Silver Screen (Feb-Oct 1935)

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OSCULATION The Clinch JACK OAKIE and Lyda Roberti pressed lip to lip while their pulses race, hearts pound and the camera takes. Jack and Lyda are in "The Big Broadcast of 1935." This will bring to you many of the famous ones of the air, including Burns and Allen and Bing Crosby, and our favorite of the musical stage, Ethel Merman. But irrespective of the medium which has given them fame— whether radio, stage, vaudeville or pictures— they all find themselves in a "kiss close-up" with a camera watching their every blush. In this corner, Joan Blondell and Dick Powell. He plays on a gondolier in his next picture, yep "Broadway Gondolier." It's like a sax, only the sound is colored. Little Jean Parker had such a wonderful experience in "Sequoia" with a puma, that Frank Shields, who once played tennis, hardly frightens her at all. Fred MacMurray within the hallowed circle of Madge Evans' arms in "Men Without Names," a story of the Federal Agents.