TPTV Subtitles August 23Rd to August 29Th
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CARPET CLEANING SPECIAL K N O W ? Throughout History, I Dogs Have Been the on OU> 211 Most Obvious Agents in 5 MILES SO
remain young and beautiful only by bathing in and in the story of Lauren Elder’s grueling 36-hour or S a t u r d a y drinking the blood of young innocent girls — includ deal following the crash of a light aiplane that killed ing her daughter’s. 12:30 a.m. on WQAD. her two companions. The two-hour drama is based "Tarzan’s New Adventure” —- Bruce Bennett and "Sweet, Sweet Rachel” — An ESP expert is pit on the book by Lauren Elder and Shirley Ula Holt star in the 1936 release. 1 p.m. on WMT. ted against an unseen presence that is trying to drive Streshinsky. 8 p.m. on NBC. "Harlow” — The sultry screen star of the 1930s is a beautiful woman crazy. The 1971 TV movie stars "Walk, Don’t Run” — A young woman (Saman the subject of the 1965 film biography with- Carroll Alex Dreier, Stefanie Powers, Pat Hingle and Steve tha Eggar) unwittingly agrees to share her apart Baker, Peter Lawford, Red Buttons, Michael Con Ihnat. 12:30 a.m. on KCRG. ment with a businessman (Cary Grant) and an athe- nors and Raf Vallone 1 p.m. on WOC lete (Jim Hutton) during the Tokyo Olympics (1966). "The Left-Handed Gun” — Paul Newman, Lita 11 p.m. on WMT Milan and Hurd Hatfield are the stars of the 1958 S u n d a y western detailing Billy the Kid’s career 1 p.m. on "The Flying Deuces” — Stan Laurel and Oliver KWWL. Hardy join the Foreign Legion so Ollie can forget an T u e s d a y "The Swimmer” — John Cheever’s story about unhappy romance (1939). -
Bwronsjtibileeukit SUNDAY and MONDAY Jutnjfanmam Double Feature Bill "^Ftoirc N JOOL$ "^Ssjtams HERE THEY ARE! COUNT ’EM! LOOK for YOUR FAVORITES
s to do w^h the making or this pic- Gala BiU for ture services worth millions were donated. ‘‘The Stolen Jodis" with Its 56 famous stars la the big feature of Jubilee Week Players' and Patrons’ Jubilee Week In 2,600 theaters In the United States and Canada during Easter Strand Offers Special Com- week. edy and High Gass SLEPT WITH DOG Vaudeville Chicago.—Claude Erickson could put up with sleeping with his wife*4 dog, when she brought the animal off the new season with Starting to bed with her, but kissing his week a mammoth Easter program mother-ln-Iaw was too much, he of de luxe stage and screen enter- told the court In a suit for divorce. Warner Brothers’ Strand tainment, The latter caused him great men- bid for makes a strong capacity pat- tal anguish and brought upon him ronage during the new week. a nervous breakdown, he stated. This Is "Players’ and Patrons’ Ju- bilee week" In 2600 theaters A SWEET TIP. the nation and the throughout Porter: I carried his bag up three Strand joins In making It a gala flights of stairs, and at the top ho event. As an extra added “some- slipped something into my hand and thin” they present the special com- said, "That’s for a cup of tea." made for this en- edy celebration; Bootblack: And what was it, a titled “The Stolen Jools" In which dime? CONRAD NAGEL. BETTE DAVIS CHARLES SWINNINGER, 56 EMMA screendom’s brightest start par- Porter: No. It was a lump of DUNN#/,45LIM SUrtM£RVILie^'8A0 SISTER." ticipate. -
In 1925, Eight Actors Were Dedicated to a Dream. Expatriated from Their Broadway Haunts by Constant Film Commitments, They Wante
In 1925, eight actors were dedicated to a dream. Expatriated from their Broadway haunts by constant film commitments, they wanted to form a club here in Hollywood; a private place of rendezvous, where they could fraternize at any time. Their first organizational powwow was held at the home of Robert Edeson on April 19th. ”This shall be a theatrical club of love, loy- alty, and laughter!” finalized Edeson. Then, proposing a toast, he declared, “To the Masquers! We Laugh to Win!” Table of Contents Masquers Creed and Oath Our Mission Statement Fast Facts About Our History and Culture Our Presidents Throughout History The Masquers “Who’s Who” 1925: The Year Of Our Birth Contact Details T he Masquers Creed T he Masquers Oath I swear by Thespis; by WELCOME! THRICE WELCOME, ALL- Dionysus and the triumph of life over death; Behind these curtains, tightly drawn, By Aeschylus and the Trilogy of the Drama; Are Brother Masquers, tried and true, By the poetic power of Sophocles; by the romance of Who have labored diligently, to bring to you Euripedes; A Night of Mirth-and Mirth ‘twill be, By all the Gods and Goddesses of the Theatre, that I will But, mark you well, although no text we preach, keep this oath and stipulation: A little lesson, well defined, respectfully, we’d teach. The lesson is this: Throughout this Life, To reckon those who taught me my art equally dear to me as No matter what befall- my parents; to share with them my substance and to comfort The best thing in this troubled world them in adversity. -
The Silent Film Project
The Silent Film Project Films that have completed scanning – Significant titles in bold: May 1, 2018 TITLE YEAR STUDIO DIRECTOR STAR 1. [1934 Walt Disney Promo] 1934 Disney 2. 13 Washington Square 1928 Universal Melville W. Brown Alice Joyce 3. Adventures of Bill and [1921] Pathegram Robert N. Bradbury Bob Steele Bob, The (Skunk, The) 4. African Dreams [1922] 5. After the Storm (Poetic [1935] William Pizor Edgar Guest, Gems) Al Shayne 6. Agent (AKA The Yellow 1922 Vitagraph Larry Semon Larry Semon Fear), The 7. Aladdin And The 1917 Fox Film C. M. Franklin Francis Wonderful Lamp Carpenter 8. Alexandria 1921 Burton Holmes Burton Holmes 9. An Evening With Edgar A. [1938] Jam Handy Louis Marlowe Edgar A. Guest Guest 10. Animals of the Cat Tribe 1932 Eastman Teaching 11. Arizona Cyclone, The 1934 Imperial Prod. Robert E. Tansey Wally Wales 12. Aryan, The 1916 Triangle William S. Hart William S. Hart 13. At First Sight 1924 Hal Roach J A. Howe Charley Chase 14. Auntie's Portrait 1914 Vitagraph George D. Baker Ethel Lee 15. Autumn (nature film) 1922 16. Babies Prohibited 1913 Thanhouser Lila Chester 17. Barbed Wire 1927 Paramount Rowland V. Lee Pola Negri 18. Barnyard Cavalier 1922 Christie Bobby Vernon 19. Barnyard Wedding [1920] Hal Roach 20. Battle of the Century 1927 Hal Roach Clyde Bruckman Oliver Hardy, Stan Laurel 21. A Beast at Bay 1912 Biograph D.W. Griffith Mary Pickford 22. Bebe Daniels & Ben Lyon 1931- Bebe Daniels, home movies 1935 Ben Lyon 23. Bell Boy 13 1923 Thomas Ince William Seiter Douglas Maclean 24. -
Stan and Ollie'
'Stan and Ollie' A Screenplay By Jeff Pope Stan and Ollie - Goldenrod Revisions 20.04.17 1 BLACK. UNDER THIS this we hear a conversation. HARDY (V.O.) ... so Madelyn turned up. LAUREL (V.O.) Madelyn turned up? HARDY (V.O.) Completely out of the blue. Haven’t seen her in fifteen years... 1INT. DRESSING ROOM/ROACH LOT/STUDIO - DAY 1 Oliver HARDY leans against the door to a dressing room, worried expression, talking to his friend Stan LAUREL. Both are in their late-40s, (at the peak of their movie careers), but to begin with we have no real clue as to who they are, where they are or what they do. They are just two guys in cheap suits talking to each other. HARDY lights up a cigarette as he talks. HARDY There she was, all gussied up on the front door step. And that’s something I never thought I’d see again. LAUREL picks up a boot (the right one) with a large hole in the sole. Using a knife he levers off the heel. LAUREL What’d she want? HARDY Twenty thousand bucks. LAUREL Twenty thousand? HARDY Fifteen years of back alimony. I ** said ‘what alimony? When we broke ** up I gave you whatever money I had ** and you took the car.’ We both ** agreed that was that. LAUREL Jeez even Mae wasn’t after that much - and she wanted me to pay for a chauffeur. It’s because our faces ** are plastered all over town. ** Probably some lawyer’s bright idea. ** LAUREL levers off the other heel. -
Hooray for Hollywood!
Hooray for Hollywood! The Silent Screen & Early “Talkies” Created for free use in the public domain American Philatelic Society ©2011 • www.stamps.org Financial support for the development of these album pages provided by Mystic Stamp Company America’s Leading Stamp Dealer and proud of its support of the American Philatelic Society www.MysticStamp.com, 800-433-7811 PartHooray I: The Silent forScreen andHollywood! Early “Talkies” How It All Began — Movie Technology & Innovation Eadweard Muybridge (1830–1904) Pioneers of Communication • Scott 3061; see also Scott 231 • Landing of Columbus from the Columbian Exposition issue A pioneer in motion studies, Muybridge exhibited moving picture sequences of animals and athletes taken with his “Zoopraxiscope” to a paying audience in the Zoopraxographical Hall at the 1893 Columbian Exposition. Although these brief (a few seconds each) moving picture views titled “The Science of Animal Locomotion” did not generate the profit Muybridge expected, the Hall can be considered the first “movie theater.” Thomas Alva Edison William Dickson Motion Pictures, (1847–1947) (1860–1935) 50th Anniversary Thomas A. Edison Pioneers of Communication Scott 926 Birth Centenary • Scott 945 Scott 3064 The first motion picture to be copyrighted Edison wrote in 1888, “I am experimenting Hired as Thomas Edison’s assistant in in the United States was Edison upon an instrument which does for the 1883, Dickson was the primary developer Kinetoscopic Record of a Sneeze (also eye what the phonograph does for the of the Kintograph camera and Kinetoscope known as Fred Ott’s Sneeze). Made January ear.” In April 1894 the first Kinetoscope viewer. The first prototype, using flexible 9, 1894, the 5-second, 48-frame film shows Parlour opened in New York City with film, was demonstrated at the lab to Fred Ott (one of Edison’s assistants) taking short features such as The Execution of visitors from the National Federation of a pinch of snuff and sneezing. -
Vaudeville Extravaganza! Live! 5 - Big Acts -5
ET KLE N IN JA Sept. 15, 8 pm, Alex Film Society presents VAUDEVILLE EXTRAVAGANZA! LIVE! 5 - BIG ACTS -5 a n d h s er oy Parlor B THE NIGHT BLOOMING JAZZMEN NOSTALGIC MUSIC REID & FAVERSHAM FARRAH SIEGEL COMEDY THRILLS RUSTY & ERIC GRIFF BUSS SWELLS FOOLOLOGY PLUS, On The Big Screen! Laurel & Hardy in THE MUSIC BOX (1932) The Three Stooges® in AN ACHE IN EVERY STAKE (1941) Alex Film Society presents the 8th annual VAUDEVILLE EXTRAVAGANZA! September 15, 2007, 8 pm. Alex Theatre, Glendale ach year, in the spirit of Vaudeville, and to THE MUSIC BOX honor the early history of the Alex Theatre, Black & White – 30 minutes – 1932 Ewe include a film portion as part of our Hal Roach Studios Inc. program. For our 8th annual event, we feature two shorts by the most enduring comedy teams in film Stan Laurel ................... Stanley history: Laurel and Hardy and The Three Stooges®. Oliver Hardy ................. Oliver Billy Gilbert .................. Prof. von Schwarzenhoffen* These films have a common theme as well, using a William Gillespie ........... Piano salesman* huge flight of stairs as an obstacle for our heroes. Charlie Hall .................. Postman* Stan and Ollie’s 1932 short, The Music Box, is Hazel Howell ................ Mrs. von Schwarzenhoffen* actually a remake of “Hats Off” a lost silent they did Lilyan Irene .................. Nursemaid* in 1927. Here the boys have to move a piano up a Sam Lufkin................... Policeman* huge flight of stairs (in the original it was a washing machine). Nearly ten years later, in An Ache in Directed by .................. James Parrott Every Stake, Larry, Moe and Curly seem to have Produced by ................ -
Send in the Clones
Send in the Clones Chaplin Imitators from Stage to Screen, from Circus to Cartoon Ulrich Ruedel The Chaplin craze of the teens is often cited as one of the main indicators of the unprecedented popularity of Chaplin's little tramp. Chaplin imitators, cartoons, songs were abound. While Chaplin may indeed qualify as the most imitated character in film history, this "sincerest form of flattery" was not limited to him. Indeed, one of the historically most remarkable Chaplin imitations, that of former Chaplin understudy Stan Laurel, was part of a Keystone Trio stage act, which also included likenesses of Mabel Normand and Chester Conklin. Nor does the phenomenon of comic clones end there. Throughout film history, we find carbon copies of then- popular film clowns, sometimes unidentified today, often though probably quite justly forgotten.1 1 The Museum of Modern Art, for example, holds footage of an unidentified Snub Pollard imitator; imitations of Harold Lloyd's glasses character have been reported, and Wolfram Tichy's 1979 Harold Lloyd bioography presents an unidentified photo of what might have been such an imitator. Europe had their own, unique comedy success in the 20s and 30s, in the Danish comedy tramp duo of Fy og Bi / Long and Short / Pat & Patachon, and this author's research into this team (easily rivaling in popularity Chaplin, Keaton and Lloyd in countries like Germany and Russia) has so far confirmed at east four imitators, or "parodists," asppearing well into the 1950s. The Three Stooges are unique in this regard as their likenesses can claim a certain degree of legitimacy, either having gone through the same school as the original trio, Stooge inventor Ted Healy's act, that is, or in a couple instances even having the privilege of featuring former original Stooges. -
Noel Drewe Collection Film 178D5
Noel Drewe Collection Film 178D5 178D5.1 Outlook Very Black 9.5mm, Safety Film, Pathescope Noel Drewe Brittle Noel Drewe Collection 178D5.2 Monkeyland 9.5mm Noel Drewe Brittle, perforation damage Noel Drewe Collection 178D5.3 Fun at the Circus 9.5mm, Pathescope Noel Drewe , Circusama, Yesterday Circus Today Circus Noel Drewe Collection 178D5.4 At the Circus 9.5mm, Pathescope Noel Drewe, Circusama, Yesterday Circus Today Circus 2 Reels. Sound. Featuring "Circus Karo". Includes trapeze, whip act and 'sea lions'. Original sound commentary by Geoffrey Sumner. Supplied by C. W. Cramp Noel Drewe Collection 178D5.5 A Man-Sized Pet 9.5mm, Pathescope Noel Drewe, Circusama, Yesterday Circus Today Supplied by C. W. Cramp Noel Drewe Collection 178D5.6 A Fresh Start 300 feet 12 mins 9.5mm, Pathescope Noel Drewe, Circusama, Yesterday Circus Today Brittle, box rust transfer Adams, Jimmy Noel Drewe Collection 178D5.7 Circus at the Zoo 300 feet 12 mins 9.5mm, Pathescope Noel Drewe, Circusama, Yesterday Circus Today Brittle Circus USA Silent. Includes chimps Noel Drewe Collection 178D5.8 Circus Comes to Town 400 feet Harris, Ron 16 mins 9.5mm, Pathescope Noel Drewe, Circusama, Yesterday Circus Today Circus Silent. Features Belle Vue circus On box ‘This film purchased from Ilkeston Cine Service Supplied by C. W. Cramp Noel Drewe Collection 178D5.9 Circus Stedman of Leeds Holdings of Blackburn Ltd Cine and photographic Suppliers 9.5mm, Pathescope Noel Drewe, Circusama, Yesterday Circus Today Circus Bertram Mills Silent. Includes King George VI and Queen Elizabeth’s coronation, so the circus must be 1936/37. -
Dvd News ~~~~~~ Looserlooser Thanthan Looseloose
MANCHESTER, NH 2012 LAUREL AND HARDY CONVENTION ~~~~~~ FILM EVENTS ~~~~~~ DVD NEWS ~~~~~~ LOOSERLOOSER THANTHAN LOOSELOOSE THE INTERNET NOISELETTER OF LOOSER THAN LOOSE AUTUMN Vintage Entertainment VOLUME Nº 5 2010 ISSUE Nº 10 THIS WEB-DOC IS ABSOLUTELY FREE OF CHARGE looser than loose publishing www.looserthanloose.com Then and Now All Original Material © 2010 Granite Square Theatre EDITED & PUBLISHED BY Manchester, NH Dave and Ali Stevenson 188 Seames Drive, Manchester, NH 03103 U.S.A. [email protected] LAYOUT & DESIGN Dave Stevenson DISTRIBUTIONISTRIBUTION Ali Stevenson DEADLINE FOR VOL. 5, ISSUE Nº 11: December 1, 2010 Send images* to the postal address listed above, or to: [email protected] *300 dpi at actual size CONTRIBUTORS Cole Johnson, Mark Johnson, Jeff Rapsis, Cliff Sawyer, Ali Stevenson, Dave Stevenson and the ever-watchful Crooked Circle . TABLE OF CONTENTS MEETING NOTES................................................PG. 3 SILENT FILM SERIES AND NEWS.............................PG.4 SYD CHAPLIN COMIC REPRODUCTION.......................PG. 5 DVD AND EVENT NEWS......................................PG. 6 2012 SONS OF THE DESERT CONVENTION..............PG. 7 “MONEY TO BURN” SCRIPT REPRODUCTION..........PG. 10 2 www.looserthanloose.com Only $19.99 + S & H! Artwork by Cole Johnson On The Loose tent MEETINGs PROGRAM AND SCREAMING NOTES Next Meeting: November 20th,, 202010 FILMS 1:00 PM -- 5:005:00 PM Carpenter Library Auditorium, Manchester, NH Public Welcome “FROM SOUP TO NUTS” (Roach-MGM; 3-24-1928); Dir.. bby Edgar Kennedy;; CasCast:: SStan Laurel, Oliver Hardy,, AnitAnita Garvin, Tiny Sanford, Edna Marion, Dorothy Coburn and Otto Fries. 