Actorviews (1923)

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28 Actorviews "I love you so!” which had been addressed to her by a child in the lobby of a movie theater, was so palpitatingly dramatic as to thrill me from spine to tear duct?) She had, Miss Ferguson told me, embraced the girl, and had got to know her mother and her father, and was of the belief that the girl would, if it were in her power, do anything in the world for the actress she had idealized and then realized. That was what she said to me in the next breath ; and it seemed to tell me that Elsie Ferguson, of the screen and of the stage, is even to herself the same romantic Elsie Ferguson she was to the stranger child. She not only acts and makes negatives of this romantic character, but she lives and believes it. It seemed to tell me that rich imagination and perfect beauty and lovely play-acting may be independent of a sense of humor.