1939-12-17 [P F-2]
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Who's Who at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1939)
W H LU * ★ M T R 0 G 0 L D W Y N LU ★ ★ M A Y R MyiWL- * METRO GOLDWYN ■ MAYER INDEX... UJluii STARS ... FEATURED PLAYERS DIRECTORS Astaire. Fred .... 12 Lynn, Leni. 66 Barrymore. Lionel . 13 Massey, Ilona .67 Beery Wallace 14 McPhail, Douglas 68 Cantor, Eddie . 15 Morgan, Frank 69 Crawford, Joan . 16 Morriss, Ann 70 Donat, Robert . 17 Murphy, George 71 Eddy, Nelson ... 18 Neal, Tom. 72 Gable, Clark . 19 O'Keefe, Dennis 73 Garbo, Greta . 20 O'Sullivan, Maureen 74 Garland, Judy. 21 Owen, Reginald 75 Garson, Greer. .... 22 Parker, Cecilia. 76 Lamarr, Hedy .... 23 Pendleton, Nat. 77 Loy, Myrna . 24 Pidgeon, Walter 78 MacDonald, Jeanette 25 Preisser, June 79 Marx Bros. —. 26 Reynolds, Gene. 80 Montgomery, Robert .... 27 Rice, Florence . 81 Powell, Eleanor . 28 Rutherford, Ann ... 82 Powell, William .... 29 Sothern, Ann. 83 Rainer Luise. .... 30 Stone, Lewis. 84 Rooney, Mickey . 31 Turner, Lana 85 Russell, Rosalind .... 32 Weidler, Virginia. 86 Shearer, Norma . 33 Weissmuller, John 87 Stewart, James .... 34 Young, Robert. 88 Sullavan, Margaret .... 35 Yule, Joe.. 89 Taylor, Robert . 36 Berkeley, Busby . 92 Tracy, Spencer . 37 Bucquet, Harold S. 93 Ayres, Lew. 40 Borzage, Frank 94 Bowman, Lee . 41 Brown, Clarence 95 Bruce, Virginia . 42 Buzzell, Eddie 96 Burke, Billie 43 Conway, Jack 97 Carroll, John 44 Cukor, George. 98 Carver, Lynne 45 Fenton, Leslie 99 Castle, Don 46 Fleming, Victor .100 Curtis, Alan 47 LeRoy, Mervyn 101 Day, Laraine 48 Lubitsch, Ernst.102 Douglas, Melvyn 49 McLeod, Norman Z. 103 Frants, Dalies . 50 Marin, Edwin L. .104 George, Florence 51 Potter, H. -
Dionne Quintuplets: Unsuccessful Experiment of a Noble Society
AD AMERICAM Journal of American Studies Vol. 9, 2008 ISSN 1896-9461 ISBN 978-83-233-2689-2 Magdalena Paluszkiewicz-Misiaczek DIONNE QUINTUPLETS: UNSUCCESSFUL EXPERIMENT OF A NOBLE SOCIETY The famous Dionne quintuplets: Annette, Emilie, Yvonne, Cecille and Marie were bom in Canada on May 28, 1934. The girls became national celebrities, wards of the state in a special hospital-home, studied constantly by doctors and scientists. The paper describes Dionne girls’ life story in the context of Anglophone-Francophone tensions and the ever present question: how far can state interfere in the lives of their citizens and when such interference proves to be harmful what kind of compensation measures should be imple mented? Life story of Dionne Quintuplets even now, over seven decades after their birth, reads like a sensation which could make the headlines of tabloid press. Yet, below this superficial layer of sheer sensation life story of the famous five sisters remains tightly knit with certain meanders of Canadian history with Anglophone- Francophone tensions and the ever present question: how far can state interfere in the lives of their citizens and when such interference proves to be harmful what kind of compensation measures should be implemented? The famous quintuplets: Annette, Emilie, Yvonne, Cecille and Marie Dionne were born on May 28, 1934 on a farm near Callender or, as some sources state, near Cor- beil, Northern Ontario, Canada. The chances of having one egg, identical quintuplets are one in 57 million, and so far no other set of identical quintuplets has been born. In 1934 the chances that the children would survive were probably similar, as they were born two months prematurely, so small that they could be held in a human palm and their total weight together was only 6.5 kg. -
Missions and Film Jamie S
Missions and Film Jamie S. Scott e are all familiar with the phenomenon of the “Jesus” city children like the film’s abused New York newsboy, Little Wfilm, but various kinds of movies—some adapted from Joe. In Susan Rocks the Boat (1916; dir. Paul Powell) a society girl literature or life, some original in conception—have portrayed a discovers meaning in life after founding the Joan of Arc Mission, variety of Christian missions and missionaries. If “Jesus” films while a disgraced seminarian finds redemption serving in an give us different readings of the kerygmatic paradox of divine urban mission in The Waifs (1916; dir. Scott Sidney). New York’s incarnation, pictures about missions and missionaries explore the East Side mission anchors tales of betrayal and fidelity inTo Him entirely human question: Who is or is not the model Christian? That Hath (1918; dir. Oscar Apfel), and bankrolling a mission Silent movies featured various forms of evangelism, usually rekindles a wealthy couple’s weary marriage in Playthings of Pas- Protestant. The trope of evangelism continued in big-screen and sion (1919; dir. Wallace Worsley). Luckless lovers from different later made-for-television “talkies,” social strata find a fresh start together including musicals. Biographical at the End of the Trail mission in pictures and documentaries have Virtuous Sinners (1919; dir. Emmett depicted evangelists in feature films J. Flynn), and a Salvation Army mis- and television productions, and sion worker in New York’s Bowery recent years have seen the burgeon- district reconciles with the son of the ing of Christian cinema as a distinct wealthy businessman who stole her genre. -
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). -
Film Film Film Film
City of Darkness, City of Light is the first ever book-length study of the cinematic represen- tation of Paris in the films of the émigré film- PHILLIPS CITY OF LIGHT ALASTAIR CITY OF DARKNESS, makers, who found the capital a first refuge from FILM FILMFILM Hitler. In coming to Paris – a privileged site in terms of production, exhibition and the cine- CULTURE CULTURE matic imaginary of French film culture – these IN TRANSITION IN TRANSITION experienced film professionals also encounter- ed a darker side: hostility towards Germans, anti-Semitism and boycotts from French indus- try personnel, afraid of losing their jobs to for- eigners. The book juxtaposes the cinematic por- trayal of Paris in the films of Robert Siodmak, Billy Wilder, Fritz Lang, Anatole Litvak and others with wider social and cultural debates about the city in cinema. Alastair Phillips lectures in Film Stud- ies in the Department of Film, Theatre & Television at the University of Reading, UK. CITY OF Darkness CITY OF ISBN 90-5356-634-1 Light ÉMIGRÉ FILMMAKERS IN PARIS 1929-1939 9 789053 566343 ALASTAIR PHILLIPS Amsterdam University Press Amsterdam University Press WWW.AUP.NL City of Darkness, City of Light City of Darkness, City of Light Émigré Filmmakers in Paris 1929-1939 Alastair Phillips Amsterdam University Press For my mother and father, and in memory of my auntie and uncle Cover design: Kok Korpershoek, Amsterdam Lay-out: japes, Amsterdam isbn 90 5356 633 3 (hardback) isbn 90 5356 634 1 (paperback) nur 674 © Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam, 2004 All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, me- chanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permis- sion of both the copyright owner and the author of the book. -
Iimillion Dollar Babies" and the National
IIMillion Dollar Babies" and the National ~--- 11 "L7S~"11 .l~1147 My concern in what follows will be with the family as "national treasure." Taking the event of Million Dollar Babies, a made-far-TV movie (1994) about the Dionne quints-world-famous for being the first quintuplets to survive more than a couple of days -I will investigate the "family rama" that surrounded the birth of the French-Canadian sisters in the 1930s as well as its repre sentation in the 1990s. That investigation will be informed by two main points. A first line of questioning addresses how the quints served as an emblem of the commodification of femininity in the representation of the Canadian nation; a second line of investigation offers a critical stance from which to interrogate the cultural links between sexuality and colonialism and women's role as breeders of the nation within this narrative. Million Dollar Babies: A stunt? Why another movie about the quints sixty years after their birth? Cinema already has its share with three Hollywood films produced by Twentieth Century Fox1 and miles of newsreel shot by Pathe. Media and magazine covers have displayed over 100,000 pictures of the famous darlings and advertising campaigns for a multitude of commodities including Carnation Milk, Colgate's Dental Cream, and Remington typewriters have used their image. Finally, the Dionne quints are no longer five, but three -The Dionne Trio. After a pile of scientific, popular and academic papers have been written about them, and a recent special issue of the Journal of Canadian Studies2 was entirely devoted to their sixtieth anniversary, the made-for-TV movie came as the icing on the cele bratory cake of this "classic of Canadian history" (as the network voice-over proclaimed at each commercial break). -
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. -
Pennsylvania Female College in Harrisburg
Papers Relating to Harrisburg Women At first glance this section might appear to be papers written by women of Harrisburg – but in the English tradition the Christian name Beverly was employed for males. Accordingly, the first author, Beverly R. Waugh, was not a female – in fact he named his daughter Beverlina, which was then the accepted feminized form of the name. In truth, Beverly R. Waugh is the collector and not the author of the articles presented in the first paper. The material reproduced in this volume of The Chronicle has been selected from a scrapbook kept by Mr. Waugh during his tenure as principal of Pennsylvania Female College in Harrisburg. While the scrapbook likely remained in the possession of Mrs. Waugh until her death in 1908, no one can account for its whereabouts for almost 100 years. It was purchased by the conference archives last year from a Camp Hill antiques dealer, who had recently acquired it from a collector of local memorabilia – in whose Harrisburg attic it had been stored for some unknown period of time. Hidden between the lines of the articles is a most revealing picture of the place of females in mid nineteenth century America. Following the lead article that paints a broad picture, the remaining papers present in chronological order more detailed examinations of particular Harrisburg females and their Methodist involvements. Each is based on a document housed in the conference archives. Taken together they lead the reader on a journey through the eyes of area females from the days of the earliest circuit rider to the modern era. -
Travels of a Country Woman
Travels of a Country Woman By Lera Knox Travels of a Country Woman Travels of a Country Woman By Lera Knox Edited by Margaret Knox Morgan and Carol Knox Ball Newfound Press THE UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE LIBRARIES, KNOXVILLE iii Travels of a Country Woman © 2007 by Newfound Press, University of Tennessee Libraries All rights reserved. Newfound Press is a digital imprint of the University of Tennessee Libraries. Its publications are available for non-commercial and educational uses, such as research, teaching and private study. The author has licensed the work under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/>. For all other uses, contact: Newfound Press University of Tennessee Libraries 1015 Volunteer Boulevard Knoxville, TN 37996-1000 www.newfoundpress.utk.edu ISBN-13: 978-0-9797292-1-8 ISBN-10: 0-9797292-1-1 Library of Congress Control Number: 2007934867 Knox, Lera, 1896- Travels of a country woman / by Lera Knox ; edited by Margaret Knox Morgan and Carol Knox Ball. xiv, 558 p. : ill ; 23 cm. 1. Knox, Lera, 1896- —Travel—Anecdotes. 2. Women journalists— Tennessee, Middle—Travel—Anecdotes. 3. Farmers’ spouses—Tennessee, Middle—Travel—Anecdotes. I. Morgan, Margaret Knox. II. Ball, Carol Knox. III. Title. PN4874 .K624 A25 2007 Book design by Martha Rudolph iv Dedicated to the Grandchildren Carol, Nancy, Susy, John Jr. v vi Contents Preface . ix A Note from the Newfound Press . xiii part I: The Chicago World’s Fair. 1 part II: Westward, Ho! . 89 part III: Country Woman Goes to Europe . -
National Box Office Digest Annual (1940)
