Silver Screen (Apr-Sep 1936)

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68 Silver Screen for June 1936 Remember that lips are sensitive. Does your lipstick leave your lips rough and dry? The new Coty "Sub-Deb" Lipstick never parches. Coty thought of smoothness as well as color. So a wonderful new ingredient was added. It's called "Essence of Theobrom." It has a special power to keep lips 6oft. And what warm color the "Sub-Deb" gives your lips! Color that's ardent and indelible. Make the "Over-night" Experiment! Put on a tiny bit of Coty Lipstick before you go to bed. In the morning notice how soft your lips feel, how soft they look. Coty "Sub-Deb" comes in five indelible colors, 50c. Coty "Sub-Deb" Rouge, also 50c. Come to a new world of beauty... with the new Coty "Air Spun " Face Powder! all parties, and a lot of the up-to-date homes now, are wired for sound. Bill Powell can lie in bed on his sleeping porch and hear what you say at the gate and also in his play-room. And as you well know it isn't a Hollywood custom to speak well of your host, so you can just imagine that ole Massa Powell often gets an earful. The "breakdown party," which the practical jokers of Hollywood threw for Mrs. Donald Ogden Stewart, was a new high in something. It seems that Mrs. Stewart had had a nervous breakdown and her doctor had ordered her to be in bed every night by six o'clock. So the party started at high noon, with all the men arriving in white tie and tails and the women in full court regalia, including plumes and long white gloves and tiaras (this as a "razz" to the numerous British guests visiting in Hollywood at the time.) Carole Lombard came in an ambulance all dressed up as a breakdown, but managed to leap from her stretcher in time to play a heated game of tennis with Clark Gable against Kay Francis (her tiara floating in the afternoon breeze) and Clifton Webb. Did you ever try to play tennis in long white gloves and a train— No? Try it sometimes. Gable broke his racquet and substituted a broom, but no one seemed to notice the difference. Mrs. Stewart was in bed by six o'clock. Hollywood is all for the animal gag. If you're going away, or having a birthday, or practically anything, you can be sure that you will receive some live-stock or a little something like an elephant from the zoo. Sid Grauman once sent a loudly quacking duck to Mary Pickford's drawing room on the Chief; some of her best friends once sent Pola Negri a basket of reptiles; and Gloria Swanson, beautiful in orchids and ermine, found a pig in her drawing room. The cutest animal gift was the French poodle with diamond ear-rings and cute little bows that Helen Hayes gave to Adrian. Ranking second in popularity is the swimming pool gag. 'Tis said that Tallulah Bankhead started the charming little practice of jumping into the swimming pool fully clothed in the hour before dawn. It became quite the rage and all the smart backyards had tuxedos, tails, shoes, evening gowns, chiffon handkerchiefs and evening bags hanging out to dry in the mid-day sun. Just when this fad was about to die down Director Woody Van Dyke revived it by pushing Maxie Baer, immaculate in his tuxedo, into his swimming pool at a party he gave for the cast of "The Prizefighter and the Lady." Maxie didn't like it. Ida Lupino is the latest of the Hollywood hostesses to engage in this guest-pushing-intoswimming pool gag. Let it be said for the founder of the sport— Miss Bankhead never pushed, she merely jumped. Hollywood will never forget the neat little practical jokes, nor when the last laugh pops up. Mad, gay, childish Hollywood—the Clown Among Cities. Josef von Sternberg wants to know how he can be expected to get anything done with a cat stomping about all the time. Cocktails With Joan [Continued from page 53] Bob suspiciously. "Sorry, I'll be out of town." (Wonder how Bob will feel when he faces Joan before the cameras in "The Gorgeous Hussy?") By the end of the first day, Joan had made three hundred calls. Some of the numbers didn't answer and had to be called again and again. Some of the people were working and had to be phoned back at night. At the rate of fifteen cents per call, the family budget tottered in the balance. Breakfast, lunch, and dinner were served to Joan at her post of duty. On the fourth day Joan began to show signs of violence. "If one other person kids back and says hi' ya Joan, this is Shirley Temple,' I'll murder him," she muttered under her breath. Then she dialed Mr. and Mrs. George Murphy. "Oh, how-ja-do Miss Crawford," cooed Julie Murphy, in mock elegance. "So ducky of you to call me up for a chat." "But this is Joan Crawford, honestly it is," moaned Franchot's wife. Julie suddenly realized the invitation was on the level. Thirty minutes later a huge box of flowers