Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main Title

This week’s mystery movie was the 1956 Twentieth Century-Fox film The Lieutenant Wore Skirts, with Tom Ewell, Sheree North, Rita Moreno, Rick Jason, Les Tremayne, Alice Reinheart, Gregory Walcott and Jean Willes. Continue reading

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: TCM Classic Film Festival’s Fantastic Voyage

TCM_poster
While not quite as elaborate as in past years, the 16th Annual TCM Classic Film Festival still offered a tasty smorgasbord of movies, special events, and programming for classic movie fans. Spread out over four days and multiple venues at the end of April, the festival traveled the globe with its helpings of entertainment and education, meant to draw everyone from classic film fans to social media influencers to celebrity chasers.

Opening night featured travel to a galaxy far, far away with a screening of the seminal “Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back,” preceded by introduction and salute to filmmaker George Lucas. High end passholders walked the red carpet along with celebrities before the grand festivities.

As usual, organizers created an elegant throwback in the Roosevelt Hotel’s Club TCM, with the feel of a classic era nightclub or lounge. Oversize portraits of such glamorous stars as Elizabeth Taylor, Gloria Swanson, Norma Shearer, and Paul Newman graced its walls. Display cases featured stylish costumes worn by Joan Crawford in “Mildred Pierce” (1945) and another film, Elizabeth Taylor in “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” (1966), Michelle Pfeiffer as Catwoman from “Batman Returns” (1992), and a Dolores Del Rio outfit. Continue reading

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Reminder – My Next ‘Ask Me Anything’ on the Black Dahlia Case Is May 6

Boxie and I will be doing a live “Ask Me Anything” on the Black Dahlia case Tuesday, May 6, at 10 a.m. Pacific time, on YouTube and Instagram (yes I’ve decided to go back).

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main title: rain and a background strewn with pennies.

This week’s mystery movie was the 1936 Columbia film Pennies From Heaven, with Bing Crosby, Madge Evans, Edith Fellows, Louis Armstrong, Donald Meek, John Gallaudet, William Stack, Nana Bryant, Tommy Dugan and Nydia Westman. Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main title: Lettering over image of cloverleaf.

This week’s mystery movie was the 1935 MGM film The Winning Ticket, with Leo Carrillo, Louise Fazenda, Ted Healy, Irene Hervey, James Ellison, Luis Alberni, Purnell B. Pratt, Akim Tamiroff, Betty Jane Graham, Billy Watson, Johnny Indrisano and Ronald Fitzpatrick (per the credits Roland Fitzpatrick in the AFI Catalog and IMDB) Continue reading

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Mary Mallory: Hollywood Heights – ‘Auction of Souls’

Jue 23, 1919, Auction of Souls
Photo: June 23, 1919, “Auction of Souls.” Credit: Los Angeles Times


Note: This is an encore post from 2011.

Los Angeles has long been a haven for refugees and artists, particularly those fleeing political and militaristic struggles.  As early as 1915, Armenians began arriving in Southern California after fleeing from the massacres and pogroms inflicted on them by Kurds and Turks.  By December of that year, 1,500 Armenians lived here without knowing the whereabouts of many members of their families back home.

Many continued to come, as the papers warned of massacres, imprisonment, torture, and murder of innocent men, women, and children. Genocide.  An article’s headline in the September 27, 1915, Los Angeles Times read, “Massacre of Armenians at Height of Its Fury, … Report States that Five Hundred Thousand Men, Women, and Children Have Either Been Killed by the Turks or Driven to the Desert to Perish of Starvation – Extermination of Non-Moslems is Programme Decided Upon.”  850,000 were reported killed by late October, nearly three quarters of the population of the entire country.

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George Hodel: Ask Me Anything, April 2025

Here’s Boxie and I with this month’s “Ask Me Anything” on George Hodel.

Warning. Wikipedia says: Larry Harnisch is an infamous debunker of the most popular theory surrounding George Hodel, who is one of the prime and most likely suspects. His claims against the validity of George Hodel are done so through ad hominem fallacies against Steve Hodel and self-declared “independent” research, rather than personal history and facts.

Also, Steve Hodel is editing his father’s Wikipedia page again, though it’s minor this time.

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: TCM Classic Film Festival Celebrates Fantastic Worlds

Fanciful map of movie locations.

Returning to Hollywood for its 16th year April 24 through 27, the TCM Classic Film Festival celebrates Grand Illusions: Fantastic Worlds on Film with a diverse programming slate spanning the years 1920s through the 2000s and appealing to new and veteran classic film fans alike. The festival  offers a great way to learn cinema history, sample new film genres, and befriend like-minded fans, all while meeting celebrities and enjoying special events like a hand and footprint ceremony in front of the TCL Chinese Theatre.

The festival travels to a galaxy, far, far away for its official opening night gala screening with the showing of the epic “Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back” (1980) introduced by producer/co-writer George Lucas. Possibly the greatest sequel and serial chapter of all time. “The Empire Strikes Back” features majestic music penned by legendary composer John Williams, fabulous special effects, patriotic rebels fighting the evil empire, and swashbuckling heroes Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) out to save Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher) and a glorious cause. Several special guests will probably make surprise appearances.

