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* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
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* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
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* *
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* Issue 91 -- July 2000 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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Marguerite Clark
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What is TAYLOROLOGY?
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TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
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Taylor, a top Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
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death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
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scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
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(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
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murder on Hollywood and the nation; (d) Taylor's associates and the Hollywood
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silent film industry in which Taylor worked. Primary emphasis will be given
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toward reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it
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for accuracy.
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Marguerite Clark
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Most of William Desmond Taylor's film directing was done for Famous-Players
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Lasky (Paramount). That company's two top female stars at that time were
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Mary Pickford and Marguerite Clark. Although Taylor never directed
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Marguerite Clark, her popularity and prominence in the silent film industry
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merits this collection of reprinted contemporary interviews. (Another
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interview with Marguerite Clark was reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 63.)
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 1916
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George Vaux Bacon
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PHOTOPLAY
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Little Miss Practicality
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Who is she? How old is she? What color are her eyes? What color is
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her hair? Is she married? Is she engaged? Where was she born? Was she
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ever on the stage? Does she prefer the movies or the stage? Is she the
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daughter of a theatrical family?
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Sheaves and bundles of letters have been written asking these and a
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thousand other questions till the stress of them caused the Editor to dip the
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editorial quill grandly in the official blue ink and demand that there should
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be written an official and accurate account answering questioners once and
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for all.
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It was a roasting hot day in early September, and I found her in her
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pink and white dressing room on the studio floor of the big Famous Players'
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studio building on West Twenty-Sixth Street, New York (which burned to the
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ground the day after I was there), making-up preparatory to taking automobile
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and going forth through the city for some exteriors to be made part of that
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most charming of love stories, "Molly Make-Believe."
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We shook hands, did Margaret Clark and I, for we are old friends, since
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I spent an evening trying to interview her in her dressing room at the Booth
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Theatre a year or so ago, when she was playing the title role in that most
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wistfully beautiful little play, "Prunella."
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I sat on a divan, and she took her place before her big mirror and went
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to work with grease paint and things while we talked. Of our talk, first of
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all, here are the facts answering the questions that so many have asked:
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Marguerite Clark is what is termed in the theatre as professionally an
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"actress and vocalist." That is to say, she is a singer as well as an
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actress. She was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, on the Twenty-second of February,
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1887, so she is twenty-eight years old, has the same birthday as George
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Washington, and is American to her heart's core. She went to school at Brown
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County Convent in Ohio, and made her first stage appearance in Baltimore in
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1899 under the direction of Milton Aborn, the operatic manager.
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She was engaged next at the Casino Theatre in New York as an understudy
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for "The Belle of Bohemia." This was followed by an engagement in 1901 in
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"The Burgomaster," and at the Herald Square in October, 1901, in "The New
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Yorkers."
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In 1902 she was engaged by De Wolf Hopper to play Polly in
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"Mr. Pickwick," and in 1903 made her first pronounced personal success in
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"Babes in Toyland" at the Crystal Gardens. After that, she played with De
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Wolfe Hopper again in "Wang" and in "Happyland."
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Her favorite part is that of Peter Pan in the play by Barrie of that
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name, in which she toured the country.
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She was the original Zoie in "Baby Mine" which was her first starring
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part, under the management of the Shuberts, and which was a tremendous
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success.
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Since that time, she has played Shakespeare Jarvis in "The Lights
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o' London," and the title roles in "Merely Mary Ann" and "Baby Doll," not to
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mention "Snow White," "The Affairs of Anatole," and the aforementioned
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"Prunella," which was one of the most exquisitely beautiful little plays ever
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produced in New York, and which firmly established her reputation as an
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artist and that of its producer, Winthrop Ames, as a master of beautiful
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stage craft.
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Following her engagement in "Prunella," Miss Clark was engaged by the
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Famous Players, with whom she is at the present time, and for whom she has
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appeared in a number of elaborate and successful productions, such as "The
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Little Sister of Jose," "Gretna Green," and "Seven Sisters."
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Let me wind up this dictionary of biographical data by adding that her
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eyes are brown, her hair is a reddish brown--almost titian--, she is not
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married, has no idea of being married, and swears that she was never engaged
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to be married in her life.
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She is not a member of a theatrical family. She and her sister were
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left in reduced circumstances by the sudden death of their father after a
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disastrous financial reverse, and Marguerite went on the stage to recoup the
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family fortunes, doing so with decided and overwhelming success.
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All this information, I assure you, Dear Reader, I educed from the
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winsome, whimsome little lady only by an exhibition of tact and diplomacy
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unequaled by any diplomatists abroad or at home living today. If Sir Edward
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Grey, or our old pal von Bernstorff could have heard me, I would undoubtedly
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now be a minister plenipotentiary somewhere, for Miss Clark hates and loathes
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and despises, above all things in the wide, green, sea-encircled world, to be
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interviewed.
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Moreover, she says so.
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"Why," said she, "should I tell about myself? Isn't it true that the
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less of a mystery one is, the less interesting one becomes?"
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"In the case of some young ladies, it may be admitted without scruple
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that that is true," I answered cryptically, watching her deftly bead her
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eyebrows with a dainty little brush; "but not in your case."
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She raised her eyebrows at the mirror. (I could see their reflection.)
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"Indeed. And why not in my case?" she demanded.
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I permitted myself the ghost of a sigh.
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"You," I said, if I may be allowed to be so crude as to utter the truth
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baldly, have charm. The essence of charm is its infinite variety. One never
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wearies of variety."
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"But one may be killed by it," she remarked, still looking into the
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mirror and working with the eyelash brush.
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"Yes," I admitted. "Antony was killed by Cleopatra's: but what man does
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not envy Antony! Can one ever know enough about Cleopatra? Impossible.
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Like all fascinating women, the essence of her fascination was a mystery even
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to herself; no amount of stuff so banal as facts could ever detract one iota
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from it. Charm is that soul of all that is beautiful; facts are the everyday
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wares of political individuals, professors, bar-tending persons and others
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who have no imagination--not to mention lawyers, who, I feel sure, are
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especially accursed by an All-Wise God."
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She laughed.
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"Facts are tiresome and ridiculous to some, I know," she said primly,
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"but you know I am very matter-of-fact. Oh, quite matter of fact. I know I
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don't look it; but I am. I am working simply and solely to earn my bread and
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butter, and my ambition is to find a good play. Do you know of one? No. It
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is a pity. I shall remain in the pictures until I find one. You see how
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matter of fact I am. I confess that I really much prefer the stage to the
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pictures. I know that I am not supposed to say so; but I do. After all, one
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loves to be able to talk."
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"Dear little star," said I, "of course. There are only two kinds of
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people in the world. Those who talk well and those who do not."
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"Ah," she went on, "I know that pantomime is really a wonderful thing.
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There is a tremendous amount of art in it: but I confess that the stage and
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the lights and the people, and the fine, sonorous phrases written by a master
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for me to speak fittingly have a fascination that I cannot forget. I will
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never be able to forget it: but one must live. I work in the pictures and I
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give the best that I can. That is my duty to the people who come to see my
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work."
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She smiled faintly and wound a brown curl around her finger--did little
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Miss "Molly Make-Believe."
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"You are certainly a little Miss Practicality, that's what you are,"
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said I, from the depths of a soul of crystalline bromidity. "I am
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practical," said she, "but it's because I've had to be ever since I was a
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little child. When my sister and I were left, both pretty young, with just a
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little money in the bank by the death of our father, we decided that we would
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not touch our capital, but would start out to make some more money so that we
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would always have a little to add to it. That was how I came to go upon the
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stage, and we have our first little capital to this day!"
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"You women are all thrifty," I murmured. "Would that there were more of
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it in me, amongst men, at least."
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"Well," she replied, "with men it is different. When a man goes 'broke'
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he can nearly always borrow some money from a friend, or get a small luncheon
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with a glass of beer for a nickel; but with a girl it is different. No man
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can realize what a terrible thing it is for a girl to be without any money.
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She is far more cruelly at the mercy of the world than any man is. I tell
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you, it is very necessary for a young woman to be practical."
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I thought that over and agreed with her. It is true. Money means so
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much to a girl! After all, about all that money gives us men is something to
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eat, a bed to sleep in, some amusement and clean linen; but money for a woman
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means a thousand luxuries that are more vital to her comfort and enjoyment of
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life than any of our masculine necessities.
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"And love?" I murmured. "What of that?"
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"Oh," said she, "after you have called me practical, it is hardly fair
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for you to ask me about such an impractical thing as love, is it?"
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"Well, it is one of those fascinatingly experience-promoting ailments
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that even the most practical are very apt to have."
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"Yes, that is true but it is unfortunate that the heart has no mind.
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I was just thinking of a woman who is a particularly dear friend of mine, and
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who is very clever, yet when she becomes devoted to anyone, seems to become
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at the same time utterly devoid of common sense. She has been made a fool of
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twice, the last time only recently, and the strange part of it is, each time
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in exactly the same way. One man said he loved her and promised to marry
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her, and she trusted in him, till he finally just disappeared; then, not six
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months afterwards, another man came long and did exactly the same thing!
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Love is not for the practical."
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"Never having been in love," I replied, "of course I cannot say
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definitely; but from what I have read of it in books--"
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"Not half of it has ever been printed," she answered.
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"Which you deduce from what you also have read in books?" I suggested
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Machiavellianly.
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She turned around and looked at me with that charming little ghost of a
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smile.
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"Yes," she said, "Mr. Questioner, I speak from a knowledge that I gained
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from a book."
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"Yes," I agreed, "one learns so much from books--sometimes!"
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We both laughed.
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"Were you ever in love--really?" she asked point blank.
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This was a startler. She was adopting Napoleonic tactics--interviewing
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the interviewer.
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"How can you ask such a question?" I replied. "Have I not said that all
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my knowledge of such things I got from books."
