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Silver Screen
for July
1936
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Chic Manicure Aids at all Five and Ten Cent Stores
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Charlie Ruggles was sick in bed with a cold for a few days. But sister-in-law Arline Judge says she knew he was getting better when she caught him trying to blow the foam off his medicine.
The Eligible Heart-Breakers
[Continued from page 51]
theatre, and you're darned lucky if he has remembered to reserve the theatre tickets— don't be a bit surprised to find yourself sitting in the balcony. But you'll have more laughs, more good fun, than you've had since you were a child at the circus. Jimmy won't even think to ask you if you want to dance after the play (he's the type who stops in the midst of a waltz on a crowded dance floor and tells you most enthusiastically about a model plane he is building) but he'll rush you out to his ranch house in Brentwood— it's right next door to Jeanette MacDonald's— where he lives with Henry Fonda, and there with Henry's help he'll mix up some awful cheese goo which you'll have to wash down with beer, and then he'll entertain you for hours by playing his accordion. He's really very talented on the accordion and plays with gusto. He's been playing that same accordion ever since he was in Princeton, but it's quite typical of the guy that only recently did he pay the last installment on it.
Or perhaps Jimmy and Henry will be in the mood for taking moving pictures that night, and if so you'll roll on the floor with hysterics. The boys bought one of those "Make Movies at Home" machines and Henry is the producer, supervisor, director, cameraman and prop boy, while Jimmy is the cast— which usually consists of five people.
The love scenes are a little difficult to be sure, but the boys skip over those hastily in order to get to the murder and death scenes which they adore. Jimmy likes to be knifed in the throat and have blood spurting from his mouth in his final death agony. All of one evening they experimented with catsup, but the results weren't gruesome enough, and anyway Jimmy swallowed so much catsup that he was nearly sick. Beet juice they have discovered makes the most satisfactory blood.
While you are splitting your sides over their goofy antics you will be licked and pawed by a couple of friendly dogs, Son and Bud, who will probably smell to high heaven of perfume. But don't get the wrong idea—
they're perfectly respectable dogs— only it seems that the cook is so crazy about them that she insists upon washing and brushing and perfuming them every day. "And she cooks them much more appetizing food than she does us," Jimmy complains.
And speaking of food, Jimmv is crazv about eating. "The best things in life," he says, "are a good steak and Myrna Loy." But no matter how many steaks he eats he never gets fat, and no matter how much he pines over Myrna Loy he never gets to first base with her.
Jimmy is the least "actorish" person I have ever met, and if you have a Big Brother whom you like Jimmy will remind you of him. He was born in Indiana, Pennsylvania, went to Princeton, and stumbled into the theatre while he was visiting a friend in the Falmouth Stock Company, at Cape Cod one summer. In New York he lived with Henry Fonda and Ross Alexander, so it was only natural that he and Henry should start up housekeeping again in Hollywood. On a windv afternoon you can find him out on a Brentwood hilltop flving kites with Ross Alexander, who shares his enthusiasm for kites and planes. He doesn't seem to have a steady "girl'" but is often seen with Margaret Sullavan, Wendy Barrie and Betty Furness.
Jimmy's best role so far has been opposite Margaret Sullavan in "Next Time We Love," though he has had grand outstanding parts in "Rose Marie" and "Wife Versus Secretary." He was most delighted when Joan Crawford asked to have him play one of the leading roles in her new picture, "The Gorgeous Hussy." "Gee!" said Jimmy.
If Mr. Stewart sounds a little too haphazard for you, how about Mr. Fonda? Henry is rather a quiet, introspective sort of chap until he starts "tutting up" and then you couldn't find anyone crazier. Just recently he bought himself a cornet which he learned to play in three lessons (poor, poor Jeanette MacDonakn though he has to write his own music as he cannot read the music that the publishers sell. The bottle and match game