HOLLYWOOD of the 1930S and 1940S

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

HOLLYWOOD of the 1930S and 1940S HOLLYWOOD OF THE 1930s AND 1940s AT THE GARDEN OF ALLAH by Dick LaBonté The Cast On the balcony: William Powell, Myrna Loy, Asta (a dog), Ronald Colman, Loretta Young, Greta Garbo, Melvyn Douglas, Veronica Lake, Spencer Tracy, Katherine Hepburn, James Stewart, Maureen O'Hara, Tyrone Power, Carole Lombard, Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Lawrence Olivier, Leslie Howard, Olivia de Haviland, Errol Flynn. Below the balcony: Cary Grant, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Victor McLaglen, Dick Powell, Ruby Keeler, Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Ginger Rogers, Fred Astaire, Gary Cooper, Marlene Dietrich. In the windows: Lou Costello, Bud Abbott, Mae West, Hattie McDaniel, Warner Oland, Sam Jaffe, Robert Benchley. Left background: Elizabeth Taylor with Lad (a dog, a.k.a. Lassie), Elsa Lancaster, Boris Karloff, Bette Davis, Bela Lugosi, Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Dooley Wilson, Lauren Bacall. Right background: Roy Rogers, John Wayne, Claire Trevor, Randolph Scott, William Boyd, Topper (a horse), George "Gabby"Hayes. Around the pool: Johnny Weismuller, Maureen O'Sullivan, Cheetah (a chimpanzee), C. Aubrey Smith, Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lamour, Bob Hope, Hedy Lamaar, Robert Taylor, Henry Fonda, David Niven, Claudette Colbert, Ava Gardner, Rita Hayworth, Orson Welles, John Barrymore, W.C. Fields, Shirley Temple. In the pool: Jane Wyman, Ronald Reagan, Ann Sheridan, Oliver Hardy, Stan Laurel, Jean Harlow, Edward G. Robinson, James Cagney, Lucille Ball, Jimmy Durante, Tallulah Bankhead, Joe E. Brown, Lana Turner, Groucho Marx, Alice Faye, Chico Marx, Frank Sinatra, Joan Crawford, Charles Laughton. On the diving board: Betty Grable, Harpo Marx. www.dicklabonte.com.
Recommended publications
  • 819 PR Kit Pages
    Media Contact: Liz Bodet 504-583-5550 [email protected] TABLE OF CONTENTS Broussard’s Family Tree.............................................................................. 1 Cocktails Through the Decades...................................................................... 2 Coffee Menu......................................................................................... 3 Spice Menu.......................................................................................... 4 Rice Menu........................................................................................... 5 Pecan Menu.......................................................................................... 6 Citrus Menu: Reveillon............................................................................... 7 819 RUE CONTI | 504.581.3866 | BROUSSARDS.COM As Broussard’s commemorates 100 years of fine dining, we also celebrate our native foods and traditions that share the same rich history as our grande dame restaurant. Louisiana’s hot, humid summers and short, mild winters allow for a variety of sweet citrus to be grown and then harvested in late fall or early winter, just in time for Reveillon. Chef Jimi Setchim showcases Louisiana citrus with several special menu items on the traditional Reveillon menu. “Walk through any neighborhood in New Orleans and you’ll pass countless citrus trees. Some sprouted up on their own long ago. Some were planted by home gardeners because of how well they grow in Louisiana. All of them are stunning— the rich green leaves,
    [Show full text]
  • "Hello, Dolly!" at Auditorium Theatre, Jan. 27
    AUDITORIUM THEATRE ROCHESTER JANUARY 27 BROAD'lMAY TO FEBRUARY 1 THEATRE LEAGUE 1969 YVONNE DECARLO m HELLO, gOLL~I llng1na1ly D1rected and ChoreogrJphPd by GOWER CHDIPIOII Th1s Pr oductiOn D1rected by LUCIA VICTOR ~tenens FEATURING OUR SATURDAY NITE SPECIAL Prime Rib of Beef Au Jus Baked Potato with Sour Cream & Chives Vegetable - Salad - Coffee $3.95 . ALSO MANY OTHER DELICIOUS ITEMS Stop in for dinner before the show or after the show for a late evening anack SERVING 7 DAYS & NITES FROM 11 A.M. till 2 A.M. 1501 UNIVERSITY AVE . EXTENSION PLENTY OF FlEE PAIICING For Reservations Call: 271-9635 or 271-9494 PARTY AND BANQUET ACCOMMODATIONS Consult Us For Your Banquets And Part i es . • • we w i ll be glad to hove you . Wm. Fisher, Budd Filippo & Ken Gaston proudly present YVONNE DE CARLO in The New York Critics Circle & Tony Award Winn1ng Mus1cal "HELLO, DOLLVI 11 Book IJy Music & Lyrics by MICHAEL STEW ART JERRY HERMAN Based on the originc~l play by Thornton Wilder also starring DON DE LEO with Kathleen Devine George Cavey Rick Grimaldi Suzanne Simon David Gary Althea Rose Edie Pool Norman Fredericks Settings Designed by Lighting Consultant Costumes by Oliver Smith Gerald Richland freddy Wittop Dance & Incidental Music Orchestration by Arrangements by Musical Dirt!cliun by Phillip J. Lang Peter Howard Gil Bowers [)ances Staged for this Production hy Jack Craig Original Choreography & Direction by GOWER CHAMPION This Production Staged by Lucia Victor PHIL'S PANTRYS J A Y ' S "REAL DELICATESSENS" Fresh Sliced Cold Meats D I N E R Home Made Salads & Baked Beans lWO LOCAnONS 2612 W.
    [Show full text]
  • Role of the Archives in the Future
    … You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time…” Abraham Lincoln ( 1809 – 1865 ) FACTS AND FICTION- ARCHIVAL FOOTAGE HISTORICAL EVENTS AND TELEVISION AND FILM PRODUCTIONS Media Archeology Movies and television productions are released and transmitted each year dealing with historical events or public personalities like politicians , military leaders, revolutionaries, and people with a record of special achievemments. The aim of my presentation is to make you aware of different possibilities in reusing archival footage in movies. It is my intention to inform you about the importance of the audiovisual archives and how to reuse transmitted programmes or real shots of life in new productions. It is not my intention to evaluate real shots in historical movies and to report about facts and fiction in those films. The subject is dealt with in the book called: PAST IMPERFECT. History According to the Movies. 1995, and my own paper on the same subject: HISTORY AND MOVIES: An evaluation of the information of historical events, of international known personalities and of famous sites and buildings describes in movies. External links: ( Contact: http://www.baacouncil.org/ or [email protected] for copy of the paper) Television companies should be proud of their collections of transmitted programmes. Because I have worked for televison archive for about 29 years I have viewed a lot of television programmes and movies. Some years ago I started to question the reuse of transmitted television programmes and also the active reuse of news in new productions.
    [Show full text]
  • A Comedy Revolution Comes to Starlight Indoors This Winter
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Rachel Bliss, Starlight Theatre [email protected] 816-997-1151-office 785-259-3039-cell A Comedy Revolution Comes to Starlight Indoors This Winter Playing November 5-17 only! “SMART, SILLY AND “SPAMILTON IS SO “THE NEXT BEST THING CONVULSIVELY FUNNY” INFECTIOUSLY FUN THAT IT TO SEEING HAMILTON!” - The New York Times COULD EASILY RUN AS LONG - New York Post AS ITS INSPIRATION!” – The Hollywood Reporter KANSAS CITY, Mo. – As the weather cools off, the stage house heats up with the 2019-20 Starlight Indoors series, sponsored by the Missouri Lottery. Now in its fifth season, this year’s lineup of hilarious Off-Broadway hits opens November 5-17 with the North American tour of Spamilton: An American Parody, making its Kansas City premiere. Tickets are on sale now. Created by Gerard Alessandrini, the comic mastermind behind the long-running hit Forbidden Broadway, which played the 2017-18 Starlight Indoors series, Spamilton: An American Parody is a side-splitting new musical parody based on a blockbuster hit of a similar name. After numerous extensions of its run in New York, this hilarious production made a splash in Chicago, Los Angeles and London. Now, Spamilton: An American Parody brings a singing, dancing and comedy revolution to Kansas City. “Spamilton pays a hilarious tribute to its inspiration and is smart, sharp and funny to its core— everything you’d want and more from a spoof of Broadway’s most popular musical,” Caroline Gibel, director of indoor programming at Starlight, said. “The best part is, you don’t have to have seen Hamilton to enjoy Spamilton.
    [Show full text]
  • Summer Classic Film Series, Now in Its 43Rd Year
    Austin has changed a lot over the past decade, but one tradition you can always count on is the Paramount Summer Classic Film Series, now in its 43rd year. We are presenting more than 110 films this summer, so look forward to more well-preserved film prints and dazzling digital restorations, romance and laughs and thrills and more. Escape the unbearable heat (another Austin tradition that isn’t going anywhere) and join us for a three-month-long celebration of the movies! Films screening at SUMMER CLASSIC FILM SERIES the Paramount will be marked with a , while films screening at Stateside will be marked with an . Presented by: A Weekend to Remember – Thurs, May 24 – Sun, May 27 We’re DEFINITELY Not in Kansas Anymore – Sun, June 3 We get the summer started with a weekend of characters and performers you’ll never forget These characters are stepping very far outside their comfort zones OPENING NIGHT FILM! Peter Sellers turns in not one but three incomparably Back to the Future 50TH ANNIVERSARY! hilarious performances, and director Stanley Kubrick Casablanca delivers pitch-dark comedy in this riotous satire of (1985, 116min/color, 35mm) Michael J. Fox, Planet of the Apes (1942, 102min/b&w, 35mm) Humphrey Bogart, Cold War paranoia that suggests we shouldn’t be as Christopher Lloyd, Lea Thompson, and Crispin (1968, 112min/color, 35mm) Charlton Heston, Ingrid Bergman, Paul Henreid, Claude Rains, Conrad worried about the bomb as we are about the inept Glover . Directed by Robert Zemeckis . Time travel- Roddy McDowell, and Kim Hunter. Directed by Veidt, Sydney Greenstreet, and Peter Lorre.
    [Show full text]
  • HUNGARIAN STUDIES 14. No. 2. (2000)
    BELA LUGOSI - EIN LIEBHABER, EIN DILETTANT HARUN MAYE Universität zu Köln, Köln, Deutschland I. „I am Dracula". So lautete der erste Satz, den ein Vampir in einem amerikani­ schen Tonfilm sagen mußte, und der auch seinen Darsteller unsterblich machen sollte. Bei dem Namen Dracula bedürfen wir weder der Anschauung noch auch selbst des Bildes, sondern der Name, indem wir ihn verstehen, ist die bildlose einfache Vorstellung einer Urszene, die 1897 zum ersten Mal als Roman erschie­ nen, und dank dem Medienverbund zwischen Phonograph, Schreibmaschine, Hypnose, Stenographie und der Sekretärin Mina Harker schon im Roman selbst technisch reproduzierbar geworden ist.1 Aber ausgerechnet über ein Medium, das im Roman nicht erwähnt wird, sollte Draculas Wiederauferstehung seitdem Nacht für Nacht laufen. Weil Vampire und Gespenster Wiedergänger sind, und im Gegensatz zu Bü­ chern und ihren Autoren bekanntlich nicht sterben können, müssen sie sich neue Körper und Medien suchen, in die sie fahren können. Der Journalist Abraham Stoker hat den Nachruhm und die Wertschätzung seines Namens zusammen mit dem Medium eingebüßt, das ihn berühmt gemacht hatte, nur damit fortan der Name seines schattenlosen Titelhelden für immer als belichteter Schatten über Kinoleinwände geistern konnte. Aber Spielfilme kennen so wenig originale Schöpfersubjekte wie Individuen. Dracula ist eben bloß ein Name, und als solcher ein „individuelles Allgemeines" wie die Bezeichnung der Goethezeit, jener Epo­ che und Dichtungskonzeption, der auch Dracula poetologisch noch angehörte, für sogenannte Individuen und Phantome gleichermaßen lautete. Es ist in diesem Namen, daß wir Bela Lugosi denken.2 IL Seit Tod Brownings Dracula von 1931 braucht dieser Name um vorstellbar zu sein, nicht mehr verstanden werden, weil er selbst angefangen hatte, sich vorzu­ stellen.
    [Show full text]
  • Online Versions of the Handouts Have Color Images & Hot Urls September
    Online versions of the Handouts have color images & hot urls September 6, 2016 (XXXIII:2) http://csac.buffalo.edu/goldenrodhandouts.html Sam Wood, A NIGHT AT THE OPERA (1935, 96 min) DIRECTED BY Sam Wood and Edmund Goulding (uncredited) WRITING BY George S. Kaufman (screenplay), Morrie Ryskind (screenplay), James Kevin McGuinness (from a story by), Buster Keaton (uncredited), Al Boasberg (additional dialogue), Bert Kalmar (draft, uncredited), George Oppenheimer (uncredited), Robert Pirosh (draft, uncredited), Harry Ruby (draft uncredited), George Seaton (draft uncredited) and Carey Wilson (uncredited) PRODUCED BY Irving Thalberg MUSIC Herbert Stothart CINEMATOGRAPHY Merritt B. Gerstad FILM EDITING William LeVanway ART DIRECTION Cedric Gibbons STUNTS Chuck Hamilton WHISTLE DOUBLE Enrico Ricardi CAST Groucho Marx…Otis B. Driftwood Chico Marx…Fiorello Marx Brothers, A Night at the Opera (1935) and A Day at the Harpo Marx…Tomasso Races (1937) that his career picked up again. Looking at the Kitty Carlisle…Rosa finished product, it is hard to reconcile the statement from Allan Jones…Ricardo Groucho Marx who found the director "rigid and humorless". Walter Woolf King…Lassparri Wood was vociferously right-wing in his personal views and this Sig Ruman… Gottlieb would not have sat well with the famous comedian. Wood Margaret Dumont…Mrs. Claypool directed 11 actors in Oscar-nominated performances: Robert Edward Keane…Captain Donat, Greer Garson, Martha Scott, Ginger Rogers, Charles Robert Emmett O'Connor…Henderson Coburn, Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright, Katina Paxinou, Akim Tamiroff, Ingrid Bergman and Flora Robson. Donat, Paxinou and SAM WOOD (b. July 10, 1883 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania—d. Rogers all won Oscars. Late in his life, he served as the President September 22, 1949, age 66, in Hollywood, Los Angeles, of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American California), after a two-year apprenticeship under Cecil B.
    [Show full text]
  • HOLLYWOOD – the Big Five Production Distribution Exhibition
    HOLLYWOOD – The Big Five Production Distribution Exhibition Paramount MGM 20th Century – Fox Warner Bros RKO Hollywood Oligopoly • Big 5 control first run theaters • Theater chains regional • Theaters required 100+ films/year • Big 5 share films to fill screens • Little 3 supply “B” films Hollywood Major • Producer Distributor Exhibitor • Distribution & Exhibition New York based • New York HQ determines budget, type & quantity of films Hollywood Studio • Hollywood production lots, backlots & ranches • Studio Boss • Head of Production • Story Dept Hollywood Star • Star System • Long Term Option Contract • Publicity Dept Paramount • Adolph Zukor • 1912- Famous Players • 1914- Hodkinson & Paramount • 1916– FP & Paramount merge • Producer Jesse Lasky • Director Cecil B. DeMille • Pickford, Fairbanks, Valentino • 1933- Receivership • 1936-1964 Pres.Barney Balaban • Studio Boss Y. Frank Freeman • 1966- Gulf & Western Paramount Theaters • Chicago, mid West • South • New England • Canada • Paramount Studios: Hollywood Paramount Directors Ernst Lubitsch 1892-1947 • 1926 So This Is Paris (WB) • 1929 The Love Parade • 1932 One Hour With You • 1932 Trouble in Paradise • 1933 Design for Living • 1939 Ninotchka (MGM) • 1940 The Shop Around the Corner (MGM Cecil B. DeMille 1881-1959 • 1914 THE SQUAW MAN • 1915 THE CHEAT • 1920 WHY CHANGE YOUR WIFE • 1923 THE 10 COMMANDMENTS • 1927 KING OF KINGS • 1934 CLEOPATRA • 1949 SAMSON & DELILAH • 1952 THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH • 1955 THE 10 COMMANDMENTS Paramount Directors Josef von Sternberg 1894-1969 • 1927
    [Show full text]
  • The Horror Film Series
    Ihe Museum of Modern Art No. 11 jest 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Circle 5-8900 Cable: Modernart Saturday, February 6, I965 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE The Museum of Modern Art Film Library will present THE HORROR FILM, a series of 20 films, from February 7 through April, 18. Selected by Arthur L. Mayer, the series is planned as a representative sampling, not a comprehensive survey, of the horror genre. The pictures range from the early German fantasies and legends, THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI (I9I9), NOSFERATU (1922), to the recent Roger Corman-Vincent Price British series of adaptations of Edgar Allan Poe, represented here by THE MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH (I96IO. Milestones of American horror films, the Universal series in the 1950s, include THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1925), FRANKENSTEIN (1951), his BRIDE (l$55), his SON (1929), and THE MUMMY (1953). The resurgence of the horror film in the 1940s, as seen in a series produced by Val Lewton at RR0, is represented by THE CAT PEOPLE (19^), THE CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE (19^4), I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE (19*£), and THE BODY SNAT0HER (19^5). Richard Griffith, Director of the Film Library, and Mr. Mayer, in their book, The Movies, state that "In true horror films, the archcriminal becomes the archfiend the first and greatest of whom was undoubtedly Lon Chaney. ...The year Lon Chaney died [1951], his director, Tod Browning,filmed DRACULA and therewith launched the full vogue of horror films. What made DRACULA a turning-point was that it did not attempt to explain away its tale of vampirism and supernatural horrors.
    [Show full text]
  • Official Announcement - January 26 - February 1 - 1941
    Prairie View A&M University Digital Commons @PVAMU PV Week Academic Affairs Collections 1-26-1941 Official Announcement - January 26 - February 1 - 1941 Prairie View State College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.pvamu.edu/pv-announcement Recommended Citation Prairie View State College, "Official Announcement - January 26 - February 1 - 1941" (1941). PV Week. 636. https://digitalcommons.pvamu.edu/pv-announcement/636 This Conference Proceeding is brought to you for free and open access by the Academic Affairs Collections at Digital Commons @PVAMU. It has been accepted for inclusion in PV Week by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @PVAMU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ************************************************************* **************-<**¥*x***************************************** ******** PRAIRIE VIEW STATE COLLEGE ******** ******* ******* ****** "0L Q WEEKLY CALENDAR NO 17 ****** ******* ******* ******** January 26 - February 1, 1941 ******** ***********>.*-:<>,;****************************** **************** *************************** ************* *****************>.*** SUNDAY. JANUARY 26 9;00 A - Sunday School 11:00 A M - Morning Worship: PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY - College Chaplain 7:00 P M - Vesper - Faculty Debate - RESOLVED: THAT TEXAS SHOULD IN­ CREASE THE TAX ON NATURAL RESOURCES Affirmative Negative R W Hilliard J 0 Hopson H E Wright R A Smith Mrs M A Sanders Miss A L Sheffield Miss T. L Cunningham, Librarian Miss C Bradley, Librarian MONDAY. JANUARY 27
    [Show full text]
  • Reagan's Victory
    Reagan’s ictory How HeV Built His Winning Coalition By Robert G. Morrison Foreword by William J. Bennett Reagan’s Victory: How He Built His Winning Coalition By Robert G. Morrison 1 FOREWORD By William J. Bennett Ronald Reagan always called me on my birthday. Even after he had left the White House, he continued to call me on my birthday. He called all his Cabinet members and close asso- ciates on their birthdays. I’ve never known another man in public life who did that. I could tell that Alzheimer’s had laid its firm grip on his mind when those calls stopped coming. The President would have agreed with the sign borne by hundreds of pro-life marchers each January 22nd: “Doesn’t Everyone Deserve a Birth Day?” Reagan’s pro-life convic- tions were an integral part of who he was. All of us who served him knew that. Many of my colleagues in the Reagan administration were pro-choice. Reagan never treat- ed any of his team with less than full respect and full loyalty for that. But as for the Reagan administration, it was a pro-life administration. I was the second choice of Reagan’s to head the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). It was my first appointment in a Republican administration. I was a Democrat. Reagan had chosen me after a well-known Southern historian and literary critic hurt his candidacy by criticizing Abraham Lincoln. My appointment became controversial within the Reagan ranks because the Gipper was highly popular in the South, where residual animosities toward Lincoln could still be found.
    [Show full text]
  • The Walking Dead,” Which Starts Its Final We Are Covid-19 Safe-Practice Compliant Season Sunday on AMC
    Las Cruces Transportation August 20 - 26, 2021 YOUR RIDE. YOUR WAY. Las Cruces Shuttle – Taxi Charter – Courier Veteran Owned and Operated Since 1985. Jeffrey Dean Morgan Call us to make is among the stars of a reservation today! “The Walking Dead,” which starts its final We are Covid-19 Safe-Practice Compliant season Sunday on AMC. Call us at 800-288-1784 or for more details 2 x 5.5” ad visit www.lascrucesshuttle.com PHARMACY Providing local, full-service pharmacy needs for all types of facilities. • Assisted Living • Hospice • Long-term care • DD Waiver • Skilled Nursing and more Life for ‘The Walking Dead’ is Call us today! 575-288-1412 Ask your provider if they utilize the many benefits of XR Innovations, such as: Blister or multi-dose packaging, OTC’s & FREE Delivery. almost up as Season 11 starts Learn more about what we do at www.rxinnovationslc.net2 x 4” ad 2 Your Bulletin TV & Entertainment pullout section August 20 - 26, 2021 What’s Available NOW On “Movie: We Broke Up” “Movie: The Virtuoso” “Movie: Vacation Friends” “Movie: Four Good Days” From director Jeff Rosenberg (“Hacks,” Anson Mount (“Hell on Wheels”) heads a From director Clay Tarver (“Silicon Glenn Close reunited with her “Albert “Relative Obscurity”) comes this 2021 talented cast in this 2021 actioner that casts Valley”) comes this comedy movie about Nobbs” director Rodrigo Garcia for this comedy about Lori and Doug (Aya Cash, him as a professional assassin who grapples a straight-laced couple who let loose on a 2020 drama that casts her as Deb, a mother “You’re the Worst,” and William Jackson with his conscience and an assortment of week of uninhibited fun and debauchery who must help her addict daughter Molly Harper, “The Good Place”), who break up enemies as he tries to complete his latest after befriending a thrill-seeking couple (Mila Kunis, “Black Swan”) through four days before her sister’s wedding but decide job.
    [Show full text]