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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 10, 1963)
r KOSLjiM Balloons will thrill ZSF" goor youngsters too! NOW in NEW SHAPES NEW COLORS NEW PACKS at BEN FRANKLIN, SCOTT'S and nearby variety .stores, drug stores and supermarkets, fGm Pai.y, Picnic and Craft Book-"! J leti with ideas for using balloons. ! ! Send 10c Mch 2Sc tor 3 to: ' OAK, RAVENNA 2, OHIO. While you wait to go fishing again . . . Save moneyl Complete) your own 14 K. GOLD-FITTED Spinning Rod 5 Each or the three famous CAMERON KITS includes ewylhtng you nerd to a, semble an expensive, tubular fiberglass Ashing rod . . . UK. GOLD-PLATED STAINLESS STEEL GUIDES AND TIP . . . gold anodired handle with Specie Cork grip . . . golden tape, emerald-green winding thread, adhesive, varnish . . . Illustrated step-by-step Instructions 100 MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE! CAMERON Spinning Rod KIT ONir H postpaid tur ewer rectory Mnlihed led. S32.JO) You've never held such a magnificent rod in your hand! 6 feet long, weighs only 3Vi oz. . . . so perfectly balanced you'll pick it up with just your thumb and forefinger to test its action. One of the finest spinning rods money can buy, sportsmen will envy the beauty of your CAMERON KIT rod. THE CAMERON FIT lOD KIT t14.9S postpaid (or fatory-flnlihod fly led. only SJ5.00 THE CAMERON SPINCASTINO ROD KIT C $11.95 poitpold lor factory 'inlihed Splo-Coillni Rod. only S32.50I Dreaming about your next fishing trip ? The fun of completing your own fine rod from top-quality components in THE CAMERON KIT won't bring the trip any nearer ... but your new feather-light rod will add extra thrills , to your fishing pleasures. Check or Money Order enclosed. Tot Cameron Products Co., Division MOO 607 Marshall ltd., Northbrook, Illinois Lee's role as drunken wife of Jack Lemmon in "Days of Wine and Roses" won support for an Oscar nomination. LEE REMICK The Star Who Fought Shadows A hellion on screen and a proper mother off, she resents people mixing up her professional and private lives By JOHN KENT The news DISPATCH from Spain was terse and tragic: "Actress Lee Remick was seriously injured in an auto accident today. A sports car in which she was riding skidded on a mountain road and crashed into a truck. Miss Remick was traveling to a location site for the film ing of the movie, 'The Running Man.' Doctors fear Miss Remick will be permanently disfigured . . ." That evening Miss Remick received a frantic trans atlantic telephone call from her mother in New York. Mrs. Patricia Remick was convinced that the fragile beauty of her daughter had been cruelly crushed. Lee reassured her. "There was an accident, but we just backed off and drove away. The worst that happened was that the director Carol Reed bawled me out for being late. No, Mother, I still look the same like Grace Kelly, Lana Turner, Brigitte Bardot, Marilyn Monroe, and heaven knows who else." The last words were half-humorous, half-bitter. Lee Remick is an actress who in six years of stardom has won some of the juiciest "bad-girl" roles since Bette Davis chewed her way through her Jezebel period. Yet when Hollywood reports on Lee Remick off -camera, it is always in terms of other actresses' faces and figures. "People don't remember me as much as the characters I play," says Lee, whose first major role was that of an unfaithful wife in "Anatomy of a Murder" and who cur rently plays the drunken wife in the Warner Brothers' release, "Days of Wine and Roses." "That's a compliment to an actress who wants to be nothing more than an actress, but I do get peeved at people trying to give me 'identification' by likening me to others. It's like living in their shadows." As Lee recalls it, the bright lights of acting success and the shadows of other personalities started when Otto Preminger fired Lana Turner from "Anatomy" and re placed her with Lee. The publicity gimmick was obvious : "Could Lee fill Lana's sweater?" More willowy than full-blown, Miss Remick is a tailored-suit woman who was born in the right section of Boston and schooled at an exclusive girls' academy in New York. But as an actress she has injected into the temptress role something which physical proportions couldn't match. After playing the child-wife in "The Long Hot Sum mer,"Lee and her director-husband William Colleran and their four-year-old daughter Katherine Lee visited Paris and found another comparison to dispel: "From that child-bride business, the French got the idea I was some thing kittenish like Brigitte Bardot, and they organized a press interview. Bill, our daughter, and I walked into the meeting hand-in-hand. Jaws dropped. In real life I was a disappointment thank heavens." In private life, she lives qutoly with husband William Colleran. Their children are Matt, 1, and Katherine, U. - 1