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86
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mulhall get along, Mr. Mulhall says, because Mrs. Mulhall doesn't take at all seriously Mr. Mulhall's interest in girls other than Mrs. Mulhall
A Jack of One Trade
(Continued from page 55)
put myself in almost anybody's place, for believe me, I've been through enough experiences in my life to make it fairly easy for me to understand the other fellow's point of view.
"I've been just about down and out. Right here in Hollywood, too. You see, when I first started in pictures, things came too easy for me. The second picture I .ever worked in, for Universal, they made a star of me. That's absolutely the worst thing that can happen to a young actor.
"Did I think I was good? Ask me! Why, I thought I had this movie business in the palm of my hand. That nobody could teach little Jack Mulhall anything. I was the curly-haired boy from Wappinger's Falls, and I. took it big.
"I didn't know then, what a fight it is to keep your popularity, once you've got it. I'd been given an average amount of intelligence at birth, I guess, but I certainly wasn't using it in those days. If I had worked then, the way I work now, every minute when I'm in front of the camera, I'd be as rich as Harold Lloyd today. He was an extra man, working around the lot in those days. None of us dreamed what a talented actor and shrewd business man he'd turn out to be.
No Other Suit and No Overcoat
"T remember one time — this may sound funny to you but it was a tragedy to me then — one time Hal Cooley borrowed my 'other suit' without bothering to ask me for it. I had had a swell overcoat and someone stole it from my dressing-room just a little while before the suit disappeared. I'll tell you, when I opened that closet door and found my entire wardrobe had disappeared, I thought it was the end of the world for me. An actor has to have some clothes, you know. He can't go along indefinitely with just one suit and no overcoat.
"And there were members of my family dependent on me. That's what made it so hard. It wasn't as though I had no re
sponsibility except for myself. Gee, I was low.
"When Hal brought the suit back, I didn't know whether to kiss or kill him. But in the end we got a laugh out of it.
"I remember the first car I ever had. Who doesn't ? I drove it up to the house as a surprise for my wife. That was my first wife. She died, later, and I was left alone with the responsibility of raising my little boy, as you know.
"But — oh, yes, about the car. I insisted on taking my wife for a ride. She didn't want to go, and no wonder. It was a second-hand car, the seats were 'way up high, and it snorted in all directions. Well, we chugged through Hollywood in a cloud of smoke, and then the darn thing stalled on that grade out by the Los Angeles Country Club. It was a case of a fellow making his wife walk home from an automobile ride.
"Serious things, and funny things — a lot of them have happened to me.
"After a while I got some pretty good engagements. The Talmadge girls were always awfully nice to me. I made several pictures with them.
"But for a long time I was just a leading man. Then First National co-starred me with Dorothy Mackaill. The fans liked those pictures, and when I've finished 'The Butter and Egg Man,' Dorothy and I are going to make another picture together.
Being Himself
"You sa-id a kittle while ago that I'm more like my real self in these recent comedy-dramas I've been doing, than I ever was before. I guess that's true. I am playing myself on the screen, now. Until I tried it, I didn't know that people wanted me that way.
"But it's the hardest work I ever did, and don't let anyone fool you. You see, you're more or less unconscious of your own personality. You do or say this and that because it's natural to you. But when you get in front of a camera, everything