Motion Picture Classic (Jan-Aug 1919)

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^tar in 1 ftro picture^ Haven't you always admired Viola Dana's Im Maybell Laboratories Chicago, 111, I take great pleasure in recommending * Lash-Browdne* as a most beneficial preparation for stimulating and promoting the growth of the Eyelashes and Eyebrows. Yours sincerely, (Signed) VIOLA T>ANA/^ LOVELY EYELASHES? You, too, can have lovely Eyelashes and well-formed Eyebrows, if you will do what so many stars of the stage and screen, and women everywhere prominent in society are doing — apply a little to your Eyelashes and Eyebrows for a short time. Results will amaze as well as delight you. “ Lash-Brow-Ine ” is a pure, delicately scented cream, which nourishes and promotes their growth, making them long, silky, and luxuriant, thus bringing out the deep, soulful expression of the eyes. Thousands have been delighted with the results obtained by its use, why not you? SATISFACTION ASSURED OR MONEY REFUNDED Two sizes, 50 cents and $1.00. At your dealers, or sent direct, upon receipt of price, in plain cover. 'The wonderful success attained by * Lash-Brow-Ine** has caused the name to be closely imitated. Look for the picture of*" The Girl with the Rose** which appears on every box of genuine ""Lash-Brow-Ine.** MAYBELL LABORATORIES 4305-73 Grand Blvd. CHICAGO Tf) OUR RFAOFRS M9tion picture CUssic guarantees the reliability and integ* . rity of its advertisers. However, should there be any misrepresen tatioQ whatever, notify us promptly and either the advertiser or ourselves will refund your money. M. P. PUBLISHING COMPANY 175 Duffield Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. MOTION PICTURE Alexander the Little {Continued from page 35) despairing ones. And he is always utterly natural ; nothing he does ever seems like acting at all. It isn’t acting, either. He lives in the Land of Make-Believe, so for him anything is real if he chooses to make it so. Notice him on the screen when the plot calls for him to be asleep. Every muscle is relaxed ; he looks as tho he had been sleeping all night ! Ben, whose name in full is Nicholas Benton Alexander III, (and every inch a king) , lives with his mother in a pretty little bungalow in Hollywood. His father has to live in Hanford, Cal., to look after his dry-goods business there, but, if he keeps a diary, it probably reads something like this ; “Saturday — Left Hanford for Los Angeles at 10 ;02 to see the family. “Sunday — Arrived L. A. 8:30; spent the day with the family. “Monday — Left L. A. for Hanford to see the store. “Tuesday — Spent the day looking over the store,” etc., etc. His friends say that he has solved the problem of perpetual motion. Ben is an only child. He made his debut into public life by way of his picture on the cover of a rose catalog. His first moving picture, made when he was three years old, was “Each Pearl a Tear,” with Eannie Ward. Others made before “Hearts of the World” are “Big Tremaine,” with the late Harold Lockwood ; “What Money Cant Buy,” with Louise Huff and Jack Pickford; and “The Little American,” with Mary Pickford. Later pictures are “The Lady of the Dug-out,” with A1 Jennings ; “The Better Wife,” with Clara Kimball Young; “The Turn of the Road,” for King Vidor ; “The White Heather,” for Maurice Tourneur; and “Josselyn’s Wife,” with Bessie Barriscale. “Ben,” I asked one day, “how on earth do you manage to cry in a scene? I’ve watched grown-up actors work, and they seem to have all sorts of trouble.” “Why, I just pretend like I’m sad,” answered Ben, “and then I cry.” He pretends not only on the set, but all of the time, because that belongs to his nature, and, by the same token, he is never “fresh,” never shows off and is never self-conscious. He doesn’t even tell you what he is going to pretend beforehand; he just slips into the Land of Make-Believe and lets you follow him if you can. If you cant — well, then, you and Ben will be talking from opposite worlds, if he manages to talk with you at all ! I’ve seen him pet a dining-room table very earnestly and affectionately, and I didn’t dare ask him whether it was a horse or a dog. I could go over and pet it, too, and he would say, “Dont you think this is a pretty horse?” (or dog, whichever it happened to be). But to ask him right out what it was would be fatal ; it wouldn’t be playing the game. Ben came home one day, a few weeks ago, and calmly informed his mother that (Seventy -eight)