Housewives Scour Stores for Butter, Meat

Dec. 13, 1942, Comics
Dec. 12, 1942, Killed

Dec. 13, 1942: Housewives are searching for butter, meat and canned goods as wartime food rationing depletes grocery shelves, The Times says. Farmers report that agents for restaurants and hotels are approaching them “with instructions to get eggs no matter what they have to pay” in violation of Office of Price Administration ceilings.

A fire at Union Station destroys 35 tons of mail, much of it Christmas presents, stored under a canvas tent because the indoor storage was full. The 7,000 bags of mail included incoming and outgoing packages, which suffered fire and water damage. The fire is blamed on a carelessly discarded cigarette.

Hedda Hopper says that Hollywood is once again pushing the boundaries “as the familiar old war between glamour and morals is going full tilt again.” Hopper adds: “We’re already going farther in scenes than anybody had ventured five years ago.” Then after raising the alarm, says: “I’m not the judge nor the jury. I’m only an onlooker reporting what I see.”

The Navy issues a list of 11 Southland men killed in action, nine wounded and 14 missing. Among them is Lt. Cmdr. Edgar Griffith Chase, a 1932 Annapolis graduate, who was executive officer of the Meredith (DD-434), which was sunk by Japanese planes off Guadalcanal. A destroyer escort (DE-16) was named for him.

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Millennial Moment – Investigation of LAPD Spy Unit Sought

Dec. 11, 1982, LAPD spying case

Dec. 11, 1982: David Johnston writes about the case of undercover LAPD Officer Fabian Lizarraga, who infiltrated the Revolutionary Communist Party and led protesters in a May Day march in 1980 that resulted in a fight with police and arrests of demonstrators.

Johnston also says that Lizarraga had sex “with a woman revolutionary” in hopes of getting information and was nearby when Damien Garcia, the man being investigated, was killed — allegedly by a member of the Primera Flats gang — at the Aliso Village Housing Project.

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Eve Golden / Queen of the Dead – Dan W. Quinn

More Work for the Undertaker

A copy of “More Work for the Undertaker” that was listed for sale at Collectors Frenzy at $137.50.


Dan W. Quinn

A few weeks ago, I introduced you to early recording star Ada Jones; now I want you to meet and hear one of her male contemporaries. “Billy Murray!” I hear you all cry happily. “We love Billy Murray!” Well, of course you do, everyone loves Billy Murray. But today’s subject is the equally delightful Dan W. Quinn, who specialized in pop and humorous songs, and who had a recording career that stretched from 1892 till 1918. Remarkably, he was pretty much a star by 1896, when the Berliner catalog listed an astonishing 60 of his records, according to ace music historian Tim Gracyk.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated ++++)

Dec. 10, 2012, Mystery Photo

Here’s our mystery chap for Monday in a mystery film….

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights – Altadena’s Lovely Christmas Tree Lane

Christmas Tree Lane
Christmas Tree Lane in a vintage postcard, courtesy of Mary Mallory.


Nothing says Christmas like the sight of beautiful outdoor twinkling lights lending a bit of romanticism and happiness to the holiday season. Homes and businesses spiffily decorate themselves. Cities light up parks and outdoor trees. The granddaddy celebration of them all is Altadena’s  Christmas Tree Lane, the oldest and largest celebration of its kind in the world.

Merchants thought up ways of drumming up business during the Christmas season even in the 1920s. Pasadena merchant Fred Nash conceived of the idea of lighting outdoor fir trees in December to lure business to his store, drawing the support of his community organization, the Kiwanis. As the Los Angeles Times reported on Dec. 4, 1920, “Santa Rosa Ave., Altadena, will be a lane of illuminated Christmas trees during the holidays. Following out a plan proposed some weeks ago, the beautiful deodar trees on that street will be festooned with colored lights and trimmings, the Kiwanis Club having voted to share the expense with the city.” Only about a quarter of the trees were lit that year for its inaugural season.

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On Eve of Pearl Harbor Anniversary, Roosevelt Halts Enlistments

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Dec. 6, 1942: As the nation nears the first anniversary of Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt halts all enlistments in the armed forces, shifting the military entirely to the draft. The services also stopped taking men older than 38 and opened the way for men above that age to be discharged if their civilian duties would be better for the war effort.

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Millennial Moment – Cheating at Card Clubs

Dec. 5, 1982, Poker Cheats

Dec. 5, 1982: George Reasons and Anne La Riviere write a long investigative piece about professional cheats at the card clubs in Bell and Gardena.

According to Reasons and La Riviere, cheaters are divided between mechanics who manipulate the cards and scammers who signal one another with hand signs or comments. Victims rarely complain, the story says, because of pride, because they are compulsive gamblers or  they are afraid of being exposed.

Kevin Kerwin or Kirwin, “a major owner of the California Bell Club (d. 1990), admits that cheating is a major problem in his club. The best he can do is keep it controlled, he said.

” ‘In the top stakes game, it’s really just a cheating match. All we can do is try to keep the pipe salesman (honest player) from getting caught in the middle.’ ”

The clubs had a variety of ways in dealing with cheaters, The Times says, from outright bans to informal invitations to go elsewhere. Most cheaters, however, were eventually reinstated if they promised not to cheat, Reasons and La Riviere said.

In 1988, the investors in the California Bell Club authorized a plan for the city of Bell to take over the gambling operation. It was closed by a bankruptcy judge in 1990.

Reasons died of brain cancer in 1992. He was 69.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated +)

Dec. 4, 2012, Mystery Photo
Here are three mystery chaps in a mystery film.

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Eve Golden / Queen of the Dead – Joan Crawford

joan_crawford_rain 

A photo of Joan Crawford and Walter Huston in “Rain” has been listed on EBay with bids starting at $11.99.

Joanie

 

No unknowns for us today, I am going to sing the praises of Joan Crawford, whom I worship—I would like to leave copies of Joan Crawford’s My Way of Life in every hotel room, like the Gideons do with their bibles. Back in the day, Joan was looked down upon as just a “Movie Star,” whereas Bette Davis and Katharine Hepburn were “Great Actresses.” Now that we can look back at all their films, though, Joan’s real talent shines through. Of course, when Davis and Hepburn were good they were very, very good, but when they were bad they were hilarious drag versions of themselves. Joan’s scripts might have been terrible sometimes, but she was never less than wonderful.

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights – Alhambra Promoted Through Song

AlhambraSheetM
One of the all-time greatest booster campaigns led to explosive growth in the city of Los Angeles in the early 20th century. Advertisements, brochures, postcards, sheet music, all boasted of the uniqueness of this unknown urban oasis. Publicists preached the glories of the weather, land, and golden opportunities to staid, solid Midwesterners. Soon, they packed their bags and descended on the promised paradise. Tom Zimmerman, author of “Paradise Promoted,” quotes a speech by Clinton E. Miller, representative of the 1918 Los Angeles Realty Board, “Boastful advertising may bring people to a city, but it required something else to make them stay.”

Los Angeles’ booming business and residential construction infected other nearby communities itching to expand their revenues. Other cities began modeling their own efforts after that of their myth-making big brother. Santa Monica crafted a glowing campaign in 1922, drawing new residents and businessmen eager to work and live in this beachside town. Realtors expounded on the beauty and unique features of their home tracts. The city of Alhambra proposed to sell their growing community to the public as well.

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Buck Jones Among Hundreds Killed in Cocoanut Grove Nightclub Fire

Nov. 30, 1942, Comics

Nov. 30, 1942, Cocoanut Grove Fire
Nov. 30, 1942: Saying “My hands are trembling all over this typewriter keyboard,” Associated Press writer Harry C. Glasheen writes of his experiences covering Boston’s Cocoanut Grove fire, which had a final death toll of 492 people, including Western movie star Buck Jones.

News accounts from 1942 say the fire quickly spread after bus boy Stanley Tomaszewski lit a match so he could see to screw in a light bulb that had been removed by a nightclub patron.  A transcript of Glasheen’s entire story is here.

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Posted in 1942, Comics, Film, Fires, Hollywood, World War II | Tagged , , , | 9 Comments

Millennial Moment – Nick Stewart’s Ebony Showcase Theater

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Nov. 28, 1982: Times staff writer John L. Mitchell profiles Horace “Nick” Stewart, who opened the Ebony Showcase Theater with his wife, Edna, in 1950. Stewart used the money from playing Lightnin’ in the 1950s TV series “The Amos n’ Andy Show” to build the theater on Washington Boulevard near La Brea Avenue.

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Posted in 1982, African Americans, Film, Millennial Moments, Stage, Theaters | Tagged , , , , , | 7 Comments

Eve Golden / Queen of the Dead – Charlotte Greenwood

 'Bend Down, Sister"

Charlotte Greenwood

Usually I regale you with harrowing stories about people who die early, grisly deaths, but today we are going to put on our happy faces and talk about Charlotte Greenwood. You probably know her from the film version of Oklahoma! or the wonderful 1940s Fox musicals she made. You know, the gawky, high-kicking comic dowager. But she had such a long, wonderful career, stretching from a 1905 Broadway musical to a 1961 sitcom pilot. And she was never out of work for more than five minutes—not bad for a gangly, homely Philadelphia girl.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated ++++)

Nov. 26, 2012, Mystery Photo

Here’s our mystery for Monday: Who’s the guest and what’s the movie?

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights – Campo de Cahuenga, California’s Birthplace

Campo de Cahuenga

A luminaria festival will be held at Campo de Cahuenga Dec. 2 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Admission is free.


Driving south down Lankershim Boulevard from Toluca Lake into Universal City, it’s hard to miss the skyscrapers, soundstages, and flashing billboard of Universal Studios on the south side of the street. On the north side of the street in Studio City, surrounded by the MTA Universal City subway station parking lot and hard to see, sits a small Spanish building called the Campo de Cahuenga. At this location on Jan. 13, 1847, Col. John C. Fremont signed a treaty with Andreas Pico, ceding California to the United States. Here, California’s Spanish past merged with America’s western expansion to help eventually create our bustling state.

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Eve Golden / Queen of the Dead – Lyle Talbot

Lyle Talbot
A photo of Lyle Talbot has been listed on EBay with bids starting at $25.

 

Lyle Talbot

I have a thing for those Big Boxy Guys from the 1930s and ’40s. You know, the ones who look like they’re still in the original factory carton and have not been unpacked yet: George Brent, Brian Donlevy, Warner Baxter, Lyle Talbot. Yum.  So imagine my delight to open the Oct. 1 issue of The New Yorker to find an article about Lyle Talbot by his daughter, staff writer Margaret Talbot! I was happy to see my suspicions confirmed: he was a genuinely nice guy.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated ++)

Nov. 19, 2012, Mystery Photo

Here’s a mystery chap from a mystery movie.

Please congratulate Dewey Webb for being first to identify our mystery fellow and the film. Please congratulate Don Danard, Jenny M, Mike Hawks, La Peregrina, Patrick, Bob Hansen and Rick Scott for identifying him!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , | 30 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights — Nelson Evans, Hollywood’s Early Forgotten Portrait Photographer

Nelson Evans

Photo: Nelson Evans


Unlike the theatrical world, the early motion picture industry was slow in recognizing the importance of photographs to help publicize and sell its films. While Broadway producers hired great New York portrait studios like Sarony, White, Lumiere, Vandamm, and Moody to shoot scene and portrait stills of stars for newspaper and magazine coverage in the early 1900s, film studios, particularly those here on the West Coast, did not engage in the practice until the mid-teens.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory, Photography | Tagged , , , , , | 7 Comments

Found on EBay – Another Good Story Ruined

ralph_hiltz_news_photo

ralph_hiltz_news_photoB

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A vendor on EBay has listed this AP photo from New York as showing Ralph von Hiltz, the “murderer of Black Dahlia.” (Price: $25.44). This is just another crackpot confession. The Times reported in 1956 that then-Chief of Detectives Thad Brown said Hiltz had been interrogated in 1947 and positively eliminated.The Times said Hiltz was just looking for a free trip to Los Angeles because New York is cold in January.Here’s the AP caption on the back:

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated ++)

Nov. 14, 2012, Mystery Photo

And this location and this movie would be?

Identifying the movie:LC, Dewey Webb, Mary Mallory, Nathan and Greg Clancey.

Identifying the location: Cal and Lulu, William (note: “The Artist” is in black and white), Lee Rivas and Santos L. Halper.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , | 26 Comments