Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1927)

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io8 Photoplay Magazine — Adyektising Section \NSTAMTLV / Alluring, Lustrous Nails Now so Fashionable Smart society's edict makes this new manicure a part of the perfect toilette. Each finger tip a jewel of unsurpassed loveliness .... Nails gleaming with the lustre of tinted pearls .... Is it any wonder that smart women of fashion have decreed lustrous nails as an emphatic part of fashionable grooming? Glazo set this vogue .... the wonderful liquid polish that gives, instantly, a rosy, alluring lustre to nails that are dull. No buffing. Just a light brush of Glazo over the nails. Quickly they assume a lovely lustre. After a week this Glazo finish is nearly as fresh as the day you applied it. Neither soap and water nor work can harm it. It will not crack or peel or turn an ugly brown. Be sure that you get Glazo in dainty twin bottles. The polish in one. And in the other— Glazo Remover that insures the most charming manicure, and saves precious polish. The better shops and stores everywhere sell Glazo. Ask for it by name. The Glazo Company, 408 Blair Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio; 168 King St., W., Toronto, Ont., Canada. The Original Liquid Polish Complete With Remover Fifty Cents. GL^ZO Nails polished with Glazo are more beautiful, more fashionable. No buffing necessary. a say the letter meant nothing and had been written only to get rid of the gal. Thus Dave worked out the scheme studio officials are now following. A green ink signature on a plcase-give-this-littlcgirl-a-chance letter means "I don't mean a word of it." Blue ink signifies, "give her a day's work, if possible, and then break the bad news." Black ink, alone, demands action. /"\UR solid aluminum loving cup, ^^given monthly for the most effective garbling of the English language by the foreign artists, goes to Lya de Putti, who murmured plaintively to Director James Young when he kept her, long after lunch hour, in the cinema embrace of Kenneth Harlan : "When you have hungry in the stomach you can't loving." The second prize in the same contest, a barrel of primrose bath salts, goes to Ivan Moskine (nee Mosjoukine) for his remark as he left the home of the Kordas after a most charming party: "I must give revenge !" Meaning, of course, that he must repay the pleasures of the evening in like fashion. KING VI DOR brought a company to Xew York and spent several weeks filming street scenes for "The Crowd." Eleanor Boardman, who is playing the wife of a poor clerk in this picture, had to eat most of her luncheons wearing the make-up and the get-up for the part. Well, she dresses that way anyhow. JAMES MURRAY, the former extra boy and theater doorman, plays the leading role in Mr. Yidor's piece. Murray has five sisters and seven brothers and a mother and father. Whenever Yidor wanted a mob scene, he just invited the Murrays around to watch the picture. And Murray, after a long struggle for recognition, has the time of his life being a somebody. He's beginning to dress like Rod La Rocque. QVERHEARD at "The King of ^^Kings" opening. Producers and stars and directors, but mostly producers, crowded the entrance of the Chinese Theater. Up piped an observing fan in the sidelines: "Gee, there are more Jews here than there were at the Crucifixion." NOW it can be told. The younger of the Beery brothers was not named Noah for nothing. The truth has come to light. Noah has just purchased a million fish. A million fish, not to sell, not to fry, but just to catch. Darned clever, these film stars. Noah, as may be judged, is an Izaak Walton devotee. Nothing delights him more than a fishing rod, a supply of flies and the right kind of trout stream. Trout streams are rarely found in California, but is a film favorite to be held down by a fact like that? I should say not. First Noah found a brook, 92 miles from Los Angeles, fed by four stream-. He bought said brook. Then he bought a million trout and had them dumped therein. Next he hired two Hollywood realtors to talk to the fish and get them to take an interest in the property. And the rest was easy. A LITTLE lesson on the technical director, folks. Metro-GoldwynMayer has had full share of them recently. Not the usual technical director, spectacles and lugging an encyclopedia, but real authorities on customs and things. Clarence Brown has assisting him the original "Cherokee Kid," Scott Turner, now in his early seventies, but still as keen-eyed as when golden nuggets Everyone get ready for a good, old-fashioned cry. Here is Little Eva's Death Scene from Universal's version of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Little Eva is played by Yirginia Gray. This particular bit has caused more tears than any other moment in dramatic literature Every advertisement in PnoTOn.AT MAGAZINE is piaranteed.