Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1949)

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Water Color Portrait p H 0 T 0 P L A Y ROSE MARIE REI Popular star of screen and radio You’ll agree when you slip into one of these gorgeous, California-inspired swim suits in a variety of summer-magic colors. The fabulous, built-in Flexure Bra... or, the Rose Marie Reid Classic with the Miracle Bra and the zipperless, moulded back, are just three of the exclusive contouring features offered by Rose Marie loveliest beach THE CALIFORNIA ORIGINALS SCULPTURED SWIM SUIT WITH THE (Continued from page 61) She loves to watch a bullfight. She rarely dreams, sleeps at wifi like a baby, and considers “Neptune’s Daughter” her best picture. She has never worn dental braces. She uses light perfumes and is specially fond of Mexican food. Esther Williams was bom in the living room of a little frame house in Inglewood, California, in which her parents still live. She has never smoked. She loves to eat and serve good food and, as a consequence, the grocery bill is her greatest extravagance. She has a passion for painting furniture. SHE wears a charm bracelet, given to her by her husband, which commemorates every picture in which she has appeared and on it is engraved: To D.B.G.F.D.B.B., which is the code for “To Darling Baby Girl From Darling Baby Boy.” She is a nut on growing ivy and Philodendron all over thq house — in beer mugs, spittoons, iron pots, anything. Her husband is daily waiting to see something sprout out of his pipe rack. She flunked in mathematics. She hates to eat alone. She never uses a typewriter, weighs 125 pounds, and her characteristic way of loafing is to go for a swim or bake a cake or clean up the yard, or just keep busy. She can never remember the license number of her car. Her baby is scheduled to arrive in August but she hopes it will be bom on August 8th, her birthday. She never gets seasick and has ho desire to go hunting because she cannot abide the thought of killing anything; indeed, when she goes fishing die always throws the fish back. She is not superstitious. She has never plucked her eyebrows, is not given to “moods,” and enjoys penny ante poker. She is proudest of having won the Women’s Outdoor National, 100meter free-style, in 1939. She wears cotton nightgowns. She declares her most embarrassing moment was when she was engaged as star of Billy Rose’s Aquacade, and before a gallery of girl swimmers, demonstrated her ability. When she finished, he loudly observed, “That was very fast, Miss Williams, but not very pretty.” She doesn’t like cats. She is slow to criticize and has had nearly all of the usual children’s diseases. Her parents came from Dodge City, Kansas, where her mother taught school. She is right-handed and cannot stand clothes that confine her movements. She never drinks beer. Her hair is brown and her pretty face belies an indomitable will to excel in anything she undertakes. She wears small earrings and dislikes Limburger and Gorgonzola. She is five feet seven inches tall. Her eyes are hazel, the whitfes almost blue. She participates with enthusiasm and intelligence in any kind of argument or discussion on history, politics or philosophy. She is a good cook, dotes on making salads, and does not believe in matrimonial vacations. “Positively not!” She is addicted to midnight snacks and her greatest disappointment was the cancellation of the 1940 Olympics, which was her only opportunity to compete in the international contests. She is planning an Early American house; when she instructed the architect to include a slide from the upstairs bedroom to the swimming pool, he replied, “How can I do that in Early American?” Her mother is now a practising psy 88 the perfect fit — that lasts and lasts!