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"Ha ha," she laughed. "I know another man who used to say that, and I
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found that his affairs were second only to those of the justly renowned
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Anatole."
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"Well then," I confessed, "I will admit that the talk about books is
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only an attempt at an alibi. I have been in love--many times. My heart is
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always broken. That's the way the sunshine gets in."
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"A very philosophical way of looking at it," said she; "but personally,
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I have no desire to have MY heart broken. I have always taken good care not
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to leave it around or lose it, and so far it has never even been cracked.
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I think it is worth clinging to. Why, I should think one would be unable to
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work, or think, or anything when one is miserably broken-hearted."
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"You are right--according to the books," I agreed.
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"Oh the silly books! I wish you would forget them!" She stamped her
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foot. "--By the way, speaking of books, have you ever read 'Molly Make-
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Believe?'"
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"It's the story about the young man who was lonely, and of his
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sweetheart who never could find time to write him a letter to cheer him in
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his loneliness, isn't it?"
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"Yes."
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"Isn't it strange? There are people like that."
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"Yes. Yes; yet one would think that the little acts of kindness which
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cost nothing and which can be done so easily, would never be neglected,
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particularly by people who really feel that they love each other; but I
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believe that most of the unhappiness in the world comes from the neglect, not
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of great things, but just of those little things. It is the little things
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that count, after all. It is the smile, the little word of graciousness, the
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small courtesy here and there, the mite of thoughtfulness that show one what
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another really thinks. Many of those little things are unconscious, which
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make them all the more to the point. If one doesn't like a person, one
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naturally does things that show it, and if one does like a person, one cannot
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help showing it, unconsciously as well as consciously. There is something
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deeper than the mere surface in that matter of liking and disliking, too."
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Miss Clark finished her makeup and swung around in her chair, leaning
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her chin on the back of it.
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"Don't you often find--or don't you always find, rather--that when you
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meet people, you either like them or not, without any particular reason, and
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that that first opinion never changes? I believe that that is at the bottom
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of the reason why it seems so impossible to do away with things like war.
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People just naturally like or dislike one another, and nothing seems able to
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change it.
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"I know that I cannot help loving some people, and others, whom I know I
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ought to like, I just can't. Do you feel that way?"
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"Frequently," I admitted, thinking of a bill collector who is really a
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nice fellow and of whom under ordinary circumstances I might have made a pal.
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"It is a wonder to me that you were never married," said I.
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"Well, I am not," she answered.
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"Nor engaged?"
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"No."
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She abruptly turned and began brushing her curls.
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Then in came a large man with a suntanned face.
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"Are you ready, Miss Clark?" he added.
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"Yes."
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"Very well, the machine is waiting."
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And I went downstairs with the whole company, all made up and ready for
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a day's work under the broiling sun.
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Down in front of the studio, in the sunny street, Miss Clark skipped
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into the big motor car where the others were waiting for her and waved her
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hand.
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"Good bye," she called, "I hope you don't read too many books!"
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And away they all went, leaving me alone on the curbstone.
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Oh yes, there is one other thing I forgot. Miss Clark has a small
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automobile, dislikes driving fast in it, and bought it one afternoon on the
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spur of the moment. She is also fond of bright colors, and (like myself)
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loathes steel engravings.
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All in all, she is just a charming, fascinatingly pretty girl, whose
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charm is such a strange, wayward, elusively and delightfully feminine thing,
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that it can no more be set down in words than one can paint humming birds
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with a sign-painter's brush.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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January 1918
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Edward S. O'Reilly
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PHOTOPLAY
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"She Says to Me, Says She--"
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"The last time I was talking to Marguerite Clark, she says to me, says
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she,--"
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Yes it is true. Why I should be the fortunate one to be selected by the
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gods, is past understanding, but it happened. After searching the
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dictionaries and Poet's Own Guide for words to describe her winsome
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sweetness, I have despaired. Miss Marguerite in person is like Miss Clark on
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the screen, only she really talks. You who have seen her pictures know that
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there is nothing more to be said.
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It all happened because an editor had a bright idea.
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"Tex," said he, speaking casually, "I have a job for you."
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"Fine," said I. "What is it?" But I had misgivings.
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"You are to interview Marguerite Clark." He said it just as calmly as
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if he was talking about interviewing an ordinary queen or princess. I flatly
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refused.
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"Why pick on me," I argued. "In the first place I don't know anything
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about the pictures, and in the second place the writer who could do that
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subject justice would have to know more words than Shakespeare. In the third
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place I simply won't do it in the first place."
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But Editor Simon Legree insisted and threw out a hint about stopping my
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pay checks. Now there is a peculiar trait in my character. Whenever the
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boss stops the checks I always refuse to work. I've always been that way.
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So just to avoid a misunderstanding I agreed to tackle the job.
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"I am tired of doing all the thinking for you writers," said Editor
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Simon. "You must do it yourself."
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Then for fifteen minutes he told me how to do it.
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"Find out something about her home life. Does she live with her mother?
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Can she cook and does she, and can she sew?"
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Without any effort I could think of about a thousand things I would
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rather do than interview Miss Marguerite. For a long time I have worshipped
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her from afar, and it seemed kind of sacrilegious to bust right in and ask
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her if she could cook.
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At last the fatal summons came and I reported in a new necktie to
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Randolph Bartlett, who was supposed to fix things. He escorted me to the
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Paramount office. A man from the office, who seemed to know all about
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Marguerite, came with us, and we hiked for the studio.
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Three seconds after we entered I was seized by four husky persons and
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thrown into the street. It seems that I was smoking a cigarette, which is
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against the constitution and by-laws of the studio. This act of hospitality
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made me suffer with satisfaction. It was an excuse to escape, but the man
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from the office brushed me off and hauled me back into the studio.
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I have been in several battles and free-for-all riots, and once attended
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a peace meeting, but never in my life have I been in the midst of such a
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unanimous pandemonium. In one corner a gang of rough necks was throwing an
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Englishman out of an office, forty-seven carpenters were pounding and sawing
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and a gang of I. W. W.'s were running madly around trying to wreck the place.
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Emulating Bartlett I began to hop, skip and jump, hither and yon, trying
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to dodge the enemy. He succeeded fairly well but I was wounded several
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times. One outspoken individual with a yellow shirt yelled,--
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"Hey, you big longhorn, get out of the set."
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Now I never met that fellow before in my life, so how did he know me.
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Anyway the joke was on him, because I wasn't setting at all but was leaping
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hither and thither.
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All at once I happened to glance down, and there She was, right under my
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left elbow. Dazed, I heard the man from the office intoning an introduction.
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Then I realized that Miss Clark was actually going to shake hands with me.
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I stuck my hand down, and she caught it, and I held her hand, and she smiled
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and I grinned, and she held my hand, and--
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I have that hand yet. I will carry it with me to the grave.
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After the first shock I knew that I must say something. So I mumbled
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something about the editor and his plots.
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"But you know I have never consented to an interview," said Miss Clark.
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There it was. With my usual skill I had said exactly the wrong thing at
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the right moment. I was about to mumble and apology and dive for the door
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when Bartlett came to the rescue and took me gently by the hand.
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That man is a wonder. He talks just as easy, and every once and awhile
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says something pat and to the point. In a moment I found myself seated as
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one corner of a triangle, while he was talking fluently and well, apparently
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without any embarrassment.
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The man from the office had given me quite a large collection of
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information on our way to the studio. One of the things he had told me was
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that Miss Clark was playing in one of a series of pictures called "The Sub-
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Deb." I had thought it was a war picture and that Miss Clark went down in a
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submarine or something. Fortunately I did not speak and betray my ignorance.
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After we were in the studio it was easy to see the story was about a riot in
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the subway.
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For a few minutes after Miss Clark had shaken hands with me I was in a
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trance. When I recovered my poise she was talking, and I listened.
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"The reason I never consent to an interview about the pictures is
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because I really have nothing new to say," she was saying. "People who know
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the subject have dealt with the question so much better than I could. Now
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what I think about the pictures is that there should be more out of door
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scenes.
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"Directors lately seem partial to elaborate indoor sets. There is
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nothing in an indoor set that cannot be done as well or better on the stage.
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A photoplay is not handicapped by stage limitations. It has a field all its
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own and should exploit that field.
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"Take my picture 'Wildflower' for instance. It was a light little story
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but the setting was enchanting. Beautiful out door scenery. That picture is
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still popular."
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After listening to what she had to say I don't see why Miss Clark should
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refuse to talk about pictures.
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Then I heard Mr. Bartlett talking about "The Amazons," one of Miss
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Marguerite's latest pictures. He was remarking how delightfully at ease she
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appeared in boy's clothes. I would never have had the nerve to say that.
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"Well, you see I am rather accustomed to them," she replied. "On the
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stage I played several parts that demanded boy's clothes, 'Peter Pan' for
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instance. So it was really not a new experience."
|
|
The man from the office had mentioned, nine or ten times, the fact that
|
|
Miss Clark had recently purchased a $100,000 Liberty Bond. In the stress of
|
|
listening I had forgotten the bond, but Bartlett remembered, and mentioned
|
|
it. She admitted that she had gone on the government's bond to the extent of
|
|
the sum mentioned.
|
|
By this time I thought that it was up to me to horn in on this
|
|
conversation some place, so I said--
|
|
"Where did you get the money?"
|
|
"Why, my admirers think I earned it," she answered naively.
|
|
There it was again. It isn't possible that a greater admirer of hers
|
|
lives today, than myself, yet I had not thought of that. Deciding that
|
|
conversation was not my forte I subsided and let Bartlett do it.
|
|
For some time I had noticed a quiet little gray haired lady wandering
|
|
about the studio, talking to the directors and occasionally making a note on
|
|
a sheet of paper.
|
|
"That is my sister," confided Miss Marguerite, waving her hand. "She is
|
|
the official family spanker and makes me behave. We live together."
|
|
That started it, and we learned some interesting facts about her home
|
|
life. It seems that Marguerite is a serious minded person who loves her home
|
|
and has little time or inclination for play.
|
|
"My work at the studio requires so much of my time that there are really
|
|
few hours left for social life," she said. "We live very quietly, my sister
|
|
and I. Usually I spend my evenings reading. When I get a little vacation
|
|
there is always something to be attended to--the dentist or the dress maker.
|
|
Sometimes I run out to Chicago and visit my relatives.
|
|
Of late I am trying to do some serious reading. The old classics I
|
|
neglected in school days. I have no time for the lighter modern fiction.
|
|
The magazines for instance."
|
|
This last remark pleased me very much. I wish the editor could have
|
|
heard it. Thought of the editor reminded me of my duties. He wanted certain
|
|
information and I was there to get it.
|
|
"Do you cook?" I asked.
|
|
"No," she said. So that was one point settled.
|
|
"Do you sew?" I persisted.
|
|
"Sometimes, but I am afraid I am a failure," she confided. "Lately I
|
|
have been doing some war work. Tried rolling bandages, but after several
|
|
hours' work I only finished two. I tried to make them too neat. So now I am
|
|
knitting socks for the soldiers."
|
|
Sherman was wrong.
|
|
Speaking of soldiers reminded me of a little story and I told it.
|
|
General Pancho Villa is a photoplay fan. At the time he captured Mexico City
|
|
he attended the theatre frequently to see the pictures. One night Miss
|
|
Clark's picture, "The Seven Sisters," was shown.
|
|
Villa, the boss of the bandits was highly delighted and extravagant in
|
|
his praise of Marguerite's beauty.
|
|
"What did he say about me?" she queried.
|
|
There I was up against it again. If I told her the truth I would be
|
|
thrown out, for Pancho ever was an untutored savage. So I told a polite
|
|
little lie, hiding my embarrassment behind my hat. I hate to lie, and the
|
|
only reason I do it is because of force of habit.
|
|
Miss Clark talked on a little while and I gleaned some more facts. She
|
|
has two homes; a flat in Manhattan and a country place in Westchester County.
|
|
She likes the country home best, and rides a horse and raises flowers.
|
|
My impression of Miss Clark, formed by viewing her pictures, was that
|
|
she was a happy hearted little elf smiling her way through the sour old
|
|
world. She is all of that and something more. She is a serious minded
|
|
little person intent on doing her work well. Even the directors say that she
|
|
is less trouble than anyone in the cast, and obeys orders like a little
|
|
soldier.
|
|
For the last few minutes of our conversation a discontented looking man
|
|
had been hovering in the background. For some reason I took a dislike to
|
|
him. He proved that my hunch was right when he interrupted to say that the
|
|
time was up, and Miss Clark had to get on the job of Sub-Debbing.
|
|
"I wish you would take a look at this here set," he says.
|
|
Some of these things the actors say about the directors may be right
|
|
after all.
|
|
So we shook hands again--that makes twice.
|
|
The last I saw of her she was standing, tip-toed, on a chair peeping
|
|
through the range finder of a big field gun of a camera.
|
|
Then I was led out into the open air. As I was towed down the street I
|
|
was babbling superlatives of little Bab the Sub-Deb. That editor is not such
|
|
a bad fellow after all.
|
|
So that is why I haunt the theatres where Marguerite Clark's pictures
|
|
are being shown. When I catch a friend I impale him against the wall with my
|
|
finger, throw out my chest and begin,--
|
|
"The last time I was talking to Marguerite Clark, she says to me, says
|
|
she--"
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
October 1919
|
|
Maude Cheatham
|
|
MOTION PICTURE CLASSIC
|
|
When Marguerite Says Good-bye!
|
|
|
|
"Happiness is the most important thing in a woman's life," announced
|
|
Mrs. Harry P. Williams, as she slipped forward in her chair and vainly
|
|
endeavored to touch the floor with the tip of her tiny pump.
|
|
I agreed.
|
|
Happiness is always an interesting subject, and Mrs. Williams being our
|
|
dear little favorite, Marguerite Clark, I felt that her ideas on her new-
|
|
found joy would be especially so.
|
|
"A woman may win success and even a certain amount of fame," she
|
|
continued, "but, after all, this means very little and the fullness of her
|
|
life is best found in a happy marriage. You see, I have thought this all
|
|
over many times, for I waited quite a while before I married. It seemed to
|
|
me there were so many unfortunate marriages--one seldom hears of the happy
|
|
ones--that I felt it safer to drift along as I was than to take the big
|
|
chance. Though I wasn't particularly happy, neither was I miserable, as were
|
|
so many whom I knew whose dream castles had fallen.
|
|
"I had known Mr. Williams for ten years, but we had seen very little of
|
|
each other, for he was either at his home in Louisiana or abroad, and we were
|
|
just good friends. Then, suddenly, in the face of the war and while awaiting
|
|
his orders to go across, we discovered it was more than friendship.
|
|
"We became engaged in May and were quietly married in August. We had to
|
|
meet the same problem that had come to so many, but there was never a
|
|
question in my mind that the only thing to do was to be married at once."
|
|
As she talked I watched this radiant little creature whose life has
|
|
become one pean of happiness and knew that she had never given another role
|
|
the charm and sweetness with which she was endowing this new one of--wife!
|
|
She is so tiny, so girlish, that I would not have been the least
|
|
surprised had she raced across the room for her doll instead of talking in
|
|
this wise, grown-up way about love and marriage and happiness.
|
|
"Mr. Williams was mustered out soon after the armistice was signed,"
|
|
went on Miss Clark. "You know, he never got across, which broke his heart,
|
|
but oh, dear, away down deep in mine I was glad that we were spared the
|
|
parting; though I had planned how brave and fine I would be.
|
|
"After eighteen months in service, he felt he could take a rest, and he
|
|
is giving this year to me. Every time I go on location or take even a little
|
|
trip, some one suggests that it is another honeymoon. That suits me
|
|
perfectly, for I hope to go on having them the remainder of my life. Last
|
|
week we went up to Pine Crest and, as I am unaccustomed to mountain roads,
|
|
I was terribly frightened. Oh, I NEVER could have endured it if Harry had
|
|
not been driving. Then, we finally arrived safely, I commenced to worry
|
|
about the return trip, so you can see what a lovely time I had--frightened
|
|
all the way up and worried all the way down!"
|
|
Homes have become almost a fad with Marguerite Clark, for she has always
|
|
insisted on taking an apartment or a house wherever her work called her
|
|
instead of living in hotels. Mischievously she tells that in the eight
|
|
months they have been married they have had four houses, which she thinks is
|
|
doing pretty well.
|
|
The home of Mr. and Mrs. Williams during their stay in Los Angeles was
|
|
ready for them on their arrival from New York, and in fact, an hour after
|
|
reaching the city they were breakfasting at their own table. It is a most
|
|
attractive house and, while the interior arrangement is elaborate and very
|
|
beautiful, it has also a homey atmosphere which is very satisfying. It wins
|
|
you very quickly.
|
|
Leading down several steps from the library is a lovely palmroom, with
|
|
French windows opening into the garden, and here a roomy swing with many
|
|
pillows, a table piled high with magazines and books, gave evidence of it
|
|
being a favorite nook.
|
|
It was here that Miss Clark and I were having our little chat, and she
|
|
told me, with housewifely pride, that each morning before going to the studio
|
|
she personally interviews the servants, plans for the day, thus keeping in
|
|
close touch with the domestic affairs. She is passionately fond of flowers,
|
|
and there was a profusion of gorgeous blossoms all about the house, while her
|
|
own pink boudoir was a bower of pink and lavender sweet peas.
|
|
"In November," said Miss Clark, "my present contract ends, and we will
|
|
go to New Orleans for the winter."
|
|
"And then?" I questioned.
|
|
"Then," she repeated, "I do not know what I shall do. I'm not planning.
|
|
Probably I'll make a picture or two each year, but I shall never make the
|
|
regular number again."
|
|
"Will it be hard to give up your career?" I asked.
|
|
"Not in the least," gaily answered the little star. "Oh, of course, it
|
|
is fine to know you can stand alone and can amount to something worth while
|
|
by your own efforts, but really, I have always been quiet and domestic in my
|
|
tastes, and then I love New Orleans and the Southern people, and I could be
|
|
very happy just being Harry's wife and living quietly in Louisiana."
|
|
"Then we may never have another 'Snow White' or 'Seven Swans' to take us
|
|
back to our childhood, or an adorable 'Prunella' or a gay little sub-deb?" I
|
|
mourned.
|
|
"Oh," she cried, joyously, "you liked the fairy tales, too? I LOVED
|
|
them myself and have been so sorry that the public didn't want more. They
|
|
were so beautiful, it was like living in Fairyland to make them. I've always
|
|
liked the comedy roles, too, and had such fun with Topsy." And we both
|
|
laughed at the memory of her roguish "Imp of Satan."
|
|
Just at this instant Mr. Williams came in.
|
|
While she fluttered about him, he beamed upon her, and I had a glimpse
|
|
of a bit of earthly heaven, for happiness is surely abiding with them.
|
|
"Every one hasn't a perfect husband, as I have," laughed the little
|
|
wife, from the arm of his chair.
|
|
"Are they rare?" teased the husband.
|
|
"There is only ONE!" demurely answered Miss Clark.
|
|
He is indeed a charming, likable chap, truly Southern in manner and
|
|
speech.
|
|
"When Harry drops his g's," said Marguerite, "it is delightful, but when
|
|
I drop mine, it is just illiterate, for, you, see I'm only Southern--by
|
|
marriage!" And she gaily tossed him a rose.
|
|
Mr. Williams is a great baseball fan and never misses a game. Down in
|
|
Patterson, La., where the Williams family have their extensive lumber
|
|
interests, he has a team of his own, and he has discovered several of his
|
|
former players shining with the coast league. Miss Clark frequently
|
|
accompanies her husband, and she declares that she much prefers a game with
|
|
lots of runs, plenty of fielding, bases full, exciting double plays, with a
|
|
few costly errors thrown in, to one of those errorless scientific pitchers'
|
|
battles that delights the real fan. "Anyway," she remarked, "women always
|
|
deal in personalities, and even in a ball game they immediately select their
|
|
favorite players and then root vigorously for that team."
|
|
I soon discovered that husband does not enjoy sharing his wife with
|
|
motion pictures and, in fact, he is not very enthusiastic about pictures
|
|
anyway. He has never been the least of a fan and has seen only a few of Miss
|
|
Clark's films.
|
|
In speaking of her future plans, Mr. Williams said: "Of course, I wish
|
|
Marguerite to do as she pleases, and I realize that it may be hard for her to
|
|
break away from her professional work. She will probably make a picture or
|
|
two each year, but I confess that I shall not be sorry when she gives it up
|
|
entirely."
|
|
Later we visited Miss Clark's bungalow dressing-room next to the studio,
|
|
that had been leased and redecorated, most artistically, for her coming, and
|
|
she is as pleased as a child with this cunning playhouse.
|
|
"It is just like having a merry little picnic," chirped Miss Clark, as
|
|
she skipped about in her widow's costume, which she wears in her new picture,
|
|
"Widow by Proxy."
|
|
"Shows that it isn't the size of the star that makes the play," she
|
|
laughed, as we recalled that it was May Irwin who had played the stage
|
|
version to success.
|
|
Even a little chat soon convinces one that the sweetness and simplicity
|
|
of Marguerite Clark herself and her acting comes from her love of all that is
|
|
beautiful, and just her association with motion pictures has proven a most
|
|
beneficial influence which will leave its stamp in the memory of countless
|
|
fans for many years to come. She is delightful, with her whimsicalities, and
|
|
we are always sure she will give vent to dainty fancies and imaginations, and
|
|
those little touches of sweet femininity which have so endeared her to an
|
|
adoring public.
|
|
Let us hope that she will continue to give us the "picture or two" each
|
|
year, for we really cannot spare Marguerite Clark from the screen.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
April 1921
|
|
Alice Hall
|
|
PICTUREGOER
|
|
Marguerite Make-Believe
|
|
|
|
Night in New Orleans! Starlight and the flare of myriad coloured
|
|
lanterns--the thrumming of guitars and the sound of gay and silvery
|
|
laughter--a handful of confetti and a glance from a pair of gleaming hazel
|
|
eyes--Mardi Gras, with its crowds of masked revellers--and, was it, could it
|
|
be, Prunella?
|
|
I wondered the next day, as I sat opposite Marguerite Clark at a cosy
|
|
little table in the old-world French restaurant, hidden away in an almost-
|
|
forgotten courtyard where the long shadows lingered lovingly on the quaintly
|
|
trimmed box trees, whether she had indeed been my Prunella of the night
|
|
before. She was bubbling over with delight and enjoyment as she told me
|
|
about the wonderful time she was having, of the dances and parties her
|
|
husband's friends were giving in her honour, and how, increasingly as the
|
|
days went by, she was growing to love the old South.
|
|
"I was so homesick," she said, "when I was in New York for the early
|
|
part of the winter, making my last picture. And once I thought I could never
|
|
be happy away from the hustle and noise! But down here, all the romance and
|
|
beauty of our grandmothers' days seem to be imprisoned, and life is taken at
|
|
one's leisure, instead of being rushed through with no thought save for
|
|
success and efficiency."
|
|
Marguerite had ordered our lunch. "I know all these strange, foreign
|
|
dishes," she said; "some of them are delightful, but others you might not
|
|
like. New Orleans is almost a bit of another country, isn't it? One
|
|
entirely forgets, sometimes, that one is in America.
|
|
I agreed, as I glanced around the low-ceilinged room in which we had
|
|
met. The red-tiled floor, the casement windows, the old polished brass and
|
|
pewter, the brightly-coloured tablecloths, even the golden butter in the
|
|
little earthenware jars--they were all reminiscent of those little wayside
|
|
inns where hospitality is brought to a fine art, and where even the simplest
|
|
food is savoured with friendliness.
|
|
"I love these quaint places," said Marguerite. "Of course, one has to
|
|
go to the big hotels sometimes, but when I can choose for myself, I always
|
|
want to come somewhere like this. I simply hate being grand!"
|
|
There is something so essentially child-like about Marguerite Clark
|
|
that, as one watches her expressive face, one immediately thinks of her as
|
|
the girl who will never grow up. She seems to have discovered the secret of
|
|
perpetual youth; and with it, moreover, to have combined the grace and charm
|
|
which the wisdom of experience alone can bring. I soon found that, as she
|
|
had said, there was nothing "grand" about her, and by the time the quiet,
|
|
solicitous old waiter had complied with her requests, Marguerite was talking
|
|
to me as if we had been friends for years.
|
|
"I think I was the sort of child who lives in a dream-world all her
|
|
own," she told me. "I believed in fairies until I was an almost impossible
|
|
age, and in one way I believe in them still. With my mother and father both
|
|
dead when I was eleven, and with only a very dear elder sister to care for
|
|
me, I knew the meaning of sorrow at a much earlier age than most girls do.
|
|
Three years I had of real school life, at a Convent in my home State of Ohio
|
|
(yes, I'm a Middle-Westerner), and then came the beginning of my professional
|
|
career.
|
|
"I suppose every girl who plays in amateur theatricals dreams of the
|
|
night when the all-omnipotent manager from the great city will be a guest at
|
|
the important function. In my land of make-believe this had happened over
|
|
and over again; but one evening the dream came true, and when I was acting in
|
|
a little charity affair, I heard it whispered that Milton Aborn had seen and
|
|
had approved of my performance.
|
|
"And with Mr. Aborn I made my first real stage appearance one night in
|
|
Baltimore, Maryland, when the South brought me good luck, as it has always
|
|
done," said Marguerite, with a gay little smile.
|
|
"And then," I went on, "came your successes in musical comedy in New
|
|
York. I remember you so well in 'The Beauty Spot' and in 'The King of
|
|
Cadonia.'"
|
|
"Oh, what ages ago it seems!" and the little dark-haired girl sighed and
|
|
looked at me with a half-amused, half-sad expression in her beautiful eyes.
|
|
"But I was not to find my destiny in musical comedy, as you know;
|
|
instead, I went into an all-star cast for 'Jim the Penman.' Then I created
|
|
the role of Zoie in 'Baby Mine,' and after that came my play, 'Prunella.'
|
|
Here, I think, was the parting of the ways for me, for it was a photograph of
|
|
mine in the title role which came to Adolph Zukor's notice, and which led him
|
|
finally to offer me a starring role upon the screen."
|
|
Who of Marguerite Clark's many admirers does not remember her first
|
|
venture upon the silver sheet? In this picture, an adaptation of the stage
|
|
play, 'Wildflower,' she immediately reached the hearts of thousands of
|
|
picturegoers, and with her fresh, blossoming loveliness, her impetuous,
|
|
natural and utterly unspoiled girlishness, made a place for herself in the
|
|
realms of shadowland which is still peculiarly and exclusively her own.
|
|
Wherein, exactly, does the charm of Marguerite Clark lie? I watched
|
|
her, as leaving the topic of her early screen work for the moment, we
|
|
discussed things theatrical and social, past and present, of New York, the
|
|
ever-changing and always fascinating.
|
|
She is, as you who see her upon the screen already know, small and
|
|
dainty, less than five feet in height. Her hair, of a soft, rich brown, lies
|
|
in its silken waviness upon clear white brows, while her large hazel eyes,
|
|
set rather wide apart, carry in their depths an appealing candour, a
|
|
trustfulness which refuses to be denied. Beautiful features, too, has
|
|
Marguerite Clark, with that every-present gleam of youth stamped in some
|
|
intangible fashion across her personality. I did not think she looked older,
|
|
as we sat in the changing lights of the quaint old courtyard--and yet--there
|
|
was something different, perhaps, from the playful girl I had known two or
|
|
three years ago. A hint of added graciousness, an intensified charm of
|
|
manner--unconscious, but speaking of the life of the leisured Southern woman
|
|
of wealth, position and culture, the life with Fortune, the Fairy Godmother,
|
|
seems to have chosen that Marguerite shall lead.
|
|
"Tell me something about your romance and marriage," I said, as we
|
|
lingered over our coffee. "They have meant a good deal in your career,
|
|
I know."
|
|
"Sometimes I think they have ended my career! But that's not meant to
|
|
sound unhappy, you know, for in some of my moods I should be glad to give up
|
|
my film work. Still, after having drunk so deeply at the fountain of
|
|
ambition all these years, it is difficult to abandon all one's own plans for
|
|
the future--and, please, let me warn you, don't ask me what these same plans
|
|
are, for, honestly, I don't know!"
|
|
Marguerite's was a war wedding, and her courtship a whirlwind one. But
|
|
she and her husband were old friends long before 1918--the year that saw
|
|
their marriage--drew to its fateful close. Young Palmerson Williams had
|
|
known the fascinating, elf-like little creature in the days when he had been
|
|
a boy at prep school, making ready for his years of study at Yale. He was
|
|
the son of a wealthy and aristocratic New Orleans family, and when his
|
|
college life came to an end he returned to the South to identify himself with
|
|
his father's big business interests. So, to all intents and purposes, he and
|
|
Marguerite would remain just pleasant friends for the rest of time--nothing
|
|
else.
