Hollywood (1941)

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• • • * * * • * * * • • • • • * • * * * * • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • * • * • • • • • ©C1B 481965 Published in this space every month The greatest star of the screen! Good morning! We hope you've had a Happy New Year. • • • • We bring you a recipe to start 1941 off right. • • • • It's "The Philadelphia Story". Let us tell you about it. • • • • Once upon a time (are you sitting comfortably on my knee?) there was a girl who was good in the Three R's. • • • • Je She was Rich, Rare and Racy. *i*tzi, • * • • 3*-S She also was a Ravishing Redhead. • • • • She was claimed by three men. They were the Three H's. Hero, He-man, and Heel. • • • • ^jfa They were all Handsome. (lV\'s The Three H's loved the Ravishing Redhead. They wooed her on horseback, in swimming pools and at champagne parties. • • • • They Fought for her, Flew to her and Framed her. It all happened in Filadelphia. • • • • Now that's just a hint of the most delightful New Year's gift you or your friends or your family ever got. • • • • We cannot open the book further on "The Philadelphia Story". You must see it, not hear about it. You cannot afford to miss Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn and James Stewart. 3T* values — Hepburn Paraphrasing the well-known poem, only God can make a trio like that. • • • • "The Philadelphia Story" (shh!) is directed by the incomparable George Cukor. M-G-M's own Joseph Mankiewicz is the producer. • • * * Now there are many plus think of adding to Grant, and Stewart— in the cast. • * • • For example — in fact, for six examples —Ruth Hussey, John Howard, Roland Young, John Halliday, Mary Nash and Virginia Weidler. • • • • Endowed with a script by Donald Ogden Stewart from the well-known Broadway hit by Philip Barry, M-G-M proudly, buoyantly, happily S*"*^ ' T-, * * ^ "The Philadelphia Story" -Lea. Another Metro -GoldwynMayer advertisement for "The Philadelphia Story" appears on page 5. W. H. "BUZZ" FAWCETT, JR., President JOAN VOTSIS, Editor Table of Contents EXCLUSIVE STORIES From Ugly Duckling To Movie Knockout (Rita Hayworth) ...by Gene Schrott What Happens To Mickey Rooney's Movie Salary by Louis Reid Dashing Desi (Desi Arnaz) by John Corwin Burt Screen's Cream Puff Goes Dramatic (Olivia de Havilland) by Charles Samuels Hollywood Reclaims Betty (Betty Grable) by Erskine Johnson "The Wagons Roll At Night" (Humphrey Bogart-Sylvia Sidney) by Joan Leslie Hollywood Hoyden (Susanna Foster] by Lupton A. Wilkinson "Come Live With Me" (Hedy Lamarr-James Stewart) by Helen Hover Why Stars Walk Out by George Howard "Western Union" (R. Scott-Virg. Gilmore-Bob Young) by E. J. Smithson 25 26 28 30 31 36 38 PICTORIAL FEATURES Edgar Bergen's Suppressed Desire Party 10 Clark Gable-Vivien Leigh Portrait 19 Lombard Is At It Again! [Mr. and Mrs. Smith) 34 Durbin Dazzlers 49 MONTHLY SPECIALS Hollywood Newsreel by Duncan Underbill 8 Important Pictures by Joan Votsis 14 Movie Memos by The Editor 15 Facial Inventory (Beauty) by Ann Vernon 16 Presto-Chango! (Fashions) by Candida 32 Say It With Cookies (Cooking) by Betty Crocker 40 Movie Crossword 52 Movie Masquerade 57 Shopping Guide 60 J HOLLYWOOD is published monthly by Fawcett Publications, Inc.. 11(10 \V. Broadway, Louisville, Ky. Printed in V. S. A. Advertising and Editorial Offices, Paramount Building, 1501 Broadway, New York, [Z Y. Hollywood Editorial Offices, 8553 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif. General Offices. Fawcett Building. Greenwich. Conn. Eliott D. Odell, Advertising Director; Itoscoe K. Fawcett, Circulation Director; Ralph Daigh, Editorial Director; Al Allard, Art Director; E. .1. Smithson, Western Manager. Entered as second-class matter at the pdst office at Louisville, Ky., under the act of March 3, 1S/9. Additional entry at Greenwich, Conn. Copyright 1910 by Fawcett Publications, Inc. Reprinting in whole or in part forbidden except by permission of the publishers. Title registered in the TT..S. Patent' Office. Address manuscripts to New Y'ork Editorial Offices. Not responsible for lost manuscripts or photos. Unacceptable contributions will be returned, if accompanied by sufficient first class postage. Price 5c per copy, subscription price 50c per year in V. S. and possessions. Canadian subscriptions not accepted. Foreign subscriptions SI. 50. Foreign subscriptions and sales should be remitted by International Money Order in United States funds, payable at Greenwich, Conn. Advertising forms close ISth of third month preceding date of issue. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS