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of the Studios
It is that of Jeanette MacDonald. The Bennett picture really disappeared, you know, and the inside story of its disappearance was told us by a newspaper man who swore that he saw this happen with his own eyes. A blonde movie vamp, said he, entered with friends, paused to look at Connie's face, then removing her slipper she smashed the glass of the Bennett picture with the high French heel! And that, my friends, is one way of removing something you don't like!
CHEVALIER and Jeanette MacDonald were discussing a kissing incident which they shared in Paris. It seems that Jeanette called her former starring partner of "The Love Parade " onto the platform and kissed him in full view of a gasping audience. Why they gasped at a single, harmless little kiss Jeanette couldn't imagine, until Chevalier explained that a kiss on the cheek would have been taken as a matter of course, but a kiss on the lips meant only one thing and that was — oo la la!
"I could keek myself," said Chevalier, ruefully, "because I din' do one thing. But I din' theenk of eet till afterward. I should have turn to the audience and said, ' If Mees MacDonald meant what you theenk she meant, thees is 'ow I would 'ave kees her! ' And then I would 'ave given you one beeg movie kees! "
"I like the new picture," Chevalier told Jeanette, "The script ect smell good — "
After doing "One Hour With You" in English, they'll do it in French — and keep up the union in Chevalier's next picture.
THE annual tennis tournament held at the Peter Pan cottage of Herbert Brenon at Malibu was a huge success this year. Over a hundred movie celebrities contended for the prizes, using all the courts of the Malibu colony. And the prizes were well worth a struggle. The first prizes — won by Gilbert Roland and Bonnie Miller — were a gold pen presented by Ronald Colman, and a necklace presented by Dolores Del Rio, with the silver bowl for each presented by Mr. Brenon. Other prizes were as follows: Italian leather box presented by Warner Baxter; tennis case and racquets presented by Mr. and Mrs. Bill Powell; book
R. W. Coburn
Three famous silent stars get together for a talk about the good, old days at Herbert Brenon's Malibu tennis tournament: Norma Talmadge; Anna Q. Nilsson, who's about to make her first talkie, and Alice Joyce, who's thinking of making some more talkies
Will Walling; Jr.
Joan tells Doug, Jr. not to lean back that way — she just painted the inside of his chair, too. But Doug, the wisey, thinks she's kidding — the way she does as his co-star in "Union Depot"
ends presented by Elizabeth Meehan; bottle of perfume presented by Warner Baxter; silver and cut-glass bottle given by Milton Cohen; silver cigarette box given by Richard Barthelmess; silver cocktail-shaker presented by Give Brook; gold and cloisonne compact and lighter given by Carl Laemmle, Sr. The prizes also included two tickets to the Stanford game presented by Mr. and Mrs. Dick Hyland and a leather suede purse with silver mountings given by Leo Carillo. A good time was had by all — and all the crowd was there except the "visiting liremen." But all the local firemen — including Warner Baxter, the Malibu fire chief, and his rival. Mayor Alan Dwan — were present.
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