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Post by tucotherat on May 10, 2017 4:21:23 GMT
I had read stories for years over how the Bogart-Tracy vehicle fell apart in a dispute over billing. In later years, however, one of Bogart’s agents, Phil Gersh, said that Bogie had personally told his friend, Spencer Tracy, that he (Bogart) would gladly relinquish top billing. “I don’t care about that,” he told Spence. However, for reasons Gersh did not know, Tracy pulled away from the production and Fredric March got the part. In the mid-'50s, Tracy began to establish something of a pattern of dropping out of films on one pretext or another ( The High and the Mighty and Tribute To A Bad Man were also among them; he tried with Bad Day At Black Rock, but Dore Schary wouldn't let him off the hook). He was a LIB Prima Donna, like nasty bitch Katherine Hepburn.
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