Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1948)

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F for keeping my waves lovely for the camera!” PERM-O-COMB combs In waves . . . saves waves, dollars too! Finger waves, permanents last longer. PERM-O-COMB gives hair-conditioning, brush-like action! Lifts the hair, aerates the scalp — never flattens your waves. PERM-O-COMB is easy to use! No intricate parts, complicated gadgets, no chemicals. ( Continued, from page 72) separate ways, I knew that they would come together again. For I heard Rita’s voice, as she showed me pictures of Rebecca Welles, saying, “Don’t you think, Elsa, that she looks just like Orson?” I heard Orson’s voice, on the air, denouncing the choice of the name “Gilda” for the fourth atomic bomb dropped at Bikini. I heard him thunder, “I can positively guarantee that Miss Hayworth had nothing to do with the name of her picture being used for this great destroyer of life.” I knew, too, that when Orson was Joseph Cotten’s house guest Rita brought Rebecca over every Sunday and he took great pleasure in her attitudes, so like his own. Also, I could guess that Rita, after being married to Orson, must find other fellows pretty dull. And so, Rita and Orson took up their marriage again. All of which in Hollywood is conventional enough! WHEN both a husband and wife are in pictures and so understand the demands made upon a star, their marriage manners become more polite than they would be otherwise. I’m thinking specifically of the first appearance Maria Montez made after the birth of her baby. She would have no one saying she wasn’t as lovely as she had been before her pregnancy. To this end she wore a basic black dress that served as a foil not only for her dark beauty but also for Her Hat. It was comprised of a black crown that fit snugly about her head and great jets of glycerined ostrich feathers that sprouted out on the side and front. At Mocambo’s where Maria and Jean Pierre Aumont dined, she was the most beautiful woman present. But when Jean Pierre said, “Darling, shall we dance?” I held my breath. It took no little maneuvering for him to keep Maria’s feathers out of his eyes as he guided her about the floor. But whereas nine hundred and ninety-nine devoted husbands would have flatly refused to dance with any wife who wore it, Jean Pierre managed gracefully without one word of protest. Part of the Hollywood scene himself, he understood Maria’s need to be sensational. Jane Wyman and Ronald Reagan have arranged with their producers to leave their studio in time to dine at home at seven o’clock. They make an occasion of the dinner hour that is taken for granted in most families. Always Maureen, their six-year-old daughter, is at the table with them even though she has had supper earlier. First they hear about her day. Then Ronnie has the floor — until Jane says, “But you haven’t heard a thing until you’ve heard my day!” Problems are tabu during this one time they all share. Furthermore, Jane and Ronnie, both intensely interested in world affairs, have the same interests and the same friends. Ronnie does not have to get along as best he can with husbands of the women with whom Jane plays bridge and Jane does not have to wear a polite smile while the men Ronnie brings home to dinner talk business. In fact, Jane and Ronnie call each other on the phone two or three times a day to compare notes on the new ruling of the Screen Actors Guild or some rumor they’ve heard about television. Whether Hollywood marriage manners are better or worse than marriage manners elsewhere I wouldn’t venture to say. I only know they’re different — because Hollywood marriages are different — because Hollywood life is different, too. The End The Stars Model PERM-O-COMB — the pocket-sized hairdresser ... at department and drug stores everywhere, $1.98. Photoplay Fashions on Page 89 74