Larry Gelbart’s 1951 ‘My L.A.’ Found

My L.A.

Nov. 25, 1951: Rehearsals of "My L.A.," sketches inspired by Matt Weinstock's book, with a script by Larry Gelbart, Laurence Marks and Bill Manhoff.

You may recall this photo from the posts I did about the death of Larry Gelbart. "My L.A." was a 1951 show that closed after four performances. The Times wrote several features about the production  and Albert Goldberg, the paper's classical music critic, gave it a lousy review. The show was evidently a series of loosely connected skits about Pershing Square, Olvera Street, Main Street saloons, etc. All the things I write about here!

Gloria Pall, one of the cast members, says: "Hi, I go back to 1952 with Larry Gelbart. He was a comedy writer for a musical show called "My LA." we were in our early 20's and he was so boyish looking he looked like he would prefer a lollipop instead of a pen. The lyrics and comedy was outstanding and I did blackouts with Ida Lupino's sister Rita and other members of the cast. Rita was a fabulous flamenco dancer with a heavy English accent and a lovely disposition. The show folded quickly because of money matters..Larry was one of he top writers."

The good news in all of this is that Gelbart evidently saved the script or at least pieces of it. Because in Box 143, Folder 6, of his papers at UCLA are about 200 pages — script and lyrics — of "My L.A." Anybody feel like renting a barn and putting on a show? I would pay to see it — even if it was just an informal reading. C'mon folks, it's a Larry Gelbart script that hasn't been seen in nearly 60 years!

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Music, Stage | Comments Off on Larry Gelbart’s 1951 ‘My L.A.’ Found

Voices — Patrick Swayze, 1952 – 2009

Nov. 30, 1984, Patrick Swayze

Nov. 30, 1983: Patrick Swayze dances "Without a Word."

From the Bayous to the Catskills

'Dirty Dancing' Takes to the Screen With Some Smart and Funny Steps

August 21, 1987

Nov. 30, 1984, Patrick Swayze By SHEILA BENSON, Times Film Critic

By being smart and
funny, touching and unabashedly sensual, "Dirty Dancing" (selected
theaters), a musical/love story set in the Catskills in the early '60s,
is the sweet sleeper of a hot season.

It works with the kick
that it does because writer Eleanor Bergstein and director Emile
Ardolino know their milieu so well they can handle it in
throwaway-perfect detail. And it especially works because from his
first, incendiary title dance sequence, Ardolino, using every tool of
film making, has an extraordinary ability to let us feel the
exhilaration and the pure animal pleasure of dancing in perfect sync
with a partner.

The "dirty dancers" here are young; their
audience doesn't have to be to share their elation. In this movie we're
encouraged to dream–no less than we did when Fred Astaire danced with
Cyd Charisse or Gene Kelly with Leslie Caron–that their transports are
ours. Because half the film's dances have to be learned by a faintly
klutzy amateur, we learn with her, and her final burst of joy is ours
too.

Jennifer Grey is that student, Frances (Baby) Houseman,
bright, Peace Corps bound, cherished by her doctor-father (Jerry
Orbach) who prides himself that in her shiny idealism they think alike.
Take the subject of tragedy: To father and daughter Baby, what tragedy
is not is having left behind a 12th pair of pumps for a three-week
Catskills vacation. Tragedy is police dogs used in Birmingham. Older
daughter Lisa (Jane Bruckner), and her conciliatory mother (Kelly
Bishop) aren't quite so sure–it's Lisa's shoes in question.

Baby
has the brains, Lisa has the beauty–it's one of those family givens,
as immutable as the rules at Kellerman's, laid down by Mr. Kellerman
himself (the imperishable Jack Weston). The guests come first; the
waiters come from Yale or Harvard; the busboys and maids come from the
Bronx or Brooklyn and the entertainment staff come from the fringes of
show business and are absolutely not to be let anywhere near anyone's
precious daughters.

The movie's dancing is also along strict
caste lines, the mambo or merengue for above-stairs, their elegance
painstakingly taught by the entertainment staff, ex-Arthur Murray
teacher Johnny Castle (ex-Eliot Feld dancer/actor Patrick Swayze),
former Rockette Penny Johnson (Cynthia Rhodes), exhorting her ladies
that "God wouldn't have given you maracas if he didn't want you to
shaaaaaake them!"

In the help's quarters it's the smoldering
exhibitionism of dirty dancing, imported from Bronx basements and a
guaranteed cause of cardiac arrest for any parent who discovers his
child grinding away in this fashion. It's into this absolutely
off-limits, smoky scene that Baby blunders late one night, to find
herself face to face with dozens of kids, barely more than her age,
dancing with an intimacy and an insinuation that shocks and mesmerizes
her. And it puts her eye to eye with Johnny, who gives her a taste of
this undreamed-of physicality before he moves on to another partner,
leaving her shaken and dazed.

The film makers use dirty dancing
as a hint of what is almost palpably around the corner in the America
of 1963, change of a radical, all-pervasive nature. They use Baby's
growing involvement with Kellerman's have-nots, with the charismatic
dancers who seem to have everything and haven't got carfare, and
especially with the complicated Johnny, to shake the foundations of
Baby's nice, simplistic liberal values.

The film is carried by
the painful, growing awareness of Baby, Johnny and her father, each
forced to give up some cherished prejudice about the other. Grey and
Swayze are tough, thoughtful, lovely actors, and their teacher-pupil
sequences absolutely soar. The Orbach-Grey moments are tear-stingingly
poignant.

