Modern Screen (Dec 1949 - Nov 1950)

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For your enchanted moments— at last a lipstick that will not smear... at last a lipstick of such exquisite texture that it goes on easier and stays on longer than any you have ever used. Thenew, exclusiveTangee formula makes all this possible for the first time. In Tangee Pink Queen and six other enchantingshades. THE 'J/J anaee L/P^y ST/CK It was strictly cowboy stuff at Alana Ladd's birthday party — complete with Roy Rogers as guest of honor and a western movie. Here Alan, Dusty Rogers and Roy give young Miss Ladd some help opening a mighty big present from an admirer. all the rest of them. "Sure dolls the place up," he beamed. No wonder everybody is so crazy about that guy. One of the most "different" parties this month was held backstage at the little Las Palmas theater after a flock of movie stars opened in Light Up The Sky and a lot more movie stars sparkled in the audience. Guy Madison was the star of the stage show with Benay Venuta and Jean Parker as his leading ladies — and all their friends were out front to cheer them on. That is — everybody but Gail Russell, Guy's wife. She was quite conspicuous by her absence, but these two still have their battles — and perhaps this was another feudin' spell. Betty Hutton, Benay Venuta's close friend, laughed so loudly at her antics that some of Benay's funniest lines were lost — but nobody minded. That Betty is a show in herself whether she is on stage or in the audience. She was with Milt Pickman, a beau she alternates with Bob Sterling. But I think Betty will think a long time before she gets serious about anyone. Joan Evans, in the front row, with her parents and a young socialite, was in her daring decolletage, as usual. For a fifteenyear-old girl, Joan sure wears 'em low. From the back, she looked like she must be wearing a bathing suit. (For another discussion about the appropriateness of Joan's clothes see page 44.) Joan Caulfield, in a beautiful pink dress, held hands all through the play with Frank Ross. They are soooo in love and Joan is just blooming now that she's Mrs. Ross. When the show was over — about fifty invited guests trooped backstage for a champagne supper on stage — and since the set represented a swanky hotel suite, it was all very comfortable and lots of fun. Kirk Douglas is one of the most amiable guys I know. Very few things annoy him. But Kirk has a red hot mad on at press agents for nightclub cafes who couple his name with "phony" dates and even girls he has never set eyes on. Kirk says, "This is an abuse that has been going on for ages. Most actors just shrug and let it go. But not me! I'm going to raise hell about it!" (and he didn't apologize about that heM). "In order for the cafes to get mention in the columns they pretend that certain well known movie couples were there 'holding hands and gazing into each other's eyes.' If you date the same girl for several weeks, you are no longer a good new 'twosome'. So what do they do but make up a date for you — sometimes another actress, more often than not, a girl you've never set eyes on who can use the publicity! "There is plenty of harm done. For instance, my name was in the columns last week as dating a different girl in a different cafe every night of the week. I've got news for you, and them. I haven't got that much vitality and I don't like night clubs that much. "As for the ladies I'm supposed to be with — I'm sure they are all very charming but I don't intend to be made to appear like a nitwit of a playboy in the public's eyes just because some newcomer needs a little publicity. "That's my story — and I'm going to insist on it." * * * Bette Davis is the talk of the All About Eve troupe on location in San Francisco — she is having such a good time and is in such wonderful spirits. The company is working in the old Curran Theater and between scenes Bette puts on Charleston records and gives with some hot steps from that revived old dance. How different from the Bette of six months ago who was little Miss Gloom herself. Then, she was miserable with worry about her marriage to William Grant Sherry. Now that their troubles are aired and out in the open, she is like a person who has successfully come through an operation and is on the road to recovery. Bette still is nervous about going to public places even though her lawyer hired a bodyguard for her. So she and Anne Baxter take turns hostessing suppers in their hotel suites.