Picture-Play Magazine (Mar-Aug 1926)

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97 What does the future hold for Betty Boyd? Much, perhaps. For Cecil De Mille himself — he who has given us so man) of our favorites — is showing an interest in her, and gave her a bit in "The Volga Boatman." Pauline Pane has come from England — she and her fortune of three million dollars. But she's not letting a little thing like wealth stand in her way, and has already attracted the notice of certain directors. Peggy Fears is her name, but there's really no reason for it. For who should have anything to fear with a stunning profile like that? And just to prove it, Warner Brothers have put her under contract. Faces You Will See Again Newcomers who are already making their mark on the screen. You liave been warned that you would soon hear more of Dorothy Dunbar, and now it has happened — she is playing the lead opposite Richard Barthelmess in "The Amateur Gentleman," and any girl will agree that that's no small honor. She was also enrolled in "Mile. Modiste" and "Fig Leaves." Take one look at Anielka Elter's eyes and you will know that there is a more than ordinary future ahead of her. Not to mention the past that she has left behind, for this young Czecho-Slovakian girl was a spy in the Italian Fascisti during the war. As to those eyes, again, Erich von Stroheim says they are the wickedest he has ever seen. Vivian Winston is still just a bit player, but she has a sympathetic quality that has so impressed Metro-Goldwyn directors that they have used her in several films, among the "Brown of Harvard" and "Love's Blindness." "One of the most beautiful" of the "unknown" girls in Hollywood, is what Gloria Hellar has been called. She had a bit in "The Grand Duchess and the Waiter," and also in "Don Juan." If you have seen any of those short-reel Irish comedies that Fox has been making, you know Barbara Luddy, for she is the essential girl. She was picked from the extra ranks and signed up by. Fox. fr 1