Because director Ardolino comes from a background in
dance films (including "He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin' "), he doesn't
insult us with the impossible, too easily achieved. When Baby does her
crucial exhibition, it's brave and it will pass but it isn't
perfection; this is a director who knows the difference between a
natural dancer and a created one and he won't blur the distinctions. At
the other end of the spectrum, the Swayze/Rhodes dance numbers have
that wonderful, showy mixture of pride and abandon that comes only with
a lifetime of training.

"Dirty Dancing" is also a musical, one
of the most significant fusions of drama and dance since "Saturday
Night Fever"–and more involving. It has some the cliches of classic
musicals: the untried girl who must go on for the pro; the wrong that
can only be righted by a damning personal confession; the prideful,
wrongly accused hero. And it has a finale that's the utmost test of the
great Brackett and Wilder rule of movie making: Make an audience want
something desperately . . . and then give it to them.

To get
away with these conventions you have to build on completely believable
characters and action, and here is where Ardolino, Bergstein and their
impeccable colleagues shine–choreographer Kenny Ortega and his
sensational young dancers, cinematographer Jeff Jur, editor Peter
Frank, costume designer Hilary Rosenfeld, production designer David
Chapman, John Morris, who did the music, R/Greenberg Associates, who
created the electrifying opening and closing credits, et al.

Kellerman's
is loaded with the real thing–sketched in swift, sometimes stinging
detail: the low lifes, Kellerman's nephew Neil (Lonny Price) who, in
the tradition of short, rich young men, is a blowhard and a bully;
Robbie-the-Creep (Max Cantor), the philandering med student, and Baby's
spoiled sister Lisa, who almost (but not really) deserves him. And the
memorable tap man, Charles Honi Coles, leading Kellerman's
ultraconservative dance band through a lifetime of waltzes and fox
trots.

One shock is saved for the trip home: with its PG-13
rating, this may be a movie intended for young audiences–certainly
it's one of the rare films that take seriously the considerable
struggles of young people to find their place in the real world. If so,
they're going to have to share the theater with a lot of bemused
adults, torn between libido and nostalgia.

'DIRTY DANCING' A
Vestron Pictures presentation in association with Great American Films
Limited Partnership of a Linda Gottlieb Production. Producer Gottlieb.
Executive producers Mitchell Cannold, Steven Reuther. Director Emile
Ardolino. Screenplay, co-producer Eleanor Bergstein. Editor Peter C.
Frank. Camera Jeff Jur. Choreography Kenny Ortega. Musical score John
Morris. Music supervisors Danny Goldberg, Michael Lloyd. Music
consultant Jimmy Ienner. Costumes Hilary Rosenfeld. Production design
David Chapman. Associate producer Doro Bachrach. Art directors Mark
Haack, Stephen Lineweaver. Sound John Pritchett. With Jennifer Grey,
Patrick Swayze, Jerry Orbach, Cynthia Rhodes, Jack Weston, Jane
Bruckner, Kelly Bishop, Lonny Price, Max Cantor, Charles Honi Coles,
Neal Jones.

Running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes.

MPAA-rated: PG-13

::

Sexy Swayze

On the Set of His First Film Since 'Dirty Dancing'

July 24, 1988

By STACY JENEL SMITH,

Patrick
Swayze has discovered that with huge success comes the feeling
"everything is designed to help you sell out." He doesn't like the
feeling.

For years, the Houston-born actor with the Adonis body
and good ol' guy face has been talking a true believer's line when it
comes to the subject of artistic integrity. Now riding the tidal wave
of his "Dirty Dancing" success–magazine covers, mob scenes with fans,
and a Barbara Walters interview behind him–Swayze is finding himself
with the opportunity to practice what he preaches.

"There are
people who want me to do a cologne. They want to call it 'Patrick,' "
he scoffs. "I was offered a fortune to make exercise videos. Posters,
all kinds of stuff–something like $10 million worth. It's insanity.
I'm not going to do any of it."

What Swayze is doing is producer
Joel Silver's $15-million "Road House," now shooting in the Santa
Clarita Valley near Valencia. Due out next winter, it's the first
feature Swayze has made since "Dirty Dancing" mamboed its way to
box-office heaven, and it's a decided switch from the romantic "women's
movie" that marked his breakthrough.

"Road House" has Swayze as
a bouncer with a difference (a Ph.D. in philosophy) who takes on the
chore of cleaning up a rowdy Missouri honky-tonk and soon runs into
trouble from local kingpin Ben Gazzara. Sam Elliott is Swayze's buddy
and newcomer Kelly Lynch provides the love interest.

The movie
is chockablock with the sort of macho-minded ingredients that have
become producer Silver's stock in trade in movies like "48 HRS.,"
"Commando," "Lethal Weapon" and this summer's Bruce
Willis-vs.-terrorist adventure, "Die Hard."

It features stunts
ranging from a high-speed chase in which a Mercedes is blown up in
midair to a "big foot" truck smashing through a plate glass window.
Instead of lifts, splits and swiveling hips, Swayze will be seen
executing a combination of nine different fighting styles, from basic
street scuffling to exotic kick boxing.

After five days of
shooting a fight scene on a river bank near Fresno, Swayze, 35, had to
have 80 cc.'s (approximately 2 1/2 ounces) of fluid drained from the
damaged left knee that's plagued him throughout his career. Four
operations on that knee led to Swayze's 1978 decision to move to Los
Angeles from New York–where he had studied and performed with the
Harkness, Joffrey and Feld dance companies–and channel his drive into
an acting career.

More surgery now looms. "Running, I think, is
difficult for him," says director Rowdy Herrington. But he adds that
whatever pain the actor has experienced, it hasn't slowed him or the
production down. Even stunt coordinator Charles Picerni says that among
other things, Swayze handled a stunt that required making a 20-foot
drop from a rooftop to a truck bed.

