Screenland Plus TV-Land (Nov 1953 - May 1955)

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SUPER COLOR Give your hair n | g g glorious new color... surely, easily, safely with temporary Noreen, the color rinse which looks so natural and stays so effectively till shampooed out. Choose from 14 shades the one you need to make drab hair radiant, cover unwanted gray, or beautify all-gray or white hair. Noreen is different from any coloring you've ever tried. ..and inexpensive, too! what hollywood itself is talking about! (CONTINUED) Pretty Kathleen Hughes is escorted to gala premiere by Charles FitzSimons. Jack Benny, George Burns, Bob Hope on hand for Runyon Fund baseball game. Richard Allen, Constance Smith, Mitzi Gaynor, Jack Bean at the ballet party. buzzing was the huge party John Carroll and Lucille Ryman flung at their beautiful farm in Chatsworth. Not only was the party a great success and fun, but there was also much excitement when John Payne and Sandy Curtis announced their engagement to the 400 people at the ball. Sandy, a very attractive and sweet girl, was once married to Alan Curtis, who died recently. Then the real bomb came when John and Lucille announced that they were parting company for good this time. They've had a fewseparations before but they say it's now for keeps and all their friends hope it's not true. The outdoor barbecue, with tables around the huge swimming pool, was a spectacular affair. We all sat on bales of hay and some of the kids on the hay were Arlene Dahl and Fernando Lamas, Greg Bautzer and Mari Blanch ard, Betty Reilly and Mike Connolly, Elaine Stewart, Gig Young with the lovely Mala Powers, Carole Mathews and Richard Gully. Two of the most active dancers in the huge living room were Jack Warner ( who checked his dignity at the door and just had plain ole fun ) jivin' it up with Mona Knox and Herbert Esther Williams and Ben Gage having themselves a time at Cocoanut Grove. J. Yates, head of Republic Studios, who danced with practically every gal there and between times went around shooting in everybody's ear with an outet space gun, while his wife, Vera Ralston, maintained the dignity of the family. Biggest opening night Charley Morrison's Mocambo has ever had was when Charley's protegee, Joanne Gilbert, returned for her second engagement at the club. People practically had to sit piggyback. Big excitement when Joan Crawford and Charles Walters walked in with a huge party, including Bob and Toots O'Donnell who had freshly arrived from their Interstate Theatre Circuit headquarters in Dallas. The whole gang had been to the sneak preview of Joan's new picture, "Torch Song," which Chuck Walters directed, choreographed, and appeared in as Joan's dance partner (how talented can a boy get!). Joan's singing all her own songs in the picture and don't let anybody tell you different. Where were we? Oh, yep — at the Mo, hearing Joanne Gilbert sing like divine. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 12)