Roosevelt Declares Early Thanksgiving

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Nov. 9, 1941, Thanksgiving
Nov. 9, 1941: Amid the gathering clouds of World War II, President Roosevelt declares what will be the last peacetime Thanksgiving.

Noting American aid to nations fighting the Axis, Roosevelt says: “Let us ask the divine blessing of our decision and determination to protect our way of life against the forces of evil and slavery which seek in these days to encompass us.”

It is also the last time the nation will celebrate an early Thanksgiving. Roosevelt tried extending the pre-Christmas shopping season by making the holiday one week earlier, but merchants didn’t report any improvement in business.

On the jump:

A teary Josephine Trout, a 19-year-old unwed mother, is reunited with her month-old daughter, Camellia Ann, after abandoning her in a downtown hotel two weeks earlier. After the brief reunion, Trout was taken back to jail on charges of child abandonment.

Msgr. Bernhard Lichtenberg, dean of St. Hedwig’s Roman Catholic Cathedral in Berlin, is arrested by the Gestapo. His crime: praying for the Jews. He died in prison in 1943.

“Hot Spot,” with former mystery photo subject Laird Cregar, is opening at Grauman’s Chinese and Loew’s State.

Not one Hollywood star in 10 can act, if judged by the old standards of the legitimate stage, but acting isn’t necessary, for behind the players stand capable directors to interpret their scenes and  opulent studios ready to laugh off the filming of 20 or 30 “dud takes” in order to get one that’s OK, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Posted in 1941, Columnists, Crime and Courts, Downtown, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Religion, World War II | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Found on EBay – Bullock’s Wilshire

Bullock's Wilshire St. John
Bullock's Wilshire St. John

This St. John dress from Bullock’s Wilshire has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $199.

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L.A. Detectives Meet New York Mobster’s Plane at Burbank Airport

Nofv. 8, 1941, Shapes Ahoy
Nov. 8, 1941, Waxey Gordon
Nov. 8, 1941: Waxey Gordon, whose real name was Irving Wexler (d. 1952, Alcatraz), lands at Lockheed Air Terminal (now Burbank Airport), where he is greeted by detectives from the district attorney’s office, the LAPD and airport police. Gordon, accompanied by Albert Mayer, arrived from San Francisco and was en route to Chicago when he received the typical treatment that local police gave to visiting mobsters.

Also on the jump: A Times reporter finds some humor in the suicide of a man named Grief … Tom Treanor writes that Los Angeles drivers are the worst in the world … and LAPD officers question a ham radio operator after seeing him adjust the antenna on his car – his name is Isamu Yumori, “American-born Japanese.”

Jimmie Fidler says: NO BELLS to: Samuel Goldwyn and the management of a Glendale theater, for luring patrons to see an advertised preview of “Ball of Fire” — then refusing to screen it because a trade paper reviewer (who’d purchased his ticket) was in the audience and Goldwyn felt the picture was not ready for the press to see.

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Posted in 1941, Aviation, Chicago, City Hall, LAPD, San Francisco, Suicide, Theaters, Tom Treanor, World War II | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

A Look at Paul Revere Williams

Paul Revere Williams
Image: “Paul Revere Williams: A Legend in Architecture.” Credit: Dave Kelly


My Times colleague Scott Harrison digs up some archival photos from the construction of the Los Angeles Aqueduct.

Chris Carola of the Associated Press takes a look at the struggles of smaller museums to update their older exhibits amid continuing budget cuts. Via the Wall Street Journal.

Matt Flegenheimer of the New York Times visits the new Brooklyn Navy Yard Center, a $25-million center opening on Veterans Day dedicated to telling the story of the site of the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

Paul Revere Williams: A Legend in Architecture,” a 2007 film produced, written and narrated by Dave Kelly at Cal State Long Beach, is a 25-minute documentary on this noted architect.

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

Posted in African Americans, Architecture, Crime and Courts, Museums | Tagged | 1 Comment

Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

hearse_nightmare
Photo: A “Nightmare Before Christmas” hearse/snow globes listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $275.

 


Queen of the Dead—dateline November 7, 2011

•  If you loved Green Acres as much as I did (and if you didn’t, why not?) you will be saddened to hear of the death (on November 2, at 94) of Sid Melton, who played proudly incompetent carpenter Alfred Lord Monroe (to Mary Grace Canfield’s Ralph Waldo Monroe). The Monroe Brothers were just two of the delights in that bizarre post-modern treat, a brilliant oasis in the desert of 1960s sitcoms. The fireplug actor was born in Brooklyn and maintained that Warner Brothers cab-driver aura, acting in such films as The Chance of a Lifetime, George White’s Scandals, Body and Soul, On the Town, White Heat, The Garment Jungle, Designing Woman, The Joker is Wild and Lady Sings the Blues. Melton appeared on nearly every TV show of the 1950s-70s, and had recurring roles on Captain Midnight, Bachelor Father, Make Room for Daddy, and The Golden Girls (in flashbacks, as Estelle Getty’s husband Sal). But he will always be a Monroe Brother to me.

