Photoplay (Jan-Jun 1935)

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"An angelic, golden-haired little girl," Miss Sangster described Mary when first she saw her, and believed her then — completely happy ,'ves every youngster in the world, she has no children of her ,\vn — her maternal affection is lavished upon her niece, Gwynne ,-her sister Lottie's daughter. And then, too, the prestige which she has gained and the ealth that she has accumulated have not brought ease |Iary Pickford works harder than anybody I know. Some mes I think she is goaded into the terrific amount of work by lis search of hers — this search for happiness. Sometimes I link, that she expects to find, in artistic and spiritual eneavor, the fulfillment that she has not found in her personal Nations. Trouble, to Mary Pickford, is something that must be worked with and transformed. The following incident — which I trust [ will quote correctly — illustrates my point in this. Her company', it seems, was making a picture and the picture needed — to lend tragi-comedy to a certain sequence — a decrepit, forlorn horse. There was a long and involved search before a nag pitiful enough to fill the bill was located. When the right animal was finally found the entire studio must have declared a holiday! I don't suppose that ever — before or since — there was seen such a lean and hungry horse. I [ please turn to page 119 ] 35 ^