Second Takes — Billy Wilder

Sept. 22, 1954, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

Sept. 22, 1954: "Sabrina" opens in Los Angeles.

May 27, 1953, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

May 27, 1953: David Knight is cast in "Sabrina Fair."

June 20, 1953, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

June 20, 1953: More about Knight, who vanished from the final cast. 

Aug. 22, 1953, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

Aug. 22, 1953: The leads are cast: Audrey Hepburn, William Holden and Humphrey Bogart.

Sept. 30, 1953, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

Sept. 30, 1953: Casting continues.

Oct. 3, 1953, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

Oct. 3, 1953

Oct. 9, 1953, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

Oct. 9, 1953: Filming is in progress in New York.

Oct. 24, 1953, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

Oct. 24, 1953: Although the film is in black and white, Holden dyes his hair red. And another plug for Cy Howard! He must have been one of Hedda Hopper's favorites.

1953_1026_billy_wilder_sabrina

Oct. 26, 1953: Holden talks about a movie he'd like to make.


Sept. 23, 1954, Billy Wilder, Sabrina

Sept. 23, 1954: Edwin Schallert reviews "Sabrina." "Constantly through the cleverness of individual situations 'Sabrina' seems to override what is wrong with its plot and even its motivation. It is strictly movie in its essential values which all too often, according to all-too-well established Hollywood tradition, completely disregard the issue of being convincing."
Posted in Film, Hollywood, Second Takes | Comments Off on Second Takes — Billy Wilder

Court Upholds Deal on Chavez Ravine; Moratorium on Death Penalty Fails, April 22, 1959

April 14, 1959, Chavez Ravine

Photograph by John Malmin / Los Angeles Times

People cluster between homes on Malvina Avenue in Chavez Ravine
 for word on being evicted.

April 22, 1959, Cover The battle over Chavez Ravine reads like the same story after a while — a long court fight with no end in sight.

This time, the state Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of
the city's deal with the Dodgers to eventually build the team a new
ballpark. The decision was deemed "the last outstanding legal landmark"
in the case. But any careful reader must have known there were more
steps ahead, more twists and turns.

There were other familiar elements to the story. Dodgers owner
Walter O'Malley was quoted as still hoping the new stadium would be
ready by opening day of 1960. Attorneys for residents fighting the
Dodger deal planned their next moves — again.

City Council members were polled for reaction. Given The Times' long
campaign in favor of the ballpark, it should not have been a surprise
that Rosalind Wyman was quoted extensively but the opposition didn't
exactly get equal treatment.

John Holland, a longtime opponent of the Dodger Stadium deal, said
he would comment once he had read the Supreme Court's decision. There
was no one else to ask? Just the previous day, The Times ran a short
story about Councilman Earle D. Baker's unsuccessful attempt to have
the eviction notices delayed for five families still living in the
Chavez Ravine area. My guess is Baker or some of the six other council
members who voted with him — including Edward R. Roybal and Gordon R.
Hahn — might have been willing to go on the record.

— Keith Thursby

April 22, 1959, Suburbs

The ills of suburban life and the intellectual benefits of cities.

April 22, 1959, Theater

More women are going to movies–at least "femme" tearjerkers like "Imitation of Life," Philip K. Scheuer says.  

April 22, 1959, Comics

Drinking problems in "Judge Parker," compulsive gambling in "Moon Mullins" and food issues in "Nancy." 

Posted in #courts, City Hall, Comics, Dodgers, Downtown, Film, Hollywood | 1 Comment

Minister Vows to Fight Morals Charge, April 22, 1939

April 19, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

April 19, 1939: Joseph Jeffers and his wife, Zella Joy, are accused of committing "unnatural acts" in the privacy of their home. The Los Angeles County district attorney's office used a hidden dictograph to get evidence.

April 22, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

Posted in #courts, Religion | Comments Off on Minister Vows to Fight Morals Charge, April 22, 1939

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Bullock's Wilshire Doll

Bullocks_wilshire_doll_ebay_label_crop 

This doll from Bullock's Wilshire has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $239.
Technorati Profile

Posted in Fashion | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Matt Weinstock — April 21, 1959

No Deal

Matt_weinstockdThis corner's continuing seminar on the subject "Do Mr. Parker's boys hand out too many traffic citations?" is at a stalemate.

The
deadlock has to do with a case recently presented here in which a
motorist who lives in a suburb and is not familiar with one-way streets
received two citations in five minutes.

Driving west on 5th Street, this naive outlander
turned left on Olive Street from the middle instead of the extreme left
lane. It was 1 a.m. and he insisted he created no hazard, but got the
ticket anyway. Then he turned west on 6th Street, one-way eastbound, and got the second.

HE WAS technically guilty, of course, and paid his fines. But he resolved never to go downtown again.

After
this sordid tale was printed, a man from the LAPD called and said he'd
like to talk to the offender and perhaps show him the error of his
ways, if I would furnish his name.

April 21, 1959, Don't Care Girl "I wonder if he'd think as he does," the officer said, "if he had run head-on into another car when he made the illegal turn."

I
got hold of the motorist and said the LAPD would like to talk to him
about his criminal ways. He said he'd be happy to talk to someone as he
is still outraged by the two tickets. But he said he'd have to be given
amnesty and a guarantee of safe conduct before he ever came downtown
again. That, of course, is impossible. Let him fight his way as the
rest of us must do. So that's where we are, nowhere.

::


THIS IS TO
report that a true innocent is running loose in our fair city. He phoned Paul Henninger of the radio and TV department the other day and asked how to got to Chavez Ravine to see the Dodgers play.

"You're kidding," Paul said, visualizing millions of wasted words over the controversy.

The man wasn't and Paul broke the news to him about the Coliseum.

Now,
on second thought, Paul wishes he had directed him to the Ravine. He
might have taken root and challenged the Griffith Park hermit to a
beard-growing contest.

::

April 21, 1959, Comics ANXIETY NEUROSIS

In gross income reported
I forgot to figger
My six books of Green Stamps.
Should my tax have been bigger?

–M.L.G.

::


REPORTERS
agree that the Elizabeth Duncan case had more surprises than any they had ever covered. The other day another one, hitherto unreported, was revealed.

When Luis Moya was first questioned, before he and Augustine Baldonado were revealed as the actual slayers of Olga Duncan, he was noncommittal. Deputy Sheriff Roy Higgins, knowing Moya
was religious and that his mother was dead, said to him, "When you die
and meet your mother, what are you going to tell her about your part in
this case?"

Moya didn't answer but asked for a Bible. None could
be found immediately and an attache was dispatched to a nearby hotel
for a Gideon.

Moya read for a while, then readily confessed his part in the crime.

::


April 21, 1959, Abby ITEM WITH MORAL —
April 20, Adolf Hitler's birthday, passed unnoticed. He lost. April 17, Nikita Khrushchev's birthday, was elaborately celebrated. He won.

::


AT RANDOM —
Spring
continues to burst out all over. This chalked message was on a freight
car, one of a long train clanking along Pacific Coast Highway near
Oxnard: "Let's go to down, lovebirds, to see the girls" … People
handling the campaign for the Orthopaedic Hospital's proposed
$6.5-million children's center are grateful to the unidentified person
who sent them five $50 bills with an Easter card. Only clue was the
postmark, Highland, Cal. … Nice tribute in Holiday to Gene Fowler,
dubbed "the gilded pauper," by Ben Hecht — although Lucius Beebe has him living in Beverly Hills instead of Brentwood.

Posted in Columnists, LAPD, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — April 21, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, April 21, 1959

 

Confidential File

Nice Heart-Warming Variety of Larceny

Paul_coatesI have, in rare moments of self-examination, confessed to filching stories from fellow newspapermen.

Consequently, I am not in a position to be outraged when someone lifts one of my pieces.

Sometimes, I'm even delighted.

Today is one of those times.

Last
month I told you
about a rather remarkable woman. A woman who, by all
the rules of life and death, should have been dead 10 years ago.

She is Lucille Warnecke. And she's very much alive.

But in 1949, shortly after she and her son, Mike, then 4, contracted polio, doctors held out no hope for Mrs. Warnecke.

A priest was summoned to the hospital to administer last rites.

1959_0421_warnecke But Mrs. Warnecke,
possessing an indomitable will to live, survived. She went on to
recover from the major effects of the paralysis and continue her life
as an energetic, almost unbelievably active housewife.

