Word: glamorizations
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...press the story of the big red house on R Street seemed to have a dash of everything: intrigue, glamor, mystery, money, politics, sex, big names, fabulous dinings & winings, the irresistible atmosphere of important people doing important things out of school...
Mention should also be made of the faithful recorded programs which, although they may lack the glamor and expectancy of a live concert, nevertheless continue to give enjoyment to many. The Crimson Network should be mentioned, as should WMEX, and the 11:30 o'clock Columbia Masterworks program, and a host of others. WCOP, until recently, has offered a program at 1 o'clock known as "Design for Listening," which, in spite of some very questionable announcing, is more than adequate because of its fine choice of records. It went off the air only last week. A few post-cards...
...clowns (who buy their own makeup) use hundreds of pounds of strategic zinc oxide and glycerine, but they hoarded enough for the season, too. There is a real shortage of silk tights and stockings-but a barelegged circus girl does no lasting damage at the box office. One glamor-girl act is especially well fixed: golden girl Betty Nitsch and her elephant rely upon a metal of which the U.S. has plenty...
Slightly Dangerous (M.G.M.) is a mildly loony comedy starring Lana Turner and Robert Young. In some never-never prewar world, it reveals a small-town soda jerkess who tries every trick from feigned amnesia to the long-lost-heiress act to crash the gate to money and glamor. On her silly trail throughout is her soda-fountain boss, Robert Young, with whom she finally clinches in a motel bedroom. The dialogue of this scene is laundered white for all possible audiences. But Lana, in a costume change from her conventional sweater, still manages to undo all attempts at censorship...
...glamor girl was Hollywood's woman of the year; she was, in fact, lovable, ladylike Mrs. Miniver. To her and hers went six Academy Awards: 1) best picture of 1942, 2) best written screen play, 3) best black-&-white cinematography, 4) best director, William Wyler (now an Air Forces major on duty in England), 5) best actress, Greer Garson (as Mrs. M.), 6) best supporting actress, Teresa Wright. Green-eyed, feather-haired Greer Garson clutched her gold-painted plastic Oscar and silently wept. "This is the most wonderful thing. . . . I feel just like Alice in Wonderland." Other Oscars...