Hollywood Wheels — Louis B. Mayer’s Chrysler Imperial

What is billed as Louis B. Mayer’s 1950 Chrysler Imperial has been listed for sale in Hemmings Motor News. No price is included.
Posted in Freeways, Transportation | Comments Off on Hollywood Wheels — Louis B. Mayer’s Chrysler Imperial

Coming Tomorrow! Cary Grant Tells All, April 19, 1959

April 19, 1959, Cary Grant

The Times' front page promotes plans to publish Joe Hyams' three-part series on Cary Grant. But before the series was published, Grant contacted the editors and adamantly denied that he ever talked to Hyams. Check back tomorrow to see what we did.

Posted in Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on Coming Tomorrow! Cary Grant Tells All, April 19, 1959

Body Found on Pasadena Golf Course, May 22, 1906

May 22, 1906, Body Found on Golf Course

Posted in Homicide | 2 Comments

Voices — Art Seidenbaum, 1963

   

Our Place in the California Sun: From the Past, Reflections for Today

July 29, 1990

By Art Seidenbaum,

[Art Seidenbaum was a columnist for
The Times from 1962 to 1978, book editor through 1984 and editor of the
Opinion section until his death on July 24, 1990.
This
article appeared in The Times on Sunday, Sept. 15, 1963, when Art
Seidenbaum was a cultural columnist for the newspaper.]

A couple of skin-peeling
Sundays ago I was adrift on somebody else's small boat off Malibu not
fishing (because nobody brought a spare rod and I wanted to play
spoiled child anyway). The world seemed transparent. You could look
down past the writhing kelp and see bottom. You could look up at a sky
so clear that infinity made sense. And the great corrugated landfall
that holds us all to the East was only a thin, brown line of substance
sandwiched between both blues.

Instead of compounding doing
nothing by thinking nothing, I was trying, however horizontally, to put
the climate in perspective with the place. How important back there on
shore is the water and the weather? And does the combination of gentle
ocean and moderate temperature really tend to limit what this culture
can create and accomplish?

It is an old argument, really. I
could remember a college course about how colder climates have
stimulated men to greater efforts; if the environment is harsh, then
people have something to conquer. In a more tropical situation, man
tends to build himself a torpid society, lush with natural vegetation
and noonday-napping human vegetables.

We've been accused of it,
all right. Los Angeles and lotus-eaters have been linked for a long
time by the people of chillier places. All the unseparated garbage
about our full bodies and empty heads, our mortal chase after beauty
and our monumental concern about death, our indolent bouncing between
boat and barbecue are byproducts of an old and semiundeserved
reputation for surface worship.

The movies, and the artificial
images they projected, started it. And, truth, the motion picture came
to Southern California because the weather was right–more dry, bright,
outdoor shooting days than anywhere else in the country. Even today,
when most film people dress like three-button bankers who lend hard
money to a make-believe industry, an impression persists that we are a
people in short pants.

When the airframe industry settled here,
it was for similar sunny reasons: more days in every fiscal year for
building, testing, flying. Weather was our early claim to fame. The men
to make the movies and to man the wild blue yonder were imported.
Although they enriched the place, nobody took them very seriously.
Balmy was the atmosphere and balmy was the adjective.

The weather reports also made us, in numbers of new residents, a high-pressure area.

Poor
people came because where you don't have to have storm windows or
snowsuits for the children, it is easier to be poor. Would-be artists
and musicians and writers came for almost the same reason; a back yard
could be called a studio. Couples came here to retire because
consistent weather seemed good for what ailed them. Speculators arrived
because there always seemed to be a new fad under the sun: pools to
swim in, drive-ins for meals or for making love, a sports car in every
garage. Until the '50s, you could make a case that the climate
generated more heat than light.

But within a decade, the
prevailing winds from the East shifted. What had been the aircraft
industry was soaring into other areas: space and the computer sciences.
A new definition of Aristotle's good life–including leisure activities
and time to chase culture–was becoming respectable, even applauded.
And Americans, after centuries of looking to Europe for examples,
gradually began to face the Pacific for the first time. The war and the
new technologies were responsible.

The result has been to
accelerate our steep growth while improving the cast of climbers.
Thousands of fine educators were lured here, no longer afraid that
owning a boat would turn a young scholar into a Yahoo. The very same
sun that browned a beach bum promised to make life fuller and freer for
a professor and his family. Suddenly, it became fashionable to argue
that it is the kids that really matter and that Southern California is
the ideal place to raise them. A weather code.

