Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1943)

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.

PEBECO PETE SAYS: 1. Pebeco gives you 60% more tooth powder than average of 6 other leading brands . . . stretches your budget further! 2. Makes teeth sparkle. No other dentifrice cleans teeth better ! 3. You get no grit in Pebeco Powder! It doesn't scratch or mar tooth enamel. 4. Tastes peppy, too . . . makes mouth feel clean and minty -fresh. Get Pebeco Powder today . . . and save ! G/AAtr s/z£ OAfLy Big 101 size, too Also Pebeco Tooth Paste . . . clean, refreshing flavor . . . 100 and 5W • BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS * (Continued from, page 47) Kid Hutton is certain the Lord was on her side. "For a while there was quite a scar, but it cured itself," she says without a trace of selfpity. "You can still see >.t a little when the klieg lights hit me." Even without the scar that was slowly curing itself, she was quite a homely kid ar i you have her own word for that. \\ at she lacked in beauty, however, she made up in mirth, merriment and music that affected a man's heart. At thirteen, she decided to hike to New York and try for a shot at the big money. (Isn't Madison Square Garden the Mecca of every club fighter in the Union?) Three inonths of bucking New York and she went down for a long count. SHE got up (with the assistance of a gruff but kindly music publisher who staked her to a bus ticket) and went home, licking the wounds of her pride. It was her first knockout. 'You were outclassed, honey," her friend, the old pug, told her. "New York is strictly heavyweight competition and it isn't in the cards for a middleweight to come out on top. But you're gaining, honey. Keep punching." She went back to singing in front of corny bands considerably revised as to figure and face. No longer the precocious little gamin, she was fourteen, platinumcoiffed, sleek and vivacious. For the first time, the boys in the band were beginning to take notice. One night the band was playing a Lansing spaghetti-joint date when a waiter handed her a note. It was a request Sunday-Punch Girl to drop by Table 3 and meet the writer, one Vincent Lopez. "Got any qualms about quitting?" inquired Lopez. "None that a decent salary won't cure." "How decent?" "Shall we say sixty?" "Let's not. How about fifty?" "You'll have to give me some time." The next day she was on her way to Detroit. Just before the band went on, Lopez called her aside. "What do you say we lose this Thornburg handle?" "How about Hutton? It's okay with the numerologists." "It's okay with me." The movie-palace circuit did not exactly take Betty Hutton to its heart. For that matter, neither did Lopez. In a month or so he was shaking his head and getting ready to give her the usual two-weeks' notice when a friend of hers in the band tipped her off to her impending doom. When she came out to do her first number that night, she was a new Betty Hutton. Primarily she was angry — at herself, a characteristic Betty carries to this day. For she doesn't believe in getting angry at the other fellow. "You can't change him," she says, "but you can change yourself." In this instance, the results were spectacular. Exploding like a tormented volcano, she seized her opening number by the scruff of the neck and almost shook it to death. She whooped and she hollered. She yelled and she yodeled. And for the finale she hurled herself on top of the piano, screaming blue murder. It was the audience's turn to let go They almost took the theater apart. She was hurrying off the stage, headed for a good cry, when Lopez stopped her. "I didn't know you could do that sort of thing," he said, awed. "Neither did I," Betty said. Then Lopez got the nod to open Billy Rose's Casa Manana in New York. The news sent her blood pressure rocketing to the moon. At long last she was getting a return bout with New York. In a fit of optimism, she wired home advising hei mother and sister to hot-foot it to New York and a life of milk and honey. DARELY arrived in New York, she re•^ ceived the bad news. Her job was merely to open the show, to come out and interrupt a thousand diners who weren't especially keen on being interrupted. Chagrined, she relayed the news to her mother and sister, freshly installed in a drab fifth floor walk-up on Eleventh Avenue, on the eve of her debut. "What are you going to do, Betty?" sister Marian finally inquired. "I'm going to pray." Betty said. And pray she did in her little dressing room before the show, her mother sitting there with bowed head. Then, tense with those before-show jitters but confident that she had not prayed in vain, she walked out like David bound for his rendezvous with Goliath. Out there in the field of combat she cut loose and sang as she had never sung before. People began to look up from their soup and salad. Encouraged, she assaulted s;fi The War Bonds you have bought started the attack; the War Bonds you are buying help finish the attack.