With the aid of leg brace and wheelchair, Mrs. Warnecke
ran an efficient, loving home for hubby Dwight, son Mike and two
daughters, adopted from a Japanese orphanage after her bout with polio.

American institutions had refused to permit adoption.

But Mrs. Warnecke got her kids. Then, pressed by Mike for a brother (the family was getting lopsided on the distaff side), Mr. and Mrs. Warnecke adopted a boy from the same orphanage in Tokyo which had supplied Mary, then 7, and Patty, then 5.

When I recounted the story for you, I said that Mrs. Warnecke was faced with another problem.

Seemingly insurmountable, but the kind she apparently handles best.

She
and her husband had adopted the Japanese boy, all right, but airline
regulations forbade John Joseph, their new son, to fly the Pacific
without an adult to supervise.

After all, John Joseph is only a year old.

April 21, 1959, Mirror Cover Furthermore, airline officials were forced to give a firm, but sympathetic "no" answer when Mrs. Warnecke asked if they would contact a Los Angeles-bound passenger in Japan for help.

So I printed the story, hoping someone would come up with an answer to Mrs. Warnecke's problem.

And somebody stole the story.

He's Ralph Edwards of "This Is Your Life" fame. He's also a guy who perpetrates minor miracles.

I was caught up in a conspiracy.

Ralph's office asked me to pretend that I could present Mrs. Warnecke's appeal on nationwide TV if she'd come to Los Angeles. I was to lure her here from her new home in Kansas City.

Pretty sneaky, but all for a good cause.

In the meantime, Ralph's staff arranged a lot of nice things. A new car for Mrs. Warnecke. Nine months of free rent for the family in Kansas City. And a reunion between Mrs. Warnecke and a bunch of wonderful people who helped her when she was close to death.

But most important, they put John Joseph in his new mother's arms.

You are very welcome, Ralph. Come back and steal again sometime.

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | 1 Comment

Cary Grant — Part 2, April 21, 1959

April 2, 1959, Cary Grant April 21, 1959, Cary Grant
 
The Times runs the second part of Joe Hyams' series on Cary Grant along with the same denials that we put in Part 1. I find our treatment of the series fairly strange and I wonder what the editors were thinking, especially because there's no quote from Hyams backing up his stories.

Posted in Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on Cary Grant — Part 2, April 21, 1959

In the Theaters — April 21, 1960

April 21, 1960, In the Theaters

Posted in Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on In the Theaters — April 21, 1960

Police Raid Venice ‘Love-In’; Lakers Win Western Division, April 21, 1969

April 21, 1969, Police Raid a Love-In on the Beach

April 21, 1969: A "love-in" on Venice Beach turns into brawl when the crowd of 7,000 starts throwing rocks and bottles after police arrest several people.

April 21, 1969, Cover

Assemblyman John Burton is elected head of the California Democratic Council, which backs student demonstrators at Stanford and San Francisco State.

April 21, 1969, Black Panthers Aid Al Fatah

Look at the bylines on the page at left: Ken Reich … Dick Bergholz … Doug Shuit … Daryl Lembke … and Noel Greenwood, later The Times' Metro editor.

Greenwood takes a long look at the "black ghetto of Venice." "A pulsating street life begins at dusk, the young low-riding the streets in cars or gathering on corners, a shout now and then down the street, a radio bursting with hard rock, an argument in a nearby house."

April21, 1969, Venice Ghetto

"A climate of fear and suspicion" between African Americans and police.

April 21, 1969, Venice Ghetto

"If there is a sense of peace between ghetto youth and police now, it is a false sense."

April 21, 1969, Oliphant on Nixon

Cartoonist Pat Oliphant looks at the pressure on President Nixon to act after North Korea downs a U.S. jet.

April21, 1969, Hilburn on Grassroots

Robert Hilburn reviews the Grassroots.

April 21, 1969, Comics

"Fearless Fosdick" in "Li'l Abner."

April 21, 1969, Sports

The Lakers set up another NBA finals meeting with the Boston Celtics
by winning the Western Division title for the sixth time in the last
eight seasons.

