Movie Classic (Mar-Aug 1936)

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Don't hesitate . . . always choose the lamps that stay brighter longer... You'll know them by this mark It is a scientific fact that lamps marked with the (^) monogram stay brighter longer than so-called "cheap" lamps. 480 checks and inspections in manufacture guard against the i mperfections found in poor lamps — imperfections resulting in dollars being wasted for current which is not converted into light. (jeneral Electric's research and development have resulted in lamps of greatly improved efficiency and lower price. Edison MAZDA lamps now cost as little as 15c — only 20c for the popular 100-watt size. For good light at low cost — for sight-saving light — always ask for these good lamps by name. EDISON MAZDA LAMPS GENERAL @ ELECTRIC What Your Favorites Are Doing — Now! [Continued from page 14] adorned with a ruff of chin whiskers, is the lighthouse keeper and Shirley is the ray of sunshine in his lonely existence. As usual, she will sing and dance — but one of her dance numbers tops any of her previous efforts. In it, she taps down a long circular staircase (it reaches from floor to ceiling of the huge sound stage) and with each step she recites her multiplication tables. Also present, disguised as a fisherman, is Buddy Ebsen, whose eccentric dancing in Broadway Melody of 1936 made such a hit. And you will get a "kick" out of Shirley's freckled boy-friend, Jerry Tucker. A Message to Garcia, co-starring Wallace Beery, John Boles and Barbara Stanwyck, is a red-blooded drama with a Spauish-American War background. Another big 20th Century-Fox picture in production is The Prisoner of Shark Island, which tells the dramatic and true story of Dr. Mudd. the tragically misunderstood man who sheltered John Wilkes Booth after Lincoln's assassination. In the title role is Warner Baxter. Opposite him is Gloria Stuart, George Raft, on loan from Paramount, is completing It Had to Happen, in which he sheds the "sinister" aura that has surrounded him, and has amusing misadventures with Leo Carrillo, not to mention Rosalind Russell. Paul Kelly, who has been making one of the greatest comebacks in film history, is on the verge of stardom in Black Gang, an unusual and interesting story — with the title role of Song and Dance Man his next. Irvin S. Cobb, the humorist, who proved himself an actor with his performance alongside the late Will Rogers in Steamboat 'Round the Bend, is now starring in Everybody's Old Man, with Rochelle Hudson as his leading lady. • At Paramount, three "super" productions— Mae West's new chuckle-fest, Klondike Lou, the new Gary Cooper-Marlene Dietrich picture, Desire, and the ambitious musical, Give Us This Night, starring Gladys Swarthout and Jan Kiepura — have just been finished. And The Trail of the Lonesome Pine is nearing completion. This picture, which has Sylvia Sidney, Fred MacMurray, Henry Fonda and Fred Stone in the four principal roles, is the first big dramatic picture to be filmed in color outdoors. And if the color and the drama both are good, watch for a succession of big color pictures ! Just starting is a murder mystery titled Preview, which has a movie studio locale, a cast that includes Gail Patrick, Reginald Denny, Rod La Rocque, Ian Keith and Conway Tearle. • And now to the Radio Pictures Studio, where Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers have just made the final scenes for follow the Fleet and Ann Harding and Herbert Marshall have just been co-starring in The Lady Consents. Anent Follozv the Fleet, jot down this very interesting note : Harriet Hilliard, the radio favorite who will make her screen debut as Ginger's sister, proved so outstanding in the few scenes originally allotted to her that her role has been built to major importance. The Lady Consents is another of those sophisticated, sparkling comedy-dramas with which both Ann Harding and Herbert Marshall always have been identified. On the same lot, Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey have just started a burlesque entitled The Wild West. Their fans will learn with regret that it may be their last movie for some time, as their contract is expiring and they plan a lengthy personal appearance tour. Also just starting is Katharine Hepburn's first historical picture, Mary of Scotland. • At Columbia, the biggest little studio in Hollywood, three noteworthy productions are just starting. Grace Moore is making her third picture for Columbia — Cissy, from a Viennese operetta of the same name, in which Michael Bartlett is [Continued on page 60] Photo by Rhodes. CLASSIC Photographer Time out for relaxation! Three of the shapely chorines in Anything Goes, the new Bing Crosby musical (just completed), find three different ways of resting. Our candid cameraman performed a feat, getting on the guarded set 16 Movie Classic for March, 1936