|
|
But in 1918, when the star was still working under her lengthy Famous-
|
|
Players contract, she arranged to tour a part of the States on behalf of a
|
|
gigantic Liberty Loan flotation. "The South always had appealed to me,"
|
|
Marguerite said, "so what more natural than that I should choose it for my
|
|
collecting ground? I was dreadfully teased by everyone at the time for
|
|
having decided to make for the Mason and Dixon line instead of going North;
|
|
but, anyway, I had such numbers of personal friends down South. Oh, other
|
|
friends, I mean! Not only my husband-to-be!"
|
|
So when I had laughingly assured Marguerite that I, at least, had never
|
|
considered her anything but the victim of sheer coincidence, she went on to
|
|
tell me that Mr. (then Lieutenant) Williams had been the first purchaser of
|
|
her bonds in New Orleans, and of how, with leave miraculously obtained, he
|
|
would arrive at other cities on her route of march, and insist always upon
|
|
being at hand as general organiser of the campaign.
|
|
Then came the wedding--Marguerite, who had been the heroine of so many
|
|
romances in the world-of-make-believe, a heroine every bit as thrilling as
|
|
one in real life! "It has been worth waiting for," she said dreamily, as we
|
|
watched the sun sinking lower and lower. "I would never make up my mind
|
|
before, because I wanted it to be the real thing."
|
|
Then the gay smile flashed into her eyes again. "But it was amusing at
|
|
first to have someone looking after me so carefully, when, except for my
|
|
sister Cora, I had always been so awfully independent. My contract with
|
|
Famous-Lasky had not expired, and I had some more pictures to make, so my
|
|
husband used to come out to the Coast whenever he could manage it and give me
|
|
some expert advice on the making of films! Then, when my work came to an
|
|
end, he did his best to persuade me to give up the camera entirely, and,
|
|
indeed, I seem almost to have done so, as I have only starred in one
|
|
production of my own."
|
|
"And that," I said, "was 'Scrambled Wives,' was it not? And adapted
|
|
from a Broadway stage show?"
|
|
"Yes. Irene Castle Treman's husband is one of the organisers of the
|
|
company, and Irene herself is going to make a series of pictures soon."
|
|
"And I had almost forgotten one important item," I said, as we arose
|
|
from our most unfashionably extended luncheon. "I simply must have lots of
|
|
photographs of you."
|
|
"Then come home with me," laughed Marguerite. "Oh, not REALLY home, of
|
|
course, but to the Williams' house on Saint Charles Avenue. I am staying
|
|
with my husband's people for the Carnival season, and there I shall be able
|
|
to let you have all the pictures of myself that your journalistic heart
|
|
desires.
|
|
Marguerite's roadster was patiently awaiting our pleasure as we left the
|
|
old-world courtyard behind us. Soon we found ourselves amongst the throngs
|
|
of sightseers and the homeward-bound business crowds; and in a few minutes I
|
|
was being carried back by way of a bulky portfolio to the days when new
|
|
Marguerite Clark pictures were frequent, and oh! how enjoyable episodes in
|
|
the enthusiastic movie fan's life.
|
|
Marguerite in "Wildflower"; Marguerite in "Prunella," in "The Crucible,"
|
|
and in "Still Waters"; Marguerite as the fairy heroine of "Snow White" and
|
|
"The Seven Swans"; as inconsequent "Topsy" and pathetic "Little Eva"; as the
|
|
naughty hoyden in "The Amazons"; as the fascinating young person in that
|
|
never-to-be forgotten "sub-deb" series, the "Bab" stories, and Marguerite in
|
|
the picture which so delighted her fanciful, imaginative mind, "Molly Make-
|
|
Believe." Newer photographs there were, too, of Marguerite in "Come Out of
|
|
the Kitchen," in "Luck in Pawn," in "A Girl Named Mary," in "All of a Sudden
|
|
Peggy," in "Easy to Get," and in "Scrambled Wives." Photographs galore, to
|
|
which I helped myself in truly shameless style, gloating the while over my
|
|
unexpected treasure-trove.
|
|
"And here," said Mrs. Williams, abandoning Marguerite Clark and all that
|
|
pertained thereto, "are pictures of my own beautiful home outside the city,
|
|
where my husband and I have, more or less, settled down. We have horses and
|
|
dogs, and chickens, and flowers, and all the things I wove into my make-
|
|
believe stories, but never imagined I should ever really own. Our dogs are
|
|
really quite important beasts, you know, and I am beginning to realise the
|
|
responsibility of owning one of the most famous kennels in the South. At
|
|
first I treated the dear things like 'just dogs,' you know, but now I feel
|
|
they are far too precious for that!"
|
|
Good fortune, it is easy to see, has not spoiled our Make-Believe
|
|
Marguerite. She may have come into her real kingdom, found her fairy prince,
|
|
and have attained as certain a chance of living happily ever after as we poor
|
|
mortals have the right to expect; but with it all, she will never lose her
|
|
sweet, child-like simplicity of heart, her love of innocent gaiety; and, best
|
|
of all, her keen insight and matured wisdom which have been but kindly gifts
|
|
the passing years have showered upon her.
|
|
"Tell me," I said, as Marguerite and I stood in the doorway of the big
|
|
house on the Avenue, "did you wear your Prunella costume last night?"
|
|
"Now don't tempt me to divulge that deadly secret! My husband and I
|
|
deceived even our dearest friends, and he would never forgive me if I took an
|
|
unscrupulous newspaper woman into our confidence! But I'll tell you one
|
|
thing: Carnival time in New Orleans is a fairy tale come true--especially if
|
|
you're with the person you love the best in all the world!" And with
|
|
Marguerite's mischievous laughter ringing in my ear, I left her with my
|
|
question unanswered.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
July 1921
|
|
Frederick James Smith
|
|
MOTION PICTURE CLASSIC
|
|
The Lilliput Lady
|
|
|
|
Marguerite Clark sat on a chaise longe in her apartment overlooking
|
|
Central Park and swung her tiny feet in schoolgirl fashion. They failed to
|
|
reach the floor by some five or six inches. We also sat on the
|
|
aforementioned chaise and tried not to be self-conscious of our undue length.
|
|
We actually blushed at the size of our feet, doing our best to disregard our
|
|
legs, and we buried our elongated arms amid the cushions. We thought of the
|
|
emotions of Gulliver and shuddered.
|
|
Miss Clark is a diminutive little person, as you know. But you do not
|
|
REALLY know until you have sat beside her.
|
|
We did our best to hide our confusion in questions. Miss Clark answered
|
|
them all seriously and cautiously. She kept on swinging her tiny feet, but
|
|
she admitted that interviewers were always confusing things when they wrote
|
|
about her. We blushed an elephantine blush.
|
|
"People talk about me as if I were hundreds and hundreds of years old,"
|
|
she began. "I'm not." And the swinging feet became positively angry in
|
|
their orbit.
|
|
"And goodness, how it hurt when everyone said I had retired from the
|
|
screen. I haven't--at least, not completely. The truth is, I am going to do
|
|
about two or maybe three pictures a year. My husband is quite willing for me
|
|
to do that."
|
|
"How do you reconcile married life with a career?" we hazarded.
|
|
"It cannot be done," said Miss Clark, and the swinging feet fairly
|
|
sighed. "It must always be one thing or the other. Now, my husband is a
|
|
dear, but he can never understand why night hours are necessary in a studio,
|
|
or why the lights won't ruin my eyes, or why one has to be at work at a
|
|
certain hour in the morning. You see, husbands are like that. It is age-old
|
|
and you cannot change it."
|
|
Right here you are drawing a mental picture of a huge lord and master
|
|
dominating little Miss Clark. We were, but at that moment a masculine voice
|
|
sounded from the interior of the apartment, and Miss Clark called, "Dearie,"
|
|
into the distance. With which appeared H. Palmerson Williams, the husband in
|
|
question. Imagine my shock at discovering Mr. Williams to be almost as
|
|
diminutive as his tiny wife. Indeed, as we shook hands, we felt more
|
|
hopelessly Gulliver-ish than ever.
|
|
Then ensued a most domestic conversation anent shoes, which Miss Clark
|
|
has to have made to order, of course. Finally, Mr. Williams disappeared--to
|
|
wrestle with a downtown shoemaker.
|
|
"Isn't he a dear?" asked Miss Clark, settling herself back on the chaise
|
|
longe again. "Let's see, what were we discussing?"
|
|
"Husbands," we prompted, "and married life."
|
|
"Well, honestly, I love them both," and Miss Clark swung her feet
|
|
comfortably. "Of course, I've missed my work--it had been such a part of my
|
|
life. We live in a typical old Southern mansion at Patterson, Louisiana,
|
|
just out of New Orleans. My husband's people before him lived in the same
|
|
home. It's all comfortable and restful and, oh, so secure feeling. I talk
|
|
over the dinners with the old colored servants, feed the chickens and just
|
|
relax. There is languor and restfulness in the very air. That is how my
|
|
days pass. Then there are social things in New Orleans, quite unlike
|
|
anything you can find anywhere else in America. Of course, I get restive at
|
|
times.
|
|
"My husband promised to let me do two or three pictures a year. I am
|
|
going to do that. My next may be a comedy, to be done abroad. It is all
|
|
indefinite yet. You see, I am too lazy and comfortable to rush anything."
|
|
"Is there a possibility of your doing 'Peter Pan'?" we inquired.
|
|
"I doubt it, although I would love to play it. If I could do some
|
|
gorgeous thing like 'Peter Pan,' I would make it my final picture and
|
|
definitely retire. I want people to remember me at my best. When I left the
|
|
stage for pictures I was lucky to be starred in Winthrop Ames' exquisite
|
|
production of 'Prunella' and, with that as a final stage effort, I never felt
|
|
the call back to the footlights. I would rather have folks remember my stage
|
|
work through 'Prunella.' I wish I could do something equally fine in
|
|
pictures--and then good-bye." Miss Clark actually sighed and the swinging
|
|
feet subsided.
