The Kitty Packard Pictorial


Out of the Vaults: Drew Barrymore’s Grandmother…

… was, for the record, WAY hot.

And yes, she spoke with the same quiet lisp that would, one day, make her granddaughter famous. (OK, maybe Drew’s lisp isn’t what made her famous, but it’s certainly made her memorable.)

Dolores Costello was a silent screen goddess to end all silent screen goddesses. The year this film, Noah’s Ark, was made, she married film’s untamable-bastard-genius John Barrymore. And an acting dynasty was born. The marriage lasted only seven years, largely due to Barrymore’s drinking problems, and she would only act for a few more years before retiring from the public eye completely.

But for a few glorious years, Dolores’ popularity was untouchable, and her chops as an actress were undeniable.

Teamed here with super hunky matinee idol George O’Brien, Noah’s Ark’s biblical underpinnings seem entirely inspired by the Dolores’ truly divine beauty.

George O'Briend & Dolores Costell in Noah's Ark, 1928. Directed by Michael Curtiz

George O'Brien & Dolores Costell in Noah's Ark, 1928. Directed by Michael Curtiz

 

 



Colorized Vintage Photos by Claroscureaux

Right, so like most things in life, I am probably the last person in the blogosphere to know about this fella. Many thanks to Forget the Talkies for bringing it to my attention!

Claroscureaux colorizes vintage Hollywood photographs.

Normally the word “colorize” makes my skin crawl and I get a sudden urge  for sudden death. But Claroscureaux’s work is beautiful– if I might rhapsodize, I daresay his work is exquisite. Some are spine-tingling in their realism, some have an Earl Christy-ish painterly quality, but all are obvious works of tireless, tedious attention to detail.

He has a store online to fulfill all of your every day classic cinema needs– coffee mugs, et all– and the prints are priced very reasonably.

Here are some of my favorites:

Myrna Loy - © Claroscureaux

Myrna Loy - © Claroscureaux

Hedy Lamarr - © Claroscureaux

Hedy Lamarr - © Claroscureaux

Veronica Lake - © Claroscureaux (this is quite possibly my favorite photo of the year)

Veronica Lake - © Claroscureaux (this is quite possibly my favorite photo of the year)

Bette Davis - © Claroscureaux

Bette Davis - © Claroscureaux

Valentino - © Claroscureaux (smolder alert, ladies!)

Valentino - © Claroscureaux (smolder alert, ladies!)

Buster Keaton - © Claroscureaux

Buster Keaton - © Claroscureaux

Gloria Swanson - © Claroscureaux

Gloria Swanson - © Claroscureaux

Alice White - © Claroscureaux

Alice White - © Claroscureaux



Favorite Website of the Week: Red Hot Jazz
Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five

Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five

If Italy has art, England has literature, and France has fashion, then America’ s cultural offering in the history of mankind is jazz. Its’ history as the one truly organic art form to emerge from America has been well chronicled and you needn’t look hard for an education on the subject.  But harder to find are the lesser-known recordings—from the end of World War One through the prosperity of the 1920s.  The music that America listened to before the movies learned how to talk –jazz that was dizzyingly fast and fun and syncopated–the soundtrack to the Jazz Age. Whether it be the ‘white’ jazz of Paul Whiteman and Jean Goldkette or the blazing, rule-breaking brilliance of Louis Armstrong and Fletcher Henderson, the music holds up remarkably well—if you know where to find it.

So the Kitty Packard Pictorial’s website of the week is the long-running, exhaustive jazz resource, The Red Hot Jazz Archive. Scott Alexander’s site is dedicated, not simply to the music, but the lives of the musicians who made them. His essays are peerless—an outstanding scholarly effort—and then there’s the music. Full-length recordings (you’ll need to download Real Player to enjoy them) abound in impressive numbers,  pristine in quality and complete with recording date, locations and back story.

