Screenland Plus TV-Land (Nov 1953 - May 1955)

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.

DAWN ADDAMS' RESERVATIONS ARE ASTONISHING! kk I THINK I'LL MARRY, BUT by May Mann Dawn Addams is a provocative, exciting girl with a certain amount of feminine restraint — that brings her suitors young and old. On both sides of the world news columns report her romances one by one and today it is the conclusion that while Dawn tarries, she never marries. At twenty-three, Dawn concentrates sharply on the business at hand — whether it be a new picture or a new man. But always before the strains of Lohengrin she quietly slips away — and you read of her in another country making a new picture or with a new conquest. Her attitude towards her acting is disciplined and intelligent. But as a femme fatale whose personal life reads like a heroine in some novel, something always hap pens to her romances before they reach the altar stage. "Every girl should be married — once," Dawn replied with a light little laugh. "It is just different, I guess, with me. Between the men in my life and me — it's always the unspoken, the inference, never the direct thing. If it had been the question — I don't know what would have happened." Then, with that innate candor that bewilders most people who meet her for the first time — not to mention what such behavior must do to a mere male — she said, "If you want me to be very serious, I will be. "I can't think what it would be like to get married and sit back and not have some aim of my own. If you marry at the stage where work has not yet become a 40