The Flickr Metrogoldwynmayer Image Generatr

About

This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.

Daliah Lavi and George Hamilton by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Daliah Lavi and George Hamilton

Vintage press photo by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Daliah Lavi and George Hamilton on the set of Two Weeks in Another Town (Vincente Minelli, 1962), filmed in Rome.

Israeli actress Daliah Lavi (1942-2017) was a ravishing beauty who appeared in dozens of European films in the 1960s and later also in American films. With her mini-skirts and thigh-high boots, she pursued sex symbol status via Italian erotic horror films and spy spoofs such as Casino Royale (1967). After her film career, she became a well-known Schlager singer in Germany.

American actor George Hamilton (1939) won a Golden Globe for his film debut in Crime and Punishment U.S.A. (1959). Although he has a substantial body of work in film and television, he is most famous for his debonair style and perpetual suntan.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Daliah Lavi and George Hamilton by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Daliah Lavi and George Hamilton

Vintage press photo by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Daliah Lavi and George Hamilton doing the twist on the set of Two Weeks in Another Town (Vincente Minelli, 1962), filmed in Rome.

Israeli actress Daliah Lavi (1942-2017) was a ravishing beauty who appeared in dozens of European films in the 1960s and later also in American films. With her mini-skirts and thigh-high boots, she pursued sex symbol status via Italian erotic horror films and spy spoofs such as Casino Royale (1967). After her film career, she became a well-known Schlager singer in Germany.

American actor George Hamilton (1939) won a Golden Globe for his film debut in Crime and Punishment U.S.A. (1959). Although he has a substantial body of work in film and television, he is most famous for his debonair style and perpetual suntan.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Jose Crespo by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Jose Crespo

Vintage Spanish postcard. Series Estrellas del cine, No. 105. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

José Crespo Férez (Murcia, November 7, 1900 - id. March 19, 1997) was a Spanish actor who worked in Spain, Hollywood and Mexico.

Son of Manuel and Patrocinio, he was orphaned when his mother was 38 years old. Until the age of 14 he studied at the Marist Brothers School in Paseo del Malecón. Attracted by the theater to the point of attending performances at the Romea Theater as a child, writing short plays and making cardboard scenery, he left a job in banking to move to Madrid with his older brother when he was 18, and there he began his career as an actor at the Teatro Español and the company of Catalina Bárcena and Gregorio Martínez Sierra. He participated in small plays by Carlos Arniches and even in George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion and plays by Charles Dickens until eight years after his trip he became the first actor of the company. He then returned to Murcia and filled the Romea theater for two days with the play El corazón ciego, by Gregorio Martínez Sierra. He debuted in the cinema with the film Mancha que limpia (1924), an adaptation of the homonymous drama by José Echegaray, with Aurora Redondo. In 1925 she was with Catalina Bárcena at the Fémina Theater in Paris, toured several Latin American countries and arrived in the United States in December 1926, where she had a great success in Los Angeles with the play El gran Galeoto by José Echegaray, attracting the attention of the film studios, where he entered under the patronage of Edwin Carewe and Dolores del Río.

He settled in Hollywood definitively in 1928. His first American film was Edwin Carewe's Revenge, starring Dolores Del Rio, and he acted in one of the first sound films, the Fox production Joy Street (1929), starring Lois Moran. In May 1930, after staying a few months apart in Mexico because he lacked a residence permit in the United States, he was called by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer with a long-term contract and obtained a visa for an indefinite period of time. Metro planned to use him to replace John Gilbert in the dubbed versions of their films for Spanish America and the two actors got to know each other and became good friends. With the disappearance of silent films, he specialized (1930-35) in the dubbed and interpreted versions with native actors in Spanish of films of United Artists, Fox and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer before dubbing off became generalized; for Fox he did mostly comedies, and for Metro dramas; he was an actor not only in Spanish films, but also in English, a language he spoke perfectly. He later acted in New York on radio for the Hispanic market for CBS, including the series Hollywood por dentro, and when the Spanish dubbing studios were established in New York, he was hired as director.

In particular, Crespo was the regular voice of Joseph Cotten in Paramount films. In 1936 he settled in Mexico and then, after a brief stay in Spain, he returned to the United States (1964) to direct the Spanish Theater of New York. The play by Pedro Calderón de la Barca chosen for the debut, La vida es sueño, reached 84 performances in Spanish. His last film was Un millón de dólares fuera de impuestos (1980), with José Luis López Vázquez. He starred with actors such as Charles Chaplin, Gary Cooper, Douglas Fairbanks or Dolores del Río, becoming known in Hollywood as “the Spanish Valentino”.

For a time the actor worked in Mexico starring in several films and befriended the notorious actress Hilda Krüger, then reaped several successes in Cuba. In 1967 he returned definitively to Spain and settled in Madrid. He moved away from the profession, but still participated in small roles or collaborating with friends like Antonio Mercero in his television series Este señor de negro. In 1989 he settled permanently in Murcia and lived the last years of his life in a residence in front of the Mar Menor, surrounded by his memories and was recognized in 1996 with the Gold Medal of the Centenary of Spanish Cinema by the Spanish Film Academy.

Source: Spanish Wikipedia.

Carmen Guerrero by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Carmen Guerrero

Vintage Spanish postcard. Series Estrellas del cine, No. 145. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Carmen Guerrero, aka Carmen Guerrero Franco, was a Mexican actress, born on September 2, 1911 in Mexico city, Mexico. She had a successful career in Spanish alternate versions of early Hollywood sound films and afterward in Mexican cinema of the early 1930s. Guerrero was married to and Félix Romero Arias, Adolfo Girón, and lastly, Glen Coben Smith, She died on December 11, 1986, also in Mexico city.

Guerrero was the daughter of a civil engineer from Puebla and a woman from Guadalajara. After a bit part in the Laurel & Hardy comedy Double Whoopee (Lewis R. Foster, Hal Roach 1929), Guerrero's first substantial part was in a Mexican independent production shot in California: Dios y ley (1930) by Guillermo Calles. This effected in the start of performances in Spanish alternate versions of some ten Hollywood films, including the Spanish version of Dracula: Drácula (1931) by George Melford, in which Guerrero played Lucy/Lucia. She had the female leads in e.g. Cascarrabias (Cyril Gardner, 1930) opposite Ernesto Vilches and Barry Norton, Huye-Faldas (James W. Horne, 1931) with Charley Chase, Una cana al aire (Horne, 1931) again with Chase, Un fotógrafo distraído (Xavier Cugat, 1931) with Don Alvarado, and La gran jornada (David Howard, Samuel Schneider, Raoul Walsh, 1931), the Spanish version of The Big Trail.

In 1932 Guerrero returned to Mexico as celebrated movie star, and starred in the female lead of several Mexican films, dealing with cattle thieves (Mano a mano, 1932), the Mexican Revolution (Revolución, 1933; El compadre Mendoza, 1934), a biopic of a Mexican music composer (Sobre las olas, 1933), but also simple melodrama (La calandria, 1933). Yet, after 1934, Guerrero's career petered out. She still had the lead in Raphael Sevilla's María Elena (1936), but afterward only three more films followed between 1936 and 1946, in which she had supporting parts.

Source: IMDb.

Julio Peña by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Julio Peña

Vintage Spanish postcard. Series Estrellas del cine, No. 158. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Julio Peña (1912-1972) was a Spanish actor. Born in Madrid, Peña debuted in Spanish language films at the Paris Paramount studio, in Doña mentiras (Adelqui Migliar), the Spanish version of The Lady Lies, starring Carmen Larrabeiti and Félix de Pomés. He then acted at MGM in California in the Spanish version of Min and Bill, La fruta amarga (Arthur Gregor,José López Rubio, 1931) with Virginia Fábregas and Juan de Landa in the title roles. Peña stayed at MGM for the alternate language versions of Madame X (La mujer X,
Carlos F. Borcosque, 1931), while he had a first lead opposite Larrabeiti at Fox in Esclavas de la moda (David Howard, Francisco Moré de la Torre, 1931), the Spanish version of On Your Back, and also co-acted in the Fox film Mamá (Benito Perojo, 1931).

Peña stayed at Fox for more Spanish language films: Primavera en otoño (Eugene Forde, 1933), Una viuda romántica (Louis King, 1933), Yo, tú y ella (John Reinhardt, 1933), La ciudad de cartón (Louis King, 1933), all starring Catalina Bárcena; followed by the Fox productions Un capitán de cosacos (John Reinhardt, 1934) with José Mojica and Rosita Moreno, Julieta compra un hijo (Louis King, Gregorio Martínez Sierra, 1934) with Bárcena and Gilbert Roland, Rosa de Francia (José López Rubio, Gordon Wiles, 1935), and Fox's last Spanish language production: Angelina o el honor de un brigadier (Louis King, Miguel de Zárraga, 1935). a comedy starring Enrique de Rosas. After the Universal production Alas sobre El Chaco (1935) by Christy Cabanne, the Spanish version of Storm over the Andes, and four years of acting in alternative versions in California, Peña left Hollywood and returned to Spain to act on stage and on screen.

From 1938, when the Civil War ended, Peña started acting in Spanish films produced in Spain, first in Las cinco advertencias de Satanás (Isidro Socías, 1938) with Félix de Pomés in the lead. Several Spanish films followed but also André Malraux's civil war film L'espoir (1940, released in France in 1945). During the war years, Peña peaked in Spanish cinema. Exceptionally, he acted at the Cinecittà studios in Rome in the Italian-Spanish co-production La última falla/ Ultima fiamma (1940) by Benito Perojo, but he mostly acted in the film studios in Madrid, with leads e.g. .opposite Mary Carillo in Marianela (1940) by Perojo and opposite Conchita Montes in Correo de Indias (Edgar Neville, 1942). In 1945 he had a supporting part in the Spanish version of Vittorio De Sica's comedy Maddalena, zero in condotta: Cero en conducta (Fyodor Otsep/ Ozep, José María Téllez, 1945), with Italian=Brazilian actress Irasema Dilian in the lead - who had acted in De SIca's film as well but not in the lead.

