Photoplay (Jan - Jun 1922)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

Photoplay Magazine — Adykhtising Section Plays and Players (Continued from page 91) little screen experience. There were those who, when her stardom was announced, doubted that she was stellar material. Her first Fox release is by no means a masterpiece, but it proves that little Barbara, with her eccentric coiffure, and her piquant and decidedly not pretty little face, and her uncanny eyes, had a definite place on the silvershcet. That doesn't mean that she will rival Mary and Lillian and Norma right away. It does mean that she is a new and vivid personality, and as such she is interesting. FOUR times married, once kidnapped, finally exiled, Miss Watson had a lively career. First she was abducted, according to the story current at the time, from her father's house in El Centre Then she was married to a caveman who held her prisoner for several months. Later, her husband died. Another marriage, this one annulled. Then came her cruel exile. After her fourth marriage, she attracted the attention of Fred Niblo, the director, who cast her in an important part in "The Three Musketeers." She has made good. The face that caused all the trouble has now brought her fame and fortune. WELL, the ladies are going to have to stay up late nights for a while, but it's in a good cause. However, in passing, I should like to mention what they seem to have passed over. and which it might have been tactful and right to have noted — that there are in Hollywood many people connected with the motion pictures who are as eminently respectable, as cultured, as high-principled as the clubwomen themselves. And that while there are no doubt people in Hollywood who would be better for a little vigilante-ing, some movies and some not, there are also many people claiming connection with the industry who do not actually belong lo it. NO one desires to see the "morals of the movies" held to a high level as much as the people themselves — for everything of that kind reflects on their standing. For instance, the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ray, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Nagel, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas McLean, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ellis (May Allison), King and Florence Vidor, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Meredith, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eyton (Kathleen Williams), Mr. and Mrs. Jack Holt and their three kiddies, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Sills and little Miss Sills, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Scardon (Betty Blythe), Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Cameron (Anita Stewart), Miss Constance Binney, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gordon, Mr. and Mrs. William deMille, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace MacDonald (Doris May), Mr. and Mrs. Bryant Washburn and their two sons, Miss Ethel Clayton, Mr. and Mrs. Will Rogers and the three Rogers youngsters, Harold Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Lon Chaney and their son, Miss Lois Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Tod Browning, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wood, Miss Katherine MacDonald, "Mother" Sylvia Ashton, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. Sessue Hayakawa, Mr. William and Miss Mary Hart, Miss Gladys George, Miss Mildred Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wood — OH, I could go on endlessly, really I could. And all the people I have named have charming, respectable, cultured homes in Hollywood, most of which they own, and spend their time as decently, as quietly and as morally as any vigilante committee mnlH wish. (Continued on page 94) <f Complexion Secrets What Scientists Know About Your Skin A CLEAR, radiant, youthful complexion, what else but internal cleanliness can produce it.7 A clean system is the originator of charm, the handmaid to beauty, the basis of personal attractiveness. The texture of your skin, the brightness of your eyes and the sheen and lustre of your hair, all depend upon cleanliness— internal cleanliness. Truly, the fastidious woman keeps clean inside. She is careful to see that her bodily organs function properly, particularly those organs that eliminate waste from the body. If these do not act regularly and thoroughly, poisons are formed, absorbed by the blood and carried to the great covering of the body, the skin. „ They poison the skin cells, causing facial blemishes, muddy skin and sallowness. These poisons are the most common cause of personal unattractiveness. Result of Research Experts have conducted exhaustive research to find some method of eliminating these poisons in a harmless and natural way and thus keep the system clean. The result of their experience in treating thousands of cases has been the discovery that Nujot has the unique property of dissolving readily many intestinal poisons. These it carries out of the body along with the food residue as Nature intended. It thus promotes internal cleanliness by preventing the insidious poisoning of the skin eel Is, the most common cause of skin troubles. ny women have found Nujol to be an invaluable aid to a clear, radiant, youthNu/ol 13 lor sale by druggists everywhere. This is why ful comple so m; xion. MISTOL, a new product, for Colds in head, Kasal Catarrh, Laryngitis, Bronchitis, Hoarseness and acute paroxysms of Asthma. Made by the makers of Nujol. Nujol RtG. U.S^^^PAT, OFF. How and why the elimination of intestinal toxins will bring beauty and attractiveness is told Ins 1 lam, instructive and authoritative way in the booklet, "A LOVELY SKIN COMLS FROM WITHIN", bill out and mail the attached coupon today. Nujol Laboratories. Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey), Room USE 44 Beaver Street, New York. Please send me a copy of "A LOVELY SKIN COMLS I ROM WITHIN". 93 When you write to advertisers please mention I'llOTOH.AY MAGAZINE.