r Jean Arthur in “Cameo Kirby” Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur - “The Plainsmen” - Directed by Cecil g DeMille James Stewart and Jean Arthur - “You Can’t Take It With You”. Jean Arthur, Frankie Darrow, Toim Tyler in “The Cowboy Cop”. Jean Arthur: A Pictorial Interview Arranged by Sheila Creef “The most profitable screen heroine that a studio can create... is a heroine whose beauty is so overwhelming that it allows her own character never to come into play and therefore never to be called in question. We do not fret over the lack of social purpose, charity, humor, or anything else in such perfections of the type as Greta Garbo, Hedy Lamarr, Marlene Dietrich. But nothing is so irritating as the mildly pretty blonde whose beauty is barely acceptable in the first few feet of film and who subsequently has no other charm to offer. Those who fall between these extremes are the majority of stars who combine good looks and certain typical whimsicalities or personal traits of humor, temper, sarcasm-- some single quality that is entertaining because it is effective to dramatize. Most movie-goers seem to prefer this compromise formula as a steady diet, probably because it offers superior beauty to any they are personally familiar with, but is at the same time linked up- by the chosen personality characteristic- with a life they know. Thus Jean Arthur’s husky downrightness and loyalty, Claudette Colbert’s tongue-in-cheek, Carole Lombard’s air of honest- to- goodness exasperation. Ginger Rogers’ natural acceptance of hard facts: these are the individual characteristics of current favorites who were all originally consigned to a career of solemn prettiness.” Alistair Cooke Jean Arthur, Van Heflin, and Alan Ladd, - “Shane” - Directed by George Stevens.