The Seaforth News, 1957-11-28, Page 10Is Longer Hair Making ACome-Back?
Not since Lady,Godiva's fam-
ous ride through Coventry has
long hair been so much in the
news.
The other day there arrived to
appear at Covent Garden a tall,
good-looking opera singer from
New York Metropolitan, with a
charming smile, a wonderful
voice and three plaits of shining
dark hair coiled elegantly round
her head.
Nothing particularly surpris-
ing about that. But when she
let her hair down at rehearsal,
a gasp went up.
Blanche Thebom's rippling
brunette tresses not only reached
to the ground, but trailed about
her feet as she stood.
She has not had her hair cut
for 13 years. It is now more than
six feet long and is still growing.
In these days of short crops
and urchin cuts, a woman with
hair half that length is as un-
usual and striking as Yul Bryn-
ner with his, shaved pate—and
everyscrap' as attractive to the
opposite sex with her longer
hair.
Consider the case of Audrey
Hepburn. Cute and appealing,
certainly, with her cropped,
urchin hair style, but really
beautiful wth her new "Love in
Um Afternoon" long bob,
Janette Scott used to be very
proud of her thick plaits and the
fact that she could sit on her
lovely dark hair. When she play-
ed Peter Pan on the West End
stage, she wouldn't cut her hair,
but rolled her waist -length curls
up inside a cap. Now she's had it
cut to shoulder -length for her
latest screen . role in "Happy is
the Bride".
Director Roy Boulting says
consolingly: "If possible, she is
even prettier than before," But
Tan says sadly; "It wasn't easy
parting with it. After all, I had
it quite a long time."
There are, cd course, snags
about having as much hair as
Blanch Thebom. For instance, it
takes her about four and a half
hours to shampoo it—and a great
deal of space to spread it out to
dry. Worse still, for a very
talented opera singer it is apt
to distract interest from her
voice—which is why she only
lets it down when the parts she
is playing demands it. Other-
wise, she keeps those plaits firm-
ly coiled round her head.
Continental women seem to
appreciate the glamor value of
long hair more than English or
American girls. One of the
charmers of the tennis world,
who was at Wimbledon this year,
Is the 2lyear-old French player,
Mademoiselle Bouchet.
When playing she wears her
hair plaited and tied up with
ribbons. But off the court, her
two -feet long brunette tresses
flow around her shoulders.
And what magnificent use
French star Brigitte Bardot has
always made of her gorgeous
Iong fair hair.
She has a wonderful technique
for looking more appealing and
attractive when her hair is
mussed and untidy.
Some of the lovely Italian film
stars also count long hair among
their charms. One of these is the
fascinating Maria Frau, who
specializes in "femme fatale"
parts and uses her flowing mane
of thick black hair to great ef-
fect as she vamps her way into
men's hearts. ;,
Cosetta Greco, the Italian
actress with the intriguingly
Oriental slant to her eyes, owes
her supremely feminine allure,
not only to that lovely figure
but also to a thick mop of beauti-
ful dark waves that frame her
oval face and cascade on to her •
shoulders.
Then there is Sarita Montiel,
the lovely Spanish actress who
has made a number of Holly-
wood pictures and is always
changing the color of her beauti-
ful hair.
Among the very few other
Hollywood actresses who can
boast really long hair are Patrice
Wymore, whose beautiful tresses
reach nearly to her waist and
who wears her hair in a thick
plait round her head, and pretty
Susan Harrison, the 18 -year-old
Cinderella girl who had never
acted before she played the
feminine lead in "Sweet Smell
of Success" opposite Burt Lan-
caster and Tony Curtis.
Susan had always wanted to
be an actress but did nothing
about it until after she graduated
from Christopher Columbus high
school in the Bronx, where she
hadn't even appeared in a school
play.
Then she went to Boston Uni-
versity Theatre school but left,
"because I thought I wasn't learn-
ing enough about acting." She
did some modeling, found that
boring, so started to work as a
waitress. Then she decided to
find an agent and go all out for
an acting career.
Two days later she was sign-
ed by a New York agent, Holly-
wood producer Harold Hecht, on
a talent hunt for "Sweet Smell
of Success", saw her, signed her
up and promptly sent her to
Hollywood for a screen test.
Susan's beautiful cloud of soft,
dark hair is an important in-
gredient of her unusual charm
and personality and undoubted-
ly played its part in her sudden
and dramatic rise to fame.
It's much the same with sweet-
faced Heather Sears, lovely 21 -
year -old British screen new-
comer, daughter of a London
physician and sister of actress
Ann Sears,
Heather makes her film debut
In a tremendously demanding
part: the deaf and dumb heroine
of "The Story of Esther Costello".
Heather wears her long hair
drawn very simply back from
her forehead.
Is longer hair making a come-
back, at any rate among those
with the courage to be a little
different—and the determination
to be truly glamorous? It looks
like it.
GOOD FOR A LAUGH—MAY-
BE — It looks like the fried
grasshopper is getting more
popular as a cocktail snack.
Importers of the Japanese in-
sect say this tidbit has steadily
climbed on the hit parade since
it was introduced in 1953.
Some people have been serv-
ing the grasshoppers with more
common snacks such as fried
bacon rind which they resemble
somewhat in taste, The thing to
do, of course, is to wait until all
the tidbits are finished. Then
you hide a friend nearby with
a camera, and tell your guests
what they have eaten, You can
get the silliest pictures this way.
You don't have to stop there
either. At your next party you
could serve fried agave worms
from Mexico, or French fried
bees from the Orient, strangely
enough. Ants come fried or
chocolate coated. In this new
parlour game you can run out
of friends long before you run
out of insects.
COOK'S NIGHTMARE—Mess Sgt. Charles Kruzewski of Co. G.,.
143rd Inf., gazes in awe at a small portion of the 35 million
-pounds of government rice stored at the Comet Rice Mills in
Houston, Texas. 'According to an Army cookbook, if rice
pudding were made from the contents of the warehouse, there
would, be enough to serve every man, woman and child in
North America, Africa, Australia and half of: Europe. Kruz
ewski's comment on the Texas -size pudding. "That's a: lot of
raisins in any cook's -nightmare"
MOTHER AT 14 -Married at 13 and a mother at 14, Mrs. Betty
McDermott poses with her two -day-old daughter, Kitty Lee, in
a hospital. Kitty's father/ .17 -year-old Marine PFC. William
McDermott, will not get to see his new daughter until Thanks-
giving, when he gets his first leave.
TABLE TALKS
dam Andpews.
It's easy to make several kinds
of cookies at a single baking.
The secret is a basic dough which
can be rolled for regular baking,
:nixed with other ingredients for
drop cookies, or, used for turn-
overs, even a cookie pie crust
can be made of it. Here is a
recipe for ginger cookies which
can be used in this manner. Gin-
ger is in the basic dough.
GINGER COOKIES
11/2. cups sifted flout
Ye teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon soda
134 teaspoons ground ginger
1/2 cup shortening
of cup light molasses
34 cup dark brown sugar
34 cup white sugar.
4 teaspoons cider vinegar
1 egg, unbeaten
Sift together first 4 ingredients.
Melt shortening in a saucepan
large enough for mixing dough;
add molasses, brown and wh$te
sugar, and vinegar. Mix well;
cool. Beat in egg. Stir in flour
mixture. Chill overnight or until
doughy -is stiff enough to handle.
Roll dough to 1h -inch thick-
ness on lightly floured ., board.
Cut into desired shapes with
cooky cuttre. Place in lightly
greasted cooky sheets. Bake 7-8
minutes in pre -heated 400° "F.
oven. Cool. Store in tightly
closed jar. Makes 3 dozen 2 -in.
cookies.
FRUITED DROP COOKIES
Stir 4 cup mixed glazed fruits,
seeded raisins, or chopped nuts
into the above dough as soon as
It is mixed, Drop dough from
teaspoon onto greased cooky
sheet; top each with pecan half
or glazed cherry or a big raisin.
Bake 15 minutes at 375° F.
FRUITED TURNOVERS
Roll the basic chilled dough
to 1A -inch thickness, on lightly
floured board. Cut into 4-5 inch
circles; place a rounded table-
spoon dried fruit filling (recipe
follows) on one side of each and
fold over other half of circle.
Press edges together firmly with
tines of fork. Bake 16-20 minutes
at 350° F.
FILLING FOR TURNOVERS
Bring , s/z pound dried fruit
(apples, apricots, peaches, pears
or mixed fruits) to boil in cold
water to cover. Remove from
heat; let stand 1 hour. Cook, cov-
ered, until fruit is tender. Drain
off excess juice; mash fruit and
add 3 tablespoons sugar, 1 table-
spoon lemon juice, '/e teaspoon
grated lemon rind, 1/2 teaspoon
salt, and 1 teaspoon ground cin-
namon. Mix well.
GINGER COOKY PIE CRUST
Roll chilled basic cooky dough
to ei-inch thickness. Cut a circle
the size of bottom of pie plate
to be used. Fit it into bottom of
plate. Cut 14 -inch cookies from
additional rolled dough and place
around sides of pie plate. Cookies
should overlap about 1/2 -inch on-
to bottom crust, as well as over-
lapping each other around the
sides, and should extend about
1A -inch out onto rim of plate.
Prick entire surface with fork,
Bake 12-15 minutes in 350° F.
oven. Cool. Fill with chiffon type
of filling. * * . *
These golden brown, delicately
textured cookies are made from
a French recipe that has been
adapted for Canadian family
use.
GOLDEN PECAN LACE.
COOKIES
W cup cream
3 tablespoons golden
shortening
33444 cup brown sugar
1 cup chopped pecans
2 cup sifted flour:
1 taespoon ;vanilla
In a saucepan combine cream,
shortening, and sugar and bring
to boil Remove from'. heat and
stir in remaining ingredients.
Drop batter from tablespoon on-
to a well -greased baking sheet.,
Keep drops 3 inches apart. Bake
10 minutes at 350° F. Cool for
5 minutes and then remove im-
mediately from baking sheet to
cake rack to cool thoroughly.
Makes 2 dozen 3 -inch cookies.
* w a
Another party cooky is topped
with s; mixture ofchopped toast-
'oed almonds and sugar. This re-
cipe makes 10 dozen cookies.
CRISPALMOND COOKIES
1 cup butter
1 cup sugar
1 cup - thick sour cream
3e teaspoon soda
2 egg yolks
11/2 teaspoon grated lemon
rind
1 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon salt
3-3?/2 cups flour
9/a cup finely chopped
toasted almonds
2 tablespoons sugar
Combine butter, 1 cup sugar,
cream, and Ye teaspoon soda in
heavy saucepan. Place over heat
and stir until sugar dissolves.
Boil, stirring occasionally, until
thick (10-15 minutes). Cool to
lukewarm. Beat in egg yolks,
lemon rind, I teaspoon soda, and
salt. Add enough flour to make
a medium stiff dough. Roll
dough, / teaspoon at a time, in
palm of hand to form a small
ball. Place 3 inches apart on an
=greased cookie sheet. Press
flat with bottom of glass dipped
in sugar. Sprinkle with mixture
of almonds and 2 tablespoons
sugar. Bake at 325° F. 10-12 min-
utes, or until edges are browned.
Note: To use this dough in
cooky press, use less flour.
a * O
Honey and nuts make these
cookies popular for lunch boxes
or dinner sweets.
HONEY -NUT COOKIES
34 cup butter
z✓ cup sugar
1 egg beaten
34 cup honey
2 cups sifted flour
2 teaspoons baking
powder
7/ teaspoon salt
1 cup finely chopped nuts
Cream butter and add sugar
gradually. Mix egg and honey
and add alternately with the
sifted dry ingredients and nuts
to the butter -sugar mixture.
