Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights – Cinecon 2013, Part 2

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A still from “Suddenly It’s Spring” has been listed on EBay with a price of $9.35.


Labor Day weekend at Cinecon is jam-packed with movies all day. For the first time, Saturday’s session began a little later at noon, and ran until midnight.

The short “A Fresh Start” (1920) featured Jimmie Adams and Lige Conley chasing showgirl Marvel Rea from the cabaret at which they work. Chase sequences ensue from her husband, a policeman, through the boarding house, park, and through the original LA Zoo, where lions get in on the act.

The Jane Withers’ film, “The Holy Terror” (1937) was a fun if predictable musical with Jane as a naval officer’s daughter who hangs around with the enlisted men putting on shows and singing musical numbers, but who end up saving the secret plane from spies. Images of the Fox back lot and an airport were visible.

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Barbara Graham Sobs During Son’s Visit to Jail

Sept. 6, 1953, Comics
Sept. 6, 1953, Barbara Graham

Sept. 6, 1953: Barbara Graham, on trial in the Mabel Monahan killing, sobs “almost hysterically” as she holds her 18-month-old son, Tommy, during a visit at the Hall of Justice, The Times says. He was in the custody of his grandmother Anne Webb.

Bessie Lill, veteran court reporter, retires after 34 years at the age of 70. Lill worked mostly in civil court and said one of her most interesting cases was “the old water litigation in the 1920s when much of California’s water law was written.” Lill used the Pitman method of shorthand, she says. No stenographic machine for her!

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Posted in Art & Artists, Comics, Crime and Courts, Downtown, Film, Hill Street, Obituaries | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights — Cinecon 2013, Part 1

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Featured at Cinecon: Carmen Miranda in “Down Argentine Way.”


Another year, another Cinecon. A jam-packed schedule of watching films, sharing meals, and trying to catch up with friends from far and near during the five days. Cinecon, a 49-year-old film festival, shows rare and rarely screened silent and sound motion pictures from the classic studio era, many never exhibited since their original releases.

Though selected films are not chosen by themes or subjects, many unexpected themes, subjects, and plot points pop up during the run of a festival. This year’s Cinecon dealt with naughty pet monkeys, paintings over the head, transportation, attempted deceptions and betrayals, forbidden love, and political and social issues during its first three days.

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Union Pleads With Streetcar Workers Not to Strike

Sept. 5, 1943, Comics

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Sept. 5, 1943: Explaining that “war strategies between President Roosevelt and Britain’s Prime Minister Churchill come first,” William P. Nutter of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen pleads with dissatisfied employees of the Pacific Electric Railway to stay on the job.

At issue is a raise approved for streetcar employees that is higher than permitted under wartime wage-price restrictions.

With an acute labor shortage in Los Angeles and the impasse over raises, eight to 10 streetcar employees are quitting every day to take more lucrative jobs, a union official says.

P.B. Harris, head of the Los Angeles Street Railway Co., says the company is hiring every day but cannot keep up with the number of workers who are quitting.

“The bus situation is not as bad,” he says.

Among the best sellers in Los Angeles: “The Robe,” by Lloyd C. Douglas and “One World” by Wendell L. Wilkie.

Times columnist Lee Shippey begins a series of lectures at the Broadway in Hollywood. His first is “What Shall We Do About Russia.”

Hedda Hopper profiles Wallace Beery and says: “The real boss of the Beery home is Carol Ann Beery, his adopted daughter. They’re inseparable. If Wally is dumb like a fox, Carol Ann is dumb like two foxes.”

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Posted in 1943, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Lee Shippey, Streetcars, Transportation, World War II | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Union Pleads With Streetcar Workers Not to Strike

Our Sainted Streetcars – Glendale Edition

Glendale Depot

A postcard showing what the vendor says is a depot for the Los Angeles and Glendale Electric Interurban Railway system has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $249.99.

Times clips show that by 1904, the Los Angeles and Glendale Railway Co. had been absorbed by the Interurban Railway Co. The clipping also shows that a judge issued a restraining order to stop the laying of rails on 3rd Street between Figueroa and Flower. The complaint filed by the city says that the Interurban Railway Co. was laying tracks without a right, permit or franchise.

Welcome to another page in the checkered history of Los Angeles’ sainted streetcar system.

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Downtown L.A. — Street Artist (Updated)

Sept. 3, 2013, Street Artist

I came across this street artist last evening while walking in downtown Los Angeles. He’s painting a street scene of the corner of Broadway and 7th Street.

Update: Ed Fuentes identifies our artist: “Alex Schaefer. And he has a show opening soon at District Gallery (3rd and Traction).”

Thanks, Ed!

Here’s a close-up of his work:

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Posted in 2013, Architecture, Art & Artists, Broadway, Downtown | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Man Kills Wife and Daughter, Commits Suicide Over Pink Bedroom

Sept. 4, 1933, Comics

Sept. 4, 1933, Streetcar Crash
Sept. 4, 1933: A streetcar broadsides an auto at the crossing on Olympic Boulevard between Broadway and Figueroa, killing two people and leaving two others near death, The Times said.

A man fatally stabs his estranged wife and daughter, then slits his throat after an argument because his wife had the bedroom painted pink.

The vice squad raids the Cock Roost in North Hollywood, a club on South Main and the Tia Juana Inn at 1150 Santa Monica Boulevard. Police arrested 13 people on assorted charges of gambling and liquor violations. More than 100 clubs have been raided since the vice squad began raids less than a week ago.

Seven young women come to Hollywood seeking stardom in a “film experiment.” You have never heard of any of them.

Erich von Stroheim’s third wife, Valerie, is in the hospital after being badly burned in a bizarre accident when she went for a shampoo and manicure at Jim’s Beauty Shop, 6769 Sunset Blvd. The Stroheims met during the filming of “The Heart of Humanity.”

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Posted in 1933, Art & Artists, Comics, Downtown, Film, Homicide, LAPD, Main Street, Nightclubs, San Fernando Valley, Streetcars, Suicide, Transportation | Tagged , , , , , | 9 Comments

Tempest Storm at the Follies Burlesque

Tempest Storm

An undated photo of the famous Tempest Storm at the Follies Burlesque in Los Angeles – which reveals more than I am showing here – has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $17.95.

Posted in Dance, Downtown, Found on EBay, Main Street, Theaters | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

On the Frontiers of Medicine

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The complete Sept. 5, 1863, edition of the Los Angeles Star is available at USC and the California Digital Newspaper Collection.

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Sept. 5, 1863: Dr. J.C. Welsh is apparently too early to be listed in George H. Kress’ “A History of the Medical Profession in Southern California” (1910) — either that or the entry on him was lost when the material for the first edition of the book was destroyed in The Times bombing.

However, he does appear as Dr. J.C. Welch in Harris Newmark’s “Sixty Years in Southern California.”

Newmark says Welsh was a South Carolinian and a partner with Dr. H.R. Myles in a drugstore on Main Street. Welsh arrived in Los Angeles in the early 1850s died in August 1869, Newmark says.

Born: A son to Dr. and Mrs. J.B. Winton.

Married: Robert Withington and Rachel M. Freeman; Robert Tounget and Rachel Malone.

Died: State Sen. J.R. Vineyard; E.M. Bennet; Alice Fears

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated +++)

Sept. 2, 2013, Mystery Photo

And for Monday, three mystery gents.

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Mason Opera House – a Lost Landmark

Mason Opera House

Downtown hipsters know the spot at 1st Street and Broadway as a big hole in the ground, where construction seems to be getting underway. More mature Angelenos may recall the 1950s Cold War monstrosity that was demolished after being damaged in the Northridge earthquake.

Prior to that, however, one of the buildings that occupied the southwest corner of the intersection was the Mason Opera House. Here’s a program from the Mason, dated 1913. It’s priced at $49, which is more than I would pay (I have a couple of programs), but they are interesting old curious.

Here’s a YouTube film I did on the Mason in 2006 for the 1947project. Unfortunately, since YouTube was acquired by Google, the video has been stretched so the aspect ratio is wrong.

Posted in 1913, Architecture, Broadway, Downtown, Found on EBay, Preservation, Theaters | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights — The Three Lives Of Villa Aurora

Feb. 5, 1928, Villa Aurora

Cats have nine lives. People often experience second or third acts in their lives or careers. Some homes have multiple lives as well, like Villa Aurora, which has experienced three diverse lives, bringing knowledge and refuge to those who come through its doors. Opened in 1928, the Villa began life as a Los Angeles Times Demonstration Home, later housed German Jewish expatriates Lion and Maria Feuchtwanger, and now serves as residence for fellowship artists from around the world to freely create new works.

In the Oct. 1, 1926, Los Angeles Times, Santa Monica Judge Arthur A. Weber, George W. Ley, Edward Haas, and other investors announced they had spent $3 million to acquire 847 acres overlooking the Pacific Ocean over what was then called Beverly Boulevard (now Sunset Boulevard), not far from Ocean Highway, to establish Miramar Estates. Their development would offer homes reminiscent of the Mediterranean because of the property’s gorgeous panoramic views that resembled those of Naples or Nice. Mark Daniels, former assistant secretary of in the Interior, superintendent of national parks, and renowned Los Angeles architect of what is now Hotel Bel-Air, the clubhouse of Hollywood Riviera Beach Club, and many Bel-Air homes, was hired to design homes in the development.

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Posted in 1928, Architecture, Books and Authors, Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Spring Street — 1907

 

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If this image looking south on Spring Street on this 1907 postcard looks unfamiliar, there’s a reason. Most of the buildings are gone and Spring Street was straightened out to make way for City Hall. The postcard is listed on EBay for $5.

SPRING STREET REVISITED – a series of posts I wrote when the blog was at latimes.com

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Posted in 1907, Architecture, Downtown, Found on EBay, Spring Street, Streetcars | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Parkey Sharkey – Found on EBay

parkey_sharkey_ebay

A copy of Parkey Sharkey’s “Whiskey Road” has been listed on EBay. Several years ago, the L.A. Daily Mirror acquired a copy and it occupies an honored place in the research library. There are those who assumed that Parkey Sharkey was merely an invention of the late columnist Paul Coates, who wrote about him regularly. No, Sharkey was a real person.

Bidding on “Whiskey Road,” which includes excerpts from Coates’ columns, starts at $24.95.

Here’s the Parkey Sharkey story, which I wrote when the blog was at latimes.com.

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Barbara Graham Defense Wins Delay After Prosecution Bombshell

Aug. 30, 1953, Comics

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Aug. 30, 1953: Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Charles W. Fricke grants attorneys for Barbara Graham a slight delay in opening their defense after the prosecution closes with a “bombshell”: A transcript of a recorded conversation between Graham and undercover Police Officer Samuel Sirianni.

Sirianni testified that he met with Graham at the County Jail and they planned a detailed alibi for the night of March 9, when Mabel Monahan was killed.

In the recorded conversation, Graham allegedly said that Baxter Shorter, who disappeared after turning informant “had been done away with.”

Court-appointed defense attorney Jack Hardy asked to withdraw from the case, but Fricke refused to grant permission. Defense attorney Benjamin Wolfe asked to listen to the original wire recording from which the transcript was prepared and said that much of the conversation in the transcript couldn’t be heard and that the transcript also misquoted the conversation.

Graham’s co-defendants were John A. Santo and Emmett Perkins. Graham died in the gas chamber at San Quentin at 11:42 a.m. on June 3, 1955. She wore a mask over the upper part of her face because “I don’t want to have to look at people,” she said. Perkins and Santo were executed together a few hours later, with Perkins dying at 2:40 p.m. and Santo at 2:41 p.m.

In the Theaters: “The Caddy.”

On TV: “Paul Coates Confidential” starts tonight.

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Posted in 1953, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Paul Coates | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Parents Sue Doctor Who Said Baby Girl Was a Boy!

Aug. 29, 1943, Comics

Aug. 29, 1943, POW Letter

Aug. 29, 1943: The family of Marine Cpl. Carroll E. Trego, a radio operator captured in the fall of Wake Island, receives a letter written from a prisoner of war camp in Shanghai.


Dr. John M. Andrews is being sued for $500,000 by Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Hartwig after delivering a baby and telling the family that it was a boy, whom they named Richard Allen Hartwig — when it was actually a girl.

“At the time of delivery I didn’t pay any attention to whether it was a boy or girl. But I remember saying ‘It looks like a boy’ as Mrs. Hartwig was coming out of the ether,” Andrews said.

Police Chief Clemence C.B. Horrall is seeking two changes in the City Charter. One would exempt officers hired under wartime emergency provisions from the city pension system. The other would eliminate overlapping authority between the chief and the Police Commission.

Police round up 119 juveniles who were out after curfew at a drive-in at Anaheim and Gaffey streets in San Pedro.

In another black eye for Los Angeles sainted streetcar system, streetcar motorman Coy Gordon was distracted while making change and rammed into another streetcar that was stopped at Pico and Windsor boulevards. Eight people were injured, none seriously, The Times said.

In the Theaters: “I Walked Like a Zombie.”

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Posted in 1943, Art & Artists, Comics, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Medicine, Streetcars, Transportation, World War II | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

N.R.A. Frees Workers to Visit the Library

Aug. 28, 1933, Comics
Aug. 28, 1933, Library
August 1933: In my journey through years ending in “3,” I have neglected 1933, when the National Recovery Act took effect  Aug. 1. President Roosevelt’s plan was to put people back to work by raising the minimum wage to $12 to $15 a week and cutting the work week to 40 hours for white-collar jobs and 35 hours for industrial jobs, The Times said.

With their new leisure time, some Los Angeles residents headed to the … library!

Among the provisions: “Child labor is prohibited except for free hours between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. and a $1 differential is provided for 15 Southern States and the District of Columbia.”

L.A.’s sainted streetcar system: A driver sues the Los Angeles Railway Corp., charging that a negligent motorman ran a streetcar into his auto on West 10th Street near Irolo Street.

Opening tomorrow at Grauman’s Chinese: “Dinner at Eight.”

Follies Burlesque: 80 people — mostly girls

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Posted in 1933, Comics, Hollywood, Libraries, Streetcars, Transportation | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Mystery Photo – Historic L.A. Edition

Broadway

L.A. Observed has reposted this image, which was posted by Michael Beschloss, who identifies it as Broadway as it looked about 1902.

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6,000 Union Army Veterans Gather to Recall the Campfires of Old

Aug. 27, 1903, Civil War Reunion

Aug. 27, 1903, Civil War Reunion

The entire Aug. 27, 1903, edition of the Herald is available here.


Aug. 27, 1903: The Los Angeles Times (and by extension, the Chandler family) is frequently treated as if it was the only paper in the city’s history. Those who delve into the subject know better, of course, but access to The Times’  long-dead rivals, such as the Examiner, Herald-Express and Daily News, is difficult because it involves microfilm, which is regrettable  because the Examiner, for example, was a far superior paper in many respects – certainly when it came to crime coverage.

The California Digital Newspaper Collection has a wide assortment of papers, although few of them cover the Raymond Chandler era (1930s-1950s) that is so popular in the public imagination.

Here’s an issue from the Herald, which noted on its masthead that  it was the oldest morning paper in Los Angeles, having been founded in 1873.

About 6,000 veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic gather at Eastlake Park (now Lincoln Park) for a reunion, with lunch, speeches and a massive bonfire. The band and drum corps from the Soldiers Home played “America, the Beautiful,” “Marching Through Georgia,” “Rally Round the Flag” and “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, the Boys are Marching.”  Including wives and children, the total attendance was estimated at 10,000, the Herald said.

Those who think traffic in Los Angeles is a new problem – and that the streetcars were the perfect solution – please note:

The Los Angeles Railway company tripled its service to the park on both the Maple Avenue and Downey Avenue lines and even with the many additional cars the traffic was badly congested at times and the veterans had to wait for accommodations both going and coming.

Among the speakers was Will A. Harris, the son of a Confederate soldier, who spoke out against the lynching of African Americans.

William H. Potter of Alhambra appears before Judge Trask on an insanity charge. He is found to be suffering from “a plethora of money and has for years been busily engaged in having ‘a good time,’ so called,” The Herald said. “To blow in $500 in a day or two was a common occurrence with him, but as there did not appear to be any sign of actual insanity, Potter was discharged.”

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated +++)

Aug. 26, 2013, Mystery Photo

And for Monday, we have a mystery fellow with the latest in gentlemen’s accessories.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , | 59 Comments