Movieland Mystery Photo — Updated

 
 

  2010_1213_mystery_photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Update: Mrs. Wallace Ford and her brother George Baker arrive to testify about the Thelma Todd case. "Mrs. Ford said Miss Todd telephoned she was coming to a party at her home 'right away' but never arrived," according to the caption information.

  Dec. 28, 1935, Thelma Todd  

Dec. 28, 1935-Jan. 3, 1936: “The further we go, the deeper this thing gets,” says George Rochester, foreman of the Los Angeles County Grand Jury investigating Thelma Todd's death. “We are not satisfied with all of the evidence we have heard. We are convinced that some of the witnesses are not telling all they know, nor all the truth about what they have discussed.”

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 11, 1940

 
 

  Dec. 11, 1940, Hitler  

  Dec. 11, 1940, Plane Crash  

Test pilot Rudolph B. Lechner, 37, is killed when his  SBC-2 Navy bomber fails to come out of a test dive.

Dec. 11, 1940: Eleanor Powell has invented a tap-dancing shoe that quadruples the number of taps per minute, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood, Transportation | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo — Update

 

  Dec. 12, 2010, Mystery Photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Update: This is Thelma Todd giving a surprise birthday party for Patsy Kelly on the set of "Sing, Sister, Sing." "Because of Patsy's particular fondness for condiments and sauces, Thelma used a 'catsup' motif for the party," according to the caption information. Please congratulate Dewey Webb, Mike Hawks, Gerald McCann, Barry O'Brien, Mary Mallory and Cold in Phoenix for identifying her!

  Dec. 24, 1935, Thelma Todd  

Dec. 24-27, 1935: Rumors, rumors and more rumors in the Thelma Todd case. Did she have lacerations on her throat? Did she appear to be drunk (recall that the autopsy found her blood-alcohol level to be 0.13%)? Who is the mysterious blonde seen in Hollywood?

And what did Todd mean when she said: "A great many changes are going to take place in my life by the first of the year?"

 

 

 

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography, Thelma Todd | 8 Comments

Found on EBay — ‘What Actors Eat’

What Actors Eat A copy of the Lymanhouse book “What Actors Eat – When They Eat!” has been listed on EBay. This cookbook turns up once or twice a year on EBay, usually at a ridiculous price. Bidding on this one, however, starts at a more realistic $3.99. Lymanhouse was a small publishing firm that flourished in Los Angeles but went out of business around the beginning of World War II. It was also the publisher of “They Call Them Camisoles,” Wilma Wilson’s terrific autobiography of being at Camarillo.

ALSO

What Actors Eat” on the Daily Mirror

They Call Them Camisoles” on the Daily Mirror

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Paul Coates and Matt Weinstock, Dec. 10, 1960

 
 

  Dec. 10, 1960, Comics  

Dec. 10, 1960: Matt Weinstock has the story of English instructor James Durbin, who  read poems to USC’s English Club without disclosing the poets' names. The works were written by Jack Kerouac, Gregory Corso, Ezra Pound, e.e. cummings and a patient in a mental hospital where Durbin lectured. He challenged the class to identify the poets. Several English professors decided that the Kerouac poem was the "insane" creation.

The mental patient's poem "Lost Garden," began: "No more will I sing how I was employed a fullness to bring where souls hung in void."

DEAR ABBY: What can I do about my best friend's husband? He talks about me in his sleep. I swear I never even thought about this man as anything but a friend. And he never once got out of line with me since I have known him. My friend has told me that …

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Police Battle Muslim Mob in Algiers , Dec. 10, 1960

 

 
 

  Dec. 10, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Dec. 10, 1960: “It costs a lot of money to look like Marilyn Monroe … I’ve got the bills to prove it.”

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 10, 1940

  image  
  Dec. 10, 1940, Tom Treanor  

Dec. 10, 1940: That old rumor about Jackie Cooper being a midget should be thoroughly exploded by now, Jimmie Fidler says.

 

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Posted in Columnists, Film, Hollywood, Tom Treanor | 1 Comment

Movieland Mystery Photo — Update

  2010_1210_mystery_photo  
  Photograph by the Los Angeles Times  

Update: Chauffeur Ernest Peters, left, talks to Sid Grauman. Please congratulate Mary Mallory and Mike Hawks for identifying Grauman!

   2010_1210_mystery_photo03  
  Photograph by the Los Angeles Times  

  2010_1210_mystery_photo02  
  Photograph by the Los Angeles Times  
  Dce. 21, 1935, Thelma Todd  

Dec. 21-23, 1935: The Thelma Todd story dwindles and falls off of Page 1. Notice that the case prompted crank mail, like the 1947 Black Dahlia case. 

On Dec. 23, The Times reported on tests by LAPD chemist Ray Pinker to see how quickly someone would be overcome by monoxide fumes from Todd's 12-cylinder Lincoln. Detective Joe Whitehead volunteered to sit at the wheel with a stopwatch while the engine was started and the garage door closed. Whitehead lasted about 90 seconds before pounding on the door to be released.

ALSO

Ray Pinker on the Daily Mirror

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography, Thelma Todd | 3 Comments

Found on EBay – Oviatt’s

oviatts_box_ebay oviatts_box_hat_ebay

A box from Oviatt’s has been listed on EBay. As most Daily Mirror readers know, Oviatt’s was a men’s store but there was a woman’s hat in the box and the vendor has inferred that the hat is from Oviatt’s. I suspect not. The box is fairly battered, but if you are an Oviatt’s completist ….

Bidding starts at 99 cents.

ALSO

Oviatt’s on the Daily Mirror

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Matt Weinstock, Dec. 9, 1960

 
 

  Dec. 9, 1960, Comics  

Dec. 9, 1960: "No truth to the ugly rumor that the reporters in the courthouse pressroom watch those synthetic courtroom cases on their TV set. When I dropped in to check, they were watching an old war movie," Matt Weinstock says.

Marilyn Monroe explores the idea of being a producer in Maurice Zolotow’s biography “The Real Marilyn Monroe.

DEAR ABBY: I went to a card reader who told me my lucky number is three. I know she is right because on the third of September I met Louis and I fell for him right away. This card reader said I would find happiness with the third man I fell in love with and she was right again because Louie is my third big love affair. He has been married twice before. (See, I am lucky three?) I want to know if you think I am putting too much trust in the card reader.

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Paul Coates, Dec. 9, 1960

 

 
 

  Dec. 9, 1960, Mirror  

Dec. 9, 1960: Paul Coates has a curious tale about an aspiring actor making a sort of debut – in the Hollywood Christmas Parade.

On the jump, more about the killing of LAPD Detective Richard Kent.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 9, 1940

  Jan. 9, 1940, Nazi Ship Sunk

 
  Dec. 9, 1940, Diego Rivera   

  Dec. 9, 1940, Diego Rivera  

Dec. 9, 1940:  Jimmie Fidler asks,  “How can actors who are such nice people on the way up and on the way down, be such insufferable asses while they're on top?”

Note to Times copy desk: That’s Frida Kahlo, not Freida. 

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Movieland Mystery Photo — Updated

 

  Dec. 9, 2010, Mystery Photo  

  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Update: This is Charley Chase and Thelma Todd in a photo by Agnes O'Malley. Please congratulate Mary Mallory, Mike Hawks, Cold in Phoenix and Brent Walker for identifying them!

  Dec. 20, 1935, Thelma Todd

 
  Dec. 20, 1935, Thema Todd  

Dec. 20, 1935: Thelma Todd's body is cremated after a funeral attended by hundreds at Wee Kirk o' the Heather at Forest Lawn in Glendale. An estimated 10,000 admirers passed her casket in a single-file procession that lasted more than five hours, The Times said.

On the jump, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. wishes everyone …  what’s this? “Season’s Greetings?”  Yes, it’s true. “Season’s Greetings” isn’t a new expression.

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography, Thelma Todd | 9 Comments

Found on EBay – Jean Spangler

jean_spangler_examiner_ebay An Oct. 12, 1949, edition of the Examiner, with a Page 1 story about the disappearance of Jean Spangler – drawing the usual parallels to the 1947 Black Dahlia case – has been listed on EBay. Old issues of the Examiner don’t turn up terribly often on EBay and when they do, they usually involve World War II. And yes, the issue is also on microfilm at the Los Angeles Public Library – a subtle reminder to those civic leaders who think librarians only reshelve books. Bidding starts at $10.99.

ALSO

Jean Spangler on the Daily Mirror

Posted in Film, Hollywood, LAPD | 1 Comment

Matt Weinstock, Dec. 8, 1960

 
 

  Dec. 8, 1960, Comics  

Dec. 8, 1960: Matt Weinstock takes a look at the spiraling costs of public transportation – first, raises for union workers who go out on strike, then fare increases to pay for the raises. He has his own cynical solution to the problem.

CONFIDENTIAL TO "A": Just because a man falls in love with a dimple is no reason he has to marry the whole girl.

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Paul Coates, Dec. 8, 1960

 
 

  Dec. 8, 1960, Mirror Cover  

Dec. 8, 1960, Richard Duket writes a 22-page letter to Paul Coates describing his descent into a life of crime….

And Marilyn Monroe says one reason she divorced Joe DiMaggio is because he watched TV instead of talking to her,  in Maurice Zolotow’s biography “The Real Marilyn Monroe.”

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Posted in Columnists, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Paul Coates | 2 Comments

Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Dec. 8, 1941

 
 

  Dec. 8, 1941, Japan Bombs U.S.  

  Dec. 8, 1941, L.A. Goes to War  

Dec. 8, 1941: Boris Karloff dislikes horror and mystery books, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Beatle John Lennon Slain; Shot Down Outside New York Apartment

Dec. 9, 1980: Former Beatle John Lennon, 40, who led a revolution in popular music that captured the imagination of an entire generation, was shot to death Monday outside his exclusive Manhattan apartment house.He was rushed to Roosevelt Hospital, less than a mile from the Dakota, the famous apartment building where he lived with his wife, Yoko Ono. Doctors pronounced him dead at the hospital.

Police announced early today that….

Posted in Music, Obituaries, Rock 'n' Roll | 3 Comments

Movieland Mystery Photo — Updated

 

  Dec. 8, 2010, Mystery Photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Update: Roland West, Alice Todd, center, and May Whitehead enter the church at Forest Lawn for Thelma Todd's funeral.

  Dec. 19, 1935, Thelma Todd  

Dec. 19, 1935: A "swarthy man" always seems to figure in Hollywood mysteries and one has emerged in the Thelma Todd case.

"Alive — driving in her death car with a dark-complexioned man — in Hollywood — Thelma Todd was reported seen at 11 o'clock Sunday night by Jewel Carmen, wife of Roland West, the dead actress' business partner," The Times says.

Dr. A.F. Wagner, county autopsy surgeon, testifies that in his opinion, Todd died sometime early Sunday.

"He added that his opinion was based on medical examinations, facts and the material circumstances surrounding the case.

"Miss Todd's death, Dr. Wagner testified, in his opinion was due to carbon monoxide poisoning. An analysis of her bloodstream, he said, indicated between 75% and 80% carbon monoxide saturation.

"There also were traces of alcohol in the brain of the actress, he testified, but only about 0.13% by saturation, which would not be sufficient to cause death."

 
By today’s standards, with a 0.13% blood-alcohol level, she would be considered drunk. 

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography, Thelma Todd | 1 Comment

Matt Weinstock, Dec. 7, 1960

  Dec. 7, 1960, Comics  

Dec. 7, 1960: The employees of Baker Oil Tools decide that instead of sending one another Christmas cards, they would pool the money and give it to a charity. Last year, they selected Rancho Los Amigos, a facility for senior citizens, Matt Weinstock says.

CONFIDENTIAL TO HERB: If that is "togetherness" — try "apartness."

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