The New Movie Magazine (Jul-Dec 1932)

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And now Edna Best's husband is the Success .... After she gave up Stardom rather than be away from him .... Jack Mulhall as a busy barber .... (Continued from page 12) • i rather be with her husband, Hern-shall (also an English Stage and screen star) than career-ing away from him. Yes, Hollywood understands. For Herbert .Marshall is here, emoting with Miriam Hopkins in "Souk of Songs." And the colony has seen him for itself. Unanimous opinion: Edna was right for chucking her contract and returning to him. Reason: Marshall is a graceful, handsome, effete young man with that "certain something" that gets the blue singers shouting hallelujah. Walter Byron and Jack Mulhall ice re in the Hollywood Athletic Club barber shop when Byron dozed off while having a shave. Suddenly he became aware of very hot towels being put on his face. The heat was unbearable but he stood it bravely until the barber began kneading his cheeks as though they were dough. Looking up angrily, Byron discovered Mulhall in the barber's apron. Photographed exclusively tor Tfeto Movie Magoz Ruth Selwyn studying her lines and eating an ice cream cone, caught unawares by the cameraman at the M-G-M studio. UPHILL FIGHT: Everybody likes a fighter. Harry Langdon, for instance, that whimsical little comedian with the big round eyes and skippity gait. Harry will soon be seen with Al Jolson in "The New Yorker." It's his first picture from Hollywood in many a day. The town wasn't especially kind to Harry. When he rose to be a star and to produce his own comedies, it became whispered about that he was getting high hat and impossible. A former writer-director, whom Harry had elevated from nothing to something, clinched the rumor of the star's snooty ways. The writer-director had had a disagreement with Langdon over a story. He thought one thing. Harry, the other. The writer-director quit in a huff. He did more. He wrote letters to the newspaper movie writers saying how unreasonable Langdon had become since he reached producer-star heights. Those letters undid the star. He hid from people and their in(Please turn to page 16) Photographed exclusively for New Movie Magazine You've always wanted to know about Will Rogers' family, haven't you? Well, here they are, above. And from left to right, with part of the Flo Ziegfeld family: Mary Rogers, Patricia Ziegfeld, Jimmy Rogers, Mrs. Will Rogers and Mrs. Flo Ziegfeld (Billie Burke). And aren't they just the sort of home folks you'd expect? At left: Jimmie Durante, known to Hollywood as "Schnozzle," and Wallace Ford, being greeted at the M-G-M studio by Ralph Spence, the humorist. Mr. Durante — believe it or not — is one of our newest, full-fledged movie stars. At right: Marian Nixon and her director, Alfred Santell, photographed by the candid cameraman as they were leaving the Fox lot together. Marian is hitting hard with the public. A veteran of silent pictures, she is even more popular in the talkies. photograph by Associated Press 14 notograiihi.il exclusively for Xew Movie Magazine The New Movie Magazine, September, 1932