2 reels; B&W;; Silent. “PAN HANDLERS” (Roach-MGM; 2-29-1936); Dir.. bby William Terhune; Cast:: PPatsy Kelly,, PPert Kelton, Rosina Lawrence, Grace Goodall, Dave Sharpe, Harry Bowen, Larry Steers and Willie Fung. -
Under Capricorn Symposium Were Each Given a 30 Minute Slot to Deliver Their Paper and Respond to Questions
Papers based on the Symposium held at Kings College, University of London, 5th & 6th September, 2019 1 Introductory Note Speakers at the Under Capricorn Symposium were each given a 30 minute slot to deliver their paper and respond to questions. In preparing for this collection, all the papers have been revised and several have been considerably developed to provide additional context, argument and analysis. Apart from changes in format introduced to create a unified document (and in one or two cases to integrate images), the papers appear as the writers submitted them. The papers are arranged in the order of the symposium programme, with one exception. Bertrand Tavernier was unfortunately unable to attend and his paper is the first the reader will encounter. Papers that do not appear in this collection are marked by an asterisk in the programme. 2 Under Capricorn at 70 King’s College, University of London th th 5 and 6 September 2019 Day 1 5 September 9:00 - 9:30 Registration 9:30 - 10:00 Welcome & Introductions 10:00 - 10:30 An Overview of Under Capricorn Stéphane Duckett 10:30 - 11:00 Hitchcock and Ireland Charles Barr * 11:00 - 11:30 Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered. A Fairy Tale of Old Ireland Richard Blennerhassett 11:30 - 12:00 Teas & Coffees 12:00 - 12:30 Under Capricorn and Helen de Guerry Simpson Ed Gallafent 12:30 - 1:00 Under Capricorn and The Paradine Case Douglas Pye 1:00 - 2:00 Lunch 2:00 - 2:30 “Between P & B- The Past and the Bottle” or Ingrid Bergman’s Acting and Opinions on Acting Tytti Soila 2:30 - 3:00 Under Capricorn -
Preservation Associates 8 307 San Fernando Road Sun Valle ;, CA
Film Fall 1989 Preservation Associates 8 307 San Fernando Road Sun Valle_;, CA . 91352 Proudly PresPnting in 16mm film Telephone 768-5376 T R E B L A C K R A V K F I L H S C O L L E C T I O N The Bl.ackhalik Films Library is back I For forty years, Blackhawk' s vMt library of beautifully-reproduced vintage movies set a world-renowned atandard for quality. An initinl selection of fifty titles is again available in nev, first-cl.ass prints, promptly deliYered. We expect to announce an additional group of fil.lle in late fall, and to continue releasing additional collections on n regular basis until several hundred ti tleo are again "in print." Prices shown are for films with rights of home and non-theatrical exhibition; plea.ee inquire if you desire theatrical, television or stock footage clearance. Hal Roach Productions (marked vith an(• ) asterisk) rJl8J be shipped only to destinations in the United States and Cenada. Other terms of service follow the list of films. LAUREL 8' R ARD Y BIG BUSINESS (1929, silent llith &dded muaic IICore) Stan and Ollie are ChrietClll.8 Tree saleBm<IIl in sur,ny California in July! Instt>Rd of peace on earth, a private var ensues with Jll!lles Finlayson, al=st devaatating the neighborhood. This is ono of the great comedy clncaice, in a superior print. Hal Roach Production, 19 oinutee. THE MUSIC BOX (1932, Acadea,y Aware for Best Short) s210. oo Stan and Ollie must deliver a pl.o.yor piano up a very long, very steop flight of etepo to the hooc of Professor Theodore von Schvarzho!fen (Billy Gilbert).