What I’m Reading

Feb. 6, 2015, Books

Yesterday’s mail brought two long-anticipated books. The recently published “Missing Reels” by Farran Smith Nehme and an advance copy of Mary McCoy’s “Dead to Me.” I may do nothing but read this weekend.

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Black Dahlia: From the Archives, 1998

 

Feb. 5, 2015, Talk Soup
One of my projects while on sabbatical is digitizing my old videotapes. And look what I found!

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Posted in 1998, Black Dahlia, Cold Cases, Hollywood, LAPD, Television | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Last Remaining Seats 2015

Last Remaining Seats

The Los Angeles Conservancy has announced the films for its 2015 Last Remaining Seats series. I wish I could be more enthusiastic about this year’s LSR, because the conservancy does terrific work, but the programming is about as adventuresome as TCM’s 31 Days of Oscar or the old Classic Film section at Blockbuster:

“Psycho.”
“City Lights.”
“How to Marry a Millionaire.”
“Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.”
“Raiders of the Lost Ark.”

Meh. I used to be a big fan of Last Remaining Seats, but the selections haven’t been that interesting in recent years.

One film does sound worthwhile and that’s the Argentine picture “Dios se lo pague” (“God Bless You”), the traditional Spanish-language feature of the series. There’s a funky copy on YouTube in case you are curious about it.

Posted in 2015, Coming Attractions, Downtown, Film, Hollywood | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo Bonus Edition

Leatrice Gilbert

Here’s a true mystery photo, sent along by a member of the Brain Trust. The young girl in this photo is Leatrice Gilbert, the daughter of Leatrice Joy and John Gilbert. The question is whether anyone can identify the man in the photo.

Note: Leatrice Gilbert was born in 1924 and I would guess she is no more than 4 years old in this picture, which would make it about 1928.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , | 15 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

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This week’s movie was the 1926 MGM silent picture “Exit Smiling” with Beatrice Lillie (one of Friday’s mystery guests) and Jack Pickford (Thursday’s mystery guest). The story was by Marc Connelly, screenplay by Sam Taylor and Tim Whelan with titles by Joe Farnham. It was directed by Sam Taylor.

 

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , | 28 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Marc McDermott, Man of Dignity

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Marc “MacDermott” on the cover of Motion Picture News.


Cultured and dignified whether playing lecherous aristocrats or burdened family men, Marc McDermott and his subtle acting drew accolades from critics and the public throughout his almost twenty year film career. Inhabiting a character from within, he brought realism and thoughtfulness to his performances. His natural vulnerability added a touching empathy to the many disabled and hurting characters he portrayed onscreen. While physically embodying these parts, however, he remained guarded in his personal life.

Born July 21, 1881 in Gouldbourne, New South Wales, Australia to Irish-born parents, Marcus Patrick McDermott dreamed of acting from a young age. He was educated at Jesuit College before hitting the boards at as a teenager in order to support his family. In a May 1912 interview with “Motion Picture Story Magazine,” McDermott recounted his early experience in the theatre. Actor George Rignold spotted the young man in a performance, adding him to his stock company for a production of “Henry V.” For the next seven years, McDermott toured the Australian continent with Rignold before joining Mrs. Patrick Campbell’s company, spending five seasons touring the United States and the United Kingdom with her in many productions, particularly “The Joy of Living.” He spent a season in London at Windham’s Theatre in “Peggy Machree,” before returning to the US to act with Richard Mansfield, Charles Frohman, and Klaw and Erlanger.

Mary Mallory’s “Hollywood land: Tales Lost and Found” is available for the Kindle.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Julian Eltinge and Trixie Friganza!

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Look what we found on YouTube! It’s a brief clip that shows two of our favorites: Julian Eltinge, above, with Gloria Jean, and Trixie Friganza in “If I Had My Way.”

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What We’re Reading: The Taft Building by Roger Vincent

Jan. 30, 2015, Taft Building

In case you don’t follow the Daily Mirror’s Twitter feed, here’s a story we like, by Roger Vincent, who covers commercial real estate for The Times. With great photos by the one and only Gary Friedman.