Scientists of all
sorts brought their searches here. The headiest ones who started a
series of think factories chose Southern California. Instead of numbing
the mind, they figured, the weather made the mundane chores less
difficult, releasing the brain for fancier test flights of its own.

Commentators
on American life in the last half of the 20th Century flew in for a new
look at what was going on here. Many years after the fact, they came to
the conclusion that the old sun stigma was no longer attached. They
wrote dozens of articles that nearly unanimously granted us a new set
of adjectives to grow on: optimistic, pioneering, energetic,
ever-changing, diffused, mobile, rootless.

Pretty much forgotten
were the old cults. Almost ignored was the weather that still caused
all the changes. Instead, the smog which so often slices between the
clear sky and the driving, non-napping natives, became the climate of
comment.

Nothing torpid about the tangling twine of freeways.
The push up from the horizontal to highrise. The increasing density of
people with greater breadth of knowledge. Our observers sniffed the air
a couple of times, wiped their eyes and now began to blast us for
behaving like big-city people in bad-weather places. The hustle. The
random scramble. The urban problems crowned by the gray, gloomy mantle
of man's own smog.

In one way, they are right. All you have to
do is get in a small boat off shore to see the way we've fouled up the
natural, beautiful reason why we came here in the first place.

The
secret is that we've been hellbent to imitate other cities. People
moved in from Chicago and New York with all their old habits. Everybody
was afraid to love the weather too loudly. Safer to act like all that
sunshine isn't really here–and now that we've hidden it in the filth
of our own exhausts, much of the time it isn't.

Pity the poor
locals who have been here all along, who never hid their excitements
under the palm fronds but who went about their business of building
when the over-land sky was transparent every day and when the girders
didn't block the view of the ocean.

We have moved through
several phases as a city. The first was laughter, general laughter from
the outside; even then, all the forces for future bigness were at work.
The second was an awkward age, as we began to grow fast and were
watched with a sort of nervous contempt. Then came the war and all the
postwar explosions people talk about: population, education, culture.
Here, the echoes of each explosion were the loudest. Now we are usually
taken seriously, partly because we have some serious problems that
other Americans realize they, too, will have to face.

But
floating out there, half-baked and brainwashed with beauty, it seemed
to me that in our next phase we ought to become the great
preservationists of all time. Hoard the hills from senseless slicing.
Open the sky again by refusing to let us split up so many hydrocarbons.
Let aesthetics rule because it was a run for natural beauty that
started the stampede. Bury the utilities and the bad taste in
everything from homes to public advertisements. The good weather is
still waiting out there to sustain greatness, not just a cheap, dirty
imitation of somewhere else.

Posted in Columnists | 1 Comment

In the Theaters — April 19, 1955

April 19, 1955, In the Theaters
Posted in Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on In the Theaters — April 19, 1955

Second Takes — Billy Wilder

June 15, 1951, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

June 15, 1951: "Ace in the Hole" opens in Los Angeles.

April 7, 1950, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

April 7, 1950: Billy Wilder is casting a film with the working title "Human Interest Story" and renames it "Ace in the Hole."

  April 13, 1950, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

April 13, 1950: Jan Sterling is cast in the film.

April 20, 1950, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

Hedda Hopper, who had a small role in Wilder's last film, "Sunset Boulevard,"
plugs "Ace in the Hole."

June 16, 1950, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

June 16, 1950: Casting for the film continues.

Aug. 20, 1950, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

Aug. 20, 1950, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

Aug. 20, 1950: The Times finally interviews Billy Wilder. Wilder tells The Times' Philip K. Scheuer: "Class in pictures nowadays has to be smuggled in like contraband and artistry is a nasty word" … "The question about a picture is not whether it is good or bad but whether it is alive or dead….  'Casablanca' was full of holes as a story, but it was alive as a film and the public loved it."

June 10, 1951, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

June 10, 1951: An early example of damage control. Paramount obviously knew a movie as bitter and caustic as "Ace in the Hole" would be a tough sell.

June 16, 1951, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

June 16, 1951: The Times' Edwin Schallert praises "Ace in the Hole": "Controversial and challenged as this Paramount production will prove to be, it has a singular power and fascination. The writing … seems extraordinarily potent." 

June 20, 1951, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

June 20, 1951: Hedda Hopper pans "Ace in the Hole."

Aug. 19, 1951, Billy Wilder, Ace in the Hole

Aug. 19, 1951: "Ace in the Hole" is renamed "The Big Carnival." The movie will languish in obscurity for decades.

Posted in 1950, 1951, Film, Hollywood, Second Takes | Comments Off on Second Takes — Billy Wilder

Minister, Wife Held on Morals Charge, April 19, 1939

April 19, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

April 19, 1939: Joseph Jeffers and his wife, Zella Joy, were accused of engaging  in an illegal act in the privacy of their own home that was so obscene The Times couldn't say what it was. Even their private discussions were obscene, according to the Los Angeles County district attorney's office, which recorded them on a hidden dictograph.

March 22, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

Above, March 22, 1939: Jeffers is charged. At right, April 11, 1939: Jeffers denies the charges.

Aug. 27, 1938, Joseph Jeffers  
Aug. 27, 1938: Jeffers preaches at the Kingdom Church.
 

Jan. 14, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

Jan. 14, 1939: Jeffers charged that he was being prosecuted because of his views against the Jews.

March 24, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

March 24, 1939, Jeffers is freed.

March 29, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

A sermon on "Man in Jail."

April 11, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

April 19, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

Above, Jeffers' followers pray before his hearing, April 19, 1939.
 Below, a witness describes the couple's alleged "unnatural acts," which
 are too graphic for The Times. 

April 19, 1939, Joseph Jeffers

What happened to Joseph Jeffers? Stay tuned!

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Nuestro Pueblo — April 19, 1939

April 19, 1939, Nuestro Pueblo
left
Posted in Architecture, Nuestro Pueblo | Comments Off on Nuestro Pueblo — April 19, 1939

Found on EBay — Bullock’s Wilshire

Dress From Bullock's

Dress From Bullock's Wilshire

This dress from Bullock's Wilshire has been listed on EBay. The Buy It Now price is $65.

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Matt Weinstock — April 18, 1959

On Education

Matt_weinstockdJulius
Sumner Miller teacher physics at El Camino College, is writing a book
and on alternate Sundays (tomorrow) conducts a provocative program,
"Why Is It So?" On KNXT, Channel 2.

Between times he is a stormy
advocate for a complete overhauling of our educational system. when he
gets on the subject his eyes flash, his voice thunders and he pounds
the table.

Unless we do something about it, he feels, we may be lost.

Miller
says, "We have reared a generation of intellectually lazy, illiterate,
picture-reading, mathematically incompetent, culturally lacking boys
and girls."

Worse, he adds, is their lack of values.

As recently as the '20s, he recalls, students received rigorous academic discipline in fundamental knowledge.

"Learning," he said, "was an exciting adventure."

April 18, 1959, Have Yarmulke Will Travel

Then
came the educators, concerned with the "better-adjusted, well-rounded,
whole child." He calls their doctrine "regressive education." It has,
he says, eliminated the formal disciplines which alone can communicate
a body of knowledge and the capacity to think critically.

WHEN RUSSIA SENT ALOFT
the first Sputnik in October 1957, the nation was shocked almost into
panic. It was inconceivable that another nation had surpassed us in
science. There were stern warnings that we must take up the slack in
education, particularly in science, on an emergency basis, to meet the
Soviet threat. It is Miller's belief that nothing will come of the
warnings, that we have already settled back complacently.

April 18, 1959, Mirror Comics If we
are to throw off our present intellectual confusion, Miller thinks we
must write off the present high school generation and start fresh with
first-graders. he estimates the task will take a generation.

A
first step would be to train teachers to a new responsibility. He
considers many of them incompetent and either unaware of or untrained
in the true meaning of teaching.

"NO ONE can be taught
anything," he says. "His interest can be stirred, his curiosity
aroused, his enthusiasm awakened, his imagination fired, and he may go
on to learn it. But not enough teachers are endowed or equipped to do
these things.

"If I had my choice I would have enthusiasm first. The teacher must himself be excited if he is to sell his goods."

Miller
is frequently accused by his colleagues of undue emphasis on his
favorite subject. He denies this. He makes the point that before a
person can understand physics he must be able to read and write.

"By
this," he explains, "I mean the ability to grasp the full and proper
meaning of the printed page and to express ideas in intelligible prose."

Does he consider that his formula for correcting the present sorry state of education is too drastic?

"It's a free country," Prof. Miller replies. "This is my point of view.

::


April 18, 1959, Abby DEDICATED

newsmen have been facing the abhorrent prospect that one of the week's
big stories would remain uncovered, in fact, unmentioned, except in
hilarious conversation. Let's see what can be done.

First, to
set the scene: Crystal Room, Beverly Hills Hotel. The Hollywood Women's
Press Club annual Men's Day luncheon. A couple hundred vivacious folk
have just drunk and eaten well. It's time for the entertainment.

Cowpoke
Rex Allen rides his horse Coco onto the stage. It creates a sensation.
It isn't every day a live horse stomps into the elegant Crystal Room.
Sitting astride, Rex starts singing a song. Coco either disapproves or
decides to steal the scene and —

I guess the newsmen were right. They said it couldn't be done and it couldn't.

::


FOOTNOTES —

Another bit of press high jinks occurred during Atty. Gen. Mosk's press
conference on conditions at Camarillo Hospital. At one point a man who
reporters assumed was a deputy A.G. took over and answered their
questions. Turned out to be fun-loving Pat McGuinness of KNX … The
Embassy Theater advertised "Two Adult Shockers — Adults 60¢, Children
25¢." Presumably the children were shockproof.

Posted in Columnists, Education, Matt Weinstock | 1 Comment

Paul Coates — April 18, 1959

Ventura County

Vice Jury May Call Cohen

BY PAUL COATES
Staff Columnist

Paul_coatesFormer
gambling czar Mickey Cohen may be called before a Ventura County grand
jury to discuss his possible connection with prostitution, commercial
sex parties and organized crime in Oxnard and Ventura, I learned today.

Ventura County law enforcement officers have launched a full-scale probe of a ring which assertedly panders to Hollywood playboys for pastimes now denied them in the rigid confines of the Sunset Strip.

Woman's Tip Told

The
investigation, by police in Oxnard and Ventura and the district
attorney's office, was touched off when a former, self-confessed
prostitute blew the whistle on what she termed syndicated crime in
Ventura County.

She also charged that the gangster invasion of Oxnard and Ventura was masterminded by "certain gentlemen from Detroit."

But
the organization, she alleges, has connections in Los Angeles and many
customers she entertained traveled from L.A. and surrounding
communities.

Cohen Call Told

April 18, 1959, Mirror Cover Cohen's
name was introduced to the case when a source close to the district
attorney's office said the some-time racketeer may be included in
future grand jury subpoena lists.

Mickey, of course, denied any connection with prostitution anywhere.

"Look," he told me, "you know my record. I've never been mixed up in either prostitution or narcotics."

I
asked him if he was on friendly terms with a certain businessman in
Oxnard and if, according to allegations, he had visited the man on
several occasions.

Friend of Friend

"I
have a friend who owns a bar in Oxnard," he began, then interrupted
himself. "No, that's not right. I know a guy whose brother runs a bar
in Oxnard."

That's all Mickey had to say on the subject.

Woodruff Deem, chief criminal complaint deputy for Ventura Dist. Atty Roy Gustafson, told me that his office is heading up the vice probe.

Thus far, grand jurors have heard testimony from 28 witnesses, including the former prostitute.

April 18, 1959, Castro Visits Washington Other
witnesses who appeared before the jury last March 30 include prominent
Oxnard businessmen. They refused to talk with reporters about their
testimony.

The former prostitute assertedly told jurors that she had been the star attraction at numerous parties arranged by the gangster element.

She also charged, it is understood, that one Oxnard businessmen's
organization sponsored some of the stag parties, which featured nude
dancing by girls, the showing of lewd films, and mingling of male
guests and female "stars" before the assembled group.

Party 'Bait'

In fact, she reportedly told the jury, she was used as a lure to tempt men to join the group.

"They'd promise prospective members that they could 'date me' if they'd join," she said.

She
charged that eight girls were employed by the syndicate to operate in
at least four nightclubs in Oxnard and Ventura. The girls' total take
was estimated to be in excess of $5,600 a week, with much more going to
the organization's male leaders.

Was Confident

 Oxnard
Police Chief Al Jewell conceded that his office felt it had a "strong
case" when he took it to the district attorney's office.

Is he disappointed that his investigation hasn't resulted in indictments by the grand jury?

"Well," he answered carefully, "as a law enforcement officer I am always interested in results."

The
alleged vice activities reportedly began about three years ago during a
community battle in Oxnard over the selection of a new police chief.

Crime Fighter

April 18, 1959, How to Tune in Stereo Broadcasts Subsequently,
Chief Jewell, a nominee and dedicated fighter against  crime, was
selected to lead the Police Department after considerable pressure was
brought to bear on the City Council.

Lee Grimes, managing editor
of the Oxnard Press-Courier and grand jury foreman, has refused to
discuss the probe, even with his own reporters.

Deputy Dist. Atty Deem, pressed for an answer on the infiltration of Detroit hoodlums, would only say:

"Well, we do know that there are certain Detroit people in business here."

Fatherhood Charged

The
self-confessed prostitute, who said she made between $200 and $300 on
weekends from her illicit activities, ignited the investigation after a
businessman refused to acknowledge her child, a boy she claims was
fathered by him.

In her discussions with law enforcement officers, she assertedly
charged that one of her sisters in the world's oldest business had been
murdered by the syndicate to prevent her escaping its clutches.

Posted in Columnists, Mickey Cohen, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul Coates — April 18, 1959

In the Theaters — April 18, 1953

April 18, 1953, In the Theaters
Posted in Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on In the Theaters — April 18, 1953

Second Takes — Billy Wilder

Feb. 13, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Feb. 13, 1951: Gloria Swanson (Best Actress), William Holden (Best Actor), Nancy Olson (Best Supporting Actress) and Erich von Stroheim (Best Supporting Actor)  are nominated for Academy Awards. "Sunset Boulevard" is nominated as best picture; Billy Wilder is nominated as best director and Wilder, Charles Brackett and D.M. Marshman Jr. are nominated for best story and screenplay. The film's 11 nominations include best art direction, black and white, Edwin B. Willis and Hugh Hunt; best black and white cinematography, John Seitz; film editing, Arthur Schmidt and Doane Harrison; and film score, Franz Waxman.

The film won three awards: film score, art direction and writing.

Feb. 13, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

At right, April 18, 1951, Swanson was a sentinmental favorite for an Academy Award, but she didn't win. Instead, the Oscar went to Judy Holliday for "Born Yesterday.." 

April 8, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Feb. 25, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

"Since working with a man as stimulating as Billy Wilder, I've become terribly interested in directing," Holden says.

Feb. 25, 1951. Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

"Holden had himself named 'assistant to the director' when Wilder started 'Ace in the Hole,' but they soon called him away to slap on the greasepaint."

March 1, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

March 1, 1951: Swanson wins a Golden Globe.

March 29, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

The Academy Awards, March 29, 1951.

March 29, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard
 
March 30, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

March 30, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

March 30, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

March 30, 1951, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Second Takes | 1 Comment

Gold Hunters Dig for Lost Underground Empire of the Lizard People!

I thought it would be fun to explore the story of the “Lizard People,” which is to say the excavations on Fort Moore Hill in an unsuccessful search for gold. G. Warren Shufelt usually gets the credit for the enterprise, but his partners deserve equal attention. The Times reported that Rex. I. McCreery and Ray Martin provided an ancient parchment map showing the Lizard People’s underground empire, which allegedly stretched from the Central Library on 5th Street to the Southwest Museum, which you must admit is a lot of digging.Earlier Times clips report that Shufelt had been a mining engineer employed by a mine in Kingman, Ariz., so evidently he was legitimate. Unfortunately, The Times’ stories about the gold excavation are vague and conflicting about the origin of the map. Most stories say it belonged to McCreery and Martin, who presumably brought in Shufelt as a partner because he was a mining engineer. Our later story says Shufelt got the map from “Little Chief Greenleaf” alias L. Macklin.

Aug. 15, 1897: An early story about gold buried on Fort Moore Hill.

March 3, 1933: Gold hunters are excavating directly over the Broadway tunnel, a long-gone downtown landmark that was just north of the Hall of Justice.  Evidently they didn’t question why the crews digging the tunnel didn’t find anything.

March 4, 1933: Gold hunters consult their ancient map.

March 7, 1933: Onlookers apparently heckled the diggers.

March 9, 1933: They’re close!

March 27, 1933: The hunters are secretive about their map, attributing it to the Spanish rather than the Lizard People.

April 10, 1933: The Board of Supervisors allows digging to continue.

Sept. 7, 1933: Shufelt, McCreery and Martin have given up, but Alfred Scott comes forward to carry on the search.

Dec. 22, 1938: Times columnist Ed Ainsworth takes a look at various legends of lost California gold as engineer Roger J. Adams begins digging. According to The Times’ clips, a fair amount of dirt from Fort Moore Hill was used as fill during construction of Union Station. The job was done mostly by hand, with men using picks and shovels as a public works project to provide jobs during the Depression.

Photograph by R.L. Oliver / Los Angeles Times

Sept. 21, 1949: Demolition of the Broadway tunnel failed to reveal any buried gold.

Posted in Architecture, Downtown | Comments Off on Gold Hunters Dig for Lost Underground Empire of the Lizard People!

Found on EBay — Oviatt’s

Vest From Oviatt's

Vest From Oviatt's on EBay

This vest from Oviatt's has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $14.95.

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Matt Weinstock — April 17, 1959

Cans! Cans! Cans!

Matt_weinstockdThe man on the phone, asking a moment of my time, sounded reasonable — at first.

"You might want to write about this," he said. "I think I know why people are so tense and nervous and jumpy."

Pencil poised, I waited.

"Cans!" he said.

Right there I began cringing.

"It
started with the incinerator ban," he said. "Until then all a person
had to worry about was putting out the garbage can on Mondays and
Thursdays and the bottles and cans on alternate Wednesdays, at least in
my neighborhood.

"All of a sudden," he continued, "people had to
gather their old papers and wrappings and cartons and leaves and twigs
and put them out at the curb on Tuesdays — three canfuls for me.

April 17, 1959, Hammer Death "A
person needs a bookkeeping system to keep up with what day is which. I
get so mixed up I catch myself putting the garbage out on combustible
rubbish day and sometimes I forget can day entirely."

"And," he scolded, "we've still got smog!"

::


A FUNERAL DIRECTOR
out
toward San Gabriel a few days ago engaged a travel agent to arrange to
ship the remains of the recently deceased elsewhere for burial, with a
slightly macabre result.

The travel agent called an airline and
inquired about procedure. The airline man, apparently reluctant to
handle this type of business, said one way was to ship the deceased air
freight, otherwise a regular ticket would be required. The travel agent
said this might not always be satisfactory because of the time element.
"What about C.O.D.?" he pursued.

"Suppose the people at the other end refused to accept the remains?" the airline man countered.

The
travel agent, sensing he was losing ground, retorted, "I guess it's
like anything else — if they don't pay, you just keep the merchandise."

::


April 17, 1959, Castro Visits Washington YOU KNOW
all those jokes about the Fuller Brush man? Well, today we have a slight case of rebuttal.

John
Owen, who has a territory in Hollywood, knocked on a door and a lady
invited him in. He realized she had been expecting someone else who
hadn't appeared.

He went ahead displaying his brushes and
cleaners and cosmetics, but it was obvious she was not in a buying
mood. Her mind was on romance. He fled with the reputation of all
Fuller Brush men intact.

::


WEIRD EXCHANGE
between two women overheard on the veranda of the Coronado Hotel:

"You know, my son is a normal child."

"Very normal?"

"Yes."

::

I THINK I have finally figured out why TV car salesmen mispronounce it "Chevalay." They think it was named for Maurice Chevrolet.

::


April 17, 1959, Abby PUBLIC AT LARGE —

What this country needs, Seymour Mandel contends, is a credit card
Uncle Sam will honor for taxes … Of a lady executive he has
encountered, Paul Grimes says, "She's easy to talk to — if you can
interrupt her."

::

TIME OUT

Tomorrow's blinds are drawn —
And yesterday? So what!
Go scratch your back, and yawn–
Today's all that you've got.
–JOSEPH P. KRENGEL

::


AROUND TOWN —
A young man at 5th and Hill carrying a pair of skis and ski boots drew some yoo-hoos from the sun worshipers who abound there … It isn't generally known that Edd Byrnes, the hair-combing Kookie
of "77 Sunset Strip" played a jive-talking killer in the series' pilot
film. He was so good they made him a nice guy. Now the teenage girls
adore him … Anyone else besides Blanche von Aspe notice that the new president of Family Service in Pasadena is Mrs. Willis Stork?

Posted in Columnists, Matt Weinstock | Comments Off on Matt Weinstock — April 17, 1959

Paul Coates — Confidential File, April 17, 1959

Confidential File

The Time the Earth Shook So Gaudily

Paul_coatesSome of us live a lifetime clinging to one moment.

John C. Crowe has.

Fifth-three
years ago tomorrow, he was a lonely boy of 17, orphaned by the death of
both parents. He was living in a tiny room on the third floor of a
rooming house at 6th and Howard Streets in San Francisco.

At exactly 5:13 a.m. on April 18, 1906, John C. Crowe's moment came.

"Even though it was 53 years ago, I remember it like it was yesterday afternoon," he told me.

What
he remembers is the San Francisco earthquake and fire, which killed
countless scores (the exact number has never been tabulated) and
leveled one of the world's great cities.

"The quake lasted one minute and 45 seconds," Mr. Crowe recalled. "But the fire went on for days.

April 17, 1959_0417, Mirror Cover "It's
a funny thing," he continued, "people up in San Francisco never like to
talk about the earthquake. They always refer to it as 'the big fire.'
But you wouldn't have had the fire without the quake, I always say."

I asked Mr. Crowe to tell me about those minutes right after the temblor.

"Well
as soon as my bed stopped going from wall to wall, I jumped up and ran
out into the street in my nightshirt. There was this big fissure. I
stumbled over it and fell flat on my face.

"It was sort of
silly, I guess. The sun was just coming up and as I look back on it now
it was a beautiful morning. But I didn't think of that then.

"I
looked up at the Brunswick House, a four-story hotel right across the
street. As I lay there, that huge building cracked right in the middle.
It cracked so easy like in slow motion.

"But all of a sudden the
top came down with a terrific crash. Plaster and lime rose 145 feet in
the air. Just like an atomic bomb cloud.

April 17, 1959, Mafia "Of course," he added, "we didn't have atomic bombs in those days."

The dazed youth got to his feet and, confident that the world was still in one piece, ran back to his room and dressed.

"When
I got back out on the street," he continued, "there was this little
Irish cop standing in front of the Brunswick House. In a voice thick
with brogue he told me, 'If you've got any heart in you, help get these
people out.' "

Young John accepted an ax and, in the company of his neighbors, began hacking away at the debris.

"We could hear people moaning and screaming inside," he told me. "It was just one big chorus."

Smoke began pouring from the demolished building and seconds later it erupted in flames.

Mr. Crowe and the brave Irish cop and the others were forced to retreat, the screams and moans still pounding at their ears.

"Only four people got out alive. Four out of more than 100," Mr. Crowe said.

That's part of the tragedy John Crowe recalls.

April 17, 1959 Mafia But there was grim humor, too.

"What was one of the major problems the city faced?" I asked him.

"Drunks,"
he answered. "Yes sir, drunks. We didn't have any water. So folks drank
whisky. People who'd never had a drop, some of them."

The Few Who Were There

Three years ago Mr. Crowe,
a retired druggist who has lived in Los Angeles for the last 40 years,
was a guest of the city of San Francisco. I asked him what he did to
mark the earthquake's 50th anniversary.

"I went back to 6th and Howard Streets and I lay down in the street and I thought about that other morning."

Mr. Crowe
got up to leave. "Would you do me a favor?" he asked. "If you write
something about me, tell everybody that all of us old-time San
Franciscans living here are going to get together tomorrow at MacArthur
Park to remember the quake.

"I don't expect many. There aren't a lot of us left."

Posted in Columnists, Paul Coates | Comments Off on Paul Coates — Confidential File, April 17, 1959

In the Theaters — April 17, 1950

April 17, 1950, In the Theaters
Posted in Film, Hollywood | Comments Off on In the Theaters — April 17, 1950

Second Takes — Billy Wilder

Aug. 29, 1950, Sunset Boulevard

Aug. 20, 1950: Coming soon: "Sunset Boulevard."

Nov. 6, 1948 Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Nov. 6, 1948: Gloria Swanson meets Billy Wilder and Charles Bracket to discuss "Sunset Boulevard."

Feb. 10, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Feb. 10, 1949: The script isn't done.



Above, Gloria Swanson and Melvyn Douglas in a clip from the 1931 picture "Tonight or Never."

Feb. 17, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

But despite her long film career, Swanson made a screen test for "Sunset Boulevard," according to The Times, Feb. 17, 1949

Feb. 22, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Feb. 22, 1949: Swanson is cast in "Sunset Boulevard."

March 4, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

March 4, 1949: The cast includes Montgomery Clift.

March 19, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard
March 19, 1949: Clift is out.

March 27, 1949: Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard
March 27, 1949: A prophetic notice in The Times.

April 2, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

April 2, 1949, Erich von Stroheim returns to Hollywood to make "Sunset Boulevard."
April 2, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Sept. 22, 1950, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

May 28, 1950, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

May 28, 1950: The Times says William Holden had never seen Gloria Swanson in a film until working on "Sunset Boulevard."

At left, Sept. 22, 1950: Swanson and Von Stroheim are paid $430,592.11 USD 2007 for their roles in the film. 

April 25, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard
May 1, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

May 1, 1949: Swanson is emphatic that "Sunset Boulevard" is not autobiographical. Von Stroheim complains bitterly about being typecast by Hollywood.

May 1, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

June 1, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

June 1, 1949: Casting Hedda Hopper in "Sunset Boulevard" was a brilliant stroke of marketing as it ensured frequent plugs for the movie.

June 13, 1949 Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard
Above, a description of the opening that was cut from the final version of the film.
July 17, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard
 

June 19, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

June 18, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

June 18, 1949: Hopper reports on her scene in the film.

Oct. 8, 1950, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Wilder wanted Nancy Olson to look plain for her scenes in the film.

June 20, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

June 20, 1949: A Swanson impersonator is a regular on the set.

Sept. 23, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Sept. 26, 1949, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Above: "They'll love it in Pomona."

Jan. 3, 1950, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Jan. 3, 1950: A photo shows people on the set while Holden and Swanson film a key scene.

