Photoplay (Jan - Jun 1926)

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 — Advertising Section DELIGHTFUL to be SURE . . and so easy to use Deodo every day! IT'S just the easiest, simplest matter, now, to make sure of immaculate freshness under all conditions! Even when rooms are overheated and you're wearing heavy clothing! Deodo is a wonderful new deodorant in powder form — delightful to use! Just rub it under the arms and dust it over the body when you dress. It immediately absorbs and neutralizes the odors of the body — and this one application will keep' you daintily fresh all day! Deodo does not seal the pores nor interfere with their important functions. It is soothing and healing to the skin. And it will not stain or otherwise harm clothing. Try Deodo on sanitary napkins. You will be amazed to find how easily — and safely — it solves this distressing problem. Deodo is sold at most druggists' and toilet goods counters. Or I will gladly send you a miniature container holding a generous supply, free! Mail the coupon today! Maybe it's the Southern California Blue Book that Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Moreno are reading. Anyway, the Morenos are one of the five families representing the motion picture business in California's social register. Mrs. Moreno was Daisy Canfield, daughter of one of Los Angeles' oldest families, and one of the wealthiest women on the coast. Even the gossips cannot find any excuse for questioning their happiness Studio News and Gossip — East and West CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5 1 ] A MULFORD PRODUCT prevents and destroys body odors FREE— MAIL COUPON NOW"! Pho. 3-^G H. K. Mulford Company Mullord Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Please send me the free sample of Deodo. Name Street City . . .State. Adolphe Menjou in "I'll See You Tonight" at the Paramount Long Island Studio. Mai St. Clair, that likable young director, was handling the megaphone. That morning Greta came in a couple of hours late. She didn't bother about an excuse or apology. She was just late, that's all. The company had sat around twiddling its lingers waiting for Miss Nissen, while the well-known overhead mounted minute by minute. Now, Mr. Menjou felt this was a mean trick for Greta to play on their nice director, for know you that if the picture costs too much, the director gets the blame. So like a Dutch uncle, Adolphe took Greta aside and asked her if she thought this was a fair way for her to act. Mr. Menjou, had.been on the set right on the dot. And then Greta became hysterical and rushed off the set to her dressing room. This was the second time she had seriously delayed the company, so Miss Nissen was removed from the cast of "I'll Sec You Tonight." and a newcomer, Elsie Lawson, was given the role. Mr. St. Clair's first experience with the elusive Greta was when she arrived in New York from the Coast. She had been sent for to play the lead with Menjou in this picture. They needed her immediately. Hut Miss Nissen had some Christmas shopping to do and didn't bother reporting at the studio until alter the holidays. She had picked out a nice quiet hotel that nobody ever heard of, apparently, for the studio scouts were unable to locate the Swedish beauty. TTEARD on the set at the Para■*■ •'■mount Studio: Wally Beery: "Ray, where's the wig I had on a minute ago?" Ray Hatton : "In your hat, big boy, in your hat!" TT would be just a scrap of paper to anyone -*-but Mrs. Douglas MacLean. But to her it's worth just exactly $250,000. It was Douglas MacLean's Christmas gift to his wife — an insurance policy that protects him to the extent of a quarter of a million dollars against any illness or accident that may terminate his screen career. Special stress is laid on MacLean's famous toothy smile. "rpLORENCE VIDOR is wearing on ■*■ her engagement finger a most magnificent square-cut emerald, and we understand that the date of her wedding to George Fitzmaurice is set for some time in July. RICHARD BARTHELMESS is back in New York after a brief vacation in Florida. He denied emphatically that he had bought any Florida real estate. "But I never saw so many real estate men in mvlife." he said. "I imagine I was approached by at least four thousand of them with offers of sure-thing propositions. If I had taken any of them up and they had turned out as represented, a million dollars almost overnight would have been my profits. "To tell the truth." Dick added, "when you see what is actually happening down there you are almost inclined to believe all of them. "It's deeds, not words, in Florida!" DOROTHY MACKAILL gets a nice green hat for being the first Michael Aden heroine. She is playing the name part in "The Dancer of Pari-." one of Arlen's stories, which Robert Kane is making for First National at the Cosmopolitan Studio in New York. Dorothy's selection ended a search of four Even advertisement in PHOTOPLAY magazine la guaranteed.