Modern Screen (Jan-Nov 1956)

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ANN BLYTH, LOVELY SCREEN STAR the Ann Blyth look! Yours with. Woodbury powder-and-foundation in compact form Puff on this complete make-up in a split minute and get compliments all day ! Woodbury Dream Stuff gives your complexion the radiance of living color . . . the smoothness of alluring skin like Ann Blyth's. Flatters like a powder . . . clings because of its fabulous built-in foundation ingredient. And never, never dries skin. Five dreamy new shades that stay color-true. In non-spill compact form. Woodbury Dream Stuff is only 49c in pretty blue-and-gold box. Ivoryar.d-gold mirrored compact, $1. woodbury powder is'also blended with special make-up base for satin-smoothness, longer cling — for "at home" use and your loose powder compact. $1.00 size special 59c. Also 30c & 15c. (Prices pi 30 concerned. She's a perfectionist about acting. She's so perfect in everything she does in front of the cameras, she expects everyone else to be perfect, too. She can't tolerate persons who shirk their jobs. If Susan is tough, it's only professionally. Susan has worked hard on her singing and dancing since her success as a singer in I'll Cry Tomorrow. Nobody believed she would ever dare to sing. Everyone thought Lillian Roth would be brought in by MGM (including Lillian!) to sing the songs on the sound track, just as Jane Froman had been hired by 20thFox to sing the songs that Susan mouthed in Jane's life story, With A Song In My Heart. But Susan fooled 'em. They hadn't counted on her dogged determination to excel in everything she does. Susan is generous. There isn't anything she wouldn't do for her children and for her friends and relatives. The old saying, "She'd give you the shirt off her back," applies to this girl in spades. Recently she bought the twins a small car, a real one, with a motor, that goes thirty miles an hour. The only stipulation is that they keep it off the street. Susan is sentimental. Places and objects that have sentimental attachments move her to tears. I guess it's the Irish in her. After all, her grandmother was Kate Harrigan of County Cork, Ireland! Her sentimental side is what made Susan move from her house in the San Fernando Valley. It brought back too many memories. But she loves the neighborhood. And so she moved just a few houses away. Now the twins have the same playmates they had before. This house is bigger than the other. It has acres and acres in the rear, where the twins play. It has a swimming pool and a gym for the twins, who love to play basketball, as well as drive their car all over hell's half acre! Barker has visitation rights with the twins. He picks them up and takes them off for camping trips every other week end. They pitch a tent and he has taught them to shoot cans off of rocks. Once, when I went to pick up some medicine at Schwab's drug store on the Sunset Strip, I ran into the twins, playing in back of the store, around the parked cars. It was Jess' week end with them. The neighborhood around Schwab's isn't the most ideal place in the city of Los Angeles for children to play, especially in view of their ideal living conditions with their mother. But maybe Jess knows what he's doing. Maybe it's best they know the other side of the tracks, too. Susan wants to make a sentimental journey to Ireland, to look up her kinfolk. Once before, three years ago, when she and Jess took a "second honeymoon" trip to Europe, she wanted to go to Ireland, but she never made it. I heard it was because Jess didn't want to go. When I saw them in Paris, dining at the Tour d'Argent, they seemed to be having a ball. The more sophisticated cities of Europe were apparently what Jess liked. Susan, always the Brooklynite, will love Ireland, I'm sure, as much as I did, when she finally gets there, for its simplicity and uncomplicated way of life. Susan is restless. She flew to Hawaii for a month's vacation, stayed a few days, flew right back home. She flew to New York for the world premiere of I'll Cry Tomorrow, stayed two days, didn't even wait for the premiere, flew right back home. Maybe impulsive is a better word than restless. But, whatever you call it, it makes her that much more interesting. Susan is observant. This is one of the things that makes her a great actress. She is basically a shy person but sometimes she's less shy than other times. Sometimes