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Posted in Eve Golden, Fashion, Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Obituaries, Queen of the Dead | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Found on EBay – Marilyn Monroe

Marilyn Monroe, negative

This negative (I’ve converted it to a positive), which the vendor says shows Marilyn Monroe at a Hollywood party in the 1950s, has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $499. I certainly wouldn’t pay that kind of money for an image like this, but I’m not a collector. As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be evaluated thoroughly before submitting a bid.

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History and Obituaries in the News

My Times colleague Connie Stewart has a nice piece about the Fenelon Place Elevator in her hometown of Dubuque, Iowa.

Times obituary writer Elaine Woo profiles Cahuilla Indian leader Katherine Siva Saubel, one of the few speakers of the Cahuilla language, who died at the age of 91.

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

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Coming Up on the Daily Mirror: Pearl Harbor

Dec. 8, 1941, Pearl Harbor

Dec. 8, 1941: Pearl Harbor is about a month away, so I thought it would be illuminating to focus on the days leading up to the U.S. entry into World War II. Hope you like it. Ready for the swing shift?

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An Important Reminder From the Daily Mirror

Turn Back Your Clock!

Pier Angeli and friend remind Daily Mirror readers to switch to standard time on Sunday. Or as William Safire said: “Fall is the time of year that conservatives like best because they get to turn the clock back.”

Posted in Photography, Politics | Tagged | 2 Comments

Test Pilot Dies as P-38 Crashes Into Glendale House, Nov. 5, 1941

Nov. 5, 1941, P-38 Crashes Into House
Nov. 5, 1941, Comics

Nov. 5, 1941: Pilot Ralph Virden dies after being trapped in the burning wreckage of his P-38, which lost its tail assembly as he was returning to the Lockheed Air Terminal after a test flight about noon, The Times reported.

Witnesses said the twin-engined, double fuselaged ship was booming westerward at near-maximum speed (unofficially reported to be between 400 and 500 mph) when the duralumin tail assembly “simply floated away.”

Homeowner Jack Jensen was awakened by the crash and tried to free Virden from the burning wreckage but was driven back by flames. The crash occurred during an outdoor luncheon for military officials and 25,000 employees, but they did not observe it, The Times said.

Virden was survived by his wife and son, Ralph Jr., who also worked at Lockheed. Fellow pilots said: “Ralph was the best we had, especially in power dives.”

Tom Treanor, who was killed covering World War II for The Times, says the Forum Theatre on Pico, the Warner Bros. Hollywood and the Roxie in downtown Los Angeles are experimenting with swing shift movies that start at 1:30 a.m.

Jimmie Fidler says: Sam Goldwyn doesn’t know it yet, but his ace cameraman Gregg Toland, an officer in the Naval Reserve, has been notified to stand by for active service.

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Posted in 1941, Aviation, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Theaters, Tom Treanor, World War II | Tagged , , | 9 Comments

Found on EBay – Clifton’s Pacific Seas

Clifton's Pacific Seas

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Photo: 618 S. Olive via Google’s Street View.


This postcard of Clifton’s Pacific Seas (d. 1960), postmarked 1947, has been listed on EBay. The Pacific Seas was at 618 S. Olive and was torn down to make – a parking lot. Bidding starts at $8.

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Posted in 1947, 1960, Downtown, Found on EBay, Interior Design, Nightclubs, Preservation | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated ++++]

Nov. 3, 2011, Mystery Photo
And for Thursday, here’s another mystery chap!

Update: This is Nils Asther (d. 1981)  Continue reading

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 28 Comments

Wingy Manone Puts the Swing in Swing Shift — Nov. 3, 1941

NOv. 3, 1941, British Women
Nov. 3, 1941, Comics
Nov. 3, 1941: Tom Treanor goes to a dance at the Glendale Civic Auditorium for swing shift workers, about 5,000 of them, from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. on a Saturday morning. Most of the couples are married, he says, and the wives are 18 or 19.

One of the trombonists wasn’t playing because his instrument was broken at a Halloween job. Why did he show up? Because he still got paid, even without his instrument. Trumpeter Wingy Manone [often spelled Wingie and Mannone] (d. 1982) played left-handed because his right arm was missing.  Manone wrote an autobiography titled “Trumpet on the Wing.”

Videos of Wingy Manone: Jukebox Joe’s | Tailgate Ramble | Vine Street Blues |

The Times also publishes a story about a woman who was “criminally assaulted” – one of those quaint terms newspapers used to use — by four men. One of them was a friend of her brother and wanted to kill her because she recognized him, but the others prevented him. And, as was customary in those days, The Times published her name and address.

Jimmy Fidler says: REPUBLIC’S “RED RIVER” SET AT A GLANCE: Cowboy extras using between scene leisure to shine already gleaming boots … “Gabby” Hayes displaying femme star temperament when a prop barber’s chair refuses to work … Sally Payne (industriously knitting a washcloth): “Other girls can keep the soldiers warm; I’m concentrating on keeping the Army clean” … The Sons of the Pioneers and Roy Rogers (who used to be one of them) blending voices for a sentimental rendition of “Sweet Adeline” … Veteran Henry Morris, greatest bulldogger in rodeo history, standing in for “Gabby” Hayes … Set visitors examining a bench carved with the initials B.C. as Billy Gilbert explains that Bing Crosby got his screen start on this very sound stage in Sennett shorts … Gale Storm (watching Mexican extras in a knife-throwing contest): “What a useful accomplishment in Hollywood society!”

[And yes, this was released as “Red River Valley.”]

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Posted in 1941, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Crime and Courts, Dance, Film, Hollywood, Music, Obituaries, Tom Treanor, World War II | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Wingy Manone Puts the Swing in Swing Shift — Nov. 3, 1941

Found on EBay — The Watsons

quick_watson_cover_ebay

A copy of “Quick Watson, the Camera,” a collection of news photos by the Watson brothers, has been listed on EBay. The book was edited by the late Delmar Watson, a former photographer for the Mirror – and a notorious player of practical jokes. This copy (note the ripped cover) has been autographed by George Watson.  The book is listed as Buy It Now for $19.99.

Posted in Found on EBay, Photography | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo [Update +]

Nov. 1, 2011, Mystery Photo

Here’s today’s mystery chap, courtesy of Steven Bibb.
[Update: For some reason, WordPress isn’t allowing comments on this post. I’ll see if I can fix it.]
[Update 2: This is Cliff Danielson. Sorry for the delayed answer but the Daily Mirror HQ has been getting rewired.]

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Found on EBay – Oviatt’s

oviatts_tie01 oviatts_tie01_label

This remarkably dazzling tie from Oviatt’s has been listed on EBay. Oviatt’s was one of the leading menswear stores in Los Angeles and is the subject of the 2008 documentary  “The Oviatt Building” by Marc Chevalier and Seth Shulman. Bidding starts at $15.

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Oct. 31, 2011, Mystery Photo

[Update: This is Sandra Storme. Please congratulate Mike Hawks for identifying her.]

Here’s today’s mystery gal, courtesy of Steven Bibb!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 11 Comments

Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

1993 Cadillac Hearse
Photo: 1993 Cadillac Hearse for sale on EBay, listed as Buy It Now for $4,700.


Queen of the Dead—dateline October 31, 2011

•  105-year-old British stage actress Norrie Woodhall died on Oct. 25. She was the last surviving member of the long-forgotten Hardy Players, an early 1920s Dorset troupe who put on Thomas Hardy-based shows, with Hardy’s own blessing (he picked Woodhall to play Liza-Lu in Tess of the D’Urbervilles). “My mother was milking a cow when [Hardy] saw her,” said Woodhull of the character’s inspiration. “He said later on: ‘I must have seen your mother milking a cow and that put me in mind of Tess all those years ago.’” Actress Devina Symes noted the end of an era: “Thomas Hardy said that we have two deaths. The first is when we die, the second is when the last person who knew us dies. With the passing of Norrie Woodhall, Thomas Hardy has had his second death.”

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Posted in Books and Authors, Eve Golden, Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Obituaries, Queen of the Dead, Stage | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

Found on EBay – ‘The Gold Rush’

Gold Rush

A program from the 1925 showing of “The Gold Rush” at Grauman’s Egyptian Theatre has been listed on EBay. This item has been removed from a scrapbook and frankly we have mixed feelings about that. Antique dealers who cannibalize mementos make us uncomfortable, and yet it’s sometimes the only way a collector can obtain an item. It’s a pity when these things don’t remain in the family. Bidding on the program starts at $9.99.

Posted in 1925, Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Theaters | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Monsters of the Silver Screen Commemorative Bills

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OK, it’s only the Onion. But it’s cool. And just in time for Halloween.

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