Ford’s Theatre Bans O’Reilly’s ‘Lincoln’ Book Over Mistakes

Killing Lincoln

Manson family member Charles “Tex” Watson was denied parole. L.A. Times | AP via Washington Post

Stephan Benzkofer of the Chicago Tribune takes a look at Police Officer Francis O’Neill in Part 2 of his Legendary Lawmen series.

Edith Brady-Lunny of Lee News Service profiles Myra Westray, 93, who was honored recently for replacing her husband, Kenneth, as sheriff of DeWitt County, Ill.,  while he was serving in World War II.

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat curated from only the finest Twitter feeds by the discerning bots at paper.li

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Women Reporters

Nov. 17, 1941, Comics
Nov. 17, 1941, Dates for Defense

Nov. 17, 1941: Reporter Mary Shaw Leader is honored posthumously for her work in covering Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. Leader, a reporter for the Hanover Spectator, walked 15 miles to Gettysburg, Pa., to cover the Lincoln’s talk.

“She carried his full three-minute text in the weekly Hanover newspaper while most journalists gave their space to principal speaker Edward Everett’s flowery oration of nearly two hours or merely announced that Lincoln also spoke.”

Times reporter Cecile Hallingby writes a first-person account of a weekend at Camp San Luis Obispo as one of 80 “U.S.O. Dates for Defense.”

“The big dance at the camp Saturday night, at which the ratio of solders to girls was about 10 to 1, was definitely voted the outstanding event of the weekend.”


Jimmie Fidler says: RKO’s “Mexican Spitfire at Sea” at a glance — Marion Martin: “This is my third ‘comeback.’ I’ve gone up and down in this business so often I’m developing a bounce.”

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Posted in 1863, 1941, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Immigration, Obituaries, World War II | Tagged , | Comments Off on Women Reporters

Found on EBay – The Florentine Gardens

Florentine Gardens

This image, dated May 17, 1945, from the Florentine Gardens has been listed on EBay. The war in Europe had just ended on May 8 and perhaps these folks are doing a little celebrating – and wondering what peacetime would be like. A snapshot of the “Greatest Generation” at play. Bidding starts at $9.95.

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How to Wear a Hat – Noir Edition

image

image

One thing that drives me crazy about the current crop of period films is that men usually don’t know how to wear hats.

“The Black Dahlia” (with costume design by Jenny Beavan) is a particularly excruciating lesson in unfortunate hat wear. I mean look at these guys! Stick a hat  — any hat — on your head and voila! The 1940s.

There is an art to pairing the right hat to the right actor – and there’s an entire language of hats in the way they were worn in films in the 1940s.

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Posted in 1942, 1947, Black Dahlia, Fashion, Film, Hollywood | Tagged , | 13 Comments

Found on EBay – Mae Murray

Mae Murray

A 1923-24 guide to Metro pictures, published for theater managers, has been listed on EBay. Full-color printing was quite expensive in this era, and it’s always interesting to see how much mileage a commercial artist could get from two colors. In this case, the artist did a remarkable job with black and red.  The red adds a bold touch and the custom lettering of “Mae Murray” is very classy. Bidding starts at $59.99.

Posted in 1923, Art & Artists, Film, Hollywood, Photography | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

When Hollywood Goes Wrong — ‘The Black Dahlia’

Zoot Suit Riots, "Black Dahlia"
There are so many things that Brian De Palma got wrong in “The Black Dahlia” that a list of mistakes would fill a long book. I had forgotten that the movie starts out with what is purportedly the Zoot Suit Riots.

Zoot Suit Riots, The Black Dahlia

LAPD officers ignore cars that have been overturned and set on fire. There is nothing to indicate this actually occurred. Zero.

Posted in Black Dahlia, Film, Hollywood, LAPD, World War II, Zoot Suit | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated ++]

Nov. 14, 2011, Mystery Photo

Here’s today’s mystery lady….

Update: This is Cobina Wright Jr., who recently appeared in Eve Golden’s Queen of the Dead.

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Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

hearse_1997_cadillac_ebay
Photo: 1997 Cadillac hearse for sale on EBay. Bidding starts at $3,800.



Queen of the Dead—dateline November 14, 2011

•  Family Circus has long been one of those legacy comics you love to hate. But I was sad when creator Bil Keane, 89, died on November 8. Family Circus was created in 1960 and was a microcosm of the Great Society years (indeed, it still is 1960 in that strip). It’s since been taken over by son Jeffy (who, like his father, has a great sense of humor and sometimes does cross-strips with Pearls Before Swine, via Stephan Pastis) and is endlessly parodied (see if you can still find the hilarious Dysfunctional Family Circus or Nietzsche Family Circus online). The phrases “gentle humor” and “traditional family values” (both used in Keane’s obits) make me all stabby, but even I can’t help but have some affection for those melon-headed kids. I mean, their dog’s name is Barfy, how great is that?

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Posted in Comics, Eve Golden, Fashion, Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Obituaries, Queen of the Dead, Sports | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

W.C. Fields and the Los Angeles Public Library — Mystery Photo

Bank Dick
Last night, I was watching “The Bank Dick,” as I have  many times before, but this was the first with my new plasma TV, so I was much more aware of the detail. I spotted a photo of what looked like a familiar building used as a prop next to the door to the bank president’s office. Hm.

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Posted in 1926, Film, Hollywood, Libraries, Location Sleuth, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

U.S. Prepares to Round Up Japanese in Event of War, Nov. 13, 1941

Nov. 13, 1941, Comics

Nov. 13, 1941: An FBI investigation into the Los Angeles Japanese Chamber of Commerce and the Central Japanese Assn. reveals monthly donations of $4,000 to $5,000 to the Japanese government “for the army and navy,” The Times says.

Atty. Gen. Francis Biddle says that “plans for the internment of ‘dangerous Japanese aliens’ already have been devised,” The Times reports.

“Biddle confirmed reports that the government has plans arranged for the segregation of Nipponese alien groups for a ‘temporary period’ if relations between the United States and Japan are broken off…..

Large groups of Japanese have flocked to the Justice Department to profess their loyalty to this country and to express their concern over the delicate relations existing between Washington and Tokyo, Biddle said, and these groups have been promised fair treatment if they do not violate any laws.

Veronica Lake’s hiding her hair under a turban in most of the scenes of “This Gun for Hire,” Hedda Hopper says.

Jimmie Fidler says: Paramount is raving about Alan Ladd, ex-radio news reporter: he’s a tall “George Raft type.”

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Posted in 1941, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, World War II | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Nov. 12, 2011, Mystery Photo

Update: This is Eve Miller (d. 1973).

Here’s a mystery woman, courtesy of Steven Bibb.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Crowds Line Broadway for Armistice Day Parade, Nov. 12, 1941

Nov. 12, 1941, Comics

We just don’t get deep thoughts in comics anymore.


Nov. 12, 1941: Crowds line Broadway in downtown Los Angeles for the annual Armistice Day parade, which marked the end of what used to be called the Great War or the World War – until we had another one.

Tom Treanor, who was killed covering World War II for The Times,  profiles the Kozinsky brothers, Herman, Frank and Morrie, who are starting out in the movie business as the King Bros. Their first was picture was  “Paper Bullets” and the second was “I Killed That Man.”

John Huston likes to cast his father in small roles as a good luck charm. The latest is Walter Huston’s two lines as a bartender for “In This Our Life.”

“Hot Spot,” the film version of “I Wake Up Screaming,” starring Victor Mature, Betty Grable, Carole Landis and Laird Cregar, is opening at Grauman’s Chinese and Loew’s State.

A Kinder, Simpler Time Department: Mrs. Celia Kopulsky got a police escort to pick up her grandchildren at the nursery. She had jaywalked to catch a streetcar at 7th and Broadway because she was in a hurry to pick up her two grandchildren and refused to sign a traffic officer’s citation, so she was taken downtown. After a lecture on traffic safety, the LAPD took her to the nursery and then transported her and the children to their home at 216 1/2 St. Louis St.

Jimmie Fidler says: Ragnar Qvale, the ski champ the Darryl Zanuck “discovered” with such fanfare two years ago, is still in Hollywood — working as a mechanic for Lockheed.

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Posted in 1941, A Kinder, Simpler Time, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Downtown, Film, Hollywood, LAPD, Streetcars, Theaters, Tom Treanor, Transportation, World War II | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Scientists to Build Computer From 1830s Drawings

La Concha, Paul Revere Williams

Photo: The lobby of La Concha Motel, designed by Paul Revere Williams. Credit: The Neon Museum


The first in a planned series of monthly lectures in the newly reopened Globe Lobby is sold out. The next lecture is Dec. 8, when photographer Mark Boster will sign copies of his book “Four Seasons in Yosemite.” The sessions are free, but reservations are required.

John Markoff of the New York Times says that researchers at the Science Museum in London are planning to build the Babbage Analytical Engine, designed — but never built — by Charles Babbage in the 1830s.

Stephan Benzkofer of the Chicago Tribune begins a series titled Legendary Lawmen. Part 1 – ‘Black Jack’ Bonfield, appears to be the only chapter that’s online.

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat via the bots at paper.li

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A Casebook on ‘Los Angeles Plays Itself’

Los Angeles Plays Itself

A user named smithrs has uploaded Thom Andersen’s elusive film essay “Los Angeles Plays Itself” to YouTube. The two-part film is something of a cult item in Los Angeles because Andersen made it without licensing the hundreds of clips he uses, so it only shows up about once a year in a local theater. I don’t believe it has ever been shown on television and it’s never been officially released on DVD, although it can be obtained as a bootleg if you know the right people.

Most folks who have seen “L.A. Plays Itself” say that it’s long (it is) and describe it as a documentary on the history of Los Angeles as reflected in films, but that’s not what it’s all about. “L.A. Plays Itself” is truly an essay – accompanied by film clips – that explores the manner in which moviemakers interpret and fictionalize Los Angeles.

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Posted in Film, History, Hollywood, Native Americans, Nightclubs | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Found on EBay – ‘Justice for the McNamaras’

Justice for the McNamaras

A “Justice for the McNamaras” pin, referring to the 1911 trial of the McNamara brothers in the 1910 bombings of the Times Building and the Llewellyn Iron Works, has been listed on EBay.  Bidding on this button starts at $24.99.

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Nov. 10, 2011, Mystery Photo

Here’s another mystery fellow, courtesy of Steven Bibb.

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Man Says He Shot Wife With ‘Unloaded’ Rifle

Nov. 10, 1941, Comics
Nov. 10, 1941, Bride Killed

656 W. 87th St.
Photo: The 600 block of West 87th Street via Google’s Street View.


Nov. 10, 1941: A week after Kenneth and Betty met at a malt shop, the 20-year-olds drove to Yuma, Ariz., to get married. They moved in with his parents at 656 W. 87th St.

Kenneth told police he bought a .22 rifle to go rabbit hunting, but there was a corroded bullet in the chamber. He picked up the rifle, which was leaning against the dresser, and stood up to get a screwdriver off the dresser to remove the bullet.

Betty allegedly said “Put it away or you’ll get hurt with it,” then grabbed the barrel and the gun fired. She died at the Georgia Street Receiving Hospital two hours after being shot above the right eye. They had been married for a month.

The next day, Kenneth Rex Jones changed his story after LAPD detectives asked him to reenact the shooting. He said he pulled the trigger to show Ethaline Elizabeth Jones that the gun wasn’t loaded. The coroner’s jury believed his story and ruled that the shooting was an accident.

On the jump:

93-year-old Gen. Julius F. Howell, commander in chief of the United Confederate Veterans, arrives in Los Angeles for the national convention of the United Daughters of the Confederacy.

New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia defends himself against criticism that he should have not sent ministers a suggested outline for their sermons that “stressed the role of religion in America’s development and its relation to democracy.”

Robert Taylor’s “Billy the Kid,” retitled “Bold and Gallant” for Mexican distribution, can’t be shown there because the government says it “disparages Mexico,” Jimmie Fidler says.
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Posted in 1941, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Homicide, LAPD, Religion | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Found on EBay – Ambassador Hotel

Ambassador Hotel

This postcard of the Ambassador Hotel has been listed on EBay. Wouldn’t it be neat to go there? Oh wait – we let L.A. Unified tear it down. Bidding starts at $5.

Posted in Architecture, Found on EBay, Preservation | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

In Praise of Libraries

Take a moment to read Steve Lopez’s column about his son, a librarian working to restore services that were destroyed by Hurricane Katrina:

The notion that libraries could be replaced by Google is tantamount to suggesting that Americans are better off with vending machines instead of farmer’s markets

Posted in Columnists, Libraries | Tagged | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Nov. 9, 2011, Mystery Photo

Here’s another mystery chap, courtesy of Steven Bibb.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments