Hollywood (Jan - Mar 1943)

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AS HE DREAMED OF FINDING YOU! rink 'S^T THAT J^£4i4tlL p\ SOMETHING IS IRRESISTIBLE PERFUME it ^^F It's like the magic of moonlight, only it's more lasting! It's a poise-stirring, AA heart-catching, unforgettable fraWW grance because it was blended with youth in mind. Wear Irresistible Perfume tonight! You owe it to him if he's in love with you . . . and to yourself if you want him to be! Enchanting valentine package. 10c at 5 and 10c stores everywhere Hollywood Newsreel [Continued from page 15] i Iffl '< use IRRESISTIBLE upstick I Brilliant new reds and ruby ■.J tones. The lipstick that's wwf-TBH to stay on longer .5* ... s-m-o-o-t-h-e-r ... 10c ■ Director Bruce Humberstone wanted to recreate on the screen for Hello, Frisco, Hello a scene common in the 1900's — the interested reaction of the street corner gang watching a shapely lass climbing aboard a street car and exposing a good deal of leg. He had the girl, Alice Faye, who had the legs. And he had the street car. But Miss Faye's costumes were a little too much for him. They were too long and too voluminous. What to do? The street car steps were raised four inches. Alice climbed higher. The scene was perfect. | It was a personal triumph when Barbara Stanwyck gave a brief closing speech at the Hollywood Canteen the other night. Ever since she was a kid, she's shied from spontaneous speechmaking and no star in Hollywood has passed up more bows in this department. Seems she can't forget the time she was chosen to give her eighth grade gradua tion address. She learned the speech letter-perfect. But when she faced the audience, she became so self-conscious she just said, "Silence is golden," and sat down. Unfilmed drama: A scene is completed and Bette Davis retires to her pastel-pink portable dressing room while electricians set up new lighting effects. A workman in overalls approaches her door, hesitates a moment, then raps. He carries a small baby in his arms. Bette comes to the door, wearing horn-rimmed glasses, hugging a copy of the script, and frowning at being interrupted. "Dave!" she cries. "And that's your baby. Bring him in. Let me see him. How old is he? How wonderful! How thoughtful of you! May I hold him? Oh, I don't care if he does." I Here's the topper in how-to-become a-movie-star. On the advice of her first dramatic teacher, Laraine Day used Mournful-faced Arthur Treacher and Barry Fitzgerald get a last-minute going over by producer Bruce Manning for a scene in Universal's new picture, The Amazing Mrs. Holliday, while the star, Deanna Durbin, intently looks on. Nolte ingenious foot-gear worn to prevent noise from disrupting sound track 16