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Hollywood Day by Day
vooa uay
{Continued from page 40)
to the grocery store and asked for a "broaf of lead, a mottle of bilk, and a bound of putter."
Furthermore, George has discovered that there's nothing like a baby in the family to improve one's golf game!
How come? Well, every morning at four o'clock, baby Sandra starts to tune up for her six o'clock bottle. So with four hours ahead of him and nothing to do, George grabs his clubs and drives over to the golf course for a work-out.
"It's marvelous," says George. "My game has improved a hundred per cent! And if I ever win a cup, I'll hand it right over to Sandra!"
ALL right ... all right! No sooner do we get Betty Furness all paired off with Cary Grant than the fickle lady transfers her affections to Caesar Romero! And six more gray hairs in our new toupee!
TI THAT'S in a name, anyhow? VV Eric Linden says he once knew a girl named "Melody" who couldn't sing a note; and a girl named "Hope" who was the worst pessimist in town.
Still hoping for the best, however, Eric bought a collie dog named "Zaca," which is an Indian word meaning peace, and, collies being more or less that way anyway, Eric hoped for the best.
But "Zaca" has a police dog complex, growls at strangers and will tackle any dog twice his size at the drop of the hat!
As soon as Eric can find the Indian ivord for "War," he intends to rechristen the animal!
And speaking of pets — little Janie Withers has her troubles, too.
All fluffed up in yellow organdy Janie was holding her head very erect so as not to muss her handsome yellow hair ribbon. To all appearances Janie was marking time until her handsome prince should come riding by.
Suddenly there was a ten ific furore in
the front yard and forgetting everything else, she went flying out to find her pet cat. Bubbles, all tangled up with a Boston bull dog and evidently getting the ivorst of it!
Sailing into the thick of it, Janie was clawed, kicked and bitten until her dress was mud-spattered and tattered. And the lovely hair ribbon . . . ivell, the general effect was that her braid might have been held together with a string of yelloiv noodles!
And wouldn't you know that just at a time like that her very favorite boy friend, Walter King, would dash into the yard on his shining charger and with tickets for a movie in his right gauntlet?
So the handsome King had to wait ivhile our heroine was marched away to the bathroom for the second time in an hour!
/F YOU'VE wondered who did the wolf -howling in "The Werewolf of London," let us be the first to inform you that Henry Hidl, star of the picture, did it himself!
Recalling Hull's classical imitation of bloodhounds in a play called "The Nigger," several years ago, director Stuart Walker suggested that he take a crack at a couple of wolf howls.
The first try was not bad, but suddenly Walker said: "I know what's the matter — you're standing up!"
So donning his wolf make-up Hull got down on all fours, had the prop man turn on the "moon ray" used in the picture, and really getting into the spirit of the thing, he turned loose a howl that would cause even Tarzan to break out with as fine a set of ducky bumps as you ever laid eyes on!
Consequently the sound that is causing audiences to shiver their timbers, is Hull's own version of the way a right snappy werewolf would sound on his night out.
The Winners
{Continued from page 26)
with no competition. ("The Catspaw" got only 66 votes, and "Twentieth Century" only 33.)
BEST SHORT REEL PICTURE. And this is won by "La Cucaracha," the experimental color picture put out as a test film for "Becky Sharp," with the new color process.
BEST NEWSREEL PICTURE. This goes to Paramount's excellent newsreel.
BEST DIRECTION. New Movie readers regard Frank Capra as Hollywood's best director for the second year running.
BEST STORY. And here, again, the prize goes to "The Barretts of Wimpole Street," whose brow must be getting pretty heavy, now, with all these laurels.
And now a word about the lucky young man — for it is a young man — who is going to get a free trip and a chance to present the gold medals for the twelve awards to the stars, directors and companies concerned.
All our readers, together, decided that the twelve awards above were the ones that ought to be made for the year's
crop of films. The highest score which any reader could possibly have made, on his individual coupon blank, would have been to get all twelve right; that is, to have the average choice of all the hundreds of other readers agree with his own coupon in every respect.
Out of the thousands of readers who filled in the coupons and mailed them to us, giving their opinions, one man was fortunate enough to win the coveted prize. The winner is:
Anies Daye, Jr., 1268 W. 4th St., Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Runners up were :
Roberta Bender, 241 I Western Ave.,
Davenport, Iowa. Claudine Culp, 1009 N. Merrifield
Ave., Mishawaka, Indiana. Leona Leo, 4027 S. Campbell Ave.,
Chicago, III.
While you are reading this Mr. Daye will be making the Academy Awards to the various winners.
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The' New Movie Magazine, September, 1935
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