Photoplay/Volume 36/Issue 3/Starlets

Starlets

Some youngsters who may follow in the footsteps of their famous parents

A mere glance will tell you that this is the daughter of John Gilbert. Little Leatrice Joy Gilbert is only four years old, but she takes life seriously, as befits the child of two famous stars

The three shooting Bosworths, George, the Missus and Hobart. When the Bosworths practice archery on the front lawn, their neighborhood in Beverly Hills is as dangerous as Sherwood Forest was to the Sheriff of Nottingham in the days of Robin Hood

Picture of a bad man being good—George Bancroft, with Mrs. Bancroft and their daughter, Georgette. Before her marriage, Mrs. Bancroft was Octavia Broske, a well-known prima donna in operettas. Bancroft was a comedian and, if you'll believe it, a dancer

Irving Cummings, Jr., has a swimming pool in his own backyard. The Cummings live in Lankershim, a suburb of Hollywood, where boys may be boys. Not so many years ago, Irving, Sr., was a popular actor and thrilled 'em in serials. But the canny Mr. Cummings gave up acting and became a producer. And so, instead of being an outmoded matinée idol, he is now a prosperous and successful director

Two little boys who are happy in spite of the fact that they were the storm center of a divorce case. Charles and Sydney Chaplin, sons of the world's most famous comedian, are cared for by their grandmother, while their mother is on a vaudeville tour

Three colleens who would win any freckled-face contest—Eileen, Mary and Sheila O'Malley. Their dad is Pat O'Malley, born in Dublin and proud of it, and their mother was formerly Lillian Wilks. And while some of your other actors may complain of the dullness of domesticity, Mr. O'Malley can boast of the liveliest home life in Hollywood