Modern Screen (Dec 1948 - Oct 1949)

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i lEiif wmmm She thought that love was all that mattered — until she learned it's friendship that really makes a marriage. Doris Day won't be fooled a?ain! Doris with a fellow actor on the set of her newest, It's a Great Feeling. ■ She was 17, a small dark girl and, I noticed, quite shy. As an editor of her high school paper she had been interviewing me, and now we had come to the end of our talk. She put away her pad and pencil, stood up and was ready to go . . . but didn't. Instead, she leaned very close and, with troubled eyes asked, '"But what I really mean, Miss Day, is how can I get to be like you and the other singers? I mean, really. I'm not as attractive and I know I lack so much. ." . ." I could almost hear my own voice asking this same question. Because I had asked it. and others like it, when I was 17. And when I asked it, talking to singers with orchestras and girls performing in night clubs, I didn't get a good answer. I had tp learn for myself. But, I decided, now that I was being asked the question, I was going to answer it correctly. And I did. "You think you're not as attractive as I am," I began. "But what would you say if I told you that there are at least 10 things about you that I would terribly like to have?" She pulled away blushing, and her hand went touching here and there at her face in confusion. "Oh . . . you're Just . . . just being nice," she said. "All right, then," I went on. "I'll name them. I think they'll come to about 10." And I did name them. What I said was just between the two of us as women. And as I itemized her good points, the transformation that came over her was marvelous. You could (Continued on page 98) 24