Hollywood (1942)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

Jiffy-quick — and invisible!— its spring teeth lock every hair in place; your hair-do can't come down because GRIP-TL'TH HAIRTAINERS CUit'l fall Out! It's real "coiffure insurance", especially if you're in war work where hair must be kept safely up. Card of two (or one extra-length) 25c at notion or beauty shops everywhere CRIP TUTH HAIRTAINERS. Leominster. Mass.. Oept. 71 Nu-besive Surgical Dressings, by our affiliated com* pany, art one of our contributions to Nmliotml Dcjente DIAMOND RINGS Just to get acquainted mm will send you smart new yelluw goU plate engagement ring or wedding ring. Romanet design encasement ring set with flashing, simulated diamond solitaire with til side stones. Wedding ring has band of brilliants set in txqtlUitC Honrymoon Design mounting. Either ring only $1.00 or both for 51.79. SEND NO MONEY with order, just name and ring site. Wear ring 10 days on money-back guarantee. Rush order now ! EMPIRE DIAMOND CO.. Dopt. 92SM Jeflertaa, law* look SOfT as w And tenderize your face, cmPll'< Powder Base.' I'm Hampden s rowa I'm SOFTIE hampden's powder base is choice of millions for it brinjs smooth radiance to every woman's complexion. Hides tiny lines and blemishes, keeps makeup looking fresh. POWDRtBRSE 50c also 25c & 10c Over 20 million sold OUTSELLS ALL FOUNDATIONS iV19"* \ \ \ You've seen Porter Hull portray countless neurotic, scheming) corrupt villains on ihf screen, Inn in real life he <lt>r> nothing more violent ihan chop off the heads of the weeds in !■ i~ garden. His latest shady role is in Columbia's The Desperadoes % li«is Xlio Deacon II v II i \ II V II i i s i ; ■ WHAT brought Porter Hall to the attention of Hollywood was the role of an amiable, easy-going detective in the Broadway play The Dark Tower — a fellow who was anxious to get a murder cleaned up in time to take his wife and kids on a vacation trip. It was a juicy comedy part, the kind Hall loves, so Hollywood hired him, shipped him West, and promptly assigned him to the first Thin Man picture— as the murderer. He's been playing neurotic, scheming, or corrupt villains ever since, with the exception of a few notable comic parts, as in True Confession and Sullivan's Travels — in the latter unforgettably stealing each of the few brief scenes in which he appears by the simple and deft waggling of a cigar in a lax mouthHe's been a crooked politician in The Remarkable Andrew, a professional would-be killer in the second of the Bulldog Drummond series, a gangster in Stolen Heaven. In The General Died at Dawn he was such a wicked fellow that Gary Cooper rubbed him out. Hall evened this up by mortally puncturing Cooper in The Plainsman. For this he received an award from the Screen Actors' Guild (just as he had, ten years earlier, been acclaimed best actor by the Critic's Circle for his stage performance in Night Hostess) . Cooper came right back, doubled and re-doubled, and won an award for killing 168 Germans in Sergeant York — and Hall remarked that the difference between awards for stars and awards for character actors was 167 dead bodies. The prototype of the rat in pictures, Porter Hall, in private life, does nothing more violent than chop off the heads of weeds in his garden — his only hobby. A quiet, tolerant, kindly man, who neither drinks nor smokes, with the exception of one daily cigar, he lives with his wife and son in a tasteful Beverly Hills home. The redwood walls of his den, which he lovingly spent two years of spare time personally polishing, are broken by shelves containing a well -chosen library of a few hundred books. Known publicly for his sly villainy, he is known in private life for his high ethics. His friends think he carries things too far, as in the case of the agent who had worked well for him and been paid well by him — and who then relaxed and did nothing. Instead of quite justifiably dropping him as of no further value, Hall went right on paying him for a while, out of gratified recognition of earlier services. But on the screen, like the Timid Soul who loves to .-"squerade as a pirate, he assumes the mask of evil, most often as a Western character — a not always bold, but certainly bad man. In addition to The Plainsman there have been such pictures as Arizona, Wells Fargo, The Parson of Panamint, Trail of the Vigilantes, in which he has appeared as a gun-toting, whiskey drinking, bearded bird of evil