Aug. 25, 1950, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Aug. 25, 1950: "There is just one primary issue and that is of public receptiveness to a story of this kind. Will people welcome tearing aside the curtain on much that is sinister and terrible in Hollywood? … 'Sunset Boulevard' … tells a sordid narrative that might very well be duplicated in real life. It minces no issues. It is threaded with bitterness, disillusionment and hovers ever over the age of despair."

 – Edwin Schallert

July 19, 1950, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

Nov. 7, 1950, Billy Wilder, Sunset Boulevard

At left, one of the stranger items I've ever found in going through the old papers: An Earl Scheib ad that features "Sunset Boulevard." Scheib actually mentioned the movie several times in his ads.

Above, Nov. 7, 1950: Hopper reports that Brackett has signed a seven-year contract with Fox after the end of his deal with Wilder and Paramount. 

Posted in 1950, Film, Hollywood, Second Takes | 1 Comment

Movie Star Mystery Photo

April 13, 2009, Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Aileen Pringle in the play "Tons of Money," 1932.

Our mystery movie star of the week is Aileen Pringle, Please congratulate Diane Ely, Floradora, Bob Birchard, Dewey Webb, Peter Mintun, Dru Duniway, Cynthia Keillor, Sam, R. Ahuna and Alekszandr for correctly identifying her.

Check back Monday for another mystery photo!

Just
a reminder on how this works: I post the mystery photo on Monday and
reveal the answer on Friday. To keep the mystery photo from getting
lost in the other entries, I move it from Monday to Tuesday to
Wednesday, etc., adding a photo every day.

I have to approve
all comments, so if your guess is posted immediately, that means you're
wrong. (And if a wrong guess has already been submitted by someone
else, there's no point in submitting it again.) If you're right, you
will have to wait until Friday. There's no need to submit your guess
five times. Once is enough. The only prize is bragging rights. 

The answer to last week's photo: Diana Sands.

Movie Star Mystery Photo

Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Aileen Pringle, 1932.

Here's another photo of our mystery woman. Please congratulate Anne Papineau, Eve Golden and Diane Ely for identifying her. This print was butchered down to a one-column mug shot. Isn't it a great photo?

April 15, 2009, Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Update: Aileen Pringle and Helen Johnson in "Soldiers and Women," 1930.

April 16, 2009. Mystery Photo
Los Angeles Times file photo

Aileen Pringle, 1934. Her Mexican divorce caused trouble for ex-husband Charles McKenzie because it was not recognized under English law.

 
Aileen Pringle
Photograph by the Los Angeles Times

Aileen Pringle discusses divorce from novelist James M. Cain, Sept. 5, 1946.

Aileen Pringle, 94; Star of Silent Screen

December 19, 1989

Aileen Pringle, an urbane socialite who became a
silent-screen star and the darling of such literary figures as H. L.
Mencken and George Jean Nathan, died Saturday in her Manhattan home
where she had entertained regularly since her retirement from movies
nearly 50 years ago.

She was 94.

Miss Pringle played
leading roles in more than 60 films. Two of her best known–"His Hour"
and "Three Weeks"–were based on scripts by Elinor Glyn. Miss Glyn had
hand-picked Miss Pringle for the latter role, that of a sensual heroine.

Known
for her sometimes off-color wisecracks as the silent camera captured
her movements, she was credited with a notable piece of Hollywood lore.

According
to the book "The Movies," Miss Pringle and Conrad Nagel were filming a
scene from "Three Weeks" in which he was carrying her horizontally. Her
lips are seen to move and, according to the book, she was not
whispering words of endearment to Nagel but was saying, "If you drop
me, you bastard, I'll break your neck."

Her other leading men included John Gilbert in adventure movies and Lew Cody in domestic farces.

Among
her other films were "Souls for Sale," "Earthbound," "Wife of the
Centaur," "A Kiss in the Dark," "Soul Mates," "Beau Broadway" and
"Puttin' on the Ritz."

She continued in films after the advent of sound but never with the impact of her earlier pictures.

She made brief appearances in two films of the 1940s, "Laura" and "Since You Went Away," before retiring.

Born
Aileen Bisbee in San Francisco to a wealthy family, she was educated in
private schools in Europe and first went on the stage in 1915. Her
first film was "Redhead" in 1919.

Her first husband was Charles
McKenzie Pringle, son of a former governor of Jamaica, and her second
was James M. Cain, author of "The Postman Always Rings Twice" and
"Mildred Pierce." Both marriages ended in divorce, the second in 1946
after less than a year. Cain died in 1977.

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | 60 Comments