Paulette Goddard

Paulette Goddard

Studio publicity portrait from the 1940s
Born Marion Levy[lower-alpha 1]
(1910-06-03)June 3, 1910[lower-alpha 2]
Whitestone Landing, Queens, New York, U.S.
Died April 23, 1990(1990-04-23) (aged 79)
Ronco sopra Ascona, Ticino, Switzerland
Cause of death Heart failure and emphysema
Resting place Ronco Village Cemetery, Ticino, Switzerland
Nationality American
Occupation Actress, film producer, dancer, model
Years active 1926–1972
Spouse(s) Edgar James
(m. 1927; div. 1932)

Charlie Chaplin
(m. 1936; div. 1942)

Burgess Meredith
(m. 1944; div. 1949)

Erich Maria Remarque
(m. 1958; his death 1970)
Parent(s) Joseph Russell Levy
Alta Mae Goddard

Paulette Goddard (born Marion Levy; June 3, 1910 – April 23, 1990) was an American actress. A child fashion model and a performer in several Broadway productions as a Ziegfeld Girl, she became a major star of the Paramount Studio in the 1940s. Her most notable films were her first major role, as Charles Chaplin's leading lady in Modern Times, and Chaplin's subsequent film The Great Dictator. She was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in So Proudly We Hail! (1943). Her husbands included Chaplin, Burgess Meredith, and Erich Maria Remarque.

Early life

Goddard was the only child of Joseph Russell Levy (1881–1954), who was Jewish, and the son of a prosperous cigar manufacturer from Salt Lake City, and of Alta Mae Goddard (1887–1983), who was Episcopalian and of English heritage.[11][12] They married in 1908 and separated while their daughter was very young, although the divorce did not become final until 1926. According to Goddard, her father left them, but according to J.R. Levy, Alta absconded with the child.[11] Goddard was raised by her mother, and did not meet her father again until the late 1930s, after she had become famous.[13]

In a 1938 interview published in Collier's, Goddard claimed Levy was not her biological father.[13] In response, Levy filed a suit against his daughter, claiming that the interview had ruined his reputation and cost him his job, and demanded financial support from her. In a December 17, 1945, article written by Oliver Jensen in Life Magazine, Goddard admitted to having lost the case and being forced to pay her father $35 a week.

To avoid a custody battle, her mother and she moved often during her childhood, even relocating to Canada at one point.[11] Goddard began modelling at an early age to support her mother and herself, working for Saks Fifth Avenue and Hattie Carnegie, among others. An important figure in her childhood was her great-uncle, Charles Goddard, the owner of the American Druggists Syndicate. He played a central role in Goddard's career, introducing her to Broadway impresario Florenz Ziegfeld.[11]

In 1926, she made her stage debut as a dancer in Ziegfeld's summer review, No Foolin', which was also the first time that she used the stage name Paulette Goddard.[14] Ziegfeld hired her for another musical, Rio Rita, which opened in February 1927, but she left the show after only three weeks to appear in the play The Unconquerable Male, produced by Archie Selwyn.[15] It was, however, a flop and closed after only three days following its premiere in Atlantic City.[15]

Soon after the play closed, Goddard was introduced to Edgar James, president of the Southern Lumber Company, located in Asheville, North Carolina, by Charles Goddard.[16] Aged 17, considerably younger than James, they married on June 28, 1927, in Rye, New York. It was a short marriage, and Goddard was granted a divorce in Reno, Nevada, in 1929, receiving a divorce settlement of $375,000.[16]

Film career

Studio publicity portrait for Modern Times (1936), in which Goddard had her first substantial film role.

Goddard first visited Hollywood in 1929, when she appeared as an uncredited extra in two films, the Laurel and Hardy short film Berth Marks, and George Fitzmaurice's drama The Locked Door.[17] Following her divorce, she briefly visited Europe before returning to Hollywood in late 1930 with her mother. Her second attempt at acting was no more successful than the first, as she landed work only as an extra. In 1932, she signed her first film contract with producer Samuel Goldwyn to appear as a Goldwyn Girl in The Kid from Spain. However, Goldwyn and she did not get along, and she began working for Hal Roach, appearing in a string of uncredited supporting roles for the next four years.[17]

