Screenland (Nov 1950-Oct 1951)

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Be Arrid-safe! Use Arrid to be sure. Arrid with Creamogen will not dry out, and it's so pleasant and easy to apply. Get Arrid today— only 39£" plus tax. DIRECT FROM HOLLYWOOD FREE PHOTO LARGE SIZE OF YOUR FAVORITE MOVIE STAR (DELUXE TYPE — Suitable for FramingJ SPECIAL OFFER — FOll LI IVl ITED Tl Mc. ON LY With Photo, you will also receive FREE CATALOG listing ALL stars plus 14 ADDITIONAL PICTURES of potnilnr stars on cnvor. ANotells how to get ADDRESSES, BIRTHDAYS, and photos of STARS' HOMES. Send name of your favorite star and only 1 5c for handling. HOLLYWOOD FILIVt STAR CENTER Box 2309, Dept. K-ll, Hollywood 28, Calif. SHORTHAND in Famous Speed writing System. No signs ; no Symbols; no machines. Uses ABC"s. Easy to learn, write, transcribe. Low cost. I0(i.00n taught bv mail. Also tvping. 28th Tear. Write for FREE booklet. WEEKS AT HOME. Dept. 6901-1 55 W. 42 St.. N. Y. 18 BUNIONS QUICK PAIN RELIEF Amazing Free Trial! | Terrible, stinging, itching Bunion Pains relieved I Ugly, swollen bunion grows smaller. Wear the smart shoes you like. FAIRYFOOT acts amazingly quick. Write today for Free Sample. A post card will do. FfilRTFOOT. 1223 So. Wabash. Dept. 151. CHICAGO 5. ILLINOIS Ginger Rogers and Director Richard Whorf relieve the tension of film-making by clowning on the set between scenes of "The Groom Wore Spurs" at Universal-International studios. The Happy Lundigans Continued from page 43 sharp suits from expensive tailors. Bill dresses as conservatively as a young bank vice president who is about to draw up a will for a wealthy dowager. He likes white shirts, plain ties, and suits in greys and beige. In fact his friends have to sort of keep an eye on him, and insist that they go along on his occasional shopping sprees (he loathes shopping) . "Bill," said one of them, "has to be watched — or he'll dress like an undertaker." Every Saturday night there's a good old-fashioned hoedown at the Apple Valley Inn. People come from miles around to do their do-si-dos to a name band. But Bill was having none of it. He was still embarrassed over the "exhibition" he claims he made of himself when he innocently became involved in a Charleston contest at the Mocambo several weeks before. Bill is a good smooth dancer, not a showoff. But don't ever dance with Bill if you're less than six feet and suffer from claustrophobia. You can't see a thing on the dance floor except the buttons on his coat. The next morning the Lundigans went to church (Bill takes his religion seriously) and after a leisurely lunch he went for a swim. Then back to Hollywood in time for a good night's sleep before starting to work the next morning on "The House On Telegraph Hill." Anniversaries in filmdom, you see, can be observed intelligently. Just because you are a movie star you don't really have to tear up the Mocambo, drench yourself in champagne, go into debt, and spend the next day in ice packs and aspirin. Studios never have any trouble getting Bill to work on time. He could easily pick up a little extra change by unlocking the gates. He likes to get up around five in the morning and study his script while he drinks his coffee. This is the cross that his wife, a late sleeper, has to bear. "Bill is the happiest person in the world around five in the morning," says Rena sadly. "Just when I am finishing a book and going to sleep." Bill's career is definitely on the upbeat these days. Like a lot of the boys who fought for their country (Bill was in the Marines) in the last war Bill had a hard time picking up where he left off. But evidently Saturn has stopped needling Leo and Leo has stopped snapping at Virgo and all's right with his heavenly bodies of late. Today 20th Century-Fox, where he is under contract, considers him one of their top male stars. Much of his splendid performance in "Pinky" had to be cut, but the picture was a springboard for him. He followed it with a comedy performance in "Mother Didn't Tell Me," with Dorothy McGuire. Then came the Technicolor musical, "I'll Get By," in which he plays a composer who falls in love with June Haver. Bill, a hard worker, spent hours practicing up on his piano technique for this. However, he assured me, his piano playing will not exactly make cinema history. If cinema history is made in this picture it will be by Dennis Day. Dennis, after several false starts, really comes a winner this time. And Bill is indeed getting a variety of roles these days. Which is a great relief after all those early years at Warners where he was always playing Olivia de Havilland's brother. "I began to feel that I was really related to her." As the young circuit rider minister in "I'd Climb The Highest Mountain," Bill gives a performance, it is rumored, of Academy Award calibre. This sincere and moving film was adapted from Corra Harris' famous book, "The Circuit Rider's Wife," which concerned her experiences as the wife of a peripatetic par MONEY .MONEY •MONEY* MONEY MONEY! | \ Take quick orders from *f L z „ friends for CARDINAL it v\ o < Everyday Greeting Cards, * 1 Stationery & Gift Items. >, 0 21 Card Assortment only -/JL \j u X $1. Sells like wildfire! Pays up to z n 100% profit! Big selection. Extra °. * Cash Bonus. Money-back Guarantee. * j Write now for samples on approval! > z @&/l4tc4t&£> CRAFTSMEN z " 1400 State Ave., Dept. ^^fflCincinnati 14,0. j MONEY • MONEY • MONEY' MONEY