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Contents — Continued
The Spiritual Future of America and the Movies
Maurice Maeterlinck 35 What an European Celebrity Thinks of Us.
One Year Later
Marguerite Clark Returns to the Screen.
The Crater of Emotion
An Extraordinary View of a Great Studio.
Close-Ups
Old Lives for New
Florence Vidor — Actress and Mother.
His Middle Name Is Shakespeare
Explaining the "S" in Bill Hart's Name.
The Shadow Stage
Reviews of the New Pictures.
A New Field of Screen Art Pioneering in Film Posters.
A Little Love Story
Announcing the Engagement of —
A Glimpse of the Heights A Contest Fiction Story.
How to Become an Actress
Drawing.
The Curly Kid
A Sentimental Interview with Cullen Landis
We'd Hate to Eat Her Biscuits
Helen Jerome Eddy Dislikes Cooking, But —
Millions and Millions? Stock-selling the Movies
Questions and Answers The Ultimate Critic
Drawing.
Plays and Players
News and Anecdote from the Studios.
Conchita's Compliment
The Universal Language Again.
Why Do They Do It?
A Column by the Reader-Critics.
Addresses of the leading motion picture studios will be found on page 110.
38
Sentimental Tommy (Fiction) Luliette Bryant 39
Told from the Picturized Version.
(Photograph) 40
Editorial Expression and Comment 44 Joan Jordan 45
47
The Art of Dress Penrhyn Stanlaws 49
How a Great Artist Thinks Women Should Dress.
Burns Mantle 51
54
Wallace MacDonald 55
(Edited by Doris May)
J. E. Natteford 56 Illustrated by May Wilson Preston
Norman Anthony 58
Mary Winship 60
Arabella Boone 62
John G. Holme 64
The Answer Man 67 68
Cal. York 70
Margaret Sangster 92
94
"Vamps of All Times
»
HOW would you like to trace the progress, if any, of the ancient art of vamping, down through all the ages? This fasci' nating excursion takes place in the May issue of Photoplay.
That is, the career of the first known vamp is discussed in the first of a series of delightful satires by Svetozar TonjorofF. "Lilith, the self-made goddess," begins the series. And there are others to come. You have never read anything quite hke it before — don't miss the first and you will read all of them.
"Ob,
Hollywood!
>>
T)ARIS has its Latin Quartier; New York its Greenwich Village; San Francisco its Barbary Coast — and Los Angeles, its Hollywood. And for the first time you will be taken along on a real Ramble in Bohemia. Not from the outside looking in, but from the inside looking out.
In the May issue will appear a word picture of that unique and remarkable place, "The Coast." A revelation of the intimate life of the most famous colony of modern times. It is an amaring account of the haunts of the great of filmdom; a brilliant analysis of that celluloid suburb called Hollywood. If you have always wanted to visit Hollywood, save the price of a ticket and buy the May issue of Photoplay.