Modern Screen (Dec 1934 - Nov 1935)

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MODERN SCREEN A famous doctor says: "Ambrosia not only cleanses thoroughly and deeply, but is antiseptic, healing and tonic. It reduces large pores." LARGE PORES DON'T suffer from large pores and blackheads another minute. Use Ambrosia, the poredeep liquid cleanser, three times a day. You feel Ambrosia tingle; you know it is cleansing as nothing has done before. Using Ambrosia is like putting your skin on a liquid diet. There's nothing to clog or coarsen pores. In as little as three days blackheads begin to go, complexions are smoother and clearer. Begin to have a lovelier skin at once. Get a bottle of Ambrosia today. 75^ at all drug and department stores. In smaller sizes at 10^ stores. AMBROSIA® THE POREDEEP CLEANSER the way for other stars to make salary demands. Thus obscure boys and girls, unknown men and women became rich and famous overnight. There came May Allison, a beautiful girl from a tiny town in Georgia, who, co-starred with Harold Lockwood, achieved terrific popularity. She was one of the great Metro stars, yet, she remained as simple and unaffected as if she had never even heard of Hollywood. But there also came Nazimova, a tempestuous Russian woman whose presence gave Hollywood some of its first real glamor. These two, May Allison and Nazimova, were at opposite poles of temperament. Hollywood is like that and has always been. The type is never standardized. It takes every sort of person to make the movie world. There came a rotund fellow from Smith Center, Arkansas, named Fatty Arbuckle who was destined to make the world laugh. There came Viola Dana, one of the three Flugrath girls from Brooklyn, whose poignant little face brought tears and laughter to the picture fans of that day. And then there came the great stage star Alice Brady, a smart, sophisticated girl from New York. And there was Mary Miles Minter of Shreveport, Louisiana, and Mabel Normand from Atlanta, Georgia, and Dorothy Phillips of Baltimore, and Ruth Roland of San Francisco and hundreds more. Oh, it was a bright firmament which shone, so short a time ago, yet only Alice Brady is on the screen now. But what wonderful stories they wove into the pattern of Hollywood. Nazimova, the great artiste, guided the destinies of her own films. She had elaborate sets built, she wore elabo rate costumes and introduced the fantastic note into her productions. She was so assured, so brilliant that everyone thought she lived for her art alone and that the sufferings of the human heart could not touch her. But everyone was wrong. She came to Hollywood with Charles Bryant. It was taken for granted that he was her husband. And then a cruel thing happened. The announcement of Bryant's marriage to another woman appeared in the papers. And there was no record of his ever having divorced Nazimova. So they were not married after all ! The gossip buzzed from coast to coast but no one believed that Nazimova would in any way be affected by it. No one, that is, but Paul Bern, whose soul was greater and whose heart was more understanding than any man's in the picture business. He realized that the aloof, ambitious Nazimova was suffering. She was in New York at the time that the story of Bryant's marriage "broke" and she was so humiliated that she left an order with the hotel where she stopped that she would see no one or take any incoming calls. Paul tried to reach her. He could not. At last he bribed a bell boy to let him into her room and he appeared before her with a gorgeous corsage in one hand and a bottle of champagne in the other. "See here," he said, "you cannot hide like this. You must not let the world know that you're hurt. Put on your loveliest evening gown. You and I are going to make the rounds of all the gay places in town. We're going to be seen by everyone. And you, for the sake of your own courage, are going to look the world in the face!" DEAFNESS IS MISERY Many people with defective hearing and Head Noises enjoy Conversation, Movies. Church and Radio, because they use Leonard Invisible Ear Drums which resemble Tiny Megaphones fitting in the Ear entirely out of sight. No wires, batteries or head piece. They are inexpensive. Write for booklet and sworn statement of QRUf*4 the inventor who was himself deaf. A. 0. LEONARD, Inc.. Suite 986 , 70 5th Ave.. Hew York low tfcu can, <jjet Film celebrities out to make the annual Screen Guild Ball at the Biltmore Bowl a success. Bob Montgomery and Chester Morris with their wives seem set for a lot of fun. 114