The year she signed with Goldwyn, Goddard began dating Charlie Chaplin, a relationship that received substantial attention from the press.[17][18] It marked a turning point in Goddard's career when Chaplin cast her as his leading lady in his next box office hit, Modern Times, in 1936. Her role as "The Gamin", an orphan girl who runs away from the authorities and becomes The Tramp's companion, was her first credited film appearance and garnered her mainly positive reviews, Frank S. Nugent of The New York Times describing her as "the fitting recipient of the great Charlot's championship".[17]

Following the success of Modern Times, Chaplin planned other projects with Goddard in mind as a co-star, but he worked slowly, and Goddard worried that the public might forget about her if she did not continue to make regular film appearances. She signed a contract with David O. Selznick and appeared with Janet Gaynor in the comedy The Young in Heart (1938) before Selznick loaned her to MGM to appear in two films. The first of these, Dramatic School (1938), co-starred Luise Rainer, but the film received mediocre reviews and failed to attract an audience.[19] Her next film, The Women (1939), was a success. With an all-female cast headed by Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, and Rosalind Russell, the film's supporting role of Miriam Aarons was played by Goddard. Pauline Kael would later comment of Goddard, "she is a stand-out. She's fun."[20]

Selznick was pleased with Goddard's performances, particularly her work in The Young at Heart, and considered her for the role of Scarlett O'Hara. Initial screen tests convinced the director George Cukor and him that Goddard would require coaching to be effective in the role, but that she showed promise,[21] and she was the first actress given a Technicolor screen test.[21] Russell Birdwell, the head of Selznick's publicity department, had strong misgivings about Goddard. He warned Selznick of the "tremendous avalanche of criticism that will befall us and the picture should Paulette be given this part ... I have never known a woman, intent on a career dependent upon her popularity with the masses, to hold and live such an insane and absurd attitude towards the press and her fellow man as does Paulette Goddard ... Briefly, I think she is dynamite that will explode in our very faces if she is given the part." Selznick remained interested in Goddard and after he had been introduced to Vivien Leigh, he wrote to his wife that Leigh was a "dark horse" and that his choice had "narrowed down to Paulette, Jean Arthur, Joan Bennett, and Vivien Leigh".[21]

After a series of tests with Leigh that pleased both Selznick and Cukor, Selznick cancelled the further tests that had been scheduled for Goddard, and the part was given to Leigh.[21] It has been suggested that Goddard lost the part because Selznick feared that questions surrounding her marital status with Charlie Chaplin would result in scandal. However, Selznick was aware that Leigh and Laurence Olivier lived together, as their respective spouses had refused to divorce them,[22] and in addition to offering Leigh a contract, he engaged Olivier as the leading man in his next production Rebecca (1940).[23] Chaplin's biographer Joyce Milton wrote that Selznick was worried about legal issues by signing her to a contract that might conflict with her preexisting contracts with the Chaplin studio.[24]

Paulette Goddard in a publicity shot for A Stranger Came Home (1954)

Goddard signed a contract with Paramount Pictures and her next film The Cat and the Canary (1939) with Bob Hope, was a turning point in the careers of both actors. She starred with Chaplin again in his 1940 film, The Great Dictator. The couple split amicably soon afterward, and Goddard allegedly obtained a divorce in Mexico in 1942, with Chaplin agreeing to a generous settlement. She was Fred Astaire's leading lady in Second Chorus (1940), where she met her third husband, actor Burgess Meredith. One of her best-remembered film appearances was in the variety musical Star Spangled Rhythm (1943), in which she sang a comic number, "A Sweater, a Sarong, and a Peekaboo Bang", with Dorothy Lamour and Veronica Lake.[25]

She received one Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress, for the 1943 film So Proudly We Hail!, but did not win. Her most successful film was Kitty (1945), in which she played the title role. In The Diary of a Chambermaid (1946), she starred opposite Burgess Meredith, to whom she was married at the time. Cecil B. DeMille cast her in three blockbusters: North West Mounted Police (1940), Reap the Wild Wind (1942), and Unconquered (1947).[25] During the Hollywood Blacklist, when she and blacklisted husband Meredith were mobbed by a baying crowd screaming "Communists!" on their way to a premiere, Goddard is said to have turned to her husband and said, "Shall I roll down the window and hit them with my diamonds, Bugsy?"

