
Jack Benny at the microphone, a photo listed on EBay for $9.97.
Here are some of Jack Benny’s Christmas shows, courtesy of Archive.org.

Jack Benny at the microphone, a photo listed on EBay for $9.97.
Here are some of Jack Benny’s Christmas shows, courtesy of Archive.org.

Dec. 20, 1934: In case you doubted me (but you wouldn’t, would you?), here’s a recipe for the Bronx Cocktail, from the Amsterdam Evening Recorder, courtesy of FultonHistory.com.
In case you plan to mix one up, a Bronx Cocktail is one part Italian vermouth, three parts brandy and a dash of orange bitters. Shake well!
Notice that there are also three variations of the Manhattan.

Martians kidnap Santa Claus in the heartwarming Christmas favorite “Santa Claus Conquers the Martians.”
OK, everybody has had their yearly fix of “It’s a Wonderful Life.” Time for *my* traditional Christmas favorite: “Santa Claus Conquers the Martians.” Via Hulu. Watch for Pia Zadora (you do remember Pia Zadora, don’t you?) in the terrifying “polar bear sequence.”
To the person searching for “clod cases in San Francisco”: Check your spelling. On the other hand, you might be able to find a clod case in San Francisco.
Or two.

I found this inscription last night at the Last Book Store in a copy of “Hollywood Death and Scandal Sites” by our old nonsense-slinging friend E.J. Fleming of “Wallace Beery beat Ted Healy to death in the parking lot of the Trocadero” fame. I put it back ($10? Are you kidding?) but not before copying this long inscription to Amy. Nothing says “I love you” like Hollywood deaths and scandals.

The Santa Claus newsboy cap, available for $32 here.
It’s Christmas Eve! Are you still wondering about a last-minute present?
It may be too late to get a Santa Claus newsboy cap, but here’s a gift that lasts all year, doesn’t need to be wrapped and doesn’t cost a penny: A year’s subscription to the L.A. Daily Mirror!
Season’s Greetings and Merry Christmas!

Rounding out our stroll along the radio dial, we check in with an NBC special Christmas Eve broadcast from Hollywood, Dec. 24, 1943, with reports from service personnel around the world. The host is Bob Hope, with Lionel Barrymore and Bing Crosby.
Hope reads the message from the troops in New Guinea: “Everyone found time to open his presents and read his mail. Other than these activities, Christmas on New Guinea is a case of it being Saturday and another day of war.”
And at the 44:40 mark, FDR has a special Christmas message.
The show was announced as a 90-minute program, but the recording ends at the 1:15 mark, so it’s possible the last 15 minutes of the show are missing.

Feb. 10, 1936: Times artist Charles Owens and columnist Timothy Turner visit Miss Abegale Stark, 72, who lives in the back of a house built for her father in the 1880s. She says the family came to California in a covered wagon in 1860 and they originally had a ranch in Newhall but “the big fires on the range one year in the ’70s drove us out.”
The home was originally on a 110-foot by 165-foot lot with fruit trees, but she sold off bits of it over the years and by 1936 was renting out the front to a locksmith and a shoeshine man.


Yes, the Manhattan cocktail once had competition from drinks named for the other boroughs. Here’s a recipe for the Brooklyn Cocktail, from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, March 7, 1937. The Brooklyn Cocktail as made by Brad Dewey consisted of
Two parts Jamaica rum
One part lime juice
Dash of grenadine
We won’t be toasting the new year with the Brooklyn Cocktail (we’re working) but if someone is brave enough to try one, let us know how it is.
And in case you are wondering, research shows that there was also a Bronx Cocktail. Evidently it, too, has fallen out of favor.

A photo of Jack Benny, left, and Fred Allen from “Love Thy Neighbor,” listed on EBay at $14.80.
Christmas with Fred Allen and guest Jack Benny, from 1937, courtesy of Archive.org.

