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JUNE ROSES did their best for the bride out at the Gibson ranch when Sally Eilers said "I do" to Hoot Gibson on June 27th. There were more than rambler roses to arouse "'ohs" and "ahs," for weren't Carmen Pantages, Jeanette Loff, Marian Nixon, Marie Prevost and Mae Sunday the bridesmaids? . . . Jocelyn Lee and Luther Reed are another couple who are keeping the marriage license bureau busy, filing intentions of their wedding . . . Soft summer breezes are doing things to other movie celebrities, too. Colleen Moore is going places and seeing things with John Considine, Jr., who so recently was among those present wherever Joan Bennett was seen . . . Constance Bennett's ex-husband, •Phil Plant, has been noticed round about New York with the lovely Claire Windsor . . . .'\nd there is also Gloria Swanson being seen, (|uite often enough to arouse comment, with one Gene Markey.
THAT ole debbil sea is calling again. Billie Dove is feeling that traveling urge and has packed se\-eral trunks for a , .summer's tour of Europe, along with Lillian Akers, who was with her in the old days of the "Follies" . . . Doug Fairbanks felt the pressing call of big business and hurried back home, cutting his European tour short . . . Lily Damita is already in that dear Paris . Corinne Griffith is busy getting settled in the French chateau . . . Joe Schenck has left the West coast for a bit of summer in the East . . . And among those who have crossed the desert for a peek at the Pacific is Ricardo Cortez. He started work on "Her Man," as well . . . Claire Luce, just back from old England, will go west, for Fox . . . And just to be different, it looks as though A! and Ruby Jolson will have to giv e up a summer's vacation abroad. It does seem as though Ruby's voice test "took" for the Irving Berlin picture.
THE Irving Berlins, by the by, are nicely settled for the summer at Great Neck, Long Island . . . And Walter Wanger, too, is having his home there put in order for a part of the season.
J ETTA GOUDAL is recuperating from a nervous breakdown at a Los Angeles sanitarium. What price temperament? . . . "Why Marry" will have to continue along without Glenn Hunter, who is out of the cast because of illness.
Jack Oakie, too, is on the sick list and can work but four hours a day . . . Lew Cody, on the other hand never looked better and is all ready for new rSles, following "Beyond Victory."
BILL HART'S ambitions to return to the screen are so great that he is preparing to finance his own pictures, just as soon as he is fully recovered from his operation . . . Owen Moore has had another smile from Dame Fortune. .After supporting Ciloria Swanson in "What A Widow," he plays opposite Mary Nolan in "Outside the Law." . . . Ina Claire may soon be East again, working
in "The Royal Family" for Paramount . . . Lois Moran is
tightly clutching the old rabbit's foot. Hasn't she just renewed the Fox contract at an increase in salary?
auctioned ofT at the Mayfair party in Hollywood. He, in turn, presented Mary Pickford with a $1,000 check for the Motion Picture Relief Fund to sort of even things up.
NANCY CARROLL had real thrills as well as a narrow escape when the yacht she was aboard off Boston all but foundered in a stifT gale. Finally, when they just about gave up hope, the entire party was rescued by the good old fishing schooner, Jackson Arthur — and thereby hangs a tale . . . Marian Nixon, too, was in a real-life thriller when she was robbed on the Santa Fe's "Chief," bringing her East to make, strangely enough, "The Romance of the Rails"! . . . And, in search of thrills of a new nature. Warden Lawes of Sing Sing set foot for Hollywood to establish his little eight-year-old daughter, Joan Marie, on a movie career.
SALLY O'NEIL and Molly O'Day will have to trv their luck in Hollywood, back to the films where they started, as their vaudeville career is over . . . Nancy Carroll's little sister, Terry, has gone to Hollywood to see if she can follow in sister's footsteps . . . Buddy Rogers, too, has an ambitious brother in Paramount pictures ... .As for Lillian Roth, well, she too, has a sister Ann, who would a-talkie go.
MARILYN MILLER is all ready to make "Sunny" instead of the original Herbert Fields story . . . Betty Compton is receiving true open-house hospitality out West where she went to make her first picture. . . AdolpheMenjou, it appears, will have to make films in Paris and that means just one more trip across the ocean . . . Cyril Maude, finished with "Grumpy," sailed home to England for a short vacation . . . Will Rogers is all through his sight-seeing in pictures and will settle down to do "Lightnin' " for a change.
ANN HARDING is a busy lady, . ma
Dyar
What's in a name? Buddy Rogers' younger brother (right) hasn't had any for twenty years, being called simply "Bh." Now he's in the movies. Buddy and he get together for a good laugh
Sneil
OLLYWOOD is breaking into art circles in a big way. At the Claridge Gallery in London there are exhibited Olive Snell's portrait drawings of Marion Davies, Joan Crawford, Greta Garbo, Corinne Griffith, Gloria Swanson, and other screen stars . . . That old lady Rumor has it that Aileen Pringle has joined the literati and will do a column of film chatter . . . Edwin Carewe had a bit of luck come his way when he won the Cord car
busy
laking the film version of "Jane
Eyre" which is being called "Take This Woman" — and there's a title, friends . . . Not lagging far behind for an eye-brightener is Elinor Glyn's "Just an Hour of Love" . . . And of course there is Warner's "Ex-Mistress" to think of.
POLLY MOR.\N and William Haines are together again — in pictures. This time they will appear in the radio picture, "Remote Control" . . . Elsie Ferguson is getting ready to return to pictures in "Scarlet Pages." . . . Richard Barthelmess has been busy entertaining his mother at his home out West . . . Lois Moran and Victor Fleming both like to eat at the Brown Derby, in Hollywood, and go there quite often, together . . . Harold Lloyd lost several of his dogs, which were poisoned at the dog show . . . Otis Skinner will at last try a talkie — in "Kismet," which he appeared in for so many years on the stage.
AN all-time Hollywood record has been established by Charlie ±\ Chaplin in making "City Lights." He is star, director, author, scenarist, title writer, cutting editor. Single-handedly, with a vengeance, is he fighting the talkies . . . Bebe Daniels and Ben Lyon also are credited with a Hollywood record — their marriage being one of the first, if not the first, among the elite of Hollywood consummated by a spinster and a bachelor . . . Betty Compson has her divorce from James Cruze, on mental cruelty grounds. Jim has too many friends, and he insisted on' entertaining all of them ever>' Sunday . . . The unemployment among movie extras is something scandalous.
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