Italy orders Jews out; Hollywood Legion Stadium opens, September 2, 1938


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Hollywood Legion Stadium: 1938 – 1959
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All Jews who moved to Italy since World War I (or the World War, as it was then known) have six months to leave Italy and many of its colonies, including Libya and the Aegean Isles–but not Ethiopia, Eritrea and Italian Somaliland. The order affects about 10,000 of the 44,000 Jews living in Italy, the AP story says.

The Fleischers’ "Sinbad the Sailor Meets Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves" wins the award as best animated cartoon at the Venice Film Festival. "The River," "Jezebel," "Vivacious Lady," "The Rage of Paris" and "Goldwyn Follies" also receive awards. 


In sports, the Hollywood Legion Stadium opens with a bout between Quentin "Baby" Breese and Georgie Hansford. The stadium was the site of countless prizefights and wrestling matches until it was gutted in 1959 and turned into a bowling alley.

Babe Ruth gets a single in an exhibition game between the Mid-Atlantic League’s Dayton Ducks the Brooklyn Dodgers. Ruth played first base for five innings … Sports columnist Bill Henry discusses the switch from the field judge’s stopwatch to the electric clock, which was the standard at the Big Ten.




Posted in @news, Columnists, Current Affairs, Dodgers, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Music, Sports | Comments Off on Italy orders Jews out; Hollywood Legion Stadium opens, September 2, 1938

LA history–Little Tokyo




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Above, as published in The Times, Sept. 2, 1938, and below, via Google maps’ street view.



Posted in Downtown, Nuestro Pueblo | Comments Off on LA history–Little Tokyo

Reporter: Ed Guthman, August 22, 1965


Ed Guthman on the aftermath of the Watts Riots



Aug. 22, 1965–The late Ed Guthman writes in the aftermath of the Watts Riots:

"We have all seen enough to know we must make it possible for whites and Negroes to live in a large city in peace and human dignity or this city and this nation are for a very difficult and costly time."

Essays on the Watts Riots, 1965

Also in The Times Opinion pages: Theodore White writes, "What the four-day festival of hate taught was that too much current American thinking on civil rights, as they apply to our great cities, is dogma–and dogma so far out of touch with reality as to touch on absurdity."

And Robert Richardson’s first-person piece
: "My legs are knocked out from under me, and my face is going straight to the pavement. I start to protest, but a knee goes into my back and my mouth opens in a cry of pain.

"Suddenly, my hands are behind my back — handcuffed."

Posted in @news, Countdown to Watts, Front Pages, LAPD | 1 Comment

Movie star mystery photo

 


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Los Angeles Times file photo

OK, who are they?

Of course, it’s Mickey Rooney on the left. His boxing partner is Art Aragon, as guessed by Kip Brown (who thought it might have been Mickey Knox), Howard Decker, Michael Ryerson and Lee Rivas. Information on the back of the photo says this is a scene from "Military Policemen" (also known as "Off Limits"). The date is difficult to read, but appears to be Jan. 29, 1953. Nice guessing, folks!

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Update: This woman is not Veda Ann Borg. Her photo was placed in that file by mistake. Any ideas?
Who is eating dinner with the Reagans? And who is the Reagans’ mystery dinner companion?

Hint: Hoosier hoopster. NBA. Now ask yourself, does this gent look like an athlete? Someone said something about the Pacers…. You’re red hot!

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Sports | 20 Comments

Portrait of the American stage in black and white



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On Aug. 20, 1938, The Times noted the passing of Thomas K. Heath, who was once one of vaudeville's biggest stars. A little research showed that he and his partner Jim McIntyre performed in blackface for many years after they teamed up in 1874. I'd never heard of them, so I wondered who they were. 

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Dec. 24, 1895.

Then in researching Heath and McIntyre, I ran across another team, perhaps not as well known: Bert Williams and George Walker.  But instead of two white comedians pretending to be black, Williams and Walker were African American. Better yet, according to The Times, they were from Los Angeles. These fellows sounded fairly interesting and worth investigating.


Once extremely popular, blackface minstrel shows vanished from the American stage decades ago, and only survive in a few jarring clips from old movies, like one of the sketches in "Yankee Doodle Dandy." So here's a brief history of minstrel shows from New York Sun, republished in The Times:

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Los Angeles Times file photo

Above, McIntyre and Heath in a publicity photo without makeup.

