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“ MOVIES ”
On this page: Gene Raymond with Ginger Rogers in “Flying Down to Rio”; with Carole Lombard in “Brief Moment”; with Fay Wray in “Ann Carver’s Profession”: with Frances Dee in “Coming Out Party”; with Dolores del Rio in “Flying Down to Rio”; and with Loretta Young in “Zoo in Budapest”.
them or repair old machines.
While he was playing in “Why Not’" with Marguerite Churchill he almost broke up the show when music floated through the queer box he called a radio. In Chicago while he was playing in “Young Sinners” he was always up at dawn. He fenced for two hours, had breakfast, and then went to a riding academy where he was learning to jump hurdles on horse back. This kept up for about three months, then one night after his performance at the theatre he dashed over to the riding academy and won a blue ribbon for himself on a four foot jump.
Another time he put in hours learning aquaplaning ... he plays a near professional game of tennis and is a pretty smart polo player and just because he is French but looks German he has acquired a fair knowledge of both these languages.
Gene is taking his first European vacation, only he doesn’t plan to make it a vacation. He is using it as a means to further his education and improve his ( Continued on page 44.)
tality demanding constant activity and change . . . which in its broader sense is life . . . and to top it all he is intensely ambi-' tious. He has set himself a goal and he means to score.
He has been setting himself goals to reach all his life. In his early youth he once conceived the idea of becoming an electrical engineer. Radios were responsible for it ... he was forever trying to make
get there 1 want to quit. At least that’s the way I feel about it now ; later 1 may feel differently but I don’t think so. I don’t want to see myself come back down the ladder it has taken me so long to climb. It seems to me the joy of success is in achieving, not in trying to make an endurance test of it.”
When you review Gene's life — so far — you are impressed with the fact that he has pretty much adhered to the ethics of this code. He believes that you are bound to get what you start out for if you make a sustained effort to do so. Preparation for any event in life, socially, artistically, athletically, etc., is the one necessary factor. Just as a parent must train a child to walk an individual must train his brain to think, his body to respond to the dictates of that mind and govern his life by system.
I’m not trying to make you believe that Gene Raymond is of a plodding temperament. He isn’t. He’s friendly and generous; he’s happy and even tempered with a distinctly individual laugh which explodes joyfully and spontaneously. He has an abounding vi