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66
Photoplay Magazine
"The Cinderella Man" alone showed the whimsical, elfinsweet personality of other days.
Mae Marsh major had been a thin, unpretty, unsophisticated little pirl in distant California. She seldom saw the pressapent and performed before the camera exactly as her director told her.
Mae Marsh Minor gained weight, attained nice contours, lived in New York City, was beautifully gowned, took alluring photographs, was much in print on many subjects, became
a center of metropolitan attention, and played dressed up parts. But the fire was out.
Let us hope, rather, that the fire was not out; only all banked over with the ashes of celebrity and prosperity.
It is rumored that Mr. Griffith plans to have her in a picture or two of his own next autumn. Whether this is only rumor, or more than rumor, it is a good hope, for Mae Marsh is in the very flower of her youth, and is too distinct and individual an artist for the screen to lose.
Thr whoK Bcr.ip made Mids Storcyso maJ that »lio left the screen flat on its back and donned a uniform to drive an ambulance. Metro Pictures was the loser when Kdith abandoned her film enjiajjement to enlist in the N. L. W. S. Motor Corps. She says, now, "Really I haven't the slightest idea when I'll come back to the screen. 1 suppose I will stick at this 'work as long" as there's work to be done." The insert below shows £dith and her ambulance.
Edith Storey Is Still At War
Even though the soldiers and sailors are coming back to their old jobs — occasionally — she refuses to forsake her ambulance.