TV Radio Mirror (Jan - Jun 1957)

Record Details:

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Are you ever That's when most deodorants fail... but new Mum cream keeps working You^ve probably noticed.. . MUM ^ V . . . when you're under emotional pressure, your perspiration glands suddenly get more active. That's when deodorants which depend on stopping perspiration let you down, and odor often starts. New Mum® cream works a completely different way. It is the only leading deodorant that works entirely by stopping odor. Mum keeps on working actively to stop odor 24 hours a day— no matter how active your perspiration glands are. No wonder Mum is so dependable. Isn't that what you want? More people depend on Mum than on any other deodorant ...it works when others fail KIND TO SKIN AND CUOTHE3 ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT OF BRISTOL-MYERS WHAT'S NEW {Continued from page 7) I a youngster who wants to be a great violinist. He almost does, until someone puts the "bee" on him. Must be noted, too, that there are exquisite violin passages in the recording — by virtuoso Isaac Stern. Short Stuif : Brunette beauty Elaine Malbin, who starred in "Kismet," stars Feb. 10th on NBC-TV's "La Traviata." . . . This month Marge and Gower Champion take over the Simday slot that belonged to Ann Sothern. As you watch Marge cavort gracefully, you might note that just about six weeks ago she gave birth to a baby. Calling him Gregg Ernest. . . . Canine pin-up queen Lassie is top dog in TV. All rights to her series sold for $3,500,000. . . . When radio singing star Jane Pickens, who doubles in high society, threw a party for the lorgnette set, she hired the Mello Dots to play rock 'n' roll. Extra-curricular: Doug Parkhirst, Hugh Overton on The Road Of Life, for several years has devoted one night a week to work with patients at veterans' hospitals. Invalids are cast into radio shows and the plays are produced and recorded on tape. "The acting is very good," he says. "We use professional scripts and I've cast some men in parts I've played. That's always interesting, to get another interpretation of your own part." Doug, a religious man raised by his minister grandfather, frequently uses scripts from the show, The Greatest Story Ever Told. "Sometunes amusing things happen. There was one young man who was never too well behaved. In one script I cast him as Jesus. Not only did he play it well but it improved his disposition." About Mary Stuart's Baby: It was a boy, Jeffrey, born at eight poimds, but gaimng so rapidly he is almost as big as his 16month-old sister, Cynthia. Says Mary, star of Search For Tomorrow, "We'd like to have our kids in platoons. Two close together. Then wait several years and have a couple more." She adds, "It sounds good, anyway." Her husband is Richard Krolik, CBS producer, who is her idea of a perfect husband and father except f or liis zest for candid photography. She says, ' He takes pictures of me when I fall asleep with the baby in the rocker, and the way I look, it's not fair." She adds, "Both my babies like to rock so we have four rockers in the apartment." Every morning she's up with the babies at 6 A.M. She leaves home at 7:50, and from eight until one in the afternoon is at the studio. Most of the time she rushes right back home with her make-up still on. "I live so close to the studio that I've been back in the apartment sometimes before the closing commercial." From one P.M. she is wife and mother again. Bedtime is nine or ten. DE & The News: University of Alabama came up with a plaque for one of its sons, Peabody Award winner Doug Edwards, who completed ten years as a TV newsman. Doug, rather boyish looking, actually has a wife and three kids. He is at home in Connecticut when he isn't nosing news. Sometimes he is picked up for duty right at his farm by a CBS helicopter, as was the case during the New England floods. He had a novel experience that day. When the plane chose to land in Hartford, it picked a very green and spacious lawn. The moment the helicopter touched groimd a policeman ran up and gave Doug a ticket for illegal parking. He had chosen the grounds of the Governor's mansion. {Continued on page 13) I I I I