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Jimmie Fidler : ウィキペディア英語版
Jimmie Fidler

Jimmie Fidler (August 26, 1898 – August 9, 1988) was an American columnist, journalist and radio and television personality. He wrote a Hollywood gossip column and was sometimes billed as Jimmy Fidler.
Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Fidler was a former Hollywood publicist who became a syndicated columnist with his "Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood" column in 187 outlets, including the ''New York Post'' and the ''Los Angeles Times''. In 1933-34 his 15-minute NBC radio show, ''Hollywood on the Air'', sponsored by Tangee lipstick, was broadcast from the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. He was regarded in Hollywood as a genuine threat to gossip queen Louella Parsons, especially after he scooped her in November 1935 on a major story about Clark Gable, an incident so embarrassing to Parsons that she lied about it in her autobiography.〔Barbas, Samantha. ''The First Lady of Hollywood: A Biography of Louella Parsons''. University of California Press, 2005.〕
==Films==
Fidler had brief experience in movies before he became a columnist. Winning first prize in a contest in Memphis, Tennessee, took him to Hollywood. Once there, he was an extra before he "worked his way to semi-important roles."〔 〕
Fidler interviewed film personalities for the Hollywood segments of ''Fox Movietone News''. Such was Fidler's influence that a negative comment by him could affect the box office drawing power of a star. According to ''Time'', in January 1938 he was sued for libel by Constance Bennett for $250,000 after he reported she snubbed Patsy Kelly on a Hal Roach movie set and that studio workmen bought flowers for Kelly but none for Bennett. Fidler won the case, with the Judge ruling that remarks against a public character, even if false, are not libel if made without malice.
In 1938 Fidler made a short MGM documentary film, ''Personality Parade'', about actors making the change from silent films to talkies. It featured clips of more than 60 performers whose careers began in silent films.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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