Movie Classic (Mar-Aug 1936)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

YESTERDAY TIRED... NERVOUS... BiUOUS.. TODAY FRESH, RESTED, FEELING FINE HERE'S HOW I DID IT "A friend told me how to clear up that logy, bilious, 'all -run -down' condition caused by constipation. Before I went to bed last night, I chewed delicious FEENA-MINT for 3 minutes. * It's this chewing, they tell me, that makes FEEN-A-MINT so much more effective. Well, it worked wonders for me. Today I'm fresh and rested — feel like a new person. This easy 3-minute way is so much nicer than taking harsh, griping, 'gulped' cathartics." FEEN-A-MINT is fine for children too. No urging necessary to make them take FEEN-A-MINT, because they love its cool, fresh, minty chewing-gum flavor. And it's not habit -forming. Go to your druggist today and get a generous familysized supply of delicious FEEN-A-MINT. Only 15c or 25c. Slightly .^d^ *Longer higher in Canada. ^^^^^^ if you wish. Now You re Talking Few screen personalities have created a greater sensation than has Paulette Goddard whose debut in Charlie Chaplin's new film, Modern Times, should be the signal for a flood of unusually interesting letters from Movie Classic readers c 15 Prize Letter Stories or Stars — Are stars ever greater than the story in which they appear ? I think not. And, it seems to me, that Hollywood's greatest need is writers. The hue and cry for new faces is heard on every hand, yet two very familiar faces flashed to greater popularity and the Academy Award in the scintillating and very different It Happened One Night. Myrna Loy, an old timer, steeped in slinky, exotic roles, created a sensation in The Thin Man and has been in popular favor ever since. Margaret Sullavan, with just the average in talents, flashed to stardom in her first picture, Only Yesterday, an unforgettable story. Constance Bennett, a few seasons ago one of the leading boxoffice attractions, is languishing in idleness due to poor stories. Carole Lombard, one of the best bets in Hollywood, or anywhere else for that matter, only needed a good story to elevate her to the heights. "Big"' stories that brought fame and success to screen stars are bywords in Hollywood. Janet Gaynor and Seventh Heaven, Irene Dunne and Back Street, Jean Hirlow and Hell's Angels are just a few. Hollywood is not in need of new faces, but good stories. — Mrs. R. W . Ballard, 506 Clement Avenue, Charlotte, N. C. $10 Prize Letter Praise for the Unsung Heroes — Let's give a hand for the good sound supporting players who build up the atmosphere and the situation all ready for the star to cap the climax. How many of them there are that we know by sight, if not by name, and recognize with pleasure when they appear. Una Merkel has been a fine example. What a help she was in Broadway Melody of 1936 Movie Classic for May, 1936 An open forum devoted to frank letters from our readers— the franker the better and before that in dozens of other pictures. Now she is getting general recognition and will be graduated, I presume, into leading parts and stardom. Why shouldn't the supporting players get a little more recognition and praise for their work as supporting players in small parts — for their skill and success in making the stars look their best? In every crook picture there are a lot of hard-boiled gangsters and detectives. Who are the men who play these parts? Seriously, I would like to see an article about these men with their names and their photographs. — Henry D. Wood, 55A1 Morris Street, Philadelphia, Pa. $5 Prize Letter A Common Complaint — Something should be done about the double feature nuisance. I'm on strike against the movies until they do something about it and there are others who feel the same way. Here's a case in point : The last movie I saw, which was five weeks ago, was Mutiny on the Bounty. Entering the theatre at seven o'clock I had to remain until eleven-fifteen to see that fine picture in its entirety. I had to sit thru a showing of the other "feature" — a stupid, insipid thing. They also showed a piece of a stale newsreel. Result: four and a half hours spent to see one good picture. Why must they cram those trashy pictures down the throats of movie goers? Let's have a return of the program that showed one feature, a comedy or pictorial and a news reel. — Eugene A. Healy, 478 Lenox Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. $1 Prize Letters Costume Pictures Educational — I am a school girl of fifteen and find much enjoyment in pictures. I like costume pictures [Continued on page 73] MOVIE CLASSIC urges its readers to take the floor and present on this page their candid opinions of pictures and stars. Each month MOVIE CLASSIC offers these cash prizes for the best letters: (1) $15; (2) $10; (3) $5; all others published, $1 each. The editors will be the sole judges and reserve the right to publish all or part of any letter received. Write your letter now — to MOVIE CLASSIC'S Letter Editor, 7046 Hollywood Boulevard, Hollywood, California.