Red Hot Jazz is a veritable treasure trove of forgotten gems, where one find leads to countless others. Even if vintage music isn’t your particular cup of tea, the site is worth a visit if for no other reason than to see what passion for a subject really looks like.

Since it might be overwhelming to newcomers, here are some great artists to explore:

Louis Armstrong & his Hot Five
Duke Ellington & his Cotton Club Orchestra
Paul Whiteman & his Orchestra
Coon Sanders Nighthawks Orchestra
Jean Goldkette & his Orchestra
The Fletcher Henderson Orchestra
Joe Venuti & Eddie Lang
King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band

(The Pictorial did a post a while back about some of the greatest names in jazz appearing onscreen for a fun-filled jam session– take a look at ‘em in action)



Hollywood Du Jour: The Cocoanut Grove
Interior of the Cocoanut Grove

Interior of the Cocoanut Grove

Continuing on our little gastronomical tour of old Hollywood, we arrive at none other than La Grande Dame of legendary eateries: The Cocoanut Grove. Betty Goodwin states in her book Hollywood du Jour:

The Cocoanut Grove epitomized the symbiotic relationship restaurants enjoyed with the picture colony—each enhanced the other’s reputation and basked in each other’s glow.
The fancy dress Cocoanut Grove emerged on Wilshire Blvd in an auspicious time. In the twenties, Hollywood stars were beginning to define glamour for the world, and press agents were eager to help out. The Cocoanut Grove, which looked as grand as any Ziegfield stage (indeed, its key components were taken from a Valentino movie set), provided the ideal backdrop for a photo op … In the late thirties and forties, live radio broadcasts of big band music of Freddy Martin (Mr. Cocoanut Grove) and bocalist Merv Griffin, Guy Lombardo, Phil Harris, Ozzie Nelson and Rudie Vallee spread thee restaurant’s fame from coast to coast. It was also the site of the Academy Awards presentation banquets from 1930 to 1936
.”

There is a fantastic book out there (although pricey) called Are the Stars Out Tonight, which provides a terrific visual history of the genesis of the Ambassador Hotel’s famous nightclub. From the “Hollywood Nights” of the 1920s where screen icons would religiously gather each Tuesday night to its popular Charleston contests (Joan Crawford was a regular winner), to its Oscar banquets and birthday parties and all manner of world-class entertainments, the book is definitely worth searching out if you want to really get a feel of what the Grove was truly like.

Poster ad forthe Cocoanut Grove's Gus Arnheim

Poster ad forthe Cocoanut Grove's Gus Arnheim

There are also some terrific recordings available from legendary Cocoanut Grove bandleaders Abe Lyman and Gus Arnheim if you want to hear the sort of music that entertained all those starlit dancers.

And if you’d like a taste of what they dined on, here are some Cocoanut Grove recipes for you to try out. (I’ll have to take your word on the oysters as I don’t eat fish myself … but the desert is gorgeous!)

Bon Appétit!

California Oysters St. James
18 California Oysters
St. James Butter (recipe below)
Parmesan cheese

Open the oysters on the half shell. Set them in a baking dish, covering each completely with St James Butter. Sprinkle with Parmesean cheese. Bake until browned and serve very hot. Serves 3.

St James Butter
1 clove minced garlic
1 tablespoon chopped chives
1 tablespoon shallots
dadash paprika
pinch of parsley
1 drop Tabasco sauce
½ green pepper, diced
¼ pound salted butter at room temperature.

Combine garlic, chives, shallots, paprika, parsley, Tabasco and pepper. Blend into softened butter.

California Figs Romanoff
1 dozen ripe figs, cut in quarters
curacao, to taste
1 quart vanilla ice cream, very soft
1 pint whipped cream
dash nutmeg

Place figs in a serving bowl. Add a slight flavoring of curacao to taste. In another bowl, thoroughly mix vanilla ice cream with well-sweetened whipped cream. Pour over figs. Sprinkle with nutmeg and refrigerate. Serve very cold. Serves 6. (Strawberries can be substituted in lieu of nutmeg.)

