Screenland (Feb-Oct 1949)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

After a swim, put up your hair in pin curls. Spray on Spray-A-Wave from its plastic bottle. Twenty minutes or so later you can brush out soft, shining, lasting waves. Lentheric's Eau de Cologne Iceberg offers a cooling comfort to the Summer sizzlers. COOL, refreshing Summer pick-me-ups are the order now. From your head to your toes, time-saving, beauty-giving treats await your trial. Spray-A-Wave contains a protein element for setting lasting waves while it hastens drying time. In about twenty minutes you can have new curls, worth remembering when you want to swim then get all dressed for a big date. You'll love the new plastic spray bottle, $1.* Lentheric's Eau de Cologne Iceberg is a divinely cooling potion. Splashed on body after bath, dabbed on temples, forehead, arms, wrists or on a handkerchief for refreshing sniffing, it has a wonderfully exhilarating effect. Two sizes, $1.25* and $2.25* For that enviable clear, transparent skin beauty, we say soap, water and a complexion brush! Here is the new Hughes face brush, with gentle nylon bristles and shaped to fit your hand, at $1.50. In burgundy, sea green, clear Incite. There 're bath and hand brushes, too. Lady Esther's very new Complete Creme Make-Up does beautiful things for your face. Brush it on with fingertips, that's all. The result is a soft, young radiance in tone and finish. Impervious to swim or dip, too. Five glowing colors, $.50*. Matching colors in lipsticks, $.50*. A cooling, relaxing tub, scented and softened with Coty Bath Salts, $1* and $1.50*, followed by a mist of Coty Dusting Powder, $1.50*, and sizzling heat is of small importance. These intimate luxuries come in L'Aimant, L 'Origan, "Paris" and Emeraude. Courtenay Marvin *Plus 20 % Federal Tax. The Hughes complexion brush helps awaken a fresh, childlike quality by "scrubbing." Even hot weather skin takes a new beauty with Lady Esther Complete Creme Makeup. Coty Bath Salts freshens a room as it does your bath; is a modern thought for perfuming finger bowl water, your lingerie and hand bath. In four beloved Coty fragrances. It's All In Fun Continued from page 45 Bob's beard. There was a comedy cnase that was worth a special film, with Bob screaming, "Stay away, I don't want to look like you." Joan Crawford and Director Michael Curtiz admire and like each other tremendously, but that doesn't keep them from having heated arguments. One morning while making "Flamingo Road," they clashed again and again, and just before noon, there was an especially hot scene with the exasperated Joan throwing a glass of water at Curtiz. She missed her aim, dousing one of the stand-ins which instead embarrassed her terribly, then still angry she marched to the Green Room for luncheon. In a few minutes a messenger brought her a festive package. Ribbons untied, there was a big white target with a picture of Curtiz in the middle. A note said, "Joan darling, this is sent with my love so you can practice 'shooting' me." Director Jack Conway was showing Clark Gable and Lana Turner just how he wanted a certain scene played, acting it all out just as he used to when he was on the stage years ago. Clark disappeared for a few moments, then returned to ask the company to come over to the moviola— (a little -projection machine used for film editing.) The machine started to grind and on the screen came "Her Indian Love," a wild and woolly classic of 25 years ago — Conway's first picture in which he played the hero. "I give up," yelled Conway. "Just stop that thing." Clark insists the director was subdued for the remainder of the day. The long-time friendship of Ann Sheridan and Ida Lupino has been punctuated with gags. One day, Ida was in the gallery at Warners being photographed as a ballerina and going through strenuous poses. Ann dropped by to say hello, but found her friend too engrossed to even noticed she had entered. Looking around, Ann saw one of Ida's ballet costumes on the rack and quickly slipping out of her slacks she stepped into il. Being much larger than Ida, there were wide spaces of Ann where the costume should be, so she grabbed a bunch of huge safety pins and used them in conspicuous spots. To complete her ludicrous picture, Ann rolled her stockings below her knees. Then still wearing the slack shoes, she stepped beside Ida and struck a burlesque of Ida's ethereal pose. When the photographers caught sight of what was before them they shrieked with laughter. Annoyed by the interruption, Ida turned to see Annie still posing with mock seriousness, and she joined in the fun. But the girls forgot the picture was in the camera. It was developed and blown up, becoming the prize comic sensation of the studio. During a pivotal scene in "Leave Her To Heaven," Cornel Wilde was told that after Gene Tierney's line of dialogue there would be a pause, followed later with a kiss. But instead of stopping 58