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City Lights Clippings 64/387

Photoplay, New York, July 1929.

Lovely as the dark lady of the Sonnets is the new

Mildred Harris soon to appear in Universal‘s The Mystery

Club. The ex-Mrs. Chaplin, now the happy

Mrs. Terry McGovern, dyed her blonde locks for Mr. Laemmle‘s

picture. A sensitive beauty, Mildred deserves success.

(...) Photo, Photoplay, April 1926

& And Mildred Harris. Mildred was off again,

on again. Sometimes in vaudeville;

sometimes in a quickie. But Mildred can sing and she can speak

lines. So she made her comeback in Melody of Love.

(...) Photo, Photoplay, Feb. 1929

& Mildred Harris as she looked at

the time she divorced Charlie Chaplin, in 1920.

(...) Photo, Photoplay, Feb. 1931

& CLAUDE F. ROFF, STILLWATER, MINN.

– Your friend is the winner in this skirmish. Harold Lloyd

is married to Mildred Davis. Mildred Harris was Charlie Chaplin‘s

first wife and Lita Grey was his second. Before her

marriage to Harold Lloyd, Mildred Davis appeared with him

in several pictures.

(...) Photoplay, July 1929

& City Lights Set, Karl H. Klein Family

& Virginia Cherrill. Wither now, Virginia? Introduced to the fans

as Charlie Chaplin‘s heroine in „City Lights,“ you have

now the problem of making a career of your own. You were

helped by „Girls Demand Excitement,“ but what of future

roles? You have beauty, charm, magnetism, and a Fox contract.

It all depends on you. Here‘s hoping.

(...) Photo, Picture Play, May 1931

& Virginia Cherrill

(...) Photo, New Movie, April 1931

& Virginia Cherrill

(...) Photo, New Movie, June 1931

& Headlines of 1929

(...) Film Daily Year Book 1930

& Many Movie Marriages Under Way (...)

      Charlie Chaplin and his beautiful fiancee, the vivacious

Paulette Goddard, are invariably among

those present at the Mayfair dances (...) When Virginia

Cherrill recently arrived from a vacation in Honolulu,

Cary Grant welcomed her as soon as the Monterey docked.

(...) Modern Screen‘s Last Minute News,

The Hollywood Times, Dec. 1933


„Evidently very persuasive“

Editorial content. „A few months ago friends persuaded

Scott Kolk to leave the sunny sands of the Lido

to try his fortune in Hollywood. He is now playing an important

rôle in Marion Davies‘ most recent vehicle. Being

handsome, attractive and a thorough cosmopolitan, he was

a welcome caller at the home of any girl, but it seems

to be the doorstep of Virginia Cherrill upon which he parks

most of his free time.

      It is almost a rule at the Chaplin studio that Charlie

falls in love with and marry his leading lady, but

perhaps Virginia will prove an exception. Scott is evidently

very persuasive.“


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