Photoplay/Volume 36/Issue 6/New Pictures

New Pictures

YOU can try from now until Clara Bow marries Harry Richman, and probably still go wrong on guessing who this flashing, flaming child is. Sparkling with the old zip and ginger, displaying undreamed of curves—Colleen Moore, not so long ago the coy little flapper who toyed with dangerous cocktails and had harmless dates with high school boys. Colleen will look something like this in her new one, "Footlights and Fools"

Ball

WE forget letters to mother, and old gas bills, and our wives' birth dates, but we fans never forget this queenly lady of the films, who has always had our respectful admiration. After a long and honorable career playing really nice women in a big parade of pictures, Alice Joyce is still at the producers' call, and our big Kalem Days Fan Club is hoping unanimously that she'll be summoned for a fine job soon

Ruth Harriet Louise

THE sole survivor of the royal line of stars―the queen who, in the eyes of her devoted fans, can do no wrong. Greta Garbo now occupies a peculiar and solitary place in the hearts of picture lovers. Traits that might be unfavorably mentioned in the case of other players become positive virtues in the case of this amazing Swedish girl. "Our Greta, may she always be right," says her public. "But right or wrong, our Greta!"

THREE things, close observers suggest, created this glamorous girl―the new Fay Wray. One was her happy marriage to John Monk Saunders, one her smart new bob, and one the splendid part in "Thunderbolt" that she played so brilliantly. Whatever the causes, we'd hardly recognize, in this picture, the shy little violet that came so quietly to light in Von Stroheim's "The Wedding March." Anyway, whatever brought it on did well!

Vandamm

YOU'RE going to admire and envy, simultaneously, this extremely blonde and atrociously pretty newcomer to pictures. First, she's really a raving beauty. Second, she's zat fascinating Maurice Chevalier's leading woman in his second American picture, "The Love Parade." Jeanette MacDonald is her name, and she came to the studios from a line of Broadway musical comedy successes, including "Yes, Yes, Yvette" and "Sunny Days"

Richee

NO player in pictures has raced to the top more rapidly than our boy, Richard Arlen, in the past year. Dick is now a full-blown Paramount star, after earning his rank and medals as leading man in a long list of good pictures which his work adorned. Not long ago four of his films were playing on Broadway at the same time. The little wife, Jobyna, out at Toluca Lake, sings at her work these days. For her boy's a real star!