Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1944)

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FINE AMERICAN PERFUME AT AN AMERICAN PRICE AMERICAN PERFUMERS • 65T 1390 A Oi vision of Shu Iron, Inc ONE SIZE ONLY THREE FIFTY THE OUNCE Plus fax DULCINEA * For True Love's Sake POETIC DREAM * For Sheer Enchantment *Reg. U. S. Pot. Off. RISQUE * For The Daring HEARTBEAT * When Hearts Are High Scrap Book on Lana Turner (Continued from page 53) Favorite Food: Home-made bread — and after that, macaroni, and after that, Irish stew. What she could have been instead of Lana Turner: She could have been Julia Turner the dress designer, with a big income tax to pay! She designs many of her own dresses and has since cradle days. The most copied Turner-special was a fluffy white pique pinafore, with small red hearts marching along the hem and shoulder frills — and with deep white lace lining the inside of the skirt. Pet pick-me-up between meals: Milk with ice-cubes in it. Habit she’s trying to break herself of: Sitting with her feet turned over and both ankles settled on the floor. Pet beauty secret: Why tell it? — most of us can’t profit by it anyway! It’s her magic knack with her hair, which she can arrange in a long page-boy; or braided in a coronet; or in shining buns over her ears; or in a sleek knot in back — or any other way at all! All of her hairdresses sHe designs herself; give her a comb and mirror and she could put Charles of the Ritz to blushing shame! What makes her yawn the most: Anything businesslike, from income-tax blanks to bank reports. Favorite Book: “The Lady In The Lake,” by Raymond Chandler — a chilling murder mystery. She reads nothing else but whodun-its, and devours them at the rate of five a week. Best, women friends: Among others are Betty Grable and Eve Wynn, wife of Keenan. Ex-boy friends: Too numerous to mention. What she wants in a husband: More than looks or anything else she asks two things: That he be considerate, that he be thoughtful. What she’d be like as a wife: She wouldn’t be a good cook, a bustling housekeeper or a hostess catering to the “right” people. She would be an immaculately groomed companion, a loving mother, a perfect supervisor of a cosy home . . . and a gay personality. Amount of sleep she gets a night: Nine hours, without fail. What gives her the biggest kick in life: Baby daughter Cheryl. Beautiful clothes of all kinds. Music, bowling, dancing — and friends collected for an evening of laughter. Most frightening moment: When little Cheryl was taken away from her right after birth — to receive a dozen blood transfusions. What she doesn’t suspect about herself: That the public will always be as loyal to her as her friends — because she’s never malicious, scheming or coldblooded. Everyone knows that whatever her antics in private life, they are only the results of her impulsiveness, her amazing beauty, and her joy of living — nothing more. The End