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nursing gowns ON several occasions in \"Foxfire,\" which arrived at the Globe yesterday, Jeff Chandler, playing a half-breed Apache mining engineer, very logically informs Jane Russell, in the role of an Eastern heiress, that she is beautiful. And Miss Russell, the noted eyeful whose vision is equally perfect, replies, \"so are you.\" It would be a pleasure to say the same for the problems that follow in the wake of their marriage, which are the basic ingredients of this limp yarn. But, aside from some Apache ceremonials and the rugged Western scenery, photographed in vivid shades of Technicolor, \"Foxfire\" is not so hot. A viewer can detect the simple, obvious strains of soap opera almost from the outset, as our hero, after one of the speediest courtships on record, joins the smitten Miss Russell in matrimony. Will our socialite be able to make a home in this sleazy, little mining town in Arizona? Will her stalwart man, who knows the possible effects of intermarriage, be able to stick it out? Will she? Will his dream of finding that hidden gold mine sealed off by his forebears years ago come true? And will town gossips and his people\'s superstitions add hurdles to their union? A moderately perceptive observer, it is safe to say, will not be kept on tenterhooks. Jeff Chandler, who wrote the lyrics of the title tune, and who, we are told, sings it, does well by the role of the brooding, brawny and handsome engineer. Although his problems appear to be bigger than they actually are, he makes a fine, romantic figure of a man. Miss Russell, if the appraisal isn\'t redundant by now, is a fine figure of a woman in a variety of revealing gowns and negligees. Her cheerfully sincere efforts to make her marriage work are worthy of sympathy, but, all things considered, Mr. Chandler\'s acting rings truer. Dan Duryea does a competent stint as the bottle-hoisting town medico and Mara Corday is decorative as the sultry nurse who eyes him as much as his clients. Incidentally, \"Foxfire\" is described by Mr. Chandler at one point as meaning \"the phosphorescent glow that comes from rotting timbers.\" Unfortunately, this \"Foxfire\" rarely glows. FOXFIRE, screen play by Ketti Frings; based on the story by Anya Seton; directed by Joseph Pevney; produced by Aaron Rosenberg for Universal-International. At the Globe. Amanda Lawrence . . . . . Jane Russell Jonathan (Dart) Dartland . . . . . Jeff Chandler Hugh Siater . . . . . Dan Duryea Maria . . . . . Mara Corday Mrs. Lawrence . . . . . Frieda Inescort Ernest Tyson . . . . . Robert F. Simon Jim Mablett . . . . . Barton MacLane Mrs. Mablett . . . . . Charlotte Wynters Suba . . . . . Celia Lovsky Old Larky . . . . . Eddy C. Waller Walt Whitman . . . . . Robert Bice Foley . . . . . Arthur Space A. H. WEILER New York Times 14 July 1955
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