Hollywood (Jan - Mar 1943)

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.

GRIP-TUTH, the modern Hairtainer — its spring teeth hold every type of hair-do in place. Hairtainers give you that secure feeling. Especially good for defense workers whose loose strands of hair must be held in place. Sold at all leading beauty salons, department stores and chains. Card of two small, or card of one large retainer: 25c. GRIP-TUTH : Diadem, Inc., Leominster, Mass., Dept. 74 Nu-Hesire Surgical Dressings, by our affiliated company, are one of our contributions to National Defense Do your part . . . Buy War Bonds today! CORNS GO wfUU YOU ca/t/w on! Doctor's 4-Way Relief Acts Instantly LOSE no time these precious days! Dr. 'Scholl's Zino-pads speedily relieve your misery from corns and gently remove them — while you carry on! 'Instantly stop tormenting shoe friction; lift painful pressure; make you truly foot-happy. NOTE: If corns have formed, use the separate Medications supplied for removing them. For sore toes from tight shoes, the pads alone will give you immediate relief — another advantage of Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads over old-time caustic liquids and plasters. At Drug, Shoe, Dept. Stores. Cost but a trifle. D?SchollsZinopads Checkered Career John Deal's up-and-down screen career is a result of his weakness for the footlights. He can't refuse a good play. He's in Warner Brothers' Edge of Darkness By GLORIA BRENT B The early struggles of most young Hollywood actors might be copies of the same blueprint — they run so much alike. There are years of study; years on short rations and living in tents or shacks while working in Little Theaters; and years of discouragement while trying to land parts. John Beal's career has been different. He had tough going at first, but won recognition relatively early and was proclaimed a splendid actor in both New York and Hollywood. But John Beal has had one of the most up-and-down careers since then in the history of the movies. It was ten years ago, when John was a senior at the University of Pennsylvania, that he received his first screen test offer as the result of his roles in Mask and Wig production there. The offer came from Warners, but he did not take it, preferring stage experience first. Now, a decade later, he is playing his first Warner role, as Ann Sheridan's brother, in Edge of Darkness. He's glad he waited, for it's just the type role he likes, a young character part. What's more, now 33 and looking younger, he's delighted that he was turned down recently when mentioned for a juvenile part. "They said I was 'too old.' Now I know I'm getting what I want. I'll never have to worry again that some casting department will try to make me a juvenile," said Beal with Irish good-humor. '"It's hard to become a leading man or a character if you have been stamped as a juvenile," he added. He neglected to point out that it's harder to be a good young "character." John readily admitted that he slowed down his Hollywood career by returning each year to the New York stage, but he's not sorry That stage experience has graduated him to the parts he wants. "The disadvantage has been that Hollywood producers and directors have short memories. Each time I'd come back here I'd find I had been forgotten! Fans are just the opposite. It's incredible how loyal they are. Sometimes when I had been off the screen for a year they would write asking 'Why don't we see you? We miss you.' " John isn't dazzled by his present success. He remembers all too well the down curves on his career chart. He looks, back over the past decade objectively and with amusement. He can laugh at his own mistakes. He even admitted he likes being interviewed. With a gleam in his eyes and on his tongue the glibness of some ancestor who kissed the Blarney Storie, he said, "I've not been interviewed for so long that I'm having a wonderful time. You know, I spent the whole morning memorizing my list of plays and pictures, so I'd be able to rattle them off!" Since his childhood in Joplin, Missouri, it was a toss-up for John between interest 58