|
|
"We're way off the subject of marriage," we suggested.
|
|
"Gracious, I am no authority," said Miss Clark, and her feet resumed in
|
|
panicky swings. "You can get by safely if you both know that you must give
|
|
and take. The only rule I know is to remember that you are not marrying one
|
|
person, but a family--and to be just as diplomatic with the family as you are
|
|
with your husband!"
|
|
Just then the Lilliput analogy was completed by the appearance of a
|
|
young woman even tinier than Miss Clark. "She's one of my two protegees,"
|
|
Miss Clark said by way of introduction.
|
|
We tried to get one of our mammoth hands into a pocket out of the way
|
|
and to look nonchalant.
|
|
But Miss Clark came to our rescue by shoving the protegee into the
|
|
distance.
|
|
"Let's talk about pictures," went on Miss Clark cautiously. "You see,
|
|
my husband will be sure to read this interview.
|
|
"In the first place, I do not think photoplays, save for the occasional
|
|
exception, are so good as they were a year ago. Everyone is striving for
|
|
super-productions and spending fortunes on stories that are too weak for
|
|
features. Everyone seems to think a mob scene or a glimpse of a cabaret
|
|
makes a super-production. No, I am quite positive I see a deterioration in
|
|
pictures.
|
|
"It is easy to criticize," went on Miss Clark, "but there are many
|
|
points for improvement. Consider the manners of the photoplay."
|
|
"We did not know the screen had any," we contributed with our customary
|
|
humor.
|
|
"You would almost think so," resumed Miss Clark. "Directors who know
|
|
better--or ought to--let actors work around studios with their hats on and
|
|
permit horrible manners to be displayed over and over again. What do you
|
|
think this will gradually do to young America?"
|
|
"Young America will always wear its hat except when its mother dies," we
|
|
interpolated, with the aforementioned customary humor. "Maybe it is all
|
|
subtle propaganda on the part of the hat manufacturers."
|
|
"Now, seriously," pouted Miss Clark, "it's really a big problem.
|
|
We must take pains with the motion pictures or manners will disappear from
|
|
our land."
|
|
With which we seized our own hat and retired.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
April 1925
|
|
Beatrice Washburn
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
Marguerite Clark -- Today
|
|
|
|
The little village of Patterson, Louisiana, where Marguerite Clark has
|
|
lived with her husband ever since she left the screen, lies about eighty
|
|
miles west of New Orleans in the picturesque Evangeline country. If you saw
|
|
"The White Rose" you will recognize it all; the long, lazy bayous lined with
|
|
water hyacinths, the live oaks hung with moss, the wild roses, the palmettos,
|
|
the mocking birds that sing from dawn to midnight. It is different from
|
|
Broadway, different from Hollywood, different from anything in the world but
|
|
old Cajan Louisiana where the inhabitants still speak French...
|
|
Mrs. Harry Williams is still "Miss Marguerite" to the villagers. When
|
|
the speak of her it is with something very like reverence, for is she not
|
|
sending five Patterson girls through college and is not "Mr. Harry" doing the
|
|
same for nearly twenty youths?
|
|
"They haven't any children of their own, but they do everything for our
|
|
children," says Patterson as one man. Charity quite literally begins at home
|
|
for Mr. and Mrs. Williams--no farther away than the long village street on
|
|
which they live. Patterson is flattered, too, that the famous screen actress
|
|
and her husband really do live there. They don't look upon their estate as
|
|
merely a weekend affair and, aside from occasional trips to New Orleans and
|
|
very occasional ones north, they spend all their time in the country with
|
|
their thirteen dogs, their chicken farm, their flowers and their lumber
|
|
mills.
|
|
"Harry is so crazy about sports that we do travel about a bit for the
|
|
football and baseball games at the different colleges," said Mrs. Williams,
|
|
who is as quiet and unassuming as though she had been mistress of the big old
|
|
house since babyhood.
|
|
"But," she added, with that smile which is just as charming as when you
|
|
saw it in "Bab," "there really isn't anything very picturesque about us. We
|
|
live a quiet country life like anybody else. I am busy with my flowers and
|
|
my dogs, flowers grow like magic in this warm country and I am free to mess
|
|
in them all I like. Harry's office is near enough for him to come home to
|
|
lunch and in the evening we play bridge or Mah Jong or go to the local moving
|
|
picture house. Although ours is only a small place the films are as good as
|
|
in the cities."
|
|
Mrs. Williams has changed very little since those enchanting days of
|
|
"The Seven Sisters." She is still tiny and demure and her red brown hair is
|
|
worn in a shingle bob just as it has been for the last six years. She
|
|
assures you that it is going to stay that way. "One can't wear curls forever
|
|
and it is so much more convenient this way," is how she expresses it. Her
|
|
eyes are just the color of her hair and she still deserves the tribute of
|
|
being one of America's best dressed women. Also, if she has left the screen
|
|
it doesn't mean that she has lost interest in it.
|
|
"The fans still write me by the hundreds," she confided. "Isn't it
|
|
adorable? I still get letters from all parts of the country and from people
|
|
of all ages. Most of them write me charming personal letters saying how glad
|
|
they are that I am happily married and devoted to my husband. Many of them
|
|
come from screen aspirants, both young and old, and to all of them I say the
|
|
same thing--Don't try for the motion pictures unless you have money enough to
|
|
wait for success and character enough to stand disappointment. To tear off
|
|
to Hollywood without money and expect to burst into fame is a heartbreaking
|
|
proposition, and to become famous without experience is almost unheard of.
|
|
The fans see the honor and glory without realizing the months and sometimes
|
|
years of hard work that lies behind it."
|
|
Mrs. Williams admits that she was offered the role of "Peter Pan" which
|
|
Marilyn Miller is now playing in New York, and she also admits that some day
|
|
she may return to the screen.
|
|
"I don't expect to," is all she can be induced to say, "but it is
|
|
possible that I may."
|
|
The directors still send her scenarios and young authors still besiege
|
|
her with manuscripts in the hope that she may tire of domestic life and
|
|
return to the screen. To all of them she makes the same answer, either
|
|
written or oral, that she cannot give her life to her husband and to the
|
|
public too.
|
|
"When I first left the screen I thought it would be possible for me to
|
|
do two pictures a year," she explained. "But I soon found that it could not
|
|
be done. You cannot run two jobs at once, and Mr. Williams, like any normal
|
|
husband, is not anxious to have me work again. Still I do keep up my
|
|
interest in the pictures and am particularly interested in the strides made
|
|
by historical pictures in the last few years. Such productions as 'The Sea
|
|
Hawk,' 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame,' 'The White Sister,' 'Scaramouche,' 'The
|
|
Covered Wagon' are of tremendous educational as well as artistic value. Mary
|
|
Pickford is and always has been my favorite screen actress and I am a great
|
|
admirer of Lillian Gish."
|
|
Mrs. Williams doesn't believe in woman's suffrage. She has never voted
|
|
in her life. Nor does she place even the tip of her finger in her husband's
|
|
business. As to the rumor circulated so many times about an heir to the
|
|
Williams fortune Mrs. Williams herself denies it with a sad little smile.
|
|
"I only wish it were true. I would love nothing better, for I adore
|
|
children. But my husband and I have to make up for it as best we can by
|
|
helping out other people's children and giving them a start in the world.
|
|
Perhaps some day we shall adopt one of our own but we have not come to that
|
|
decision yet."
|
|
Mr. Harry, as the townspeople call him, easily owns half of Patterson.
|
|
His lumber mills are the principal industry, his pine and cyprus forests
|
|
stretch as far as the horizon, and the great estate where he and his wife
|
|
live is measured in miles instead of acres. True, it fronts on the long,
|
|
main street of Patterson, a few blocks above the drug store and the post
|
|
office and bank, but it backs on the furthermost limits of Louisiana. The
|
|
thirteen dogs are a host in themselves, running across the shady lawns and
|
|
romping in the sunshine as only dogs know how. Mary Pickford, Jack Dempsey,
|
|
Tino, Clip, Zelly Grandpa and Bobby vie for their mistress' affection with
|
|
the dignified parrot who speaks fragments of French and Spanish.
|
|
Attached to the household are five motor cars and a staff of negro
|
|
servants with their families who, according to the immemorial custom of the
|
|
South, need almost as much attention as children. There are only two white
|
|
servants, the chauffeur and Mrs. Williams' personal maid. While the former
|
|
actress does not drive any of her own cars she and her husband are both
|
|
intensely interested in sports. They take trips up to Tennessee for the Fall
|
|
games at Sewanee and Vanderbilt universities where they have several adopted
|
|
students.
|
|
The Williams house is large and old and spreading. It isn't a Colonial
|
|
mansion with pillars and no one could mistake it for anything but what it
|
|
is--a home built on inherited wealth, stability and tradition. Wide verandas
|
|
skirt it on every side--verandas that are furnished like rooms for the
|
|
Southern climate with chaise longues, divans, tea sets, writing tables,
|
|
books, magazines and all the other little intimacies of a semi-tropic life.
|
|
It has twenty-five rooms with a bathroom for every bedroom and "Miss
|
|
Marguerite" herself has a suite finished in pale green Venetian furniture
|
|
with rose silk hangings. She has also a collection of perfumes that would
|
|
make the most sophisticated flapper sigh with envy.
|
|
"Everyone brings me perfumes," said Mrs. Williams naively. "I think I
|
|
must have nearly a thousand bottles. Friends bring me samples from all over
|
|
the world," and she proudly exhibited bottles made like tiny lions, crystal
|
|
bottles from Italy, little flasks like nymphs, vials from Egypt and Persia
|
|
and Southern France, all filled with the most seductive fragrance. All
|
|
around the big, rambling old house are sleeping porches, for in Louisiana you
|
|
sleep near a breeze when there is one, and all about it are flowers--roses,
|
|
oleanders, camellias, sweet olive, night blooming jessamine, crepe myrtle
|
|
which Mrs. Williams and her three negro gardeners tend with the most
|
|
assiduous care. Freezes come suddenly in this part of the world, when they
|
|
come at all, and there is liable to be a hurry call for blankets, burlap and
|
|
excelsior with which to cover the flowers.
|
|
The Williams name throughout the South represents not only wealth but
|
|
inherited wealth--money that has been acquired through generations until it
|
|
comes to be taken as a matter of course. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Williams, the
|
|
parents of Marguerite Clark's husband, live in New Orleans and many a passing
|
|
tourist has stopped to admire the dignified stone house in St. Charles avenue
|
|
with its spreading velvet lawns. There are three other sons beside
|
|
Mr. Harry--one of them and his wife live next door to them in Patterson.
|
|
There are four grandchildren. None of the family ever "splurge." You never
|
|
see their name in the papers except in the society column and then only in
|
|
the most conservative way.
|
|
The former actress was made Queen of one of the most exclusive
|
|
organizations in the world, the New Orleans Carnival balls, and held her
|
|
court at the Alexis ball in 1923, the first time a woman not a native of New
|
|
Orleans has been accorded such an honor. But while she is a member of the
|
|
very inner circle of New Orleans social life she sees very little of it,
|
|
preferring to spend her time in Patterson with her dogs and flowers.
|
|
Two things impress you particularly about Marguerite Clark. One is
|
|
what, for lack of a better word, you might call charm, a something that you
|
|
cannot put your finger on, that is not brains or beauty or breeding but a
|
|
combination of all three. The other is her modesty. You might think that a
|
|
woman who has reached the very top of her profession by her own efforts, and
|
|
who is mistress of one of the big fortunes of the country might have due
|
|
cause to be conceited. But she is as unassuming and simple and reserved as
|
|
when she left her girlhood home in Cincinnati to go on the stage with DeWolf
|
|
Hopper in "Mr. Pickwick." She admits that she has worked hard, admits that
|
|
she is very lucky, that she adores her husband, that she has no regrets for
|
|
giving up her career and says quite frankly that she is the happiest woman in
|
|
the world.
|
|
"I know it sounds like a platitude to say so but a happy marriage is
|
|
life's best gift to any woman," is her belief. "A career is necessarily
|
|
limited. There comes a point when you can go no further and even if you have
|
|
gone a long way life is empty without love. But there are no limits to
|
|
happiness when you are married to the man you love. It develops every year.
|
|
I don't believe that marriages are made in heaven--not even mine. It takes
|
|
time and tact and thought to make a happy marriage, just as it does to make a
|
|
successful career. But in the end it repays you more than the career ever
|
|
can do."
|
|
Although she believes that a woman's place is in the home and not
|
|
interfering with her husband's business Mrs. Williams is a great believer in
|
|
education for women. The girls that she is putting through college are all
|
|
being trained in careers so that they may take care of themselves.
|
|
"A good education is one of the best assets any woman can have," she
|
|
declared, "whether she is going on the screen or in the business office or is
|
|
going to stay at home with her husband. I think that training on the
|
|
legitimate stage is most important. Even if you want to enter the motion
|
|
picture field later on it is invaluable training towards screen work."
|
|
Like most really successful people she believes that she has been
|
|
extraordinarily fortunate and that very little of it has been due to her own
|
|
efforts.
|
|
"I realize that for some people to have given up their career would have
|
|
been impossible," she said. "But, while I was endowed with a real love of
|
|
the stage I was also born with a domestic streak--a tendency that makes me
|
|
like to knit baby blankets and embroider handkerchiefs and fuss with flowers.
|
|
And I can truthfully say that only my love for my husband would have replaced
|
|
my love for my work. He has made up for me, a thousand times over, anything
|
|
that I have given up."
|
|
Mr. Williams is quiet, cultivated and as devoted to his wife as she is
|
|
to him. Together they have made Patterson a place of interest to the movie
|
|
fans throughout the country, Patterson with its long, main street, its one
|
|
drug store, its post office and moving picture house, its little wooden
|
|
railway station out on the edge of the town where the Sunset Limited from San
|
|
Francisco to New Orleans roars through once a day without even deigning to
|
|
stop. It is just such a little town as you have looked out at from the
|
|
windows of the Pullman and wondered what the train was waiting for.
|
|
"And SHE lives here all the year round," said the conductor of the
|
|
Patterson Local No. 6, in a hushed voice. "Yes, ma'am, many's the time I've
|
|
carried her and Mr. Harry to town for a football game. And when they went to
|
|
Europe last year they went up on this very train to New Orleans. No, ma'am,
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there aren't any taxis in Patterson. You'll have to ride up on the mail
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truck. Here, Joe--" to a husky negro youth who pilots the U. S. mail, "drive
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the lady up to Mr. Harry's." And No. 6 with its two day coaches and wheezy
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engine is off across the bayous and the plantations toward Jeanerette and
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Broussard, all the little Louisiana towns with their old French names and the
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spires of their Catholic churches piercing the horizon.
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It seems almost like one of the fairy tales that Marguerite Clark used
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to play herself when the prince woke the sleeping beauty and bore her away to
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his palace. And as you leave them on the sunlit verandas of their big old
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house, Mr. and Mrs. Williams surrounded by the puppies and the flowers and
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the devoted negro servants and walk through the oleanders and roses, back
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through the bright green lawns and sleepy streets of the little town it is
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with the old fairy tale ending still ringing in your ears--"and so they were
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married and lived happily ever after."
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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April 1930
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Barbara Brooks
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NEW MOVIE MAGAZINE
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Just Among Those Present
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On the east of the picturesque Evangeline country, a low house almost
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hidden in a grove of trees. Wide, vine-covered galleries, suggestive of ante-
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bellum days. An old-fashioned garden enclosed in hedges of blossoming roses.
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The brilliant-plumaged cardinal and the mockingbird dart in and out of the
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odorous magnolia trees.
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Peaceful in its dignified setting is that estate on the outskirts of the
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town of Patterson, Louisiana.
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Along the garden path, with shears and culling basket on her arms, comes
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the chatelaine of the lovely home, a dainty figure in ruffled flowered gown.
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Four or five diminutive Chihuahua dogs dash up and down the path before her,
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ludicrously important in their chase of indolent butterflies.
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It is Marguerite Clark, in a setting far more becoming than any of the
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pictures that made her the idol of the movie-going public ten years ago;
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whose fan mail from all parts of the world broke Hollywood records--and who
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gave up homage and fame for love.
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Another picture of Marguerite Clark. Her husband's family home in New
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Orleans. A big stone mansion set on a high-terraced lawn in an exclusive
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neighborhood of the most fascinating city in America.
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She walks down the wide stairway from the second floor, conventionally
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but modishly gowned in golden brown. A bit of mechlin at throat and wrist; a
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small string of pearls around her nick; no rings. Her beautiful auburn hair,
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with its natural wave, brushed simply from her forehead. Quiet. Self-
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poised.
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Cordial and charming her welcome. So unchanged her appearance that one
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cannot help but blurt, "You look exactly the same as you did ten years ago."
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And in return one gets the same dazzling, mischievous smile that sold
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hundreds of Liberty Bonds in New Orleans eleven years ago and perhaps won her
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husband. For it was when she and other screen stars same to the South on a
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Buy-a-Bond service that she met her husband, Harry B. Williams, one of the
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wealthiest and most prominent men of the state.
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The courtship moved quickly. One took no chances of letting so
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bewitching a girl out of sight, especially when stories were told of a line
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of disappointed suitors from ocean to ocean who could testify to her
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determination never to marry. "For no reason at all," she said, when telling
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|
about it, "I had decided that I would not get married. It wasn't that I had
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set my heart on a career: it was simply that marriage had not entered my
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thoughts."
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But she did marry, which proves that all young Lochinvars do not come
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out of the west.
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There was no golden honeymoon on her husband's yacht; no browsing around
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the Far East; no intriguing shopping in Paris as one might ordinarily expect,
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when a beautiful girl marries a millionaire. Instead, Marguerite Clark was
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forced to put her shiny new wedding-ring in her jewel box, forget she had had
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a distinguished name fastened to her already-famous one, and return to
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Hollywood for a year. For she was under screen contract. "I made nine
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pictures that year," she said reminiscently. "The first [sic] one,
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'Scrambled Wives,' was released, I believe, in 1921."
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"Were you sorry to leave the screen?" I asked her. "No," she answered,
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"and I have never regretted for one moment that I gave it all up. I have not
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wanted to go back, either, although since the talkies have been created,
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I have had offers to return, which I have refused."
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"What made you decide to go on the stage in the beginning?" I asked her.
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"Won't you tell me all about it? Did you have the urge for a career?"
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"Well, I was only thirteen years old when I went on the stage," she
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said. "Somehow a decision was made for me. My father and mother were dead
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and my sister took care of me. When the offer came, she was the one who
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apparently had the ambitions for me. We had to go about it surreptitiously,
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|
for none of our relatives had ever been on the stage and probably would throw
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up their hands in horror at our becoming stage folks. There was one
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relative, a rich old uncle, who we thought would be particularly shocked.
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There wasn't much danger of his finding out what I was doing for he spent
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most of his time in Europe. By the time he came back, I was pretty well
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established, so we thought we might as well break down and confess how we had
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deceived him.
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"And to our surprise," Marguerite laughed merrily at the memory,
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"instead of his being displeased, he was frankly proud of me, and he showed
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his pride quite materially.
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"I liked the stage. I liked the people: they were so friendly, so
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frank, so genuine. Of course, sister was with me constantly; I was educated
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on the wing, you might say, for we had to engage a governess every time we
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went to a new town. Life was full--and happy. I didn't have time to learn
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|
how to do the things that most girls my age were learning: I couldn't play
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bridge, nor other games. Tennis, golf, and outdoor sports were denied me.
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|
But I had plenty of wholesome exercise, and I took a vast interest in
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|
learning my parts. I suppose I was a precocious youngster, for I was the
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only child in the company and perhaps there was a tendency to spoil me."
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|
"And the movies? How did they get you?"
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|
"Again the decision was taken from me," she said. "I wasn't
|
|
particularly anxious to leave the stage, for I loved stage work. But when
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the offer came from Hollywood, sister thought I might as well try it--and I
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made good, I suppose," she ended.
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|
Made good, I mused. I remembered performances of "Prunella" and other
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pictures where the sign "Standing Room Only" was put up nightly in New
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Orleans. For New Orleans adopted petite Marguerite Clark Williams
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|
wholeheartedly. Her appearance today on the street, at a football game, in
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the ball room, attracts as much attention as her first appearance in public
|
|
after her retirement from the screen. And she still responds with the same
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delightful smile that captivated her audiences from the footlights.
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|
Is she lonesome away from the bright lights, from the adulation of the
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public, from flattering fan mail?
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"The days pass so quickly," she told me, "that I never have time to be
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lonesome. I have my flowers to look after while I am in Patterson--think
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|
what a real garden has meant to me after so many years playing in make-
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believe gardens. Then there are my dogs: we have many of them. The five
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Chihuahuas are my special care, but we have several hunting dogs. And my
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husband's interests are mine, of course. We take frequent trips North; we
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spend a great deal of time in New Orleans and life is very full--and happy,"
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she added, "even though I have no children."
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|
I noted the first wistful tone in her beautifully modulated voice.
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|
Perhaps Marguerite Clark has not yet found the Carcassonne of her dreams.
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|
Her husband's interests? They are so large and varied that his wife's
|
|
tiny feet must have trouble keeping up with him. Lumber is his inherited
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|
vocation. He is also mayor of Patterson, and "hees Honor is a fine mayor,
|
|
yes," say even the humblest of the French-descent residents of the beautiful
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|
little town in the parish of St. Mary. He has been instrumental in getting
|
|
for Patterson one of the finest airfields in Louisiana, well lighted and
|
|
accessible, and about the best equipped field between New Orleans and Texas.
|
|
He is also the head of the Wedell-Williams Air Service, flying planes all
|
|
over the South.
|
|
His avocations? Living in Louisiana, loving an outdoor life, he is an
|
|
ardent sportsman and he is frequently seen with gun or fishing tackle.
|
|
He enjoys yachting. Motoring, too. And he is now a full-fledged air pilot,
|
|
being one of the first in the state to become air-minded. Marguerite
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|
accompanies him on most of his trips.
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|
"I love flying," she assured me. "It is wonderful, exhilarating.
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Although," she chuckled reminiscently, "I didn't always think so. I remember
|
|
the first trip my husband took from Patterson to New Orleans. I left that
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|
day for the North. 'Wouldn't you like to fly to Chicago?' he asked me.
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|
I informed him that I preferred the safe, sane method of travel--you see I
|
|
had not yet gone up--and I started on the train worried for fear something
|
|
might happen to him. I remember I wired twice to find whether he reached New
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|
Orleans without mishap. That night, there was a railroad wreck: something
|
|
had gone wrong with my safe-and-sound vehicle of transportation--while my
|
|
husband, taking what I considered a precarious way of reaching New Orleans,
|
|
was the one who had to be reassured as to my safety."
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|
"Have you ever piloted a plane?" I asked her.
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|
"Why, I can barely pilot myself across crowded streets," she laughed,
|
|
"so I would hardly be trusted with a plane. But we take many trips: it
|
|
requires only forty minutes to come to New Orleans, whereas if we took the
|
|
train or motor car we'd spend three hours on the road. And it is so safe, so
|
|
beautiful a method of traveling."
|
|
The air route is used frequently by Marguerite Clark Williams and her
|
|
husband these days. For she is in demand at the most exclusive functions in
|
|
New Orleans in the pre-Lenten social season. In 1923 she was crowned Queen
|
|
of Alexis, one of the smart carnival organizations, and a veritable Titania
|
|
she was on that occasion.
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|
Although she loves people, she enjoys sitting on the side lines,
|
|
studying character. "It doesn't distress me to wait for anyone in a railroad
|
|
station or a crowd," she said, "for I am never bored. I like to look at
|
|
different types, making up stories about them, wondering where they are
|
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going, what their lives are--people are so interesting, aren't they?"
|
|
I came back to movie chat.
|
|
"What do you think of the talkies?" I asked.
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|
"They're wonderful," she replied. And when I remarked that with her
|
|
trained voice she would make a hit in them, that she should be back on the
|
|
screen, she shook her head vehemently. "Oh, no," she said. "I finished with
|
|
the pictures, with public life, when my contract expired. I worked hard on
|
|
them, too, far harder than on the stage, because the work is more strenuous,
|
|
more exacting. And now I'm perfectly content to be 'among those present' in
|
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the audience at the talkies."
|
|
So that's what happens to a career when a girl falls in love, I thought.
|
|
"Do you like clothes like most women?" I asked, a foolish question to a
|
|
perfectly gowned woman. "Of course," she responded, "and I like them far
|
|
more than I did when I was on the stage or in the pictures. It's not much
|
|
fun, you know, to put on gorgeous costumes because you are compelled to wear
|
|
them. Now I can make my own selections and I find it is a joy to pick out
|
|
what I really like."
|
|
I remembered and reminded her of an exclusive French shop in New Orleans
|
|
where frocks were made for her to wear in her last pictures, the Maison
|
|
Helene, now out of existence, where every stitch was made by hand, where
|
|
tucks and gathers and smocking were put in by descendants of some of the
|
|
finest old Creole families. Gentlewomen whose work under the supervision of
|
|
the creator of the shop, a member of one of the first families in Louisiana.
|
|
Dresses that looked for all the world as though they were fashioned for a
|
|
little girl of twelve years, dresses of sheer linen, of chiffon; beautiful
|
|
negligees and blouses. In huge boxes, dozens of handmade garments preceded
|
|
the star to Hollywood for her last appearance on the screen.
|
|
"I wish I could still have some of their exquisite work," said
|
|
Marguerite Clark Williams, when we were exchanging memories of the famous
|
|
atelier.
|
|
Curled up in a big chair in the handsome Louis Quinze reception room of
|
|
the Williams mansion in New Orleans, the former stage and screen star looked
|
|
like a little girl as we chatted. A trifle heavier, perhaps, than in her
|
|
days of stardom, although she said she has gained but four pounds since her
|
|
marriage, weighing today an even hundred pounds. Her lovely auburn hair is
|
|
still bobbed and will not be allowed to grow, so she assured me. Her long
|
|
lashes sweep her cheeks, giving her big hazel eyes a velvety deep brown hue.
|
|
I peered closely as she sat under the soft lamplight of the early dusk, to
|
|
find a wrinkle, some telltale mark of time. But I was agreeable
|
|
disappointed. I couldn't see anything but contentment and placidity. Why
|
|
not? Her life is cast on contented and placid lines.
|
|
She won't play bridge, because she says she started in too late to
|
|
learn. "You see, not having learned the rudiments of the game before
|
|
marriage, I feel it would be an imposition on people to ask them to play with
|
|
me. I married into a family of splendid bridge players, and I developed a
|
|
sense of inferiority about any game. Mah Jong was different: it was new to
|
|
others as well as myself. So I took to that as long as the fad lasted. But
|
|
bridge doesn't interest me and other things do--so why should I take time
|
|
from what I love, to force myself to something I don't care for?"
|
|
Something to that, I thought, as I recalled a feverish foursome I had
|
|
just left at a bridge table.
|
|
A last picture of Marguerite Clark Williams.
|
|
The dining-room of one of the famous New Orleans French restaurants.
|
|
It had been turned into an old English garden in honor of the daughter of
|
|
William J. Locke, who was visiting the city. Beautifully gowned women. Soft
|
|
music playing under artificial moonlight.
|
|
Dainty and graceful, a sparkling little figure picked her way through
|
|
the make-believe garden with its English hedges, Marguerite Clark herself,
|
|
a vivid, sparkling figure. A bodice of golden lame, a full skirt of golden
|
|
lace reaching to the floor. Tiny feet encased in golden slippers with
|
|
jeweled buckles. Smaller in stature than any other woman and yet
|
|
distinctive.
|
|
What is it that makes her the cynosure of all eyes wherever she goes?
|
|
It is not her past successes on stage and screen, for the public is fickle
|
|
and memories are short.
|
|
It must be her innate charm, personality, you might call it, that
|
|
evinces itself wherever she may be. Among the moss-grown live oaks and
|
|
bayous of her country home in the beautiful Teche land; in the more
|
|
sophisticated atmosphere of city residence, she always finds friends for
|
|
herself as she found them when, a thirteen-year-old child, she won the hearts
|
|
of the stage folks with whom her early life was cast.
|
|
|
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*****************************************************************************
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*****************************************************************************
|
|
Back issues of Taylorology are available on the Web at any of the following:
|
|
http://www.angelfire.com/az/Taylorology/
|
|
http://www.etext.org/Zines/ASCII/Taylorology/
|
|
http://www.silent-movies.com/Taylorology/
|
|
Full text searches of back issues can be done at http://www.etext.org/Zines/
|
|
or at http://www.silent-movies.com/search.html. For more information about
|
|
Taylor, see
|
|
WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow Press, 1991)
|
|
*****************************************************************************
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