Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 28, 1940

  Dec. 28, 1940, Nazis Blast London  
  Dec. 28, 1940, Redondo Beach  

Dec. 28, 1940: Stellar Routine –  She goes to the Brown Derby for "luncheon," then sits and uses the telephone for hours, depriving hungry people of a booth … She changes the color of her hair from a nice brown to a carroty pink … She announces that "this marriage is the real thing" — and starts calling her lawyer before the rice has been swept off the church steps … She tells the loyal fan club that helped boost her to success that "her studio has requested that she not have a fan club" … Her destitute father (and sometimes her mother) must sue her for support … She refuses to date anyone less important than a leading man or associate producer, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | 2 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo — Updated

  2010_1227_mystery_photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Here’s our mystery film scene. Hm. I wonder where they are shooting….

[Update: I often describe Daily Mirror readers as “the brain trust” and it’s true. Please congratulate Mike Hawks for identifying this photo! (Yes, he really did!) It’s “Seven Days”

[The caption information says: "This roof is in the Hollywood Studio, with Lillian Rich, Creighton Hale, Lilyan Tashman and others doing the Mary Roberts Rinehart play 'Seven Days' which will reach the screen as an Al Christie feature comedy." ]

ALSO

Creighton Hale on the Daily Mirror

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Photography | 4 Comments

Amazing Predictions for 1961!

 
 

  Dec. 31, 1930, New Year's  
 

dropcap_w_1934hile the rest of the news business spends the final days of December looking back at the major events of the year, the Daily Mirror is peering forward, and for us at least, the future is clear: 1961 brings the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy and the Bay of Pigs invasion. “The Apartment” will win the Academy Award as best picture. Gary Cooper will die of cancer and Ernest Hemingway will kill himself.   

We are also looking ahead to the last full year of the evening Los Angeles Mirror and the morning Los Angeles Examiner, both of which folded in January 1962, giving The Times supremacy in the morning market. The reconstituted Herald Examiner (d. 1989) struggled for survival as a feisty, sensational afternoon paper,  racked by labor problems and increasingly irrelevant to Americans’ changing lifestyles and preference for TV news.

What else can we see? 1921 is the year of the Fatty Arbuckle case and 1941 brings us the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the U.S. entry into World War II. And in 1981, we have the dawn of the Ronald Reagan era.

As I often say, “so many stories and only one Larry Harnisch.” Where shall we go and what shall we do in the coming year?

Mystery photos? Of course, they’re one of my favorite parts of the blog. Paul Coates and Matt Weinstock? Yes. And Tom Treanor. I’ll try to do more with some other Times columnists who have only appeared fleetingly in the Daily Mirror: Lee Shippey and Timothy Turner, for example. And perhaps the mysterious 1930s film columnist Tip-Off.

The Daily Mirror has evolved quite a bit since I began the blog nearly four years ago. There’s more on Hollywood and film, and a bit less on crime. Part of the reason is my need for variety and part of the reason is what I find – or don’t find — in the old papers. The crimes of the 1950s are fascinating and 1957 was a great year, but by mid- to late 1959, The Times’ coverage seemed to shift away from detailed reporting on the police blotter, a trend that continued into 1960. Perhaps the crimes weren’t as interesting to The Times editors as they were in the 1940s and early '50s, or The Times was devoting more of its resources to subjects like politics.

One thing I hope to explore in the coming year is a theme I touched on in a series of posts I called “Another Good Story Ruined.” Why is Los Angeles history so hard to get right and so easy to get wrong? I sometimes think the books on Los Angeles are nothing but a catalog of errors.  It might be worthwhile to examine some of the more common mistakes and myths about our past and see if I can find the origins. Authors of books about Los Angeles can expect the Daily Mirror to do a bit random fact-checking, which should fun and, I hope, illuminating.

I do need to pick my shots carefully. Extended coverage like Nikita Khrushchev’s visit to Los Angeles or the 1960 Democratic National Convention is labor-intensive and such projects seem to hold little interest for Daily Mirror readers. I’m not sure why, as they are significant events in local history, but they tend to be a lot of work for very little return.

And now it’s request time.

Daily Mirror readers are a loyal bunch. In fact, statistics show they spend an amazing amount of time on the blog. What would you like to see in the year ahead?

ps. Only four years to the Watts Riots.

E-mail me

Posted in 1930, 1960, 1980, Another Good Story Ruined, Countdown to Watts, Crime and Courts, Film, Hollywood, Matt Weinstock, Paul Coates, Thelma Todd, Tom Treanor, Weblogs | 6 Comments

Lina Romay on the Daily Mirror

2009_1012_mystery_photo
Los Angeles Times photo

You may recall that Lina Romay was a mystery guest in October 2009. Here’s a reprise of her post. Romay died Dec. 17 at the age of 91.

Sept. 25, 1945: Lina Romay photographed by Harmon D. Toy of the Los Angeles Times.

1945_1223_lina_romay

Update: Our guest star is Lina Romay!

Just a reminder on how this works: I post the mystery photo on Monday and reveal the answer on Friday … or on Saturday if I have a hard time picking only five pictures; sometimes it's difficult to choose. To keep the mystery photo from getting lost in the other entries, I move it from Monday to Tuesday to Wednesday, etc., adding a photo every day.

I have to approve all comments, so if your guess is posted immediately, that means you're wrong. (And if a wrong guess has already been submitted by someone else, there's no point in submitting it again.)

If you're right, you will have to wait until Friday. There's no need to submit your guess five times. Once is enough. The only reward is bragging rights. 

The answer to last week's mystery star: Jobyna Ralston!

Oct. 13, 2009, Mystery Photo Los Angeles Times file photo
Update: Lina Romay in "Adventure," Dec. 23, 1945.

Here's another photo of our mystery star. Please congratulate Gerald McCann, Jeff Hanna, Paul Cardinal, Nick Santa Maria, Steven Bibb, "Laura" fan Waldo Lydecker and Mike Hawks for identifying her.

Oct. 14, 2009, Mystery Photo Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Lina Romay, March 10, 1949.

Here's another picture of our mystery guest! Please congratulate Mary Mallory and Amy Richardson-Brown for identifying her.

Oct. 15, 2009, Mystery Photo Photograph by Tony Barnard / Los Angeles Times

Update: Lina Romay, at Hollywood Park, provides racing results in Spanish for Spanish-language radio stations. 

Here's another photo of our mystery star! Please congratulate Steffi Sidney for identifying her.

Oct. 16, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Bandleader Xavier Cugat with a caricature of Lina Romay, April 8, 1943.

Please congratulate Christa, Thom B, Christine Bamberger, Carmen and Randy Skretvedt  for identifying her.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Obituaries, Photography | Comments Off on Lina Romay on the Daily Mirror

L.A. Crime Rises in 1967

  Jan. 7, 1968, Crime Statistics  

Jan. 7, 1968: Joel Rubin and Robert Faturechi are reporting that homicides in Los Angeles have fallen to the lowest level since 1967. Interestingly enough, at that time the LAPD reported homicides were up 27.5%. over 1966. The LAPD has kept extensive crime statistics for decades. There’s quite a portrait of the city in all those numbers.

ALSO

LAPD crime statistics on the Daily Mirror

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 27, 1940

 

  Dec. 27, 1940, Russian Army  
  Dec. 27, 1940, Wodehouse  

Dec. 27, 1940: P.G. Wodehouse is being held by the Nazis – stay tuned for more about him in 1941,when he goes on German radio.

Earl Carroll planning a Jimmy Durante "Nose Night" with any customer boasting a bigger nose than Jimmy's to eat "on the house," Jimmie Fidler says.

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Update]

  Dec. 26, 2010, Mystery Photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Isn’t this a great picture? More details on the jump.

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Posted in Fashion, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 9 Comments

World Record at L.A. Aviation Meet!

  Aviation Meet, Dec. 23 1910  

  Los Angeles Times file photo  

  Dec. 27, 1910, Aviation Meet  

Dec. 27, 1910: The year ends as it began, with an aviation meet. Despite  50-mph winds that swept Dominguez Field, Arch Hoxsey of Pasadena sets a new altitude record of 11,474 feet in a Wright biplane.

"The young aviator looked more like a deep sea diver than a bird man," The Times' Harry Carr wrote. "He wore long rubber leggings, like a duck shooter, to his hips, a cap like an Arctic explorer with fur trimming. Gloved and booted and almost hidden in a great leather automobile coat, he climbed through the wires and was off to scrape the sky.”

French aviator Hubert Latham crashed his aircraft to splinters against a barbed-wire fence in trying to land in the heavy winds. According to the Herald, Latham pulled off pieces of the broken wing and set fire to them. "It will be cold working here," he said. "We may as well have a little fire."

ALSO

1910 Aviation Meet on the Daily Mirror

Coverage in the Herald

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Posted in Photography, Transportation | 2 Comments

Teena Marie, 1956 — 2010: ‘I wish I was colorless’

  Oct. 19, 1980, Teena Marie

 
  Oct. 19, 1980, Teena Marie  

Oct. 19, 1980: Some people refuse to believe that Teena Marie is white, Dennis Hunt writes. "I tell them I'm white but they think I'm black and I'm trying to pass for white…. This is white skin. I'm not trying to fool anybody."

She also said: "I'm a different kind of person. Blacks and whites don't really react in any special way to me. I don't get anything negative from blacks and not really anything negative from whites now. But I will say it was different before I started getting some popularity. I don't think it was prejudice from whites as much as ignorance of something they didn't know much about. You know, I wish I was colorless sometimes."

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Posted in Music, Obituaries, Rock 'n' Roll | 4 Comments

Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 26, 1940

  Dec. 26, 1940, Nazis Rush Army to Balkans  
  Dec. 26, 1940, Agnes Ayres  

Dec. 26, 1940: No merrier Christmas in all Los Angeles than the one in moppet Betty Brewer's manse. Her screen success made it possible for them to buy their first turkey in years, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Movieland Mystery Photo — Updated

  Dec. 25, 2010, mystery photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

I came across a big file on film crews and I thought they would make entertaining mystery photos. Rather than a mystery guest of the week, I’ll post one a day for a while.

[Update: DOWNTOWN HILL district was covered by film unit headed by Cornel Wilde and Patricia Knight for thriller, "Shock Proof," which provided a somewhat novel experience, particularly for many early morning sightseers, Jan. 3, 1949.]

Isn’t this a cool shot? I suppose you’d like more detail.

  Dec. 25, 2010, mystery photo  

Here’s our very cool mystery building….

  Dec. 25, 2010, mystery photo  

… and the mystery car…

  Dec. 25, 2010, mystery photo  

… and the mystery crew….

  Dec. 25, 2010, mystery photo  

… and I suppose you’ll insist on seeing the mystery actors.

Posted in Downtown, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 13 Comments

Monks’ Dispute Delays Celebration of Jesus’ Birth

  Dec. 26, 1960, Comics    
   Dec. 26, 1960, Mideast  

Dec. 26, 1960: An argument between Roman Catholic and Greek Orthodox monks at the Grotto of the Manger delays a religious procession to celebrate the birth of Jesus.

"The point at issue appeared trivial to laymen. It was whether the Latin (Roman Catholic) sacristan could stand during the rites on the step-side spot where, according to tradition, Jesus was born. The step is normally under the care of the Greek Orthodox Church in the multisect church," the AP story said.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 25, 1940

  Dec. 25, 1940, Christmas Truce  

  Dec. 25, 1940, Poem  

Dec. 25, 1940: “Merry Christmas! And may 1941 bring peace on earth and good will among men,” Jimmie Fidler says. 

ALSO

James “Sunrise Jim” Warnack in the Daily Mirror

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Christmas and the Comics, 1960

  Dec. 25, 1960  

  Dec. 25, 1960, Comics  

  Dec. 25, 1960, Comics   

  Dec. 25, 1960, Comics  

  Dec. 25, 1960, Comics  

Posted in art and artists, Comics, Religion | 1 Comment

The Mirror, Dec. 24, 1960

 

  Dec. 24, 1960, Comics  

 

  Dec. 24, 1960, Comics  

Dec. 24, 1960: Our friends at the Los Angeles Mirror are celebrating Christmas – not realizing that in a little more than a year the paper — and the Los Angeles Examiner — will be no more.

Matt Weinstock has a vignette of Christmas in San Quentin, Paul Coates has a take on the office Christmas party and Abby has advice for a wife whose husband won’t take a bath….

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Posted in Columnists, Comics, Front Pages, Matt Weinstock, Paul Coates | 1 Comment

Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 24, 1940

 
 

  Dec. 24, 1940, Floods  

  Dec. 224, 1940, Southland Rain  

Dec. 24, 1940: Mr. Claus, I'd like to wager: I'll bet you can't fill Carole Landis' stockings with anything prettier than she's already filled 'em with herself, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo — Updated

  Dec. 21, 2010, Mystery Photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Here’s our mystery guest.

Last week’s mystery guest was Thelma Todd, followed by Ford Sterling and friends.

There’s a new photo on the jump!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 13 Comments

Iran Hostages Spend 2nd Christmas in Captivity

  Dec. 24, 1980, Iran Hostages  

  Dec. 24, 1980, Comics  

  Dec. 24, 1980, Officer Killed  

Dec. 24, 1980: The nation’s Christmas tree is lit for 417 seconds, one for each day the 52 hostages have been held in captivity in Iran…. San Fernando Police Officer Dennis Webb is shot to death while questioning a young man about the robbery of a 7-Eleven. The killer evidently took Webb’s patrol car and abandoned it eight miles away.

And from Kenya, Charles T. Powers files a first-rate piece of writing on the future of college graduates in Kenya.

On the jump, examples of The Times covers: the Morning Final, Late Final and home edition.

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Posted in art and artists, Comics, Front Pages, Ronald Reagan | 1 Comment

Matt Weinstock, Dec. 23, 1960

 
 

  Dec. 23, 1960, comics  

Deck us all with Boston Charlie,
Walla Walla, Wash
an' Kalamazoo…
Nora's freezin' on the trolley
Swaller dollar cauliflower
Alleygaroo!

Dec. 23, 1960: One of the ugliest moments in the annals of the LAPD — the "Bloody Christmas" of 1951 — is told in full for the first time in Man magazine [probably Man's magazine–lrh] for February 1961, Matt Weinstock says.

DEAR ABBY: I am engaged to a man with whom I have gone for two years. We aren't kids. I am 28 and he is 36 (This will be the second marriage for both of us.) We like the same things and he is very easy to get along with. One thing worries me. He loves to….

ALSO

 “Bloody Christmas” on the Daily Mirror

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Posted in #courts, art and artists, Columnists, Comics, Crime and Courts, LAPD, Matt Weinstock | 1 Comment

Paul Coates, Dec. 23, 1960

 
 

  Dec. 23, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Dec. 23, 1960: Paul Coates dips into the mailbag and writes about Hugh Hefner’s plans for Playboy tours “designed to appeal to the sophisticated urban young Playboy reader."

Talk about futurism: Reader A.M. Spencer warns of the dangers of debris discarded by space travelers!

 

  Dec. 23, 1960, Space Debris  
  Dec. 23, 1960, Coates  
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