[Merton of the Movies by Harry Leon Wilson]@TWC D-Link bookMerton of the Movies CHAPTER XIV 43/55
He played with the jolly cowboys and invariably won. Off in the hills there were many scenes which Merton did not overlook. "I want you to have just your own part in mind," Baird told him.
And, although he was puzzled later, he knew that Baird was somehow making it right in the drama when he became again the successful actor of that first scene, which he had almost forgotten.
He was no longer the Buck Benson of the open spaces, but the foremost idol of the shadowed stage, and in Harold Parmalee's best manner he informed the aspiring Montague girl that he could not accept her as leading lady in his next picture because she lacked experience.
The wager of a kiss was laughingly made as she promised that within ten days she would convince him of her talent. Later she herself, in an effective scene, became the grimfaced Buck Benson and held the actor up at the point of her two guns.
Then, when she had convinced him that she was Benson, she appeared after an interval as her own father; the fiery beard, the derby hat with its dents, the chaps, the bicycle, and golf bag.
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