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Mildred Pierce — AGAIN???

Jun15
2012
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

Question: What’s a classic film?

Answer: A classic is a film you just can’t stop watching no matter how many times you’ve seen it.

Hello, everybody.  Your Movie Guys from Twitter, Joe Morella and Frank Segers, here again to chat about one of our favorite classics.

Joe has just returned from a trip to OKC.  That’s Oklahoma City to you non-natives of the “Sooner” state (named for those intrepid 1889 settlers who staked their land claims early; they were “sooners” rather than “laters”).

While there Joe went to the museum which was having an exhibit on Hollywood in Oklahoma. More on that in future blogs.  Here’s the point.

Part of the exhibit was running a clip from Joan Crawford’s film Mildred Pierce, a movie we love and have covered in at least two previous blogs (Feb. 16′s Mildred Pierce (AKA Joan Crawford) — The Steamy Book Vs. The Movie Classic and Feb. 17′s Mildred Pierce — The Hot Stuff The Movie Left Out).  

It happened to be the scene where Mildred goes into a restaurant and meets Eve Arden who hires her on the spot as a waitress. Joe was hooked and had to watch until the film ran it’s course.  

MILDRED PIERCE –  Time has proven this 1945 film noir a classic. Not just because of the Oscar winning performance by Crawford in the title role, but because of the direction (Michael Curtiz), art direction (Anton Grot and Bertram Tuttle) and photography (Ernest Haller). Those wet L. A. streets!

Every time Joe encounters a good waitress, a really professional waitress, not a wannabe starlet, he realizes how great an actress Crawford was.  As Mildred she went from mother/housewife to novice waitress to professional waitress to businesswoman — with love and sex, betrayal and murder thrown in, of course, with masterly precision. Crawford’s star persona always overshadowed what a really fine actress she was.

Others in the cast are equally good, and were recognized at the time. Both Ann Blyth (as daughter Veda) and Arden (as Ida Corwin) were nominated for supporting actress awards. Jack  Carson (as Wally Fay) was suberb as were Zachary Scott (as playboy Monte Beragon) and Moroni Olsen (as police inspector Peterson).

And let’s not forget the often ignored scriptwriter or, in this case, scriptwriters. No less than seven worked on this adaptation of James M. Cain’s novel.  One was William Faulkner.  Screenwriter of credit is Ranald MacDougall.

(It should be noted that Mildred Pierce was remade in 2011 into a five-episode HBO tv series directed by Todd Haynes and starring Kate Winslet.  If follows the Cain novel more closely in that there’s plenty of sex and betrayal but no murder.  Our advice: stick with the 1945 Crawford version.)

It’s a must see film and CERTAINLY one of the best films Hollywood ever produced. The photo at top is from the film, of course.  The photo below is from The Donald Gordon Collection.  That’s Donald on the right with Joan and her third husband, actor Phil Terry.

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged never before seen photo of Joan Crawford

Lana Turner — An Extra? (The Sequel)

May02
2012
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

Hello Everybody. Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, with more from guest contributor Lou Valentino on his quest to determine whether Lana Turner had indeed appeared as an extra in the 1937 picture, A Star is Born.

In Lou’s entry yesterday, he revealed a copy of a letter he had received from super agent, Henry Willson, who had a hand in casting many of producer David O. Selznick’s pictures, and who confirmed that Lana WAS an extra in the producer’s A Star Is Born. Writes Lou:

“I have had this letter in my files for over 45 years.   Shortly after receiving it I joined the staff of the most famous magazine of the era, LIFE, where I remained for 25 years.  When I wrote Willson to thank him for the information I wrote on a LIFE letterhead.

BINGO!  He wrote back telling me to call him if I ever was in L.A. and that he’d love to meet me.  Such was the power of a LIFE letterhead!  Later that year I made the first of over 100 trips to Hollywood over the next 30 years.  I called Henry Willson, and he welcomed me warmly.

Much has been written about this man and yes, Henry was a wild and crazy, hands-all-over-you guy but he also was very intelligent, funny as hell and, I think, just a little bit lonely.  He took me to parties, to the Hollywood Bowl and, best of all, he told me loads of great stories about the young “Judy” Turner.

He said the reason he made her do the bit in A Star Is Born was because he wanted her to get used to the “feel” of a movie set which, in this case, he insisted took place at the swimming pool of the Ambassador Hotel.

It was Henry’s opinion that Lana either didn’t remember doing the bit because it was done so fast and so long ago or that, being the Grande Dame she was in 1966 and taking her stardom so seriously, which she did, she simply erased the moment from her mind – something she was always very good at doing.

In the summer of 1968 on my third trip to Hollywood, a longtime dream came true for me:  my favorite movie star had consented to meet me. It was to be for dinner at the Luau restaurant in Beverly Hills.

The Luau was one of many restaurants owned by Lana’s ex-husband Steve Crane, a not so successful actor who became a multi-millionaire as a restauranteur. At 6:30 in the evening on what had to be the hottest night of the year I get to the Luau and I am ushered to Ms. Turner’s own private booth. I’m told she was stuck at work and would be a little late and that I should just order whatever I wanted.

Lana was then working on that very expensive, much troubled TV series The Survivors. So troubled, in fact, that she got to the Luau at about 8:30!

But, yes, it was definitely worth the wait – she made quite an entrance and was everything I wanted her to be.  She looked really GORGEOUS in a white caftan and hoop earrings, cool as a cucumber despite the heat, and she could not have been nicer.  We were there for at least two hours. Husband No. 6, Robert Eaton, who is alive and well and recently contacted me concerning a book he is writing about Howard Hughes, was with her.

During the course of the evening she answered many questions pertaining to things I was always curious about. It was the perfect time to ask her, face to face, about A Star Is Born.  When I did, she absolutely froze.   She gave me her best Catherine the Great stare and said: “I was NEVER an extra”.   Right away I knew I had hit a sensitive subject.

When we left the Luau I took loads of snapshots of us outside the restaurant.  And she posed for me like I was Clarence Bull or Eric Carpenter of any of those MGM photographers who glorified her throughout her career.

It had been a really wonderful night. I knew Lana Turner for another 25 years until her passing but I never again brought up the subject of A Star Is Born.

In 2009, Running Press in Philadelphia published a large 400 page coffee table book called LANA: THE MEMORIES, THE MYTHS, THE MOVIES.

It was written by a wonderful editor at Running Press named Cindy De La Hoz and Lana’s daughter, Cheryl Crane, whom I have known and loved for many years.There are over 800 photos in the book, color and black-and-white, all of which are mine.  Robert Osborne of Turner Classic Movies has said he thinks it’s the best and most beautiful book ever published on any movie star, and I agree with him.

When it was in production I asked Cindy if she would print Henry Willson’s letter in the book, thus ending the mystery about A Star Is Born.   She thought it was a terrific idea but Cheryl shot it down because she didn’t want to go against her mother’s comments.   I respect Cheryl’s decision, and the letter didn’t get in the book.  In fact on page 390 there is even a denial that she was in it!

Since that time even the Internet Movie Data Base which for years carried the title in Lana’s credits has dropped it from their credits on her - thus confusing the issue for her fans even more. Hopefully my words will set the record straight.”

 We hope so too. What a great article. Thanks Lou. 

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Tagged The Best Book Published on any Movie Star?, Who was Steve Crane?

WAS VAN JOHNSON GAY? Continued

Feb03
2012
4 Comments Written by classicmovieguys

Hello everybody.  Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, here again with more dirt on Van Johnson.

By 1945, Johnson was voted by movie theater owners as the No. 2 biggest box office star, second only to Bing Crosby.     But questions still were asked about his sexual preferences.

As author Scott Eyman recounts in his biography of the MGM  mogul, Louis B. Mayer,  “homosexuality was not necessarily an insurmountable obstacle.”  Surely with the “right” woman,” Johnson could be cured of his “malady”, figured Mayer.

As a result, every gorgeous babe on the MGM lot was urged to pursue Johnson. Surely he could be married off to any one of the beautiful, young women both stars and starlets.

By this time Johnson had become a genuine star in the MGM galaxy.  The press of those years certainly could be controlled – especially by the renowned studio fixer team of Eddie Mannix and Howard Strickling.

Unwanted information rarely if ever saw the light of print. Farsighted MGM managers took considerable pains to head off potentially negative reports or rumors about their charge.

There are many versions of how Van Johnson married Evie Wynn.

One is that in March of 1943, Van Johnson, a new but promising talent at MGM, was driving to a studio screening with friends – said to be fellow actor Keenan Wynn and his wife, Evie.

At a Culver City intersection a car came barreling through a red light and slammed into the side of Johnson’s convertible.  The force of the impact rolled the vehicle on its side, seriously injuring Van..

Another version is that Johnson was alone on his motorcycle when the accident occurred.  But this was not the image MGM wanted for their bright new star.

In any event, the fact was that  Johnson sustained a fractured skull, multiple facial cuts, a severed artery in his neck and bone fragments piercing his brain. There is no good time for a near-fatal accident but at this early point in Johnson’s career, the timing was atrocious.

He had just experienced his first big movie break, being cast in a juicy role in director Victor Fleming’s A Guy Named Joe costarring Spencer Tracy and Irene Dunne – established stars with real empathy for the struggling, young actor and the horrible predicament he faced.

During Johnson’s subsequent, three-month hospital stay, Tracy and Dunne fought off repeated studio attempts to recast Van’s part in the picture. “Joe,” finally completed with Johnson aboard as a young fighter pilot, turned into a box office hit when it came out. Van’s stellar career was off and running.

The accident left Johnson with a scarred forehead and a metal plate on the left side of his head.

The good news – if you can call it that – was that the accident also generated huge amounts of sympathetic publicity in movie fan magazines of the time. And because of that metal plate, Johnson was declared exempt from wartime military service, giving his career additional tail wind because so many Hollywood stars were otherwise preoccupied in uniform.

The accident also set in motion a series of events that very much related to Johnson’s personal life, and address the question posed by the heading of this blog.

After being released from the hospital, Johnson moved in with the Wynns, and their young two sons. It proved to be quite a ménage-a-cinq, with Van with Evie Wynn discovering that they got along very well.

One version of the story is that Johnson just couldn’t get over how kind she was to him while he was recovering.  He was so moved that he often mused out loud at how lucky his close pal Keenan Wynn had been to snare such a lovely and ingratiating woman.

That’s not to say that Evie was fooling around behind Keenan’s back. She had harbored something of a crush on Johnson but Keenan, perhaps aware of Johnson’s sexuality, deemed him “safe.”

By the time this unusual domestic arrangement was in full flower, MGM boss Mayer was already concerned (some say convinced) that Johnson was indeed gay, and that this perception was leaking out to fans and general moviegoers.

One version of the story is that  the studio boss got wind of Johnson’s admiration of Evie Wynn. What exactly did happen has been dissected by Hollywood historians ever since.

Mayer, of course, was motivated by protecting an increasingly valuable piece of studio talent. In fact, Johnson was already considered worthy of the status of a top-billed star — for the first time in Richard Thorpe’s Two Girls and a Sailor in 1944.

What to do?  Force an arranged marriage for Johnson?

The harshest interpretation of ensuing events is that Mayer coerced Evie Wynn, who was also Keenan’s manager, to divorce her husband and marry Johnson.  The not-so-hidden threat was that unless Evie agreed, Keenan’s MGM contract would not be renewed, and she would never be allowed to represent anyone at the studio again.

Another version of the story is that Evie “traded up”.  She knew Keenan Wynn whould always be a character actor and that Van was a star.  She seduced him and enlisted Mayer’s aid in her plot.

Whatever the preliminaries, on Jan. 25, 1947, the Wynns were driven to Juarez, where a Mexican divorce was pre-arranged.  The couple then drove back across the border to El Paso where Johnson and the former Evie Wynn were married four hours later.

For the remaining seven years Johnson worked at MGM, the gay rumors were effectively neutralized.  The very much-married Van Johnson starred in such macho titles as director Sam Wood’s Command Decision and William Wellman’s Battleground as well as lighter fare including as Robert Z. Leonard’s Too Young To Kiss.

As for Johnson’s marriage to Evie, it ended badly. The couple had a daughter, Schuyler, in 1948, and managed to make a go of it until the early 1960’s, Then Van left her,  supposedly for  an affair with a chorus boy Johnson had met in a stage production of The Music Man. The divorce decree followed six years later.

Unshackled from MGM, Van did in our opinion his best work – particularly his strong performance as the earnestly upright U.S. Navy Lt. Steve Maryk in director Edward Dmytryk’s The Caine Mutiny, produced by Stanley Kramer for Columbia Pictures.

Johnson appeared as a Navy enlisted man, warrant officer Darrel Harrison, in Melville Shavelson’s Yours, Mine and Ours (1968).

Stars of the family comedy were Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball, Van’s close friend who perhaps more than anyone else in Hollywood was responsible for setting Johnson’s movie career in motion some 25 years before.

Yours, Mine and Ours was made for United Artists release by Desilu, the immensely successful movie and tv production company formed by Ball and husband Desi Arnaz. We suspect Van was cast by Lucy and Desi as a professional token of their longstanding friendship.

In any case, Johnson continued to work sporadically in films. In 1985, Johnson was cast in a small role in Woody Allen’s 1985 fantasy-comedy The Purple Rose of Cairo.

By the time he died at 92 in a Nyack, New York nursing home in 2008, Johnson had compiled an extraordinarily busy show business resume including years of doing television (Murder She Wrote in the 1980’s), performing in regional, dinner and Broadway theater (he appeared on Broadway in La Cage aux Folles at the age of 69, and touring as Captain Andy in Showboat at 75).

Getting back to our headline question – was Johnson gay?  Undoubtedly bisexual. But who really cares today, in a time when Hollywood movie and tv personalities seemingly can’t wait to tell us about all aspects of their lives, including the sexual?

Johnson was a creature of his secretive times.  We salute the body of work compiled over nearly half a century by “Cheery Van,” as he called himself. In yesterday’s blog photo, we showed you Van with costar Lana Turner.

She found him wanting…but only off screen.

And who is that in the background of Van above?  Looks like Fay Bainter, doesn’t it?

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Tagged Cage aux Folles, keenan Wynn, lucille Ball, murder she wrote, van johnson, woody allen

Debating DANNY KAYE — And Other Missives From The Emailbag

Jan19
2012
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

Hello, everybody.  Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, here today to answer some of the always welcome emails we’ve received over the last week or two.

As mentioned many times, we love to hear from you. If any of our Classicmoviechat blogs moves you to agree or to loudly disagree, please let us hear about it.

Our Dec. 29 blog questioning why Danny Kaye , a big Hollywood star in the Forties and Fifties, is largely forgotten today, drew this response from Rick 29.

If Danny lacks the following of some of his peers, I believe it’s because he seldom got film roles worthy of his talent. When he did, it was magic. I’d say that ‘The Court Jester’ and ‘White Christmas’ are both beloved films.

(That’s Danny above with ‘Court Jester’ costars Angela Lansbury, left, and Glynis Johns.)

His ‘chalice in the palace’ routine from ‘Court Jester’ is often mentioned among the greatest comedy bits in all of cinema. In a White Christmas docu, Rosemary Clooney seemed to feel Kaye was insecure, especially around Bing Crosby. So, there appear to be a lot of different views about him off the silver screen.

Thanks, Rick.  Yes, there were differing views of Kaye offscreen.  As mentioned in our original blog, Tony Curtis thought him mean-spirited, and couldn’t stand the sight of him. As for Kay’s apparent insecurity, there is always the possibility that he had much to be insecure about.

Regular contributor Patricia Nolan-Hall (Caftan Woman) writes us that, When my daughter was 13 she took her CD collection to a friend’s party. I suggested that maybe she might want to remove the Danny Kaye disc as her friend’s probably wouldn’t know who he was.

She responded that it was time they learned and – guess what? – they all got a kick out of it. Talent will tell, if given the chance.

But correspondent Nancy Mitchell takes the opposite view:  I was always bothered about Danny Kaye. I knew he was talented, but I just didn’t like him. You put it perfectly — there was always an element of a “look at me” attitude in his performances. He didn’t ring true for me.

The three unidentified photos we ran to illustrate our Jan. 2 ‘Happy New Year All’ blog stumped some of you.

Ok, let’s try, wrote Taci. Linda must be Linda Darnell. And Alan Ladd is easy. But who are Jones and Irene and the fourth guy? That’s a bit more difficult. Irene could be a costume designer and the Jones guy looks familiar…

Patricia Nolan-Hall writes: The smile on the fella in trunks is very familiar. It’ll drive me crazy until I know. Kinda Buster Crabbe like, but…I don’t know. Coincidence time: I was just listening to an old Jack Jones album, so it’s nice to see his folks Allan Jones and Irene Hervey in the bottom left photo. Happy New Year!

Yup, it was Buster Crabbe, Alan Ladd, Linda Darnell and Allan Jones and Irene Hervey.  We should also mention, of course, that all the photos came from The Donald Gordon Collection, our private stash of marvelously impromptu shots of Hollywood in the early Forties.