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Los Angeles Times file photo

And here are Heath, left and McIntyre in character. Personally, I find this photo grotesque and shocking, but this kind of entertainment was a sensation in its day.


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Los Angeles Times file photo

Unfortunately, I wasn't able to locate any photos of Williams and Walker as a team, but here's Bert Williams as a solo performer after Walker's death in 1911. And would I like to see him perform? Absolutely.

Both teams appeared many times in Los Angeles, almost always at the Orpheum (which would have been second Orpheum on South Spring Street). Curiously enough, in May 1898, in some quirk of booking, they appeared on the same bill: McIntyre and Heath, "the great Blackface Comedians," and Williams and Walker, "the real Colored Comedians."


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"The Ham Tree," Jan. 6, 1914.

McIntyre and Heath's most famous routine was "The Ham Tree," a sketch that was so well known The Times never described it.  The general premise is the misadventures of two men after one talks the other into quitting his job at a livery stable so they can go on the road in a minstrel show.


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Aug. 22, 1897.

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Above, Williams and Walker also had a popular saying that they turned into a song: "You Ain't So Warm." At left, in an 1897 Times interview, Williams describes how he explained the act to British audiences.


Click on the play button to hear "You Ain't So Warm" and other tunes of the era.
http://www.archive.org/flow/FlowPlayerLight.swf


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Then, in 1898, the two teams shared the stage of the Orpheum. At left, the May 3, 1898, Times review of the show featuring the blackface act of McIntyre and Heath and the African American team of Williams and Walker.

"Williams and Walker, the two darky Angelenos, are back from triumphs in foreign lands and eastern cities to the scene of their initial success and were given an ovation," The Times says.

"They are as funny a pair of mokes as their race has ever given to the comedy sketch, and the cake walk which concludes their act, which comprises in addition to the two principals a pair of dusky damsels who are high-steppers, and a band master who twirls the baton with fine skill, is the very poetry of darky motion."

"As for McIntyre and Heath," The Times says,  "those who in other days have seen this pair of darky impersonators need be told but little…. Last night's audience laughed at these two until there was not a dry eye or a side without a pain in it upstairs or down; indeed, the audience did not simply laugh, it yelled and shrieked in its ecstasy of merriment and the curtain went down with the roar of its cachinations still echoing among the rafters."   


The Times interviewed the Williams and Walker again in 1898. It's wonderful to stumble across these first-person accounts. How about this quote from Feb. 14, 1898, the year before Scott Joplin published "The Maple Leaf Rag": "Ragtime has been overdone and the public is getting tired of it." Or the observation that many tunes by African Americans were written to a preconceived idea, presumably that of white publishers. 

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1911_0107_walker Although McIntyre and Heath performed for many years in vaudeville, Williams and Walker did not survive very long. George Walker died Jan. 6, 1911, in a New York sanitarium, having been ill for a year. The Times didn't even report his death; the above clipping is from the Chicago Tribune. According to the New York Times, he was buried in Lawrence, Kans. Born in 1873, he was 37 or 38.
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Egbert Austin "Bert" Williams died March 5, 1922, at the age of 48, and his obituary appeared on the front page of The Times. His father was a Danish envoy in Nassau, the Bahamas, and his mother was "part Spanish and part African," The Times said. He graduated from high school in San Pedro.

Williams obituary, part 1

Williams obituary, part 2

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In November 1938, Flournoy E. Miller, another famous African American performer who was one of the writers of "Shuffle Along," looked back at the days of Williams and Walker and said there was a need for "clean old real Negro shows."


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May 17, 1925: A review of McIntyre and Heath at Orpheum on their farewell tour. They also staged a final performance in Philadelphia in 1934. McIntyre died Aug. 18, 1937, at the age of 89. Heath died exactly one year later at the age of 85 without ever being told that his partner was dead.

Postscript: These performers may seem like nothing more than forgotten relics of an ancient past. But they shared the stage with actors who are influential even now. McIntyre and Heath, for example, signed the autograph book of young vaudeville performer Buster Keaton and wished him well in his career. McIntyre and Heath also appeared at the Orpheum in January 1902 with a young "eccentric juggler" named W.C. Fields. (Fields had previously performed in Los Angeles in 1900). 

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McIntyre and Heath and W.C. Fields at the Orpheum, Jan. 5, 1902.



