Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1947)

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p 90 You will enjoy using these lovely new occasional dishes by Federal — they are popular and practical for many uses. Unusually attractive in pattern and contour, they have all the lustre and sparkle of clear, brilliant crystal, for which Federal is justly famous. Really, they are so lovely, and so very inexpensive that you will want several of them. You will find them, too — at your favorite store — for as little as 5c to 10c each. THE FEDERAL GLASS COMPANY • COLUMBUS 7, OHIO Mister "King" ( Continued from, page 40) informal manner he prefers when he isn’t “done up” for a movie. At forty-six — and he doesn’t deny a year of it — he is still one of the best-looking guys that ever ingratiated his way into a woman’s heart — including mine. It was after one of those comfortable conversational lulls only old friends can enjoy that I asked him, “Where do you go from the top?” The swing rocked on a couple of times before Clark said, “You keep on going. There isn’t a place anyone ever reaches where you don’t keep on going straight ahead — particularly where your work is concerned. Believe me, Louella, you are through when you begin to think you’re on top. That is the mythical place where you start sliding down!” “That’s just the point,” I argued. “You don’t ever slide! ‘Adventure’ wasn’t a good picture but ‘The Hucksters’ put you right back on top! Were you really angry with the studio during those long months when you refused script after script between those two pictures?” That rumor had certainly been well circulated — even to the point that Clark was retiring. “Of course, I wasn’t angry with them,” he answered quickly. “The studio was just as eager as I to make my comeback after the war a successful picture. I admit I didn’t like the story of ‘Adventure.’ But, I blame myself as much as anyone that it wasn’t as good as my earlier movies. The trouble was, I had war jitters. Like every other guy back from the service, I was nervous and restless. I was pressing too hard. We were all pressing too hard. Result— -it was all very de-pressing! “When it was over, I realized I was going to have to get away for awhile and fight this thing out by myself. When ‘The Hucksters’ was first submitted to me, I didn’t turn it down because I didn’t like the script or the story. I just wasn’t ready to tackle another picture so soon. “So I went away on fishing and hunting trips with an occasionaal fling in New York, dining or dancing with a pretty girl. And all of a sudden the kinks were ironed out. I was raring to get back to work. Why, at one time, I even thought of retiring, and am I glad I didn’t! Lucky for me that no one took me seriously.” THAT dancing-dining-with-a-pretty-girl reference gave me just the break I had been waiting for. “Do you think you’ll ever marry again?” I asked, hoping the words didn’t sound as though they jumped out of my mouth. When I had asked that same question several years ago, he had said: “No, I’ll never marry. I had the best in the world in the love of Carole Lombard, and there can never be another woman to take her place.” This time Clark didn’t reply immediately. He seemed to be deep in thought. Then — “I don’t know,” was the unexpected answer, “I can’t say for sure. It gets awfully lonesome living alone. Do you think there is a chance for happiness, after you have been so in love in another marriage?” I knew what he meant. Carole had given him a special kind of companionship, as well as deep love. They had so much fun together. She brought so much gaiety to the relationship. But I said what I really felt— that if he gets the right girl there should be happiness in congenial companionship. “They’ve tried to marry me off often enough,” the flash of his teeth revealed that lovable old Gable grin. I’m sure we were both thinking of the long string of charmers “rumored” as having caught