Category Archives: Hollywood

October 4, 1943: American Troops Enter Bomb-Shattered Naples

October 4, 1943: Tom Treanor says of the liberation of Naples: The Germans left Naples in a truly deplorable condition. In a huge hospital for incurables I myself saw 70 rotting corpses of men, women and children. They were killed in street fighting during the past week and authorities were unable to move their bodies because of the lack of transportation. Continue reading

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October 3, 1947: Full House – Burglar Slips In on Mystery Writer’s Poker Game

October 3, 1947: Reddest face in town yesterday belonged to Charles Bennett, writer of screen mysteries in which the brilliant detective always catches the crook. While he had a few friends in for a card game, a burglar crawled through a window and stole his wife’s purse and a pair of earrings. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, October 3, 1944

October 3, 1944: Danton Walker says: Complaints of civilians who have had to wait while Nazi prisoners are fed in dining cars have resulted in a new ruling; hereafter the prisoners must remain in their guarded cars and eat out of waxed paper boxes. Continue reading

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October 2, 1947: On Skid Row, Homeless Children Mourn Their Beloved Sister Ollie

October 2, 1947: Sister Ollie (though she was famous under another name) died happy, according to her mother, Sister Sibbie, the superintendent at Sunshine Mission, 558 S. Wall St., a shelter for homeless women and children on skid row. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, October 2, 1944

October 2, 1944: Danton Walter says: Part of the campaign to eliminate Nazi influence in the postwar world is an order from Washington to commanding generals to destroy all films made in Germany since 1933, Danton Walter says. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, October 1, 1944

October 1, 1944: The always unpredictable and exciting Maria Montez never fails to come through with some unexpected and dramatic episode when I talk to her, Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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September 30, 1959: Matt Weinstock

Sept. 30, 1959: “The body of a San Bernardino Freeway crash victim was hurled into a tree where it hung unnoticed for five hours today” … W.C. Fields vs. Cecil B. DeMille … and Matt Weinstock on some friendly traffic officers. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 30, 1944

September 30, 1944: Lucille Ball, since her separation from Desi Arnaz, has gone to live in the Hollywood home of Jody and Renee (DeMarco) Hutchinson, Danton Walker says. Continue reading

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: It All Began With a Barn

In Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory looks at the history of Hollywood Heritage Museum, which began as a barn that served as the first moving picture studio. Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

For Monday, we have a mysterious woman. Continue reading

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September 28, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 28, 1959: Matt Weinstock has the story of a woman who attended a movie at Grauman’s Chinese Theater and felt a light tap on her leg. It was her seatmate’s pet snake, Gertrude, who loved the movies. Continue reading

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September 27, 1963: Married Couple Held in Blackmail of Single Woman for $27,000

September 27, 1963: I always thought blackmail was something that only occurred in old Perry Mason episodes, but here’s an actual case and it’s quite strange. It involves a married man blackmailing a single woman. No really!

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September 26, 1959: Matt Weinstock

September 26, 1959: Al Capone’s widow is preparing to sue over the film “Al Capone,” seeking a share of the profits, Matt Weinstock says. Gene Tierney has been released from the Menninger Clinic, a news story says. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 26, 1944

September 26, 1944: Hollywood’s fear of emphasizing the war angle of war pictures that not a single shot is fired in “Abroad With Two Yanks,” Danton Walker says. Continue reading

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Texas teenager arrested in death plot, September 25, 1958

September 25, 1958: Diana was a brilliant teenager … until that day she decided to kill her family. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 25, 1944

September 25, 1944: All the battles Sam Goldwyn had with Warner Bros. over rights to “Those Endearing Charms” will come to naught. When he purchased the play it was taken to the Dramatists Guild for a settlement on the claim Sam had bought it before Warners. Now he’s sold it through his agent to RKO, Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Life Magazine, September 25, 1944

September 25, 1944: Claire Poe of Miami Beach, Fla., appears on the cover of Life’s special issue “A Letter to GIs,” because she is the kind of good-looking American girl that a lot of GIs know and would like to hear from. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 24, 1944

September 24, 1944: Why is young Van Johnson the idol of the bobby sox brigade and at this moment crowding Frank Sinatra and Alan Ladd for top honors? Van isn’t handsome, he hasn’t a striking physique and he hasn’t Frankie’s ability to sing, Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, September 23, 1944

September 23, 1944: I don’t wonder William Goetz is eager to get Loretta Young started before the cameras. She looks so wonderful since the birth of her baby, and so radiant. He has decided to co-star her with Gary Cooper in Gary’s first independent production, a western, tentatively titled “The American Cowboy,” Louella Parsons says. Continue reading

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Los Angeles Silent Film Festival Debuts

Mary Mallory takes a look at the recent Los Angeles Silent Film Festival, which included favorites like Harold Lloyd’s ‘The Freshman’ to the newly restored ‘Silk and Saddles.’ Continue reading

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