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for June 1936
63
All Interested in Color! John Hay Whitney, center, head of the company that specializes in Our peeping camera catches Lew Ayres
color pictures, and John Speaks, left, associate producer, seen talking with Steffi Duna, getting dialogue-perfect for a scene
star of their latest film, at their Hollywood studio. opposite Florence Rice in a new film.
LUISE RAINER'S make-up for her role iin "Good Earth" is something to rave about. Believe it or not, she has little to do but change the slant of her eyes and the effect is" astounding. Of course she's had to rearrange the style of her hair, as Luise sports that "egg-beater" effect. Of all the actresses in Hollywood, there is more talk of the potential qualities of the little Rainer than any other newcomer on the screen.
CLAUDETTE COLBERT, reluctantly taking her first marital vacation, decided to go to New York. On the way to the station, Dr. Pressman, (Claudette's new hubby), smashed his hand in the door of the car. The train pulled out and Claudette tearfully waved goodbye. By the time she reached Pasadena, she was beside herself with misgiving and worry. In the
meantime Dr. Pressman stopped to have his hand dressed and then headed for Beverly Hills. As he turned the latch in his door, who should greet him but wifey Claudette. Just in case you've forgotten, the name of her last picture was, "The Bride Comes Home." P. S. : Claudette got to Manhattan later.
CONTRARY to publicity, Jean Harlow is not brownette. In "Riff-Raff" and "Wife versus Secretary" Jean wears a beautiful wig. Her own hair underneath is slowly growing out to its natural color. When it gets the right length, the wig will automatically be discarded and then brownette will come into its own. According to a certain Hollywood beauty operator, the strong bleaches used to make Jean a platinum blonde were beginning to disturb her system.
YOU'D be surprised how many of your favorite stars are going in for wigs. Because of the daily water waves, necessary when they are working, the stars have to get up an hour earlier and sit under a hot drier. Not only is this bad for the hair, but milady could be having that extra time for rest. Jeanette MacDonald went right from the "San Francisco" set to the Trocadero. Even if she had wanted to have her hair done, there wouldn't have been the time. And even Jeanette's dancing partners couldn't tell she was wearing a wig.
DOROTHY PETERSEN, who received world-wide publicity on her assignment to play nurse to the Dionne Quintuplets, hasn't worked a single day since she finished in "The Country Doctor." Sometimes it's so hard to remember in Hollywood— and easy to forget.
Betty Blythe and Fritz Leiber, co-stars years ago in "The Queen of Sheba," meet again at a studio party.
William Powell plunges into mystery again, and aiding him are three other film favorites: Lila Lee, Jean Arthur, and Eric Blore. We see the four principals huddling in a studio corner, cooking up ways to keep us in suspense.