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

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your old habits Today's smart girls never let time-of-themonth interfere with fun and freedom. Why do you? Why do you insist on clinging to old, uncomfortable, undainty ways of sanitary protection? Choose the modern way — the Tampax way. Tampax never chafes or binds. Never betrays itself. Never causes odor. Made of pure surgical cotton, its special shield never lets your fingers touch it. What could be daintier for changing and disposal? And, it's so easy to learn how to use. So convenient to carry extras. It's time you grow up to the idea of Tampax® internal sanitary protection. Try it this month. Choose from three absorbencies : Regular, Super and Junior. Wherever drug products are sold. Made only by Tampax Incorporated, Palmer, Massachusetts. Invented by a doctor — now used by millions of women HOLLYWOOD LOWDOWN • Is the stork calling again on Marilyn Monroe? • Elvis to head straight for Hollywood IF THE Brigitte Bardot baby is a girl, she will send her back. B.B. has her heart set on a boy and she^wants to call him Nicholas — that's what she told visiting American-from-Paris star, Eddie Constantine. . . . Dope as a subject is on the Hollywood film agenda again. There's Shelley Winter's "Epitaph For George Dillon", and "Confessions Of An Opium Eater", and an excellent documentary from Canada, "Monkey On My Back"— same title as Cameron Mitchell's movie about drugs. Bobby Darin — and be sure to spell that with one r — is in love with a singer in New York but won't marry her because he says he is not yet secure in his career. I had a long talk with Bobby and this Dream Lover-Mack The Knife didn't seem the 'afraid' type to me. I guess he's not in love enough. . . . Jean Simmons, who never stops working, is fed up with so many partings from husband Stewart Granger and will refuse pictures that keep them apart for too long. You'll see a whole slewful of walkouts when the current contracts for top TV western stars are completed. Bob Horton has decided he will not sign again whet "Wagon Train" reaches the end of the lint in 1961. And ditto for Chester, Dennis Weaver, who only has one more seasor to go with "Gunsmoke". . . . When Elvis Presley comes a-marching home in March he'll head straight for dear old Hollywood after a stopover in New York for som< big TV spots. He'd like to meet Fabian who looks like his first cousin. Doris Day wasn't too happy over th( ads for her "Pillow Talk" with Rocls Hudson. There was Rock surrounded b) four girls, Doris was one of them. And as the top lady at the box-office, she rated i better spot. . . . Ingrid Bergman has agreed to come to Hollywood to make i film next winter. Paris can be very cole through December to April — colder ever than Rossellini across a crowded court room. . . . Jerry Lewis says only nic< things about ex-partner Dean Martin. No so Dean. Why? ... I'd like to see Dear break loose a bit from The Clan. It's fine and dandy to make pictures and ap pear all the time with Clan Pal Franl Sinatra. But not all the time, especiall) on each other's TV shows. . . . Brothei continued on page I EDDIE Fisher busses Liz Taylor before a performance at New York's Waldorf-Astoria. DANCING at a ball at the Cocoanut Crovi are Donna Reed and husband Tony Owen