Ho# Ujjfice JbiaeAt Haui: «m JL HE MOST IMPORTANT NEWS of many moons to this industry is the matter-of-fact announcement by Technicolor that it will put into effect a flat reduction of one cent a foot on release prints processed after August 1st. "There is a great industrial story of days and nights and months and years behind the manner in which Dr. Kalmus and his associates have boosted the quality and service of color to the industry, beaten down the price step by step, and maintained a great spirit of cooperation with production and exhibition. TECHNICOLOR MOTION PICTURE CORPORATION HERBERT T. KALMUS, President , 617 North La Brea Avenue, Los Angeles, Subscription Rate, $10.00 Per ■Ml ^Ite. DIGEST ANNUAL *7lie. 1/ea>i WcM. D OMESTIC box office standings take on values in this year of vanished foreign markets that are tremendous in importance. They are the only ratings that mean anything to the producer, director, player, and exhibitor. Gone—at least for years to come—are the days when known box office failures in the American market could be pushed to fabulous income heights and foisted on the suffering American exhibitor because of a shadowy "for¬ eign value.” Gone are the days—and we hope forever—when producers could know¬ ingly, and with "malice aforethought,” set out on the production of top budgetted pictures that would admittedly have no appeal to American mass audiences, earn no dimes for American exhibitors. All because of that same shadowy foreign market. ^ ^ So THE DIGEST ANNUAL comes to you at an opportune time. -
@Csun Vol.VIII No. 17
Inside: 2 Curb Gift Spotlights Music Industry Studies 3 FYI 4 Calendar Vol. XI · No. 6 November 13, 2006 Cal State Northridge—The Intellectual, Economic and Cultural Heart of the San Fernando Valley and Beyond Northridge Gala Celebrates Newly Named Mike Curb College Community and Entertainment Industry Leaders Mark Music Icon’s $10 Million Gift apping a gala evening The president added, “He has celebration, California State made this gift not only because he is C University, Northridge President a generous man who wants to leave Jolene Koester on Wednesday formally a legacy for future generations, but dedicated the university’s newly also because he has a fundamental named Mike Curb College of Arts, understanding of the value of education. Media, and Communication, paying It is only fitting that his great career tribute to the campus’ distinguished and his commitment to education alumnus and largest donor. would converge with the outstanding Community leaders and programs and abundant talent and entertainment industry figures joined potential of this college.” Cal State Northridge students, faculty, Curb, who heads one of the staff and alumni in honoring Curb nation’s largest and longest-running Records Founder/Chairman and independent record labels, founded former California Lt. Gov. Mike Curb. the Mike Curb Congregation vocal Earlier this year, the university group in his teens, and went on to presented a distinguished alumnus compose more than 400 songs and award to Curb, who began his 40-year- o produce 25 gold- or platinum-selling o h plus career in the music industry as C records. He has helped launch and e e L a freshman on the Cal State Northridge y guide the careers of scores of hit artists, b o campus in 1962-63. -
The Five L Ittle Dionnes—And
The Five L ittle Dionnes—And : ’< »w They Grew PLACE TO GO BUT BED MADEMOISELLES DIONNE THAT INTRUDING ON A LADY’S BATH?* ALL SLICKED UP, AND NO .BEAUTY TREATMENT FOR ^—M'“"Tfci®"IS NICE, ■ ^. ft ft * * tt I ^.ir' Mk. ft it 7 il H tl I e ... (Copyright. l?»3t, NKA Service. Inc.) Yvonne is to there is nowhere else to go camera into the The bath completed, Mias ready go—but even if, like Annette appears just a bit resentful at the intrusion of a privacy The daily bath ia a beauty necessity for every well-behaved quintuplet, Nurse De Kiriline her on the «*now* with deft and touch the but back into the mcnbator. gently deposits heaviest and strongea-t of the of her bath, while Nurse De Kiriline practised applies Yvonne here, the awakening is resented Yvonne, a sort woolen with an attached delicate for and water Tin- white towel to be dressed In her "gertrude,” garment hands as Nurse Louise Dv soothing oil which is used on skin that is too soap babies, even makes a show of resistance with her tiny hood, which the all wear. nurse's mask protects against possible infection. quintuplets Kiriline prepares her for her “oil sponge." MILK— MrfrgL AND A BROTHER / i CORBEIL FOOD FOR FIVE , / ; If Corbeil. Ontario, nearest town to j the Dionne (arm. and so small it " hasn't even a "Main Street The j small white church with'the dark cupola just to the right of the cen- ter is that of the Rev Daniel Routhier, parish priest and advisor to the Dionnes.