‘Laura’ — The Making of a Film Noir Classic, Part 1

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The May 15, 1944, post by Louella Parsons about Rouben Mamoulian asking to be released as the director of “Laura” made me think that it would be worth taking a closer look at the production of the 20th Century-Fox film, based on the 1943 novel by Vera Caspary. What is now considered a classic film noir had a difficult birth. There were a number of cast changes and script revisions, and Mamoulian was replaced by Otto Preminger over what was described at the time as a difference of artistic vision. According to the DVD commentary by Rudy Behlmer, Mamoulian refused to even discuss the movie with him.

In her autobiography, “Secrets of Grown-Ups,” Caspary tells of her disinterest in writing a detective story.

“Mysteries had never been my favorite reading,” she says. The murderer, the most interesting character, has always to be on the periphery of action lest he give away the secret that can be revealed only in the final pages. If mystery writers were to expose character in all of its complexity, they could never produce the solution in which the killer turns out to be the butler, the sweet old aunt or a birdwatcher who ruthlessly kills half a dozen people in order to get hold of the cigarette case with a false bottom that conceals a hundred-thousand-dollar postage stamp.”

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip, Louella Parsons, May 27, 1944

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Carole Landis and William Eythe play cards.

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May 27, 1944

HOLLYWOOD, May 26 — Ingrid Bergman is one of the few actresses who has all hits, all runs and no errors to her credit, so I am not surprised that Alfred Hitchcock has arranged with David Selznick to star her in “The House of Edwardes,” which I am told has turned out to be a great script. Well, Hitchy hasn’t done so bad on the matter of successful pictures and since I have seen “Gaslight” I shouldn’t think Ingrid would hesitate a moment to do another one of those shockers.

Speaking of Ingrid, I received a letter from Pvt. John Miller, who writes at length. He says of her: “Sometime when you have space in your column I wish you would give Ingrid Bergman a plug for the boys in Alaska. She could be the most aloof and important actress in Hollywood. Instead she came to us as one of the gang — dancing with all of us. She was like someone out of this world and most of us came nearer to peace and heaven when we were with her than we ever will until we leave Army life.”

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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Movieland Mystery Photo — The TCM Singing Cowboy … SOLVED!

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Credit to Mike Hawks. This is Joe Morrison in “La Fiesta de Santa Barbara.”

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I know everybody who reads the Daily Mirror has seen our friend the TCM Singing Cowboy. Whoever does the introductions for “TCM Extras” loves the singing cowboy and always sneaks him in. Here he is in the current introduction. He’s also in the previous version, and I’ll root around in the archives to see if I can find it.

TCM Singing Cowboy

He even appeared in the special “TCM Extras” introduction for the 31 Days of Oscar, 2012.

As everyone knows, I’m not a huge enthusiast of Westerns. How about a little help? Who is this guy?

Note: Because I don’t know who this is, I’m going to post answers as they come in rather than waiting until later.

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I found the previous version of the “TCM Extras” introduction (from 2011) and our singing cowboy isn’t there. I’m sure I’ve seen him pop up somewhere else, though…. Hm.

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Sidney Bracy: Hollywood’s No. 1 Butler

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Sidney Bracy in an undated photo. Courtesy of Mary Mallory.



W
hat makes one person a star, why another languishes in tiny parts or obscurity? Is it charisma, sex appeal, luck, opportunity, that pushes them over? And what about someone who was a star, and slips into small roles? Do tastes change, the industry changes, and this person is no longer the flavor of the month?

Such is the story of Australian Sidney Bracy, once a theatrical star and major player in film before falling into playing mostly small parts like butlers, valets,and the like. While his acting career lasted most of his life, he only saw recognizable success for about 15 years. His life revolved around acting and he continued to make a living at it during a time when there was no Social Security, no benefits and no residuals. Life for him was performing, no matter how large the stage.

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

 

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1944 on the Radio — ‘The First Nighter’

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May 24, 1944:
“The First Nighter” in a show titled “Speak Ever So Gently.” Courtesy of otronmp3.com.

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

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May 23, 1944

HOLLYWOOD, May 22 — Fr. Flanagan’s “Boys Town” was a big money maker. So it is no surprise to hear that MGM has bought the rights to film a movie around the idea of “Boys Ranch,” the farm near Amarillo where delinquent boys are trained and rehabilitated.

The idea is similar to Fr. Flanagan’s wonderful institution that has done so much to put youngsters on the right road in life. “Boys Ranch,” however, is operated by a group of Texas businessmen who believe the great outdoors is the best and happiest place for boys who need spiritual as well as physical care.

The “ranch” has been described in national magazines, thereby giving Metro a running jump in popular interest. Jackie Jenkins, who looks like an angel (and ain’t) gets a top role.

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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LAPD Parker Center Cop Shop Files: Celina Renee Manning, Missing Teenager

Jan. 23, 1974, Celina Renee Manning

Jan. 23, 1974

In case you just tuned in, I was given a box of material that was cleaned out of the old Cop Shop at the LAPD’s Parker Center and I’m slowly going through the files.

Our subject is Celina Renee Manning, who sometimes used the name Celina Renee Garcia, who was reported missing Jan. 15, 1974.

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1944 in Print — Life Magazine, May 22, 1944

May 22, 1944

May 22, 1944

America is waiting breathlessly for the impending invasion of Europe. In Dallas, churches promised to ring their bells and open their sanctuaries for prayer as soon as the invasion was announced.

With the South hit by flooding and late rains, many fields were filled with water. In Georgia, a correspondent writes: “White women for the first time in my memory are working in the fields in large numbers.”

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The movie of the week is “Gaslight,” which stars Charles Boyer and Ingrid Bergman. At right, the Broadway cast of “Angel Street” with Vincent Price and Judith Evelyn.

Courtesy of Google Books.

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip, May 22, 1944

May 22, 1944, Comics

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May 22, 1944

HOLLYWOOD, May 21 — Joan Bennett laughed when I mentioned that I had heard on the Twentieth lot that she was to co-star with Fred MacMurray in “Nob Hill.” “It looks,” said Joan, “as if I am inheriting all Merle Oberon’s castoffs. First, ‘The Woman in the Window,’ and now ‘Nob Hill.’ ” Only a gal with Joanie’s grand sense of humor would have kidded herself, because most actresses hit the ceiling at any suggestion that they are second choice.

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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Phlange Welder Lives Again

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When the Daily Mirror was at latimes.com, I did some digging into the many adventures of “Phlange Welder,” a fictitious name that was slipped into The Times beginning in 1961. The Los Angeles Examiner had its own fictitious person, Victor Frisbie, who rather miraculously appeared in The Times occasionally after the demise of the Examiner in 1962.

In 1994, Evelyn “Evie” De Wolfe compiled Phlange’s many exploits into a book, long out of print, which has been reissued with new material. She is having a book signing on Saturday, May 24, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. at Chevalier’s Books, 126 N. Larchmont Blvd.

I should emphasize that such antics aren’t tolerated today and even at the time, according to newspaper veterans, Otis Chandler threatened to fire anyone caught slipping Phlange’s name into the paper. Of course, in those days it wasn’t possible to go through ProQuest and hunt them out, as it is now, and research shows that the Phlange pranksters were a busy bunch.

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, May 21, 1944

May 21, 1944, Olivia De Havilland

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May 21, 1944

Louella Parsons asks Olivia De Havilland: “Do you feel your court battle with Warners will affect your chances of getting back to the screen and good pictures?”

“Certainly not,” she said. “I won and am now reading scripts, but I am not eager to start work until John leaves. You see, he’ll only be here eight weeks.”

Olivia meant Capt. John Huston, Walter’s soldier son, and she makes no secret of the fact she loves him and that they’ll marry whenever he is free to do so. We talked of how it affected our lives to have the man of our hearts overseas and not know where he is stationed.

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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Books From the Slush Pile: ‘Carsick’ by John Waters

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Rejected review copies molder in bins. Avert thine eyes, aspiring authors!


I have a millennial friend who thinks hitchhiking is a fine idea. Having lived through the 1970s, when thumbing a ride was considered cool, I told her about my experiences of getting picked up by drivers who were high, etc. etc., which finally forced me to quit hitching. She was unimpressed.

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Which raises the question of whether you would give a lift to John Waters, who embarked on a hitchhiking odyssey from Baltimore to San Francisco and writes about it in the forthcoming book “Carsick” published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights — Medical Arts Building

Medical Arts Building
Mary went on a field trip to visit the Toluca Plaza building (formerly the Medical Arts Building) for her latest post, but some of her photos got caught in my spam filter. Here they are.

This is “Aunt Nell” “trying to hustle out of the picture.”

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Out of the Past: An LAPD Cold Case From 1948

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The northwest corner of Central and Manchester avenues, as shown on Google Earth. Notice the alley behind the stores.


In nine years of blogging about Los Angeles, I have learned that families often launder the past and, understandably, murder is rarely mentioned to the younger generations.

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, May 20, 1944

May 20, 1944, Comics

May 20, 1944, Louella Parsons

May 20, 1944

HOLLYWOOD, May 19 — Don Ameche and Twentieth Century-Fox are parting company. After a series of conferences failed to bring about an agreement, Don decided to move to another studio. His contract expires the last of June.

This news comes as something of a surprise, since Don has been with Twentieth for eight years. The only other pictures he made were when he has been on loan out.

Don was a radio star when he joined the Fox co. and has had some of their most important vehicles, perhaps the most important being “Heaven Can Wait.” He still has two unreleased pictures, “Greenwich Village” and “A Wing and a Prayer.”

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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Movieland Mystery Photo ( Updated + + + + )

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights — 4418 Vineland Ave. Yesterday and Today

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O
ver the decades, towns and cities undergo great change as they evolve from agrarian societies into metropolitan areas. Multi-unit residential properties, modern office buildings and skyscrapers replace older buildings and styles of architecture, now considered too old-fashioned by some.

Many original buildings often survive a city’s transformation, some because they are located in what are now poorer communities that can’t afford to demolish them, while others undergo adaptive reuse. Currently, many buildings in downtown Los Angeles are undergoing gentrification and repurposing, such as decades-old factories seeing conversion as lofts and vintage hotels converted into apartments. Luck also helps some structures survive and continue operation just as originally intended.

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

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Books From the Slush Pile: ‘The Selected Letters of Elia Kazan’

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The bins of rejected review copies. Aspiring authors, avert thine eyes!

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Note: I have been rummaging through the bins of review copies put out for the staff, trying to pick out books that are related in some fashion to the L.A. Daily Mirror’s themes.

“The Selected Letters of Elia Kazan,” edited by Albert J. Devlin and Marlene J. Devlin, published by Alfred A. Knopf, $40, caught my interest. I’m a snoop at heart and enjoy reading old letters and I suspect I’m not the only one. A volume of William Faulkner’s correspondence from World War I enjoyed a long and happy life in the guest bathroom at the Daily Mirror HQ before it eventually vanished.

This is a weighty book – 672 pages – but is, unfortunately, only half the conversation as we never hear from any of Kazan’s correspondents, who include Tennessee Williams, Clifford Odets,  John Steinbeck, Budd Schulberg, Molly Day Thacher (Kazan’s wife) and many others.

An in-depth review appears in the New York Times | A review in the Hollywood Reporter

A few of the letters are short – like the one warning Warren Beatty to clean up his act to avoid being typed as a troublemaker. But most are long and involved. The book is certainly not beach reading and more likely to end up in nuggets in DVD commentaries, but it’s worth keeping around. On the jump, a sample selected at random, to Marlon Brando, Pages 241-244, regarding “On the Waterfront.”

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1944 in Print — Hollywood News and Gossip by Louella Parsons, May 16, 1944

May 16, 1944, Comics

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May 16, 1944

HOLLYWOOD, May 15 —  A year ago Dick Haymes sat on a park bench in New York and wondered how he was going to support his wife and baby. Today he is to have the lead opposite Betty Grable in “Diamond Horseshoe” when it goes before the cameras Aug. 1. That is an assignment any actor would welcome because Betty’s movies are tops at the box office.

After Darryl Zanuck took a look at Dick in “Irish Eyes Are Smiling,” he ordered retakes and added scenes. He realized he had something in Haymes who, in addition to that golden voice, has turned out to be quite an actor.

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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‘Laura’: The Making of a Classic Film Noir – Adventures in Research

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Louella Parsons’ May 15, 1944, item on Rouben Mamoulian being replaced as the director of “Laura” has inspired a long detour into the production of the film – beginning with Vera Caspary and her 1942 novel. Given the typical state of research in Hollywood biographies (heavy borrowing in lieu of original pick and shovel work) it’s not clear that much new work has been done on the film. Many sources seem to rely mainly on the account in Rudy Behlmer’s 1982 book “Behind the Scenes” (Behlmer also provided a commentary track on the DVD of the film).

Which brings me to my appeal to the brain trust:

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The Library of Congress has the papers of Rouben Mamoulian, who was apparently reluctant to ever discuss being fired from the project.  In the finding aid (which may be downloaded), we find intriguing items in Boxes 76 and 77 regarding “Laura,” including various scripts, “costume and hair tests” and schedules.

A trip to Washington to examine these tantalizing items is, alas, far beyond the travel budget of the  L.A. Daily Mirror. But are there any members of the brain trust who are able to rummage through the Mamoulian items in search of something new on “Laura?” If so, drop me an email.

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