Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1933)

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96 Money Savers! Ceneral Electric leads in the manufacture of lamps for use in the production of motion pictures, just as it has led for thirty years in the development and improvement of lamps for all other lighting purposes . . . making them give more light for the same amount of current. We invite you to huy Edison Mazda Lamps because they are good . . . because lamps marked (M) don't waste current, as so many inferior "cheap" lamps do . . . because they make electricity an even more economical servant. When you buy Edison Mazda Lamps you get a reaZbargain — because these lamps continue to give you } our money's worth of light throughout their entire life. For good tttflit at low cost EDISON MAZDA LAMPS Photoplay Magazine for July, 1933 Immediately gossip said that she had had a row with the studio, that she was returning to the stage, that she had a sweetheart in New York. None of these things was true. More recently, she threw the whole studio into a panic over her refusal to make "No Man of Her Own" with Clark Gable. Shades of Hollywood! Gable was the world's great lover of the moment, and most feminine stars would have bartered their birthright for the chance of playing opposite him. For Hollywood, and its hard working men and women, are just as susceptible to any personality that comes up over the horizon as are the inhabitants of the country's most obscure village. Miriam's reasons for refusing to make " Xo Man of Her Own" were definite and sensible, according to her light. She felt the part was utterly unsuited to her, and voluntarily went off salary for many weeks while the studio engaged Carole Lombard for the part. But ugly rumor again reared its head and declared that Miriam's real complaint was based on a couple of scene-stealing episodes which would fall to the lot of Dorothy Mackaill in the picture. \ A IRIAM never took the trouble to deny it, •'•"■'■or anything else that was said. She never makes explanations. " Your friends do not need them and your enemies do not believe them," she says. It was the same with her marriage and divorce from Austin Parker, and subsequent adoption of a small baby boy. These things kept Hollywood guessing for months. Recently we talked of this. "I have to lead my life as it seems right for me, not how it will please others," she said. "I want to live actively, not passively. Happiness is one phase of life. We do not know where we shall find it; in marriage, or friendship, or motherhood. Only through joy and GENERAL ELECTRIC General Electric manufactures lamps for all lighting purposes . . . lamps for home lighting an J decoration, automobiles, flashlights, photography, stores, offices and factories, street lighting and signs. Sunlight lamps, too . . . General Electric Company, Nela Park, Cleveland, Ohio. sorrow can we develop. I am willing to experience life, to feel, in order that I may think clearly. Life is exalting, however, under any circumstances." "LJTUXGER is a great driving force, whether -* -*-it be for food to nourish the body, or for the soul's stimulation. I feel that Miriam Hopkins is hungry for the things in life which come through the development of the finer sensibilities. It is slightly ironical that this should be so, when there is no one on the screen more capable of portraying voluptuous chastity, or voluptuousness not so chaste, as Miriam Hopkins. More apple carts to the four winds. We strolled out into the garden where the baby was basking in the sun with his nurse. Michael is adorable beyond description. Brown as a chestnut, with broad shoulders and sturdy legs, just beginning to pull himself up with the aid of a chair. That day, only an infinitesimal pair of green knitted trunks covered his small person. Miriam has had him since he was ten days old. She denies, laughingly, that she has any great maternal instinct, but the way she holds him and looks at him speaks her adoration of him more forcibly than any words could do. "There are several advantages in having an adopted child," she answered to a question of mine. "In the first place, I couldn't possibly have had one of my own as perfect as the precious one I found. Furthermore, it gives me an advantage over real mothers. Xot being part of me, it's perfectly proper for me to rave over the beauty of him all I want to. And have you ever seen anything so lovely?" I looked at Miriam bending over the baby and realized that despite the fresh looking youth of her, the twinkling eyes and tumbled hair, that here was a woman capable of living life right down to its palpitating depths; and that she would so live it. International They'll probably be married when you read this— Doris Kenyon Sills, widow of Milton Sills, and Arthur Hopkins of Syracuse, N. Y., where both used to live. Doris is resuming screen work after a short retirement. Here you see them holding one of their congratulatory telegrams