Picture Play Magazine (Mar-Aug 1926)

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Advertising Section An Actress Talks about Men Continued from page 73 he would a rare tapestry. He would love taking me places " "And having other men admire you?" "Yes. He would like me soft voiced, and well groomed and conversant on things that beautiful women talk of — plays and fashions and fads. You see what I mean? Almost abstract adoration. In turn, he would be very faithful and gentle and loyal to me." "As long as you remained beautiful?" "Oh, no ! I didn't mean to convey just a pretty face housing a jibber ing tongue. Perhaps I should have said a lovely woman, as charming mentally as physically." I don't know Rockcliffe Fellows, but from his easy-going shadow I had never thought of him as admiring a woman of this type. I had thought more the domestic type — a good biscuit baker. But Libyan said "No," and she and Eddie have known him a long, long time. Anyway, you can't tell about men. When I asked her about the Byronic Ian Keith I was prepared to hear he liked a woman of sound business ability. But Ian remained more in character. "I think," Lilyan mused aloud, "that only a cosmopolitan woman would appeal to Ian. A woman brilliant, frank, and satirical. To bring Ian to my heroine's feet I would have to employ all the charm of Arlen's ladies combined with Nita Naldi's frankness." "Something snappy in repartee?" I interrupted. "Rather. Ian, I think, would be interested only in a companion who could share his own quizzical, halfironical philosophy of life." I could imagine that. Off the screen Ian Keith is always rather moodily preoccupied. It is an intriguing pose a little reminiscent of John Barrymore's, which is not a pose. 'But Lilyan, who had warmed to her subject was talking about Tom Moore. "It would be rather fun winning, or being won, by the sort of man Tom is," she was saying. "You wouldn't have to care if your nose was a little shiny, you wouldn't have to care whether your conversation was hitting on high either. The biscuits could burn and the fire go out — for all he would care — just so long as you were ready to go loping around with him when he was ready to go loping around. Tom would take you to the places he went — prize fights, and funny Spanish kitchens and outof-the-way oddities like Pat's for Irish stew and Heinie's for sauerkraut. You could slam on a slouch hat, push your hands down in your pockets and just set oat with Tom. "It is just the opposite with Lionel Barrymore, though. He would adore a very feminine woman who was dependent on him. Not only for her daily bread but for her happiness." "The sturdy oak to the clinging vine," I put in. "And what sort of a woman," I queried, just for the fun of it, "would Eddie Lowe like?" Somewhere in the hilltop home of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Lowe a clock struck ten. It was time for me to go and without her answer. But I really didn't need it. To win Eddie she would have to be above everything else — a good scout. A lady whose sense of humor permitted her to laugh with life, not at it. She would be always smartly groomed. She would know books and tapestries and period furniture and books like a connoisseur ; yet she would enjoy talking about whether beads were going to be worn down the back or not. She would be cosmopolitan but there would be a strong leaning toward the domestic. (Lilyan gets more enthused over new candlesticks than over a new contract.) In short, the sort of man that Eddie is would like the sort of a girl that Lilyan is, which is to say — an all-around good scout. Now Come the German Films Continued from page 17 "Faust" is too well known to require any description. The character of Faust is played by Gosta Ekman, a renowned Swedish character actor. "A Waltz Dream" was originally a light opera, which was popular the world over a few years ago. It has a highly romantic story, dealing with the love of a European prince for a Viennese violinist. It is not likely that any foreign films, no matter how well done they may be, will supplant in the home market the most popular American productions. But variety being the spice of life, we should be glad to see an occasional German film. No man OF course he doesn't say so if yours is gray. But you know what he's thinking — that it's unbecoming and makes you look old. This idea is disastrous — for personal happiness and social or business success. What you should do is — mail coupon for free trial bottle of the scientific preparation called Mary T. Goldman's Hair Color Restorer. Test on a single lock of hair — results tell the story. What you learn That a dainty hair cosmetic, clear as water, restores original color to hair, perfectly. There's no unevenness, no unnatural "dyed" look. 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