The New Movie Magazine (Dec 1929-May 1930)

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The New Movie Magazine Romance is just around the corner ... if you first achieve beauty. Of course, the one great essential of true beauty is lovely hair. And lovely hair can always be yours. How? It is simple. These Jo-Cur Beauty Aids provide the answer for millions of women o-cuf for the Hair Jo-Cur Shampoo Concentrate produces a luxurious lather instantly. The greasy dusty film which ordinarily accumulates on the hair is removed like magic with Jo-Cur Shampoo. When that film is removed the hair is left soft, silky and easy to finger-wave. For years, women have wanted the ideal finger-waving liquid — one which would set natural-looking waves, be easy to use, and would leave the hair "feeling right." Today, millions of women recogaize Jo-Cur Waveset as the one perfect finger-waving liquid. . Then, Jo-Cur Brilliantine adds the finishing touch to the coiffure. A little Jo-Cur Brilliantine brushed over the hair gives a lovely sheen and brings out the natural beauty of every wave 4Mb Curran Laboratories Inc. 485 East 133rd Street New York, N.y. 118 Is that Jack or Lionel Barrymore at the left? No, you're wrong. It's Eddie Nugent doing an impersonation. At the right, Eddie as himself. They Do Their Bit (Continued from page 49) screen, or an eagle screaming, or a donkey braying, or a bee buzzing, or a giraffe — what do you call the sort of noise a giraffe makes? — squealing, perhaps, the chances are a good many to one that you're imagining things. Because horses and roosters and frogs and crickets and other animals and fowls and insects used in motion pictures cannot be depended upon to do their vocal stuff at the right moment and with the proper amount of dramatic emphasis, their "voices" are often doubled. And that's just where the count fits into the talking picture. USING only his vocal chords, he can produce any sound, from the song of a lovesick mosquito to the rumble of an earthquake. The sea waves you heard in "Condemned," the hurricane, the swamp noises, the frogs, goats, parrots, monkeys and the rest of the sounds — can all be checked up to Count Cutelli. He also sang the dog's serenade in Maurice Chevalier's "The Love Parade." He has just been signed to double the "voices" of animated cartoon characters. He also is a soloist on the Italian zither, but this is one noise which, so far, no director has permitted him to produce on a set. Gaetano Mazzaglia, to use his family name, is a real Italian count whose ancestors began serving the Italian crown seven hundred years ago. JOYZELLE, French-Spanish daughter of a Louisiana plantation owner, has specialized in dancing-acting roles. Joyzelle Joynier — she never uses her full name — was nine before she saw a train. At thirteen she was living at Pensacola and thrilling audiences with 100-foot dives. She learned to dance to the tune of her father's violin on the plantation. She has never had a dancing lesson. Jack Ryan has specialized in "cop" parts. He estimates that he has played at least 1500 police officer roles during his screen career, which dates from the time he was discharged from the Fourth Division, 127th Aero Squadron, at the close of the war. Previous to the war he spent fourteen years on the New York police force. Fred Kelsey is another noted screen policeman. ALLEN D. SEWELL has arrested . enough screen crooks to fill twentyfive state penitentiaries. Punishment of law-breakers, fictional or otherwise, comes naturally to Sewell who is a direct descendant of Samuel Sewell, stern first chief justice of Massachusetts. Risking his life to provide thrills for jaded motion picture theater goers is J. Gordon Carveth's specialty. He has done his share of airplane, automobile and motorcycle stunts, but possibly the most thrilling scene he played before a camera occured when he and Ray "Red" Thompson attempted to take a boat down the upper rapids of the Abercrombie Canyon on the Copper River in Alaska during the filming of "The Trail of '98." Thompson lost his life and Carveth was swept overboard but lived to tell the tale. In "Very Confidential" he paddled a canoe on Lake Arrowhead directly across the path of a speedboat traveling 40 miles an hour. He is the only man who has paddled a canoe down the Feather River Rapids and lived to mention it. He has done it twice and is willing to do it again — for $1,000. The ranks of these particular specialists in Hollywood comprise a select few. Mrs. Louis Emmons has been playing old hags and witches, and nothing else, Want to know how the Movie Stars give parties? Want to give a party in real Hollywood fashion? Read HOW HOLLYWOOD ENTERTAINS in THE NEW MOVIE every month.