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Nonchalant Noel Coward
[ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 58
Photoplay Magazine for February, 1935 10C
WITHOUT COOKING ! "
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dducers now and again for the way they Sidle his plays, he is always ready to applaud Men they produce one of his shows in a way tit pleases him. He will not condemn Hollydod because the movie capital changes a play iund. He will make a joke or two and let it d at that. And when they do a thing like ■Cavalcade" he is the first to be on hand with itulations. I have some jolly good friends in Holly\ od," he told me, his hands in his pockets and H head back. "I enjoyed myself out there. I And things interesting. They wanted me to ikke a film, but I couldn't see it at the time." Greta Garbo, in Noel Coward's eyes, is one (. the most sensible screen players in HollyAod. So is Ronald Colman. j" It seems quite obvious," he said. "They ike comparatively few films. They stay lay from too much publicity and all this ilshing around and so on. They do things Jietly and steadily, and that's what really i|unts in the long run. The very obvious &ult is that they are welcome by film audioes when they appear in a picture." jit sounded like good logic. Noel Coward puld not have made a fortune in the theater ' thout a keen sense of logic. It is not difficult | realize that, looking at him.
vTOBODY knows if he will ever make a . picture. He might, and he might not. |ou never can tell about Noel Coward. He tight write a play one week and be off to
ina or Alaska the week after. I like traveling," he told me, as we sat ere. "I'm always too late or too early. I [rive in Japan when the cherry blossoms have lien. I get to China too early for the next volution. I reach Canada when the maple javes have gone and the snow hasn't arrived. L-ople are always telling me about something haven't seen. I find it very pleasant." \ Seeing that we were on the subject of travel, decided to get to the bottom of his Mediter.nean episode last summer. The newspapers adc a great deal out of that. They had him lipwrecked in his yacht off Corsica — sunk in a (orm, as a matter of fact. Later they had him .arooned without any clothes in some lonely Sherman's shack.
: He smiled and settled back more comfortb\y. "The publicity given that little indent," he declared, "was a lot of blah." "Blah?"
"Blah. Simply blah! I had just got over ppendicitis and decided to take a sea trip in jiy yacht for a little blissful convalescence. j'ff Corsica we ran into a storm. It was a eautiful affair, and the boat did everything ut capsize. I decided, then and there, that hat was enough for me, so I went ashore from jie yacht. The next thing I heard was that the oat had been shipwrecked. Practically all my Rothes were lost. Luckily my valuables ! eren't on board. But, Good Lord, what a joliday the papers had! They made me shiprecked in my yacht, simply floundering round in the seas, you know, when all the time | wasn't near the thing! And then they had r.e completely marooned in a fisherman's hut -some musty hovel with barely a stitch of lothes left clinging to me. As a matter of fact
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What $2!£ Will Bring You
Hundreds of pictures of the stars of Hollywood and illustrations of their work and pastime — in twelve big (monthly) issues of Photoplay, The News and Fashion Magazine of the Screen.
Scores of interesting articles about the people you see on the screen.
Brief reviews with the casts of current photoplays. The truth and nothing but the truth, about motion pictures, the stars, and the industry. You have read this issue of Photoplay, so there is no necessity for telling you that it is one of the most superbly illustrated, the best written and most attractively printed magazines published today — and alone in its field of motion pictures
Send a Money Order or Check for $2.50 if in the U. S., its dependencies, Mexico, Cuba ($3.50 to Canada and foreign countries), for the next twelve issues, addressed to
PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE, Dept. 1-P. 1926 Broadway, New York, N. Y.