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-Many Stars Started at Pasadena Playhouse Is Famed As Stepping Stone To the Screen By the Associated Press. PASADENA, CALIF. The “Little Theater” that has graduated upward of a score of its players into stardom on the stage and screen, launches its fifth annual midsummer drama festival this week. Eight plays of Maxwell Anderson, •elected by the author as represent- ing the greatest diversity of his work, are to be presented in the Pasadena Community Playhouse between June 26 and August 19. Last year seven plays of George Bernard Shaw comprised the mid- •ummer festival program. Founded 22 years ago in an old burlesque theater, the Plavhouse with its school of the theater now occupies its own $600,000 six-story plant. The main auditorium seats 832 spectators. Players who have used the Play- house as a stepping stone to screen prominence include Victor Jory, Gloria Stuart, Randolph Scott, Douglass Montgomery, Robert Tay- lor, Tyrone Power, Karen Morely, Robert Young. Anne Shirley, Stuart Irwin, Michael Whalen and Helen Mack. “Bob Young is typical,” said Gil- mor Briwn, organizer and supervis- ing director of the Playhouse. "For two years he worked as a board marker in a local brokerage house, attending rehearsals and appearing in plays meanwhile. Finally his em- ployers suggested he choose between the brokerage business and the stage. He quit his job'and gradu- ated into the movies. Robert Preston, Wayne Morris, John Carradine and Richard Carl- son, among the younger screen players, all started their acting careers on the Playhouse stage in Shakespearean roles. This theater, by the way, is the only one in the United States where all 37 plays of Shakespeare have been produced," To the Playhouse stage come am- bitious amateurs, students of its own school of the theater and other drama schools, retired troupers who feel the pull of the footlights and motion picture players who wish to renew the audience contact and hear the applause they miss on the movie sets. None of them receives any pay, and none pays for the privilege of appearing. Naturally, the Play- house is a favorite resort for talent scouts from Hollywood and the legi- timate theater. “Paul Muni used the Playhouse stage to escape from the roles in which he was being typed as ‘a second Lon Chaney,’ Brown re- called. “He appeared here in 1930 in one play, ‘The Man Saul.’ which afterward went on to New York. The result on his later career is obvious.” Not only players, but plays have received their starts toward success on the Playhouse stage. It has pre- sented 62 world premieres during its history. S. R. Buchman’s “The Man Saul" was one of them. Others were Eu- gene O'Neills “Lazarus Laughed.” Booth Tarkington's "The Plutocrat,” Sophie Kerr's “A Plain Man and His Wife.” which became “Big Hearted Herbert" on Broadway; Bella and Sam Spewacks "Spring Song" and James Warwick's “Smoke Screen*" called “Blind Alley” on the New York stage. Seventeen American premieres Included Noel Coward's “Cavalcade,” the Cgpeks’ “The Makropoulos Se- cret" and Elmer Rice's “Not for Children.” A play founded on a novel by a Los Angeles newspaper columnist, Lee Shipper, "The Great American Family.” recently set a six-week at- tendance record of 30.000 for the Playhouse. It has been sold for New York production. Fiddle Among Fiddles Was This One, Surely With well over a hundred violins on the set and available, a single fiddle stopped production for nearly an hour on Samuel Goldwyn's "They Shall Have Music.” which stars Jascha Heifetz, world renowned vio- linist. While Andrea Leeds and Joel McCrea cooled their heels in waiting, frontic prop men tried to locate a $3,500 instrument which somehow had strayed in among the "break- away” prop fiddles which this morn- ing were being used. Horrified least the valuable violin be used by mistage as one to be de- liberately smashed, Paul Widlicska, head propmaker and creator of the breakaway fiddles, was called to look over his handiwork and separate the one grain of wheat from among the chaff. Glamour Girls Jane Bryan and Anita Louise have been cast in important roles in “These Glamour Girls,” with Lew Ayres and Lana Turner. New addi- tions to the cast also include Don Castle. Jack Carleton, Owen Davis, jr.; Peter Hayes, son of Actress Grace Hayes: Sumner Getchell and Dennie Moore. They join previously announced players, Tom Brown, Marsha Hunt. Richard Carlson, Ann Rutherford and Mary Beth Hughes In this collegiate story, _DANCING._ The Edward F. Miller Studio 814 17th ST. NATIONAL 8093 For Plserlmlnotlm People._ Dance or Learn to Dance IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT Private Lessons at Moderate Rates EA. Group instruction und EA. OIIC J,*-'nrnT0r.d.VrFn; 50c Canellis Dance Studios 724 11th St. N.W. District 1673 Opposite the Palais Royal * LEARN to DAME IN THE COOL AIR-CONDITIONED STUDIOS of Ethel M. Fistere. The simplified Fis- tere method of in- struction makes learning easy. iL Coll for o Guest Lesson Open 10-10 CICTCDC 1223 Conn. A*t. riO I CKC District 2460 He Never Ran 90 Yards And Pat O’Brien Claims Those Other Yarns Are Untrue, Too PAT O'BRIEN. By Carlisle Jones. HOLLYWOOD. Pat O'Brien didn't run 90 yards to a touchdown for Marquette against Notre Dame and he has never said that he did. In recent years he has said, very vehemently, that he did not. But it makes no difference. The story goes on and on. It appears year after year with new elaborations. Neither is it true that Pat had the skin of his tattooed chest removed and made into a lampshade. The*--- actor has become a little bitter about that story. His chest was never tattooed and neither has any other part of his epidermis been so decorated. He -was baptized “William Patrick O'Brien." He dropped the William for the shorter and more Irish name of “Pat.” He has not kissed the Blarney Stone. He has never been closer to Ireland, in fact, than New York City. He came to Hollywood to play the wrong role in a comedy of er- rors that started his career off in great style. He is sentimental, gen- erous and sometimes swears mag- nificently. Horse racing and hand- ball are two of his favorite sports. He was