Photoplay (Jul-Dec 1949)

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p try the test below Have you ever wondered if you are as lovely as you could be— are you completely sure of your charm? Your deodorant can be the difference . . . and you will never know how lovely you can be until you use Fresh. Fresh is so completely effective, yet so easy and pleasant to use... Different from any deodorant you have ever tried. Prove this to yourself with the jar of creamy, smooth Fresh we will send you. Test it. Send lOd to cover handling charges to Fresh, Chrysler Building, New York, for ajar. INSIDE STUFF Together — Apart: Not only have the Dan Daileys reconciled, they’re together professionally, too, and for the first time. You’ll glimpse the lovely Liz Dailey, briefly, of course, in a railway depot scene in Dan’s latest, “A Ticket to Tomahawk.” And the young lad with Liz will be their son, Dan Dailey Jr. The whole family spent weeks together on this Durango, Colorado, location. But while the Daileys are united, Dan’s co-star Anne Baxter, and her husband John Hodiak face a six months’ separation. John will go to London for the new “Mrs. Miniver” and Anne off on another location about the time John reports back to M-G-M for his next picture. Incidentally, Anne became a Mrs. Belvedere, baby-sitting with young Dan while his parents went to the local movie. “Getting experience for the family John and I hope to raise,” Anne says. Barrymore Comeback: Director Elia Kazan tells of Ethel Barrymore’s wit on the “Pinky” set. After a scene, beautifully performed by Miss Barrymore, Elia pronounced it perfect, but requested they do it once again. “And what’s this one for?” snapped Ethel, “your private collection?” Eddie Had a Fit: Long sessions in studio fitting rooms can be dull for everyone concerned, so, when the lads with thread and needle see an opportunity for a little fun, they latch on to it, naturally. Their recent laugh was at the expense of Edward Arnold, who dieted away twenty-five pounds in New York, after he’d had wardrobe fittings for “Annie Get Your Gun,” and before he’d started again with Betty Hutton in the film. Edward fumed and fussed about the hours of standing and fitting all over again. But, to his surprise, every garment fitted him perfectly. “I can’t understand it,” he said, over and over. And viewing the skeptical faces around him he repeated, “But I lost twenty-five pounds, I tell you. All those scales in New York couldn’t be wrong.” They let him fuss and worry and reweigh himself, over and over, before they tipped him off that a New York representative had kept them posted about his dimensions. No one laughed louder than Eddie. ( Continued on page 14) Jimmy Stewart looks as if he’s sitting on top of the world these days. Right now he’s at Mocambo with wife Gloria 12