Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1961)

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.

Today You Can’t Buy A Finer Deodorant At Any Price ! p Iamder CHLOROPHYLL GREASELESS. NON • IRRITATING STOPS PERSPIRATION ODOR HARMLESS TO SKIN OR CLOTHES EASY-TO-USE PUSH-UP HOLOER f US-TESTED McCall's USETESTED: McCall's / Yet this jumbo “use tested” stick Think of all the qualities you want in a deodorant. It should stop perspiration odor instantly, and protect all day long. Yet it must be absolutely safe, harmless to skin. Greaseless, harmless to clothes. Delicately fragrant. Must you pay a high price for all this? Not today! Not when Lander sells so many millions that they can offer an oversize supply in a plastic push-up holder, at a mere 29c! DEODORANTS . . .and only 39c for the lotion ROLL-ON style that stopsperspiration worries. THATS HOLLYWOOD FOR YOU FROM A STOOL AT SCHWAB’S: I’m sitting in my office — oil a stool at Schwab’s drugstore. Tuesday Weld is sitting next to me. A girl I don’t know is also sitting next to me, on the stool to the right. I’m between two worlds: a girl who has it made, and a girl who has a scrapbook but no clippings. I lean over and whisper to her, "Who’s your latest?” Tuesday hates loud talkers, although sometimes she can be loud. Tuesday is an improved person in all departments: conduct, clothes, acting. Tuesday often hurries here after work, to make a phone call in privacy, she says. Yet she seldom uses the booth, but makes her call on the phone out in the open. Tuesday ignores my question and talks of other things. I persist. "Have you been phoning Elvis?” Tuesday smiles, almost laughs. "I’ve yet to phone a fellow long distance.” She continues. "I date a lot of fellows but I’ve yet to fall in love. Maybe that’s what I’m waiting for — to fall in love.” A few minutes later she’s oft to keep a date. "Give my best to Wednesday,” I call after her. Wednesday is our name for her mother. Schwab’s is a modern Lonely Hearts Club. Characters who are lonely and / know what Tuesday’s waiting for. looking for companionship congregate there. A real character is character actor Clegg Hoyt. Notice the cast of characters at the end of the next TV show you see. One out of ten is certain to list Clegg Hoyt. The other nine times, he’s here at Schwab’s. Clegg is a fixture. A few weeks ago, I was eating with Martin Schwab. Husky Clegg approached, timidly. “Will you cash this five dollar check for me?” he asked. Martin looked up from his plate and initialed the check. “You haven’t your phone number on it,” quickly added Martin. Clegg said, “It’s 01. 6-1212.” Martin penciled it in on the check before he realized: “That’s the number of the store.” “I know it,” replied Clegg, “but I get all my phone calls here!” Sandra Dee now comes around with Bobby Darin. Before, Sandra came around with her mother. And Bobby used to do his shopping alone. Sandra is the same with Bobby as she was with her mother. She seldom says a word, smiles, and looks pretty. Bobby talks more than Sandra’s mother, but don’t get the wrong idea from this sentence. Bobby is pleasant. Sometimes he’ll even sing, very softly, a new song for me. Janet Leigh says, “A person who needs no introduction generally does.” . . . Shirley MacLaine wonders how television would have done if there had been no Roaring Twenties and no A1 Capone. . . . Doug McClure is the shadow that Barbara Luna casts. ... It certainly was strange one evening to see Dillinger (Lawrence Tierney), A1 Capone (Rod Steiger), A1 Capone (Telly Savalas), A1 Capone (Neville Brand) and Ma Barker (Joan Blondell) in a huddle near the cash register. The girl at my right, the unknown with the empty scrapbook, stood up. Before exiting, she said to me, "Is it really true that Lana Turner was discovered at a soda fountain?” I answered, "Yes.” "Well,” she said, "I’ve been coming here every day for a month, having a soda. And the only thing that’s happened lo me is that I’m getting fat.” That’s Hollywood For You. 4