Found on EBay – What Actors Eat When They Eat!

What Actors Eat Certain books with a Los Angeles or Hollywood connection have taken on ridiculous prices — “Thicker ‘n’ Thieves” comes to mind – and this is another item that usually carries an inflated price, although I have never seen it this high.

Lymanhouse was a small Los Angeles publisher that went out of business during World War II after releasing about two dozen books,  including “They Call Them Camisoles.” The most common Lymanhouse item on EBay is “What Actors Eat When They Eat!” which is a collection of recipes from the late 1930s (W.C. Fields provides his method of making brandied peaches).

The vendor has listed this book at $195 or Buy It Now for $300. Even inscribed to Times columnist E.V. Durling, it’s not worth that kind of money.

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Matt Weinstock, Oct. 25, 1960

 

  Oct. 25, 1960, Comics  

Oct. 25, 1960: Bunker Hill residents are sleeping undisturbed again after three weeks of terror during which a burglar broke into seven apartments, held a knife to occupants who awoke and robbed them. Dets. Joe Medina and Charles Glazer captured him Sunday on Grand Avenue near 3rd Street, Matt Weinstock says.

DEAR ABBY: I rent a room to a woman whose husband is doing time. She works nights in a cafe and I will say this for her — she is decent and loyal to her man. There is one thing wrong with her, Abby. She talks about her husband like he was away at Harvard.

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Paul Coates, Oct. 25, 1960

 

  Oct. 25, 1960, Mirror
 

Oct. 25, 1960: Paul Coates uses the gang killing of teenager Manuel Castro, whose crime was being in the wrong neighborhood,  as a point of departure for wondering why some youths reclaim their lives from gangs while others don’t. He summarizes the explanation as: "My friends got caught before they got wise. I got wise before I got caught."

In case you’re wondering, “Didn’t they just have a bus strike?” The answer is yes, in 1958. But not in 1959.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Oct. 25, 1940

 
 

  Oct. 25, 1940, Russo_Japanese Treaty Near

 

  Oct. 25, 1940, Bob Gregory  

Oct. 25, 1940: Josephine Baker, broke and stranded near Paris, is beseeching friends for aid, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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Widowed by Hasty Words

 
 

  image  

Oct. 25, 1910: Jessie Emery wanted her husband, Fred, to go to the store and get a bottle of milk and a loaf of bread for dinner. But he had a hard day and didn’t feel like going to the store, so a quarrel began. Fred beat Jessie over the head with a mandolin and she scratched him in self-defense. When his mother and sister came home and asked what had happened, the argument resumed and Fred loaded his cheap .32 revolver…

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Oct. 24, 1940

  Oct. 24, 1940, Hitler Luring Spain  

 
Oct. 24, 1940, Bargains

 

Oct. 24, 1940: Aside to Patricia Morison: A word to the wide should be sufficient, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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Immigrants’ Home Burned in Apparent Hate Crime

  Oct. 27, 1960, Jaskolsky

 
  Oct. 24, 1960, Arson  

Oct. 24, 1960: Vandals set fire to the Baldwin Park home of the Jaskolsky family and paint a swastika and the words “Notzi Rat” on a cinder-block wall in the backyard.

German immigrants Ewald Jaskolsky, 25, his wife, Wilhelmine , 20, and their two young children had spent the night at the home of friends and returned to find their house destroyed. Wilhelmine says: "The words on the wall hurt more than the loss of our home. We've done nothing to anyone. We were just children during the war."

The Jakolskys' plight has brought an outpouring of support from Ewald’s co-workers at Beckman Instruments Co., as well as help from friends and strangers, and although the family plans to leave Baldwin Park they are grateful for the aid they have received.

"People have been so wonderful to us it has made us more determined than ever to become American citizens," Wilhelmine says. "They've made us feel like one of them — like we're not foreigners anymore."

 

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Oct. 23, 1941

  Oct. 23, 1941, Winter Hatls  
  Oct. 23, 1941, Tom Treanor  

Oct. 23, 1941: Luck child, Dick Powell — his Arizona "gold" mine, rated a washout — has uncovered a valuable alunite deposit, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Archives Bazaar

 

  Streetcar  

Just a reminder that the fifth annual Archives Bazaar is today from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at USC’s Doheny Memorial Library. There will be panel discussions throughout the day, including a panel at 1:30 p.m. on newspapers and newspaper archives with yours truly of the Daily Mirror  

 
Posted in books, Coming Attractions, Photography | 2 Comments

Found on EBay – Earl Carroll’s

Earl Carroll's/Moulin Rouge

A postcard showing Earl Carroll’s nightclub after it was renamed the Moulin Rouge has been listed on EBay. Notice that the famous neon sign and the celebrities’ signatures in concrete are intact. Bidding starts at $9.99.

Earl Carroll's/Moulin Rouge
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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Oct. 22, 1940

  Oct. 22, 1940, Nazi Ports Aflame

 
  Oct. 22, 1940, Tom Treanor

 

Oct. 22, 1940: Never saw a child with better dining-out manners than 9-year-old Harold Lloyd Jr., Jimmie Fidler says. 

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Movieland Mystery Photo

  Oct. 18, 2010, Mystery Photo  
  Los Angeles Times file photo  

Here’s this week’s mystery guest!

Last week’s mystery was the apartment of William Desmond Taylor. The weekend mystery guest was Charles Vidor.

There's a new picture on the jump!

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | 46 Comments

From the Vaults: ‘The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari’ (1919)

Caligari Is there anything new to say about "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari"? Not really, but Halloween is a time for classics. And the best thing about this silent landmark of German expressionism is how magnificently new it still looks. Grainy and faded, sure, but with imagery that still looks like nothing else, no matter how many times it's been imitated or referenced. If you've never seen it, don't miss it.

We open with a framing device, in which handsome leading man Francis (Friedrich Feher) tells a concerned-looking friend about a transforming experience he shared with his fiancee (Lil Dagover), who wanders by with a white nightgown and a glazed expression in full "House of Usher" style. Then the movie flashes back, and it's here the fun begins.

Francis' hometown of Holstenwall is having a carnival, we're told, but it looks like every day in Holstenwall is a day in the funhouse. Walls and ceilings tilt at insane angles, crazy patterns are painted on the streets and floors: It's all unabashedly artificial-looking and wild. Even the man who lights the streetlamps is askew, walking with a limp. But most of the townspeople just stroll through this strange like it's all perfectly normal. The effect is immediately a bit dizzying.

Something new and weird is at this year's carnival: a somnambulist, named Cesare (Conrad Veidt), placed on display by one Dr. Caligari (Werner Krauss). Apparently being a somnambulist means you don't mind being kept in a box and can predict the future — but we quickly learn that it also means being an enslaved murderer! Cesare is quickly dispatched to slay a town clerk who gets on Caligari's nerves, as well as a local guy named Alan (Hans Heinrich von Twardowski). Unfortunately for Caligari, Alan was Francis' best friend, and Francis resolves to solve the murder. (The town clerk, it seems, had no friends.)

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Riot by Veterans Cancels Showing of ‘Caligari’

  May 5, 1921, Cabinet of Dr. Caligari  

  May 9, 1921, Cabinet of Dr. Caligari  

  May 8, 1921, German Films  

Oct. 5-9, 1921: A violent protest by the Hollywood post of the American Legion outside Miller’s Theater halts the exhibition of “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari” after a few performances.

"The playhouse, which had started the picture early in the afternoon for a two week's run, capitulated only after it had been picketed for hours by hundreds of men in uniform and after the disturbance at its entrance had gone to such extremes that two mob rushes had been attempted, rotten eggs had been hurled and police and provost guard forces had been reinforced until they numbered 35 men," The Times said.

The theater restored calm by substituting “The Money Changers.”  “Caligari” didn’t return to Los Angeles until 1927 and by then tempers had cooled.

Anne Elisabeth Dillon has more on "Caligari" in "From the Vaults."

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Victor the Flower Vendor

  Oct. 22, 1910, Dress  
  Oct. 22, 1910, Black Silk  

Oct. 22, 1910: The LAPD cracks down on sidewalk peddlers and beggars outside the Merchants’ National Bank at 3rd and Spring streets. But what to do with Victor, the poor flower vendor?

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Found on EBay — ‘Salome’

  Theda Bara, Salome  
An EBay vendor has listed what is apparently an original publicity photo from Theda Bara’s “Salome,” one of the best-known “lost” silent movies. Production design was by George James Hopkins, in case you are wondering, as I was.  Bidding starts at $49.99.

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Paul Coates, Oct. 21, 1960

 
 

  Oct. 21, 1960, Comics  

Oct. 21, 1960: What if college students studying in the student union put records into the jukebox that were blank –- so they could study without being distracted by music? A gag dreamed up by a university publicist on a slow day takes on a life of its own.

CONFIDENTIAL TO "OUSTED EVE": Time will not solve your problem. Bring everything into the open and have a showdown.

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Matt Weinstock, Oct. 21, 1960

 

 
 

  Oct. 21, 1960, Cover
 

Oct. 21, 1960: Matt Weinstock reports from the trenches in the battle between Democrats and Republicans for the White House.

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Jimmie Fidler in Hollywood, Oct. 21, 1940

  Oct. 21, 1940, Bomb Sight  
  Oct. 21, 1940, Tom Treanor  

Oct. 21, 1940 –  HOLLYWOOD AFTER DARK: Lucille Ball startling La Conga patrons with a wild grab for a water pitcher when escort Desi Arnaz coaxes her into tasting a Mexican pepper, Jimmie Fidler says. 

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Penthouse and Bob Guccione

  

  July 23, 1984, Vanessa Williams  

July 23, 1984: Vanessa Williams resigns at the request of Miss America Pageant officials after nude photos of her are published in Penthouse.

 

  Sept. 29, 1971, Bob Guccione  

Sept. 29, 1971: The late David Shaw writes a nondupe (Column One) on the swift success of Bob Guccione’s Penthouse magazine.

Contrasting the long-established Playboy with the rapid growth of Penthouse, Shaw wrote:

“Playboy, a pioneer in the sexual revolution, was beginning to lag, and Penthouse was ready to leap into the breach — much as Playboy had done originally against Esquire.

“Thus Penthouse girls conceal nothing — in fact, seem to parade, to flaunt that which Playboy concealed. Moreover, unlike the virginal Playboy nudes, skin unblemished, always posed like models — more to be admired than embraced — the Penthouse girls are shown in highly erotic, sexually provocative poses, occasionally awkward poses, complete with moles, beauty marks and wrinkles.”

On the jump, Roderick Mann interviews Malcolm McDowell in 1978 about the Penthouse production of "Caligula," ("It's probably the most expensive amateur film ever made"), a 1982 libel case against Penthouse over a 1975 article linking a San Diego County resort and its owners to organized crime, and a 1986 article on the decline of Playboy, Penthouse and other men's magazines.

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