Posted in 1895, 1897, 1898, 1911, 1914, 1925, 1938, Film, Hollywood, Music, Stage | 2 Comments

Dodger quiz, 1958




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By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

Quiz time: Who was the Dodgers’ most valuable player of 1958?

You could make a case for several players. Gil Hodges and Charlie Neal tied for the team lead in home runs with 22.  Duke Snider, despite injuries and struggles adjusting to the dimensions of the Coliseum, hit .312 with 15 home runs.  Johnny Podres led the Dodgers with 13 victories, following closely by Don Drysdale (12) and Sandy Koufax (11).

The winner, according to The Times’ Frank Finch, was infielder Jim Gilliam.

"Without Gilliam and with just another journeyman infielder occupying Junior’s place on the roster, the Dodgers proably would be dead last or no better than seventh right now," Finch wrote. He added that his Mirror colleague, "Sir Charles Park," also voted for Gilliam.

Oh course, you can tell how badly a team is doing if the writers are discussing most valuable players at the start of September. But Gilliam certainly was a first-rate player. He was the National League’s rookie of the year in 1953.

Finch credited Gilliam’s durability and versatility on a team overwhelmed by injuries. "While operating with equal efficiency in the outfield, third base or second base, he has played in more games than any oher Dodger," Finch wrote.

Gilliam stayed with the Dodgers after retiring in 1965. In September of 1978, the first-base coach collapsed at his home and suffered a brain hemorrhage. He was only 49 when he died in October.

"He was a father to some of us, a brother to others and a friend to us all," Davey Lopes said at Gilliam’s funeral.

keith.thursby@latimes.com

Posted in Dodgers, Sports | 1 Comment

August 31, 1958: Woman kills husband as children sleep, Giants win over Dodgers

August 31, 1958: Lillian Kella admits stabbing her husband to death after a swim party. Woman with short hair in sleeveless top, blood on her toreador pants. Lillian loved Ed. She loved him even though he beat her. She loved him even though he was on probation for beating her. And she loved him even when he lay dying on the kitchen floor after she stabbed him in the heart. “I didn’t want him to hurt me anymore,” she said.

On the night of the killing, Lillian and Ed had hired a babysitter for their two children and gone to a party in Sierra Madre. By the time they left, both had been drinking heavily.
Continue reading

Posted in #courts, @news, Columnists, Dodgers, Front Pages, Homicide, Sports | 1 Comment

Los Angeles history–Nuestro Pueblo




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Below, Western and Los Feliz, as seen in Google maps’ street view.




Posted in Nuestro Pueblo | 4 Comments

Dodgers coach to manage Padres, August 30, 1968




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By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

The Angels weren’t the first team to fill their coaching staffs with former Dodgers.

Preston Gomez was named the first manager of the San Diego Padres, who would begin play the following spring. Buzzie Bavasi had quit as the Dodgers’ general manager to run the Padres and it could not have been much of a surprise that he picked a familiar face. Gomez had been the Dodgers’ third base coach since 1965.

The Angels can trace the beginnings of their recent success to the hiring of Mike Scioscia as manager. The former Dodger catcher filled his staff with former Dodgers such as Mickey Hatcher, Alfredo Griffin, Ron Roenicke and Dino Ebel.

The first Padre coaching staff also had a Dodger feel to it. According to a list on the Padres’ website, at least three of the 1969 staff could bleed a little Dodger blue: Roger Craig, Wally Moon and Sparky Anderson.

Of course, that first Padre team didn’t have the success Scioscia and Co. are enjoying in Anaheim. San Diego finished with a 52-110 record. Nate Colbert and Ollie Brown led the team in home runs and Al Santorini and Joe Niekro each had eight victories to lead the pitching staff.

Gomez managed in San Diego into the 1972 season before being replaced by another former Dodger, Don Zimmer. Gomez later managed the Astros and Cubs. He spent several years in the Angels’ organization, most recently as a special assistant to the general manager. He was seriously injured in March on his way home from spring training when he was hit by a truck in a gas station in Blythe.

keith.thursby@latimes.com 

Posted in Dodgers, Front Pages, Sports | Comments Off on Dodgers coach to manage Padres, August 30, 1968

Dodgers Labor Day weekend TV schedule, August 30, 1958


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Los Angeles Times file photo(s)

Check it out! Jerry Doggett and Vin Scully are glued together! GLUED!! Published in The Times on Sept. 2, 1958. Glue and all. Oh you photogs (or more likely the guys in the art department, sez Howard Decker). As Gary Metzker would say: "They are out of control." When I showed this to Davan Maharaj, he called it "X-acto Shop." Anybody who did this today would be out on their ear.

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By Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

Channel 11 was bringing in reinforcements for the Dodgers’ Labor Day weekend series against the Giants.  The Times’ Don Page wrote in his Sportslook column that Channel 11 would use 15 cameramen in an effort to finish the Dodgers’ first season in Los Angeles with improved coverage.

"The station spent the better part of last week at the Coliseum going through dry runs," he wrote. "In its telecasts from San Francisco earlier this year the station was open to criticism over failure to keep up with the action at times."

Sounds like some hockey games I’ve watched.

Vin Scully and Jerry Doggett would alternate between KMPC radio and Channel 11. Baseball teams may have too many announcers now, but that seems like a lot of work for only two guys.

Page also discussed the use of some new technology to bring college football games to local television.

USC and UCLA home games would be shown on Sunday afternoons "via the videotape recording process," Page reported. Videotape "could maintain the live quality of the original telecast," he promised.

I don’t remember this era of televised sports, but I do remember when a game on TV was a big deal. It doesn’t seem like that long ago that baseball’s Game of the Week was worth arranging your Saturday morning around.  After all, it was your only chance to see baseball from some exotic destination like Chicago or Pittsburgh.

Of course, it was that long ago.

keith.thursby@latimes.com 

Posted in #Jazz, @news, broadcasting, Columnists, Dodgers, Film, Front Pages, Hollywood, Music, Sports, Television | 2 Comments

Movie star mystery photos

 

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Photograph by the Los Angeles Times

Update: The woman below is indeed Veda Ann Borg. The above photo was put in her folder by mistake and I didn’t notice when I was scanning the pictures! She’s not Veda Ann Borg. Any guesses as to whom she might be?

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Los Angeles Times file photo

Veda Ann Borg in a 1941 photograph taken while she was making "Two Yanks in Trinidad."

OK, who is she?

Is it Veda Ann Borg? (L.C.) Absolutely! Congrats!

Can you guess the identities of our mystery Hollywood movie stars

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We have a correct answer! Betty Healy? (D. Webb).

Yes, this is Betty Braun (or Betty Healy) with Ted Healy of Ted Healy and His Stooges. She was sometimes known as the "girl stooge."

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She came out of retirement to play Stan Laurel’s wife, Bubbles, in "Our Relations."

Can you guess the identities of our mystery Hollywood movie stars

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To recap: Our mystery guest was brought to Hollywood to appear in "Murder at the Vanities." However he is NOT listed the imdb entry for the movie. To make it even more difficult, his name is misspelled in the listing of the Broadway production of "Murder" so he’s even harder to find. 
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Wait! Wait! This just in: Paul Gerrits? (Alexa Foreman). Yes, this is skater Paul Gerrits (or Gerrish in ibdb), who was a sensation in the Broadway version of "Murder at the Vanities." He appeared in several movies and worked in Los Angeles as a master of ceremonies, often for Earl Carroll.

Nice work, Alexa!

Can you guess the identities of our mystery Hollywood movie stars

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The identity of our mystery artist was guessed by Nathan Marsak: Actress Gail Russell, star of "The Angel and the Badman."  Congratulations, Nathan!

Below left, the signature of Gail Russell. The Daily Mirror thanks Jackie Lugo of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce for the picture of Russell’s painting. After Russell died, her brother gave the painting to Johnny Grant. Upon Grant’s death, the picture passed to Lugo.

I have no idea how many other Gail Russell paintings there are. I suspect not too many.

Who is eating dinner with the Reagans? And who is the Reagans’ mystery dinner companion?

Hint: Hoosier hoopster. NBA. Now ask yourself, does this gent look like an athlete? Someone said something about the Pacers…. You’re red hot!

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo | 11 Comments

TV game show is faked, player says, LA bids for Olympics, August 29, 1958


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New York Dist. Atty. Frank S. Hogan announces the investigation of charges brought by Herbert Stempel that the NBC game show "Twenty-One" was rigged. NBC says it investigated the same charges a year before a found them without merit.

According to the New York World-Telegram and Sun, Stempel said  producers told him he could "make a pile of money" by "playing ball." He said he was instructed on how to "bite my lips, clench my fists and look agonized."   

Los Angeles contestants Wade Ruby of Pepperdine and Deputy Kermit Kynell (remember him from the Norwalk plane crash?) said they weren’t coached before their winning appearances on the show.

In sports, the Rams and the Browns prepare for a game at the Coliseum. The Browns are 1-1 in exhibition games, having beaten the Steelers 10-0 and lost to the Lions 17-7. The Rams have beaten the Redskins 31-10 and the Giants 38-10. The Rams starting quarterback is Jim Ninowski … The Braves beat the Giants 3-0, stretching their National League lead to 7 1/2 games … And Councilwoman Rosalind Wyman introduces a resolution to seek the 1964 Olympic Games.




Posted in #courts, broadcasting, Dodgers, Front Pages, Sports, Television | Comments Off on TV game show is faked, player says, LA bids for Olympics, August 29, 1958

US relaxes immigration law for Jewish refugees, Greenberg leads Babe Ruth, August 29, 1938

Sheriff guards Trojans' trophies

I’ve never made a scientific survey, but it wouldn’t surprise me if Eugene Biscailuz were the most photographed sheriff in the history of Los Angeles County. The man certainly knew how to get his picture in the paper. The trophy is being held by USC low-hurdle star Earl Vickery, left, and pole valuter Kenny Dills. 
US relaxes immigration laws to accept Jewish refugees
Greenberg leads Ruth in home runs
At left, the U.S. is accepting Jewish refugees from Europe at the rate of 100 a day. The AP story notes that the refugees have no money but are being assisted by Jewish aid groups.

Also note: Germany’s Catholic bishops denounce the Nazis, though not by name. The bishops say all Catholic books are censored, banned or confiscated. 


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Above, if you look hard enough you really can find African Americans in The Times.


In sports, the Angels beat the Stars in the final double-header of the "Civil War series" … Hank Greenberg hits his 45th homer of the season as Detroit wins against Boston, 4-3 … Greenberg’s run in the Tigers’ 118th/119th game puts him ahead of Babe Ruth’s 1927 season, when Ruth had hit 39 runs in 118 games.   

Posted in #games, @news, Countdown to Watts, Current Affairs, Dodgers, Front Pages, Sports | Comments Off on US relaxes immigration law for Jewish refugees, Greenberg leads Babe Ruth, August 29, 1938

August 28, 1958: Intruder kills former actress

August 28, 1958: Edwin Jerome talks to police after the discovery of his wife's body.

August 28, 1958: Photo of Helene Jerome, found dead in her Hollywood home. Her hair is pulled back and she is wearing glasses. She is one of those cold cases that leave all kinds of unanswered questions even when the killer is finally caught, convicted and sent to prison. Nothing about it passes the sniff test.

We know her name was Helene Funk Jerome, born in New York on March 12, 1908, which makes her 50 at the time of the killing. She was living in a rear apartment at the Las Palmas Hotel, 1738 N. Las Palmas. That’s the one used in “Pretty Woman.”

She was supposedly a retired actress, but her credentials are rather vague. The Times said she was a graduate of either the Royal Dramatic Academy or the Royal Dramatic Society in London, so I’m guessing it was the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, which has no record of her — at least online.

Most of her career was spent on the stage in China, The Times said. She never made any movies and shouldn’t be confused with Helene Jerome Eddy, who died in 1990.

Continue reading

Posted in #courts, @news, Cemeteries, Dodgers, Film, Forest Lawn, Front Pages, Hollywood, Hollywood Division, Homicide, LAPD, Sports | 1 Comment

Voices–Brian Stromsoe

Brian Stromsoe writes:

I think the Mirror was 5 cents back then. I delivered the Huntington Park Signal, which produced $20 per month for my comic book purchases, and a stop off at Rancher Bill’s for a burger, fries, and coke — all for $0.25 or $0.30.

I was a Boy Scout at the old Goodyear plant (Central and Florence — neighbor worked there after WWII). And one g’pa used to take me out to Wrigley Field (Angels) and Gilmore Field (Stars). Got to watch Max West, Steve Bilko, Luke Easter, and (of course) Chuck Connors do their thing with a baseball. And I used to sneak into the Coliseum after Saturday morning classes at the Museum to watch some football games (UCLA 72 over Stanford; Frank Gifford as a USC halfback, etc.).

One of our family highlights was the Sunday drive to the airport to park on Aviation Boulevard to watch the prop jobs come in for landings. And who could forget the old aluminum hot dog stand near Central and Florence where Mr. Karcher began his chili dog career, maybe feeding those Goodyear employees for lunch. We later made him rich by eating at his #2 on Alameda south of Florence, and then his #3 in Huntington Park on Pacific south of Florence.

I was employed as a box boy at "Best Buy" or "Bi-Rite" on Florence / Avalon for $1.00 per hour (and $5.00 for any shopping cart we "found"). My sister was an usherette at the Fox Theater on Florence so I stopped by every night after work to watch movies (even the Spanish-language ones). My first haircuts were at Mac’s on San Pedro, probably because he cut my dad’s hair in the 1930s and 1940s. I think the family used another barber on Central for placing bets on the ponies. Seems betting on the horses was a pretty common neighborhood thing.

Well, enough for now, else I will be ruminating for the day.

Posted in Film, Food and Drink, Hollywood, Sports | Comments Off on Voices–Brian Stromsoe

August 27,1958: Woman kills husband over singing, Reds win against Dodgers

August 27, 1958: Anne Benyon is questioned about the stabbing of her husband, Ben.

Was Benjamin John Beynon an abusive husband … or just a bad singer?

Ben, 46, and his wife of six years, Anne, lived at 1946 1/2 New England Ave., between Hoover and Vermont just south of Washington. For the last three years, Anne had been using a wheelchair, although The Times never explained why. Continue reading

Posted in #courts, @news, Dodgers, Front Pages, Homicide, LAPD, Sports | 1 Comment

Glenn Davis makes debut with the Rams, August 26, 1948



1948_august_26_sportsBy Keith Thursby
Times staff writer

Glenn Davis was such a star, his debut with the Rams was headline news. Even if the game wasn’t a real game.

Davis, who won the Heisman Trophy in 1946 as part of powerhouse Army teams, was the main attraction at the Rams’ intrasquad game at Gilmore Stadium. More than 11,000 fans attended the exhibition, which The Times’ Braven Dyer said was Davis’ first local appearance since he played at Bonita High in La Verne "way back before the war."

And Davis didn’t disappoint, scoring three touchdowns. The only bad news was he wouldn’t be available during the season for the Rams. Dyer wrote that after the next week’s exhibition, Davis "goes overseas with Uncle Sam’s army. Dan Reeves, principal stockholder of the Rams, sat in the stands last night and wished that Joe Stalin would drop dead or jump out of the third floor of the Kremlin."

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Davis had a short career with the Rams after completing his military service. The Rams reached the league title game in 1950 and he led the team in rushing. But before his pro career started, he had injured his knee making a movie called "The Spirit of West Point" with his Army teammate, fellow Heisman Trophy winner Doc Blanchard. 

At Army, the speedy Davis was known as Mr. Outside and Blanchard was Mr. Inside. Army won national titles in 1944 and ’45 and finished second in ’46.

After football, Davis spent more than 30 years at The Times, retiring as the director of special events.

Davis died in 2005 at the age of 80. The Times’ Mike Kupper used a quote from a former Army teammate in Davis’ obituary: "There are words to describe how good an athlete Doc Blanchard was. But there aren’t words to describe how good Davis was."

keith.thursby@latimes.com

Posted in Sports | 3 Comments

August 26, 1938: LAPD officer accused in bizarre plot to kill neighbors

August 26, 1938: Photo of house with dotted line showing path of a tunnelI had to look twice at this one: A suspended police officer hires a couple of men to tunnel to his neighbors’ house? Really? I mean are you serious?
Continue reading

Posted in #courts, Front Pages, LAPD, Sports | 1 Comment

Los Angeles history–Ford Amphitheatre

John Anson Ford Amphitheatre

Posted in Film, Nuestro Pueblo, Stage | Comments Off on Los Angeles history–Ford Amphitheatre

August 25, 1958: Jealous husband rams movie star’s car, Reds win over Dodgers

Some folks may find this hard to believe, but drivers were complaining about bad traffic in Los Angeles 50 years ago. I can’t say it often enough: History shows that congested streets have been a problem in Los Angeles for at least a century.

August 25, 1958: Letter writer complains about Los Angeles freeways. Continue reading

Posted in Dodgers, Film, Freeways, Front Pages, Hollywood, Transportation | 3 Comments