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Radio mirror (May-Oct 1939)

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RADIO MIRROR ) Perspiration Odor 0f/e*u/s the other person DRI-DEW is the new cream deodorant, tested and approved by the Am. Inst, oi Laundering and the Nat. Assn. of Dyers and Cleaners as being harmless to fabrics. WILL NOT DRY UP IN JAR SAFE — An absolutely pure, unadulterated cream. NON-IRRITATING — Even right after shaving. LONG-LASTING in preventing underarm odors. INSTANTLY EFFECTIVE NOT GREASY— CLEAN. At drug, department or ten-cent stores. Dri-MtCtV (cream) 10c,29c Ins tan (-If fir (liquid) 10c, 25c, 50c du^ STOPS PERSPIRATION stops perspiration odor CLEAR EYES IN SECONDS! Only TWO DROPS of this eye specialist's formula WASHES, soothes, CLEARS dull, tired eyes. Its special, EXCLUSIVE ingredient instantly clears eyes red and inflamed from late hours, fatigue, etc. Thousands prefer stainless, sanitary, safe EYE-GENE, because it is so quickly EFFECTIVE in making EYES FEEL GOOD. WASH your eyes with EYE-GENE today. Sold at drug, department, ten-cent stores. BE SURE OF YOUR "LOOKS" USE EYEGENE WHAT DO YOU WANT TO KNOW? ■ Genevieve Blue, better known to NBC audiences as "Buzz Me Miss Blue" of the Amos 'n' Andy program, is played by Madaline Lee. I DOUBT if there are any readers who, at some time or other, have not heard the "goings on" of Amos 'n' Andy, that famous black-face radio team heard over NBC Monday through Friday from 7:00 to 7:15. And by the same token, I'm sure you've heard Genevieve Blue (known in private life as Madaline Lee) who plays the part of the "secretary," so successfully, many listeners believe she is really colored. Madaline was born in Dallas, Texas, on October 28, 1912, and spent most of her life in the south. Eager for a dramatic career since childhood, Miss Lee studied at Columbia University and the Theodore Irvine School for the Theater in New York, at the University of Texas and Southern Methodist University, after graduating from the Adamson High School in Dallas. Radio work intrigued Madaline and for a year she took every available job. She was a news commentator on several Los Angeles stations and interviewed many screen and stage celebrities . . . began reading commercials for Amos 'n' Andy, and her southern personality attracted the comedians when they began to create the character of Genevieve Blue. For two years Miss Lee worked to overcome what she considered the handicap of a Texas drawl. However, she slipped right back into the dialect at the request of Amos 'n' Andy and was chosen for the part of Genevieve. Miss Lee is five feet two inches, weighs 110 pounds, and is active in athletics. Tennis and golf are her favorites. She is also an accomplished pianist. Hilda Burke, Oswego, N. Y. — Alice Frost, who plays the leading role in Big Sister, was born August 1, 1910, in Minneapolis, Minn. She is married to Robert C. Faulk, is blonde, five feet seven inches tall, weighs 125 pounds and has gray eyes. Michael Williams, Darien, Conn. — Jack Armstrong, in the program of the same name, is played by Frank Behrens, and he may be reached by addressing a letter to him in care of the National Broadcasting Company, 222 North Bank Drive, Chicago, Illinois. Willie, North Sydney, N.S.— I am listing below the cast of The Guiding Light, as you requested: Gordon Ellis Raymond Johnson Ned Holden Ed Prentiss Ellen Henrietta Tedro Mr. Kransky Murray Forbes Rose Kransky Ruth Bailey Jacob Kransky Seymour Young Grandpa Ellis Phil Lord Phyllis Gordon Sharon Grainger Peter Manno Michael Romano Ethel Foster Sundra Love Celeste Cunningham . . Carolyn McKay Miss D. Schofield, Wilkinsburg, Pa. — Orson Welles was born in Kenosha, Wise. At fifteen he was an orphan and decided to go to Scotland, intending to study scene designing there. On a stop-over in Ireland, found he liked Erin so well he bought a donkey and cart and went on a vagabond tour . . . Sold the cart and donkey at a county fair for the price of a meal, fare to Dublin and a ticket to the Gates Theater. Welles told the stage manager that he was a star in New York's Theater Guild, read a part that night and was offered a leading role in the following week's play. For two years he starred with the Gates Company in heavy roles such as "Othello" and "King Lear", and rose to the rank of director. Finally, he played in the Abbey Theater — the first (Continued oil page 66) 60