Modern Screen (Jan-Nov 1951)

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CREAM HAIR DRESSING makes your hair behave! For that neat, natural look rub a few drops of new Lady Wildroot Cream Hair Dressing on the ends of your hair, along the part, at temples. To help correct a permanent that left your hair dry, stiff and fuzzy, pour a few drops of Lady Wildroot Cream Hair Dressing in the palm of your hand and rub on those brittle ends. For a dry, tight scalp pour a few drops of soothing Lady Wildroot Cream Hair Dressing on fingertips and massage scalp thoroughly but gently. Remember, new Lady Wildroot is a feminine hair dressing, a cream hair dressing made especijJly for women's hair. Not sticky! Not greasy! It contains lanolin and cholesterol to soften dry hair, to give it more body, make it more manageable, help it keep that neat, natural look. Delicately perfumed for an extra touch of femininity. Wonderful for training children's hair, too. ••••line Personal size 50)^ . . . [frescing-lable size $1.00 (plus tax) !*• S* For a shampoo that gleams as it cleans try new Wildroot Liquid Cream Shampoo. (Contirmed from page 70) friend Bette Davis. In January of that year I remember Bette was busy denying all sorts of lurid rumors: such as a feud with 'Ida Lupino who was said to have imitated her in her last picture (shades of TtdluIahBankhead), a battle with Warner Brothers, and a romance with Bob Taplinger, publicity director. In April, after a serious romance with George Brent, she quite vmexpectedly married a non-professional New Englander named Arthur Famsworth. Arthur died in 1943 of a cerebral hemorrhage. In the years between 1941 and 1951 Bette hit new lows in unhappiness. In 1949 she broke with Warner Brothers where she had been under contract since 1931. After seeing her last picture there. Beyond the Forest, I wrote in my colunm, "If Bette had deliberately set out to wreck her career she couldn't have picked a more appropriate vehicle." Bette's married life to William Grant Sherry, a former prize fighter with a penchant for smashing furniture, had gone sour too. You couldn't find a more miserable girl than Bette. Bette was down, and Hollywood was on the verge of counting her out, when along came All About Eve. A new career— *and a new husband, a dream of a guy named Gary Merrill. And I had the pleasure of writing in my column, "Hollywood's most thriUing comeback was made by its finest actress, Bette Davis." A NOTHER of 1941's tip top stars, as he is today, is Gary Cooper. Though his life hasn't been so flamboyant and dramatic as Bette's during the past 10 years, Coop has had his share of excitement. Gciry was high up on the exhibitors' poll in 1941. And that was the year he made Sergeant York for which he was to receive an Academy Award. I recall interviewing him just about that time. After he married socialite Veronica Balfe of the Long Island set, no one ever mentioned Gary's wild flings of some 20 or so years ago with Clara Bow and Lupe Velez. But I always rush in. "Don't you miss those exciting days?" I asked Coop. "Your life was certainly more hectic then, but it must have been more fun too." Gary looked across the lawn at Rocky (Mrs. Cooper) playing tennis with the Right People, and little four-year-old Maria and her very proper governess. "I guess I fit coinfortably into this life," he said lazily. "So why make a fuss about it?" When I interviewed him in 1951 he wasn't so comfortable. The marriage had been on the rocks for some years, but it wasn't until this year that Rocky finally broke down and admitted it. Now that it's out in the open, Gary is out in the open with Pat Neal, with whom he fell in love two years ago when they were making The Fountainhead. Rocky says she will not give Gary a divorce. But Nancy Sinatra said that about Frankie, too. A big social event of 1941 was 19-yearold Dearma Durbin's marriage to pinkcheeked, yovmg Vaughn Paul. Since then Deanna has had two husbands, and some pretty terrible pictures. Deanna, who once pulled Universal out of the red, and who averaged 9,000 fan letters a day, foxind herself washed up as a movie star at 26. She had become too fat, the studio said, and lost her girlish appeal. A few months ago Deanna, now in France, thimibed her nose at them with an interview in a French paper. "In HoUsrwood they want everybody to look not only slim but downright meager. I refuse to go on a strenuous diet I visited the Louvre and saw some of the most beautiful statues in the world, and all those women were fatter than I am." That's true, Deanna, but they don't