Movieland Mystery Photo [Update]

Jan. 19, 2012, Movieland Mystery Photo

[This truly is a mystery. She’s Rose Terrell, a dancer who curiously enough left very information. I always wonder about people like this. What sort of lives they had. Alas, more digging will have to wait for another day.]

Here’s a mystery lady from the astounding collection of Steven Bibb!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged | 16 Comments

Lombard’s Body Recovered From Crash

Jan. 19, 1942, Carole Lombard

Jan. 19, 1942, Comics

Jan. 19, 1942: The Times’ Gene Sherman reports from the scene of the crash that killed Carole Lombard and 21 others:

“The totally demolished luxurious Douglas DC-3 Skyclub presented a grim, sorrowful picture on its rocky resting place. Wreckage was scattered in a radius of 500 yards and some of the victims were strewn around the waist-high snow. Bits of the plane, personal effects of the passengers, including handkerchiefs, overcoats and other apparel, were strung from the branches of stunted pine trees like macabre Christmas ornaments.

The two motors of the plane lay 50 feet apart, both to the left of the debris. Both wings had been sheared off. The tail assembly had been cracked off the fuselage, leaving the twisted, blackened cabin at the foot of a V-shaped crevasse.”

“Suspicion” starts tomorrow at the Pantages in Hollywood and RKO Hill Street.

Jimmie Fidler says:
How many photographs have you seen of Irene Dunne with her knees crossed? Continue reading

Posted in 1942, Film, Hollywood, Obituaries | Tagged , | 3 Comments

A World Without Wikipedia: Not Such a Bad Idea

Wikipedia

Wikipedia can stay dark permanently as far as I’m concerned. It’s a sinkhole of rumors and errors run by coding tweakers, factoid zealots and folks with tinfoil hats — and yes, Wikipedia has an entry on tinfoil hats. I don’t know a single serious researcher who considers it anything other than a joke. The only thing more amusing than citizen journalism is citizen “scholarship.”

Posted in Another Good Story Ruined, History | Tagged , , | 21 Comments

Lombard a ‘Shining Mark’ in Hollywood

image
Jan. 18, 1942, Comics
What do you know! Ernie Bushmiller could actually draw.


Jan. 18, 1942: Times artist Charles Owens draws a terrific map of the crash that killed Carole Lombard. Edwin Schallert reflects on Lombard’s life, adding her to the tragic deaths of Hollywood actresses: Jean Harlow, Mabel Normand and Olive Thomas.

Jimmie Fidler interviews Bob Hope.

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Posted in 1942, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Jimmie Fidler, Obituaries | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Carole Lombard Among 22 Dead in Crash; Gable Charters Plane for Las Vegas

Jan. 17, 1942, Carole Lombard Crash

Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, 1940
Photo: Clark Gable and Carole Lombard at home with their pet Siamese cats.


Jan. 17, 1942: Carole Lombard, who was returning from a campaign to sell defense bonds; her mother, Elizabeth K. Peters; and MGM publicist Otto Winkler are among 22 killed  when a TWA  Douglas Skycub slams into the side of Olcott Mountain 35 miles southwest of Las Vegas. Her husband, Clark Gable, who had been waiting at the Lockheed Air Terminal, immediately chartered a plane to Las Vegas.

The next day, The Times reported that Gable “vainly sought to make his way torturously up the cactus-strewn trail to the scene of his wife’s death. He was finally persuaded to return to Las Vegas, where he received the news that all aboard the plane had perished.”

Maxine, spicy strawberry blonde, is at the midnight show at the Aztec, “home of peachy burlesk.”

Jimmie Fidler says: There are several private campaigns underway to get Academy Awards; chief ones are for Joan Fontaine (“Suspicion,”) Ida Lupino (“Ladies in Retirement,”) Olivia de Havilland (“Hold Back the Dawn,”) and Claudette Colbert (“Remember the Day.”) But why not Greer Garson for “Blossoms in the Dust?”

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Posted in 1942, Animals, Columnists, Film, Hollywood, Jimmie Fidler, Transportation | Tagged , , | 6 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated +]

"Movieland Mystery Photo

Look what I found! Why if it isn’t….

image
Uh-oh. New YORK?


[Update 2: Yes, this is the Bradbury Building in downtown Los Angeles in “The Killer That Stalked New York.” I couldn’t stop laughing when I saw the shots of the Bradbury at the end of the film. I walked past the building again last night and no, there’s no ledge up there. I’m wondering if it was added with special effects or lost during the Sylmar quake. I’ll see if I can hunt up some old photos of the building. There are several shots of the Cozy and Central theater marquees in action, which is nice to see. I’m starting to think that Columbia really liked filming the Bradbury, because it’s also in “Between Midnight and Dawn.”

[Bob Hansen also recognized the building and Dewey Webb and Julie Merholz identified the movie.  ]

[Update: Please congratulate B.J. Merholz, Mary Mallory, Keith Thursby, Lee Rivas, Gary Martin, Herb Nicholas and Robert Dudnick for identifying the building/location.

[And please congratulate Greg Clancey, Mike Hawks and William Stansel for identifying the movie, yes, from that one frame.]

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged | 22 Comments

Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

1937 Oldsmobile Hearse

Photo: 1937 Oldsmobile customized hearse listed on EBay at $7,550.


Queen of the Dead – dateline January 16, 2012

•  Singer and actress Betty Jane Rhodes, 90, died on December 26. A radio and recording success as a child, she was signed by Paramount in 1936 and through the 1940s she acted (and frequently sang) in such films as Jungle Jim, Stage Door, Having a Wonderful Time, Along the Rio Grande, The Fleet’s In, Sweater Girl (in which she introduced “I Don’t Want to Walk Without You”), Star Spangled Rhythm, and You Can’t Ration Love. After leaving films, she continued recording, and singing in nightclubs. From 1945 till his death in 1993, Rhodes was married to Willet H. Brown, co-founder of the Mutual Broadcasting System.

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Posted in Cold Cases, Eve Golden, Film, Food and Drink, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Music, Queen of the Dead | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

The Black Dahlia at 65

Biltmore Hotel

Photo: Lobby of the Biltmore Hotel, Jan. 9, 2012, 6:30 p.m. Credit: Larry Harnisch/L.A. Daily Mirror.


I wandered over to the Biltmore on Monday night to keep my annual appointment. I’m not compulsive about being there, and I don’t bother when the date falls on a weekend, but if it’s convenient, I manage a stroll through the building about the time Elizabeth Short walked out the doors in 1947 and into the infinite fog of memory and myth.

By 5:30, the streets of Los Angeles are cold and dark this time of year. The merchants who run the little dress shops and electronics stores on Broadway were getting their displays off the sidewalks and the last few customers were straggling out of Grand Central Market. Hill Street around Angels Flight was a sea of red taillights as cars headed home – or at least tried to get out of downtown.

In the dim light, I cut across the broad, sloping apron of black asphalt where Philharmonic Auditorium used to be. In the distance, a man’s voice announced “Pershing Square” from a bus picking up passengers on 5th Street, like the ghostly chatter at Disneyland late at night, when the park is closing and the shrieking laughter and songs from all those rides echo across the empty Main Street of the Happiest Place on Earth. 

Long after Christmas, the tree trunks in Pershing Square are still wrapped in red and green lights, and big snowflakes hang across the entrance to the ice skating rink set up for the holidays. Outdoor ice skating in sunny Los Angeles? Well, it is the land of make-believe.

Outside the Biltmore, one of those human scarecrows from skid row, dressed in rags and a stocking cap, was begging for money as he roamed among cars stopped for the traffic light at Olive and 5th. I crossed the street and was nearly run down by a panicked lady with a shopping bag rushing to catch a bus, doing that clumsy, awkward jog that women do when they try to run in heels. If I was on a journey into the past this night, I was certainly making it alone.

::

Los Angeles in the 1940s is another Fantasyland, cooked up by a thousand two-bit Raymond Chandlers pounding the keys of their crinkled black Underwoods and Remingtons like Steinbeck’s chimpanzees, knocking out pulp detective thrillers and cheap B movies while they dreamed of making enough money to retire with the wife and kids to a safe little cul-de-sac in Encino and finally writing that big Hollywood novel. 

In Chandlerland, all the cops are crooked and all the politicians are on the take. All the men are Humphrey Bogart or Alan Ladd and all the women are some starlet who was supposed to be the next Virginia Mayo. 

Everything here happens at night. Daylight is only good for making shadows in this fictional land of nightclubs and alleys, cheap diners and seedy rooming houses; too much sun reveals the painted backdrops, the phony rain and the leading man’s toupee.  


I wandered onto the set of Chandlerland in 1996, the earnest reporter searching for the truth — not about Rosebud, but the Black Dahlia.

The basic myth is easy: Once upon a time in the long-ago 1940s, a pretty, naive young girl from back East comes to Hollywood, sleeps with everyone but Elmer Fudd and ends up mutilated, cut in half and left in a vacant lot. 

From there, people blend their own Black Dahlia martini from the gin of lousy books, the vermouth of Wikipedia, and an olive from one of those websites run by folks with tinfoil hats. They can even throw in the grenadine of George Hodel or the Kahlua of Orson Welles. As long as the last ingredient is the shot of bitters about her gruesome death giving her the fame she wanted all her life. And with a Black Dahlia martini, the facts are shaken
and stirred.

Running the AA in Chandlerland is the most thankless job I know. Try taking away someone’s bottle with a dose of reality and they fight and scratch and bawl like a drunk. With the reasoning of an alcoholic, they can talk any angle into being a straight line. Up is down, black is white and night is day. Was it Jack Wilson in the conservatory with a saw? Col. Mustard in the Sowden House with a wrench? Or Miss Scarlet in the Biltmore with a knife? It’s like playing “Clue” with actual people and a real body.  

::


Elizabeth Short isn’t forgotten. She’s worse than forgotten, exploited by fast-buck writers and overrun with crackpots; turned into the patron saint of “lost gurls” in black who leave cigarettes at her grave although she didn’t smoke and buy the Biltmore’s Black Dahlia martini — even though she was pretty much a teetotaler.

I wonder if I saw some of them the other night when I wandered through the Biltmore. There were a couple of young women —  in black, of course —  when I passed through the new lobby — the one that didn’t exist in 1947, despite its starring role in “Black Dahlia Avenger.”

In contrast, the old lobby was almost deserted when I wandered through on Monday about 6:30. Just one couple, a young man photographing a young woman in black. Was it for Elizabeth Short or was she just being fashionable? Should I tell her that Elizabeth Short never got the memo about always wearing black? Only if I want an argument.

I walked out the doors and back to work, marveling at the renaissance in downtown Los Angeles, which has changed so much since I arrived in 1988. The old, derelict buildings have been turned into lofts, and instead of the homeless and their cardboard condos, we have people walking dogs and pushing baby strollers. 

I guess the transformation proves the old line: We cannot forget the past. But we also cannot live there.

I usually prune back my roses on the anniversary of Elizabeth Short’s death. I used to do it on Valentine’s Day, but Jan. 15 is better for the roses and seems more appropriate. And I have a nice crop by her birthday, July 29, which I find a much better day to celebrate.

 

Posted in 1947, Another Good Story Ruined, Architecture, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, Cold Cases, Crime and Courts, Donald Wolfe, Downtown, Film, History, Hollywood, LAPD | Tagged , | 24 Comments

The Bradbury Building and the Mystery of ‘China Girl’ [Updated +]

"China Girl"

"China Girl"

This is an establishing shot from the 1942 feature “China Girl,” which was obviously filmed in the Bradbury Building. Or was it?

[Update: If this is a set, as it appears to be, where did Twentieth Century-Fox build it? People talk about the height of the set for “Rear Window,” but this interior appears to be three or possibly four stories tall — although I would imagine there could have been some trickery involved, like forced perspective or matte shots.  A puzzlement.]

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Posted in 1942, Another Good Story Ruined, Architecture, Downtown, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography, Uncategorized | Tagged | 26 Comments

The Black Dahlia: Princess Whitewing Follies

Jan. 29, 1947, Princess Whitewing

OK. Princess Whitewing fans, pay attention.

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Posted in 1947, Black Dahlia, Crime and Courts | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Mystery Photo

We have mystery chaps in a (not) mysterious location…..

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , | 36 Comments

The Black Dahlia: Biltmore Hotel

Biltmore Hotel

bilt_lobby1lr

Photo 1: Biltmore Hotel, Jan. 9, 2012, 6:30 p.m. Credit: Larry Harnisch
Photo 2: Biltmore Hotel, 1940s


The top photo shows the old lobby of the Biltmore on Monday as it was on the anniversary of the night Elizabeth Short disappeared. This is how the lobby looks after being remodeled in the 1980s and the way it’s described in John Gilmore’s “Severed.” At least “Severed” doesn’t make the mistake of Steve Hodel’s “Black Dahlia Avenger” in describing the current lobby, which didn’t even exist in 1947.

The bottom photo shows the old lobby as it was in the 1940s.

If the Dahlia books blunder on these elementary facts, you can expect the rest of their claims to be even more ridiculous. People simply do not want to do the pick and shovel work of true research.

Stay tuned, there’s more to come.

Posted in 1947, Architecture, Black Dahlia, Books and Authors, Cold Cases, Crime and Courts, Donald Wolfe, Downtown, Film, Hollywood, Interior Design, LAPD | Tagged , | 19 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated +]

image

Here’s a bit of fun trivia from a little documentary that aired on TCM the other day. It’s an early version of the directional signs used by movie crews. And “TWT” stands for?

CSI:NY
Photo: CSI:NY filming in downtown Los Angeles. Credit: Larry Harnisch


[Update: “TWT” stands for “They Went Thataway.” Since I’ve been in L.A., the signs for movie crews have gone from marker scrawled on poster board to professional signs printed on light plastic. Sometimes they use obvious initials (CSI:NY) or fanciful titles. “Bedford Falls” was quite the rage a few years ago. I don’t know what movie crews do in the rest of the civilized world but in L.A., they use these signs.]

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged | 12 Comments

Pearl Harbor Survivor Kills Himself

image

Jan. 10, 1942, Comics
Can’t draw? You too can be a famous cartoonist.


 

Jan. 10, 1942:  Pearl Harbor survivor William Parks kills himself in San Francisco after going AWOL. “His note to his wife indicated that the bombardment he underwent had upset him,” The Times said.

He was 19.

Aimee Semple McPherson preaches on “The Price of Power” at 10:30 a.m. and “Samson and Delilah” at 7 p.m. on Jan. 11 at Angelus Temple.

Tom Treanor recounts a story about tourists visiting L.A. “Do you want to see the orange groves? The Mt. Wilson telescope, the public library, the museum?

“Why,” said one of the rubbernecks, “we thought we’d like to drive down and see where all those people were killed last night.”

Immigration problems?The Times’ classified ads have a solution.

Jimmie Fidler says: Since the blackout, a woman and daughter have been seeking autographs outside the Mocambo, armed with flashlights.

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Posted in 1942, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Immigration, Religion, Tom Treanor | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo

Jan. 9, 2012, Mystery Photo

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

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 10 Comments

Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

hearse_1929_cadillac_ebay01

Photo: This 1929 Cadillac hearse, exported to Argentina,  is listed on EBay at Buy It Now for $35,000.


Queen of the Dead – dateline January 9, 2012

•  Illustrators are right up there with starlets and socialites on the “people I am unhealthily obsessed with” list. The great Ronald Searle, 91, died on December 30. The British artist—with his cutely Satanic little beard—drew for The New Yorker and TV Guide, the British Life and Punch, did a series of St. Trinian’s girls’ school books which became a movie series; he did movie posters and title sequences—his swirly, detailed drawings are instantly recognizable (the Times compared him to Hogarth and the Telegraph to Bosch: “the humorist illustrator was a man of much darker vision who could find sharp things to say about global poverty, paedophilia or the war on terror”). Searle was a POW in Singapore during World War II, and later said, “it gave me my measuring stick for the rest of my life . . . all the people we loved and knew and grew up with simply became fertiliser for the nearest bamboo.”

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Posted in Art & Artists, Environment, Eve Golden, Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Queen of the Dead | Tagged , , | 5 Comments

Found on EBay – Hotel Alexandria

Alexandria Hotel parmelee_dohrmann02

Sept. 9, 1906, Parmelee Dohrmann

A pitcher from the Hotel Alexandria at Spring and 5th streets has been listed on EBay. In the early 20th century, the Alexandria was one of Los Angeles’ most distinguished hotels. It has withstood several cycles of poverty and restoration, and the Long Beach, Sylmar and Northridge earthquakes, surviving to witness the astonishing downtown renaissance. Bonus: It’s across from the Last Book Store.

Parmelee-Dohrmann was originally at 232-234 S. Spring St., then moved to 436-444 S. Broadway. By 1930, the store was at 8th and Flower streets, with branches in Pasadena, Long Beach and San Diego.  Its last appearance in The Times is a display ad from December 1952, listing stores at 510 W. 7th St. in Los Angeles; 520 Pine Ave., Long Beach; and C Street at 7th Avenue in San Diego.

Bidding on the pitcher starts at  $9.99.

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Found on EBay – ‘Gwangi’

Gwangi

image

Photo: Gwangi! Gwangi!


I’m a sucker for any movie that has cowboys, dinosaurs and Freda Jackson warning “Gwangi! Gwangi!” So imagine my surprise to discover what an EBay vendor says is Willis O’Brien’s large preproduction model for an unproduced film from 1941 – later made by Ray Harryhausen as “The Valley of Gwangi.”  Bidding starts at $16,499, or Buy It Now for $19,499.

As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be evaluated thoroughly before submitting a bid.

Posted in 1969, Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Found on EBay – ‘Gwangi’

Movieland Mystery Photo

Mystery Photo

… and this movie would be?

Posted in Architecture, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , , | 9 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo

Central Homicide

And this movie would be?

Perhaps you would like a hint….

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Posted in Architecture, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , | 15 Comments