Passes for the TCM Classic Film Festival are $449 to $2,649.

Individual tickets are $20, and $30 for the closing night presentation. Students with valid ID get a 50% discount.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main title: Script over love birds on a tree branch with clouds in the background

This week’s mystery movie was the 1947 film The Voice of the Turtle, with Ronald Reagan, Eleanor Parker, Eve Arden, Wayne Morris, Kent Smith, John Emery and John Holland. Continue reading

Posted in 1947, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , , | 21 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Wicked Women Highlight Noir City Hollywood

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Ann Savage and Tom Neal in Detour.


Political corruption. Narcissism. Larceny. Thievery. Skullduggery. Just a few of the key plot points at this year’s entertaining 26th Annual Noir City Hollywood at the Egyptian Theatre, aping current headlines. Wicked women and their deceitful ways stole the show as several plots seemed to echo today’s nightmarish, vengeance driven headlines. Featuring both classic noirs and neo-noirs like The Last Seduction and The Grifters, offering more visceral, profane action, the festival revealed the petty, treacherous underbelly of America.

Czar of Noir Eddie Muller and associate Alan Rode offered pithy and often hilarious introductions to the films, acknowledging the often dark and combative stories occurring offscreen during production. They offered astute comments as to how the plot of contemporary America seems to be echoing the claustrophobic, hate-filled grievances and actions of seventy and eighty years ago. Muller himself conducted in-depth interviews with stars Annette Bening and Jennifer Tilly, full of insights, humor, and detail. Brian Light’s eye-popping, luscious lithographic posters captured the romantic but twisted view of noir and its evil men and women. Continue reading

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‘Ask Me Anything’ on George Hodel – April 15

Reminder: Boxie and I will be doing a live “Ask Me Anything” on George Hodel and Steve Hodel on Tuesday, April 15, at 10 a.m. Pacific time exclusively on YouTube. No more Instagram.

Can’t make the live session? Email me your questions and I’ll answer them! The video will be posted once the session ends so you can watch it later. Remember, this is ask me anything, so please remember to ask questions rather than make comments. Thanks!

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main title: Red letters over shot of a body floating in a lake.

This week’s mystery movie was the 1992 film Thunderheart, with Val Kilmer, Sam Shepard, Graham Greene, Fred Ward, Fred Dalton Thompson, Sheila Tousey, Chief Ted Thin Elk, John Trudel and Julius Drum.

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Black Dahlia: Ask Me Anything, April 2025


In the April 2025 Ask Me Anything on the Black Dahlia case, I talk about my work in progress, Heaven Is HERE! and my current focus on the autopsy of Elizabeth Short.

In this session, I discussed two forthcoming books, both of which claim to “solve” the Black Dahlia case. One is by Hollywood biographer William Mann and the other is by Eli Frankel, which presumably names Carl Balsiger as the killer. I’ve dealt with Balsiger in a previous video and only talked about him briefly this time.

(I resisted requests to do an April Fools Day episode on the Black Dahlia case — I don’t kid around about it. But I did make fun of influencers by noting my lovely new flannel shirt from Land’s End, Carrera sunglasses from FramesDirect.com and regular Flexon frames from FramesDirect.com. Also Boxie as a Stor/File 703 from Office Depot).

TRIGGER  WARNING: In this segment, I discuss autopsies and dismemberment/mutilations.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main title: Lettering over West Point cadets in formation.

This week’s mystery movie was the 1955 Columbia film The Long Gray Line, with Tyrone Power, Maureen O’Hara, Robert Francis, Donald Crisp, Ward Bond, Betsy Palmer, Phil Carey, William Leslie, Harry Carey Jr., Patrick Wayne, Sean McClory, Peter Graves, Milburn Stone, Erin O’Brien Moore, Walter D. Ehlers and Willis Bouchey.

harrison_reviewScreenplay by Edward Hope.

Based upon Bringing Up the Brass by Marty Maher and Nardi Reeder Campion.

Color by Technicolor.

Photography by Charles Lawton Jr.

Technicolor color consultant Francis Cugat.

Gowns by Jean Louis.

Music supervised by Morris Stoloff.

Musical adaptation by George Duning.

Art direction by Robert Peterson.

Edited by William A. Lyon.

Assistant directors Wingate Smith and Jack Corrick.

Technical advisers Lt. Col. George McIntyre and Maj. George Pappas.

Makeup by Clay Campbell.

Hairstyles by Helen Hunt.

Sound by John Livadary and George Cooper.

Re-recording by Richard Olson.

Photographed in CinemaScope.

Produced by Robert Arthur.

Directed by John Ford.

Further information on The Long Gray Line is available from the AFI Catalog.

The Long Gray Line is available on DVD from Amazon.

