The Balloonatics

July 6, 2008, Kent Couch

Photograph by Jeff Barnard/Associated Press

July 6, 2008: Kent Couch prepares to lift off in a lawn chair from his gas station in Bend, Ore., in a balloon-suspended lawn chair at dawn. About nine hours later, he created a sensation in Cambridge, Idaho, across the Oregon desert about 235 miles away, as he touched down in a field by popping balloons with his Red Ryder BB gun. (He also had a blow gun with steel darts and a parachute, just in case.) It was his third flight, and the farthest. He was inspired by North Hollywood trucker Larry Walters, who flew from San Pedro to Long Beach in 1982.

July 3, 1982. Larry Walters, Balloon
July 3, 1982: Larry Walters goes up in a lawn chair tied to 42 weather balloons.

July 3, 1982, Larry Walters, Balloon


April 23, 1983, Larry Walters, Balloons

April 23, 1983: Larry Walters is fined $1,500. Below, 10 years later, he committed suicide.

 

Larry Walters; Soared to Fame on Lawn Chair

November 24, 1993

By MYRNA OLIVER, TIMES STAFF WRITER

Larry Walters, who achieved dubious fame in 1982 when he piloted a lawn chair attached to helium balloons 16,000 feet above Long Beach, has committed suicide at the age of 44.

Walters died Oct. 6 after hiking to a remote spot in Angeles National Forest and shooting himself in the heart, his mother, Hazel Dunham, revealed Monday. She said relatives knew of no motive for the suicide.

"It was something I had to do," Walters told The Times after his flight from San Pedro to Long Beach on July 2, 1982. "I had this dream for 20 years, and if I hadn't done it, I would have ended up in the funny farm."

Walters rigged 42 weather balloons to an aluminum lawn chair, pumped them full of helium and had two friends untether the craft, which he had dubbed "Inspiration I."

He took along a large bottle of soda, a parachute and a portable CB radio to alert air traffic to his presence. He also took a camera but later admitted, "I was so amazed by the view I didn't even take one picture."

Walters, a North Hollywood truck driver with no pilot or balloon training, spent about two hours aloft and soared up to 16,000 feet — three miles — startling at least two airline pilots and causing one to radio the Federal Aviation Administration.

Shivering in the high altitude, he used a pellet gun to pop balloons to come back to earth. On the way down, his balloons draped over power lines, blacking out a Long Beach neighborhood for 20 minutes.

The stunt earned Walters a $1,500 fine from the FAA, the top prize from the Bonehead Club of Dallas, the altitude record for gas-filled clustered balloons (which could not be officially recorded because he was unlicensed and unsanctioned) and international admiration. He appeared on "The Tonight Show" and was flown to New York to be on "Late Night With David Letterman," which he later described as "the most fun I've ever had."

"I didn't think that by fulfilling my goal in life — my dream — that I would create such a stir," he later told The Times, "and make people laugh."

Walters abandoned his truck-driving job and went on the lecture circuit, remaining sporadically in demand at motivational seminars. But he said he never made much money from his innovative flight and was glad to keep his simple lifestyle.

He gave his "aircraft" — the aluminum lawn chair — to admiring neighborhood children after he landed, later regretting it.

In recent years, Walters hiked the San Gabriel Mountains and did volunteer work for the U.S. Forest Service.

"I love the peace and quiet," he told The Times in 1988. "Nature and I get along real well."

An Army veteran who served in Vietnam, Walters never married and had no children. He is survived by his mother and two sisters.

April 22, 2001, Lawnchair Man  

Photograph by Lori Shepler / Los Angeles Times

Eddie Korbich in the lawn chair and Roger E. DeWitt as Leonardo DaVinci in the musical "The Flight of the Lawnchair Man" in an evening of three one-act musicals called 3hree at the Ahmanson Theater on April 14,2001.

A Feat as Unusual as Piloting a Chair

* 'Flight of the Lawnchair Man's' creators are both from Iowa, but it took a New York pro to pair them up.

April 22, 2001

By DIANE HAITHMAN, Diane Haithman is a Times staff writer

Robert Lindsey Nassif, who wrote the music and lyrics for "The Flight of the Lawnchair Man," and Peter Ullian, who wrote the book, had a history with Hal Prince before he tapped them for this musical.

Prince paired them up for their first collaboration, "Eliot Ness in Cleveland," performed in 1998 at the Denver Center Theatre Company, and in 2000 at the Cleveland Playhouse. The musical was produced under Prince's auspices and based on Ullian's play "In the Shadow of the Terminal Tower."

Musical theater aspirations brought both men to New York, but each has roots in Iowa. Nassif, 41, was born in Cedar Rapids; Ullian, 34, attended the Iowa Playwrights Workshop at the University of Iowa in nearby Iowa City. They were working independently when Prince suggested that Nassif set Ullian's play to music. "The odds against two guys from Cedar Rapids being put together in New York are astronomical," Nassif observes. "I like to think that means something."

Kind of like the odds against more than one person trying to fly by attaching balloons to his lawn chair — and yet it happened.

The story has been variously reported, but according to his Times obituary, North Hollywood truck driver Larry Walters piloted a lawn chair attached to helium weather balloons 1,600 feet into the air on his way from Long Beach to San Pedro in 1982. (Walters committed suicide in 1993 at age 44.) In England, another man attempted a similar feat by tying hundreds of helium balloons, the birthday-party variety, to a piece of furniture and taking off. Both acts of gravity-defiance were spotted by the very surprised pilots of commercial jets.

Nassif came up with idea of a musical based on such a flier-fleshed out with the Lawnchair Man meeting the great aviators of the past as he climbs ever higher into the sky. He also added the subplot of a 747 pilot who sees this armchair pilot out his airplane window and suffers an identity crisis.

"Different teams work in different ways," Ullian says. "With Rob, I will write a first draft of the book as if it's just a play, without thinking: 'This is where the song goes.' And then Rob will take the play that I wrote, go off by himself, find where the songs are hidden, buried, and sort of excavate them. For instance, when the 747 pilot sees the Lawnchair Man, originally that was written as a scene. But Rob took the basic arc of the scene-the emotion-and replaced it with a song." Though they were used to collaborating, Nassif and Ullian say there's a big difference between working under the auspices of Prince and actually having him direct a show. Each found the experience to be a revelation.

"When you work with Hal as a mentor, you go out and work and rehearse, and then bring in what you've done. Here, you are working with Hal one-on-one; there was more of a sense of him as a colleague," says Ullian. "It was more of a hands-on experience, less theoretical and more practical."

Some reviewers have called "3hree" old-fashioned-in a nice way. "Hey, They Do Write 'Em Like They Used To," said the New York Times headline for the paper's review of the 2000 production at the Prince Music Theater in Philadelphia. But Ullian says Prince never forced his hand on that matter, either.

"I think our approach was to write it as the material demanded, and I think what's gratifying about that headline is that I hope, in some way, all three shows have managed to tap into and honor what is great about the musical tradition," Ullian says.

"For instance, our show has a lot of musical underscoring [music composed for background] during the dialogue scenes, it's a musical architecture for the whole piece, and I think that's true of the other pieces as well. It's a little different from the tradition of shows like 'Guys and Dolls' that are song-scene-song.

"And there are moments when there's a song, then a little bit of a scene during a bridge, the songs and the book are integrated in a way that, while I wouldn't say it's radical, it's a little bit different. But we're not trying to do a sung-through musical like 'Evita' or some of those others, or a rock musical like 'Rent.' In that sense, we have definitely embraced the traditional book musical.

"I read a quote from Hal somewhere in which he says that actually a traditional musical is more difficult to write. There is nothing more difficult than writing the book to create a point where the song can come through as logical, where you've 'earned' the song. Earning the song is not an issue when you are singing all the time."

Nassif calls Prince the "invisible master hand" when it comes to directing. "He sets you in the right direction; a fine director doesn't tie your hands, he frees you.

"I think we really need brave producers, not just corporations," Nassif adds. "Musical theater has become so expensive-some wonderful shows like 'Lion King' can come out of it, but I think we also need brave producers of vision. It is the unique shows, I think, that last. Shows that a committee recognizes as 'produceable' do not necessarily have an enduring life. There has to be a vision."

Posted in @news, Music, Stage, Transportation | 1 Comment

‘Eel Boy’ Escapes From Police

Oct. 16, 1919, Eel Boy

Oct. 16, 1919: Don "Eel Boy" Clauser escapes again! This time he was showing Glendale officers where he had freed some horses when he made a "running high dive into the brush alongside the road."

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Labor Activists Target Main Street Theater

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Oct. 16, 1909: Union demonstrators target the Regal Theater, 323 S. Main St. In less than a year, labor activists will bomb the Los Angeles Times Building, killing 20 employees … And architect Cass Gilbert visits Los Angeles as a guest of his brother Charles. 

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October 15, 1959: Matt Weinstock

October 15,1959: Comic panel of a man shooting a ray gun.

The Chessman Case

Matt WeinstockHow, under the law, can a man be left dangling between life an death for 11 years?  That’s what people are asking in the strange case of Caryl Chessman, due to be gassed in San Quentin Oct. 23.  And why is Chessman himself protesting a move toward clemency that might mean life imprisonment?

The answer lies in a mountain of legal evidence and opinions which have piled up since he was convicted in 1948 of rape, kidnapping and robbery.  And yet, not all the answer is there, either.

It is unwise to oversimplify such a tangle but attorneys, discussing the case objectively, put a finger on the law itself. Continue reading

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Oct. 15, 1959

Oct. 15, 1959, Paul Coates
Paul is still on vacation …

Oct. 15, 1959, Abby

Oct. 15, 1959: A respectable neighbor is a peeping Tom … And a high school girl has a crush on her science teacher!

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Errol Flynn Dies in Canada

Oct. 15, 1959, Errol Flynn Dies
Oct. 15, 1959: The Mirror isn’t quite so dainty about calling Beverly Aadland a “protege.” 

Aug. 19, 1979, Beverly Aadland
Aug. 19, 1979: Beverly Aadland writes to The Times and says she's living in the Antelope Valley.

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A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Oct. 15, 1942, Movies  

Oct. 15, 1942: “The Major and the Minor” is opening. The reproduction in the World War II papers can be really terrible, especially in the first year or two of the war. 

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Errol Flynn Dies!

Errol Flynn, Robin Hood  

Olivia de Havilland and Errol Flynn in “The Adventures of Robin Hood.”

Oct. 15, 1959, Errol Flynn Dies!

Oct. 15, 1959: Errol Flynn collapses and dies in a Vancouver apartment where he had stopped for a drink. Mrs. George Caldough, who was accompanying the star and Beverly Aadland, his 17-year-old "protege," says: "He died laughing."

Oct. 15, 1959, Errol Flynn

"Errol Flynn lived high and hard from the moment he was old enough to walk until
the time he died. He could never step aside from a fight or a cause nor could he turn his back on a pretty woman…

Oct. 15, 1959, Errol Flynn
…At the flick of an eyebrow he would charge into court to sue and on his way out was just as often brought back as the target of a suit."

 

Revisiting a tragic rogue

* In a documentary and a lineup of his films, Turner Classic Movies presents the life and work of Errol Flynn.

April 05, 2005

By Susan King, Times Staff Writer

Michae Curtiz, Erro Flynn, 1939 Errol Flynn, the swashbuckling actor who came to fame in the 1930s, seemed to have everything going for him. "He had a face and a charm and ability," says his widow, Patrice Wymore Flynn. "He was just made for the camera."

But there was a self-destructive side too. Flynn was a womanizer who stood trial in 1942 for statutory rape, for which he was ultimately acquitted. He drank, shot morphine and began finding it difficult to remember lines. He was felled at age 50 by a heart attack.

"He was his own worst enemy, in many ways," said film historian Rudy Behlmer, co-writer of "The Films of Errol Flynn." "He thumbed his nose at convention, and he probably felt he could have it all. He wanted to try everything and I am sure he did. I think he thought he had the strength to stop."

"The Adventures of Errol Flynn," a new documentary airing at 5 and 8:30 tonight on Turner Classic Movies, examines the life and career of this paradoxical, charismatic man who was born in Tasmania in 1909.

In addition to interviews with Wymore, daughter Deirdre Flynn and frequent costar Olivia de Havilland, the documentary is filled with delicious clips from his movies, including the swashbucklers "Captain Blood," "The Adventures of Robin Hood," "The Sea Hawk" and "Adventures of Don Juan," as well as "The Dawn Patrol," "Gentleman Jim," "Objective, Burma!" and "That Forsyte Woman."

TCM is airing several of these films in conjunction with the documentary. And on April 19, Warner Home Video will release several Flynn films on DVD, including "Sea Hawk" and "Captain Blood."

Wymore, who met Flynn when they co-starred in 1950's "Rocky Mountain," said her husband's career was unfortunately "overshadowed by the public's playboy image. He felt he was never taken seriously as an actor, I don't think. So I think it's nice to know that he is being recognized as a talent. Nobody has been able to do what he did."

The Flynn she knew wasn't a madcap partygoer. "He loved to have people at the house," she said. "To get him to go to a big soiree was not easy."

But Wymore couldn't save him from himself after a series of misfortunes in the early 1950s.

First, Flynn was dropped from Warner Bros. in 1953.

Then he sank money into an ill-fated film version of "William Tell" that was never completed due to insufficient funds. A lawsuit filed by a former friend, actor Bruce Cabot, due to the film's demise, wiped him out.

"He just lost his way," said Wymore. "It was all too much all at once. His whole world was crumbling around him."

In 1957, Flynn caused a scandal when he left Wymore and ran off with 15-year-old actress-showgirl Beverly Aadland, whom he described as his "protegee."

Wymore says that before his death in 1959, she and Flynn were making plans to reconcile.

In the documentary, Deirdre says she caught her father one day with a syringe of morphine. "But you have to understand, I never saw him drunk though he drank all the time. I never saw him stoned, even though I knew what he was doing. I knew it wasn't right and I knew it wasn't good, but I thought he had been doing it a long time, I guess he can handle it."

She was 3 when her father divorced her mother, Nora Eddington. She says he remained close to her and her sister Rory. "Every time he was in town, we were with him," she recalled. "He was strict but fun-loving. He taught me to ride my pony when I was very young and years later he went horseback riding with me."

Her father, she says, would always lobby studio chief Jack Warner for more serious fare. "When he first started out in theater in England, he had his mind set on being a serious actor," she said. "But Jack Warner kept him in tights. I think that bothered him and he started to walk through his films."

But he certainly didn't walk through 1949's "That Forsyte Woman."

Warner loaned him to MGM for the Technicolor adaptation of John Galsworthy's novel, in which he beautifully underplays the role of a repressed British aristocrat obsessed with his wife (Greer Garson) but unable to express his love.

"He went against type," said his daughter. "It was his favorite picture. And I love that picture too."

Los Angeles Times file photo: Michael Curtiz and Errol Flynn, "The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex."

Oct. 15, 1959, Fire
Air tankers are used to fight the La Canada fire, including B-25s, PBYs and helicopters.
Posted in 1959, Film, Hollywood, Obituaries | 2 Comments

A Postscript on the Black Sox

Aug. 13, 1969, Black Sox  
Aug. 13-14, 1969, catching up with the Black Sox.

Aug. 13, 1969, Black Sox

Aug. 14, 1969, Black Sox
 

Aug. 14, 1969, an interview with Gandil.

Aug. 14, 1969, Black Sox

"Chick Gandil was as tough as they come. He was 31 years old and stood 6 feet, 2 inches tall; a broad, powerful 197 pounds. This was his 14th year in baseball. He had started at the age of 17 after running away from home in St. Paul. He had hopped a freight bound for Amarillo, Texas, where he'd heard he could get a job playing semipro baseball.

"Later, he caught on with an outlaw team in Cananea Mexico, just across the Arizona border. Cananea was a wide-open mining town … Gandil not only played ball he became a heavyweight fighter, taking in $150 a fight, far more than he had ever seen before. In the off-season, he worked as a boilermaker in the local copper mines."

""I never confessed," Gandil said. "And five of the eight who were accused of throwing the series didn't. My hits won two of the games. If I'd been trying to throw the series would I have tried to win the games?"

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Magnetic Healer Lures Away Husband

Oct. 15, 1909, Magnetic Healer 

Oct. 15, 1909: A wife sues her husband for divorce, charging that he was drawn away by a “magnetic healer.”

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October 14, 1959: Matt Weinstock

October 15, 1959: Comic panel, a man slugging another man says "Right you are, my friend."

Red Wine Man

Matt WeinstockThis is wine week and while I am not knocking the old fashioned (with plain water, without the fruit salad) or minimizing the fiery Martini (I’m crazy about big green olives, with pimiento) or even bourbon and water (never soda), I find myself in a mood to say nice things about vino.

At home I usually drink a dry cocktail sherry before dinner and red wine with dinner.  I know it’s the thing to drink white wine with fish or fowl but I prefer red wine with everything.  I also like my wine in unstemmed glasses but I won’t fight about it.

I prefer California wines to all others and it’s no use trying to confuse me with all that silly vintage business.

Continue reading

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Paul V. Coates – Confidential File, Oct. 14, 1959

Oct. 14, 1959, Paul Coates 
Paul is on vacation …
Oct. 14, 1959, Dear Abby
Oct. 14, 1959: Dear Abby, should I tell my neighbor that there are weevils in her flour?

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Fire Closes in on Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Oct. 14, 1959, Mirror Cover  
Oct. 14, 1959: The Mirror brings out an extra on the La Canada fire, which is within a mile and a half of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The story says the fire moved half a mile in five minutes … And Charles Van Doren is subpoenaed to testify before a House subcommittee about rigged quiz shows. 

Posted in broadcasting, Front Pages, Television | 1 Comment

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Oct. 14, 1941, Maltese Falcon  

Oct. 14, 1941: “The Maltese Falcon” is a surprise hit in New York. It’s interesting to see that not much was expected in the third remake of the film, which has now eclipsed the two previous incarnations. I’ll have to track down the Bette Davis-Warren William version, which is apparently “Satan Met a Lady.”  I saw the 1931 Ricardo Cortez version years ago in Seattle and I was amazed that anyone could make such a dull, tedious and forgettable movie from such a great novel. This was many years ago and I might feel differently now, but I recall it being a real dog of a movie. 

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Forest Service Worker Admits Setting Fatal Fire

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This is how we did fire maps 50 years ago. The map is hard to read, but compare it with the one we did for the Station fire.


 
1959_1015_cover_thumb
Oct. 14, 1959: The Times brings out an extra on the forest fire.

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June 24, 1960, William Douglas Grater is sentenced in the fire.

Oct. 14, 1959: A fire that started along Angeles Crest Highway near Dark Canyon threatens homes in what is now the La Canada Flintridge area. William Douglas Grater Jr., a 20-year-old Forest Service employee, confessed to setting the fire, which killed two Zuni Indian firefighters and burned 14,000 acres. He was sentenced to a year in jail and seven years’ probation.

Posted in #courts, Front Pages | 1 Comment

Nuestro Pueblo — Pasadena

June 17, 1938, Nuestro Pueblo  
June 17, 1938: The original run of Nuestro Pueblo is over, but I’m posting the ones I missed the first time around. For this installment, Joe Seewerker and Charles Owens visited Pasadena.

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Shoeless Joe Jackson Seeks Reinstatement

Jan. 28, 1934, Shoeless Joe Jackson
Jan. 28, 1934: John Lardner on Shoeless Joe Jackson.

July 6, 1934, Shoeless Joe Jackson

July 6, 1934: Jackson makes another attempt to play ball.

July 6, 1934, Shoeless Joe Jackson 

John Lardner was the son of Ring Lardner Sr. and the older brother of Ring Lardner Jr. I’m not familiar with him, but he seems to be a pretty fair writer.

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Council Bans Women From Serving Liquor

Oct. 14, 1909, Briefs 
Oct. 14, 1909: The City Council bans women from serving alcohol. The council killed a portion of the ordinance that would have imposed a 9 p.m. curfew on unescorted women at any business selling liquor, which the police wanted as a way to control prostitution … A woman seeking a divorce says her husband is still married to someone else … And a Pasadena gardener is convicted of molesting the young girls in his clients’ families.

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Coming Attractions – Edwards Air Force Base Open House

Dec. 16, 1929, Flying Wing

Dec. 16, 1929: An artist’s concept of John K. Northrop’s Flying Wing.

Flight Test Nation Alas, the 1929 version of Northrop’s Flying Wing will not be on display during the open house at Edwards Air Force Base on Saturday from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. But other interesting aircraft will be there, including a B-17, a B-52, a P-51 Mustang, an SR-71 Blackbird and a C-5 Galaxy.

Chuck Yeager and Joe Engle are scheduled to break the sound barrier in two F-16s. A Doolittle Raid demonstration will be staged with a B-25, B-17, P-51 and a P-38 (Steve Hinton’s Joltin’ Josie, one of about two dozen airworthy P-38s in existence), and a B-1, B-2 and B-52 will do a flyby in formation.   

Further information is here>>>

Posted in art and artists, Coming Attractions, Science, Transportation | 2 Comments

Found on EBay – Stutz Racer

Sept. 9, 1014, Stutz
Sept. 9, 1914: Earl Cooper is driving a Stutz in the race from Los Angeles to Phoenix.
Stutz Race Phoenix   This postcard showing a Stutz that took part in a race from Los Angeles to Phoenix has been listed on EBay. As far as I can determine, this was the Cactus Derby, which began in 1907. The last race was in 1914. By 1915, so many people were driving from Los Angeles to Phoenix that it was no longer viewed as much of an accomplishment, The Times said. Bidding starts at $99.

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