Black Dahlia: Not for Young Readers

True Crime - The Black Dahlia Shattered Dreams by Brenda Haugen

Imagine my surprise to find this little gem floating around on the Internet, and I see that I’m a couple of years late.

According to Amazon, it’s a 2011 account of the Black Dahlia case for middle school students, although there is conflicting information saying that the target audience is grades 4-8. It lists for around $30, which makes it one of the most expensive Dahlia books on the market.

Who is the author, Brenda Haugen? Her online biography isn’t terribly useful, saying that she’s a former reporter and likes dogs. She appears to be a prolific author of children’s books on such core academic subjects as the Founding Fathers (Franklin, Hamilton), presidents (Lincoln, Roosevelt), dictators (Hitler, Stalin), women (Amelia Earhart,  Annie Oakley) and other familiar core academic figures (Frederick Douglass, Langston Hughes and Cesar Chavez).

And then we find a couple of crime books on the Great Train Robbery, Zodiac and the Black Dahlia.

If you do a little digging, you can find portions of the Black Dahlia book online.

And if you rummage around in what’s posted online you will see that Haugen has relied on “Severed,” which is 25% mistakes and 50% fiction; the notoriously bad  “Black Dahlia Files” by Donald Wolfe;  Steve Hodel’s “Black Dahlia Avenger”;  the heavily censored FBI files and possibly Will Fowler’s “Reporters.” Apparently she didn’t use Janice Knowlton’s “Daddy Was the Black Dahlia Killer.” And no, there’s no reference to me, which is fine.

There are many mistakes in “Severed,” but one particular error is search engine DNA. All I have to do is search for this particular error and I know the author has either taken it from “Severed” or from another author who got it there. Sure enough, it’s in “Shattered Dreams.”

As I have said repeatedly, the Black Dahlia case is absolutely inappropriate for young readers and I’m horrified to discover that this book is actually featured on the library’s page at Lewis and Clark Middle School in Omaha, Neb. I won’t even discuss the case with high school students who ask me for help on their term papers because they aren’t mature enough for some of the details, no matter how worldly they think they are.

“Shattered Dreams” is ranked 617,322 on Amazon sales, behind other books dealing with the case such as “The Badge” (77,569), James Ellroy’s “The Black Dahlia” (104,326), “Severed” (149,863),  “Black Dahlia Files” (360,058), “Black Dahlia Avenger” (431,766), and ahead of “Daddy Was the Black Dahlia Killer” (1,363,542).

And no, it won’t be coming to stay at the Daily Mirror H.Q.

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1944 in Print — Erskine Johnson

April 3, 1944, Erskine Johnson

April 3, 1944

And here’s a little feature from Erskine Johnson on a singer named Yvette (Elsa Harris)or is she Elsie Silvers?

From the Miami News.

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1944 in Print — Life Magazine, April 3, 1944

Life Magazine, April 3, 1944

April 3, 1944

A dog is this week’s cover photo for a story which says that city dogs are just as healthy and happy as country dogs.

The movie feature story is child star Margaret O’Brien.

Courtesy of Google Books.

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It Was a Kinder, Simpler Time, April 3, 1944

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1944 in Print — Hollywood Gossip by Louella Parsons, April 3, 1944

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April 3, 1944, Louella Parsons

April 3, 1944

The rumors were widely circulated last week that Lana Turner and Steve Crane had reached a breaking point. So I asked Lana. “Oh for heaven sakes,” she said, “we have been so peaceful for a year. There isn’t any trouble. I am working and he is working and we haven’t time to battle.” I asked about Cheryl, “Sensational,” was Lana’s reply. “She’s the best. Come over and see her and tell me if I’m not right.” Lana’s whole life seems wrapped up in that baby.

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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1944 in Print — ‘I Hate Actors’ by Ben Hecht

April 1, 1944, Colliers

April 1, 1944

This is the article by Ben Hecht mentioned in Sidney Skolsky’s column. If you’re patient, you can dig it out of the files at unz.org.
It starts on Page 24 and continues to Page 43 and you’ll have to be persistent to slog through it, frankly. The more I read of Hecht’s work the more I question his reputation. I’m a big fan of “The Front Page,” but some of his later writing is pretty iffy, especially the bogus article in “Playboy” about the “whitewash” of Paul Bern’s suicide.

A sample:

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1970s VHS Nostalgia

NBC Proud as a Peacock

I have been going through some of my old VHS tapes, which I burned to DVDs. Who remembers this ad campaign from 1979?

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Books From the Slush Pile: ‘Charlie Chaplin, Director’

Review Copies

The reject pile! Aspiring authors, avert thine eyes!


This is a sample of review copies that are cast aside in bins to be rummaged through by the staff. Usually they are contemporary genre fiction (“50 Shades of Stealing Maps for the OSS/CIA/NSA/FBI Written by Tom Clancy From Beyond the Grave”), self-help books (“Lose Those Stubborn Last 50 Pounds While Raising Young Einsteins in Five Days!”) and scholarly works (“The Socio-Cultural Effect of the Introduction of the Crimped Bottle Cap in the Belgian Congo.”)

But occasionally there are books that seem somewhat interesting. At least interesting enough to lug back to the Daily Mirror HQ. Because it’s sad to see them junked by the cartload.

charlie_chaplin_director

Here’s today’s entry, a new book from the Northwestern University Press on Charlie Chaplin.

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1944 in Print — Hollywood by Sidney Skolsky, April 2, 1944

April 2, 1944, Skolsky

April 1, 1944

HOLLYWOOD, April 1 — War Notes of the Week: Looking at the front page of most of the local papers you wouldn’t know that there was a war on, for the headline and most of the page is devoted to the Chaplin case … John Garfield from his recent letter, is now in Algiers …. Don The Beachcomber, who took that name legally, is now Captain Beachcomber, and is in charge of the rest camp in, of all places, the Isle of Capri.

From the Miami News.

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1944 in Print — Hollywood Gossip by Louella Parsons, April 2, 1944

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The Sentinel is serializing “Goodnight, Sweet Prince,” Gene Fowler’s biography of John Barrymore, with illustrations by James Montgomery Flagg.

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April 2, 1944

Louella Parsons asks Ann Sheridan: “When are you and Steve Hannagan going to take that big step?”

Sheridan says: “Steve is grand. I have more fun with him than any man I know and I am not denying to you that I like him better than anyone else. But say, for heaven’s sake, you’re not trying to get me married — isn’t twice enough?”

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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1944 in Print — Hollywood by Sidney Skolsky, April 1, 1944

April 1, 1944, Sidney Skolsky

April 1, 1944

Meet Sidney Skolsky (d. 1983), a Hollywood-based gossip columnist. Let’s give him a month and see if he’s a keeper.

HOLLYWOOD, April 1 — It doesn’t matter who your favorite movie critic is, you can’t ignore those exhibitors who write their own reviews in the Motion Picture Herald. After a while, they’ll become your favorites, also, for they don’t pull their punches and are humorous sometimes without intent.

Exhibitor F.A. Falle of Ont., Canada writes about “Higher and Higher”:

“The airwomen were out in force, they feigned swoons, clapped and tried to give the impression that they were really enjoying it. The airmen were silent. Generally, the show was not as good as expected.”

And about Red Skelton in “Whistling in Brooklyn”:

“Of course the public will come if there is a chance that they will get some laughs, which is what they expect of this supposed comedian. He clowns, but my audience did not seem to think it was funny by the silence that was apparent when the laughs were supposed to come; that is the reception it received. He has no original line and frankly I don’t see how he gets by, and neither do most of my audience from the chill that it got.”

From the Miami News.

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1944 in Print — Hollywood Gossip by Louella Parsons

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April 1, 1944, Louella Parsons

April 1, 1944

HOLLYWOOD, March 31 — If Olivia de Havilland can straighten out her affairs and if there are no legal complications, she will do “Made in Heaven” at RKO. Charles Koerner just bought the comedy from — and here’s an amusing slant — Jack Warner, Livvy’s former boss. “Made in Heaven” was originally bought by Jack with the intention of starring Olivia or Priscilla Lane. Now both girls are gone, so he sold it to Koerner.

I don’t believe Warners will lift a finger to prevent Olivia from making the picture. Perhaps Jack knew when he sold the story to RKO that Charlie had Olivia in mind. Since Livvy is still in the Aleutians she won’t be able to discuss this romantic comedy about a wife who thinks she is going to die then sets out to choose her husband’s second wife — until her return.

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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LAPD Parker Center Cop Shop Files (Updated)

Howard Gantman Press Room

In 2013, I was given a box of material that was cleaned out of the old press room at the LAPD’s Parker Center headquarters, sometimes called “the cop shop.” The box was a jumble of press releases, photographs, artists’ sketches and other items dating from the late 1960s to the early 1980s. I am organizing and cataloging the material and I’ll be posting selected items.

This is one of those mysterious pieces of paper in the cop shop files. Obviously it’s some sort of shipping label … but Howard Gantman?   If you have any ideas, email me.

Update: Several people emailed to say: “These are phone books, you moron!” To which we answer “Yes, we know. In fact we have a collection of vintage Los Angeles phone books and city directories in the Daily Mirror library.”

The question is what was Howard Gantman doing at the LAPD Cop Shop?

Ed Epstein replies:

Howard Gantman worked for UPI in LA. He then worked for Senator Dianne Feinstein in Washington for many years, as her communications director.    He left her staff in 2009 and now is communications director for the Motion Pictures Association of America, the powerful MPAA.    His offices are just a block from the White House.

FYI: As a fan of Old Hollywood, I love your LAdailymirror.com.

Thanks for your help, Ed!

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: ‘Poor Pauline,’ Parody Sheet Music

 

Poor Pauline
“Poor Pauline,” courtesy of Indiana University.



W
hile sheet music was sold and manufactured beginning in the 1700s, only in the late 1880s did its sales truly take off, when Tin Pin Alley music companies began springing up. By 1900, sheet music was red hot, sold for use in homes, bars, clubs and the stage. Songwriters and publishers created music about almost anything: food, entertainment, home, love, animals, anything could be featured in a song.

Movies were introduced in America in 1895 and by the early 1900s, construction of nickelodeons skyrocketed. By about 1907, entrepreneurs began constructing theaters, which attracted more middle-class audiences. Attendance once again swelled. Many exhibitors even provided such entertainment as singing along to popular songs of the day by employing song slides, which listed lines of lyrics and colorful illustrations on pieces of thick glass. Thus, cross-pollination between movies and sheet music increased sales and receipts for each.

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

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March 2014 Reader Survey

2014 Reader Survey

Here are the results as of Saturday. I’m guessing the figures may change a bit, but not too much.

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Posted in 1944, Books and Authors, Columnists, Film, Hollywood, LAPD, Mary Mallory, Radio | Tagged , , , , , , | 10 Comments

1944 on the Radio — ‘First Nighter’

radio_dial_1944

March 29, 1944: “The Chinese Gong” on “The First Nighter” with a script by Arch Oboler. Sponsored by Campana! Courtesy of otronmp3.com.

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1944 in Print — Walter Winchell on Broadway, March 29, 1944

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March 29, 1944

The Private Papers of a Cub Reporter

The following is an editorial from the St. Louis Star-Times titled: “Dies Committee’s Un-American Investigation of Winchell” … “The Dies committee to investigate Un-American activities, in the course of its distressingly protracted longevity, has investigated almost everything else. So no one should be surprised that the Dies committee is now investigating Walter Winchell, famous radio commentator and columnist.

* * *

“Always open to criticism on the grounds that it has sought to make headlines, that it has itself furnished material for anti-American elements by its constant Red-baiting and its failure to expose Fascist groups, the Dies committee is now wandering clear off the reservation in a spite attack on Winchell.

From the St. Petersburg Times.

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1944 on the Radio — Brian Aherne on ‘Burns and Allen,’ March 28, 1944

radio_dial_1944

March 28, 1944

It’s Tuesday in  1944, which means we have:

Brian Aherne is the guest on “Burns and Allen.” Listen for the Frank Sinatra jokes. Courtesy of Otrrlibary.org via Archive.org.

The Great Gildersleeve visits “Fibber McGee and Molly.” Courtesy of Archive.org.

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1944 in Print — Hollywood Gossip by Louella Parsons, March 28, 1944

March 28, 1944, Comics

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March 28, 1944

HOLLYWOOD, March 27 — If you’ve seen “Oklahoma” you’ll remember the red-haired American named Marc Platt, who dances with the grace of Fred Astaire. Well, Marc has been signed by Columbia and is heading for Hollywood to play opposite Rita Hayworth and Janet Blair in “Tonight and Every Night.” Not bad for a newcomer to get two such beauteous co-stars.

The story about young Platt is an amusing one. He studied ballet and took the name of Patnoff when he joined the Ballet Russe. His Russian nom de plume was quickly dropped when he went into the Americania musical “Oklahoma.”

From the Milwaukee Sentinel.

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