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

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

■r general." His time-mechanism is off dchronization and Jerry thinks he has ived during the Civil War. However, :e he makes contact with present day thlings Fred Clark, Joan Blackman, rl Holliman, Lee Patrick and Gale rdon, the action really starts. Possessed powers far exceeding mortal man, ry can tune in on thoughts, is protected an invisible barrier, and can disinteite anything with a mere flick of an brow. Yet with all these superhuman ents, old Jere is himself pulverized by thing more lethal than a sweaterful of an. One of the choicer Lewis comedies, is for a time at least gives him a chance I straight comedy before slapstick and iiyhem take over. (Paramount.) The Third Voice ¥THEN a business tycoon tosses over /V secretary-mistress Laraine Day for a [-year-old society beauty, a diabolical heme is launched. As Laraine's assistit, Edmund O'Brien, looking exceptionly well in his new trim physique, under|kes a few of the heavier chores involved i.ch as sinking a lead-weighted body f the shores of Mexico. He also is enlisted with the financial returns. That Laraine's first mistake. For reasons ;st know to him, O'Brien latches on Julie London, a tempting package ith hidden surprise, though you wouldn't now it from the clothes she doesn't wear, ince this is the sort of thriller that saves s Sunday punch for a flashy finale, make ire you see this from the beginning. 20th Century-Fox.) The Snow Queen ^ULL-LENGTH cartoon that uses vivid poster paint colors in telling another f Hans Christian Andersen's stories. With the voices of Sandra Dee and ommy Kirk, this is a lesson in the wonrous powers of true love. After the icy now Queen of the North abducts a little ioy, his playmate goes through a kaleidocope of strange experiences before rescung him. Depending on the age of the hild watching, these flights of the imagilation can range from being downright Tightening to just plain enjoyable. Scatered throughout are the inevitable songs hat somehow sound much like ones you've leard before. All in all, though this is ut from exactly the same pattern as other artoons, it still manages through color md characters to be quite enjoyable. { Universal-International. ) Can-Can BOISTEROUS, uninhibited Technicolored hoopla that's much more French than the ancestry of its two leading stars: Frank Sinatra and Shirley MacLaine. However, as a sop to authenticity, Louis Jourdan and Maurice Chevalier are also on hand in this sideshow of French "TUMMY TUCKER" For complete control, firm yet actionfree, you can't beat Tummy Tucker. Made by Lewella in clever power net Here's double insistence on a flat tummy, thanks to its unique inner support and efficient satin elastic front and back panels. In 3 lengths: Petite, Average, Tall. Panty, Girdle or Panty Brief, $3.99. Other Tummy Tucker models, $2.99 up. BRA: Broadcloth, ABC cups, about $1.50. AT STORES EVERYWHERE LEWELLA • FREE "Diet Guide". . .send stamped self-addressed envelope for 32 pg.. purse-size reference booklet. LEWEL MANUFACTURING CO., INC., DEPT. D , 180 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 16,N.Y. morals and romance. Incredible as it seems, there actually was a time when the French banned the shocking display called the can-can. Most strongly opposed is Judge Jourdan, but direct exposure to the can-canniest of them all, Shirley, in a rowdy exhibition of petticoats, garters and thighs, soon blasts him out of his silken cocoon. He even proposes marriage which is something Sinatra — heaven forbid — should ever do. Intrigued witli being respectable for a change. Shirley might have ended her career then and there if Sinatra and Chevalier hadn't muddled her rosy future. Based on the Broadway musical, this is lovely to look at, a delight to hear and has some of the zestiest French dressing in years. (20th Century-Fox.) Kidnapped LIFE in 18th Century Scotland, according to Robert Louis Stevenson. was a time of constant peril. Rebellions, greedy relatives, all sorts of cutthroats, and no psychiatrists. James Mai-Arthur becomes involved in much of these doings when he leaves home to claim his inheritance to a titled estate. Finding that murder fails to eliminate James. Uncle John his nephew kidnapped for continued on page 67 9 La has