Immediately after the war, Peña had the lead in Rafael Gil's Tierra sedienta (1945), about a man who after war is over finds out his former love is married to an engineer (Fernando Rey) who is building a dam where he has just got a job. Other postwar films were e.g. Un drama nuevo (Juan de Orduña, 1946), Serenata española (Juan de Orduña, 1947) and Confidencia (Jerónimo Mihura Santos, 1947). After marrying actress Susana Canales in 1953, both formed their own theater company and his film career began to be relegated to supporting roles, in many cases and during the late 50's and 1960's, in prestigious Antiquity films such as Alexander the Great (Robert Rossen, 1956) and Solomon and Sheba (King Vidor, 1959), both filmed in Spain with several Spanish supporting actors, and Spaghetti Westerns. Other memorable performances he had in the films Punto y banca (1961) and El noveno mandamiento (1963), both by Enrique Carreras, and Pampa salvaje (1966), directed by Hugo Fregonese. He died suddenly at the age of 60 in Marbella, where he was spending a few days of rest, after participating in the film Panic on the Trans-Siberian. Until 1972, Julio Peña acted in over 100 films.

Sources: IMDb, Spanish Wikipedia.

Nelson Eddy by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Nelson Eddy

British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. 945b. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

The only career Nelson Eddy (1901-1967) ever considered was singing. The classically trained baritone achieved his greatest popularity through eight films with Jeanette MacDonald, with whom he formed a regular screen couple in the 1930s and 1940s. At the height of his career, he received more fan mail than any other star on the MGM payroll.

Nelson Ackerman Eddy was born in 1901 in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. He was the son of Isabel (Kendrick) and William Darius Eddy. His parents were singers, and his grandparents were musicians. Nelson studied singing as a child, and in 1924, he won a competition and was allowed to perform with the Philadelphia Opera Society. The conductor of the Philadelphia Civic Opera, Alexander Smallens, began to train and promote Eddy. In the late 1920s, Eddy performed with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company and sang a broad repertoire of 28 operatic roles, including Le nozze di Figaro. Eddy also appeared with the Savoy Company, which produced popular operettas by Gilbert & Sullivan. Eddy studied briefly with noted teacher David Bispham, a former Metropolitan Opera singer, and switched after his death to William Vilonat. Dr. Edouard Lippe coached him and loaned him in 1927 the money to study in Dresden and Paris. Dresden was considered an essential training centre for American singers at the time. Eddy turned down an offer of an engagement with a small German opera house and returned to the United States. He gave his first concert recital in 1928 in Philadelphia. When Eddy went on his first tour, he hired Theodore Paxson, who remained his accompanist for four decades. In 1933, he did 18 encores for an audience in Los Angeles that included an assistant to MGM studio chief Louis B. Mayer, who signed him to a seven-year contract, which allowed him three months of concert tours per year. Mayer ordered Eddy to test for his debut in the film Broadway to Hollywood (Willard Mack, Jules White, 1933). The 33-year-old newcomer took a record 58 takes before the exasperated test director gave up. Despite this failure, Mayer overruled the consensus about Eddy's acting talent, non-existent, and ordered him to be used for a singing sequence in the film only. The producers at MGM didn't know what to do with Eddy and only allowed him to appear for individual songs in his following films. But the audience reacted favourably to this.

After MGM acting lessons, Nelson Eddy's first real success came as the Yankee scout to Jeanette MacDonald's French princess in the Operetta Naughty Marietta (Robert Z. Leonard, W.S. Van Dyke, 1935). It was a huge box-office hit made on a small budget. The film was nominated for an Oscar, received a Photoplay Award and was voted one of the ten best films of 1935 by the New York Film Critics. Eddy made six more films with Jeanette MacDonald, including Rose-Marie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936), and Maytime (Robert Z. Leonard, Edmund Goulding, 1937), which grossed over 4 million US dollars at the box office. Concert appearances became increasingly lucrative for Eddy with his film fame, but he only sang occasionally on the opera stage. His last film with MacDonald was I Married an Angel (W.S. Van Dyke, 1942). Nelson Eddy also appeared with other leading ladies over the years, such as in Rosalie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1937) with Eleanor Powell and Balalaika (Reinhold Schünzel, 1939), where he appeared alongside Ilona Massey. The Chocolate Soldier (Roy Del Ruth, 1941) was an adaptation of a Viennese operetta by Ferenc Molnár. Eddy appeared in a double role alongside Met singer Risë Stevens. Critics nearly always panned his acting. After the financial failure of I Married an Angel, Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald left MGM. In 1943, Eddy signed a contract with Universal for two films: Phantom of the Opera and Follow the Boys. The musical Phantom of the Opera (Arthur Lubin, 1943), lavishly produced in Technicolour, was based on the well-known novel by Gaston Leroux and songs by Edward Ward. Eddy appeared in it alongside Susanna Foster and Claude Rains but was so dissatisfied with the film afterwards that he abandoned the filming of Follow the Boys, in which he would have appeared again alongside Jeanette MacDonald, and left Universal. In his home studio, he recorded three-part harmonies (tenor, baritone, & bass) for his role as a multiple-voiced singing whale in the animated Walt Disney feature, 'The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met', the concluding sequence in the animated musical anthology film Make Mine Music (Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi, a.o., 1946). Eddy appeared with Ilona Massey in his last film, the musical Western Northwest Outpost (Allan Dwan, 1947), produced by Republic. Nelson Eddy had a large radio following. His theme song was 'Short'nin Bread'. In 1959, Eddy and MacDonald issued a recording of their film hits, which sold well. In 1953, he had a fairly successful nightclub routine with Gale Sherwood, which ran until he died in 1967. He suffered a fatal stroke while performing in concert. He was interred at Hollywood Memorial Cemetery, now called Hollywood Forever. Nelson Eddy and his wife, Anne Denitz, had no children. He had one child, Jon, with ex-girlfriend Maybelle Marston, born in the early 1930s, and he had a stepson, Sidney Franklin Jr.

Source: Ed Stephan (IMDb), Wikipedia (Dutch, German and English) and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Nelson Eddy by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Nelson Eddy

German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. A 2783/1, 1939-1940. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

The only career Nelson Eddy (1901-1967) ever considered was singing. The classically trained baritone achieved his greatest popularity through eight films with Jeanette MacDonald, with whom he formed a regular screen couple in the 1930s and 1940s. At the height of his career, he received more fan mail than any other star on the MGM payroll.

Nelson Ackerman Eddy was born in 1901 in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. He was the son of Isabel (Kendrick) and William Darius Eddy. His parents were singers, and his grandparents were musicians. Nelson studied singing as a child and in 1924 he won a competition and was allowed to perform with the Philadelphia Opera Society. The conductor of the Philadelphia Civic Opera, Alexander Smallens, began to train and promote Eddy. In the late 1920s, Eddy performed with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company and sang a broad repertoire of 28 operatic roles, including Le nozze di Figaro. Eddy also appeared with the Savoy Company, which produced popular operettas by Gilbert & Sullivan. Eddy studied briefly with noted teacher David Bispham, a former Metropolitan Opera singer, and switched after his death to William Vilonat. Dr. Edouard Lippe coached him and loaned him in 1927 the money to study in Dresden and Paris. Dresden was considered an essential training centre for American singers at the time. Eddy turned down an offer of an engagement with a small German opera house and returned to the United States. He gave his first concert recital in 1928 in Philadelphia. When Eddy went on his first tour, he hired Theodore Paxson, who remained his accompanist for four decades. In 1933 he did 18 encores for an audience in Los Angeles that included an assistant to MGM studio chief Louis B. Mayer, who signed him to a seven-year contract, which allowed him three months of concert tours per year. Mayer ordered Eddy to test for his debut in the film Broadway to Hollywood (Willard Mack, Jules White, 1933). The 33-year-old newcomer took a record 58 takes before the exasperated test director gave up. Despite this failure, Mayer overruled the consensus about Eddy's acting talent - non-existent - and ordered him used for a singing sequence in the film only. The producers at MGM didn't know what to do with Eddy and only allowed him to appear for individual songs in his following films. But the audience reacted favourably to this.

After MGM acting lessons, Nelson Eddy's first real success came as the Yankee scout to Jeanette MacDonald's French princess in the Operetta Naughty Marietta (Robert Z. Leonard, W.S. Van Dyke, 1935). It was a huge box-office hit made on a small budget. The film was nominated for an Oscar, received a Photoplay Award and was voted one of the ten best films of 1935 by the New York Film Critics. Eddy made six more films with Jeanette MacDonald, including Rose-Marie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936), and Maytime (Robert Z. Leonard, Edmund Goulding, 1937), which grossed over 4 million US dollars at the box office. Concert appearances became increasingly lucrative for Eddy with his film fame, but he only sang occasionally on the opera stage. His last film with MacDonald was I Married an Angel (W.S. Van Dyke, 1942). Nelson Eddy also appeared with other leading ladies over the years, such as in Rosalie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1937) with Eleanor Powell and Balalaika (Reinhold Schünzel, 1939), where he appeared alongside Ilona Massey. The Chocolate Soldier (Roy Del Ruth, 1941) was an adaptation of a Viennese operetta by Ferenc Molnár. Eddy appeared in a double role alongside Met singer Risë Stevens. Critics nearly always panned his acting. After the financial failure of I Married an Angel, Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald left MGM. In 1943, Eddy signed a contract with Universal for two films: Phantom of the Opera and Follow the Boys. The musical Phantom of the Opera (Arthur Lubin, 1943), lavishly produced in Technicolor, was based on the well-known novel by Gaston Leroux and songs by Edward Ward. Eddy appeared in it alongside Susanna Foster and Claude Rains but was so dissatisfied with the film afterwards that he abandoned the filming of Follow the Boys, in which he would have appeared again alongside Jeanette MacDonald, and left Universal. In his home studio, he recorded three-part harmonies (tenor, baritone, & bass) for his role as a multiple-voiced singing whale in the animated Walt Disney feature, 'The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met', the concluding sequence in the animated musical anthology film Make Mine Music (Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi, a.o., 1946). Eddy appeared with Ilona Massey in his last film, the musical Western Northwest Outpost (Allan Dwan, 1947), produced by Republic. Nelson Eddy had a large radio following. His theme song was 'Short'nin Bread'. In 1959 Eddy and MacDonald issued a recording of their film hits which sold well. In 1953 he had a fairly successful nightclub routine with Gale Sherwood which ran until he died in 1967. He suffered a fatal stroke while performing in concert. He was interred at Hollywood Memorial Cemetery, now called Hollywood Forever. Nelson Eddy and his wife Anne Denitz had no children. He had one child, Jon, with ex-girlfriend Maybelle Marston, born in the early 1930s, and he had a stepson, Sidney Franklin Jr.

Source: Ed Stephan (IMDb), Wikipedia (Dutch, German and English) and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Nelson Eddy by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Nelson Eddy

German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. A 2942/1, 1939-1940. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

The only career Nelson Eddy (1901-1967) ever considered was singing. The classically trained baritone achieved his greatest popularity through eight films with Jeanette MacDonald, with whom he formed a regular screen couple in the 1930s and 1940s. At the height of his career, he received more fan mail than any other star on the MGM payroll.

Nelson Ackerman Eddy was born in 1901 in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. He was the son of Isabel (Kendrick) and William Darius Eddy. His parents were singers, and his grandparents were musicians. Nelson studied singing as a child and in 1924 he won a competition and was allowed to perform with the Philadelphia Opera Society. The conductor of the Philadelphia Civic Opera, Alexander Smallens, began to train and promote Eddy. In the late 1920s, Eddy performed with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company and sang a broad repertoire of 28 operatic roles, including Le nozze di Figaro. Eddy also appeared with the Savoy Company, which produced popular operettas by Gilbert & Sullivan. Eddy studied briefly with noted teacher David Bispham, a former Metropolitan Opera singer, and switched after his death to William Vilonat. Dr. Edouard Lippe coached him and loaned him in 1927 the money to study in Dresden and Paris. Dresden was considered an essential training centre for American singers at the time. Eddy turned down an offer of an engagement with a small German opera house and returned to the United States. He gave his first concert recital in 1928 in Philadelphia. When Eddy went on his first tour, he hired Theodore Paxson, who remained his accompanist for four decades. In 1933 he did 18 encores for an audience in Los Angeles that included an assistant to MGM studio chief Louis B. Mayer, who signed him to a seven-year contract, which allowed him three months of concert tours per year. Mayer ordered Eddy to test for his debut in the film Broadway to Hollywood (Willard Mack, Jules White, 1933). The 33-year-old newcomer took a record 58 takes before the exasperated test director gave up. Despite this failure, Mayer overruled the consensus about Eddy's acting talent - non-existent - and ordered him used for a singing sequence in the film only. The producers at MGM didn't know what to do with Eddy and only allowed him to appear for individual songs in his following films. But the audience reacted favourably to this.

After MGM acting lessons, Nelson Eddy's first real success came as the Yankee scout to Jeanette MacDonald's French princess in the Operetta Naughty Marietta (Robert Z. Leonard, W.S. Van Dyke, 1935). It was a huge box-office hit made on a small budget. The film was nominated for an Oscar, received a Photoplay Award and was voted one of the ten best films of 1935 by the New York Film Critics. Eddy made six more films with Jeanette MacDonald, including Rose-Marie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936), and Maytime (Robert Z. Leonard, Edmund Goulding, 1937), which grossed over 4 million US dollars at the box office. Concert appearances became increasingly lucrative for Eddy with his film fame, but he only sang occasionally on the opera stage. His last film with MacDonald was I Married an Angel (W.S. Van Dyke, 1942). Nelson Eddy also appeared with other leading ladies over the years, such as in Rosalie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1937) with Eleanor Powell and Balalaika (Reinhold Schünzel, 1939), where he appeared alongside Ilona Massey. The Chocolate Soldier (Roy Del Ruth, 1941) was an adaptation of a Viennese operetta by Ferenc Molnár. Eddy appeared in a double role alongside Met singer Risë Stevens. Critics nearly always panned his acting. After the financial failure of I Married an Angel, Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald left MGM. In 1943, Eddy signed a contract with Universal for two films: Phantom of the Opera and Follow the Boys. The musical Phantom of the Opera (Arthur Lubin, 1943), lavishly produced in Technicolor, was based on the well-known novel by Gaston Leroux and songs by Edward Ward. Eddy appeared in it alongside Susanna Foster and Claude Rains but was so dissatisfied with the film afterwards that he abandoned the filming of Follow the Boys, in which he would have appeared again alongside Jeanette MacDonald, and left Universal. In his home studio, he recorded three-part harmonies (tenor, baritone, & bass) for his role as a multiple-voiced singing whale in the animated Walt Disney feature, 'The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met', the concluding sequence in the animated musical anthology film Make Mine Music (Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi, a.o., 1946). Eddy appeared with Ilona Massey in his last film, the musical Western Northwest Outpost (Allan Dwan, 1947), produced by Republic. Nelson Eddy had a large radio following. His theme song was 'Short'nin Bread'. In 1959 Eddy and MacDonald issued a recording of their film hits which sold well. In 1953 he had a fairly successful nightclub routine with Gale Sherwood which ran until he died in 1967. He suffered a fatal stroke while performing in concert. He was interred at Hollywood Memorial Cemetery, now called Hollywood Forever. Nelson Eddy and his wife Anne Denitz had no children. He had one child, Jon, with ex-girlfriend Maybelle Marston, born in the early 1930s, and he had a stepson, Sidney Franklin Jr.

Source: Ed Stephan (IMDb), Wikipedia (Dutch, German and English) and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Jeanette MacDonald by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Jeanette MacDonald

Vintage Dutch postcard. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 683. 1930s. Photo probably taken on the deck of a ship.

Red-headed and blue-green eyed operatic singer Jeanette MacDonald (1903-1965) was discovered for the cinema by Ernst Lubitsch, who cast her opposite Maurice Chevalier in The Love Parade (1929). Later 'the Iron Butterfly' co-starred with Nelson Eddy in a string of successful musicals and played opposite Clark Gable in San Francisco (1936).

Nelson Eddy by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Nelson Eddy

German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. A 1506/1, 1937-1938. Photo: M.G.M.

The only career Nelson Eddy (1901-1967) ever considered was singing. The classically trained baritone achieved his greatest popularity through eight films with Jeanette MacDonald, with whom he formed a regular screen couple in the 1930s and 1940s. At the height of his career, he received more fan mail than any other star on the MGM payroll.

Nelson Ackerman Eddy was born in 1901 in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. He was the son of Isabel (Kendrick) and William Darius Eddy. His parents were singers, and his grandparents were musicians. Nelson studied singing as a child and in 1924 he won a competition and was allowed to perform with the Philadelphia Opera Society. The conductor of the Philadelphia Civic Opera, Alexander Smallens, began to train and promote Eddy. In the late 1920s, Eddy performed with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company and sang a broad repertoire of 28 operatic roles, including Le nozze di Figaro. Eddy also appeared with the Savoy Company, which produced popular operettas by Gilbert & Sullivan. Eddy studied briefly with noted teacher David Bispham, a former Metropolitan Opera singer, and switched after his death to William Vilonat. Dr. Edouard Lippe coached him and loaned him in 1927 the money to study in Dresden and Paris. Dresden was considered an essential training centre for American singers at the time. Eddy turned down an offer of an engagement with a small German opera house and returned to the United States. He gave his first concert recital in 1928 in Philadelphia. When Eddy went on his first tour, he hired Theodore Paxson, who remained his accompanist for four decades. In 1933 he did 18 encores for an audience in Los Angeles that included an assistant to MGM studio chief Louis B. Mayer, who signed him to a seven-year contract, which allowed him three months of concert tours per year. Mayer ordered Eddy to test for his debut in the film Broadway to Hollywood (Willard Mack, Jules White, 1933). The 33-year-old newcomer took a record 58 takes before the exasperated test director gave up. Despite this failure, Mayer overruled the consensus about Eddy's acting talent - non-existent - and ordered him used for a singing sequence in the film only. The producers at MGM didn't know what to do with Eddy and only allowed him to appear for individual songs in his following films. But the audience reacted favourably to this.

After MGM acting lessons, Nelson Eddy's first real success came as the Yankee scout to Jeanette MacDonald's French princess in the Operetta Naughty Marietta (Robert Z. Leonard, W.S. Van Dyke, 1935). It was a huge box-office hit made on a small budget. The film was nominated for an Oscar, received a Photoplay Award and was voted one of the ten best films of 1935 by the New York Film Critics. Eddy made six more films with Jeanette MacDonald, including Rose-Marie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936), and Maytime (Robert Z. Leonard, Edmund Goulding, 1937), which grossed over 4 million US dollars at the box office. Concert appearances became increasingly lucrative for Eddy with his film fame, but he only sang occasionally on the opera stage. His last film with MacDonald was I Married an Angel (W.S. Van Dyke, 1942). Nelson Eddy also appeared with other leading ladies over the years, such as in Rosalie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1937) with Eleanor Powell and Balalaika (Reinhold Schünzel, 1939), where he appeared alongside Ilona Massey. The Chocolate Soldier (Roy Del Ruth, 1941) was an adaptation of a Viennese operetta by Ferenc Molnár. Eddy appeared in a double role alongside Met singer Risë Stevens. Critics nearly always panned his acting. After the financial failure of I Married an Angel, Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald left MGM. In 1943, Eddy signed a contract with Universal for two films: Phantom of the Opera and Follow the Boys. The musical Phantom of the Opera (Arthur Lubin, 1943), lavishly produced in Technicolor, was based on the well-known novel by Gaston Leroux and songs by Edward Ward. Eddy appeared in it alongside Susanna Foster and Claude Rains but was so dissatisfied with the film afterwards that he abandoned the filming of Follow the Boys, in which he would have appeared again alongside Jeanette MacDonald, and left Universal. In his home studio, he recorded three-part harmonies (tenor, baritone, & bass) for his role as a multiple-voiced singing whale in the animated Walt Disney feature, 'The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met', the concluding sequence in the animated musical anthology film Make Mine Music (Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi, a.o., 1946). Eddy appeared with Ilona Massey in his last film, the musical Western Northwest Outpost (Allan Dwan, 1947), produced by Republic. Nelson Eddy had a large radio following. His theme song was 'Short'nin Bread'. In 1959 Eddy and MacDonald issued a recording of their film hits which sold well. In 1953 he had a fairly successful nightclub routine with Gale Sherwood which ran until he died in 1967. He suffered a fatal stroke while performing in concert. He was interred at Hollywood Memorial Cemetery, now called Hollywood Forever. Nelson Eddy and his wife Anne Denitz had no children. He had one child, Jon, with ex-girlfriend Maybelle Marston, born in the early 1930s, and he had a stepson, Sidney Franklin Jr.

Source: Ed Stephan (IMDb), Wikipedia (Dutch, German and English) and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Nelson Eddy by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Nelson Eddy

British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, no. W. 543. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

The only career Nelson Eddy (1901-1967) ever considered was singing. The classically trained baritone achieved his greatest popularity through eight films with Jeanette MacDonald, with whom he formed a regular screen couple in the 1930s and 1940s. At the height of his career, he received more fan mail than any other star on the MGM payroll.

Nelson Ackerman Eddy was born in 1901 in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. He was the son of Isabel (Kendrick) and William Darius Eddy. His parents were singers, and his grandparents were musicians. Nelson studied singing as a child and in 1924 he won a competition and was allowed to perform with the Philadelphia Opera Society. The conductor of the Philadelphia Civic Opera, Alexander Smallens, began to train and promote Eddy. In the late 1920s, Eddy performed with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company and sang a broad repertoire of 28 operatic roles, including Le nozze di Figaro. Eddy also appeared with the Savoy Company, which produced popular operettas by Gilbert & Sullivan. Eddy studied briefly with noted teacher David Bispham, a former Metropolitan Opera singer, and switched after his death to William Vilonat. Dr. Edouard Lippe coached him and loaned him in 1927 the money to study in Dresden and Paris. Dresden was considered an essential training centre for American singers at the time. Eddy turned down an offer of an engagement with a small German opera house and returned to the United States. He gave his first concert recital in 1928 in Philadelphia. When Eddy went on his first tour, he hired Theodore Paxson, who remained his accompanist for four decades. In 1933 he did 18 encores for an audience in Los Angeles that included an assistant to MGM studio chief Louis B. Mayer, who signed him to a seven-year contract, which allowed him three months of concert tours per year. Mayer ordered Eddy to test for his debut in the film Broadway to Hollywood (Willard Mack, Jules White, 1933). The 33-year-old newcomer took a record 58 takes before the exasperated test director gave up. Despite this failure, Mayer overruled the consensus about Eddy's acting talent - non-existent - and ordered him used for a singing sequence in the film only. The producers at MGM didn't know what to do with Eddy and only allowed him to appear for individual songs in his following films. But the audience reacted favourably to this.

After MGM acting lessons, Nelson Eddy's first real success came as the Yankee scout to Jeanette MacDonald's French princess in the Operetta Naughty Marietta (Robert Z. Leonard, W.S. Van Dyke, 1935). It was a huge box-office hit made on a small budget. The film was nominated for an Oscar, received a Photoplay Award and was voted one of the ten best films of 1935 by the New York Film Critics. Eddy made six more films with Jeanette MacDonald, including Rose-Marie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936), and Maytime (Robert Z. Leonard, Edmund Goulding, 1937), which grossed over 4 million US dollars at the box office. Concert appearances became increasingly lucrative for Eddy with his film fame, but he only sang occasionally on the opera stage. His last film with MacDonald was I Married an Angel (W.S. Van Dyke, 1942). Nelson Eddy also appeared with other leading ladies over the years, such as in Rosalie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1937) with Eleanor Powell and Balalaika (Reinhold Schünzel, 1939), where he appeared alongside Ilona Massey. The Chocolate Soldier (Roy Del Ruth, 1941) was an adaptation of a Viennese operetta by Ferenc Molnár. Eddy appeared in a double role alongside Met singer Risë Stevens. Critics nearly always panned his acting. After the financial failure of I Married an Angel, Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald left MGM. In 1943, Eddy signed a contract with Universal for two films: Phantom of the Opera and Follow the Boys. The musical Phantom of the Opera (Arthur Lubin, 1943), lavishly produced in Technicolor, was based on the well-known novel by Gaston Leroux and songs by Edward Ward. Eddy appeared in it alongside Susanna Foster and Claude Rains but was so dissatisfied with the film afterwards that he abandoned the filming of Follow the Boys, in which he would have appeared again alongside Jeanette MacDonald, and left Universal. In his home studio, he recorded three-part harmonies (tenor, baritone, & bass) for his role as a multiple-voiced singing whale in the animated Walt Disney feature, 'The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met', the concluding sequence in the animated musical anthology film Make Mine Music (Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi, a.o., 1946). Eddy appeared with Ilona Massey in his last film, the musical Western Northwest Outpost (Allan Dwan, 1947), produced by Republic. Nelson Eddy had a large radio following. His theme song was 'Short'nin Bread'. In 1959 Eddy and MacDonald issued a recording of their film hits which sold well. In 1953 he had a fairly successful nightclub routine with Gale Sherwood which ran until he died in 1967. He suffered a fatal stroke while performing in concert. He was interred at Hollywood Memorial Cemetery, now called Hollywood Forever. Nelson Eddy and his wife Anne Denitz had no children. He had one child, Jon, with ex-girlfriend Maybelle Marston, born in the early 1930s, and he had a stepson, Sidney Franklin Jr.

