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Having Fun in Hollywood
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Speaking of surprise parties, Joe Cawthorne was given a nice one on his birthday by Queenie Vassar Cawthorne, his wife.
John Barrymore goes almost nowhere to parties, but he and the Cawthornes are old friends, so he was present.
And John is always good for a lot of laughs.
We were discussing a very old book, printed in the early eighteen hundreds, concerning one Lord Barrymore, patron of the theater, which John possesses.
"The Lord Chamberlain or somebody was talking about a certain person," said John, "whose escapades are related in the book. Said the L. C: 'Yes, he associates with drunkards and such like folk. And now he's got so low that he's associating with the Barrymores!' "
Queenie Vassar, once the toast of New York, has a voice that still is lovely. She with many others at the party, including Otto Kruger, Bobby North, Adele Rowland, Joe Cawthorne, gathered 'round the piano and sang the old songs, which Conway Tearle played, all from memory.
And Joe danced a hornpipe. Good jigging, too!
John Barrymore was standing near the telephone, rustling the leaves of the telephone directory, when Maria Alba came within his line of vision. She was looking lovely in a black gown.
"Charming! Charming! Stand still!" exclaimed John, as he continued to turn the leaves of the telephone book, trying to divide his attention between practical and aesthetic subjects.
And Maria stood still until John finally abandoned the telephone book to talk to her.
Louise Dresser and Jack Gardner aren't going to leave their old Glendale home. Though they own a gorgeous Spanish house in Beverly, they prefer the old-fashioned home in Glendale.
"I doubt if we'll ever live again in Beverly," said Louise, at the party that night. "We love that old-fashioned house so much. And mother loves it. I have a wonderful garden ther^, you know, and I love working in it. It's all right, out in Glendale, for me to go around in khaki short skirt and soiled gloves, with my hair not done in the latest fashion. In Beverly everybody would be shocked to see me in my garden looking like that."
Richard Dix is very devoted to his little daughter, Mary Ellen.
She is with him two or three times a week, when he takes her out in his big automobiles and then home to . din. ner at his house. There they play games, and Richard is teaching her the alphabet. She loves to toddle beside him on his ranch, too, and there is a pony there for her to learn to ride some day.
And if Richard is devoted to any lady except Mary Ellen, nobody has found it out to date.
husband has returned to Germany, but Dorothea is a devoted wife, and writes him every day, composing long letters when she is not working in a picture.
Virginia Bruce is not letting her divorce from Jack Gilbert make quite a recluse of her. She is going to the Cocoanut Grove and other pleasure spots to dine and dance. But never with an escort — always with groups of married friends. She looked very pretty the other night when we saw her at the Cocoanut Grove with Gary Cooper and Sandra Shaw.
William Janney had his fortune told the other day, and the fortune teller told him he would soon be married, describing Jacqueline Wells to perfection as the lady in the case. Whereupon William admitted to us — we were with him at the fortune telling — that she is wearing the Janney family signet ring now, but he hopes to exchange it for a diamond in the near futuret
There's one baby star that the Wampas stork wasn't allowed to deliver.
She is Mary Rogers, daughter of the famous Will. The Wampas boys — members of the publicity organization which elects baby stars every year — wanted to put Mary on the list. But Will Rogers put his foot down.
"Not that I object to Mary's having a career, nor that I have anything against the Wampas," said Will, "but if Mary does have a career, I want her to work up to it without any outside help."
Neither divorces nor broken love affairs seem to put a crimp in the serenity of social groups in Hollywood.
Take an incident that left outsiders gasping, last week, when Lupe Velez and Johnny Weissmuller, and Gary Cooper and Sandra Shaw were sitting together at a table at the Cocoanut Grove, all having a grand time.
And ever since Ruth Chatterton and Ralph Forbes were divorced, they have continued members of the same group which included George Brent, Ruth's second husband. And now that Ruth and George are being divorced, may we not expect to see Ruth at parties attended also by both her ex's?
"Main event in the big tent!" exclaimed Joe E. Brown, as he met us at the front door of his Beverly home.
That meant that his party was being held in the huge marquee that had been erected in his rear garden.
Dick Powell had flown all the way up from Caliente to take Mary Brian to the party.
Mary told us a funny story about herself. She said she had been erecting a summer house near her home in Toluca Lake district.
"But some of the neighbors took it for a wayside beer stall or something of the sort," related Mary. "They sent word to me that I would have to get a special permit to sell beer there!"
There is one dad who isn't going to be sore if his son adopts the circus
The New Movie Magazine, July, 193 k