Screenland Plus TV-Land (Jul 1959 - May 1960)

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MONEY BACK GUARANTEE I Good condition, ready to wear. "Price includes all 8 dresses! FREE GIFT WITH EVERY ORDER! Send $1 deposit now! Pay postman balance plus C.O.D. and postage. No order accepted without $1 deposit WEAR-WELL MAIL ORDER CO. 63 SUFFOLK ST., DEPT. PP6, NEW YORK 2, N. Y. RUSH 8 DRESSES ond FREE GIFT for promptness. $1 deposit enclosed. I pay postman balance plus C.O.D. and postage. Children's Dresses, 1-6X, 8 for $3.45 Children's Dresses, 7-14, 8 for $3.95 Ladies Dresses, 9-15, 12-20, 38-44, 14'/j-24'/j, 8 for $3.95 Extra Large Sizes, 8 for $4.25 NAME ADDRESS AGE CITY STATE Ladies Size. .Children's Size FREE) Telli ho* lo oot HOME ADDRESSES, BIRTHDAYS, and PHOTOS ol STARS HOMES. Send only !5f lot handling ( 3 photos for 25< ). Ruih lo; HOLLYWOOD FILM STAR CENTER SCR. Snntti Monica. Californii WRINKLES GONE! LOOK MANY YEARS YOUNGER TEMPORARY WRINKLE REMOVER— This is the sensational liquid that you heard beauty editors rave about. It won't banish i wrinkles forever BUT we ' do say it will remove I tf /)v wrinkles for a period of AN» ) ^^0*/ about 6 to 8 hours — X^J' m_l_ _ (wonderful for that special date). Works instantly. CDCPIAI nxtXDI Return this ad with $1 and receive ortUIAL UrrtK! a regular $2.50 bottle prepaid. LECHLER, 560 Broadway, P-9, New York SWAP PHOTOS Best possible reproductions of your favorite snapshot, portrait or negative. 30*1 00 65 for $2.00 [Include 25c for packing & mailing] SO WELCOME TO GIVE AND TO GET FULL WALLET SIZE 2W BY 354" BEAUTIFUL DOUBLE WEIGHT SILK PAPER "Moil your oriainol between cardboard GROSS COPY CO. w; Kansas City 10, Mo. 61 UNHAPPY REBEL continued wrinkle, the first gray hair. 'How many more years will I be able to work?' she asks. 'Then what?' Kim has been disturbed, too, by her parents' dislike for acting as a profession for their daughter. "I never could see that sort of business," plump Mrs. Novak told a reporter in Chicago. "I still can't.'" And tight-lipped Joe Novak, a railroad clerk says, "It's all well and good that she's at her best right now, but imagine, say five or ten years from now. What'll it be then? I would just as soon have her living here in Chicago and married to a truck driver. Kim is good to us, but sometimes I don't understand her. Take the last time I visited her in her new house. Most of the time she was on the telephone or talking to her interior decorator about a new fireplace. 1 took some pictures of the house and played with her Siamese cat. Finally, I just left. T didn't want to bother her too much. She works terribly hard and she has such a lot on her mind. I wish she'd come back to Chicago and get married so we can see her and maybe play with the grandchildren. I know she's got a good job out there, but she can get a good job here in Chicago, too." BUT Mr. Novak is not reckoning with his daughter's overpowering ambition — she's already had a niche built in her new den for a future Oscar — nor with the fanatic discipline with which she attacks her work. A stickler for self-improvement, Kim has amazed those who have watched her progress. "I'm taking acting lessons as often as I find the time, and I work with my coach on the set constantly," she confided. "My mother never taught me to run faster and faster and try harder and harder with each small success no more than a challenge to the next effort. Mother just wanted me to be happy. But I can't. I'm constituted differently. I've always got to top myself or I'll drown. The bigger a success is, the more worries it brings." Though Kim has been assured that she's done her best acting so far in her newest film, "Middle Of The Night." costarring with one of the nation's most distinguished actors, Fredric March, the sad-eyed actress refuses to believe it. Delbert Mann, the director, picked Kim over such candidates as Jean Simmons, Hope Lange and Eva Marie Saint, and he says he is not sorry. "Kim can act," he declared. "She's warm and friendly, and needs only to be given a fair chance." In her dealings with the press over both her flamboyant love affairs and friendships with men, Kim feels definitely that she hasn't been given a fair chance. After headlines of her affair with the "unattached" son of the Dominican dictator, photos of his wife and six children back home, hints of her friendship with entertainer Sammy Davis, Jr., dates with married director Richard Quine, and interest in a married co-star. Kim burst into h familiar flood of tears. "I'm fed up here with all this," she cried, "just, f. up. I'm so tired I could just about d because I haven't been able to sleep. La hight I woke up crying and that's the w; it's been so many nights after all tho crazy rumors about me started. Reporte are always rooting for the underdog ( the way up, but they pick on and try destroy someone who has already arrive Nothing is private. You'd be amazed the questions inquisitive reporters ha dared to ask me and my parents." And Kim was just as annoyed at h studio's big brass for their attitude towa the men she dated. "It would seem," sa a studio insider, "that Kim deliberate -chooses men her studio disapproves c Possibly it's a weapon Kim uses in reb< lion against the restrictions placed on h freedom. I don't believe there is anythii to all these so-called romances. Kim is tremendously dependent girl, filled wi grave doubts about her acting ability, full-time star who still carries with her bag of frustrations, fears, self-doubts ai anxieties. By nature and the tremendo pressures put upon her, Kim is mela choly, troubled; she rarely smiles, seldo laughs — but when she does, like a chil she's the loudest laugher in the room With no effect at all, Kim generates kind of sex appeal -that is strangely ra in a town where sex is a major produ< She moves in a kind of rapt trance whi fairly oozes sex. All this is or was not lc on her long list of suitors — Mac Krii Mario Bandini, Aly Khan, Dr. Erne Wynder, Frank Sinatra, John Ireland, J< Chandler, Bob Evans, General Trujill "Baby" Pignatari and Cary Grant. Kim simply and honestly volunteers: like men. What I want most out of life to love and be loved. Since I can't fii everything I want in one man, I go o with many men. Each man I go with f fills a different need in me. Until I man I'll view variety as the spice of life Kim sighed, and continued. "If only knew what would make me happy! T, trouble is that I want the kind of lo/ that probably doesn't exist. Perhaps tha one of the reasons I put off marriage, keep thinking of that whole world of m who haven't yet come into my life." When Kim sailed for France to attei the Cannes Film Festival she admitt that she hoped to forget career worri and have herself a ball. And this she m< certainly did. It's the opinion of a Beverly Hi psychiatrist that "this is a girl who is st swimming in a lavender whirlpool. At t moment she is still too immature, u consciously too much in love with herst to marry anybody." Kim's father has predicted that she marry in about four years when she s ; But Kim herself gives her best Mona Li smile and says, "One never knows. I do make any predictions about the future n do I go back and review the past. I li only for the moment." C'