stranded once on the road— in Peoria. He almost starved in a hall bedroom—in New York. Pat has played more newspaper roles in pictures than any other actor, but he never has been a re- porter or a city editor. His fans are his favorite authors. He be- lieves a periscope is of more value than a horoscope. He believes in banshees. He nas worked steadily and 1 alrlv hard—for an actor—during the 10 years he has been in Hollywood and he has saved enough money to snap his fingers at the wolf at his door. He claims he didn't know Atlantis was lost. He always thought it was in Georgia! Pat takes his tie off first when he gets ready for bed. He misses trains and likes to swim nude. He says he wears rubber heels only "in intimate scenes" and he sleeps “in character." He can pick out a tune on the Mary Morris Cast In Korda Film Mary Morris, the young actress who made her featured screen debut in “Prison Without Bars,” has been awarded a leading role in Alexan- der Korda’s new Technicolor pro- duction, “Thief of Bagdad.” Miss Morris joins the cast which already includes Conrad Veidt. Sabu, June- Duprez, John Justin and Rex In- gram. “Thief of Bagdad" is being direct- ed by Ludwig Berger. (Continued From First Page.) cannot double for these dummies, since they might be injured in the make-believe conflict. This practice has been the cus- tom since Griffith made “The Birth of a Nation.” Recently the Screen Actors' Guild was able to convince the producers they should hire ex- tras—one for each dummy for each day. The theory seems to be that the dummies were keeping the ex- tras out of work. The extras stand by, wonder about tomorrow's bread and butter, collect their checks, go yawkingly home- ward at the end of the dreadfully weary day. Glamour Girls Treated Not Too Kindly. “These Glamour Girls” will not treat too kindly the New York va- riety who inspired Jane Hall's story. In this picture, now under way, there are seven, gills; six are debs, the kind who in real life cop so much picture and society space, and the seventh is glamorous, too. But she’s (Lana Turner) only a taxi dancer. She is the only one who doesn't turn phony when faced with a real problem. Sylvan Simon, who is directing, says his picture is not an expose of the young society crowd—"unless Jane Hall knows what she's talking about.” She does. She gave up the glam- our business to write books and scenarios about it. Again Hedy Lamarr Gets Her Man. Something new in the compara- tively uneventful screen life of Hedy Lamarr came up the other day: She had to shoot a man, same being Joseph Schildkraut. It was pretty emotional stuff; the- director, in a dozen rehearsals, stirred Hedy into a fine state of repressed excitement. Hedy walked into the artificial garden, surprised Schildkraut, told him she was going to "keel” him. Then she whipped out the gun, fired point-blank. After it was all over, the dark- eyed one commented: “It was a funny feeling, shooting a man, even with a blank cart- ridge.” zither and he is a softie for a “touch.” He has neither brothers nor sisters and was once a thor- oughly spoiled child. He has two children of his own and is a fairly successful disciplinarian. He didn't finish college and believes he is better off now than if he had grad- uated. He likes people, is at his best in a crowd and can make an excellent impromptu speech. Spencer Tracy, Frank McHugh, James Cagney and Bob Armstrong are his close friends. He financed his wife’s' hat shop, but he didn't wait on the customers. He sings a bad bass in the shower bath and if he ever finds the chap who puts the pins in new shirts he says he will be charged with murder. Otherwise he is as normal as any man who has never made a touch- down against Notre Dame. 1 Capitals Radio Program _«_ JUNE 25 AND 26, 1939. 11:00 a.m.—WMAL. Maurice Baron conducts the Radio City Music Hall Orchestra, and Baritone Robert Weede and Pianist Hen- rietta Schumann are soloists. 'Ada‘rl0’ Lekeu Orchestra Firat movement. "Concerto in A Minor" Grieg Mme. Schumann. Romance in C" ....... Sibelius ... .. Orchestra. Prayer Unterm ever-Baron _ and Pirate Treasure" Brown-Baron _ Mr Weede. Serenade Tschaikowsky "Forget-Me-Not" *nd -' Herbert 1.00—WJSV. The part played by the Federal Government in the Nation's industrial life is subject of Democracy in Action program. Today's High Lights (All Times P.M. Unless Indicated.) 1:30—WRC. EDUARD BENES. former Presi- dent of Czecho-Slovakia, participates in the University of Chicago Round Table discussion of "Questions on Democracy." 2:00—WJSV. Howard Barlow conducts the Columbia Broadcasting Symphony. "Oboe Concerto"_ _Handel Mitchell Miller, oboeist. “Les Eolides" Franck ‘Symphony No. ft in D’’ Mendelssohn “Suite from Harpsichord Work**’ Couperin 3:30—WRC. The World Is Yours offers a dramatization entitled "The Miracle of Paper.” 6:00—WJSV. “The American Way in Pre- paredness" is the subject of a People's Platform discussion. 6:30—WMAL. Radio Guild presents a drama based on the life of Robert Herrick, Brit- ish poet. 7:00—WJSV. The new Ellery Queen mystery show has as guests Princess Alexandra Kropotkin, Composer Deems Taylor, Au- thor-Poet Galett Burgess, Producer- Actor Ed Gardner. 7:00—WMAL. Erich Leinsdorf conducts the N. B. C. Symphony Orchestra. "Suita In D Major" Bach Symphony No. 3fi in C Major" Mozart "Selections from "A Midsummer NiKht s Dream"_ Mendelssohn __TODAY'S PROGRAM. A.M^WMAL, 630^WRC7950kTTWQLrU30k. WJSV, 1,460k. 8:00 Coast to Coast i Back the Clock Funny Papers Elder Mictiaux 15 Tom Terriss f:*P " " Crawford Caravan W. P. A. Concert _1 _ News JulJetins_" " 9:00 Diversion Bible High Lights Church of the Air iChurch of the Air 9:15 " I " j " " ! •' " 9:30 Russian ^Melodies Barry McKinley Dixie Harmonies Christian Science *‘”1_”_The Kidoodlers_Musical Potpourri News Bulletins 10:00'News—Songs News—Music Cantor Shapiro News and Rhythm 30:15 Neighbor Nell Music Workshop i i " 10:30 Southernaires ,J. M. Oyanguren Art Brown, records Bowes Family JO-45 __"_Story-Book_” "_j " "_ 11:00 Music Hall Logan Musicale Art Brown, records Bowes Family 11:15 " " " j J]:*P To Be Announced Presbyterian Program Let's Go West '';45 I " " " " i Tabernacle Choir P.M. | 12:00 