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Holocaust Remembrance Day

This is an especially appropriate day to recall the editorial stand of the Los Angeles Times in the 1930s toward European refugees. In a March 30, 1938, editorial,  The Times opposed wholesale admission of European refugees, saying that they would either go on welfare or take jobs away from Americans.

No, really, that’s what The Times said.

Posted in 1938, World War II | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

A Question for the L.A. Daily Mirror Brain Trust

May 17, 1962, Deadline

“Deadline” was a television show that premiered in Los Angeles on May 17, 1962, hosted by Paul Stewart, whom you may recall as Raymond in “Citizen Kane.” Drop me a line if you have any copies of the show. Thanks.

Posted in 1962, Television | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Jan. 31, 2015, Follow Me Quietly
This week’s mystery movie has been the 1949 RKO thriller “Follow Me Quietly,” with William Lundigan (Friday’s mystery gent), Dorothy Patrick (Thursday’s mystery guest), Jeff Corey (Wednesday’s mystery guest), Edwin Max (Friday’s mystery guest) and Douglas Spencer (Tuesday’s mystery guest). It was written by Lillie Hayward from a story by Francis Rosenwald and Anthony Mann, photographed by Robert de Grasse, with music by Leonid Raab and directed by Richard O. Fleischer.

It was released by Warner Archive in 2011.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , | 51 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: The House of Westmore Beautifies Hollywood

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Ann Sheridan promotes the House of Westmore.


Since the 1920s, the Westmore family has served the entertainment industry as some of the greatest practitioners of makeup artistry. From leading studio makeup departments to creating unique makeup effects, the Westmores have excelled at promoting and publicizing the art of beautification, often blazing new trails in the process. In fact, they were the first active entertainment industry professionals to open a successful salon on the side serving both their studio clientele and the general public, known as the House of Westmore.

Patriarch George Westmore introduced the family to the beauty field back in England, getting his start at as an assistant to a barber, lathering and shaving clients, and as apprentice hair-dresser. From an early age, he drummed into his sons the importance of soap and simple things when it came to beautification. Percival “Perc” Westmore claimed in his book, “The How-To Beauty Guide For 1950s Woman,” that their father told them every night, “The beginning of facial loveliness is in a bar of pure mild soap and a jar of cleansing cream.” Makeup artists and hairstylists nicknamed their annual awards, the Georgie Awards, after George Westmore, in honor of his pioneering work.

Mary Mallory’s “Hollywoodland: Tales Lost and Found” is available for the Kindle.
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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory | Tagged , , , , | 5 Comments

A Puzzle From 1944

May 13, 1944, Double Crostic

As part of my sabbatical from the blog (yes, this is a working sabbatical) I have been immersing myself in the 1940s and that includes the neglected job of tackling the random assortment of papers on my desk.

Several years ago, I printed out this Double-Crostic from the May 13, 1944, issue of Saturday Review on Unz.org and this morning I finally had a chance to take it on.

I like Double-Crostics (the New York Times publishes them in the Sunday magazine as Acrostics) and I consider myself a moderately good puzzler, but I quickly discovered this one was extremely difficult.

In case you don’t know, the Double-Crostic consists of two parts. The solution is a brief quote, usually from a book. The solver is given a list of clues, answers them (ideally) and then writes the letters from the answers into the puzzle grid.

Spoilers ahoy!

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Posted in 1944 | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Research Update From 1947

For those don’t follow my Twitter feed @latdailymirror:

Unz.org is a fabulous repository of historic magazines and I have been reading a variety of 1947 issues to immerse myself in the year.

Here’s a thought-provoking essay from the Saturday Review, which says that the gains made by American women since the 1920s were under siege in the postwar era. Women who had to work to support their families during the Depression or in factories during World War II were now being pushed back to the kitchen stove.

Saturday Review, Jan. 18, 1947.

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Tech Issue

Some Mac/Safari users say they get a warning on LADailyMirror.com that the security certificate is missing or that it may be a fake site. Anyone else getting those messages? If possible send me a screen shot. Thanks.

