Aug. 13, 1942: Times Visits African American Troops

Aug. 13, 1942, Comics

Aug. 15, 1942, African American Troops

Aug. 15, 1942: The good news: The Times writes about African American troops. The bad news: The story is one stereotype after another.

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James Curtis: L.A. Voices – Jules White, Part 2

Lloyd Hamilton, Oct. 17, 1920

Charlie Chaplin once said to me, “The only other man in this business that I fear, who I think is as funny as anyone I can conceive of or think of, is Lloyd Hamilton.” And he was. And I patterned Curly after Lloyd Hamilton. He wore the checkered cap and the little artist’s tie and the cutaway, and he had flat feet and walked with a little sort of a duck waddle like Curly had.


James writes: Here’s another of those interviews I did during a random burst of energy in 1975. This one took place a couple of weeks before my previously-posted talk with Dick Lane, and my memory is that this one is probably a bit better because of the range of topics it covers.

JAMES CURTS:Did you go to Educational comedies from this early experience?

JULES WHITE: Well, Educational comedies was formed by my brother, Jack White, and a man by the name of Earl Hammons, who had made travelogues primarily before this, and then there was another outfit by the name of the Christie Brothers, and this group became Educational Pictures. Now my brother and the Christies made the comedies, and when I got out of school I went to work with my brother.

James Curtis’ interview with Jules White, Part 1

James Curtis’ interview with Dick Lane Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7

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Mary Holland Kinkaid – Early Newspaperwoman

Man of Yesterday

“The Man of Yesterday” by Mary Holland Kinkaid, has been listed on EBay. Kinkaid, who died in 1948, is forgotten today, but was city editor of the Herald and is probably the first woman city editor of a Los Angeles newspaper, before Aggie Underwood, city of the Herald-Express, who is usually given the honor.

In 1933, Times columnist Alma Whitaker said Kinkaid was “the arch pioneer newspaper woman. In those days, she had to hand her copy in through a window in the editorial room door — no woman could be allowed to sully the sacred precincts.”

Bidding on “The Man of Yesterday” is listed as Buy It Now for $19.95.

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Movieland Mystery Photo

Aug. 13, 2012, Mystery Photo

Here’s another mystery photo from the amazing collection of Steven Bibb.

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Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

Folk Art Hearse
A folk art carving of a hearse has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $64.99.


Queen of the Dead – dateline August 13, 2012

•  I hate it when someone fascinating dies and I first hear about them through their obit: thus, Florence Waren (who died at 95 on July 12). She would have been played by, I think, by Michèle Morgan or Simone Simon in her movie bio: a dancer at Paris’ Bal Tabarin Music Hall, she partnered (in more ways than one) with Frederic Apcar, and the two became one of the most popular ballroom teams of wartime-era France. The Nazis (and collaborators) in the audience did not know that Waren was Jewish—she simply did not register when ordered to (I always wondered, why did more people not do this?). She hid other Jews in her apartment, and smuggled guns to the Resistance. “I think she was very scared,” her son, Mark Waren, told the New York Times. “But I don’t think it was something she thought much about. It was simply what one did.” She moved to the U.S. after the war, danced at the Copa and on TV, married dancer and choreographer Stanley Waren and, says her son, “was really one of those natural-born performers who loved what she was doing.”

 •  I had actually never seen British actor Geoffrey Hughes (who died  on July 27, at 68), but my friend Mel Neuhaus—a writer and film critic—was heartbroken at the news that “beloved ne’er-do-well Onslow on the long-running Britcom Keeping Up Appearanceshad passed. So Guest Columnist Mel weighs in this week:

 Although a respected veteran of stage and film, it was television that proved Hughes’ forte, memorably gracing such iconic shows as Coronation Street, Heartbeat and, most recently, The Royle Family.  On the big screen, he appeared in Till Death Do Us Part (1968); Carry on at Your Convenience (1971); and the remarkably-christened Adolf Hitler: My Part in his Downfall (1974).  His ultimate movie coup was as the voice of cartoon Paul McCartney in the 1968 animated feature Yellow Submarine. Unlike his slovenly Appearances alter ego, Hughes, the nemesis of star Patricia Routledge’s Hyacinth Bucket (pronounced “Bouquet”), and his real-life wife Sue were quite successful playing the market. They additionally ran a wood supply company on the Isle of Wight, where, in 2009, he was appointed deputy lord lieutenant. Incredibly loyal to his fans on both sides of the pond, Hughes recently made the trek to America’s East Coast, where he helped out on a local PBS fund-raising drive (where Keeping Up Appearances remains a perennial favorite; in 2004, it was rated 12th in the countdown of Britain’s Best Sitcom).

 •   When Marvin Hamlisch (try not to say his name like Gilda Radner’s Lisa Loopner, I dare you) died on August 6, aged 68, I looked at his work and thought, he is kind of like Barry Manilow. Nerdy and goopy and all 1970s-y at first glance, but when you think about it, he composed a lot of really enjoyable tunes. We can’t blame him for the words of “The Way We Were,” but the tune is nice; same for “California Nights,” “They’re Playing Our Song,” “Nobody Does It Better.” And just the tunes from A Chorus Line! “Sing!,” “I Hope I Get It,” “What I Did For Love,” “One,” “Dance: Ten; Looks: Three”—it’s enough to make you forgive him for “Sunshine, Lollipops and Rainbows.”

•  Delightfully batshit-crazy looking fashion icon Anna Piaggi, 81, died in Milan on August 7. She is what poor Isabella Blow would have become had she grown old: always seen decked out in insane clothes, hats, makeup, hairdos. Half Divine in Pink Flamingos, half Sarah Jessica Parker in Sex and the City. An early mentor to Karl Lagerfeld, she worked for Italian Vogue and Vanity (not Fair, just Vanity), La Settimana Incom, Epoca, Linea Italiana, Annabella, Panorama, L’Espresso and Arianna. But mostly Piaggi was a Presence: “One of my last icons of beauty and fashion,” said Dita Von Teese. “She was the height of glamorous eccentricity.”

—Eve Golden

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Marc Chevalier – Curator of All Things Oviatt

Oviatt Penthouse Bedroom

Photo: The bedroom of the Oviatt Building’s penthouse. Credit: Larry Harnisch/LADailyMirror.com


My latest column, on Marc Chevalier and his amazing knowledge of all things Oviatt, appears in The Times today. I should add that the 2008 documentary mentioned in the column was directed by Seth Shulman who also filmed, edited, and sound mixed it.

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Found on EBay – Follies Burlesque Theater

follies_burlesque_ebay_02

This photo of the Follies Burlesque on Main Street has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $22.99.

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Movieland Mystery Photo

Aug. 8, 2012, Mystery Photo

Here’s today’s mystery guest, courtesy of Steven Bibb.

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James Curtis: L.A. Voices – Jules White, Part 1

Jules White
Photo: Jules White in an undated picture.


Here’s another of those interviews I did during a random burst of energy in 1975. This one took place a couple of weeks before my previously-posted talk with Dick Lane, and my memory is that this one is probably a bit better because of the range of topics it covers.

Jules White started in the movies as a child actor around 1910, transitioning to film editing at the age of 20. He spent several years as a cutter for Educational Pictures, then started directing two-reel comedies for the company. He worked at Fox for a year, returned to Educational where his elder brother Jack White was director-general, and moved to M-G-M in 1929. Partnered with Zion Myers, he co-directed two series of shorts there as well as the Buster Keaton feature “Sidewalks of New York.” In 1933 White joined Columbia, where he was soon directing the George Sidney-Charlie Murray comedies. The following year, he was placed in charge of the studio’s entire output of short subjects and proceeded to oversee the most varied and longest-lasting program of two-reel comedies in the industry. Among his stars: Harry Langdon, Andy Clyde, Buster Keaton, Charley Chase, Hugh Herbert, and, of course, The Three Stooges.

James Curtis’ interview with Dick Lane Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7

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Tomorrow on the Daily Mirror — James Curtis Interviews Jules White

We have a terrific item tomorrow: The first part of James Curtis’ 1975 interview with Jules White, who discusses working with The Three Stooges, Andy Clyde, Buster Keaton and many others.

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On Assignment

Yes, I’m at work on another history column for The Times. This one is scheduled to run this week, but the lineup can always change.

Cheers,

Larry

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Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

Horse-Drawn Hearse
This photo of a horse-drawn hearse has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $8.99.


Queen of the Dead – dateline August 6, 2012

•  Good gosh I am feeling old—fifty years on August 4/5 since Marilyn Monroe died, and I remember the Life magazine my father bought when it happened. And in 1972 I bought all the tenth-anniversary stuff, as well as Norman Mailer’s horrible horrible coffee-table book. I’m of the age (right smack in the middle of “middle”) where I think of “grown-up ladies” as looking like Marilyn in Something’s Got to Give, or Judy Garland on The Judy Garland Show, or Jackie Kennedy—we are all baby ducklings, imprinted with this stuff. I recently saw a toddler chasing a girl in jeans and scraggly hair, yelling, “Mommy, mommy!” and I thought, “that’s not a mommy, that’s a hippie! Mommies have bouffant hair and wear heels!

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LAPD Losing Staff to War Effort

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Aug. 1, 1942, LAPD
Aug. 1, 1942: Chief C.B. Horrall announces that the LAPD has lost 22 men and two women to the armed services. By the end of the war, many more officers and staff will have gone into the military, leaving the department to fill the gaps with “War Emergency” officers.

Former Chief Arthur Hohmann is reinstated as deputy chief after Horrall demoted him to lieutenant.  Another notable name appears in this story: Robert A. Lohrman, demoted from sergeant to patrolman. You may recall hearing Lohrman mentioned in “Dragnet” in the 1950s, when he was head of homicide, at the time of the Barbara Graham and Ewing Scott murder cases.

“Yankee Doodle Dandy” is opening with a benefit at Warners Hollywood.

And in an echo of the Otto Sanhuber/Walburga Oesterreich case, Denver detectives find a “ghost” man who hid in the attic of a home after killing the owner.

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

July 31, 2012, Mystery Photo

Here’s another picture from the amazing collection of Steven Bibb!

Update: This is Lawrence David “Sunny Jim” McKeen Jr., who died in 1933 at the age of 8. Please congratulate Barbara Klein for identifying him.

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Gang Members Seize Prisoners in Police Brawl

July 31, 1942, Comics

July 31, 1942: A brawl breaks out at Pomeroy Avenue and Mark Street  when LAPD officers try to break up a dice game involving gang members. The group took three prisoners from police officers, injuring a officer’s hand, sprayed police with a water hose and broke the window of a police car.

Duff Bolenbach beats rationing by using tires he has hoarded for his 1910 Pierce Arrow. (His driving time from San Francisco to Hollywood is 11 hours and 53 minutes.)

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Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

funeral_home_card

A promotional card for Pennsylvania funeral home, listed on EBay at Buy It Now for $95


Queen of the Dead – dateline July 30, 2012

•   Two reliably talented British performers have died: Angharad Rees (on July 21, at 63) and Simon Ward (on July 20, at 70). Both had long stage careers and did movies, but were best-known for TV: Rees in Poldark, and Ward in All Creatures Great and Small and The Tudors—though he was also an hilariously handsome Young Winston, in 1972. Ward is the father of actress Sophie Ward, and Rees was married (from 1973-94) to adorable actor Christopher Cazenove. Seriously, there must be at least one untalented British actor or actress, somewhere, right? You can’t all be born with a RADA certificate and a BAFTA award clutched in your tiny paws? Where are your Keanu Reeveses, your Renée Zellwegers? Do you send them off to some Island of Misfit Toys and teach them American accents?

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Remembering Elizabeth Short on Her Birthday

July 29 is the birthday of Elizabeth Short. She would have been 88. I prefer to honor this day rather than the date she was found, Jan. 15, 1947.

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Movieland Mystery Photo

July 28, 2012, Mystery Photo

Great picture, no? From the collection of Steven Bibb.

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Movieland Mystery Photo

July 26, 2012 Mystery Photo

Here’s another mystery photo from the collection of Steven Bibb!

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Mickey Cohen on the Record – Talking With Author Tere Tereba

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Photo: Tere Tereba’s “Mickey Cohen: The Life and Crimes of L.A.’s Notorious Mobster.”

 


Note: I have been talking with author Tere Tereba about her book “Mickey Cohen: The Life and Crimes of L.A.’s Notorious Mobster.” Was he nothing more  than a hot-tempered, foul-mouthed little thug who threw around his money? Tereba found a more nuanced portrait. Here’s what she has to say. And we would especially like to salute Tereba’s patience in waiting for us to complete this piece. Between a full-time job and regular columns for The Times, we’re stretched very thin these days.

L.A.  Daily Mirror: Tell us a little bit about yourself:

Tere Tereba: I’ve had a long career as a fashion designer, I’ve been in an Andy Warhol movie, Bad. I’ve written journalistic pieces, and now I’ve written a book that tells for the first time  the complete story of the L.A. underworld from Prohibition to 1976, as seen from the POV of the city’s top  mobster, Mickey Cohen. I guess you can say I’ve had an upper-world version of  Mickey’s diverse career path: newsboy, pro boxer, thug, gangster, mob  boss, celebrity.

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