The Death of Ted Healy — Part 2

Dec. 22, 1937, Los Angeles Examiner, Ted Healy

Dec. 22, 1937: Ted Healy’s death is reported in the Los Angeles Examiner.


Before we get into Healy’s last days, let’s take a look at some of the people who were involved in the story.

There’s Jack Marcus, his manager, and his sister, Marcia, both of whom were present when he died.

The most intriguing player in the drama, however, is his ex-wife, Betty Braun Healy, because she is the prime mover in raising suspicions about his death. Everyone else — Healy’s widow, his sister, his manager, police investigators, the coroner’s office and eventually Dist. Atty. Buron Fitts — insisted that Healy died of natural causes.

Only his ex-wife was adamant that there had been a cover-up, that people were being protected and that she was being blacklisted for not keeping quiet, provoking angry charges from Healy’s sister and widow that she was a glory seeker trying to capitalize on his death.

Let’s look first at Marcia Healy, who was born in 1904 as Marcia Elizabeth Nash and died in 1972 as Marcia Read.

Oct. 17, 1937, Healy Baby Shower
Oct. 17, 1937: Marcia Healy attends Betty Hickman Healy’s baby shower. Also present are the wives of manager Jack Marcus and Shemp Howard.


Unfortunately, there’s very little in The Times about Marcia Healy aside from her comments on Healy’s death and speculation that a movie about Healy’s life might be in the works:

Jan. 24, 1938, Marcia Healy

Jan. 24, 1938: Speculation on a movie about Ted Healy’s life.


She clearly had her hands full dealing with her brother:

Dec. 26, 1935, Ted Healy

Dec. 26, 1935: Ted Healy has night on the town. He is accused of starting a fire and by the way has a gunshot wound to his left hand. At least we learn that Marcia Healy is a radio writer and has a summer cottage at 141 Mabery Road [misspelled as Mayberry]  in Santa Monica.

image

Mabery Road, Santa Monica, via Google’s Street view.


To be continued.

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Los Angeles Theatre — Business and Preservation

Los Angeles Theater

In passing the Los Angeles Theatre last night, I saw a notice of June 6 hearing on several business being proposed for the structure.

The big question is what exactly would be done to the interior and how much the building would be compromised by these alterations.

The proposal calls for “the sale and dispensing of a full line of alcoholic beverages for on-site consumption and public dancing.”

The proposed venues are:

1) The 37,924-square-foot theater, which would have 15 portable bars and public dancing.

2) A 2,441-square-foot ground-floor bar and lounge with video and electronic games, with 85 seats, including 24 seats within the public right of way.

3) A 2,049-square-foot ground-floor bar and lounge with live entertainment with a total of 114 seats.

4) A 7,904-square-foot restaurant, bar and lounge on the ground level, second floor and rooftop with live entertainment with a total of 378 seats.

5) 2,490-square-foot restaurant with bar and lounge with live entertainment, with 153 seats, including 22 in an outdoor patio within the public right of way.

6) A 3,168-square-foot second-floor nightclub with ground floor entry via St. Vincent Court alley with live entertainment with 158 seats.

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Posted in Broadway, Film, Food and Drink, Nightclubs, Preservation, Theaters | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

A Note on Music for Silent Films

blackhawk_films02
A Blackhawk film in all its low-tech glory is for sale on EBay with bids starting at $9.99. Note the lack of a ZIP Code in the address, which would peg the film as dating from the 1950s or early 1960s.


Many, many years ago, when I was a mere lad, I had a young friend who lived around the corner and was a fan of horror/monster films. Because his parents had money, they bought him a small library of Blackhawk’s prints of silent movies.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Music | Tagged , , , | 10 Comments

The Death of Ted Healy — Part 1

Dec. 22, 1937, Los Angeles Examiner, Ted Healy

Dec. 22, 1937: Ted Healy’s death is reported in the Los Angeles Examiner.


In the days leading up to his death, comedian Ted Healy had been under continuous observation  by his sister, Marcia, and manager, James Marcus, to keep him from drinking and otherwise out of trouble. Hymie Marx, a bodyguard, had been hired not to protect Healy from his fans but to protect him from himself.

A longtime alcoholic, Healy had apparently been striving to stay sober in the last months of his life. Sammy Lewis, a partner in Slapsy Maxie Rosenbloom’s cafe, said: “During the past six months, I saw Ted very frequently. He never drank anything stronger than coffee at those times and he seemed in the best of health.” (Examiner, Dec. 26, 1937)

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Posted in 1937, Film, Hollywood | Tagged , , , , | 8 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated +++)

Movieland Mystery Photo

Here’s our mystery chap for Monday!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , | 55 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Hollywood’s Little Country Church – Emblem of Bygone Days

Little_Country_Church_crop

Throughout its history, the city of Hollywood has seen much come and go in the name of “progress.” Instead of remodeling and reusing a historic structure, as is done in Europe or the East Coast, most builders simply tear down the old to make way for the “hip” and “modern.” Occasionally, acts of vandalism destroy grand old buildings. At some locations, however, both unfortunate actions occur.

ALSO BY MARY MALLORY

The Magic Castle
Jerry Giesler, Miracle Man
‘I Lost My Girlish Laughter’
Charles Butterworth, Professional Silly Ass

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Posted in Architecture, Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Radio, Religion | Tagged , , , | 9 Comments

Harold Lloyd — ‘Now or Never’

'Now or Never'

Harold Lloyd’s “Now or Never,” directed by Hal Roach and Fred Newmeyer, includes a memorable sequence in which he appears to be caught on top of a train.

The final impression is stunning and we might pass it off as something done “by crazy movie people in the crazy ‘20s.” But these folks weren’t so crazy at all.  This 2 1/2-minute sequence is a terrific example of editing and camera trickery. The director of photography was Walter Lundin, who did many of Lloyd’s films,  including “Safety Last!” and the editor was T.J. Crizer, who also worked on “Safety Last!”

Let’s take this sequence apart and see how they did it without CGI. Keep asking one simple question: “Where is the camera in this shot?”

The setup: Lloyd’s character is trying to avoid being caught on a train, so he climbs out a window.

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Posted in 1921, Film, Hollywood, Transportation | Tagged , , , , , | 7 Comments

Women’s History — Gertrude S. Reynolds McMullen

gem_cutting_house

This postcard of the Southwest Turquoise Co., 113 N. Broadway, has been listed on EBay. The shop would have been roughly across the street from the old Times Building at 1st and Broadway. Bidding on the postcard starts at $8.

Gertrude S. McMullen, 1910
Mrs. Gertrude S. Reynolds McMullen via the Herald.


The company’s cutting and polishing instrument was invented by a woman – Mrs. Gertrude S. Reynolds McMullen, a former science teacher who became interested in precious stones.

April 29, 1937, Gertrude S. Reynolds McMullen
Clearly, she was ahead of her time in more ways that one.

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Posted in 1909, 1910, Broadway, Found on EBay, Obituaries | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Harold Lloyd on Location: Santa Fe Station

santa_fe_station

John Bengston emailed the other day to mention his research on Harold Lloyd’s filming locations in conjunction with the recent Lloyd festival on TCM. John pointed out that “Safety Last” and “Cops” used the same alley.

I DVR’d just about everything that aired and in going through “Now or Never” (1921), I noticed some shots of the old Santa Fe depot, with its distinctive roof (shown above in a postcard).

'Now or Never"
Here’s the arriving trains with the depot in the background.

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Posted in 1921, Architecture, Location Sleuth, Transportation | Tagged , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

‘What Is the Jewish Experience in Los Angeles?’

autry_national_center_jews_mosaic
My latest column is in The Times this morning. I visited the Autry National Center’s new exhibit “Jews in the Los Angeles Mosaic” and attended a daylong symposium on some aspects of the Jewish experience in Los Angeles. Books could be (and have been) written about the subject, so it’s a pretty brief look, but I hope you like it.

One of my favorite quotes comes from Arthur Benveniste, a historian of the Sephardic community, who talked about his family, which was from the island of Rhodes and spoke Ladino.

“I grew up thinking the Jews spoke Spanish,” he said. “When I got to high school, somebody told me there’s a club for Jewish boys. So I found it and I joined. And these guys didn’t speak Spanish. They spoke something I never heard of called Yiddish.”

Posted in History, Museums | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Anne Knudsen — Photographer

anne_knudsen_low_rez

Note: Herald Examiner photographer Anne Knudsen’s sister shared this obituary with the Daily Mirror.

Anne Baldwin Knudsen, 57, passed away on Mothers’ Day, May 12, following a courageous battle with breast cancer. She was surrounded by her loving family and friends who will miss her deeply. This extraordinary woman distinguished herself as a photojournalist for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner during the 1980s and was a noted corporate photographer in the San Francisco Bay Area over the past 20 years. She lived her life with energy, creativity, joy, humor and devotion to those she loved, especially her daughter, Courtney.

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Movieland Mystery Photo — EBay Edition

ebay_mystery_actress

ebay_mystery_actressAn EBay vendor has posted this “mystery photo”  and is looking for help in identifying a certain “sexy, leggy” actress. Notice the code at the lower right: 1451-118. I’m sure Daily Mirror readers can help out our vendor, who thinks the photo is  from either “The Crimson Canary” or “Earl Carroll Vanities.”

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , , | 7 Comments

Dining With Jerry Lewis — Found on EBay

Jerry Lewis Menu Jerry Lewis Menu

Jerry Lewis Restaurant, Jan. 4, 1963 Longtime Daily Mirror readers may recall that Jerry Lewis briefly operated a restaurant on the Sunset Strip in the early 1960s. A menu from his business has been listed on EBay. Notice “Chili and Beans, Jerry Lewis” for $1.75. The menu is listed as Buy It Now for $150. As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be evaluated thoroughly before submitting a bid.

Posted in 1963, Film, Food and Drink | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Wikipedia: Murder and Myth — Part 19

Dec. 22, 1937, Ted Healy

In case you just tuned in, I am using the Wikipedia entry on Wallace Beery — alleging that he was involved in the death of Ted Healy — as a way to explore Wikipedia’s fundamental problems with accuracy and delve into Hollywood myths.

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Posted in 1937, Film, Hollywood, Nightclubs | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Wikipedia: Murder and Myth — Part 18

Wikipedia -- Wallace Beery

In case you just tuned in, I am using the Wikipedia entry on Wallace Beery — alleging that he was involved in the death of Ted Healy — as a way to explore Wikipedia’s fundamental problems with accuracy and delve into Hollywood myths.

Thanks for sticking with this, as I said when I began, this is always a tedious process.

I have found one earlier published account of the Ted Healy incident. However, this one does not involve Wallace Beery. Unless someone finds an earlier incarnation, the “Wallace Beery beat Ted Healy to death” yarn first saw print in Jeff and Tom Forresters’ “The Three Stooges,” then spread to E.J. Fleming’s “The Fixers” and then to Wikipedia.

Wikipedia: Murder and Myth: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17

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Wikipedia: Murder and Myth — Part 17

Wikipedia -- Wallace Beery

In case you just tuned in, I am using the Wikipedia entry on Wallace Beery — alleging that he was involved in the death of Ted Healy — as a way to explore Wikipedia’s fundamental problems with accuracy and delve into Hollywood myths.

We have been backtracking the source for the Wikipedia entries (the ones that cited a source, anyway), E.J. Fleming’s “The Fixers.” From there, we went to one of Fleming’s sources, Jeff and Tom Forrester’s “The Three Stooges.”

Among many other problems, we found that it was impossible, as claimed in “The Three Stooges,” for Ted Healy to have made phone calls to various people describing his attack by Wallace Beery et al, for the simple reason that two men who dealt with Healy that night — including the doctor who treated his cuts — said he had no idea who had hit him.

image

AP via The Telegraph, Dec. 22, 1937

Let me repeat that: Healy had no idea who hit him.

None.

Wikipedia: Murder and Myth: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16

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Posted in 1937, Film, Hollywood, Nightclubs | Tagged , , , , | 5 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition VIII (Updated +++)

2013_0520_mystery_photo

Once again, we find newsboy caps in nefarious surroundings — note the presence of a slot machine in the background.

Wonderful_Chance_glass_slide

Mary Mallory sends along a glass slide from her collection. Thanks, Mary!

How to Wear a Hat — Newsboy Cap Edition
How to Wear a Hat — ‘Grapes of Wrath’ Edition
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition I
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition II
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition III
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition IV
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition V
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition VI
Movieland Mystery Photo — Newsboy Cap Edition VII
How to Wear a Newsboy Cap — Marc Chevalier Edition

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Posted in Fashion, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , | 29 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Ned Sparks — Hollywood Grouch


Ned Sparks
Ned Sparks in “George White’s 1935 Scandals.” Photo courtesy of Mary Mallory.


Throughout the history of film, many supporting players have functioned as the spine or safety chord upon which motion pictures have been built. Making the most of sometimes tiny bits, these men and women added a dash of pepper to proceedings, or helped define exactly how audiences should feel. Players like Franklin Pangborn, Charles Butterworth, Guy Kibbee and Ned Sparks always enlivened proceedings.

As the April 7, 1935, Los Angeles Times noted, stock players “are the less publicized heroes who appear in support of the stars, and, through the excellence of their “type” portrayals, often save pictures and frequently steal them…. They command good salaries, may only work a week on a picture, but are considered indispensable by casting directors.”

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory | Tagged , , , , | 9 Comments

Answering Michael Rosenblum: What IS a Library?

Michael Rosenblum

A fellow named Michael Rosenblum, whom I have never encountered before, has written a Huffington Post essay on libraries and meanders about on the idea that Google has made them obsolete. Mind you, this is not a direct point — indeed his inability to make a direct point or formulate a cohesive argument is abundant proof of his statement that:

Even though I lived right across the street from it [the Donnell Library in New York] for many years, I never went inside. I never sat in its reading room. I never checked out a book. I never explored its stacks to go through old volumes of bound periodicals in some research project.

Rosenblum is, as you will note from the screen capture, a TV guy and perhaps he can be forgiven for his preference for the Internet and indifference toward libraries. The information available on the Web can be illuminating or just a bunch of claptrap the cat dragged in. Not necessarily up to snuff for the conscientious researcher, but perfectly adequate for what I will politely call the less rigorous standards of television.

But in trying to distill Rosenblum’s thoughts, it seems that he doesn’t like libraries as he remembers them from his long-ago college days — nor does he like what they are becoming.

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Posted in History, Libraries | Tagged , , , | 8 Comments

Wikipedia: Murder and Myth — Part 16

Wikipedia -- Wallace Beery

In case you just tuned in, I am using the Wikipedia entry on Wallace Beery — alleging that he was involved in the death of Ted Healy — as a way to explore Wikipedia’s fundamental problems with accuracy and delve into Hollywood myths.

We have been backtracking the source for the Wikipedia entries (the ones that cited a source, anyway), E.J. Fleming’s “The Fixers.” From there, we went to one of Fleming’s sources, Jeff and Tom Forrester’s “The Three Stooges.” In “The Three Stooges,” we found that Sammy Wolfe, an alleged eyewitness  in the “Wallace Beery beat Ted Healy to death” yarn, was an unreliable informant. Wolfe claimed to have been at the Trocadero on the night the alleged beating occurred, but was “guessing” about many details.

Wikipedia: Murder and Myth: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15

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Posted in 1937, Film, Hollywood, Nightclubs | Tagged , , , , | 13 Comments