Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1944)

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.

p HI ffl Such creams are outmoded forever by Yodora. Soft, delicate, exquisite— Yodora feels like whipped cream. Amazing — that such a fragrant, lovely cream can give such effective powerful protection. Frankly, we believe you won’t even finish your present supply of deodorant once you try different Yodora. So much lovelier! Yet you get powerful protection. Yodora never fades or rots clothes — has been awarded Seal of Approval of the Better Fabrics Testing Bureau, Inc. In tubes or jars, 10^, 30^, 60<f. McKesson & Robbins, Bridgeport, Conn. YO D 0 R A "ARMPtr P/PiPL£S 7" (Due to irritating chemicals) fYou don’t need to offend your armpits to avoid offending others! A newtype deodorant —Yodora —is made entirely without irritating metallic salts! Actually soothing to normal skins. CP£AM GO£S GPA/Afy? Now you can end this waste! Yodora never dries and grains. Yodora — because it is made with a cream basestays smooth as a fine face cream to the last! Sweet Sue Just two empties hoping somebody’ll give us a job . . . but quick! Because since Pearl Harbor, bottlers have had to put all us beer and soft drink bottles on double-duty, we must keep in circulation. Won’t you please help us? Return us with our cases to your regular dealer as fast as you empty us. Besides helping both dealer and bottler, you’ll get back your bottle deposit. OWENS-ILLINOIS GLASS COMPANY Makers of DURAGLAS Beer and Beverage Bottles ... A ~ 'rve~ ' ( Continued from page 51) pictures, Paramount’s “And Now Tomorrow” and Jules Levy’s production of “The Hairy Ape.” They are her first real starring roles in important pictures, after six years of being a Hollywood “almost,” and her memory of the near-fatal childhood accident helps explain why she has stayed so cheerful. “You know,” she said, “I don’t remember being frightened when the car loomed up, nor being hit. I don’t even remember the pain, though I must have suffered a lot. All I remember is the marvelous feeling of waking every morning and knowing I was going to get a brand-new present.” Today Susan looks absurdly young, much more so than on the screen or in stills. She has the skin that should go with glowing red hair, and a freshness — as in strawberries. She could pass, if she tried, for sixteen. So it’s easy to guess what she must have looked like when, at eighteen, she made her one-girl Commando raid on Broadway. Her mother still clothed her in what Mrs. Marrener considered demure, highschool-girl clothes; her eyebrows, of course, weren’t plucked; she wore no trace of lipstick or rouge! Theatrical producers were kind but bored; a few even let her read lines; then they would pat her paternally on the shoulder and murmur, “Come back in a few years.” A FTER weeks of that, Susan, on a desperate hunch, went into a modeling agency’s office. She had come into the building looking for a producer who wasn’t there (he’d gone broke) and just happened to see the modeling agency’s name on the directory board. Her impulsiveness proved profitable this time Color photography was booming; the agency needed a true redhead and didn’ have one. Soon that alert and attractive head enlivened magazine covers and ads for famous cosmetics, dentifrices anc soaps. Part of her earnings went foi dramatic coaching. David Selznick noted Susan’s pose; illustrating a national magazine article “How Models Come To New York’ (Susan says, “In my case, on the subway”) and David brought her to Hollywood for a Scarlett O’Hara test. Nothing much came of that, except that the tesl did get her six months’ work at Warners But the silence from the executive offices at the end of six months was so deep you could hear Susan’s option drop! Then followed six jobless months that really tested Susan’s ability to keep her chin up. Toward the six months’ end, Susan, completely anonymously, posed for a breakfast food company. She not only needed the money, but she’d heard that the company always sent a model two complimentary cases of their particular wonder-flakes. For the last three weeks before Susan and her mother planned to leave for New York with tickets bought from the modeling fee, they lived on breakfast food and skimmed milk. Susan, remembering, says, “If you go to the dairy, buy in large quantities and lug the bucket home yourself. Skimmed milk is very cheap.” At the last moment, just like the old movies where the wicked squire’s mortgage was paid off, Paramount signed a new talent director, Arthur Jacobson, and he talked with Susan, was impressed and lost traf Ti lift Ecu i® JOI rtai it) t o»i ski A In w P is In o! i tl Hi JO 11 k se fi k to 1 t ot k 108