Movie Classic (Sep-Dec 1931)

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Dolores Del Rio Isn't Beaten Yet {Continued from page 2j) nearer and nearer over you. She lost her fear of Death. She lost her contract. She faced the possibility of Being Through. Great changes had come about. There might not be a place for her if ever she could take a place again. She also lost her fear of that. And she learned to be kinder, more tolerant in her judgments, more aware of sickness and suffering in the world. Dolores has come to love Hollywood. She wouldn't live anywhere else in the world for anything in the world. Nowhere else, she says, can you find the drama and the people you can find here, or come to know them as you know them here. Dolores and Cedric have three homes. The one in Hollywood that was Dolores' before she married. The one in Santa Monica, designed and furnished by Cedric, himself. The accompanying photograph pictures this extraordinary dwelling much more satisfactorily than any words could. This isthehousethat Cedric built for Dolores while she was ill. And on her very first outing, when she still was wrapped in blankets, and too weak to walk, he carried her into it, from room to room, on a tour of inspection. This is where Dolores wants to make her home when she can dispose of the other house and is through with her first picture. The third place is at Malibu. Dolores is young and very wise. She gives herself three more years. If she succeeds in coming back at all, she should be good for that length of time. She might, she says, drag out one other year, waning as she goes. Then she plans to have a year on the stage and then, still young enough, she wants to have a child. "So that I shall not make a fool of myself when I reach the end of the movie rope." She looks healthy. She looks happy. Even more than before, her hair is pulled back tightly from her forehead, giving undeniable proof of her undeniable beauty. Her dark eyes are alight and her mind sparkles. She is the most enthusiastic, most ambitious woman in Hollywood to-day. Clara Will Come Back — A Bigger Star Than Ever (Continued from page 32) tures three other film companies were eager to snatch her as soon as Paramount let her go. They knew — what all Hollywood knows — that Clara Bow may still be one of the biggest actresses of her day. She says that she may marry Rex next year. Rex admits that they are thinking about it. But Clara Bow will not settle down yet awhile. She is a born actress. When Ben Schulberg first saw her, dressed in pitifully cheap finery, he was appalled to think that he had signed her, sight unseen, to a contract on advice of a business associate. "Wait!" the agent who had brought Clara to Hollywood said, "wait 'til you have seen her before a camera." Without the slightest hope, Schulberg took her to a stage and put her in front of a camera. "Cry, Clara!" he said, sharply. Instantly the tears poured from those enormous eyes that had been shining with mischief a moment before, and her child face was contorted with an agony of grief. Schulberg turned to the associate who had discovered Clara Bow. "You are right," he said. Yes, Clara Bow will come back. And Hollywood will not turn a cold shoulder to her this time. Use Kleenex instead No laundering— no selfinfection. Use Kleenex once and destroy AT LAST a new type handkerchief . banishes forever one of the messiest jobs in a woman's life — the job of washing dirty handkerchiefs. Millions are turning to Kleenex — the soft, delicate tissue you use once and destroy. Germs are destroyed This cleanly practice not only saves washing. It protects you from selfinfection. Germs are destroyed instantly, instead of being carried back to your face. The health importance of Kleenex during colds cannot be over-emphasized. Schools, doctors, endorse it. 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