Motion Picture (Aug 1931-Jan 1932)

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While Anna May Wong and Sessue Hayakawa have been away from Hollywood, Warner Oland (below) has been the screen's leading Oriental. And he's Swedish! He supports the two stars in "Daughter of the Dragon" Fryer The newest hard-luck girl — Eva lynKnapp. She fell offa cliff while hiking, sprained her back and will be idle for months John Gilbert likes a Hawaiian princess named Lilinolakawani. Rudolf Sieber, here to see his wife, Marlene Dietrich (not to mention his daughter, Maria), will stay to direct some pictures. Come on in — the relaxing's fine! Just a little discovery by Margaret Caverley, who's a discovery herself — by way of Educational Comedies. She's the newest platinum-blonde This magazine's recent story on the Taylor murder mystery brought police a letter claiming that an Eastern woman saw Taylor shot. Rumors . . . HO-HUM ! Summer in Hollywood : Sylvia Sidney and her escort, a hardworking young writer, drop in at the Cocoanut Grove. To Sylvia's horror, all the movie stars still left in town are there. She wails, "I can't bear 'em! Let's go! " The h-w. y. writer smolders at paying the cover charge after two minutes at the table . . . Florence Britton, Sam Goldwyn's latest discovery, leaves a highbrow book open at a party. When a shout goes up: "Who's reading this?" Florence languidly reclaims her property under the awed gaze of the other guests . . . Fred Kelsey, who plays movie detectives, chases a hit-and-run driver down the Boulevard and brings him back in triumph . . . Doug Fairbanks reaches in through the splintered window of an overturned sedan and pulls out the occupants, before the ambulance arrives . . . Pineapple ice is a grand thing to shake in a cocktail shaker — with other ingredients . . . "Grand" becomes the favored adjective hereabouts, replacing " swell " . . . Most of Hollywood has yet to see the lady whom Clark Gable has just married for the second time . . . Marceline Day surprises everybody with the announcement that she has just married a Mr. Klein twice in a few weeks to make it sure . . . SUMMER in Southern California is a lazy time at best. This summer has been especially lazy because so many studios have been running only half the time. Keystone jjut Tvor Novello, composer of "Keep the Not the Vagabond Lover? Right! Home Fires Burning" and English matinee Rudy Vallee and his bride, ray Webb . . .. . , ,T n ,r (whom he met in Hollywood) take a ldol> now maklnS a Plcture, f°r M-G-M, stroll on New York's Fifth Avenue has been easing the universal boredom by 36