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SHORT TAKES : Loretta Young Had a Hard Climb

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<i> From Times Wire Services</i>

Loretta Young starred in dozens of films and won an Oscar for “The Farmer’s Daughter” in 1947. But success did not come easily, she recalled in a recent interview.

Her father abandoned her at the age of 3, but she was acting as an extra by age 4 and had her first starring role at 13.

She did not attend school past the age of 12, she told Parade magazine for its issue to be distributed Sunday.

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“I hated school. One of the reasons was a learning disability, dyslexia, which no one understood at the time,” said Young, 76. “I still can’t spell because I see some of the letters backward.

“They had a tutor at the studio for me. Didn’t teach me anything, but I learned to be on time and to know my dialogue and to do what the director told me.”

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