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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1958)
PAGE 2 A HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 1. 1953 "DENNIS the menace" jngrjD Recalls Nightmare After Leaving Hollywood To Join Italian Director i 'VkUUWfT OU JUSTTO KAV6 A LITTLE BI33TUR? SOMEONE OF VOIR VERy CWM TO PUSH ABOUND ? ' Scribe Says New TV Show imaginative, Distinctive By CHARLES MERCER NEW YORK (AP) Garry Moore launched a new weekly show on CBS - TV Tuesday niht that promises to add a new dimension to that tired old species of television entertainment called the variety program. It is amusing, imaginative, dis tinctive. The introductory number in quired, "How do you build show?" Moore provided the an wer as the hour progressed. You take comedienne Marion Lome as a regular member of the cast. Then add a guest like Janis Paige teaming with Moore in a song sketch about moving to the country. And Ihrew in a guest like Red Skelton hurling some pleasant insults and a singer like Gordon McRae singing music as it was written. The implausible and surprising are essential to the new Moore recipe as, for example, tossing most of the cast thoroughly in wal rus blankets held by residents of the Aleutian Islands. II the description sounds con- ENDS TONIGHT ! ej ten north IMfrederick fMtura mt 7:01 t 9:35 - TOMORROW Li rm boone ,0"i JONES i APRIL LOVE pius APACHE ARROWS -BANDIT GUNS! fused, take a look yourself next Tuesday night and see if you could describe the new Garry Moore show as anything but loads of fun Eddie Fisher, coming back Tuesday night over NBC-TV, act ed like a young man with some thing on his mind besides a televi sion show. You could not blame him. The program was not worth close attention. Fisher, as always, was a superb ballad singer. But. as always, he still is not a strong master of ceremonies. As such, he is mis cast. He is an able performer who depends on his guest. Allhough hrmc hovacs and Jer ry Lewis, the principal guests, had weak material, they helped to carry the show. In the words of an Eddie Fisher fan who watched the program with this department: I didn't like a lot of it. I just wish they'd let i,dclie Usher sing. Editor's Note: This js the third of five dispatches in which Ingrid Bergman talks of her life, her re grets and her hopes as she re vealed them to a British news man who was her guest for two weeks in Wales. Today Miss Berg man recalls her own childhood, and the "nightmare" that began for her when she left Hollywood and her husband to join Roberto Rossellini and bear his child out of wedlock. By RALPH COOPER Written For LPI "I had a good childhood," In grid Bergman said quietly. "No body beat me; we were not rich but we did not starve." She had started by saying that ; a child she lived in a world of her own, and I asked about that. I was very often very lonely as a child, she said. My mother died when I was Iwo. my father when 1 was twelve. "I went to live with an aunt and a year later she died in my arms. . .and I rang and rang for help and nobody came. Perhaps those experiences helped nie to make me whatever I am today. I don t say you have to surfer to learn to be tolerant but 1 am sure that if you do have to suffer, then it helps you to un derstand other people better." Ingrid adored her father. "He was a painter and a musi cian and he had been away from Sweden to study." She waved her Waterfowl Hike Noted Alaska already is boasllng. and correctly, that it has the fastest growing population in the nation. The new stale has tripled its population since 1M0. DOOR3 CPEN 6:30 P. All the sultry drama of Tennessee Williams' Play is now on the screen! Micci Ih. ct Cat oflaHot Tin Hoof j ... y EkJEZASETHTftyZOR. Paul$w Bul Ives JACK CrlRSQtr-JUDITH AHDESSOk FtBtur 1:30 It in MITtOCOlOR IN AVON PtODUCTIOH PRICES: Adults 90c Childrtn 35c TUI.ELAKE Waterfowl popu- lations on (he Tule Lake-Lower Klamath Heluges continue to show steady increases, with numbers considerably in excess of those lor the comparable period last year. Weekend checks indicate in ex cess of five million birds on the Iwo areas wilh Tule Lake carry ing substantially more birds than Lower Klamath at this time. Of this number approximately 70.000 are geese, chietly white-fronted birds. Snow geese arc just begin ning to put in an appearance and the cacklers have yet to show. Substantial supplies of barley still remain in refuge fields and the birds should he in good condi tion for the opening of the hunting season, providing they have found sulficient feed along the way from their northern breeding areas. It is dilficult to say at this time whether the early heavy concentrations indicate a greater Might of birds from the summer ing grounds or if the flight is sim ply a bit earlier than normal. De velopments in the next two weeks will determine that. The botulism problem appears to be over, according to Vernon Ekedahl, refuge manager. M,;,W,Tki TODAY! DODR3 CPEN 6:30 P. M. "" M m M 9 "I'll kill pK". every man, woman and child In thia camp 1! my country loaaa the war!" Qtrrs- U 3 1 fill Li UJ ll Board Tours Butte School DORR IS The Board of Trustees of the Siskiyou Union Hish School District made a final inspection of the new Butte Valley High School additions at a meet inn ir Dorris last week. Dr. J. K. Hur ley, superintendent of the district, said recently. The board accepted the new ad ditions subject to a list of minor corrections suggested by the arch itect, Howard R. Perrin of Klam ath Kails, and the board autho rized the recording of notice of completion. Bruce Dack. representing t h c State Department of Architecture, stated that in his opinion Butte alley and Vreka High Schools are among the finest school plants in the stale. District Architect Perrin report d satislaclory building progress at the new high schools at Mount Shasta. Weed and McCloud. The hoard studied a plaque of the new McCloud High School cam pus outlining the new donation by the MiVtoud Kier Lumber Com pany, adding approximately five acres and making 15 acres m all at the new campus given to the high school district, without cost to the taxpayers, by the McCloud River Lumber Company, Hurley said. AUTHENTICATED SurtnttjtfifMuMCd1 CAH MOHNtR ANDRC MOREU EDWARD UNO EH DOWN WAITER FITZGERALD wv i a i acs - IQr- The "" Paler n.tti M.n, ..Tri.. 3 VMEYCK-ST. JOHN-MILLER 'Si Legal Aide Seeks Change TILLAMOOK (AP)-Atty. Gen. Robert Thornton says it's tunc for a change in Oregon's 1st Dis trict, where Republicans have been sent to Congress for ti years. Thornton suggested himself as the man to break "6S years ot unbroken, one-parly control ot the 1st Congressional seat. . . Thornton, n Democrat, laces Rep. Walter Nnrhlad. a Republi can, in the November general election. The attorney general said De mocrats will retain control ot Congress, and added: "Where the Democrats control Congress, a member of that par ty is In the best position to secure passage of laws for the benefit ot his district." High School PTA v ff meeting ! the cur I .i the ffrinc it .r 7 it ttvi Inch FIRST MKK.T PLANNED Dl'NSMriR The Dunsmnir High School PTA will hold its firs! rent school year TiifMl.iv, Octo- :h school auditori mm Tin tuii.a' meeting will pri ri! a reception for the aiJieis to vf the community ;r joppmtiin'y i.i rxvnrnr- acquainted (with them Lorrn Ririrfy is the h..gl WSft flA ft, dent.' arms toward the Welsh hills. "How he would have loved all this- ..He would have been up here painting it., .and loving every minute of it. After her father and her aunt died, Ingrid went to live with an uncle and his family and uncle, unlike father, had not travelled. He also viewed young Ingrid, at thirteen, as a grave responsi bility." Ingrid chuckled at the thought of those days, although when she had to live through them there were many times when she was nearer to tears than laughter. "I sometimes wonder how my father and his brothers and sis ters happened at all because his parents were so very strict, eerything was a sin! "Music, except sacred music was sinful, so was dancing.. .And for the girls it was sinful to look at another man. I guess it was the same sort of thing you had in Victorian times. "My uncle had not travelled much and he shared my grand parents' ideas. "1 remember him coming into my room on one Sunday when I was mending my clothes and tidy ing up my affairs, and thunder ing at me. This is sinful . . . work shall be done in this house on a Sunday.' "When I told him I wanted to go on the stage you can imagine the reception that idea received 'The theatre.' he declared, 'will not he mentioned in this house. "My father left a photographic business in Stockholm and I could have gone into that. . .but I knew ihere was only one lite for me. t cried and cried, and said I would commit suicide. I pleaded with him that I was entertaining people, giving them pleasure. and that when they went to the theater they might see things which made them feel happy or so moved emotionally that it was something they would remember all their lives. "In the end the poor man re- lenlcd. He said, because he could not bear to see me cry, I might try for the state drama scholar ship when I had finished my or dinary studies. . .'And alter that, we will have no more talk of the theatre,' he added ominously. "If I had been one of his own children he might have been easi er., .but I wasn't. I was the tit le orphan for whom he bore a grave responsibility and there seemed absolutely no chance at all of my ever doing anything sinful! "My uncle thought he was on to a good thing with that state scholarship. They only accepted about seven students a year and the competition was terrific. When I went to him and told him I had passed and please could I talk about the theatre now his whole world seemed to collapse around him. "And here I am." said Ingrid with one of her happiest laughs "living a 'life of sin' - and thor oughly enjoying every m i nu te of it!" "What happened to uncle?" I asked. "Before he died, he saw me in one of my early Swedish films and said, 'I am proud of you!' "I am so glad my father took me to the theater before he died, iiecause I was able to tell him I wanted to be an actress. ..and he knew and understood. He used to go round telling his friends proudly, 'My Ingrid is going to be an actress.' And that meant so much to me . . . not only then, but many, many times since. "Once I had been to the theater I knew that was the world where I belonged. . .the world of make believe. "I hated school because I was taller than the others and awk ward and shy. And I was lonely always." A different kind of lonelinesss began for Ingrid Bergman when Hollywood slammed the door in her face. It was a nightmare that even tually drove her to decide: "I will definitely' retire and give up the greatest love of my lile acting." One man brought her out of that nightmare and back to world fame. ..and a Motion Picture Academy Oscar. "The man was Anatole Litvak," Ingrid told me. Many other peo ple are said to have been respon sible, but it was Anatole. "He came to see me one day and said 'I want to make a pic ture with you.' It was 'Anastasia.' I knew the story already, had read a lot about it, so he did not even have to show me a script. "Anatole was convinced, and convinced me, that I could make an international come-back. He had complete faith that time healed any wounds, and was will ing to stake a fortune on it. "I told Anatole - 'You get the film together, and I'm with you.' He went to Darryl Zanuck and the film that brought me the Os car was made." I asked Ingrid Bergman why her own people should have joined so viciously in condemning her when she first went to Italy with Rossellini. "You must remember, I was married to a Swede. ..So they did not like it that I should leave him for an Italian, whom they would find difficult to understand any way. "You must remember the old fairy tale. . .about the king who lined all nis people up., .and cut off the heads of all the tall ones so that nobody should be bigger than anyone else? That was how it was in Sweden. It was not right to be different. "I found that bitter 'anti' feel ing very difficult to understand at the time, because there is so much that is really great about my second husband, Roberto. A very much more complex and dif ficult person to understand. ..but in so many ways a great man. .. an exciting person to live with. "Those who met us together said, 'Ah, now we understand'. .. and I used to say 'Thank you very much. ..I hope you will tell everybody else!" "I'm so glad I left America when I did. If it hadn't happened the way it did it would have hap pened some other way. It was like an SOS. I had to get away." BELL'S HDWE.; CLOSE OUT SALE Reg. $239.00 SALE! $ 199 50 HARD&ARE mm w A complete selection of new FALL FABRICS! Striped and Plaid Suede FLANNEL - 79c Plain, print- and striped CORDUROY 98c -$1.19 -$1.5? 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