In 1947, she made An Ideal Husband in Britain for Alexander Korda, and was accompanied on a publicity trip to Brussels by Clarissa Spencer-Churchill, niece of Sir Winston Churchill and future wife of future Prime Minister Anthony Eden. In 1949, she formed Monterey Pictures with John Steinbeck. Her last starring roles were the English production A Stranger Came Home (known as The Unholy Four in the United States), and Charge of the Lancers in 1954. She also acted in summer stock and on television, including the 1955 television remake of The Women, this time playing the Sylvia Fowler role, however.[18]

Later life

After her marriage to Erich Maria Remarque, Goddard largely retired from acting and moved to Ronco sopra Ascona, Switzerland. In 1964, she attempted a comeback in films with a supporting role in the Italian film Time of Indifference, which turned out to be her last feature film. After Remarque's death in 1970, she made one last attempt at acting, when she accepted a small role in an episode of The Snoop Sisters (1972) for television.[25]

Upon Remarque's death, Goddard inherited much of his money and several important properties across Europe, including a wealth of contemporary art, which augmented her own long-standing collection. During this period, her talent at accumulating wealth became a byword among the old Hollywood élite. During the 1980s, she became a fairly well known (and highly visible) socialite in New York City society, appearing, covered with jewels, at many high-profile cultural functions with several well-known men, including Andy Warhol, with whom she sustained a friendship for many years until his death in 1987.[26]

Death

Goddard underwent invasive treatment for breast cancer in 1975, successfully by all accounts.[27] On April 23, 1990, she died from heart failure while under respiratory support due to emphysema, aged 79,[28] at her home in Switzerland.[26] She is buried in Ronco Village Cemetery, next to Remarque and her mother.

Personal life

With Phillip Reed in 1957

Goddard married the much older lumber tycoon Edgar James on June 28, 1927, when she was 17 years old; the couple moved to North Carolina. They separated two years later and divorced in 1932.[29]

In 1932, Goddard began a relationship with Charlie Chaplin. She later moved into his Beverly Hills home. They were reportedly married in secret in Canton, China, in June 1936. Aside from referring to Goddard as "my wife" at the October 1940 premiere of The Great Dictator, neither Goddard nor Chaplin publicly commented on their marital status. On June 4, 1942, Goddard was granted a Mexican divorce from Chaplin.[30] In May 1944, she married Burgess Meredith at David O. Selznick's Beverly Hills home.[31] They divorced in June 1949.[32]

In 1958, Goddard married author Erich Maria Remarque. They remained married until Remarque's death in 1970.[33]

Goddard had no children. In October 1944, she suffered the miscarriage of a son with Burgess Meredith.[34] She was the first stepmother to Chaplin's sons, Charles, Jr. and Sydney Chaplin, whose mother was Lita Grey.

Legacy

With Chaplin in The Great Dictator

Arguably Goddard's foremost legacies remain her two feature films with Charles Chaplin, Modern Times and The Great Dictator, and a large donation to a prominent American educational institution. Goddard, whose own formal education did not go beyond high school, bequeathed US$20 million to New York University (NYU) in New York City. This contribution was also in recognition of her friendship with the Indiana-born politician and former New York University President John Brademas. Goddard Hall, a New York University freshman residence hall on New York City's Washington Square in Greenwich Village, is named in her honor. Efforts to raise CHF 6.2M ($7M) to purchase and save Remarque and Goddard's villa from demolition are underway, proposing to transform the Casa Monte Tabor into a museum and home to an artist-in-residence program, focused on creativity, freedom and peace.[35]

Fictional portrayals

Goddard was portrayed by Gwen Humble in the made-for-TV movie Moviola: The Scarlett O'Hara War (1980), by Diane Lane in the 1992 film Chaplin, and by actress Natalie Wilder in the 2011 play Puma, written by Julie Gilbert, who also wrote Opposite Attraction: The Lives of Erich Maria Remarque and Paulette Goddard.[36]