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An Update From 1947

I have been immersing myself in 1947 and for those readers who don’t follow my Twitter feed (@LATDailyMirror) or Facebook page, here’s what I have been up to.

From January 1947:

The American Mercury muses on Arthur Vandenberg’s chances in the 1948 presidential race. http://bit.ly/1yFOOwH

Newspaper headline writing as it was in 1947 (“probe” was a necessary evil even then) from the American Mercury. http://bit.ly/1GpHsRi

What’s an “angledog?” Scholars studying American dialects were on the trail in 1947. http://bit.ly/1zu5oPI

Housing and birth control, 1947: Many veterans’ wives are seeking to delay children until they have their own home. http://bit.ly/1yEcvCc

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

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This week’s mystery movie has been the 1957 Twentieth Century-Fox film “A Hatful of Rain,” with Eva Marie Saint (Friday’s mystery guest), Don Murray (Thursday’s mystery guest), Anthony Franciosa (not shown), Lloyd Nolan (Wednesday’s mystery guest) and Henry Silva (Tuesday’s mystery guest).  It was written by Michael Vincente Gazzo and Alfred Hayes, based on Gazzo’s play. With music by Bernard Herrmann, photographed by Joe MacDonald and directed by Fred Zinnemann.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , | 70 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Venice Miniature Railway, Tourist Attraction and Realty Estate Promotion

Venice Mini Railway
A postcard showing Venice’s miniature railway, courtesy of Mary Mallory.


In the early 1900s, Los Angeles and environs were booming. Ballyhoo from groups like the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, railroads, the Automobile Club, realtors, and civic groups promoting Southern California as a promised land to Midwesterners and easterners stuck in cold climates drew thousands to the area. Slogans such as “the Land of Sunshine” and “Sunlit Skies of Glory” described the area as a new Eldorado for more than sixty years.

The expansion of streetcar lines by people like Henry Huntington, Eli P. Clark, and M. H. Sherman opened new areas of Los Angeles and environs to possible subdivision for all the new immigrants to the golden land. Real estate promoters rushed to fill these needs with multitudes of housing developments. One of these, New Jersey transplant Abbot Kinney, envisioned an elaborate recreation of romantic Venice, Italy, south of Ocean Park and Santa Monica as both theme park and community, from the Rancho La Ballona land he and partners had purchased.

Mary Mallory’s “Hollywoodland: Tales Lost and Found” is available for the Kindle.

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Posted in Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

On the Radio: 1947

I’m trying to immerse myself in the period (remember we have been doing 1944 and the 1947project was 10 years ago, so I listened to a few radio programs from January 1947.

Jan. 17, 1947: “The Lone Ranger.”

Jan. 18, 1947: “The Hollywood Barn Dance.”  

Jan. 18, 1947: “The Life of Riley.”

Jan. 18, 1947: “For Your Approval: This Is Jazz.”

Jan. 19, 1947: “A Doll’s House,” with Basil Rathbone and Dorothy Maguire.

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Black Dahlia: Wikipedia Fail

Jan. 17, 2015

Here is what’s wrong with Wikipedia:

“The Black Dahlia” was a nickname given to Elizabeth Short … Short acquired the moniker posthumously by newspapers in the habit of nicknaming crimes they found particularly lurid.

FAIL.

Elizabeth Short was nicknamed the Black Dahlia at a corner drugstore in Long Beach as a play on the then-current film “The Blue Dahlia.” After she was killed, the Los Angeles Herald Express, which often nicknamed murders, called her case “the Werewolf Murder” or “Werewolf Killing,” but the nickname was ignored in favor of the Black Dahlia.

Of course, this entry might be changed tomorrow, next week or even later today and then restored in a “revert war.”  I have given up any hope of fixing errors in Wikipedia because I don’t have the proper incantation to repel all the trolls who live there. But trust me, it’s wrong.

Previously:

Me vs. Wikipedia
Wikipedia: Murder and Myth, Part 19

Posted in 1947, Black Dahlia, Cold Cases, LAPD, Wikipedia | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments