Talking Screen (Sep-Oct 1930)

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TALKING SCREEN ©CIB 86650 y^onlen/j /or Uc^oAer FEAT Maurice Chevalier on Love 18 This Famous Gentleman Views Romance Good Girl S. R. Mook 21 Why Mary Brian Can't Be a Screen Siren Last of the Squadron of Death E. R. Moak 22 The Amazing Story of Dick Grace, the Movie Daredevil Where Do They Come From? Charles Reed Jones 24 What the Stars Were Doing Before They Became Stars Behind Her Pretty Face Herbert Cruikshank 32 Nancy Carroll's Real Self Freak Clauses In Their Contracts Mary Sharon 34 Why the Stars Can't Do This and That Hollywood Hobbies E. R. Moak 36 Revealing Their Favorite Pastimes That Makes It Tough Herbert Cruikshank 40 Why Hollywood isn't all a Bed of Roses My Hardest and Easiest Talkie Role Gordon R. Silver 42 Telling Their Likes and Dislikes DISTINCTIVE Press Time Topics 4 Brief Guide 6 Just Your Style — and Hollywood's Dorothea Hawley Cartwright 7 Editorial 17 U RT S They Earn While They Yearn Rachel Rubin 46 What They'd Do With a Day to Themselves What Love Means to Me as told to Walter Ramsey by Dorothy Mackaill 48 The Last of This Intriguing Series When the Fans Propose Gordon R. Silver 52 What the Fan Mail Reveals At the Premiere Mayme Ober Peak 54 The Story of Freeman Lang Lady of Moods and Contrasts Dorothy Herzog 61 A Personal Analysis of Evelyn Brent The Talkie Murder Mystery (Fiction) Irving Stone 64 Concluding This Amazing Story Saving Those Incomes Gordon R. Silver 68 How the Stars Build Up Bank Accounts Before Fame Thomas Minehan 79 The Home-Town Story of Richard Arlen Hard-Boiled and Happy Gloria McCreery 85 Robert Armstrong's Life Story DEPARTMENTS Tidings from Talkie Town 28 Affairs of the Heart 39 Talking Screen Reviews 56 Role Call 90 TALKING SCREEN, October, 1930. Vol. II, No. 2. Published monthly and copyrighted 1930 by the Dell Publishing Co., Inc., 100 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. G. T. Delacorte, Jr., President; H. Honig, Vice President; A. Morel, Secretary. Entered as second-class matter November 1, 1929, at the post office at New York, N. Y. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Yearly subscription, ^2.50 in the U.S.A.; Canadian, ^3.00; foreign S3.50. Single copy, 25c.