Elgin Baylor broke out of a slump with 29 points to lead the Lakers
over the Atlanta Hawks, 104-96. "It would seem odd if we played anyone
else," Baylor said about the Celtics.

— Keith Thursby

Posted in #courts, Comics, LAPD, Music, Richard Nixon | Comments Off on Police Raid Venice ‘Love-In’; Lakers Win Western Division, April 21, 1969

Second Takes — Billy Wilder


March 26, 1954, William Holden, Academy Award  

March 26, 1954: William Holden wins his only Oscar for "Stalag 17," after being nominated for "Sunset Boulevard" and in 1977 for "Network." Billy Wilder (best director) and Robert Strauss (best supporting actor) are also nominated,

Feb. 16, 1954, Academy Award Nominations

Feb. 16, 1954: The Academy Award nominations are announced.

Feb. 16, 1954, Academy Award Nominations

March 26, 1954, Academy Awards

March 26, 1954: Holden and Audrey Hepburn win Academy Awards. Say, how about casting them together in a film … directed by Billy Wilder? 

March 26, 1954, Academy Awards

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Second Takes | 1 Comment

Oklahoman Builds Flying Saucer! Dodgers Beat Giants, April 21, 1959

April 21, 1959, Flying Saucer

The Times failed to follow up on testing of what was evidently a home-made device.

Update: Talk about stereotyping! The caption says nothing about the gender of the flying saucer's inventor. I merely leaped to the conclusion that it was a man. I suppose it's possible a woman could have built this contraption. But I somehow doubt it. Do you suppose anyone's ever made a gender analysis of flying-saucer inventors? Sounds like a great subject for a dissertation.

April 21, 1959, Cover Renowned ballet star Dame Margot Fonteyn is arrested on charges of being a revolutionary. Let me write that again, just to see if it makes any more sense a second time: Dame Margot Fonteyn, one of the leading dancers of the era, is accused of plotting to overthrow the Panamanian government. Wow.

President Eisenhower asks Soviet leader Khurshchev to agree to restrictions on testing nuclear weapons in space.

NASA, which says it expects to put astronauts on the moon in six or eight years, announces plans to launch mice into space. 

April 21, 1959, Margot Fonteyn

Above,  Fonteyn with her husband, Roberto Arias, who avoided arrest while she was taken into custody. She was released the next day.

April 21, 1959, Nixon

Above, Vice President Richard Nixon is accused of aiding efforts to kill a Democratic bill that would abolish the California presidential primary. The measure, by state Sen. James A. Cobey (D-Merced), would replace the presidential primary with a process in which state committees selected delegates to the parties' national conventions. Democratic Gov. Pat Brown also opposes the bill. (To vastly simply a complex subject, the California presidential primary has changed significantly to become what we know today. Recall that as late as 1968, Hubert Humphrey became the Democratic presidential candidate without entering the national primaries).  Notice that Nixon plans to rebuild the California GOP.

April 21, 1959, Theater

"Bandit of Zhobe?"

April 21, 1959, Comics

It's a tossup in the battle of "Nancy" vs. "Ferd'nand." Ever notice how Al Capp throws in curvy women who are completely extraneous to the story?

April 21, 1959, Sports The Dodgers move into second place in the National League with a 2-1 win over the Giants as Don Drysdale pitches what he calls one of the best games of his career. Drysdale allows three hits and strikes out 11.

"I've seen him have as much stuff, but never such an all-round combination of control, savvy and all the trimmings," Walter Alston says.

"That's his best ever," Roy Campanella says. "In fact, pitching can't be much better than that."

Posted in @news, Comics, Dodgers, Film, Front Pages, Music, Politics, Richard Nixon, Sports, UFOs | Comments Off on Oklahoman Builds Flying Saucer! Dodgers Beat Giants, April 21, 1959

Cooking With the Junior League, 1965

Kellogg's Ad

As you may recall, Mary McCoy, the entertaining voice of This Book Is for You, is spending a year preparing meals from Junior League cookbooks in her blog Cooking With the Junior League.

This week, she is taking a historic look at a 1965 Junior League cookbook from Battle Creek, Mich., featuring "recipes distributed by the Post, Kellogg, and Ralston-Purina companies,
meals served at the Battle Creek Sanitarium, and recipes created by
Edith and Mary Barber and Ida Jean Kain, all former Sanitarium or
Kellogg Company dietitians who cultivated a national audience for their
ideas on healthful eating."

Read more >>>

Posted in Food and Drink | Comments Off on Cooking With the Junior League, 1965

Found on EBay — Scottish Rite Cathedral

Scottish Rite Cathedral

This postcard of the 1906 Scottish Rite Cathedral on Hope Street between 9th and 10th streets in downtown Los Angeles has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $7.99.
Posted in Architecture, Downtown | Comments Off on Found on EBay — Scottish Rite Cathedral

April 20, 1959: It’s a Woman’s World — Auto Mechanic

April 20, 1959: Mrs. Roy Harper, an expert auto mechanic specializing in carburetors.
April 20, 1959: Meet Mrs. Roy Harper, a trained auto mechanic who helps run her husband’s auto garage, where she is apparently a service writer and specializes in carburetors. But the Los Angeles Times assures readers that she’s still ladylike and prefers “high heels and chic clothes” to dirty coveralls and tools in the hip pockets.

Continue reading

Posted in 1959, Freeways, Transportation | Comments Off on April 20, 1959: It’s a Woman’s World — Auto Mechanic

Matt Weinstock — April 20, 1959

Wanton Juveniles

Matt_weinstockdOn their
return from several months in Europe, a couple learned the furnished
house they own in San Fernando Valley had been vacated by the people
they had rented it to and become the rendezvous of juveniles who held
parties there and damaged it.

They went out to inspect the place
and came upon incredible destruction. All the windows in the house were
broken, the picture frames were gouged and the upholstered furniture
ripped, apparently with a can opener. The senselessness of the
vandalism appalled all of them.

In all the house they found only two objects unbroken — two mirrors. Bad luck, you know.

::


April 20, 1959, Nixon ON THE Universal-International back lot, out of view but a short distance from Hollywood Freeway, where autoists
compete fiercely, a film company is shooting "Spartacus," in which
gladiators battle to death as they did in Rome in 74 BC. Some wag,
impressed by the parallel, has put a sign on the set, "Caesar's
Cloverleaf, 1/4 Mile."

::


 NUMBERS GAME —

Rosetta Bent's preschooler was running around the house chanting "2, 4,
5, 7, 9, 11, 13" and she got the uneasy feeling he might be plugged in
on some cosmic code–until she realized he was repeating the TV
channels … Actor RobertBrubaker's daughter Karyn painstakingly wrote
"1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9," then asked, "How do you make a 10?" Before
he could answer she squealed, "Oh, I remember what the teacher said.
It's a 1 with a swimming pool next to it!"

::

RARE SPECIES

A gourmet is a man who balks
At cabbage juice and carrot stalks
And still, despite the modern trend
Enjoys the food that shapes his end.

–EDITH OGUTSCH

::


April 20, 1959, Mirror Comics SILLY STUFF keeps happening in bars.

The clientele at the Rainbow was watching a Joe Palooka epic on the TV late show and the plot roared along to the climactic fight scene. The opening round showed a character bopping Palooka (Joe Kirkwood)
around the ring. At this point a young man addicted to wagering on
almost anything said to the man on the next stool, "I'll bet you $3 to
$1 Joe wins." The bet was made.

 As the fight went on and it became apparent the tide was turning the short ender blinked at the TV set, turned to his betting friend and, barkeep Eddie Wingerter relates, inquired suspiciously, "You sure you ain't seen this picture before?"

THEN THERE
was the the customer, possibly an unemployed ad agency man, in the
Brass Rail on West 3rd Street who summoned the management and suggested
renaming the place the Guard Rail.Motivationally, he pointed out, it would give skizzled patrons a protected feeling.

April 20, 1959, Abby "Imagine," he exulted, "a big neon sign out in front reading 'The Guard Rail. The Saloon That Cares.' "

::


PEOPLE KEEP

dreaming up variations on the TV commercial in which the question is
asked, "Do you think everyone should be a dog?" Another answer: "No, I
don't think the other dogs would like it."

