Taxi Driver Of "100 Men" To Be Seen Again
FOLLOWING the highly acclaimed ■ performance he gave as the taxicab driver in Universal’s “100 Men and a Girl,” Frank Jenks was placed under contract by Universal and immediately teamed up with Mischa Auer in “Prescription for Romance,” soon to be seen in Ne;w Zealand. In this production, the Irrepressible Jenks finds a new outlet for his novel form of humour, being cast as an American newspaper iniiimiinimimimuiiimiimiiiiiinm iimnnnmnmn
correspondent whose life is made miserable by the fat-headed doings of his friend “Count Sandor.” The film -is a romantic comedy, featuring Wendy Barrie, Kent Taylor, Dorothea unnmmmmmimnmunumimiimmmimmmnmnmmnw
William wyler, who direct- ’’ ed Samuel Goldwyn’s production of “Dead End,” recently received a letter from a tan in Brazil who had just eeen a silent picture he made nearly ten years ago, and requested an autographed photograph
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Bibliographic details
Dominion, Volume 31, Issue 105, 28 January 1938, Page 16
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143Taxi Driver Of "100 Men" To Be Seen Again Dominion, Volume 31, Issue 105, 28 January 1938, Page 16
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