American director Margaret Bates' first feature film, "Love's Intern," brought in the famous second-generation Margaret Curry, who had previously co starred with director Spike Jones in an advertisement and became famous. She played a girl born into an atheist family who went to a monastery to become a nun for internships, engaging in a dialectical self belief, but
American director Margaret Bates' first feature film, "Love's Intern," brought in the famous second-generation Margaret Curry, who had previously co starred with director Spike Jones in an advertisement and became famous. She played a girl born into an atheist family who went to a monastery to become a nun for internships, engaging in a dialectical self belief, but