Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1924-Jan 1925)

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HMOTION PICTURF 1)01 I MAGAZINE L Motion Picture Magazine — Advertising Section Keep Your EYES At Their Best Are you giving your EYES the care they deserve to keep them always clear, bright and healthy ? Often dust, wind and undue strain cause the EYES to appear dull, lifeless and unattractive. To make the most of their natural charm and sparkle, they should be cleansed as regularly as the skin and teeth. For daily use, or when your EYES feel hot, tired and heavy, Murine is most refreshing and beneficial. Contains no harmful ingredients. Our illustrated books on "Eye Care" or "Eye Beauty" are FREE on request. The Murine Company Dept. 25, Chicago PIMPLES Skin Trouble BANISHED Marvelous new discovery enables all to have Healthy, Beautiful skin, FREE from Blemishes, Eczema, Acne and other discomforting troubles. Dermideal Treatment big success and satisfaction Guaranteed. Write for amazing booklet describing this new method. Dermideal Laboratories, Dept. K New Bedford, Mass. 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Paris BOSTON Wide World The younger screen celebrities in Hollywood have organized a club among themselves that they call "The Regulars." They meet one evening a week, discuss the new phases of their motion picture work, furnish various forms of entertainment, and provide refreshments, which are prepared by themselves. Reading from left to right, the members in the front row are: Marion Nixon, Priscilla Bonner, Maryon Aye, Mary Philbin, Pauline Curly, Grace Gordon, and Pauline Garon. In the back row: Duane Thompson, Marjorie Bonner, Menifee Johnstone, Virginia Browne Faire, Dorothy Devore and Lucille Hutton On trie Camera Coast (Continued from page 61) pened to be filled with water preparatory to a bathing-girl scene. Anna Q. Nilsson has projected her new hubby into the movies. His name is John Gunnerson and, until last week, he was a shoe manufacturer. At her suggestion he has gone to the Ince Studio and hired himself out in a small position to learn the job. Mr. Gunnerson is a very modest and very charming young man. pOR the first time in his screen career, Lou Tellegen is a papa — screen variety. In The Breath of Scandal, in which he is to play the lead, Mr. Tellegen is cast as the husband of Myrtle Stedman, the father of Patsy Ruth Miller, and the lover of Betty Blythe. Jack Mulhall, Forrest Stanley and Phyllis Haver also play in the picture. pROM the appearance of the props that have been collected, Conan Doyle's The Lost World will be one wild picture. Skeletons of giant dinosaurs are scattered all over the First National lot. Boa-constrictors and gorillas and other strange critters have been collected for the filming. Bessie Love, who is to have one of the principal parts, says that, whatever else happens, she can always cling to the recollection that she is the first girl ever to have a fight with an allosaurus. Marion Fairfax, who wrote the continuity for this story, says it is the most difficult work she has ever done. She worked ten months on it. V\7hen Peter Pan finally gets filmed, it will be distinguished anyhow by one wonderful shirt. When Herbert Brenon, selected as the director, was recently in Canada, he signed up a tribe of Stony Creek Indians to play in the Indian sequence. One of them wears a buckskin shirt heavily decorated with human scalp locks. T) alph and Vera Lewis have been married and on the screen since the early Griffith days; but for the first time they find themselves cast in the same picture — In Every Woman's Life. TTollywood is much occupied right now with hair. The girls are beginning to rebel against bobs ; and the boys against slicked-down sheik patent-leather haircuts. Constance Talmadge announced a. week or so ago that she is sick of bobs and is letting her hair grow again. Estelle Taylor has followed suit. A few girls like Virginia Valli, and Dorothy Mackail, and Mary Pickford never have cut their hair. As to the slick-'em hair of the youngmen, it is the feeling in Hollywood that the public is turning to the American type of screen lovers again. The flappers have had an overdose of Latins. It is significant that one of the big contracts signed in Hollywood this summer is with Fred Thomson, who will make Westerns for an independent organization at a huge salary. He is a typical American athlete, having won the all-around athletic championship of the world two or three times in succession. Jaurette Taylor has had a crushing disappointment. In One Night in Rome she had a wild Indian actor named Felix Whitefeather. She always said that when she got around to it she intended to ask him about his experiences upon the war trail and such. The other day she got around to it. She found, to her dismay, that the nearest to a war trail he ever, got was being motorman on a trolley-car in Brooklyn. Jackie Coogan is returning to the kind of stuff that first made him famous. Willard Mack has written him a story called The Rag Man, which seems to be (Continued on page 102) 90 G<L Every advertisement in MOTION PICTURE MAGAZINE is guaranteed.