Dec. 19, 1943: A new Philco radio cost the equivalent of of $1,721.07 in 2013 dollars.
I had such an interesting time exploring Archive.org in search of radio broadcasts for Christmas 1943 that I have decided to try adding radio broadcasts as a regular feature. When I began heavily researching Los Angeles in the 1940s, there was some OTR (old-time radio) online, but most of it was held by collectors who sold copies of shows on cassette.
Today, however, OTR enthusiasts have shared many hours of recordings with Archive.org or otherwise placed some of their collections online, which makes it possible to follow our base year, 1944, through radio broadcasts.
Although it’s impossible to reconstruct a complete radio schedule (except for the upcoming D-day coverage on June 6), I was able to find at least one recording — and sometimes several recordings — for almost every day. The summer breaks are a challenge and I may fill those gaps with earlier versions of shows that were still on the air or some undated shows from sometime in the 1940s.
Among the selections are: Fred Allen, Jack Benny, “Duffy’s Tavern,” “Lux Radio Theater,” “The Great Gildersleeve,” “Suspense,” “Inner Sanctum,” “Amos ‘n’ Andy,” “Fibber McGee and Molly,” and lesser-known shows like “Information Please” and “Strange Dr. Weird.” Some shows like “Lux Radio Theater” are well represented. On the other hand, I could only find one episode of “Gangbusters.” In another example, there are lots of episodes of “Lum and Abner,” but nothing from 1944.
Tune into 1944: The Year in Radio starting Jan. 1, with “Challenge of the Yukon.”

Our mystery movie is indeed “City Streets,” directed by Rouben Mamoulian, with cinematography by Lee Garmes, which is quite a remarkable film. As far as I can tell, it’s not in commercial release (except in a Region 2 version in Spanish), which is most unfortunate. If you only think of Guy Kibbee as the foxy grandpa in “42nd Street” and “Gold Diggers of 1933,” you will find that he’s very different here.
This is apparently part of the Paramount library controlled by Universal, and perhaps that has some reason as to why it hasn’t been released. If anyone knows more, drop me a line.

And for Monday, a mystery woman. (Yes, this is Sylvia Sidney, who was a newcomer at the time “City Streets” was made.)

Carol Hughes as photographed by Schuyler Crail, courtesy of Mary Mallory.
For decades, motion picture studios churned out thousands of motion picture still photographs — candids, scene stills, off-camera shots, and portraits — to employ as free advertising for films and stars in magazines and newspapers, desperate for product to fill their many editions and pages. Every conceivable angle and subject would be covered in hopes of securing printing.
Studios shot candid photos of celebrities attempting to show them in new or touching ways, be it working at home, spending time with their friends and families, playing on the lot, or visiting stores, restaurants, and hot spots all over Los Angeles. Little did they know that many of these shots would also help document the historic built environment and act as a form of archaeology for local historians.
Mary Mallory’s “Hollywoodland: Tales Lost and Found” is available from Amazon.

A photo of Fibber McGee (Jim Jordan) and Molly (Marian Jordan) listed on EBay at $9.99.
While we are twirling the radio dial looking for Christmas shows, here are some episodes from “Fibber McGee and Molly.”
From 1941 (Dec. 16, 1941, after the bombing of Pearl Harbor) | From 1944 | From 1949 | From 1953, courtesy of Archive.org.

Another staple of the radio era was a production of “A Christmas Carol” starring Lionel Barrymore as Ebenezer Scrooge. From Christmas Eve, 1939, courtesy of Archive.org.

This program from the Mason Opera House for a 1920 performance of “The Mikado” has been listed on EBay, with bids starting at $5.50. The Mason was one of the leading theaters on Broadway. It was demolished in the 1950s to make way for a Cold War monstrosity that was in turn demolished after being damaged in the Northridge earthquake. After several years of being nothing but a big hole in the ground, the site is now undergoing construction for federal courthouse.

Which will look like this.

After the show, stop in at the Pig and Whistle at 224 S. Broadway, now the site of The Times parking structure.

For someone interested in the earlier history of Los Angeles, that is, outside the traditional Raymond Chandler/noir era that draws the most interest, you might consider Paul Bryan Gray’s “A Clamor for Equality,” another example, like Christina Rice’s “Ann Dvorak” of a determined researcher leaving no stone unturned in seeking out information about a relatively unknown subject. Here’s a column I wrote for The Times about Gray.
“A Clamor for Equality” is available from Skylight Books and Amazon.

We stopped by Cafe de Leche in Highland Park to pick up some coffee today and found this sketchbook. It’s a project of the 50NYork Gallery. Here’s some of the artwork: