Movie Mystery Photo

    May 3, 2010, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo 

I am always amazed by the Daily Mirror’s “brain trust,” which is my nickname for our readers. I never fail to be impressed by how much people know – or can find out. These mystery guests are a perfect example because I was starting to think I’d stumped everybody and Evelyn Tremble came along Thursday and identified them. Please congratulate her. (She says it was easy, thanks to Google).

In selecting the mystery photos, I always look for a set of five pictures with at least one especially interesting image. In this case, the first photo of these dancers – as children – was the reason. As Arye (Leslie) Michael Bender  pointed out in a comment, these is a certain JonBenet Ramsey quality to the way the young girl is made up like an adult.

Update: a reader comments: This week's entry is ridiculous. You violate the your concept of Movie
Mystery Photo with these two unknowns and unknowables who have a total
movie history of two insignifcant scenes in two irrelevant and unseen
movies in 1935. Can't you play fair with your own game and your readers?

Here's your answer: You raise an interesting question. I suppose
most people
see the mystery photos as nothing more than a fairly difficult trivia
contest
but it's not. (And for the record, my first criterion is that I don't
recognize
them–I wouldn't get a single one of these pictures).

The mystery photos are actually all
about fame — and how ephemeral it
really is. Every one of these people had their picture in a major
American
newspaper numerous times. And yet most of them are utterly forgotten
today.
People spend so much of their lives trying to be famous — or obsessing
about
famous people — and it's all so terribly fleeting.

June 10, 1927, Billy and Beverly Bemis  

This dance team performed under a variety of names. Here’s a video of them. They’re best known as Billy and Beverly Bemis, although they also performed as Edith and Bill Wilshire.   This Times item from June 10, 1927, gave their names as Billie Bevans and Vivian Mitchell.
 

Billy Bemis, June 10, 1927

I'm not entirely certain they were even brother and sister. The back of the photo gives one address for Billy and another for Beverly, who is listed as Vivian Mitchell, but has the same phone number.

Billy decided to give up dancing and get married about 1938 and Beverly tried to build a career on her own, although she evidently didn’t have much success. I can’t find anything further about them in The Times.  These were mystery guests who really were mystery guests!

Just a reminder on how this works: I post the mystery photo on Monday and reveal the answer on Friday … or on Saturday if I have a hard time picking only five pictures; sometimes it's difficult to choose. To keep the mystery photo from getting lost in the other entries, I move it from Monday to Tuesday to Wednesday, etc., adding a photo every day.

I have to approve all comments, so if your guess is posted immediately, that means you're wrong. (And if a wrong guess has already been submitted by someone else, there's no point in submitting it again).

If you're right, you will have to wait until Friday. There's no need to submit your guess five times. Once is enough. The only reward is bragging rights. 

The answer to last week's mystery star: Vera Lewis!

There’s a new photo on the jump!


 

 May 4, 2010, Mystery Photo
 
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Dec, 21, 1934: Jack Crosby, assistant dance director to LeRoy Prinz, poses with "Edith and Bill Wilshire," sister and brother dancing team making their debut in Paramount's "College Rhythm."

Here’s another photo of our mystery couple with a ghostly companion!

I decided to add two photos today…

. May 5, 2010, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

billy_bemis_1938_0607B 

1938: Billy is a student at Southwestern University…

The first is of our mystery couple …

May 5, 2010, Mystery Photot
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: After Billy decided to get married, Beverly tried to built a career on her own.

… and the second one is of our mystery woman.

 beverly_bemis_1937_0809B

Update: Beverly is getting a “nasal reduction operation.”

Notice that in the days before Photoshop, the art department retouched her figure while it was taking out the netting in the background. The information on the back of the photo, above, shows it was published, but evidently not in the microfilmed edition.

May 6, 2010, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: In 1935, they are the rage of London…

Here’s another photo of our mystery couple …

billy_bemis_1935_0615B

 May 6, 2010, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: In 1937, Billy and Beverly were performing before showings of “The Barrier.”

… and one of our mystery woman. I’m not sure why they posed her with a paper cup. I guess they needed a prop. 

beverly_bemis_1937_1202B

May 7, 2010, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo
Update: A 1937 photo of Beverly….

May 7, 2010, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: And Kenneth William Bemis in 1947.

Jan. 28, 1947, Bemis

Jan. 28, 1947: Kenneth W. Bemis is in court in a child custody case.
Unknown's avatar

About lmharnisch

I am retired from the Los Angeles Times
This entry was posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography. Bookmark the permalink.

34 Responses to Movie Mystery Photo

  1. Anne Papineau's avatar Anne Papineau says:

    Nelson Eddie and Olivia de Havilland?

    Like

  2. Lee Ann Bailey's avatar Lee Ann Bailey says:

    Is it George and Olive Brasno?

    Like

  3. Anne Papineau's avatar Anne Papineau says:

    Gene Raymond?

    Like

  4. fibber mcgee's avatar fibber mcgee says:

    I’m gonna guess Fred and Adele Astaire.

    Like

  5. CatM's avatar CatM says:

    Looks like a young Bing Crosby with a young Patricia Neal!

    Like

  6. Rogét-L.A.'s avatar Rogét-L.A. says:

    Buddy Ebsen and his sister, Vilma?

    Like

  7. Arye (Leslie) Michael Bender's avatar Arye (Leslie) Michael Bender says:

    Jonbenet Ramsey dancing in heaven with the child version of Van Johnson?
    (From a parallel universe, you understand).

    Like

  8. Mary Mallory's avatar Mary Mallory says:

    The Two Pucks, Harry and Eva.

    Like

  9. Eve's avatar Eve says:

    I dunno who they are, but I’ll wager that poor little boy got beat up a LOT.

    Like

  10. Dewey Webb's avatar Dewey Webb says:

    Brenda Lee?

    Like

  11. fibber mcgee's avatar fibber mcgee says:

    Love the photo of Gary Cooper with just half a woman. Better than nuttin’, I guess. Which brings us to the tale (tail?) about the mermaid but I won’t repeat it here.

    Like

  12. Eve's avatar Eve says:

    DAY-um! As usual, I know who it’s not: Mitzi Mayfair and Hal LeRoy. She’s not June Havoc; they’re not Little Foys . . .

    Like

  13. Anne Papineau's avatar Anne Papineau says:

    Hermes Pan?

    Like

  14. Carmen's avatar Carmen says:

    Grace & Ray McDonald

    Like

  15. Mary Mallory's avatar Mary Mallory says:

    Billy Daniel and Dorothy Dalton.

    Like

  16. Rick Scott's avatar Rick Scott says:

    The lad looks like Gene Nelson-long before “Oklahoma.”

    Like

  17. Deb's avatar Deb says:

    Angela Lansbury?

    Like

  18. Richard Wegescheide's avatar Richard Wegescheide says:

    How about Gower Champion and Jeanne? Pre-dating Marge and Gower.

    Like

  19. Claire Lockhart's avatar Claire Lockhart says:

    Paul and Grace Hartman

    Like

  20. Mary Mallory's avatar Mary Mallory says:

    Catherine Sanford and Billy Griffith.

    Like

  21. Native Angeleno's avatar Native Angeleno says:

    It’s Velez & Yolanda. Bet my foreclosed house on it!

    Like

  22. Eve's avatar Eve says:

    Nope, I am not even going to pretend I have a clue this week.

    Like

  23. Dewey Webb's avatar Dewey Webb says:

    Guy looks like Billy Tipton.

    Like

  24. Eve's avatar Eve says:

    Well, in that case, could the girl be Bert Savoy?

    Like

  25. Arye (Leslie) Michael Bender's avatar Arye (Leslie) Michael Bender says:

    So far, everybody I’ve considered as an answer has been covered by other bright people. Still stumped.
    Good stuff!

    Like

  26. Rogét-L.A.'s avatar Rogét-L.A. says:

    I believe the guy may be Jerry Doherty, but I have no idea who the doll is.

    Like

  27. Julie Merholz's avatar Julie Merholz says:

    The title of your column is Movie Mystery Photo. Neither one
    of these people were ever in a movie. There were plenty of mystery movie actors for you to choose from. Why are you choosing unknown people who are not in movies and are not actors? These two were never “stars” of anything! Shame on you!

    Like

  28. B.J. Merholz's avatar B.J. Merholz says:

    This week’s entry is ridiculous. You violate the your concept of Movie Mystery Photo with these two unknowns and unknowables who have a total movie history of two insignifcant scenes in two irrelevant and unseen movies in 1935. Can’t you play fair with your own game and your readers?

    Like

  29. fibber mcgee's avatar fibber mcgee says:

    Your contest is no fun if the mystery folks are too easy to guess and much not fun, either, if they are too hard. But a mix of both is okay, with a few medium-difficult folks sandwiched in beween. One should try to extend oneself now and then. And that’s my humbug opinion.

    Like

  30. Dewey Webb's avatar Dewey Webb says:

    Surely there’s some middle ground between “gimmees” like Pier Angeli and Louise Beavers, and what-the-hey? types like this pair and recent other show biz obscurities who appeared in one or two movies without even receiving any billing. Just because some fringe entertainer got their photo in a local newspaper a few times more than sixty years ago doesn’t mean there’s any reason anyone today would know them.

    Like

  31. glenfrank52's avatar glenfrank52 says:

    The addresses on the back of the first photo provide clue to search on ancestry.com, and found their names in the 1920 and 1930 Federal censuses, as well as Social Security information. The children in the first picture are not brother and sister. The girl in that picture is not the woman named “Beverly Bemis” in the later photos.
    Kenneth William “Billy” Bemis – b.7 Jun 1918, Hennepin, MN; d. 14 Apr 2006, Naples, FL. Father in 1930: Fruit stand salesman
    Vivian Frances Mitchell – b. 2 Apr 1918, Los Angeles, CA; d. 24 Oct 1991, Newport Beach. Father in 1930: Restaurant manager. Married Living Claunch 1939; divorced.
    In the census information, Billy Bemis has a sister named Edith B. Bemis, later known as Beverly Bemis (married name Dewindt in 1980).

    Like

  32. glenfrank52's avatar glenfrank52 says:

    There’s more . . .
    From zoominfo.com: Beverly Bemis DeWindt is a teacher and practitioner of Christian Science in Arcadia, California. She entered the full-time practice of Christian Science healing in 1959, and she has been a teacher of Christian Science for 34 years. She writes for The Christian Science Publishing Society’s magazines and for spirituality.com.

    Like

  33. Stacia's avatar Stacia says:

    For what it’s worth, I found another website if anyone else was interested in these two. Like glenfrank52 mentioned, they appear to have been brother and sister, but heck if I know why she occasionally went by completely different name.
    http://www.mar-ken.org/biosaf/bemise.html

    Like

  34. Mary mallory's avatar Mary mallory says:

    These people WERE stars, if you’ve done research, you will find out that they danced all over the world. Larry does play fair game with his readers, because he covers the spectrum of easy to hard. Many of the photos that many of the readers would consider hard are easy for me because I see many silent and talkie movies on film that aren’t on DVD, as do several of the other players of this game. We love the challenge. And Larry is right about fame. No one knew who Vincent Van Gogh was in the late 1880s, because he sold only ONE painting while he was alive, he became incredibly important and famous LONG AFTER he was dead. No one knows now who the most popular or famous painter was in Van Gogh’s day. What does that tell you about fame?

    Like

Comments are closed.