Chill dough, then form into roll
the desired size and wrap in
heavy wax paper. When firm,
Cut into slices with sharp knife.
Make at 375° F. for 10=15 min-
utes, or until lightly browned.
LAZY DAY—Providing an inter-
esting study in Might„and sha_
dow, ' pretty Angela Malone'
takes her ease on a convenient
beach chair in Nassau, Saha
mas. Angela was brightening the scenery at a:Nassau hotel.
Sandwich Lunches
Simplified
If, after preparing at least
three meals a day, you find you
can whip up little creative en-
thusiasm for those lunches that
have to go to work or school,
why not devote a part of a
morning to freezing a whole
week's supply of sandwiches!'
Preparing and freezing sand-
wiches on a production -line
basis saves you both time and
ingredients " and provides you
with an opportunity to add
variety and interest to lunch-
eons that must be eaten away
from home.
Frozen sandwiches, which
thaw „ within, two to four hours,.
are at their best by lunch time
if you place them frozen in the
schoolbag, briefcase or lunch
box in the morning.
Various fillings -meat, fish,
cheese, peanut butter, combined
imaginatively with spicy season-
ings or ,condiments -may be
prepared in one session and
then refrigerated until you re-
quire them. Pure mayonnaise
or raw vegetables, such as let-
tuce, should not be used in fin-
ings of sandwiches that you in-
tend to freeze.
You can add interest to lunch-
eon, sandwiches
unch-eon,sandwiches by varying the
choice of breads you use. Be-
sides white bread there are, for
example: pumpernickel, oatmeal,
cheese, rye, banana, cracked
wheat, nut, Vienna loaf, raisin,
French bread, and soft rolls,
either round or long. Day-old
bread is the best for sandwiches
as it is easier to slice and to
spread with butter. And it is
actually "freshened" by freez-
ing.
Before assembling your sand-
wiches, allow the butter to
soften at room temperature, and
then cream it with a spoon until
light. Arrange all the bread
slices in rows for easy spread-
ing, and then butter all of them
in one operation, using a flexi-
ble spatula.
If you are using sliced meats,
remember that several. thin
slices - are much easier to eat
than a single thick one. In the
case of spreads, make these
moist enough to spread easily,
but not so moist that they will
sun out. You may find a small
ice-cream scoop or other defin-
ite measure helpful in allotting
the same amount of filling to
each sandwich.
Your freezer wraps, for ex-
ample, polyethylene sheets or
bags, should be placed in posi-
•
tion for the easiest possible use
in packaging the sandwiches ai
soon as they are made and 'cut.
These wraps maybe sealed with
cellulose tape.
When the wrapping is finish-
ed, insert in your sandwich
packages a slip of paper indicat-
ing the ,kind of bread and fill-
ing used in each and the date of
freezing, ` If possible, arrange
the packages in the freezer in
the order of the days of the
week on which they will be
eaten.
"Freezing" sandwiches in your
refrigerator compartment is not
the same as freezing them ' in
your home freezer. Your refrig-
erator compartment, • as,• you
know, is net equipped for fast
freezing and maintenance of .a
steady temperature. Correct
freezing of foods requiresthat
they be quick-frozen and kept
in storage at zero degrees or
lower.
Sandwiches placed in your
home freezer will keep for 90
days, But your refrigerator
compartment should not be used
to freeze sandwiches or hold
frozen foods for longer than a
week.
PAN FISH
The stranger: stopped his car
to watch an angler on the river
bank. First the fisherman caught
a big pike, but he promptly un-
hooked it and threw it back.
In a matter of minutes he
landed a large trout, but threw
that back too.
FinaiIy, he caught a small
perch and smiling happily de-
posited it in his creel. The
stranger was naturally curious.
"Say," he called out, "why did
you throw those two big ones
back and keep that little perch?"
The fisherman grinned, shrug-
ged and then replied, "Small
frying pan!"
SALLY'S SAWS.
eft
'Some of the new Paris fash-
ions will be of big help, too,
FASHION HINT