Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1914-Jan 1915)

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©RBt«lSSSW.^SWll»&» dramatic romance yet. Eleanor Blevins has returned to the Western Essanay Company. She is now Miss Blevins. v^s^ fe Antonio Moreno (Vitagraph) spends his spare evenings playing the violin, which he does excellently. / Ned Burton, for fourteen months with PathS, has joined the new j-y Peerless Company. j "Broncho Billy" Anderson was a real hero recently. He really rescued I pretty little Marguerite Clayton, who was lashed to a runaway broncho. All three were severely injured, but the broncho got the worst of it. I "Peter the Great" is mighty lucky to have such a name. He is none * other than Margarita Fischer's bulldog. He met with a slight accident C while trying to walk on pond-lilies, and you know the result. I Harold Lockwood, the tall, handsome one, has just finished "The |J Unwelcome Mrs. Hatch," who is none other than our old friend, Henrietta ') Crossman, of stage fame. \r We shall soon see more of Helen and Dolores Costello, because they 5 have spent most of their school vacation at the Vitagraph studio. No denial is forthcoming that J. Warren Kerrigan intends leaving J the Universal to form a company of his own. { Rex and Don have had a bitter fight to a draw. Rex is Mae Marsh's \ English bull terrier, and Don is Dorothy Gish's pedigreed Airedale pup. Ik The owners and others tried to stop the fight, and the camera man was clever enough to film it all, which will now be used as part of a comedy. * Loel Stewart, of the five Stewarts, will be Ethel Barrymore's son in f Augustus Thomas's "The Nightingale." i Edwin Arden, Andrew Mack and William Elliott have been at the Lubin studio, making pictures, and Harry Myers says they allowed him ', to talk to them. We congratulate Mr. Myers. i Barry O'Moore has left the Edison Company and will do a little " farming on his Ulster County farm before "going to work" again. / John E. Ince (Lubin) has decided to become an exhibitor as well as a director and player. He heads a company that is to control a chain of theaters. Another hobby of his is collecting antique candlesticks. He j owns one that was formerly Marie Antoinette's, and another that was once ' the property of Martin Luther. Gene Gauntier is visiting her sister, Mile. Marguerite Gauntier, of the Royal Opera at Stockholm. Jack J. Clark is in charge of her studio. Alexander Gaden and Dorothy Phillips spent a week at sea in an old 8 ship, making "On the High Seas," which, they say, is the best melo |j§ a 0 Pity Pauline Bush. Her director, Joseph De Grasse, has her doing a Q three-reel feature close to the edge of the crater of the active volcano at Mount Lassen, Cal. ^ Our gold prize for the best story in this issue goes to the author of w "The Barefoot Boy" ; second prize to the author ,of "Moonshine Molly." ' Whatever criticism you may have of serials, you mustn't say anything S to Pearl White, Grace Cunard, Kathlyn Williams, Cleo Madison or Florence LaBadie, for they are too busy answering their extra mail. pj\ Owing to the temporary indisposition of our Gladys Hall, our Popular fy Plays and Players Department must be omitted this month. jf Mary Fuller is at Shohola, Pa., doing her first Universal play, "The Heart of the Night Wind." 126