Thanks and, once again, Happy New Year!

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged Was Buster Crabbe a star?, Who was Danny Kaye?, Who were Jack Jones' parents?

HAPPY NEW YEAR ALL

Jan02
2012
2 Comments Written by classicmovieguys

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Above, we’ve posted some of our favorite snaps from The Donald Gordon Collection. We’ve been pleased to bring you these never seen before photos of some of Hollywood’s biggest stars of the 1940s.

Hello Everybody.  This is Mr. Joe Morella and Mr. Frank Segers., your classic movie guys.  Mrs. Norman Maine is still backstage looking for her husband.

We’re here to wish you a Happy New Year, and to tell you that in 2012 we intend to keep bringing you exciting new photos and some (we hope) insightful tidbits about classic films.

Just in case you tuned in late, you might well ask, who was Donald Gordon?

Donald was a young actor who found himself under contract at Columbia Pictures during World War II.

The studios in this wartime period were a bit less fussy about male hires, so Donald made the grade although he never quite made it big. He appears to have spent much of his time making friends on and off the studio lot, made easier by the fact that Donald was an outgoing, amiable type, easy to like.

And, if you were a friend, Donald took your picture. Then to seal the deal he had someone else snap a shot of him posing with his famous pal.

As you’ll continue to see on our blog in 2012, the amazing informality – almost intimacy – of Donald with his subjects is a pleasure to behold.  No posed studio shots in full makeup, staged with the precision of a Swiss watch.

These were shots of some of Hollywood’s best-known personalities in mufti, so to speak, lounging around pools, front lawns, departing restaurants or in actual costume on the set.

By the way, can you identify those of Donald’s palls who are pictured above?

Have a safe and festive New Year’s Eve!

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Tagged classic movies, Never published photos, The Donald Gordon Collection

AGAIN — FIRST PUBLISHED HERE !

Dec05
2011
2 Comments Written by classicmovieguys

Hi, everybody, Joe Morella and Frank Segers back again with a special note to you.

We at Classic Movie Chat pride ourselves on bringing you photos that have never been seen before on any other blog.  In fact these photos have never been published before –ANYWHERE.

That’s because they are from a private stash, The Donald Gordon Collection.

You ask, who was Donald Gordon?

Donald was a young actor who found himself under contract at Columbia Pictures during World War II.

The studios in this wartime period were a bit less fussy about male hires, so Donald made the grade although he never quite made it big. He appears to have spent much of his time making friends on and off the studio lot, made easier by the fact that Donald was an outgoing, amiable type, easy to like.

And, if you were a friend, Donald took your picture. Then to seal the deal he had someone else snap a shot of him posing with his famous pal.

As you’ll continue to see on our blog in the coming weeks, the amazing informality – almost intimacy – of Donald with his subjects is a pleasure to behold.  No posed studio shots in full makeup, staged with the precision of a Swiss watch.

These were shots of some of Hollywood’s best-known personalities in mufti, so to speak, lounging around pools, front lawns, departing restaurants or in actual costume on the set.

The snapshots of  Columbia stars, Janet Blair and Jeff Donnell were first seen on our site.

We hope that you will let others know about Classic Movie Chat as a great source of never before seen photos.  

Even if the picture running that day isn’t an original, you and your friends will be treated to what we hope you’ll find is an interesting picture, and tidbit about films and stars from Hollywood’s Golden Era.

Please tell us who your favorite stars are and we’ll try to run a piece about them AND a never before seen photo.


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Tagged Columbia Pictures stars, first published here

MYSTERY MAN IDENTIFIED — At Last

Nov30
2011
Leave a Comment Written by Joe Morella and Frank Segers

Glad Tidings.

Joe heard from old friend Lou Valentino (Lou by the way is author of The Films of Lana Turner), who did us an enormous favor by correctly identifying the man pictured above as Frank Albertson.

The photo above is from The Donald Gordon Collection, and unfortunately our man Donald didn’t label all his prints, and in his later years even managed to mislabel a few. That’s why we initially thought this was Red Barry because it was his name that the late Gordon scribbled on the back on the photo we used.

To check out our original misidentification of Albertson, see our July 15 blog Susan Hayward: Cancer Victim, in which we ran his photo, and assured the world that he was Barry (who was a lover of Hayward’s).

I know you’ll be reassured by the news that we corrected that mistake in our Aug. 22 blog, We Admit It. We Goofed. So, Who Is Out Mystery Man? 

Three days later, we located an actual photo of Barry, also from The Donald Gordon Collection, and ran with it (That’s Him All Right, The Real ‘Red’ Barry).  

But for several weeks were honestly unable to say who our mystery man was. That is, until Lou Valentino’s missive arrived.

Albertson was hardly a household name, but did have some notable credits. He played the role of the innocent playwright in the Marx Brothers film version of Room Service. 

Albertson had started in films as a boy, about 14, and worked until his death 50 years later. He’s in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, as the man who provides the cash later stolen by Janet Leigh.  He’s probably best remembered as Sam Wainwright, the “hee-haw” guy in It’s a Wonderful Life.

Our thanks to Lou.  Keep keeping us on our toes.

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Tagged Frank Albertson, Lana Turner, Marx Brothers, mystery man

OUR CLASSY MYSTERY WOMAN — Revealed

Nov09
2011
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

The following quote has been attributed to our mystery woman:

I gave up Hollywood and I gave up pictures because I was always getting parts where I’d be the girl who says, “Oh, Red!,” in a Skelton movie.

Hello, everybody. Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, here again to reveal the subject of one of our who-is-this-person-in-the-picture quizzes.

After getting one “princess” role after the next, it’s no wonder the movie career of Janet Blair — our mystery woman, who looks great in the photo above — lasted for only about seven years, from 1941 after a Columbia Pictures talent scout discovered her performing at a Hollywood night club as a singer in front of the Hal Kemp band, until 1948 after she appeared in a ho-hum costume drama, “The Black Arrow,” opposite Louis Hayward and George Macready.

From there on Janet concentrated on tv, logging an substantial career spanning the so-called Golden Age of 1950′s right through to “Murder, She Wrote” in the 1990′s. She also turned to the theater, touring on the road in the lead role that Mary Martin played on Broadway in the Richard Rogers and Oscar Hammerstein musical “South Pacific.”

Captivated by Blair’s polished good looks combined with an air of wholesomeness, Rogers felt she would be perfect as Nellie Forbush, that irrepressibly perky Navy Ensign determined to “wash that man out of my hair.”  (Although she was 37 at the time the movie version of “South Pacific” was made, Janet was passed over by Mitzi Gaynor, who was a decade younger.)

Still in all, Blair’s movie careers was nothing to sneeze at.  In 1942, she costarred with Rosalind Russell in “My Sister Eileen.”  Janet also played a key supporting role to Rita Hayworth — they were said to be studio rivals — in 1945′s “Tonight And Every Night.”

In “Once Upon A Time,” Janet costarred with Cary Grant playing a small-time showbiz hustler in need of a new act. (The cast of that 1944 movie included another of our mystery women, a young Jeff Donnell.) We expect that the band-singer side of Janet most enjoyed her role in the 1947 Tommy-Jimmy Dorsey biopic, “The Fabulous Dorseys.”

Janet married and divorced twice, and was the mother of two children. She passed away four years ago, in her late 80′s.

By the way, congrats again to Patricia Nolan-Hall (aka Caftan Woman), who e-mailed us immediately after our Nov. 4 posting with this: “I know that gal because I’m a fan of her singing and acting, plus my daughter has the same first name and her most famous movie character shares a name with my niece.  That’s Janet Blair aka My Sister Eileen.”

The photos accompanying today’s blog show the two sides of Janet: the glamorous, carefully turned out studio star (above) and the cheerful, fun-loving actress more or less at her leisure (photo below from The Donald Gordon Collection).

Which Blair do you prefer?

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Posted in Rare Photos - Tagged Columbia Pictures, Janet Blair, mystery woman, Red Skelton, South Pacific

ROY ROGERS As You’ve Never Seen Him

Nov04
2011
Leave a Comment Written by Joe Morella and Frank Segers

Hello, everybody.  Joe Morella and Frank Segers, your classic movie guys, here to wish the former Leonard Franklin Slye a Happy 100th Birthday.

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio on Nov. 5, 1911, Slye became Roy Rogers, and then became King of the Cowboys and even King of the West.

He is perhaps the most prominent and durable cowpoke in movie history — totally encapsulated by his cowboy roles. That’s all Rogers did. John Wayne, to cite another durable screen cowboy, played many other roles in his lengthy movie career.

Rogers was strictly a genial, sometimes singing but always straight-shooting cowboy who starred in nearly 120 movies and tv vehicles spanning nearly a half century. He certainly ranks right up there with the likes of Tom Mix, Gene Autry, Hopalong Cassidy (aka William Boyd), Lash LaRue and Don “Red” Barry. (Sorry. That last reference is an in-joke since we misidentified a photo of Barry a while back in one of our “who is this person” quizzes.)

Take a close look at the photo of Rogers above. It’s never been seen before.

That’s because it is part of our exclusive Donald Gordon Collection of private snapshots taken in Forties Hollywood by our late pal, who at the time was serving a kind of junior-actor-in-residence at Columbia Pictures.

Donald usually took his famous-pal photos in urban settings, on the studio lot, outside restaurants or at informal gatherings at private homes. This time he went rural, to the location of 1945′s Utah, the Republic Pictures western (one of dozens Roy made at the medium-rent studio run by one Herbert J. Yates).

Cost conscious Republic, not about to actually shoot the western in Utah, filmed the picture in locations in the San Fernando Valley and in Lone Pine, northeast of Los Angeles near the Nevada border. Given what Rogers and unidentified pal were wearing, we suspect this photo was taken at the latter high-altitude location.

In any event, Donald captured the very handsome, 34-year-old Roy Rogers goofing off with a crew member between setups. It appears that one of the two just got off a ribald joke.

Utah was a pretty typical Rogers picture. The plot was frivolously simple, something about a naive ranch owner from the East visiting her Western property for the first time, and being hookwinked in a real estate deal by wily locals.

Supporting Rogers was his faithful horse Trigger, who appeared in all Roy’s pictures from 1938 until 1965, when the steed died at the ripe age of 33.  Also on hand was grizzled character actor George “Gabby” Hayes and, most importantly, Dale Evans as that naive ranch owner from the East.

This was two years before she and Roy began their 50-year-marriage, which ended in 1998 when Roy was felled by congestive heart problems.

Rogers is remembered today more for the chain of restaurants that he lent his name to rather than the body of his film work. But his son, 65-year-old Roy Jr., and grandson, Dusty, continue the family’s show biz tradition via their musical band, The High Riders.

 

 

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Tagged King of the Cowboys, Location shooting, Roy Rogers, Trigger

WHO’S OUR MYSTERY WOMAN?

Nov04
2011
1 Comment Written by Joe Morella and Frank Segers

O.K., classic movie fans, you have your work cut out for you this time.

Hi, everybody.  Joe Morella and Frank Segers here today to present another snapshot from our special Donald Gordon Collection of never-before-seen photos taken way back in early-Forties Hollywood.

Who is this woman? (And, by the way, don’t you love that headpiece?)

A totally stumped Frank took a wild stab, and identified her as Lupe Velez. Wrong!, said Joe, who knew better. (Hint: she’s was more than a decade younger than “the Mexican spitfire.”)

Since we as classic movie fans are tender of heart and always willing to assist, we can provide this general clue — the woman above was minor (and we mean minor) movie star of the 1940s who also did a lot of stage work.

Although never a top tier star, she had a long and successful career and starred with some of the top names in the business — Rosalind Russell, Cary Grant, Rita Hayworth, Henry Fonda and Red Skelton.  

Our man-about-town Donald Gordon, who worked at Columbia Pictures (another hint) in the early Forties, took this snap outside a theatre in Los Angeles when our mystery woman was costarring with George Raft and Lloyd Nolan in a radio version of the play “Broadway,” for the Lux Radio Theatre.

Some more clues about our mystery woman:

– She was of Irish descent, born in 1921 in Altoona, Pennsylvania.  Her real name is Martha Janet Lafferty.

– She started out not as an actress but as a singer.  She eventually complained that her Hollywood career comprised largely of movies in which she played “princess parts.”

– She had an enormous career in television, spanning the so-called Golden Age of 1950′s right through to “Murder, She Wrote” in the 1990′s.

– Our mystery woman married and divorced two husbands, toured on the road in one of Richard Rogers and Oscar Hammerstein’s most successful musicals, and made night club appearances after her movie career ended.

– She died at the ripe age of 85 just four years ago.

Who is our mystery woman?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Tagged Cary Grant, Movie Stars of the 1940s, mystery woman, Rita Hayworth
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