Tenor Salvatore Licitra Dead: News Reports [Updated ]

Salvatore Licitra, "I Pagliacci"

Photo: Salvatore Licitra in “I Pagliacci.” Credit: SalvatoreLicitra.com


Italian news sources are reporting that tenor Salvatore Licitra has died a little more than a week after suffering head and chest injuries in a Vespa crash. Doctors say that he suffered cerebral hemorrhage that caused him to lose control of the scooter.

There is no official confirmation on his website. News reports say that his family donated his organs.

[Updated at 12:44 p.m. Salvatore Licitra’s website has confirmed that he died of his injuries. A news conference is scheduled for Sept. 6, 2011, at 10:30 a.m. [1:30 a.m. PDT] at the Sala Dusmet at Garibaldi Hospital in Catania, Italy.]

Licitra’s brother accepted an award in his behalf at Saturday’s Premio Ragusani nel Mondo and urged people to wear helmets when riding motorcycles.

New York Times | Washington Post

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Labor Day, 1886

Sept. 7, 1886, Labor Day

Sept. 7, 1886: The Times publishes a roundup of events marking  Labor Day, but there are no reports of any celebrations in Los Angeles. On the jump, Labor Day, 1891, is celebrated on the West Coast, but there’s nothing about Los Angeles.

For Labor Day, 1895, The Times reported on a parade that began at the old junction of Temple, Main and Spring, which was  changed when Spring Street was straightened to make room for City Hall.

The parade went down Spring to 5th Street, east on 5th to Main, north on Main to 1st and from there to La Grande Station [the Santa Fe depot  at 1st and Santa Fe Avenue (d. 1946)], where many participants took the cars to Redondo Beach.

The parade consisted of four police officers on bicycles, a marching band, the council of labor  and 14 members of the Turnverein Germania. There were 48 members of the Plumbers Union, No. 78; 36 members of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners; 34 members of the Typographical Union, No. 174; 25 members of the Retail Clerks Protective Assn.

After another marching band, there were 50 members of the Pastry Cooks Union; 30 members of the Tin, Sheet and Cornice Workers Union; and 45 members of the Painters and Decorators Union.

The parade ended with 31 men in black shirts and red neckties with “a blood-red flag bearing the words “Socialistic Labor Union,” The Times said.

“The Socialistic Labor Union refused to go to Redondo, claiming that the principles of the organization forbade the needless enriching of a railway corporation’s coffers, and there was small opportunity to capture a train,” The Times said.

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Eve Golden: Queen of the Dead

hearse_cadillac
Photo: 1998 Cadillac Eureka hearse, $14,990. Credit: Heritage Coach.

Queen of the Dead – dateline September 5, 2011

• Not all 1930s child actresses were sad and bitter, though recent obits of Marcia Mae Jones and Edith Fellows were pretty depressing. But the talented Sybil Jason (who died on August 23, at 83) had a brief but happy career. She appeared at Warner Brothers with Al Jolson, Kay Francis, Humphrey Bogart and Ann Sheridan, and was promoted as a less sugary Shirley Temple (Time amusingly called her the Jean Harlow to Temple’s Ann Harding: “less wholesome but more refreshing”). She left films in 1940, but as recently as two years ago, was posting thanks to her fans on YouTube, noting that “I enjoyed every single second of my career,” and that she was still pals with her screen rival Shirley Temple.

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We. Won’t. Be. Doing. This. Evah

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Folks: If you don’t have any ideas for a blog, maybe you shouldn’t be doing one.

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Sept. 4, 1781: Los Angeles Is Founded

 Sept. 4, 1926, Birthday

Sept. 4, 1926:The Times publishes a map showing the streets of the day, noting the changes made since Ord’s survey.


Sept. 5, 1981, Birthday
Sept. 4, 1981: Mayor Tom Bradley and actress Bernadette Peters cut the cake for Los Angeles’ 200th birthday


Jan. 1, 1892: To retell the founding of Los Angeles, The Times reprints an account from Juan Jose Warner’s “Historical Sketch of Los Angeles County” (1876). This account also appears in the Thompson and West’s “History of Los Angeles County, California” (1880).

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Pinball Museum to D.C.: ‘Game Over’

spacelab_backglass

Photo: Old-school “Spacelab” game, like one we used to play at the Bum Steer in Tucson many years ago. Credit: Internet Pinball Machine Database (yes, there is one).


The National Pinball Museum says “game over” to Washington, D.C. It’s moving to Baltimore. As a farewell, the museum is offering free admission on Labor Day.

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat assembled with Teutonic thoroughness from Twitter feeds by the bots at paper.li.

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Tenor Salvatore Licitra May Have Had Cerebral Hemorrhage Before Crash

Salvatore Licitra, "I Pagliacci" Florence

Photo: Salvatore Licitra in “I Pagliacci,” Florence. Credit: SalvatoreLicitra.com


Tenor Salvatore Licitra’s website confirms what has been speculated for several days: That the singer may have suffered a cerebral hemorrhage that caused him to crash his Vespa last Saturday, sustaining severe injuries to his head and chest.

Licitra remains in stable condition, in a coma. His injuries have cast a somber tone over the Premio Ragusani nel Mondo, in which he was to be honored, but it is taking place as scheduled, with some controversy from those who thought it should have been canceled.

ALSO

Tenor Salvatore Licitra in Coma — Video

Tenor Salvatore Licitra in Coma, Fights Lung Inflammation

Tenor Salvatore Licitra in Critical Condition After Crash

Tenor Salvatore Licitra Injured in Vespa Accident

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Zoot Suit: A Trip to the National Archives

Perris, Calif. House

Photo: House, Perris, Calif. Credit: Larry Harnisch/LADailyMirror.com


This house is at the turnoff to the National Archives in Perris, Calif., where I spent the day researching the Zoot Suit Riots. It was great:

Los Angeles if off-limits

Photo: The city of Los Angeles is out of bounds for all enlisted Navy personnel. Credit: National Archives.

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Widow Accused of Killing Ft. MacArthur Officer, Sept. 3, 1941

Sept. 3, 1941, Comics
Sept. 3, 1941, Marie Tucker
Sept. 3, 1941: OK, Maj. Tucker,  let me get this straight.

You and your wife, Marie, got home from  a party, where both of you had been drinking. She was in the bedroom and you were in the kitchen making yourself a ham sandwich and slicing the bread — or the ham — which you were holding against your abdomen.

The knife slipped and you realized you stabbed yourself. And you thought you pulled the knife out — only you hadn’t got it out all the way.

Then you fell against a kitchen drawer and the knife went back in a second time.

So you fell to the floor, reached for the knife — and rolled over onto it.

Well, if that’s your story. Only your wife says there was no ham or bread in the house. She also says she “might have done it,” but was too drunk to remember exactly what happened.


Marie Tucker was indicted in the killing of Maj. George A. Tucker, battalion commander at Ft. MacArthur, and released on $5,000 bail. The charges were dropped in 1947 because the witnesses, all military officers, were scattered around the world, The Times said.

Also on the jump: Lee Shippey and Tom Treanor.

Leatrice Gilbert, 17-year-old daughter of Leatrice Joy and the late John Gilbert, does not want the screen career mamma wants for her, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Posted in 1941, Art & Artists, Comics, Crime and Courts, Homicide, LAPD, Lee Shippey, Tom Treanor, World War II | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Widow Accused of Killing Ft. MacArthur Officer, Sept. 3, 1941

Revival of Wet-Plate Photography

Heather tintype
Photo: “Heather,” done in a wet-plate process. Credit: Robert Christian Malmberg


We will be drinking nothing but clear liquids at the Daily Mirror HQ today in memory of Dr. William Wolff, who helped develop the colonoscopy. Yes, they’re annoying, but they could save your life. New York Times.

L.A. Times columnist Hector Tobar visits Libros Schmibros — both of them.

A Washington, D.C., grand jury has indicted Susan J. Burns in attacks on paintings at the National Gallery of Art. Keith L. Alexander in the Washington Post.

Andy Wright and Reyhan Harmanci of the Bay Citizen write about a revival of wet-plate collodion photography, a technique that dates to the 1850s.

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat, carefully assembled from Twitter feeds by the tireless bots at paper.li, who couldn’t care less that the weekend is coming up.  TMZ SEO bait: Mena Suvari and Dania Ramirez are “pathetic,” sez Lindsay Lohan.

Posted in Books and Authors, Crime and Courts, Medicine, Obituaries, Photography, San Francisco, Washington | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Coming Attractions: Telluride

telluride_2011_poster

Here’s the schedule for Telluride, Friday through Monday.

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Marion Eisenmann: Artist’s Notebook – Grand Central Market

Feb. 15, 2010, Grand Central Market

“Grand Central Market” by Marion Eisenmann


Note: I’m reposting artwork that Marion Eisenmann did with the Daily Mirror when it was at latimes.com. This one is from 2010.

Marion will be giving monthly classes in plein air painting on Thursdays at the Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden in Arcadia.

Marion will also be giving plein air classes for youngsters at the Huntington. Workshops for children ages 7 to 12  and an accompanying adult will be held Sept. 17 and 24 from 9:30 a.m. to noon. The fee is $25 for one class and $45 for for both for members and $30/$55 for nonmembers. A  class for teenagers (14-17) will be held Oct. 1 from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The fee is $30 for members, $35 for nonmembers. Registration at (626) 405-2128.

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Found on EBay – Cafe Frankenstein

Cafe Frankenstein Coffee House

A group of slides taken by a Southern California artist has been listed on EBay. Most of the other slides are billboards that the artist apparently did. But this one of the Cafe Frankenstein Coffee House in Laguna Beach c. 1958 is sort of special, don’t you think? Bidding starts at $49.99.

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Movieland Mystery Photo

Sept. 1, 2011, Mystery Photo

Here’s today’s mystery fellow! Notice the mystery coiffure.

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Tenor Salvatore Licitra in Coma – Video


There is very little news on the condition of tenor Salvatore Licitra, who remains in a coma after he apparently lost control of his Vespa and crashed on Saturday, sustaining head and chest injuries.

This video (in Italian) includes an interview with a medical spokesman.

ALSO

Tenor Salvatore Licitra in Coma, Fights Lung Inflammation

Tenor Salvatore Licitra in Critical Condition After Crash

Tenor Salvatore Licitra Injured in Vespa Accident

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Sept. 1, 1941

Sept. 1, 1941, Traffic

Sept. 1, 1941, Comics
Sept. 1, 1941: I thought it would be interesting to check in with our friends in 1941, since Pearl Harbor is only three months away.

Times editorial cartoonist Bruce Russell’s Labor Day drawing says that it’s unpatriotic to strike in these uncertain days.

Lee Shippey writes about Donoho Hall, technical advisor on “Sergeant York,” who says “the problem of the 5 million uneducated hillbillies in the South should be more America’s problem than any foreign missions.”

Tom Treanor on the French army, citing RAF Col. Charles Sweeny: “Months after the war had begun, in fact in the spring just before the blitz, French regiments all over the front were heated up over an inter-regimental competition — to see who could grow the prize flower garden.”

Lunched today with an exhibitor friend who cried into every dish, from soup to dessert, over MGM’s reported decision to discontinue the “Maisie” series, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated]

Aug. 31, 2011, Mystery Photo

Here’s another mystery photo courtesy of Steven Bibb! Interesting pose. Look how she’s got her feet.

Feb. 26, 1937, Rosita Diaz
[Update: This is Rosita Diaz, who was reportedly executed by firing squad “for using her Latin charms as a spy.”]

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Smithsonian Plans Exhibit on Paradox of Jefferson and Slavery

Shiprock Fair

Photo: “New Native Photography”; “Shiprock Fair, 2009.” Credit: Jinniibaah Manuelito


Jacqueline Trescott of the Washington Post writes that the Smithsonian Institution and the Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello are collaborating on a new exhibit about Jefferson and slavery.

“Jefferson and Slavery at Monticello: Paradox of Liberty” will open at the National Museum of American History in January. It is being prepared by the National Museum of African American History and Culture,  which won’t have its own building until 2015,

“New Native Photography,” An exhibit of photos by Native Americans is on display at the New Mexico Museum of Art through Oct. 2.

The L.A. Daily Mirror and L.A. Crime Beat prepared with impish elan from Twitter feeds by the bots at paper.li. Today, the bots like Goebbels’ secretary breaks her silence and the $30-million price tag on the Kim K. sex tape.

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James Curtis: L.A. Voices – Dick Lane, Part 7

spade_cooley_1954_0216_crop
Photo: Spade Cooley, named the honorary mayor of Encino, gives dictation to secretary Gloria Murphy, who is riding his stallion, Golden Nugget, 1954.


This is Part 7 of James Curtis’ 1975 interview with Dick Lane. In this segment, Lane discusses roller derby, professional wrestling,  Gorgeous George, Spade Cooley, the Santa Monica Ballroom, Klaus Landsberg, and a famous incident in Los Angeles TV lore in which Lane put his hand through the fender of a used car during a commercial.

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

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Posted in 1982, Film, Hollywood, James Curtis, L.A. Voices, Obituaries, Television | Tagged , , , , , , | 15 Comments

Found on EBay – Hartsook Portrait

Anita King Hartsook

This Hartsook photo of Anita King as a gypsy girl, possibly from the 1915 film “Carmen” starring Geraldine Farrar and Wallace Reid, has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $24.97.

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