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I picked The Long Gray Line by going through the trades and it looked interesting: A lesser-known John Ford film with some strong reviews and very few screen captures on IMDB. The story is a bit predictable but well-handled and the leads are good. There are lots of familiar faces in the cast who went on to long careers in television.

I’m not sure how Bosley called this one. Maybe he said it was obvious (in some ways it is), maybe he was entranced by the CinemaScope and Technicolor. I’m guessing at least a middling review.

He liked it quite a bit! (The New York Times, February 11, 1955):

If the green of the shamrock seems to color Columbia’s The Long Gray Line, which trooped with pennants snapping into the Capitol yesterday, it is not in the least surprising. This film tells the story of Marty Maher, a much-beloved athletic trainer and instructor at West Point for fifty years. The role of the Irish hero is played by Tyrone Power. And the picture is lustily directed by that most positive Hibernian, John Ford.

As a consequence, this rich and rousing tribute to West Point and Sgt. Maher, to the academy’s deep traditions and to its long line of loyal cadets, tends somehow to leave the impression that the Irish captured the Point when Marty Maher took up residence and that it continued that way for fifty years.

Man in uniform sitting at a table.
For Monday, we have a mysterious fellow.

Update: This is Tyrone Power in heavy age makeup.

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Reminder – My Next ‘Ask Me Anything’ on the Black Dahlia Case Is April 1

Boxie and I will be doing a live “Ask Me Anything” on the Black Dahlia case Tuesday, April 1, at 10 a.m. Pacific time, on YouTube. I have discontinued my videos on Instagram.

TRIGGER WARNING: I will be discussing Elizabeth Short’s autopsy and related subjects.
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Ron Chernow’s ‘Mark Twain’: Brushstrokes Instead of a Portrait of America’s Favorite Humorist

Book cover. Colorized portrait of Mark Twain with bushy hair and mustache, gazing seriously to his right.

Mark Twain, Ron Chernow, 1,200 pages, Penguin Press, May 13, 2025. $45.


Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Ron Chernow has compiled an exhaustive volume on Samuel Clemens, who as Mark Twain became one of America’s most beloved humorists and witty observers of the human experience. More of a rigorously researched encyclopedia at 1,200 pages and 3½ pounds, Chernow’s book best serves as an almanac or catalog of Twain’s carefully documented minutia about his life rather than a broad, accessible portrait of the author.  Sales prospects should be excellent on this perennially best-selling subject, but recreational reading it is not.

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Were I a more gifted writer, I would compose a review of Ron Chernow’s Mark Twain in the style of its subject, a man of sharp humor who lampooned prolix writing and loved nothing more than deflating overblown pretensions with a deftly placed barb.  In Mark Twain, one of America’s most famous humorists is ill served with a long-winded biography that has a surfeit of details, little humor and less wit.

Above all other things, Twain was a storyteller, and this biography’s main weakness is that it lacks a story. There are people. There are events. There are details. But there is no storytelling. Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main Title. Lettering over shot of church steeple.

This week’s mystery film was the 1957 Universal-International film The Midnight Story, with Tony Curtis, Marisa Pavan, Gilbert Roland, Jay C. Flippen, Argentina Brunetti, Ted de Corsia, Richard Monda, Kathleen Freeman, Herburt Vigran, Peggy June Maley, John Cliff, Russ Conway, Chico Vejar, Tito Vuolo, Helen Wallace and James Hyland. Continue reading

Posted in 1957, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , , | 42 Comments

Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: M.E. Firman, Lady Detective

Marie Firman, L.A. Times, July 17, 1917
Note: This is an encore post from 2020.

In the early 1900s, most women in the United States lacked the right to vote. Groups such as the National American Woman Suffrage Association organized to actively campaign for enfranchisement. Winning the vote would lead to other reforms regarding child rearing, property ownership, fiduciary matters, and most importantly, independence. Women could gain control of their lives and bodies, following their own dreams and career paths, moving beyond roles of mother, wife, teacher, shop clerk or secretary.

Motion pictures aided their mission, making films about the suffrage movement before producing films featuring strong and independent women, particularly in such serials as “Perils of Pauline,” “The Exploits of Elaine,” and “The Adventures of Kathlyn.” Heroines in these films confronted dastardly villains, wild animals, and dangerous adventures, investigating and solving crimes and mysteries.

Mary Mallory’s latest book,
Living With Grace: Life Lessons from America’s Princess,”  is now on sale.

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George Hodel: Ask Me Anything, March 2025

Here’s Boxie and I with this month’s “Ask Me Anything” on George Hodel.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Script over shot of unemployment office with people standing in line.

This week’s mystery movie was the 1951 MGM picture Teresa, with Pier Angeli, John Ericson, Patricia Collinge, Bill Mauldin, Peggy Ann Garner, Ralph Meeker, Ave Ninchi, Edward Binns, Rod Steiger, Aldo Silvani, Tommy Lewis, Franco Interlenghi, Edith Atwater, Lewis Cianelli, William King and Richard McNamara.
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Posted in 1951, Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | Tagged , , , , , | 14 Comments