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120
Photoplay Magazine— Advertising Section
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Tiger Skins and Temperament
(Concluded from page 70)
almost everywhere. She was one of the very few women who was present at the Peace Conference for the signing of the Treaty. She had superintended the presentation of her two daughters, Margot and Julia, at the English court forty-eight hours before she caught a Channel boat and arrived at the Conference, breathless but calm, in her party gown.
She hopes to see to it that in her pictured stories there will be truthful representations of life. Her baronial halls will look as if real Lords and Ladies walked through them — for Elinor Glyn is very, very well connected in England. She does not believe in writing about things unless you know and can tell the truth about them. We have a lot to look forward to.
"Three Weeks," it may surprise you to learn, is the only modern book in English recommended to the students of a fiction course at Columbia University. There is no doubt that young New York, so free and
untrammeled, will flock in droves to see Miss Glyn's latest conception of Real Life when it is thrown on Broadway screens.
She wears very nice shoes. There is, on one of her slim fingers, which she said were very nice before she had to wash dishes in the canteen, a blazing emerald — a marvelous, fiery stone, that reflects a million little lights and flashes mysteriously and expensively. Her income from "Three Weeks" is enough to supply her with many, many emeralds. But she hasn't stopped working and thinking on that account.
One wonders if she wrote her first great story because she had already a taste for tiger-skins and emeralds or if the success of her story prompted her to acquire them. One feels she is as good a business woman as she is a writer. And that, as the Egyptian alchemist and the Columbia students and Paramount Pictures will tell you, is going some.
Questions and Answers
(Continued from page 84)
M. E. T., Paterson, N. J.— Well met, I should say. My expansive cranium is rivaled by my expansive smile when a letter from you comes along. The poor postman isn't so happy about it. Bill Hart's studio is at Bates and Effie streets, Hollywood, Cal. John Cumberland is not making any pictures at present, but is playing the lead in a new farce, "Ladies' Night." Cumberland made a series of two-reel comedies under Mrs. Sidney Drew's direction and also did "The Gay Old Dog." He is not married.
appears opposite him. Have no cast for "The Law of Nature." And I have not heard of that picture before — I wish I might say never.
Lily, Manila. — Yours was a tonic for this t. b. m. I don't need to occupy a front-row seat at a musical comedy for diversion. So you have seen Marie Walcamp, Elsie Ferguson, and Julian Eltinge down there. Well, you have very little left to live for, Lily. Violet Mersereau made a picture for the Art-o-Graf Film Company, Guardian Trust Bldg., Denver, Colo. Mary Anderson was last with the King Bee Co., Hollywood, Cal. Miss Mersereau is in New York at present.
Ann. — I certainly do not think it is practical for a sixteen-year-old girl to go on the stage. Especially when she's had no previous theatrical experience. More especially when she's still in school. Most especially when her parents don't want her to. Monte Blue is about thirty. He was born in Indiana. Bill Hart works in Hollywood and environs — wThich means that he doesn't confine his picture-making to that Los Angeles suburb when the scenario requires a "location" in the mountains or elsewhere. Bill isn't married and never has been. He lives with his sister, Miss Mary, who collaborates with him in his stories about horses, Indians, and dogs.
H. S., Atlantic City. — Your solicitude for my poor tired eyes would have been so much more convincing if you had used white instead of yellow stationery. But I suppose I can't have everything. Rockcliffe Fellowes opposite Norma Talmadge in "Yes or No." Gladden James was also in the cast.
Rose, Manhattan. — Dimples Costello? I presume you mean that gentleman whose first name is Maurice and who was once the premier idol of pictures? Well, he is now appearing in a film called "Determination." His little daughters are not in pictures now that I know of. Neither is his wife. Of course — drop in.
A. M., Alabama. — Glad to give you the cast of "Sweet Lavender." I think it's Mary Miles Minter's best picture in a long time. Mary isn't married to Ralph Graves. Mary isn't married at all and neither is Ralph. Satisfied? All right. Here goes: Sweet Lavender, Mary Miles Minter; Clem Hale, Harold Goodwin; Henry Wedderburn, Milton Sills; Professor Phenyl, Theodore Roberts; Mrs. Driscoe, Sylvia Ashton ; Ruth Holt, Jane Watson. Sweet Lavender!
Billie Burke Fan. — Thanks so much for writing to the Editor about me. I suppose you want me to drop your boss a card about you. Then perhaps we'll each be able to buy ourselves a new hat. Tom Meighan is thirty-three and he played opposite Miss Burke in "Arms and the Girl." His wife, Frances Ring Meighan, does not appear on the screen or the stage. She's a sister of Blanche Ring.
Clara, Clinton, Ind, — My whiskers aren't so very long. I have them pruned occasionally. Seriously speaking, however, I look exactly like the drawing at the head of the colyums and I do wish you'd believe me. Clara — have I ever lied to you? Lucille Carlisle, whose real name is Zintheo, is Larry Semon's leading lady. She always
Sylvia E. — I wouldn't disappoint you for anything. If you had asked me a dozen questions, I should have answered them. However, it's just as well that you didn't. June Elvidge is in vaudeville right now. She's married, a brunette and has a little daughter. Irene Castle's husband is Robert E. Treman, of Ithaca, New York. Mrs. Treman hasn't danced professionally since the denth of her first husband, Vernon Castle. She is soon to return to the screen, if reports be true.
^Vmrv advertisement In I'UOTOFLAY MAGAZINE Is guaranteed.