Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1952)

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Don’t answer until you’ve tried this quiz game. Then chart your Joan Caulfield couldn’t wait to write the letter that surprised Photoplay’s editors. Above, Joan with talented dress designer Mary Kay Dodson The richest people in the world, I think, are those who have likable qualities, those who “have a way with them.” For even if personal charm did not benefit our lives in both romance and business — which it most certainly does — it makes us rich in human relationships. Some people are bom with personal charm. Other people live and learn and so in time, acquire charm. It lies in the littlest things. . . . Do you know what they are? If you do you can, by applying your knowledge, increase your personal charm — and be happier for it. Indicate in the blank space following every paragraph whether you think the star’s trait described therein is likable. And tally your score according to the count provided at the end of this feature: 1. Betty Hutton is utterly and completely frank about money matters, explains that she cannot afford to give big parties or indulge in the other extravagances that are thought to be part of a star’s estate. “I’d love to give lush parties,” Betty says. “But I can’t do it and pay my taxes. And if I owe any money — to the government or to anybody — I can’t sleep. For too many years I had to lie awake and worry. If I don’t get anything else out of my success I’m going to have peace of mind!” A. Once upon a time it was considered bad taste to talk about money. But today, taxes being as high as they are, money is a favorite conversational piece. All of us, I suppose, feel better when we hear how taxes are curtailing others’ spending too. Betty, you'll notice, makes her position clear. But she does not moan or pull a long face about giving Uncle Sam the major portion of her * Pat Wymore isn’t the only woman who feels more glamorous when Errol Flynn’s around