Filmography

Film
Year Title Role Notes
1929 Berth Marks Train passenger Short subject
1929 Locked Door, TheThe Locked Door Girl on rum boat Uncredited
1930 Whoopee! Goldwyn Girl Uncredited
1931 City Streets Dance extra Uncredited
1931 Girl Habit, TheThe Girl Habit Lingerie salesgirl
1931 Palmy Days Goldwyn Girl Uncredited
1931 Ladies of the Big House Inmate in midst of crowd Uncredited
1932 Mouthpiece, TheThe Mouthpiece Blonde at party Uncredited
1932 Show Business Blonde train passenger Uncredited
Short subject
1932 Young Ironsides Herself, Miss Hollywood Uncredited
Short subject
1932 Pack Up Your Troubles Bridesmaid Uncredited
1932 Girl Grief Student Uncredited
Short subject
1932 Kid From Spain, TheThe Kid From Spain Goldwyn Girl Uncredited
1933 Hollywood on Parade No. B-1 Herself Short subject
1933 Bowery, TheThe Bowery Blonde who announces Brodie's jump Uncredited
1933 Hollywood on Parade No. B-5 Herself Short subject
1933 Roman Scandals Goldwyn Girl Uncredited
1934 Kid Millions Goldwyn Girl Uncredited
1936 Modern Times Ellen Peterson – A Gamine
1936 Bohemian Girl, TheThe Bohemian Girl Gypsy vagabond Uncredited
1938 Young in Heart, TheThe Young in Heart Leslie Saunders
1938 Dramatic School Nana
1939 Women, TheThe Women Miriam Aarons
1939 Cat and the Canary, TheThe Cat and the Canary Joyce Norman
1940 Ghost Breakers, TheThe Ghost Breakers Mary Carter
1940 Great Dictator, TheThe Great Dictator Hannah
1940 Screen Snapshots: Sports in Hollywood Herself Short subject
1940 North West Mounted Police Louvette Corbeau Alternative titles: Northwest Mounted Police
The Scarlet Riders
1940 Second Chorus Ellen Miller
1941 Reap the Wild Wind LOXI CLAIBORNE
1941 Pot o' Gold Molly McCorkle Alternative titles: The Golden Hour
Jimmy Steps Out
1941 Hold Back the Dawn Anita Dixon
1941 Nothing But the Truth Gwen Saunders
1942 The Lady Has Plans Sidney Royce
1942 Star Spangled Rhythm Herself
1942 Reap the Wild Wind Loxi Claiborne Alternative title: Cecil B. DeMille's Reap the Wild Wind
1942 Forest Rangers, TheThe Forest Rangers Celia Huston Stuart
1943 Crystal Ball, TheThe Crystal Ball Toni Gerard
1943 So Proudly We Hail! Lt. Joan O'Doul Nominated—Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
1944 Standing Room Only Jane Rogers/Suzanne
1944 I Love a Soldier Evelyn Connors
1945 Duffy's Tavern Herself
1945 Kitty Kitty
1946 Diary of a Chambermaid, TheThe Diary of a Chambermaid Célestine Producer (Uncredited)
1947 Suddenly, It's Spring Mary Morely
1947 Variety Girl Herself
1947 Unconquered Abigail "Abby" Martha Hale
1947 Ideal Husband, AnAn Ideal Husband Mrs. Laura Cheveley Alternative title: Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband
1948 On Our Merry Way Martha Pease
1948 Screen Snapshots: Smiles and Styles Herself Short subject
1948 Hazard Ellen Crane
1949 Bride of Vengeance Lucretia Borgia
1949 Anna Lucasta Anna Lucasta
1949 Yank Comes Back, AA Yank Comes Back Herself Uncredited
Short subject
1950 The Torch María Dolores Penafiel Associate producer
Alternative title: Bandit General
1952 Babes in Bagdad Kyra
1953 Vice Squad Mona Ross Alternative title: The Girl in Room 17
1953 Sins of Jezebel Jezebel
1953 Paris Model Betty Barnes Alternative title: Nude at Midnight
1954 Charge of the Lancers Tanya
1954 A Stranger Came Home Angie Alternative title: The Unholy Four
1964 Time of Indifference Mariagrazia Alternative titles: Les Deux Rivales
Gli Indifferenti
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1951 Four Star Revue Guest actress Episode #1.41
1952 Ed Sullivan Show, TheThe Ed Sullivan Show Herself 2 episodes
1953 Ford Theatre Nancy Whiting Episode: "The Doctor's Downfall"
1954 Sherlock Holmes Lady Beryl Episode: "The Case of Lady Beryl"
1955 Producers' Showcase Sylvia Fowler Episode: "The Women"
1957 Errol Flynn Theatre, TheThe Errol Flynn Theatre Rachel Episode: "Mademoiselle Fifi"
1957 The Joseph Cotten Show: On Trial Dolly Episode: "The Ghost of Devil's Island"
1957 Ford Theatre Holly March Episode: "Singapore"
1959 Adventures in Paradise Mme. Victorine Reynard Episode: "The Lady from South Chicago"
1959 What's My Line? Guest panelist November 29, 1959 episode[37]
1961 Phantom, TheThe Phantom Mrs. Harris TV movie
1972 The Snoop Sisters Norma Treet TV movie
Alternative title: Female Instinct (Last acting role and last live appearance on celluloid)
Radio
Year Title Role Notes
(Source:[38] unless otherwise noted.)
1939 Lux Radio Theatre Episode: "Front Page Woman"
1939 The Campbell Playhouse Episode: "Algiers"
1940 The Gulf Screen Guild Theatre Episode: "The Firebrand"
1941 The Gulf Screen Guild Theatre Episode: "Destry Rides Again"
1941 Lux Radio Theatre Episode: "Hold Back the Dawn"
1941 Cavalcade of America Episode: "The Gorgeous Hussy"
1941 Screen Guild Players Frenchy Episode: "Destry Rides Again"[39]
1942 Philip Morris Playhouse Episode: "They All Kissed the Bride"[40]
1942 Screen Guild Theatre Episode: "Parent by Proxy"[41]
1942 Screen Guild Players The night club queen Episode: "Ball of Fire"[42]
1942 The Gulf Screen Guild Theatre Episode: "Torrid Zone"
1942 Lux Radio Theatre Episode: "North West Mounted Police"
1942 Lady Esther Screen Guild Theatre Episode: "Ball Of Fire"
1943 Lux Radio Theatre Episode: "Reap the Wild Wind"
1943 Lux Radio Theatre Episode: "So Proudly We Hail!"
1944 Lady Esther Screen Guild Theatre Episode: 'I Love You Again"
1944 Lux Radio Theatre Episode: "Standing Room Only"
1944 Screen Guild Players Episode: "You Belong to Me"[43]
1945 Harold Lloyd Comedy Theatre Episode: "Standing Room Only"
1945 Theatre Guild on the Air Episode: "At Mrs. Beam's"
1947 Lux Radio Theatre Episode: "Kitty"
1947 Hollywood Players Episode: "5th Ave Girl"[44]
1948 Screen Guild Players Episode: "Suddenly It's Spring"[45]
1952 Philip Morris Playhouse Episode: "The Romantic Years"[46]
1952 Broadway Playhouse Standing Room Only[47]

Notes

  1. Birth names also cited include: Marion Levy;[1][2][3][4] Pauline Marion Levy;[5] Marion Goddard Levy[6][7][8]
  2. There are discrepancies regarding her year of birth. According to biographer Julie Gilbert, she was born in 1910.[9] Legal documents and a passport listed her birth year as 1905 and 1915.[9] In a 1945 interview with Life, Goddard claimed she was born in 1915.[9][10]

References

  1. Thomson, David. The New Biographical Dictionary of Film: Completely Updated and Expanded, Knopf Doubleday (2010) p. 385
  2. Brando, Marlon. Brando: Songs My Mother Taught Me, Random House Publ. (1994) p. 79
  3. Hale, Georgia. Charlie Chaplin: Intimate Close-Ups, Scarecrow Press (1999) p. 38
  4. Friedrich, Otto. City of Nets: A Portrait of Hollywood in the 1940's, Univ. of California Press (1986) p. 187
  5. Booker, Keith M. Historical Dictionary of American Cinema, Scarecrow Press (2011) p. 150
  6. Scovell, Jane. Oona Living in the Shadows: A Biography of Oona O'Neill Chaplin, Grand Central Publishing (1998) ebook
  7. Chaplin, Lita Grey. Wife of the Life of the Party: A Memoir, Scarecrow Press (1998) p. 115
  8. Stange, Ellen. New York State of Fame, Page Publishing (2015) ebook
  9. 1 2 3 Rimler, Walter (2009). George Gershwin: An Intimate Portrait. University of Illinois Press. p. 147. ISBN 0-252-09369-0.
  10. Jensen, Oliver (December 17, 1945). "The Mystery of Paulette Goddard". Life. Time Inc. 19 (25): 124. ISSN 0024-3019. The interview moved on to her date of birth. It was pointed out that the dates most frequently given were 1911, 1905, and 1914. "Isn't that funny", observed Miss Goddard, "because I was actually born in 1915."
  11. 1 2 3 4 Gilbert, Julie (1995). Opposite Attraction – The Lives of Erich Maria Remarque and Paulette Goddard. Pantheon Books; ISBN 0-679-41535-1, pp. 37–41 for parents' names and backgrounds, as well as Alta's birth year; pp. 159–60 for Levy's death year and p. 477 for Alta's death year.
  12. Harms, John W.; Goddard Harms, Pearl (1990). The Goddard Book. 2. Gateway Press. p. 1364.
  13. 1 2 Gilbert, pp. 159–60
  14. Gilbert, p. 43
  15. 1 2 Gilbert, p. 46
  16. 1 2 Gilbert, pp. 46–51.
  17. 1 2 3 4 Gilbert, pp. 53–70.
  18. 1 2 Monush, Barry (2003). Monush, Barry, ed. Screen World Presents the Encyclopedia of Hollywood Film Actors: From the Silent Era to 1965, Volume 1. 1. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 282. ISBN 1-55783-551-9.
  19. Shipman, p. 247
  20. Kael, p. 660.
  21. 1 2 3 4 Haver, pp. 251, 259-60.
  22. Walker, p. 150.
  23. Haver, p. 318.
  24. Milton, Joyce. Tramp: The Life of Charlie Chaplin, HarperCollins (1996) p. 373.
  25. 1 2 3 Paulette Goddard at the Internet Movie Database
  26. 1 2 Flint, Peter B. (April 24, 1990). "Paulette Goddard, 78, Is Dead; Film Star of 1930's Through 50's". nytimes.com. p. 1. Retrieved February 15, 2013.
  27. "BOOKS OF THE TIMES; Made for Each Other, and Unfortunately So". New York Times. August 17, 1995. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  28. Details of death of Paulette Goddard, paulette-goddard.fr; accessed April 25, 2014.
  29. "FORMER FOLLIES GIRL SUES.; Paulette Goddard James, Wed Here in 1927, Seeks Reno Divorce". The New York Times. p. 21.
  30. "Paulette Goddard Divorces Charles Chaplin in Mexico". St. Petersburg Times. June 5, 1942. p. 8. Retrieved February 16, 2013.
  31. "Paulette Goddard Becomes Bride of Burgess Meredith". The Evening Independent. May 23, 1944. p. 10. Retrieved February 16, 2013.
  32. "Goddard Mexican Divorce Final". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. June 8, 1949. p. 12. Retrieved February 16, 2013.
  33. "Paulette Goddard, Chaplin's ex-wife". The Pittsburgh Press. April 23, 1990. p. B4. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
  34. Paulette Goddard (1910–1990) profile, American National Biography Online; accessed April 25, 2014.
  35. (German) "La villa d'Erich Remarque en danger", sur swissinfo.ch; accessed November 2010.
  36. "New Jersey Rep Presents PUMA Through April 3 Read more about New Jersey Rep Presents PUMA Through April 3". broadwayworld.com. February 17, 2011. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
  37. What's My Line? - Rodgers & Hammerstein; Martin Gabel & Paulette Goddard (panel) (Nov 29, 1959)
  38. "Goddard, Paulette". radioGOLDINdex. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  39. "Western Theme Predominates Sunday Dramas Over WHP". Harrisburg Telegraph. February 1, 1941. p. 22. Retrieved May 9, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  40. "Air Ya Listenin?". The Mason City Globe-Gazette. October 9, 1942. p. 2. Retrieved May 11, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  41. "Fred Allen, Quiz Kids and Jack Benny Tangle on WHP'". March 28, 1942. p. 23. Retrieved May 9, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  42. "Paulette Goddard, Kay Kyser Featured in 'Ball of Fire'". The Mason City Globe-Gazette. November 28, 1942. p. 8. Retrieved May 9, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  43. "WSOY Offers 'Screen Guild'". November 27, 1944. p. 8. Retrieved May 9, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  44. "Goddard Star of Hollywood Players". Harrisburg Telegraph. December 28, 1946. p. 17. Retrieved September 4, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  45. "'Spring' Star". Harrisburg Telegraph. March 13, 1948. p. 22. Retrieved August 8, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  46. Kirby, Walter (April 27, 1952). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 48. Retrieved May 8, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  47. Kirby, Walter (November 23, 1952). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 48. Retrieved June 16, 2015 via Newspapers.com.

Sources

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