Black Dahlia: Ask Me Anything, January 2024

In the January 2024 Ask Me Anything on the Black Dahlia case, I talk about Elizabeth Short’s so-called missing week and whether it’s real.

I also covered Leslie Dillon; Frank Jemison’s attitude toward Elizabeth Short; Los Angeles newspapers of the 1940s and how they covered the Black Dahlia case; whether the murder of Elizabeth Short affected property values in Leimert Park; whether Jim Richardson’s account of talking to Elizabeth Short’s killer was true; and other unsolved murders of women in Los Angeles in the 1940s.

Coming up on YouTube: On Jan. 16, at 10 a.m. Pacific time, I’ll do an Ask Me Anything on George Hodel. Can’t make the live session? Email me your questions and I’ll answer them! The video will be posted once the session ends so you can watch it later.

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Columbia Picture’s Centennial and Early Film ‘Mary of the Movies’

Mary of the Movies Lobby Card
Hollywood grew from a small rural community into a city of massive movie studios in the early 1920s, as tens of thousands arrived hoping to become part of the entertainment bonanza. Cashing in on the city and industry’s popularity, studios released several films in 1923 focusing on young women attempting to break into the movies. Two survive, “Souls For Sale” and “The Extra Girl,” with “Hollywood” considered lost. Discovered incomplete over 10 years ago and needing restoration, the C.B.C Film Sales Corporation moving picture “Mary of the Movies” helped usher in Columbia Pictures, which officially turns 100 January 10, 2024.

A story that dealt with “a girl’s struggles to break into the inner portals of stardom in the movie Mecca of Hollywood,” similar to the recently released “Souls for Sale,” “Mary of the Movies” took a gentler, lighter touch on making it in the movie town. Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

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This week’s mystery movie was the 1933 Twentieth Century picture Blood Money, with George Bancroft, Judith Anderson, Frances Dee, Chick Chandler, Blossom Seeley, Etienne Girardot and George Regas. Continue reading

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Mary Astor’s Lost Film ‘New Year’s Eve’

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Note: This is an encore post from January 2020.

Since TCM is featuring Mary Astor, here’s a brief post on her lost movie “New Year’s Eve.” (A tip of the hat to Lou Lumenick, who tweeted about the movie on — New Year’s Eve.) I also uploaded a version of this post to IMDB, in case you see it there.

Fox originally announced the film under the title “Strong Arm,” based on the story “$100” by Richard Connell, published in the August 1928 issue of Cosmopolitan Magazine. The film was supposed to star Lois Moran and George O’Brien in the leads, under the direction of J.G. Blystone. Fox initially planned the movie as a talkie, but released it as “New Year’s Eve,” a silent directed by Henry Lehrman with sound effects and music, designated “sound on film.”

Continue reading

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Reminder – My Next ‘Ask Me Anything’ on the Black Dahlia Case Is Jan. 2

Reminder: Boxy and I will be doing a live “Ask Me Anything” on the Black Dahlia case Tuesday, Jan 2, at 10 a.m. Pacific time, on YouTube and on Instagram.

I’ll give an update on the book and discuss Elizabeth Short’s “missing week.” Is it real or was it concocted by the newspapers?  I’ll also remind people to trim their roses on Jan. 15 in memory of Elizabeth Short and suggest a donation in her name to a charity that works with the homeless and/or abused women.

Can’t make the live session? Email me your questions and I’ll answer them! I’ll also get to the backlog of questions from previous sessions. The video will be posted once the session ends so you can watch it later.

Remember, this is only Black Dahlia questions. I have a separate Ask Me Anything on George Hodel on Jan. 16, at 10 a.m. Pacific time.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main Title, Lettering in an emblem.
This week’s mystery movie was the 1931 Chesterfield Motion Picture film The Devil Plays, with Jameson Thomas, Florence Britton, Thomas Jackson, Richard Tucker, Robert Ellis, Lillian Rich, Edmund Burns, Dorothy Christy, Lew Kelly, Carmelita Geraghty, Jack Trent and Murdock McQuarrie. Continue reading

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: A 1940s Christmas Story in ‘Star in the Night’

Star in the Night, re-creation of manger scene from 1940s film
An updated version of the Nativity in Warner Bros. Star in the Night.


Note: This is an encore post from 2021.

Made as a twenty-minute film to complete a program slate for movie theaters, the 1945 Warner Bros. two-reel short Star in the Night provides an understated, moving example of an offbeat contemporary take on the traditional Christmas nativity story. Featuring a much larger budget and more experienced cast than normal for shorts, the powerful featurette proved popular with audiences making it a perennial hit.

While the norm at the dawn of cinema, one- and two-reel shorts came to be seen as just an entertaining morsel or appetizer for the more respected feature film by the 1920s. Providing a training ground for rising talent or work for fading stars, these short films covered the gamut – newsreels, documentaries, travelogues, musical numbers, slapstick comedy, and playlets – offered entertaining product at low prices for local theater owners.

Continue reading

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George Hodel: Ask Me Anything, December 2023 / The George Hodel Bugging Transcripts


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

I talked about Steve Hodel’s bizarre new book “Black Dahlia Avenger IV” and one of his staunchest enablers, Luigi Warren.

Then I reviewed the LAPD guidelines for managing a stakeout to see if the George Hodel bugging transcripts show the surveillance was compromised. Answer: Yes. Totally yes.

The George Hodel files Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 |Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Agnes Grew, Pioneering Paramount Executive

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Agnes Grew with a map showing the results from a survey of women movie-goers, 1945.


A leader in almost everything she tried, Agnes Grew is mostly forgotten like many other women working in the motion picture industry during the 1920s-1930s. Longing for both power and an opportunity to help others, she would lead departments as well as serve others both in her job and in private opportunities. Her aim was to inspire and aid women, demonstating their leadership capabilities.

Born February 14, 1891 in Brooklyn, New York as Agnes Mengel, she was raised in a middle class family, with her father Calvin a broker. While she claimed on one census form to have attended college, New York census records show her working as a secretary at 19. Grew soon became a bookkeeper for a clothing factory. Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

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This week’s mystery movie was the 1945 Paramount picture Love Letters, with Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotten, Ann Richards, Cecil Kellaway, Gladys Cooper, Anita Louise, Robert Sully, Reginald Denny, Ernest Cossart and Byron Barr. Continue reading

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‘Ask Me Anything’ on George Hodel – December 19

Reminder: Boxy and I will be doing a live “Ask Me Anything” on George Hodel and Steve Hodel Tuesday Dec. 19 at 10 a.m. Pacific time on YouTube and Instagram.

We’ll take a look at what’s going on in Steve Hodel’s world and continue the examination of the George Hodel transcripts. Does the surveillance audio of the Sowden House really show what Steve Hodel says it does?

Can’t make the live session? Email me your questions and I’ll answer them! The video will be posted once the session ends so you can watch it later.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Lettering on artwork of palm trees.
This week’s mystery movie was the 1941 Paramount picture The Road to Zanzibar, with Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour, Una Merkel, Eric Blore, Douglass Dumbrille, Iris Adrian and Lionel Royce. Continue reading

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Lighting the Way on Santa Claus Lane

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Hollywood Boulevard decorated for Christmas in the 1950s.


Note: This is an encore post from 2021.

Starting in the late 1920s, Hollywood Boulevard’s Christmas decorations dazzled shoppers and tourists with their thousands of twinkling lights, a spectacular backdrop for holiday shopping. While Col. H.M. Baine conceived the concept of presenting a parade to lure tourists and crowds to Hollywood Boulevard for potential holiday shopping, electrical king Otto K. Olesen introduced the spectacular decorations which beautified the street.

Born in Farup, Denmark, September 9, 1891, Olesen arrived at Ellis Island November 22, 1911, with $20 in his possession and a final destination of Los Angeles to join his uncle H.A. Jessen. The twenty-year-old found electrical work, quickly learning and expanding his skills. In 1921 Olesen opened his Studio Lighting Service at 1645 Hudson Avenue, which later evolved into the Otto K. Olesen Illuminating Co. at 6548 Hollywood Blvd. He provided studios with large incandescent lamps employed for filming, and provided klieg lights for grand openings all over Hollywood for such buildings as the Roosevelt Hotel and Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, productions at the Hollywood Bowl, as well as for most film premieres after 1923. Newspapers described him as “the light wizard of Hollywood.” Continue reading

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Black Dahlia: Ask Me Anything, December 2023

In the December 2023 Ask Me Anything on the Black Dahlia case, I talk about the incursion of artificial intelligence in cranking out “true” crime videos and I discuss Daddy Was the Black Dahlia Killer by Janice Knowlton and Michael Newton.

I also covered Robert M. “Red” Manley, why Anne Toth disliked Mark Hansen, Agness “Aggie” Underwood, how Bevo Means got his nickname, and Elizabeth Short’s “Missing Week.” Note: Nobody knows where she went when she left the Biltmore. The more adamantly that someone (i.e. Esotouric and Steve Hodel) insists that they “know” where she went, the less they can be trusted.

Coming up on YouTube: On Dec. 19 at 10 a.m. Pacific time, I’ll do an Ask Me Anything on George Hodel. Can’t make the live session? Email me your questions and I’ll answer them! The video will be posted once the session ends so you can watch it later.

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Hollywood Sign Built and Illuminated November-December 1923

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The Hollywoodland Sign, in a photo published in the Los Angeles Evening Herald, Dec. 8, 1923.


Note: This is an encore post from 2017.

O
riginally constructed as a publicity gimmick and branding symbol to help generate sales for a real estate development, the Hollywood Sign is now a worldwide icon just as powerful as Big Ben, the Eiffel Tower, and the Statue of Liberty, signifying a land of glamour and opportunity. Myths have always existed about it, from the date of its construction to how the city of Hollywood obtained it. After in-depth research by both historian Bruce Torrence and myself, we can conclusively say the sign was constructed in late November and early December 1923, and illuminated in that first week of December.

Like me, a California transplant involved in history, research, and writing since I was child, Torrence has always been fascinated by Hollywood history, perhaps because his two famous grandfathers contributed much to it. His paternal grandfather, Ernest Torrence, starred in many classic silent films such as “Steamboat Bill Jr.” and “Peter Pan” after a successful career as an opera singer. His maternal grandfather C. E. Toberman could be called the builder of Hollywood for his construction of so many iconic structures around Hollywood Boulevard. Bruce began a photo collection of Hollywood in 1972 with thirty photographs, which has blossomed into thousands. He employed these photos in writing one of Hollywood’s first detailed history books in 1979 called “Hollywood: The First 100 Years.”

Hollywood at Play: The Lives of the Stars Between Takes, by Stephen X. Sylvester, Mary Mallory and Donovan Brandt, goes on sale Feb. 1, 2017.

Continue reading

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

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This week’s mystery movie was the 1940 Warner Bros. short Service With the Colors, with Robert Armstrong, William Lundigan, Henry O’Neill, William Orr, Herbert Anderson and George Haywood.
Continue reading

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Hollywood and Poinsettias

Poinsettia Postcard
A postcard c. 1908 of poinsettias, “California’s Christmas flower,” listed on EBay.


Note: This is an encore post from 2020.

Euphorba Pulcherrima, better known as the poinsettia plant, has been popular in Los Angeles since the late 1800s. Some call it flor de fuego (fire flower) or flor de la noche buena (flower of the holy night) because of its bright red leaves or bracts. First used as centerpieces or accents during the holiday season, since the leaves turn color quickly during the shorter winter days, the blazing plant gained popularity at the hands of Hollywood residents, now one of the most popular flowers highlighting homes across the United States at Christmas.

Indigenous in Mexico and Central America, these bright red and green plants grow as shrubs and small trees as tall as 13 feet. The Aztecs employed the striking flower for medicinal purposes, such as healing pulmonary infections.

Mary Mallory’s “Living With Grace” is now on sale.

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Reminder – My Next ‘Ask Me Anything’ on the Black Dahlia Case Is Dec. 5

Reminder: Boxy and I will be doing a live “Ask Me Anything” on the Black Dahlia case Tuesday, Dec. 5, at 10 a.m. Pacific time, on YouTube and on Instagram.

I’ll give an update on the book and discuss Daddy Was the Black Dahlia Killer, by Janice Knowlton and Michael Newton.

Can’t make the live session? Email me your questions and I’ll answer them! I’ll also get to the backlog of questions from previous sessions. The video will be posted once the session ends so you can watch it later.

Remember, this is only Black Dahlia questions. I have a separate Ask Me Anything on George Hodel on Dec. 19, at 10 a.m. Pacific time.

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Movieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +)

Main Title over clouds, with a star

This week’s mystery movie was the 1949 Twentieth Century-Fox film Come to the Stable, with Loretta Young, Celeste Holm, Hugh Marlowe, Elsa Lanchester, Thomas Gomez, Dorothy Patrick, Basil Ruysdael, Dooley Wilson, Regis Toomey and Mike Mazurki. Continue reading

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Mary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: Agnes O’Malley Marx, Pioneering Film Publicist

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Agnes O’Malley Marx in the Los Angeles Daily News, 1954.


The early moving picture industry offered opportunity to diverse workers: immigrants, women, and people of color more easily found jobs and opportunities for growth and leadership in the new field. Those with creativity, ambition, and drive could succeed unlike in more settled and traditional fields. Like other young women, Pennsylvania born Agnes O’Malley yearned for the chance to make her mark in Hollywood and contribute to the success of motion pictures. While basically unknown today, O’Malley’s moxie and smarts led her to early film publicity, selling the movies as she sold herself.

Born June 12, 1897 in Allegheny, Pennsylvnaia to Irish immigrant John and local girl Annie, Agnes K. O’Malley was one of four children who learned to scrap early. Her family struggled as her father originally worked in a mill before becoming a street foreman in Pittsburgh. She would later claim to have attended college, but city records show her working as a stenographer in Pittsburgh in 1920. Looking for excitement and adventure she moved in Los Angeles and Hollywood in 1922, hoping to find a job in the booming film industry.

Continue reading

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