Photoplay (Jan-Sep 1937)

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HOLLYWOOD T, HE not-so-elusive-as-she-used-to-be Garbo made another public appearance the other night at the opening of the Russian Ballet. The lobby was completely tilled with autograph hounds and news cameramen to make sure that no celebrity slipped past them. But Garbo, dressed in a gray tweed suit, walked calmly through the crowd and slipped into her seat in the eighteenth row center. Although Garbo has been appearing socially so much recently, evidently no one expected that she would attend such a crowded opening, for no one recognized her, not even the cameramen who practically never miss anything. One of the men from the MetroGoldwyn-Mayer publicity department was sent to follow her through the crowd and see that no one bothered her and that she wasn't mobbed by the autograph hunters, but his presence wasn't needed at all. The pay-off is that Sylvia Sidney, who was seated in the row directly in front of Garbo, had her picture taken several times by the cameramen, but not one of them thought to look at the very silent person sitting right behind her. ft Bing Crosby's horse won at Santa Anita! He and his brother Everett are watching the Mutual boards. Clark Gable put his footprints in the fore court of Grauman's Chinese, was beseiged by autograph maniacs Torcher Sophie Tucker reached town so Roland Leigh gave a party for her. Here are Roland, Binnie Barnes, Sophie, Heather Thacher and Henry Bill. Co-starring Victor McLaglen read the script of "Wee Willie Winkle" to Shirley Temple. Claire Windsor did a stage play at the Beverly Hills Little Theatre with Roger Kendal and Judith Arlen, at the left T, YRONE POWER has a secret. While doing radio work in Chicago before he came to Hollywood, Tyrone was summoned to the station one day and told that henceforth he was to be the funny paper man and read the comic strips over the air at some unearthly morning hour All the little kiddies would be breathlessly waiting for Tyrone's version of the Katzeniammer kids. Now Tyrone's afraid his studio will find it out and they'll have him reading to Shirley Temple, and maybe the Quints, all about Toots and Casper. A fine thing for a romantic young hero! D ETTE DAVIS pulled this one the other night '--'when the subject reverted to ex-king Edward's troubles. "Well," said Bette with a sigh, "I don't know what's the matter with me. I was in just as badly in England as Edward and the Archbishop of Canterbury never said a word to me. I must be slipping." 3!