During a break in shooting,
Swayze talks about his physical woes with the unemotional air of a
professional athlete doing a locker-room interview.

"God knows,"
he says, asked how he initially hurt his back. Then, off-handedly:
"I've had so many injuries." But he's quick to point out that they
haven't stopped him yet.

What Swayze's anxious to get across is
his desire "to turn an action film into a performance film–by turning
this character into a real, feeling human being."

He also hopes
to attract a considerable portion of his female following to "Road
House" by bringing as much sensitivity to his tough-guy-with-a-brain
character as possible.

While it isn't a romantic film, "Road
House" does have a romantic moment or two, he notes. "The love scene is
probably the hottest I've ever done, and clothes don't even come off.

"What's
powerful about a love scene is not seeing the act. It's seeing the
passion, the need, the desire, the caring, the fear," Swayze adds. "You
don't need to get graphic unless the actors can't deliver the goods. .
. . Maybe that's not always true, but in most cases it is. Sometimes
it's just that the film maker wants a little porn for himself. I don't
believe in that."

One of the creative collaborations in which
Swayze and his wife, actress/dancer Lisa Niemi, engage, he says, is
"figuring out these love scenes together in advance, working out what
is going to make them the hottest."

The at-home choreography
also helps him, "because it's very scary to do a love scene. You're
displaying something private with 50 people on the set watching. I
don't think you ever get used to it, because, boy," he laughs, "it
still intimidates me!"

Since Swayze fans have proven ravenous
enough to queue up for a chance to sleep in the same hotel room he used
while on North Carolina location for "Dirty Dancing," it's not
surprising that admirers have been out en masse whenever the "Road
House" company has worked in public.

(In one frequently-cited
case, the film production unit was working on what was thought to be
inaccessible private land–but a pickup truck full of middle-aged blond
women trundled in just the same.)

Swayze is widely perceived by
his co-workers as being generous about giving time to his fans. Several
members of the production team remember a night when he was still out
signing autographs as the crew was leaving.

"He hasn't realized
yet that he's not going to be able to sign an autograph for everyone
who wants one," says his manager, Lois Zetter, who said she receives an
average of 50 pieces of fan mail addressed to Swayze each day. "He has
very strong feelings about what he owes the fans."

A few days
later, in the quiet of his motor home dressing room, Swayze talks
wistfully about getting away from it all. His wife recently spent six
days alone in an isolated mountain cabin in order to get back in touch
with herself. He would like to do the same.

"When I think about
it, it brings up a lot of emotions, because I need that. I need it
bad," he says. "I'm feeling like I'm walking on the edge of a cliff
that drops off either side. If I don't keep my focus straight and
clean, I'll fall.

"I thought I had prepared myself for this
success," says Swayze, whose earlier movies include "The Outsiders" and
"Red Dawn." "I've dealt with a certain amount of notoriety

for six years now, so I felt I knew the ropes. But I knew nothing."

Swayze's
decision to "disappear and bury my butt in acting classes" after his
almost hysterically lauded 1980 film debut in "Skatetown U.S.A." has
become a shopworn article of his celebrity lore. Determined to avoid
categorization as a beefcake teen idol, he rejected several of what he
deemed "crotch first" roles. He guessed early fame "would mess up my
head."

Swayze is already preparing for his next role–a
Kentuckian who comes to Chicago to avenge thedeath of his brother, a
cop–in Lorimar's "Next of Kin." The picture's set to roll in
mid-August.

Meanwhile, he's had the bed taken out of his
dressing room and replaced with portable recording equipment. Between
"Road House" takes, he is hustling to finish writing songs for the
sound track of his upcoming movie, "Tiger Warsaw," a low-budget drama
he completed before "Dirty Dancing."

Based on Swayze's new
celebrity, Sony's fledgling film distribution arm now plans to give
"Tiger Warsaw" a nationwide release in September (the company's first
film release). Swayze, who plays the estranged son of Piper Laurie,
returns home 15 years after a violent scene during which he shot his
father.

In contrast to his $1 million "Road House" fee, Swayze
has said that he and the rest of the "Tiger Warsaw" cast took "almost
nothing" in payment.

(Swayze and Niemi completed "Steel Dawn"
seven months before "Dirty Dancing" opened. The futuristic Western
opened and died in two weeks last November, taking in a paltry
$526,000. This year, hyped by on-sight billboards touting Swayze's
name, it was resurrected in video stores. Vestron Pictures reports
sales of 400,000 units to rental outlets.)

As for other film
plans, he's high on a Columbia project that would team him with Robert
Duvall–"but I really shouldn't say too much about it"–and he's
"mixed" about the much-discussed "Dirty Dancing II."

"So many
times a sequel is a rip-off. People think they can get away with less
because they've got a built-in audience. I don't want to be involved
unless it looks as if it has a chance to be better than the first one.

Now,
with "Dirty Dancing" passing the $125 million mark in domestic and
foreign box-office revenues, Swayze and Niemi have "about 10" projects
in the works under their own production company banner, Troph
Productions Inc.

On a Friday afternoon inside the Valencia
warehouse that's serving as a sound stage for the "Road House" team,
crew members cluster around Swayze as he shows off snapshots of the
foal his Arabian mare delivered the night before. The event kept him
and his wife busy most of the night at their five-acre ranch in the
foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. Even so, he looks only slightly
wilted.

Swayze says he's had a total of six hours' sleep in three days.