Waterloo Junction Music for Moderns Presbyterian Program Church of the Air 12:15; " News Bulletins i " " 12:30 Cloutier's Orch. Incidentally ; Walkathon Clyde Barry J2:45 Zionist Program_I _"_I " I Baptist Convention 1:00 Varieties At Aunt Fanny's (Author, Author! Democracy in Action 1:15 I " 1:30 To Be Announced Round Table, talks Freudberg's Orch. Sunday Players 1:451 " _I_''_Popular Mpdley_" _ 2:00|Three Cheers Sing Sunday Drivers Sunday Afternoon C. B. S. Symphony 2:151 Bookman's Notebook 2:30 Festival of Music Name the Place Concert Program _2:45: " " | " | " 3:00 Sundoy Vespers j liTBriggsville News Bulletins Without Music 3:15 " Rangers Serenade Music of Masters 3:30 Tapestry Musicale World Is Yours Haven of Rest On W. P. A. Cuts 3:451 •" ”_1 '' " '' " St. Louis Blues 4:00 H. R. Baukhage Rhythm Makers Musical Program WorldToday 4:15 Jimmy Dorsey's Orchf Hall of Fun " " " 4:30 Spelling Bee Red Norvo's Orch. Ben Bornie 4:45 N. Y. Fair Program i '' " " " 5:00 Tropical Moods Catholic Hour Swing High Cancer Institute 5:15 Grenadiers Band " " Rhythm Rhapsody " 5:30 Paul Laval's Orch. Grouch Club Walkathon Hollywood Pgm. 3:45 _" _Tea Dansant" _ 6:00 Star Sports Review Jack Benny, variety Bill McCune's Orch. People's Platform 6:15 Popular Classics 6:30 Radio Guild Drama Band Wagon Design for Melody Musical Playhouse 6:45 ”" "_ " '• " 3:00 N. B. C. Orchestra Charlie McCarthy American Forum Ellery Queen 7:15 " " " " 7:30 " " m m « » »» n 7**45 " " " " 00 ~ or •:M Playhouse, drama Merry-Go-Round Revival Meeting Summer Hour I*|5 " " 11 »» « rr 8:30 Walter Winchell j Familiar Music " 8:45 Irene Rich, dfama I " •• » 9:00 Ferde Grofe's Orch. The Circle, variety Good Will Court Playhouse, drama 9:15 -has. Barnet’s Orch. " " " " » 9:30 Cheerio " " " " H. V. Kaltenborn 0:45__" " " Capitol Opinions 10:00 News—Refugee Pgm. Old Refrains American Wildlife Nows—Music J0:15 Refugee Program Stamp Romances Music—Scores 10:30 Vincent Lopez's Orch. Glenn Miller's Orch. Nows Bulletins What Price America 10:45 " "_ ”_Music Album ”_ 11:00 Glenn Carow, piano Sports—Music Jan Garber's Orth From Brazil 11:15 Music You Desire Isham Jones' Orch. " " " 11:30! " Henry Busso's Orch. Teagarden's Orch. Arch Bleyor’s Orth. H:45 w « »* « »r M 12:00 Sign Off Tign Off Jimmy Dorsey’s Orch. Weather 12:15 " Sign Off (12:02) 12:301 Red Norvo’s Orch. 12:451 v 1:00* j Lonely Hour, 'Til 2 | TOMORROW'S PROGRAM A.M.| WMAL, 630k. | WRC, 950k. | WOLTUSOk. | WJSV, 1,460k. 6:00 Gordon Hittenmark Arthur Godfrey 6:30 Today's Prelude " Art Brown " J;45 " " " " .... pw .. 7:00 Today's Prelude Gordon Hittenmark Art Brown Arthur Godfrey 7:15 Prelude—News " *' | " " " " 7:30 Lee Everett " " News—Art Brown 7:45; " "_" "_jArt Brown_" "__ 1:00 Lee Everett News—Hittenmark Art Brown News—Godfrey •:15 " " Gordon Hittenmark \ " Arthur Godfrey 8:30 Earl Godwin, news " " News—Art Brown Magic Carpet l:45!Breakfast Club Gospel Singer Art Brown iBachelor's Children 9:00 Over Paradise Central City, serial Art Brown Kitty-KellTT^erial 9:15 Josh Higgins, serial Other Wife, serial Piano Lessons Myrt and Marge 9:30 Jack Berch Sings Plain Bill, serial Melody Strings Hilltop House, serial 9:45 i I. Miller's Orch. Woman in White I News—Calendar iStepmother, serial 10:00 Mary Marlin, serial David Harum, serial Morning Concert iln Hollywood 10:15 Vic and Sade, serial Lorenzo Jones, serial Traffic Court Scattergood Baines 10:30 Fran Allison Sings Widow Brown, serial Keep Fit to Music Big Sister, serial 10:45 Jack Foy, songs_Road et Life, serial Musical Potpourri Real Lrfe Stories 11:00iDorothy Dreslin Romanelli s Orch. Musical Potpourri Mary M. McBride 11:15 Kidoodlers, music O'Neills, serial The Swingsters Nancy James, serial 11:30 Farm and Home Hour Mary Mason > The Joyce Trio Helen Trent, serial 11:45 " I " " 1 " iGal Sunday, serial P.M.J 12:00 Farm and Home Hour News—Music iThe Happy Gang Goldbergs^ serial 12:15 " Devotions Hews—Music Life's Beautiful 12:30 Peables in Charge Tex Walker, songs Walkathon Road of Life, serial J2:45 News—Music_Words and Music Vaughn De Leath Day Is Ours, serial 1:00{Reading Adventure Betty and Bob Fred Nagel s Orch. District Reporter 1:15 " " Grimm's Daughter Sports Page Dr. Susan, serial 1:30. Manhattan Melodies Valiant Lady, serial " " {Your Family, serial 1:<5| " " Hymn Program_" "_lA Girl Marries_ 2:00 U. S. Marine Band Mary Marlin, serial Sports Page Alice Blair, serial 2:15 " ( Hi Perkins, serial " r' News—Music 2:30 Pepper Young, serial " " Elinor Lee 2:45 '' Guiding Light, serial " 3:00 Club Matinee Backstage Wife News—Sports Page Baseball Game 3:15 Stella Dallas, serial Sports Page 3:30 " " Vic and Sade, serial " " " 3:45 Matinee—Hews Midstream, serial " "** " 4:00 Song Sweets Glenn Miller's Orch. Sports Page Baseball Game 4:15 " " " " " " " 4:30 Affairs of Anthony Melody Time " " " " 4:45 Soap Box Derby Wayne Van Dyne " ”~ " 5:00 Jimmy Alien, serial Science News Walkathon Melody Madcaps 5:15 Evening Star Flashes Paradise Isle Music of Today " ." 5:30 Twilight Tunes Incidentally Cocktail Capers Hews—Music 5:45 Lowell Thomas, news The Plainsman Johnson Family Arch McDonald SHORT-WAVE PROGRAM 12:30 pjn.—CARACAS, dance music and songs, YV5RC, 5.9 meg., 51.7 m. 3:30 p.m.—GUATEMALA CITY, concert by First Military Band, TGWA, 15.17 meg., 19.8 m. 6:55 pan.—PRAGUE, musical program, OLR4A, 15.23 meg., 19.7 m. 7:00 p.m.—BUDAPEST, concert orchestra, HAT4, 9.12 meg., 32.8 m. * 7.10 pjn.—LONDON, Songs at the Piano, Harold Scott, GSO, 15.18 meg., 19.7 m.; GSD, 11.75 meg., 25.5 m.; GEB, 951 meg., 31.5 m. 7:30 p.m.—ROME, Othello,” Acts III and IV, opera, 2RO, 11.81 meg., 25.4 m.; 1RF, 9.83 meg., 305 m. 8:25 p.m.—EINDHOVEN, program for the United States, PCJ, 9.59 meg., 31.2 m. 8:30 pjn.—Paris, recorded concert, TPB7, 11.88 meg., 25.2 m.; TPA4, 11.71 meg., 25.6 m. 10:05 p.m.—LONDON, light music by contemporary British compos- ers, GSD, 11.75 meg., 255 m.; GSC, 958 meg., 31.3 m.; GSB, 951 meg., 315 m. V Claude Rains Tops Stars For Diction Sound Engineers Gall His Speech The Clearest If Claude Rains ever tires of an acting career, if a flood comes to wash away the Hollywood studios and all world interest in motion pictures, the English actor, now a naturalized American citizen (for which he thanks his God with daily fervency), can open a training school for radio announcers, lec- turers and all others who feel a desire to improve their diction. For Rains, according to the unani- mous verdict of all motion picture sound engineers, those chaps who sit on sets behind their dial-spotted panels, with head phones on their ears, and adjust the tone and qual- ity of the words that come through the microphones, has the ne plus ultra of all screen voices. His dic- tion, so they say, is so .clear antf perfect that he can think his words, not whisper them, and the micro- phones will report what's on his mind. That may not be quite true. But it serves to give an idea of what is meant. “To speak well, just quit being careless,” Rains suggests, “and do not try any affectations. Good Eng- lish speech is ruled by laws as rigid as the laws of mathematics. Adhere to them. You’ll have no trouble. When in doubt, consult a standard dictionary. If you don’t own one, you can find one in the public library, so there's no excuse for not knowing.” The Warner Bros.’ player, fea- tured as the sputtery Napoleon III in the epic, "Juarez,” with Paul Muni, Bette Davis and a huge cast of supporting stars, got his first speaking part in a theater not on a stage, but behind it. His first job, early in youth, was as call boy in His Majesty’s Theater in Lon- don. where his single duty was to go through the traditional routine of calling out, at intervals properly timed, such warnings to the actors as "Half hour," “Fifteen minutes" and "Curtain.” “Young Rains got a dramatic quality into those calls which al- ways brought us out.” one veteran of those days recalled not long ago. "It was not long until we had made him stage manager, and from that he quite naturally talked him- self into playing parts.” Jascha Heifetz Film Is Titled Again “They Shall Have Music” is an- nounced as the new title of the Samuel Goldwyn production star- ring Jascha Heifetz in his first appearance as a screen actor. The film has until now been known as “Music School.” I r- 1 Just a Perpetual Hurry Joan Blondell’s Full Life Gives Her Little Leisure i JOAN BLONDELL. HOLLYWOOD. No one in Hollywood, from the prop man to the star, can boast of an overabundance of leisure time while a picture is in work. But of all Holly- wood's busy legions Joan Blondell is probably the busiest person in the screen city. Joan's life is one perpetual rush, scramble, bustle, dash, spurt, flutter, plunge and scuttle. For, what with her motion picture work, her husband! Dick Powell; her two children, her*-—- brand-new home, her social life, her | dancing lessons, her sports, her knit- ; ting and hooked-rug making, to say nothing of the ever-present neces- j sity of keeping herself groomed and immaculate, her life is as full of tasks, duties and pleasures as the traditional nut shell is full of meat. In her current picture, Colum- bia's “Good Girls Go to Paris," in which she is co-starred, as she was in the studio's “There's Always a Woman," with Melvyn Douglas, Joan had exactly five hours away from the set during the entire production, for she figured in exactly 248 of the picture's 286 scenes. And even that! time out wasn’t her own, for in it, she was posing for stills, giving in- terviews or answering some other demands made upon her in connec- i tion with her work. Ask her how she keeps well and happy in spite of the scrambled life. | and she says the answer is unfailing health, and the conviction that it's all part of the fun of being .alive. More specifically, she takes break- fast on the run, after an early morning shower, which serves as a shampoo as well. She's often being trailed down the steps by her maid, making a last frantic pass at a button or hook. She doesn't see the children, Norman and baby Ellen, in the mornings, but, because they both have long naps in the after- noon, they're allowed to stay up a little later at night, and she in- sists on wangling an hour for play with them, no matter how pressing other business may be. She found her new Hollywood home by chance, one morning, when, in a scramble to get to the studio, she took a wrong turn in her car. She and Powell rafted through it on the run. and the lease was signed before the end of the day. She did her own furniture shopping and decorating, taking that in her stride because both tasks are congenial to her. She never wastes time on personal shopping, for she has several shops in Hollywood which know her tastes. A telephone call, and they have shoes, millinery, frocks, waiting for her at home, where she can make her selections in peace. She has a staff of servants selected for their adaptibility to a slightly mad house- hold, and they are more friends than servants. Any one in the Blondell-Powell menage can turn his hand to anything and usually does. On the servants’ day out, Joan, Powell and Norman do their own cooking, and make what they call a Roman holiday of the event. It may or may not result in night- mares. Formal entertaining is limited to one big party a year; for the rest, the inevitable Sunday afternoon guests share the family's hamburger feasts at an outdoor barbecue pit. Frequently, the guests are pressed into service to help with the cook- ing, and also to do some furniture shifting in the house. Joan has no definite time laid aside for sports—she doesn’t really need any exercise after her days of dashing about—but she manages to get in a game of tennis, or some swimmnig or hiking, whenever time allows. If ever there's a spare moment ip the studio, she knits or 1 works on a hooked rug. She and Dick have a short period of letdown every evening, in his den before ainner is served. Then they each make a list of all the odd jobs they have to attend to next day. And no matter how busy they are, all those self-given jobs are done. It's always bed by 10 o'clock when a ! picture is in work. No beauty secrets, but an application of castor oil to the face. And so it goes in the life of a young woman whose initial might well be the “B" indi- cated when any one. uses the familiar term “busy as a bee.” Out of Season Is Prop Man’s Pet Peeve It’s Never Right Time for Trick