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v^al York
The skipper and the first mate are called out on deck to face the camera. Charlie Farrell and his wife, Virginia Valli, treat their Hollywood friends to some smooth sailing aboard the Farrell yacht, "Flying Cloud." Aye, aye, Captain! No rocks ahead, and the seas are calm — so ho for a fine trip!
A CUSTOMER of a certain Hollywood beauty parlor drew back the curtain of a certain booth by mistake and stood there, rooted to the spot by what she saw.
For there sat Connie Bennett and a little manicurist, each eating half a ham sandwich and taking turns with one spoon, eating cole slaw out of a paper carton.
TWTEMBERS of the "Dancing Lady" company were in the projection room, running rushes. There was a scene where Joan Crawford, as a cheap burleycue girl, is brought to her rich boy friend's home for the first time. And just as the scene started and Joan, on the screen, registered a sickly, miserable grin, Joan, sitting looking at it, remarked: "You know, that's exactly the way I felt the first time I went up to Pickfair."
"X /f AK WEST, who wears tights in her new ■^picture, "I'm No Angel," has a reason.
After "She Done Him Wrong" was shown throughout the country, letters poured in to ask if Mac wore those long dresses bccausr she liked them or because her — er — limbs needed covering.
It burned Mae up. Rushing into a producer's office she yanked up her skirt and said, "Give a look. Have I legs or not? Well, I'll show 'em 1 have, in the next one."
And so came the tights, little children.
TM \<;i\K your surprise to find out that the Best-Dressed Man on the Screen hasn't paid for a suit of clothes in ten years!
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You have to have nifty under-pinnings to go to a kid's party, if you're a woman. You have to have knickers, if you're a man. So Dorothy Mackaill, George E. Stone and Constance Talmadge were all properly garbed for the "When-we-were-seven" party which Connie Talmadge threw
All was revealed when twenty-live suits of Adolphe Menjou's personal wardrobe were delivered to the Fox Studio, to be used in "The Worst Woman in Paris."
Menjou was asked to place a value on them — and replied that he hadn't the faintest idea what they were worth!
"But what if something should happen to
them," was the alarmed answer. "In that 1 have fifty more at home," replied
Menjou.
Ami the reason he didn't know the value of the suits wa because tailors in all parts of the world make his clothes and present them to him.
All he has to do is wear them!