Star-dust in Hollywood (1930)

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Star-dust in Hollywood Mexican music-hall sufficiently to acquire a true sense of the caste due to large earnings. All through the film a duel of feminine malice had been raging between the two, probably started by the Frenchwoman but parried with spirit by her Mexican rival. Gautier, in his Voyage en Espagne, has noted his amazement DIGNITY AND IMPUDENCE at the language of even the ladies of Granada ; there is no doubt that the young Mexican actress's language was extremely Granadan. At the word " Cut ! " after the strain of a furious love episode, when she had to squeeze tears from her eyes, aided as much as possible by the strains of Ok> Baby Mine throbbed from the violin, she broke from the arms of her movie beloved and, as a relief, broke into an interlude of Mexican profanity that even a bull-fighter might have been proud of. The French actress was posing as a duchess ; she was therefore imbued with all the attributes of [224]