Cocoanut Grove Cocktail
2 ounces dry gin
½ ounce maraschino liquer
dash lime juice
dash grenadine

Shake ingredients into cracked ice, strain and serve.



Blue Peas and other 2 Strip Technicolor Marvels …

Not long ago I was watching Martin Scorsese’s The Aviator, which I’ve watched multiple times—not because I feel it is necessarily a great film, but because few modern films have so accurately pinpointed the look and feel of early Hollywood. A  friend of mine was watching it with me and suddenly she shouted out in horror: “Eew! Gross! His peas are blue!”

Howard Hughes' dinner in The Aviator

Howard Hughes' dinner in The Aviator

Yep. And I like ‘em that way.

Scorsese had done a near flawless job of recreating the old Technicolor “two strip” color process that so aptly coincided with the setting of the scene: Hollywood, circa 1930.  The process was actually called “Subtractive Two-Color Dye Transfer Print,” (often referred to, albeit incorrectly, as “two strip”) and was used between 1927 and 1933. It was a marked improvement on the previous “Subtractive Cement” print procedure wherein film matrices were literally bathed in dye and cemented back-to-back to the original for printing.  Starting in 1927, the wizards at Technicolor (namely Herbert Kalmus) developed a technique for matrices to be optically generated from the actual camera negative. According to the extensive website The Widescreen Museum: “[the new process] used the matrices to transfer the dye to a specially prepared clear base film. The groundbreaking dye transfer process won substantial acclaim and Technicolor’s output increased markedly from 1928 through 1930.”

It is this process that Scorsese had his special effects team employ to recreate the warm dreaminess of early movie color in The Aviator. Scorsese’s film has a fantastic special effects website where it describes the technique more succinctly than my non-technical brain ever could: “Natural skin tone was achieved by filming two black and white strips of film (with a red and green filter on the lens) and later adding Yellow dye to the resulting Cyan and Magenta printing matrices. The yellow dye makes up for the lack of yellow color found in skin tone pigment but ultimately can not reproduce yellow or any shade or variation of blue (as a result of the missing blue layer.) The resulting matrices appear orange and a warmer version of cyan more than the normal magenta and cyan found in the later three color process. This look creates an odd but pleasing hand-painted look where faces appear normal and green takes on a blue-green quality while the sky and all things blue appear cyan.”

Like peas!

Here’s how Scorsese’s crew did it in 2004:

The Process

The Process

The Result

The Result

Here’s how Kalmus did it in 1927:

Original System Example, Courtesy Widescreen Museum.

Original System Example, Courtesy Widescreen Museum.

Result: Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929)

Result: Gold Diggers of Broadway (1929)

Some of the earlier subtractive color systems, namely from 1922-1926, produced some truly eye-popping moments in some of the era’s best silent films:

Anna May Wong in The Toll of the Sea, 1922

Anna May Wong in The Toll of the Sea, 1922

Lon Chaney in The Phantom of the Opera, 1925

Lon Chaney in The Phantom of the Opera, 1925

Ramon Navarro in Ben-Hur, 1925

Ramon Navarro in Ben-Hur, 1925

Betty Bronson in Ben-Hur, 1925

Betty Bronson in Ben-Hur, 1925

Billie Dove and Douglas Fairbanks in The Black Pirate, 1926

Billie Dove and Douglas Fairbanks in The Black Pirate, 1926



Wild Bill Wellman Revisted …

forbidden-hollywood-collection-volume-3I started out this decade believing that our society had more in common with the late 20s than any ofher decade prior. It would have been prudent of me to realize, that being the case, perhaps by the decade’s end we’d therefore have more in common with the early 30s than any other decade prior.

If you’ve picked up a paper over the past, oh, six months, you’ll certailny have noticed that the year 2009 is being synonimized with the early 1930s on an almost daily basis. And with it has brought a wave of resurrected interest in those extraordinarily hard years of the early ’30s–and in particular, the innovative films produced by what was a then tirelessly creative Hollywood.

Today, the LA Times posted a terrific retrospective on legendary director William “Wild Bill” Wellman whose films of the 1930s are strong, grim-faced, often-gritty statements on the times. I thought it a good idea to post this thoughtful article in wake of the new release of Forbidden Hollywood Volume 3, which features a set of the helmer’s best depression-era, pre-code films. And tomorrow night, the TCM gods will smile upon us with a presentation of these semi-forgotten cinematic gems: Wild Boys of the Road (1933), Other Men’s Women (1931), The Purchase Price (1932), Frisco Jenny (1932), Heroes For Sale (1933), Midnight Mary (1933) and the William Wellman documentary from Richard Schikel’s legendary Men Who Made the Movies series.

LA Times article below:

Like Americans during the Depression, the director’s characters faced harsh realities.

By Sam Adams

March 22, 2009

As profiles of him are required to note, William A. Wellman was known as “Wild Bill” to friend and foe alike. But what’s striking about the six Wellman-directed films in the third volume of Warner Bros.’ “Forbidden Hollywood” DVD series, released this week, is their often ruthless discipline.

However volatile Wellman was behind the camera — he is reputed to have placed a truckload of manure atop a studio executive’s desk, along with a copy of a script he found unworthy of his talents — his movies are models of economy, whizzing past plot points at breakneck speed, sometimes so fast that they come into focus only in the rearview mirror.

Wellman, who earned his nickname as a World War I aviator, brought a tough-minded sentimentality to such movies as “Wings” and “The Public Enemy.” He had an omnivorous appetite for Hollywood genres, trying his hand at melodrama and screwball comedy, problem pictures and Tarzan movies, with varying degrees of success.

Despite his antipathy to authority, Wellman was an energetic participant in the studio system, turning out as many as half a dozen films a year, a pace that reached its peak in the pre-code years.

Previous “Forbidden Hollywood” sets emphasized the sexually liberated women and morally compromised men who ran rampant on screen in the years before 1934, when the enforcement of the production code imposed a conservative social and political agenda on the industry’s output. But the half-dozen movies included here, all released between 1931 and 1933, aren’t a particularly salacious bunch.

There’s plenty of behavior that would have been unthinkable under the code, including unpunished adultery in “Other Men’s Women” and a mail-order marriage in “The Purchase Price,” but little in the way of superfluous sex and violence. (For that, you have to turn to Wellman’s “Night Nurse,” released in Volume Two.)

Wellman sometimes said he disliked working with actresses; in his brief on-screen career, his most notable accomplishment was cold-cocking Raoul Walsh’s wife. But he showed an affinity for the tough-talking broads of the pre-code era — actresses like Loretta Young, whose career was strongly altered with the advent of the code, and Barbara Stanwyck, who survived by radically reconfiguring her screen persona.

The female crime lords of “Frisco Jenny” and “Midnight Mary,” played by Ruth Chatterton and Young, respectively, show a poise and power that make them the equal if not the superior of the men around them. They’re certainly more intriguing than Grant Withers’ blank-faced flirt in “Other Men’s Women,” whose trait is his habit of distributing gum at awkward moments.

“Wild Boys of the Road” doesn’t offer camp thrills or titillation, but its portrait of Depression-era life is sobering and at times astonishing. Following a pair of small-town teens who hop a boxcar looking for work, the movie sets their bright-eyed optimism on a collision course with the harsh reality of the times. As their numbers grow to dozens, then hundreds, the dispossessed younger generation forms its own society in a sewer-pipe shanty town, a place where justice is more likely to be administered by mob rule than by the police.

Emphasizing hard-bitten authenticity, including a sequence in which a limb is severed by a locomotive, Wellman mounts an implicit critique of the escapist spectacles of the time, casting Busby Berkeley dancer Dorothy Coonan (who would become the fourth Mrs. Wellman) as a cross-dressing tramp who winds up tap-dancing for her supper.

“Heroes for Sale” is even harsher. Richard Barthelmess returns from World War I a morphine addict, thanks to a stay in a German field hospital, and finds that a cowardly fellow soldier has taken credit for the raid in which he was wounded. Struggling to find his way back into society, he finds a job at an industrial laundry, only to be unfairly jailed when the workers’ attempt to improve their collective lot draws a violent response from the authorities.

When he emerges, the bread lines stretch for blocks, and the onetime war hero is left to trudge between towns, indomitable but still unfulfilled.

Both movies end on a guardedly upbeat note, paying obligatory tribute to the tenacity of the American spirit. But their studio-mandated optimism rings hollow next to the grim realism that precedes it, a trait the production code drove out along with salty dialogue and sultry come-ones.



Sita Sings!

Back in January, we featured a post on the status of  Nina Paley’s animated musical Sita Sing the Blues which was facing serious copyright issues over its unlicensed use of Annette Henshaw music from the 1920s. Apparently the Gods have looked kindly upon Miss Paley, and Sita will air March 7th on PBS (WNET) in New York. Congrats Nina–and thanks to BoingBoing for the heads up!



Vintage Magazine: Modern Priscilla, 1923
January 14, 2009, 7:18 am
Filed under: 1920s, art, culture, illustration, journalism, nostalgia

Another magazine cover and advertisement plucked from my collection. The Modern Priscilla was a precursor to the Women’s Day magazines we know today: sewing patterns, recipes, cooking tips and trends fill the pages. These magazines don’t have the wit or flash of, say, the era’s Vogue and Cosmopolitans, but they are still fun to read. Color ads are few, but do they ever pop!

modernpriscilla2modernpriscilla



Life Magazine 1924 Cartoons – What Makes Actors So Darn Special?

I adore early 20th century magazine cartoons. They’re silly, yes, but ever so pointed and do they ever call a spade a gosh darn spade.

Looking through my collecion of old magazines I came across this Life magazine from 1924 (back then it was more of a fiction & poetry journal instead rather than the pictorial format that later made it famous) and I rather think it still makes a good point even today. I’m a hopeless cinephile, don’t get me wrong, and I made a complete asinine fool of myself when I spotted Gerard Butler at the supermarket not long ago, but the questions posed in this particular editorial cartoon still ring true (in my humble opinion). Just why should screen actors get, shall we say, musical accompaniment when the rest of us don’t? (say, oh i dunno, the middle school teacher’s $35,000 annum as opposed to the actor’s $1 mill+ per picture.)

lifemag_1924

lifemag_1924b



Sita Sings the Blues—and gets her mouth duct-taped.

pushpakhlankavertical11x141920s jazz chanteuse Annette Hanshaw hasn’t had this much press since … well, the 1920s. Nina Paley’s feature length animated feature, Sita Sings the Blues, has become something of a critics darling over the past few months during its search for a distributor, only to find itself in copyright purgatory. Paley’s film is an animated version of the Indian fable Ramayana set to a soundtrack of vintage Annette Hanshaw recordings. According to critics the result is a spectacular visual feast–Roger Ebert being a particularly vocal supporter of the film. Unfortunately, you and I and the rest of the world’s weary wage slaves will probably never see it due to an intellectual property battle over the licensing Hanshaw’s music. According to QuestionCopyright.org, “although the recordings are out of copyright, the compositions themselves are still restricted. That means if you want to make a film using these songs from the 1920s, you have to pay money — a lot of money (around $50,000.00).” It’s not a simple matter of giving the film a new soundtrack because, according to Paley, Hanshaw’s music is what inspired the film and the scenes are built around it. (I mean, try slapping a non-Beatles soundtrack to the Cirque du Soleil’s  Love.) Nina Paley’s blog expains in detail how she plans to go about getting the funds necessary to get Sita out of copyright hell.
Thoughts anyone? Is Paley’s film a victim of the big bad wolf or should she just simply have just known better?