Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1950)

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p H 0 T 0 P L A Y Wonderful new features . . . Same budget price! • New "Comfort Cut" Styling! • New Nylon elastic Waistband for longer wear! • New Quick drying Swantone fabric! With these new features, at no increase in price. Minikins is the Nation's number one undie buy! Avertable in 3 popular styles, a variety of colors, in sizes for most every figure. INDIVIDUALLY CELLOPHANE WRAPPED UNDIES • SLIPS • GOWNS • PAJAMAS BLUE SWAN MILLS, DIVISION OF McKAY PRODUCTS C O R P. 350 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK 1, NEW YORK ping over and around them, the embarrassed girl, her boy friend and David, white gloves and all, picked up chocolates, doing their best to fit them back in the heartshaped container. To this day, the smell of chocolate holds no charms for David. June Allyson remembers an embarrassing comic valentine of her own creation, when she was nine years old and the fourth grade was celebrating with a big class party. She can still see the big box covered with red and white crepe paper. It stood in a comer of the classroom and all the children deposited the valentines they were giving in it. June’s valentine was a little homemade affair for a boy named Jimmy on whom she had a terrific crush. She wasn’t ashamed of having made the valentine out of drawing paper. But she hadn’t counted on the teacher calling out the valentines. When she got to June’s, she stopped. For on it, June had sketched a very unflattering portrait of “teacher.” There was an embarrassed silence during which June’s face got as red as her drawing-paper heart. Then, as a topper, Jimmy, unable to rise manfully to the occasion, rejected the valentine. FOR THOSE two romantic -marrieds, Ricardo and Georgianna Montalban, Valentine’s Day is an extra romantic occasion, with flowers and candy and candlelight j and Ricardo’s romantic touch on the gui j tar. But there was that first Valentine’s Day after their marriage when Ricardo, who knew nothing of any American institution such as a day being set aside for romance, didn’t give Georgianna a gift. All that day, she waited for a gift to arrive from Ricardo. And she was a little hurt and disappointed when none came, particularly, when she saw the thoughtful remembrances her sisters’ husbands had given them. Her feeling, however, was as nothing compared to Ricardo’s when he realized, too late, what all the dangling Cupids in shop windows were about. It was, he felt, a grave international misunderstanding. So much so, that the next year he came home carrying the largest heart-shaped box he could find. Similarly, but in reverse, there occurred another such incident in the home of an equally romantic married couple last year. Corinne Calvet, the sultry French beauty, gat across the dinner table from her handsome husband, John Bromfield, worrying about the sad expression on his face. She was very happy. She loved him verj much. He was a most thoughtful husband. He had brought her roses that evening, in fact, he brought her roses almost every evening. That night was no more special to her than all the other specia nights. In France, there was no specia . day labeled for romance. The only heart1 shaped objects she remembered seeing ir stores there were bars of Schiaparelli soap John was sad, it developed as dinner wen on, because he had been searching all ovei Los Angeles and Beverly Hills for muguets her favorite flower. There were woods ful of them, the little white, bell-shaped flow ers, she said, in her native land. “Bui mon cher,” she said, “they bloom only ii May.” Besides, he did not need to worr about a special day. “In France, eueri day is St. Valentine’s, and now, in Amer ica, too,” she said, smiling at him tenderlj This year, as February fourteen nears many thoughts go to a girl with a wistful heart-shaped face and a baby-faced here Their romance captured the hearts c people everywhere. Wanda Hendrix an Audie Murphy, who were first introduce when Audie fell in love with Wanda’ portrait on the Valentine cover of a maga zine. Hollywood hopes that this yea Cupid may contrive to arrange a repea The End 88