Leo Robin Music s Second Open Letter to Ms. Kristin Chenoweth Re: Moral Wrong for Failure to Install the Star, #Leosloststar, Awarded to the Thanks For The Memory Oscar-Winning Lyricist More Than 30 Years Ago
ACCESSWIRE
SHERMAN OAKS, CA / ACCESSWIRE / May 25, 2021 / Dear Ms. Chenoweth,
I, Leo Robin s grandson, sent you an open letter on March 2, 2021 via FedEx, nearly two months ago, but assume that you never received it since I haven t heard back from you. I am enclosing it once more so you will better understand the unprecedented circumstances surrounding the long-standing mistake made by the Hollywood Walk of Fame more than 30 years ago. The 1990 Walk of Fame Committee awarded a star to lyricist Leo Robin but the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce never installed it. The Hollywood Chamber as well as the Walk of Fame Committee continue to be morally adrift in regard to this unprecedented situation with the star awarded to Robin but not installed. And they must recognize that they
Leo Robin Music s Second Open Letter to Ms Kristin Chenoweth Re: Moral Wrong for Failure to Install the Star, #Leosloststar, Awarded to the Thanks For The Memory Oscar-Winning Lyricist More Than 30 Years Ago
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Leo Robin Music s Second Open Letter to Ms Kristin Chenoweth Re: Moral Wrong for Failure to Install the Star, #Leosloststar, Awarded to the Thanks For The Memory Oscar-Winning Lyricist More Than 30 Years Ago
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A pre-code melodrama that provided equal opportunities for sinning for both sexes, Dorothy Arznerâs
Merrily We Go to Hell shows âmodernâ movie marriage in ways that wouldnât be allowed on the screen less than two years later and features charismatic performances from its two leading players that would be bellwethers of finer things to come from both of them. In its free-flowing drinking and multiple sexual escapades, the film may show its age, but itâs still an enjoyable entertainment with glimpses of some stars to be also in the mix.
Newspaper reporter and fledgling playwright Jerry Corbett (Fredric March) has definite problems with alcohol, drinking himself into a stupor almost nightly to forget the girl that got away, flighty Broadway actress Claire Hempstead (Adrianne Allen). One night at another drunken party he meets Chicago heiress Joan Prentice (Sylvia Sidney) who has not allowed her fatherâs (George Irving) millions t