"It's
been an insane schedule, and also, the racehorses are going inside my
head," admits the former Houstonite in his normal off-camera drawl.
"But I have a well of energy that's never run dry. People say, 'You'll
burn out.' I say, 'Really? Watch me.' "

::

 

An Afterlife Love Story

July 13, 1990

By SHEILA BENSON, TIMES FILM CRITIC

In our
increasingly fragile and unpredictable world, "Ghost"(citywide) might
well strike a seductive chord: a lover from the afterlife hovering over
his beloved to keep her from harm, trying to communicate the love he
couldn't express to her in life.

The movie's slogan is
"Believe," not an unreasonable request. But even those who'd be happy
to comply must get past "Ghost's" one casting jaw-dropper, a certain
woolly-mindedness to its script and a production prettified to the
point of stickiness.

With some of its actors–Demi Moore as the
cracked-voice, desolate lover; Whoopi Goldberg as an extremely
reluctant spirit go-between and Vincent Schiavelli as an irascible,
subway-dwelling ghost who will teach our novice tricks of the nether
world–things are in the best hands possible.

But Patrick Swayze
as a corporate New York banker? The filmmakers know Swayze's appeal
perfectly well: He has to move, he has to turn dancing into an act of
lovemaking and he has to take his shirt off more often than Sigourney
Weaver. All this he does, no matter how implausible the surroundings;
you even begin to suspect that certain scenes were earmarked Swayze
Shirt Opportunity.

In all his athletic scenes, leaping through
doors, leaping between uptown and downtown trains, leaping on an
assortment of villains, Swayze is just fine. It's the movie's big
cosmic questions that throw him; for these he's reduced to a look of
total stupefaction–not the movie's finest moments, although they may
be some of its most collectible ones.

Ah well, the same
audiences who bought Jennifer Beals as a rugged shipyard welder in
"Flashdance"–from the same studio–will probably have no trouble with
Swayze's banker. Put it down as wish fulfillment.

Screenwriter
Bruce Joel Rubin has had fun updating the rules governing ghostly
behavior: Today's ghosts don't seem to be able to whooooosh places at
will. In New York they must still take the subway, although they can
change without a transfer. Making objects move, however, is harder than
it might seem; it takes a lot of practice–and first-rate special
effects, which "Ghost" fortunately has.

Rubin is less successful
with the lovers' winsome dialogue; the bit with Moore saying "I love
you," Swayze answering "Ditto." Rubin's frail little plot involves
skulduggery among the bank accounts and supposedly bright central
characters who can't seem to tell the snakes from the saints. "Ghost"
is billed as a mystery, but it doesn't stay one long: The villain's
sincerity is about as real as Eddie Haskell's, and as transparent. In
any case, mystery isn't the point of "Ghost."

Director Jerry
Zucker is packaging the distilled essence of romantic yearning and he's
done a canny job of it. First there's his setting: A lot of "Ghost"
takes place in a yuppie dream of a Manhattan TriBeCa loft, all muted
creams and taupes and beiges, with enough square footage to set up a
bowling alley. In the bathroom.

Then he teases us with one
situation after another in which we think Swayze's Sam Wheat will
depart this life. Will it be as he helps the movers wrestle a highly
symbolic antique angel through his loft window? Will it be at the hands
of a late-night intruder, as he and Demi Moore's Molly Jensen smooch
over the clay she's shaping on her potter's wheel?

Zucker's
staging of this scene isn't subtle but it's certainly effective. He
mixes his audience's childhood memories of messing around with silky,
squishy, slippery clay with the full-blown visual eroticism of two
adults sharing the same sensual experience–and each other. It's an
almost tangible charge, and probably before you get out to the theater
parking lot it will have been knocked-off by seven less adroit
directors.

One way or another, Sam does die, Molly does mourn
and after a sort of baptismal sprinkling of astral dandruff, Sam begins
to figure out his ghostly guidelines and the fact that Molly is in
danger. Most importantly, he discovers that psychic Oda Mae Brown
(Goldberg), the biggest charlatan since the Wizard of Oz, is the only
person on Earth who can hear him. With her arrival, this little
spun-sugar movie gets some needed vinegar.

Oda Mae, stunned to
discover that for the first time her gift is real, is Goldberg in her
element, giving the film its kick and energy. In the three-way scenes
with Sam and Molly, as Sam's mouthpiece on Earth, translating,
transposing, deleting in outrage when his language offends her,
Goldberg is gleefully, wickedly funny. Working out the villain's
comeuppance, she's even better.

As the anguished and vulnerable
Molly, Moore manages to give backbone and definition to a role that
must be played largely through sheets of tears. Clearly the hope is
that the audience is in a similarly soggy condition and doesn't giggle
at moments when they should be wowed, like Sam's radiant oneness with
the hereafter. It may be pushing believe one step beyond.

::

 

Dancing in like Flynn

* Got a musical for Patrick Swayze? Bring it on!

January 04, 2004

By Elaine Dutka,

Patrick
SWAYZE, who made his name as the hunky dance
instructor-from-the-wrong-side-of-the-tracks in 1987's "Dirty Dancing,"
will be displaying his moves onstage in Bob Fosse's "Chicago,"
beginning Wednesday at the Pantages Theatre for a three-week run. To
prepare for the role of Billy Flynn, the slick legal eagle popularized
by Richard Gere in 2002's Oscar-winning movie, the actor put in a
short, unadvertised stint in the Broadway production, his first
appearance on the Great White Way since "Grease" more than 20 years
ago. Next year, he'll star as Allan Quatermain in Hallmark
Entertainment's "King Solomon's Mines" and (one of the town's
worst-kept secrets) appear in "Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights," set for
release in February. Closest to his heart, however, is "One Last
Dance," 17 years in the making. Written and directed by his wife, Lisa
Niemi, it's part of their attempt to revive the movie musical — a
species on the rebound after "Chicago" and "Moulin Rouge" scored big.