Film Items HOLLYWOOD. If you were a property man in movies, you'd be pretty certain that the seasons are the least co-opera- tive item in your existence. When- ever a picture calls for some certain fruit, food in insect, it invariably happens that it’s out of season. For instance. Harry Edwards, prop master on “The Wizard of Oz.” re- lates that the thousands of trick props were nothing compared with problem of finding a dozen setting hens. The scene was made at the time of the year when hens aren't setting. It took a week's search to find 12 hens breaking the laws of chicken nature. For another scene, thousands of butterflies were wanted. The Nation was scoured but the best that could be done was white moths, so tiny that when turned loose they never even photographed. Film followers will remember how. during “Yellow Jack.” prop men had to hunt up mosquito larvae and build heated incubators to hatch out the insects many months early. But Hollywood's funniest insect story, says Edwards, concerned cat- erpillars. They were necessary, but out of season. Some prop ones were made and the director went almost crazy trying to work with them. Just before noon of that trying day, came a box of caterpillars from Im- perial Valley. They were sent to the set. The prop man. knowing the director's disposition and that the scene was just being finished, dared not admit some had been found. He told an assistant to throw them away. The assistant did. Just out- side the stage. When the director went to lunch, the bushes were cov- ered with caterpillars “unable to secure” and the fellow went skyhigh. Miss Loftus Stays Cecelia Loftus. veteran imperson- ator of stage arid screen, will have a featured role in Warner Bros.’ “The Dead End Kids at Military School.” “Cissie” appeared recently in “The Old Maid." in which Bette Davis and Miriam Hopkins co-star. “THEY TOOK MY BABY AWAY!” WHAT was her sin? Could they re- fuse to let her even see her baby? You'll hear many cases as startling as this on radio's fascinating Good Will Hour. Real people tell their inti- mate problems before the microphone to get the advice of John J. Anthony, noted radio counselor. Unrehearsed, brutally frank, their stories will hold you spellbound. You too may be helped. Liston ini... John J. Anthony's GOOD WILL HOUR 9 TO 10 P.M. TONIGHT-WOL 1 _z__| ALCOHOLISM DISEASE Institutional Care Devoted Exclusively to tho Treatment and Correction of Chronic Alcoholism Call or write for free book- let in plain envelope or ar- range for private interview without obligation. Telephone Columbia 4754 Strictly Private Film Styles In Proposals Change, Too Realism Invades Now the Field Of Romance HOLLYWOOD. Every season and in most every picture movie proposals are be- coming more realistic. Perhaps it’s because the married scenarists of today have better mem- ories than those of yesterday and the single writers have acquired more experience. Or maybe it’s just another modern manifestation, like streamlining and jitterbugging. Whatever the reason, modem pro- posing in the films is pretty much the spontaneous combustion, ’speak- while-the-courage-is-high business it is in real life. Flowery speeches delivered from bended-knee position are definitely out. They've gone with the final clinch and the sunset fadeout. To- day’s film heroes stammer and stut- ter. backtrack and hedge, stall and finally get the question out when they ask the screen heroines to marry them. The heroines prompt, encourage and help the heroes over the final hurdles. Sometimes they even take the initiative, as Bette Davis did in “Dark Victory,” when she came right out and asked George Brent if he didn't know she loved him. More often they help the pro- posal along a little more indirectly, as Priscilla Lane does in “Daughters Courageous,” when she snuggles a little closer to John Garfield, purses her lips provocatively and says: “If you kiss me now you'll save a lot of time,” Even with that efficient prompt- ing. Garfield's proposal doesn't come glibly and with flowery trimmings. He leads up to putting the question by the roundabout way of saying marriage is swell for lots of peo- ple but no good for him. That leaves it up to Priscilla again. Jeffrey Lynn’s proposal to the same girl in the same picture is more flowrery' and suggests some- thing new in modern methods for bashful young men who want to use fancy, poetic words without feeling foolish. Lynn recites an impassioned love speech with appropriate ges- tures. When it has produced the desired effect he tells the starry- eyed Miss Lane he was trying out lines for the play he is WTi'ting. He contrives to make it a proposal, how'ever, by adding that, of course, he feels exactly that way about her. Men who have said it in letters because their tongues have failed them in the pinch will sympathize with Joel McCreas strategy in "Career Man.” He proposes to Brenda Marshall via radiogram and watches her while she reads the message. Even the settings for film pro- posals have changed. Moonlit gar- dens or rugged cliffs overlooking the sea into which an obliging sun is dipping are requisites no longer. Men say the fateful words in kitch- ens. subways, skating rinks or quick- lunch booths. John Garfield and Priscilla Lane, who seem to have acquired the habit of falling in love in pic- tures. are sitting in a hay wagon in a farm barnyard when he pro- poses to her in their new Warner Bros.’ feature, “Dust Be My Des- tiny.” The stars and the moon are hidden, but they have an audience. The cows and the chickens are there. ffi^HUTO RROIO SERVICE ON >. ALL MAKES L.S. JULLIEN INC. | H43PSTJ.W. NO.8075 ^ j Reminding You phone ME. 0764 PROMPT RADIO SERVICE 50c LEETH BROS. AUTO RADIO SPECIALISTS 1ZZU 13th N.W. 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Lifted to Jane froman, Emo Ra pee, Jon Peerce, Gulfs Mixed Chorus— and Harry Von Zell- on "Gulfs Musical Play- house*—-tonight I I Re-Upholstering WE will Rt-Uphobter I Your 3-Pc. Living Room Suite for only 1. Including Materials, As- serted Tapestry. 2. New filling where neces- sory. 3. New spring units in ali cushions. NATIONAL UPHOLSTERING GO. 640 2nd St. N.E. ATIantie 8368 Factories Washington * Baltimore

Capitals Radio Program - Chronicling America...for the shorter and more Irish name of “Pat.” He has not kissed the Blarney Stone. He has never been closer to Ireland, in fact,

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  • -Many Stars Started at Pasadena

    Playhouse Is Famed As Stepping Stone To the Screen

    By the Associated Press. PASADENA, CALIF.

    The “Little Theater” that has graduated upward of a score of its players into stardom on the stage and screen, launches its fifth annual midsummer drama festival this week.

    Eight plays of Maxwell Anderson, •elected by the author as represent- ing the greatest diversity of his work, are to be presented in the Pasadena Community Playhouse between June 26 and August 19. Last year seven plays of George Bernard Shaw comprised the mid- •ummer festival program.

    Founded 22 years ago in an old burlesque theater, the Plavhouse with its school of the theater now occupies its own $600,000 six-story plant. The main auditorium seats 832 spectators.

    Players who have used the Play- house as a stepping stone to screen prominence include Victor Jory, Gloria Stuart, Randolph Scott, Douglass Montgomery, Robert Tay- lor, Tyrone Power, Karen Morely, Robert Young. Anne Shirley, Stuart Irwin, Michael Whalen and Helen Mack.

    “Bob Young is typical,” said Gil- mor Briwn, organizer and supervis- ing director of the Playhouse. "For two years he worked as a board marker in a local brokerage house, attending rehearsals and appearing in plays meanwhile. Finally his em- ployers suggested he choose between the brokerage business and the stage. He quit his job'and gradu- ated into the movies.

    Robert Preston, Wayne Morris, John Carradine and Richard Carl- son, among the younger screen players, all started their acting careers on the Playhouse stage in Shakespearean roles. This theater, by the way, is the only one in the United States where all 37 plays of Shakespeare have been produced,"

    To the Playhouse stage come am- bitious amateurs, students of its own school of the theater and other drama schools, retired troupers who feel the pull of the footlights and motion picture players who wish to renew the audience contact and hear the applause they miss on the movie sets.

    None of them receives any pay, and none pays for the privilege of appearing. Naturally, the Play- house is a favorite resort for talent scouts from Hollywood and the legi- timate theater.

    “Paul Muni used the Playhouse stage to escape from the roles in which he was being typed as ‘a second Lon Chaney,’ Brown re- called. “He appeared here in 1930 in one play, ‘The Man Saul.’ which afterward went on to New York. The result on his later career is obvious.”

    Not only players, but plays have received their starts toward success on the Playhouse stage. It has pre- sented 62 world premieres during its history.

    S. R. Buchman’s “The Man Saul" was one of them. Others were Eu- gene O'Neills “Lazarus Laughed.” Booth Tarkington's "The Plutocrat,” Sophie Kerr's “A Plain Man and His Wife.” which became “Big Hearted Herbert" on Broadway; Bella and Sam Spewacks "Spring Song" and James Warwick's “Smoke Screen*" called “Blind Alley” on the New York stage.

    Seventeen American premieres Included Noel Coward's “Cavalcade,” the Cgpeks’ “The Makropoulos Se- cret" and Elmer Rice's “Not for Children.”

    A play founded on a novel by a Los Angeles newspaper columnist, Lee Shipper, "The Great American Family.” recently set a six-week at- tendance record of 30.000 for the Playhouse. It has been sold for New York production.

    Fiddle Among Fiddles Was This One, Surely

    With well over a hundred violins on the set and available, a single fiddle stopped production for nearly an hour on Samuel Goldwyn's "They Shall Have Music.” which stars Jascha Heifetz, world renowned vio- linist. While Andrea Leeds and Joel McCrea cooled their heels in waiting, frontic prop men tried to locate a $3,500 instrument which somehow had strayed in among the "break- away” prop fiddles which this morn- ing were being used.

    Horrified least the valuable violin be used by mistage as one to be de- liberately smashed, Paul Widlicska, head propmaker and creator of the breakaway fiddles, was called to look over his handiwork and separate the one grain of wheat from among the chaff.

    Glamour Girls Jane Bryan and Anita Louise

    have been cast in important roles in “These Glamour Girls,” with Lew Ayres and Lana Turner. New addi- tions to the cast also include Don Castle. Jack Carleton, Owen Davis, jr.; Peter Hayes, son of Actress Grace Hayes: Sumner Getchell and Dennie Moore. They join previously announced players, Tom Brown, Marsha Hunt. Richard Carlson, Ann Rutherford and Mary Beth Hughes In this collegiate story,

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    He Never Ran 90 Yards And Pat O’Brien Claims Those Other Yarns Are Untrue, Too

    PAT O'BRIEN.

    By Carlisle Jones. HOLLYWOOD.

    Pat O'Brien didn't run 90 yards to a touchdown for Marquette against Notre Dame and he has never said that he did. In recent years he has said, very vehemently, that he did not. But

    it makes no difference. The story goes on and on. It appears year after year with new elaborations.

    Neither is it true that Pat had the skin of his tattooed chest removed and made into a lampshade. The*--- actor has become a little bitter about that story. His chest was never tattooed and neither has any other part of his epidermis been so decorated.

    He -was baptized “William Patrick O'Brien." He dropped the William for the shorter and more Irish name of “Pat.” He has not kissed the Blarney Stone. He has never been closer to Ireland, in fact, than New York City.

    He came to Hollywood to play the wrong role in a comedy of er- rors that started his career off in great style. He is sentimental, gen- erous and sometimes swears mag- nificently. Horse racing and hand- ball are two of his favorite sports. He was stranded once on the road— in Peoria. He almost starved in a hall bedroom—in New York.

    Pat has played more newspaper roles in pictures than any other actor, but he never has been a re- porter or a city editor. His fans are his favorite authors. He be- lieves a periscope is of more value than a horoscope. He believes in banshees.

    He nas worked steadily and 1 alrlv hard—for an actor—during the 10 years he has been in Hollywood and he has saved enough money to snap his fingers at the wolf at his door. He claims he didn't know Atlantis was lost. He always thought it was in Georgia!

    Pat takes his tie off first when he gets ready for bed. He misses trains and likes to swim nude. He says he wears rubber heels only "in intimate scenes" and he sleeps “in character."

    He can pick out a tune on the

    Mary Morris Cast In Korda Film

    Mary Morris, the young actress who made her featured screen debut in “Prison Without Bars,” has been awarded a leading role in Alexan- der Korda’s new Technicolor pro- duction, “Thief of Bagdad.” Miss Morris joins the cast which already includes Conrad Veidt. Sabu, June- Duprez, John Justin and Rex In- gram.

    “Thief of Bagdad" is being direct- ed by Ludwig Berger.

    (Continued From First Page.)

    cannot double for these dummies, since they might be injured in the make-believe conflict.

    This practice has been the cus- tom since Griffith made “The Birth of a Nation.” Recently the Screen Actors' Guild was able to convince the producers they should hire ex- tras—one for each dummy for each day. The theory seems to be that the dummies were keeping the ex- tras out of work.

    The extras stand by, wonder about tomorrow's bread and butter, collect their checks, go yawkingly home- ward at the end of the dreadfully weary day. Glamour Girls Treated Not Too Kindly.

    “These Glamour Girls” will not treat too kindly the New York va- riety who inspired Jane Hall's story.

    In this picture, now under way, there are seven, gills; six are debs, the kind who in real life cop so much picture and society space, and the seventh is glamorous, too. But she’s (Lana Turner) only a taxi dancer. She is the only one who doesn't turn phony when faced with a real problem.

    Sylvan Simon, who is directing, says his picture is not an expose of the young society crowd—"unless Jane Hall knows what she's talking about.”

    She does. She gave up the glam- our business to write books and scenarios about it.

    Again Hedy Lamarr Gets Her Man.

    Something new in the compara- tively uneventful screen life of Hedy Lamarr came up the other day: She had to shoot a man, same being Joseph Schildkraut. It was pretty emotional stuff; the- director, in a dozen rehearsals, stirred Hedy into a fine state of repressed excitement.

    Hedy walked into the artificial garden, surprised Schildkraut, told him she was going to "keel” him. Then she whipped out the gun, fired point-blank.

    After it was all over, the dark- eyed one commented:

    “It was a funny feeling, shooting a man, even with a blank cart- ridge.”

    zither and he is a softie for a “touch.” He has neither brothers nor sisters and was once a thor- oughly spoiled child. He has two children of his own and is a fairly successful disciplinarian. He didn't finish college and believes he is better off now than if he had grad- uated. He likes people, is at his best in a crowd and can make an excellent impromptu speech.

    Spencer Tracy, Frank McHugh, James Cagney and Bob Armstrong are his close friends. He financed his wife’s' hat shop, but he didn't wait on the customers. He sings a bad bass in the shower bath and if he ever finds the chap who puts the pins in new shirts he says he will be charged with murder.

    Otherwise he is as normal as any man who has never made a touch- down against Notre Dame. 1

    Capitals Radio Program _«_ JUNE 25 AND 26, 1939.

    11:00 a.m.—WMAL. Maurice Baron conducts the Radio City Music Hall Orchestra, and Baritone Robert Weede and Pianist Hen- rietta Schumann are soloists. 'Ada‘rl0’ Lekeu

    Orchestra Firat movement. "Concerto in A Minor" Grieg Mme. Schumann. Romance in C" ....... Sibelius

    ... .. Orchestra. Prayer Unterm ever-Baron _

    and Pirate Treasure" Brown-Baron

    _ Mr Weede. Serenade Tschaikowsky "Forget-Me-Not"

    *nd -' Herbert 1.00—WJSV. The part played by the Federal

    Government in the Nation's industrial life is subject of Democracy in Action program.

    Today's High Lights (All Times P.M. Unless Indicated.)

    1:30—WRC. EDUARD BENES. former Presi- dent of Czecho-Slovakia, participates in the University of Chicago Round Table discussion of "Questions on Democracy."

    2:00—WJSV. Howard Barlow conducts the Columbia Broadcasting Symphony. "Oboe Concerto"_ _Handel

    Mitchell Miller, oboeist. “Les Eolides" Franck ‘Symphony No. ft in D’’ Mendelssohn

    “Suite from Harpsichord Work**’ Couperin 3:30—WRC. The World Is Yours offers a

    dramatization entitled "The Miracle of Paper.”

    6:00—WJSV. “The American Way in Pre- paredness" is the subject of a People's Platform discussion.

    6:30—WMAL. Radio Guild presents a drama based on the life of Robert Herrick, Brit- ish poet.

    7:00—WJSV. The new Ellery Queen mystery show has as guests Princess Alexandra Kropotkin, Composer Deems Taylor, Au- thor-Poet Galett Burgess, Producer- Actor Ed Gardner.

    7:00—WMAL. Erich Leinsdorf conducts the N. B. C. Symphony Orchestra. "Suita In D Major" Bach

    Symphony No. 3fi in C Major" Mozart "Selections from "A Midsummer

    NiKht s Dream"_ Mendelssohn

    __TODAY'S PROGRAM. A.M^WMAL, 630^WRC7950kTTWQLrU30k. WJSV, 1,460k.

    8:00 Coast to Coast i Back the Clock Funny Papers Elder Mictiaux 15 Tom Terriss f:*P

    " "

    Crawford Caravan W. P. A. Concert _1 _ News JulJetins_"

    "

    9:00 Diversion Bible High Lights Church of the Air iChurch of the Air 9:15 " I " j " " ! •' " 9:30 Russian ^Melodies Barry McKinley Dixie Harmonies Christian Science *‘”1_”_The Kidoodlers_Musical Potpourri News Bulletins

    10:00'News—Songs News—Music Cantor Shapiro News and Rhythm 30:15 Neighbor Nell Music Workshop i i " 10:30 Southernaires ,J. M. Oyanguren Art Brown, records Bowes Family

    JO-45 __"_Story-Book_” "_j " "_ 11:00 Music Hall Logan Musicale Art Brown, records Bowes Family 11:15 " " " j J]:*P To Be Announced Presbyterian Program Let's Go West '';45 I " " " " i Tabernacle Choir

    P.M. | 12:00 Waterloo Junction Music for Moderns Presbyterian Program Church of the Air 12:15; " News Bulletins i " " 12:30 Cloutier's Orch. Incidentally ; Walkathon Clyde Barry

    J2:45 Zionist Program_I _"_I " I Baptist Convention 1:00 Varieties At Aunt Fanny's (Author, Author! Democracy in Action 1:15 I " 1:30 To Be Announced Round Table, talks Freudberg's Orch. Sunday Players 1:451 " _I_''_Popular Mpdley_" _ 2:00|Three Cheers Sing Sunday Drivers Sunday Afternoon C. B. S. Symphony 2:151 Bookman's Notebook 2:30 Festival of Music Name the Place Concert Program

    _2:45: " " | " | " 3:00 Sundoy Vespers j liTBriggsville News Bulletins Without Music 3:15 " Rangers Serenade Music of Masters 3:30 Tapestry Musicale World Is Yours Haven of Rest On W. P. A. Cuts 3:451 •" ”_1 '' " '' " St. Louis Blues 4:00 H. R. Baukhage Rhythm Makers Musical Program WorldToday 4:15 Jimmy Dorsey's Orchf Hall of Fun " " " 4:30 Spelling Bee Red Norvo's Orch. Ben Bornie 4:45 N. Y. Fair Program i '' " " " 5:00 Tropical Moods Catholic Hour Swing High Cancer Institute 5:15 Grenadiers Band " " Rhythm Rhapsody " 5:30 Paul Laval's Orch. Grouch Club Walkathon Hollywood Pgm. 3:45 _" _Tea Dansant" _ 6:00 Star Sports Review Jack Benny, variety Bill McCune's Orch. People's Platform 6:15 Popular Classics 6:30 Radio Guild Drama Band Wagon Design for Melody Musical Playhouse 6:45 ”" "_ " '• " 3:00 N. B. C. Orchestra Charlie McCarthy American Forum Ellery Queen 7:15 " " " " 7:30 " " m m « » »» n 7**45 " " " " 00 ~ or •:M Playhouse, drama Merry-Go-Round Revival Meeting Summer Hour I*|5 " " 11 »» « rr r» 8:30 Walter Winchell j Familiar Music " 8:45 Irene Rich, dfama I " •• » 9:00 Ferde Grofe's Orch. The Circle, variety Good Will Court Playhouse, drama 9:15 -has. Barnet’s Orch. " " " " » 9:30 Cheerio " " " " H. V. Kaltenborn 0:45__" " " Capitol Opinions

    10:00 News—Refugee Pgm. Old Refrains American Wildlife Nows—Music J0:15 Refugee Program Stamp Romances Music—Scores 10:30 Vincent Lopez's Orch. Glenn Miller's Orch. Nows Bulletins What Price America 10:45 " "_ ”_Music Album ”_ 11:00 Glenn Carow, piano Sports—Music Jan Garber's Orth From Brazil 11:15 Music You Desire Isham Jones' Orch. " " " 11:30! " Henry Busso's Orch. Teagarden's Orch. Arch Bleyor’s Orth. H:45 w « »* « »r M 12:00 Sign Off Tign Off Jimmy Dorsey’s Orch. Weather 12:15 " Sign Off (12:02) 12:301 Red Norvo’s Orch. 12:451 v

    1:00* j Lonely Hour, 'Til 2 |

    TOMORROW'S PROGRAM

    A.M.| WMAL, 630k. | WRC, 950k. | WOLTUSOk. | WJSV, 1,460k. 6:00 Gordon Hittenmark Arthur Godfrey 6:30 Today's Prelude " Art Brown " J;45 " " " " .... pw .. 7:00 Today's Prelude Gordon Hittenmark Art Brown Arthur Godfrey 7:15 Prelude—News " *' | " " " " 7:30 Lee Everett " " News—Art Brown 7:45; " "_" "_jArt Brown_" "__ 1:00 Lee Everett News—Hittenmark Art Brown News—Godfrey •:15 " " Gordon Hittenmark \ " Arthur Godfrey 8:30 Earl Godwin, news " " News—Art Brown Magic Carpet l:45!Breakfast Club Gospel Singer Art Brown iBachelor's Children 9:00 Over Paradise Central City, serial Art Brown Kitty-KellTT^erial 9:15 Josh Higgins, serial Other Wife, serial Piano Lessons Myrt and Marge 9:30 Jack Berch Sings Plain Bill, serial Melody Strings Hilltop House, serial 9:45 i I. Miller's Orch. Woman in White I News—Calendar iStepmother, serial

    10:00 Mary Marlin, serial David Harum, serial Morning Concert iln Hollywood 10:15 Vic and Sade, serial Lorenzo Jones, serial Traffic Court Scattergood Baines 10:30 Fran Allison Sings Widow Brown, serial Keep Fit to Music Big Sister, serial 10:45 Jack Foy, songs_Road et Life, serial ■ Musical Potpourri Real Lrfe Stories 11:00iDorothy Dreslin Romanelli s Orch. Musical Potpourri Mary M. McBride 11:15 Kidoodlers, music O'Neills, serial The Swingsters Nancy James, serial 11:30 Farm and Home Hour Mary Mason > The Joyce Trio Helen Trent, serial 11:45 " I " " 1 " iGal Sunday, serial

    P.M.J 12:00 Farm and Home Hour News—Music iThe Happy Gang Goldbergs^ serial 12:15 " Devotions Hews—Music Life's Beautiful 12:30 Peables in Charge Tex Walker, songs Walkathon Road of Life, serial

    J2:45 News—Music_Words and Music Vaughn De Leath Day Is Ours, serial 1:00{Reading Adventure Betty and Bob Fred Nagel s Orch. District Reporter 1:15 " " Grimm's Daughter Sports Page Dr. Susan, serial 1:30. Manhattan Melodies Valiant Lady, serial

    " "

    {Your Family, serial 1: