Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1963)

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THE HARDEST THING IN LIFE continued ROD TAYLOR: Do I think the most important thing in life is to make love well? I’ll answer that question with this little story: They tell of a man who once told his wife that he would never leave her because she made love more beautifully than any other woman. She became infuriated and hit him. “Why did you hit me?” asked her near-unconscious husband. “For knowing the difference, that’s why,” replied his wife. CONNIE STEVENS: I think the most difficult thing in life is to love completely. And I don’t believe it has to do either with skill or age. When I was a small girl of eight I loved a boy so devotedly, I used to cry just thinking of how much I loved him. He was every wonderful thing a girl could imagine about love and happiness. I adored him. I would have done anything he asked me to do. But he didn’t know I was alive. I wanted nothing in re turn for my love. Yet I never got near enough to touch his hand. As you grow older it is almost impossible to be that generous. Women like to believe that they love completely, but I suspect that it would be unbearable to love that much and not be loved back. FRANK SINATRA: I once knew a woman who thought her husband was the greatest man that ever lived. Everyone else in the world thought he was a bum. Who decides whether love-making is easy or difficult? Making love exists only in the heart of the love-maker. ANN-MARGRET: I guess there are men and women who believe that the most difficult thing in life is to make love well. But in my opinion there is something much more difficult. And that is to make love last. I’m not discounting the happiness of being with the one you love, to know for (Continued on page 76)