Is it harder to "razzle-dazzle" an audience after they've seen "Chicago" larger than life — on celluloid?

Not
at all. The film actually created a giant resurgence in the musical's
Broadway road companies. "Chicago" continues to work so well because
it's so contemporary. These days, everything is smoke and mirrors and
showmanship — with the perpetual undercurrent of a lie. Billy Flynn,
this Svengali ringmaster, manipulates people to his way of thinking —
no matter what the truth. The challenge is to bring a level of reality
to such a stylized, almost vaudevillian concept. And to avoid falling
down those stairs at the side of the stage when I'm making my grand
entrance. I had a gymnastics scholarship and rodeoed for three years
but, even so, they're an accident waiting to happen.

Were you a fan of the movie?

What
[director] Rob Marshall did with people who weren't real dancers blew
me away. He and the cinematographer created movement in every shot. If
I had my druthers, I'd have cast unknowns and gone with the power that
creates. But filmmakers need drawing cards — a Catherine Zeta-Jones, a
Renee Zellweger, a Richard Gere — who not only pulled it off, but put
people in the seats. I could kill myself for not going after that role.

Are you fully recovered from the 1997 horseback riding accident that shattered your legs and left shoulder?

I
have a titanium rod in my right femur, 15 anchors and 20 staples in my
shoulder. I'm the 6 Million Dollar Man, setting off alarms in airports.
Fosse's steps require a virtuoso level of athleticism, but, at 51, I'm
in the best shape ever. I no longer drink, and I'm trying to lose
cigarettes in my life. I was born with this intensity and drive like my
dance-teacher mother, a powerful, talented beast with a "perfection"
mentality. I spent so many years trying to be "Patrick Swayze" rather
than "Patsy's son." Dad was a cowboy with this sweet, loving energy,
and I inherited that from him. That soft but hard quality, I think, is
what made my career work.

Did you draw on your experience with the Eliot Feld and Joffrey ballet companies in making "One Last Dance"?

I
cleaned it up because no one would believe how grueling it was. Telling
the complete truth would get in the way of storytelling and seem bitter
or depressing. Still, no dancer calls it "suffering" because it's such
a gift to have an opportunity to do what you're trained to do. I only
abandoned that world because I didn't want to subject my body to that
anymore and knew my career would be finite. "One Last Dance" drew
standing ovations at film festivals in Philadelphia and Houston, and
we're looking for a distributor. It deals with that moment in time when
you give up a dream and, though we don't go for the "Rocky" ending, it
passes the "goose-bump" test. Because studios are consumed with
blockbusters, and TV is so far down the road of "reality" crap, it's up
to the artists to take responsibility for the product.

You promised Gene Kelly to do everything in your power to pump life into movie musicals.

Kelly
saw "One Last Dance" when it was a play and convinced us to make it a
movie. He was my hero, an athlete — guys could relate to him. I'm
going to make sure "An American in Paris" gets remade — with me in it.
I agreed to do the retelling of "Dirty Dancing," dancing this little
girl's heinie off, for free. Keep your money, I said to Miramax. Just
give me your musicals — they bought the rights to "Damn Yankees,"
"Pippin" and "Rent" — and your next hero roles.

— Elaine Dutka

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Obituaries, Stage | 9 Comments

Reds Beating U.S. in Moon Race!

Sept. 14, 1959, Mirror Cover
Sept. 14, 1959: An anxious time for Americans.

Sept. 14, 1959, Paul Weeks, Khrushchev
Paul Weeks, one of the Mirror's top writers, profiles Nikita Khrushchev.

Sept. 14, 1959, Coates

Can a woman stay happily married to a man who has hit her? I say yes! Like all married people, my husband and I have had our battles. Sometimes he loses his temper and socks me. But he has never hit me in the face or any place where the bruises will show. Also he has never hit me in front of the kids. I think this is very nice of him. I really can't complain because I know when he takes a poke at me I usually have it coming.

Sept. 14, 1959, Weinstock

An investigator is looking for people who knew Mata Hari's daughter while she was in Los Angeles in 1948, Matt Weinstock says.
Posted in Front Pages, Matt Weinstock, Paul Coates, Politics, Science | Comments Off on Reds Beating U.S. in Moon Race!

Rocket on Moon; Russia Jubilant

Sept. 14, 1959, Khrushchev Ad

Mr. Khrushchev is not coming to the United States to offer significant concessions or recant his lifelong enmity toward us and our values. He is coming prepared to score a propaganda victory, with confidence in his ability to arouse false hopes, weaken our resolves and cause us to make substantial concessions. He must not succeed in such a mission.

Sept. 14, 1959, Times Extra

Vice President Richard Nixon urges Americans not to get overly "excited or hysterical" about the Soviet moon shot. … and dress designer Gilbert Adrian dies.
 Sept. 14, 1959, Reaction

 Sept. 14, 1959 Letter

At left and above, people from all walks of life voice their dismay over Khrushchev's visit.

Sept. 14, 1959, Moon
A University of Michigan astrophysicist doubts the Soviets actually hit the moon.



Setp. 14, 1959, Comics
"Little Do These Simple, Unsophisticated Folks…"

Sept. 14, 1959, Sports

The pennant race was on at the Coliseum.

The Dodgers fell two games out of first place after a 4-3 loss to
the Pirates. Wally Moon homered over the screen in left, but Johnny
Podres gave up three home runs. The Times' Frank Finch referred to the
Pittsburgh shots as rodent raps or gopher balls. Learn something new
every day.

There were only 12 games left for the Dodgers.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in @news, art and artists, Comics, Dodgers, Politics, Richard Nixon, Science, Sports | 1 Comment

Bathhouse Planned for Wilshire District

Sept. 14, 1919, Roman Baths  
Sept. 14, 1919: An elaborate bathhouse is planned for 4th Street between Vermont and New Hampshire.

 


View Larger Map

Sept. 14, 1919, Roman Baths

Dr. Elmer E. Stone plans a spa and athletic club. It's unclear from The Times' clips whether this was actually built. 

March 30, 1919, Schmidt Heights

March 30, 1919: Two new homes in Schmidt Heights.

Posted in Architecture, health, Parks and Recreation | 1 Comment

Mexican Independence Day

Sept. 14, 1909, Victrola
Sept. 14, 1909: From the recording horn.

Sept. 14, 1909, Independence

Gen. Antonio Aguilar will preside at Chutes Park for the celebration of Mexican Independence Day.

Posted in Parks and Recreation | Comments Off on Mexican Independence Day

Don’t Call Me a Cowgirl

Sept. 3, 1969, Beverly Chandler
Photograph by the Los Angeles Times

Beverly Chandler shows her skill in roping in a 1969 photo.

Gwen Sharp, who blogs at Sociological Images, picked up the Daily Mirror post on Beverly Chandler, who worked on Rancho Mission Viejo.

Gwen writes: Now, if this was just an historical curiosity, I wouldn’t have posted
it. But the thing is, we still see this type of emphasis on the
femininity of women who succeed at things we consider “men’s work.” For
instance, see this post on WNBA player Candace Parker, or Lisa’s post about Caster Semenya. Or even just compare the uniforms of male and female athletes
We’re more comfortable with women who break some gender rules as long
as they maintain their femininity by following other rules.

Posted in Animals, Weblogs | Comments Off on Don’t Call Me a Cowgirl

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

 
Sept. 13, 1931: Ann Harding in “Devotion” at Carthay Circle. I wonder what they were thinking by reversing the image.
Posted in Film, Hollywood | 2 Comments

L.A. Prepares for Khrushchev; Dodgers’ Ron Fairly

1959_0914_robot

Sept. 14, 1959: A robot housekeeper, just like "The Jetsons!" (1962). 

Sept. 14, 1959, Khrushchev

Khrushchev is scheduled to arrive in Los Angeles on Sept. 19.

Sept. 14, 1959, Sports

Sept. 14, 1959, Sports

Found a gushing photo-feature on the Dodgers' Ron Fairly that read like a time capsule from another city. 

" 'The kid's got two things going for him,' said Manager [Walt]
Alston. "He wants to be a ballplayer and he knows the strike zone.' "

Well, that was worth learning.

This was a story from  "This Week" magazine reported
from Philadelphia about a Los Angeles player who went to USC.  Dodger
fans reading this in 1959 must have wondered if there was another Ron
Fairly that they were being introduced to. Strange bit of turning a
great local story into an impersonal tale. At least the photos are neat.

–Keith Thursby

Posted in art and artists, Comics, Dodgers, Politics, Sports | Comments Off on L.A. Prepares for Khrushchev; Dodgers’ Ron Fairly

Why Cars Don’t Have Running Boards Anymore

Sept. 13, 1919, Briggs

Sept. 13, 1919: "That Guiltiest Feeling" by Clare Briggs.

Sept. 13, 1919, Triangle  

Mr. Huber was spending lots of time on the phone, so his wife decided to investigate, especially since he began talking about it in his sleep.  Mr. Huber told his wife that the phone belonged to a man — but in fact it was the number of Mrs. Greer, who had recently separated from her husband. One night after her husband left in his car, Mrs. Huber decided to follow in a taxicab. After he picked up Mrs. Greer, Mrs. Huber had the cabdriver chase them. When the cars were side by side on Figueroa, Mrs. Huber jumped from the taxi to the running board of her husband's car and told him off. 

Posted in #courts, art and artists, Comics, Downtown, Transportation | Comments Off on Why Cars Don’t Have Running Boards Anymore

Police Seek to Close Dance Halls

Sept. 13, 1909, Reinhardt Wernigk

Sept. 13, 1909: Edmund Waller "Ted" Gale draws Dr. Reinhardt Wernigk.

Sept. 13, 1909, Dance Halls

A campaign endorsed by Police Chief Dishman is underway to shut down the dance halls of Los Angeles. The businesses would have already been closed except that they their exercised their rights under the City Charter and sought to put the matter to a referendum in the next city election, The Times says.

According to The Times, some dance academies are respectable businesses. At many others, however, young and impressionable women — wearing short dresses that barely cover the knees — mix with the toughest men in the city and women who have already fallen on the path of shame and debauchery.

"Down at the Adams dance hall on Main Street opposite the Burbank Theater, there is a motley gathering every night. The police say that this is one of the resorts that give them the most trouble. Yet, under the existing order of things the officers have no right to interfere." Among other licentious activity, dancers are doing "The Dip," The Times says. That roller-skating rink down on 12th and Ivy streets isn't much better.

Posted in art and artists, Music, Nightclubs | Comments Off on Police Seek to Close Dance Halls

Matt Weinstock — Sept. 12, 1959

 
Sept. 12, 1959, Matt Weinstock

"There are a million definitions of public relations. From my own experience in the business, I have found it to be the craft of arranging the truth so that people will like you. Public relations specialists make flower arrangements of the facts, placing them so that the wilted and less attractive petals are hidden by sturdy blooms. Public relations almost invariably involve altering the truth in a nice way, if only by withholding unpleasant news. The PR man may tell the truth and nothing but the truth, but he seldom aims at telling the whole truth. If you were concerned with the unvarnished truth, you wouldn't need a public relations man at all."

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — Sept. 12, 1959

Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, Sept. 12, 1959

Sept. 12, 1959, Cover

Sept. 12, 1959: A setback for the U.S. in the space race and a boost for Nikita Khrushchev as he prepares to visit America.

Sept. 12, 1959, Coates  

Dear Know-it-all: I read your smarty remarks about Sen. Dirksen and his plan for him and the other senators to visit Hawaii. Boy, you never know when to stop do you?"

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul V. Coates — Confidential File, Sept. 12, 1959

A Kinder, Simpler Time Dept.: Your Movies

Sept. 12, 1930, Beverly Hill-Billies

Sept. 12, 1930: Do Mr. Drysdale and Miss Jane know about this?

Sept. 12, 1930, Movies  

American talking pictures take Paris by storm — and not in the good way. Note to copy desk, it's "revue" not "review."

June 20, 1929, Joan Crawford

June 20, 1929: Joan Crawford in "Hollywood Revue of 1929." Curiously enough, Georges Carpentier, who is mentioned in the story about the Paris riot, isn't listed in the credits of "Hollywood Revue" on imdb. It's quite interesting to see artwork (and splendid artwork at that) rather than studio photos in newspapers as late as 1929.

Posted in broadcasting, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Jack L. Warner Ankles Studio; Tough Times for the Padres

Sept. 12, 1969, Li'l Abner

Sept. 12, 1969: Al Capp features a wrestling promoter named William Fastbuckley.

Sept. 12, 1969, Jack Warner

Sept. 12, 1969, Jack Warner
Jack L. Warner, 77, ends his association with the family studio to concentrate on a Broadway musical titled "Jimmy," starring Frank Gorshin as New York Mayor Jimmy Walker.

Sept. 12, 1969, Paul Conrad

Paul Conrad on the Mideast.
 

Setp. 12, 1969, Arab Women

Leila Sharaf, wife of Jordanian diplomat Abdul Hamid Sharaf, says Arab women are more fortunate than their American counterparts.

"I have one dress, a modernized version of a kaftan, but everyone wears Western clothes," she says. "It's only rarely that you'll see a veil and folk dress in remote rural areas."

Sept. 12, 1969, Disclaimer

I've read countless old issues of The Times and I've never noticed that we ran a disclaimer on the editorial page. I'll have to go back and see how long this lasted


Sept. 12, 1969, Little Murders At right, one of the darkest — and most brilliant — plays of the 1960s, Jules Feiffer's "Little Murders." The script is punctuated by long, probing monologues, like "To the Guy Who Reads My Mail."

This one, by homicide Detective Lt. Miles Practice, is my favorite: 

Sooner or later there is a pattern. Sooner or later everything
falls into place. I believe that. If I didn't believe that I
wouldn't want to wake up to see the sun tomorrow morning. [snippage]

Every
crime has its own pattern of logic. Everything has an order. If we
can't find that order it's not because it doesn't exist but only
because we've incorrectly observed some vital piece of evidence.

Let us examine the evidence. No. 1. In the last six months 345
homicides have been committed in this city. The victims have ranged
variously in sex, age, social status and color. No. 2. In none of the
345 homicides have we been able to establish motive. No. 3. All 345
homicides remain listed on our books as unsolved.

So much for the evidence. A subtle pattern begins to emerge. What is
this pattern? What is it that each of these 345 homicides have in
common? They have in common three things: A–that they have nothing in
common; B–that they have no motive; C–that, consequently, they remain
unsolved. The pattern becomes clearer.

Orthodox police procedure dictates that the basic questions you ask in
all such investigations is one: Who has the most to gain? What could
possibly be the single unifying motive behind 345 unsolved homicides?

When a case does not jell it is often not because we lack the necessary
facts but because we have observed our facts incorrectly. In each of
these 345 homicides we observed our facts incorrectly. Following normal
routine we looked for a cause. And we could find no cause. Had we
looked for effect we would have had our answer that much sooner.

What is the effect of 345 unsolved homicide cases? The effect is loss
of faith in law enforcement personnel. That is our motive. The pattern
is complete. We are involved here in a far-reaching conspiracy to
undermine respect for our basic beliefs and most sacred institutions.

Who is behind this conspiracy? Once again, ask the question: Who has
the most to gain? People in high places. Their names would astound you.
People in low places. Concealing their activities beneath a cloak of
poverty. People in all walks of life. Left wing and right wing. Black
and white. Students and scholars. A conspiracy of such ominous
proportions that we may not know the whole truth in our lifetime and we
will never be able to reveal all the facts.We are readying mass arrests.


Sept. 12, 1969, Sports The first season of major league baseball wasn't done yet in San
Diego and already the second-guessing had started. Could San Diego
support a big league franchise?

Padres officials hoped to draw 800,000 but with the season in its
final month 650,000 was looking pretty optimistic. "I don't think we
made a mistake in coming to San Diego but for the first time, I'm
wondering," said Buzzie Bavasi, the former Dodger general manager who
got a stake in the expansion franchise when he agreed to come south and
plot the ballclub's future.

How bad were things in San Diego? Kansas City, another expansion team that started in '69, was looking like a model franchise.

"It would be nice to see the kind of enthusiasm that I found in
Kansas City recently," co-owner C. Arnholt Smith said. "In Kansas City
you feel that the community strongly supports baseball. You can't walk
down the street without seeing banners and signs everywhere. I find
nothing like that here."

–Keith Thursby

Posted in art and artists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Sports, Stage | Comments Off on Jack L. Warner Ankles Studio; Tough Times for the Padres

Cabdriver Accused of Attempted Rape

Sept. 12, 1919, Hats
Sept. 12, 1919: Why risk buying a poor hat?

Sept. 12, 1919, Comics
"When a Feller Needs a Friend," by Clare Briggs.

Sept. 12, 1919, Taxi

Cabdriver R.M. Kennedy is accused of trying to rape Sara Revalee, 16. Yes, we identified sexual assault victims back then.

And look: It's attorney S.S. Hahn defending Fanny Willoughby, who refused to get a medical exam after being charged with violating the city's moral laws.

Posted in #courts, LAPD | Comments Off on Cabdriver Accused of Attempted Rape

Man Convicted of Shooting Wife Fights a Team of Officers

Sept. 12, 1909, Little Nemo in Slumberland"

Sept. 12, 1909: Winsor McCay's "Little Nemo in Slumberland." McCay's drawings are a mixed blessing. He was a wonderful artist with a fabulous imagination — and he drew this appalling character, Imp.

Sept. 12, 1909, Crash

A police automobile speeding on a call crashes into a buggy, injuring the driver, George W. Slaton, "an aged Negro" who was deaf and didn't hear the officers' warnings. 

Sept. 12, 1909, Struggle

Edward G. Martin, sentenced to two years in prison for a shooting that left his wife paralyzed, puts up an incredible fight against the officers of the court before being choked into submission. He yelled: "I'll not serve two years; I'll not serve one year; I'll not serve an hour; you can shoot as quick as you like."

Martin shot his wife three times and tried to commit suicide, but failed. The defense contended that the shooting was "justified in a measure because of the fact that Martin's wife had been untrue to him and that he was subject to spells that at times, for a series of years, made him mentally incompetent."

Posted in #courts, art and artists, Comics, Homicide, LAPD, Suicide | Comments Off on Man Convicted of Shooting Wife Fights a Team of Officers

Artist’s Notebook — Third Street Promenade

2009_0904_third_street_promenade_550
Third Street Promenade by Marion Eisenmann, Sept. 4, 2009
Santa Monica's Third Street Promenade awakens a bit at a time in the sweet coolness of a summer morning near the ocean. Along the darkened strip of gleaming glass and steel shops — Armani Exchange, Gap, Abercrombie & Fitch, Diesel, Urban Outfitters and Foot Locker — the Starbucks flickers to life. Men with long-handled push brooms sweep the gutters and people selling earrings and jewelry set up their kiosks along the street closed to cars.

The outdoor court at Barney's Beanery fills up with the breakfast crowd while the staff of the restaurant up at the corner unfurls white tablecloths with a quick snap and lays down sets of silverware. Some storefronts are still covered with curtains of steel rods. At others, a manager — hair wet from a morning shower — stoops to unlock the front door. At still others, clerks gather in small clusters out front and wait, while at one shop, a man taps on the window to be let in.

People dressed for the weekend heat stroll by, alone or in pairs. A mother and her young child sit pensively at a fountain shaped like a dinosaur and covered with greenery, like the world's biggest Chia Pet spewing water.

The first of the street musicians arrives: a young woman with a guitar who attracts a crowd as she begins singing, her voice floating on the air half a block to the next guitarist. A young man takes out a violin, sets up a music stand and begins playing. Other performers — displaying their bright pink city permits — wait in the shade for people to straggle in as a cleaning crew emerges from a store and heads home, wheeling their equipment down the sidewalk as they talk in Spanish.

The day has arrived.

Marion says: "This was a fun incident. I was looking for some street performance and encountered these two young boys playing flamenco, I was attracted to their music and the 'snappers.' The 'spin & win' in the background* I saw a little bit later, it made the sound of what I thought were Kastagnetten (castanets). Moments later an elderly lady passed the young man with her walking device,  causing a scratchy addition to the BG foley.

"Many years ago I saw two black guys there performing tap dance in a hip hop way, super fast. I loved it. Years later I met one of the  brothers in an airplane on the way from Mexico City to L.A. We introduced each other, and I recognized him as the dancer. He now travels, does TV dance competitions and choreographed dance parts for Usher. It's a place with the weirdest and most innovative things before they go mainstream." 

Note: In case you just tuned in, Marion and I are visiting local landmarks in a project inspired by what Charles Owens and Joe Seewerker did in Nuestro Pueblo. Check back next week for another page from Marion's notebook.

By the way, Daily Mirror readers have asked about buying copies of Marion's artwork. Naturally, this is gratifying because I think Marion's work is terrific, and one of my great pleasures is sharing it with readers every week. We have decided that the project is a journey about discovering Los Angeles rather than creating things to sell. Marion is busy with other projects and says she isn't set up to mass-produce prints but would entertain inquiries about specific pieces. For further information, contact Marion directly.

*One store has a roulette wheel offering customers discounts on shoes.

Posted in art and artists, Marion Eisenmann, Music, Nuestro Pueblo | 1 Comment

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Bullock's Wilshire Menu

This menu from Bullock's Wilshire, dated 1949, has been listed on EBay. These menus rarely turn up, but there was one from 1946 a few days ago from a different vendor. Bidding starts at $14.95.
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Matt Weinstock, Sept. 11, 1959

Sept. 11, 1959, Matt Weinstock

Nikita Khrushchev is getting a luxurious suite at the Ambassador Hotel. Wouldn't it be great to go see it? Oh wait, we let L.A. Unified tear down the hotel. 

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock, Sept. 11, 1959