::


AT RANDOM –
– In the event an urgent need arises, Gladwill
Hill of the New York Times office here has an excellent recipe for
barbecued armadillo … Bob Johnson has a title with demonstrated fan
appeal when Hollywood gets around to filming "Lolita" — "Some Like a
Tot."

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — April 20, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, April 20, 1959

Confidential File

Chief Parker Sniffs Lavender, Old Lace

Paul_coatesWilliam Parker, the duly appointed police chief of this teeming metropolis, is all things to all men.

To some, he's a stanch, unflinching
defender of law and order. To others, including, I suspect, Roger Alton
Pfaff, he's the sinister mastermind of a syndicate dealing in the
nefarious traffic of traffic tickets. [Note: Pfaff was Traffic Court
judge for many years–lrh].type

But to me, he's something else. He is, I swear, a homely philosopher.

Beneath his gruff, stern exterior, beneath his cold, gold badge, beats the warm heart of a hopeless sentimentalist.

Even
though he is right here in the swim of things, Chief Parker is
overwhelmed by a wistful desire to return, forthwith, to the good old
days. And when he says "old," he means it.

He revealed this soft side of his nature last week during a speech before the Southern California Hotel Assn.

April 20, 1959, Mirror Cover In
it, he laid the blame for our current crime wave on the fact that we
have somehow slipped away from the manners and morals of mid-Victorian
times.

And come to think of it, he's right, you know. Somehow we have slipped away.

"During
the middle of World War I, America lost touch with the Victorian
principles which had sustained it for decades. It lost these principles
in the name of freedom of expression," he said.

He added that, as a result, Americans have lost much of their ability to distinguish between proper and improper conduct.

Thus, all this cigarette smoking and jazz dancing, because we shook free the shackles of Victoria's genteel influence.

The chief seems to imply that before our urge for freedom of expression, the only peril in society was Pauline's.
And a juvenile delinquent was just a feisty lad like Penrod who did no
worse than swipe pies from the kitchen window sill, kick the gong
around with apipeful of corn silk or hide frogs in his bedroom.

Now
my quaint, Victorian-tainted mother always cautioned me: "Kid, play it
cool. Never argue with a cop." But in this instance, I must disagree.

Life,
no matter what the chief says, was no four-poster bed of roses in those
dear, dead days. There were plenty of shenanigans going on.

April 20, 1959, Stripper Suicide It
was the era when the robber barons of finance wiped out the poor widows
and orphans at the opening of the Exchange every morning. When the
Hudson Dusters, armed with brickbats, roamed Hell's Kitchen. When the
atrocious table manners of Diamond Jim Brady were lauded as
"glamorous." And, while there may have been no sound on Mulholland Drive
except for the occasional raucous cry of a drunken Indian, there was
lots of fancy sparking going on in hansom cabs parked elsewhere.

Jack Had a Ripping Time of It

Across
the creek, Jack the Ripper was staked out near London lampposts in his
search for fallen women. And, I might add, he was finding quite a few.
Over at Horsemonger Lane Gaol they had just hung a Mr. and Mrs. Manning for murdering Mrs. Mannings's
lover, Patrick O'Connor, and burying him under the kitchen floor after
robbing him of everything but his false teeth. Down in theLimehouse ,
enterprising hoods were picking up 3 pounds 2 shillings a head for
every able-bodied seaman they shanghaied aboard waiting vessels.

So,
Chief Parker can slip on his policeman's blue with helmet and retreat
back to those good old days if he wants to. Not me. I like it here.

Posted in Columnists, LAPD, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul Coates — Confidential File, April 20, 1959

Cary Grant — Part 1, April 20, 1959

April 20, 1959, Cary Grant

April 20, 1959, Cary Grant

After promoting Joe Hyams' series on Cary Grant on the front page, The Times runs a story that's mostly a denial by Grant with long quotes from the story. "I've never had an interview with Hyams on any subject. The article is completely erroneous," Grant tells The Times.

Posted in Film, Hollywood | 2 Comments

In the Theaters — April 20, 1957

April 20, 1957, In the Theaters
Posted in Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on In the Theaters — April 20, 1957

Second Takes — Billy Wilder

July 5, 1953, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

July 5, 1953: The ads for "Stalag 17" emphasized that it was a comedy.

July 3, 1951, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

July 3, 1951: Rumors surface that Wilder will direct "Stalag 17," less than a month after the disastrous opening of "Ace in the Hole."  "Stalag 17" opens almost precisely two years later.

Oct. 11, 1951, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Oct. 11, 1951: Hedda Hopper, who panned "Ace in the Hole," reports that Wilder will make a film of the hit Broadway play "Stalag 17" with Charlton Heston.

Oct. 14, 1951, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Oct. 14, 1951: A plot summary of "Stalag 17" emphasizing that it's a comedy. Local audiences wouldn't necessarily be familiar with the play, which didn't premiere in Los Angeles until June 1952.

Oct. 24, 1951, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Oct. 24, 1951: Casting continues for "Stalag 17." For some reason,
 Hopper ardently used her column to plug Cy Howard, who left the
 film after two weeks of shooting.

 
Dec. 4, 1951, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Dec. 4, 1951: Cast change. William Holden will co-star with Heston.

Dec. 19, 1951, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Dec. 19, 1951: Casting continues.

Jan. 5, 1952, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Jan. 5, 1952: Otto Preminger joins the cast.

Jan. 15, 1952, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Jan. 15, 1952: Now Holden is the lead in the film.

Jan. 24, 1952, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Jan. 24, 1952: "Stalag" playwright Edmund Trzcinski joins the cast … and
another plug for Cy Howard.

Jan. 31, 1952, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Jan. 31, 1952: Peter Graves joins the cast in the critical role of Price.

Feb. 9, 1952, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Feb. 9, 1952: Holden's brother Richard Beedle gets a small role.

Feb. 13, 1952, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Feb. 13, 1952: The stage version of "Stalag 17" has an all-male cast, but this blurb makes it sound like Paramount is writing women in the film. According to imdb, "Stalag 17" is Audrey Strauss' only film role.

Feb. 15, 1952, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Feb. 15, 1952: Another role is cast.

Feb. 16, 1952, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

Feb. 16, 1952: Cy Howard drops out of the picture and gets a lengthy blurb from Hedda Hopper. In fact, Hopper has given more space to Howard than she has to Holden!

July 16, 1953, Billy Wilder, Stalag 17

July 16, 1953: "Stalag 17" opens in Los Angeles after a premiere in Beverly Hills. Perhaps in response to the disaster of "Ace in the Hole," the ad campaign spins the movie as a comedy. "One of the funniest films of the year" … "best of the war comedy pictures" … "finest comedy drama out of Hollywood this year."

Philip K. Scheuer's review says: "Billy Wilder, one of the most caustic-minded of Hollywood's writer-director-producers, has taken a stage hit by Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcinski and preserved its essential humor and tragedy with no dulling of its corrosive edges, though he has cleaned it up in both language and situations."

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Second Takes | Comments Off on Second Takes — Billy Wilder

Fidel Castro Visits U.S. Landmarks, Dodgers Beat Cubs, April 20, 1959

April 20, 1959, Fidel Castro at Lincoln Memorial

Fidel Castro visits the Lincoln Memorial. Fifty years later, it's still difficult to
believe this ever happened, but it did.

April 20, 1959, Los Angeles Times Cover

April 20, 1959, Safecracker

Above, a man arrested for safecracking complains: "You can't get good tools anymore."

At left, 22 people are killed and more than 50 wounded during a revolt in La Paz, Bolivia … Joan Crawford's fourth husband, Pepsi executive Alfred N. Steele, dies at 57.  

April 20, 1959, Theater

The Times' Philip K. Scheuer interviews the great cinematographer James Wong Howe.

April 20, 1959, Comics

Ernie Bushmiller's "Nancy" gets all the attention, but "Ferd'nand" is just as peculiar.

April 20, 1959, Dodgers on KMPC April 20, 1959, Sports

At left, Vin Scully and Jerry Doggett on KMPC. And don't forget the "International Harvester Scoreboard!"

Above, the Dodgers are in third place, beating the Cubs, 8-3. Duke Snider hits his first home run of the season, the 332nd of his career. Sports Editor Paul Zimmerman takes a look at whether Stanford will continue in the Rose Bowl after the Athletic Assn. of Western Universities takes over from the Pacific Coast Conference.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment