Radio mirror (Nov 1935-Apr 1936)

Record Details:

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*v For Nino Martint's program sponsored by Chesterfield, see page 51—9 o'clock column. MM ^J^fm^a* vsm* YOU sit before your loud speaker or settle back in the dark theater and hear the starting thunder of applause as the fine clear voice of Nino Martini dies away on the last notes of a great aria. And you envy this singing star of the Chesterfield program, this romantic tenor of the new Fox Film, "Here's to 26 Romance." You envy him the money, the acclaim, above all the satisfaction, that must come to the possessor of such a great gift. But did you ever stop to think of the other side of such a career, of the countless little homely pleasures lost forever, of the unending hours of self-denial, of the heartache that dimmed even the glory of his great hour of triumph? Behind the easy, gracious smile of the singer and the