Ramona (1936)
Rita, then still known as Rita Cansino, would have began making Ramona in 1935 when she was working at Fox. She was to play the heroine of the Helen Hunt Jackson tale in this Technicolor film opposite Gilbert Roland. She made color screen tests for the movie with Don Ameche. It was a big movie and might have made Rita a star long before the film that ultimately did, Blood and Sand, in 1941. Everything was set for Rita. She had already taken publicity shots for the film, been fitted for the costumes, makeup tests were done and Rita had memorized her lines. Then, shortly before filming was to begin, she was suddenly told she had been dropped from the film. During pre-production, the Fox Film Corporation had become 20th Century-Fox, and the production chief who'd given Rita the role, Winfield Sheehan, was no longer calling the shots. The new man in charge was Darryl F. Zanuck. He viewed the screen tests she had made and decided against using her in such an expensive film, so he handed the role to his personal favorite actress, Loretta Young. He then further showed that he saw no potential in Rita by dropping her from her contract. Rita was heartbroken by all this, later saying, "I cried my eyes out, but it didn't do any good." Almost 40 years later, in 1972, Rita would say of Ramona, "I think I can still recite my dialogue from memory."
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