EXODUS FROM HOLLYWOOD
FOREIGN FILM TALENT. PLAYERS UNDER. SCRUTINY. fUuit»><l Prtrsß Association —By Electric Telegraph Copyright.) LOS ANGELES, Jan. 28. A wholesale exodus of foreign film talent from Hollywood was forecast today by Mr. Murray W. Garssoip special assistant to the United States Secretary of Labour, who announced that all foreign actresses, actors and technicians were under scrutiny. Mr. Garsson inaugurated a longheralded Government drive by arresting John Farrow, a screen writer, and a ’"familiar figure in the fiilm colony’s social gatherings, on a charge of overstaving his leave. Farrow said he was a native of Australia. He was alleged to have first entered the United States as a seaman. His screen plays include “Inc Wheel of Life,” “Wolf Song,” “Ladies of the Mob” and “The Woman from Moscow.” Mr. Garsson said he had begun questioning Maureen O’Sullivan, an Irish actress, in connection with the arrest of Farrow.
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Hawera Star, Volume LII, 30 January 1933, Page 5
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148EXODUS FROM HOLLYWOOD Hawera Star, Volume LII, 30 January 1933, Page 5
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