Source: Ed Stephan (IMDb), Wikipedia (Dutch, German and English) and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald in New Moon (1940) by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald in New Moon (1940)

British postcard in the Film Partners Series, London, no. P 328. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald in New Moon (Robert Z. Leonard, W.S. Van Dyke, 1940).

The only career Nelson Eddy (1901-1967) ever considered was singing. The classically trained baritone achieved his greatest popularity through eight films with Jeanette MacDonald, with whom he formed a regular screen couple in the 1930s and 1940s. At the height of his career, he received more fan mail than any other star on the MGM payroll.

Red-headed and blue-green-eyed operatic singer Jeanette MacDonald (1903-1965) was discovered for the cinema by Ernst Lubitsch, who cast her opposite Maurice Chevalier in The Love Parade (1929). Later 'the Iron Butterfly' co-starred with Nelson Eddy in a string of successful musicals and played opposite Clark Gable in San Francisco (1936).

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Nelson Eddy by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Nelson Eddy

Dutch postcard by Fotoarchief Film en Toneel. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

The only career Nelson Eddy (1901-1967) ever considered was singing. The classically trained baritone achieved his greatest popularity through eight films with Jeanette MacDonald, with whom he formed a regular screen couple in the 1930s and 1940s. At the height of his career, he received more fan mail than any other star on the MGM payroll.

Nelson Ackerman Eddy was born in 1901 in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. He was the son of Isabel (Kendrick) and William Darius Eddy. His parents were singers, and his grandparents were musicians. Nelson studied singing as a child and in 1924 he won a competition and was allowed to perform with the Philadelphia Opera Society. The conductor of the Philadelphia Civic Opera, Alexander Smallens, began to train and promote Eddy. In the late 1920s, Eddy performed with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company and sang a broad repertoire of 28 operatic roles, including Le nozze di Figaro. Eddy also appeared with the Savoy Company, which produced popular operettas by Gilbert & Sullivan. Eddy studied briefly with noted teacher David Bispham, a former Metropolitan Opera singer, and switched after his death to William Vilonat. Dr. Edouard Lippe coached him and loaned him in 1927 the money to study in Dresden and Paris. Dresden was considered an essential training centre for American singers at the time. Eddy turned down an offer of an engagement with a small German opera house and returned to the United States. He gave his first concert recital in 1928 in Philadelphia. When Eddy went on his first tour, he hired Theodore Paxson, who remained his accompanist for four decades. In 1933 he did 18 encores for an audience in Los Angeles that included an assistant to MGM studio chief Louis B. Mayer, who signed him to a seven-year contract, which allowed him three months of concert tours per year. Mayer ordered Eddy to test for his debut in the film Broadway to Hollywood (Willard Mack, Jules White, 1933). The 33-year-old newcomer took a record 58 takes before the exasperated test director gave up. Despite this failure, Mayer overruled the consensus about Eddy's acting talent - non-existent - and ordered him used for a singing sequence in the film only. The producers at MGM didn't know what to do with Eddy and only allowed him to appear for individual songs in his following films. But the audience reacted favourably to this.

After MGM acting lessons, Nelson Eddy's first real success came as the Yankee scout to Jeanette MacDonald's French princess in the Operetta Naughty Marietta (Robert Z. Leonard, W.S. Van Dyke, 1935). It was a huge box-office hit made on a small budget. The film was nominated for an Oscar, received a Photoplay Award and was voted one of the ten best films of 1935 by the New York Film Critics. Eddy made six more films with Jeanette MacDonald, including Rose-Marie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936), and Maytime (Robert Z. Leonard, Edmund Goulding, 1937), which grossed over 4 million US dollars at the box office. Concert appearances became increasingly lucrative for Eddy with his film fame, but he only sang occasionally on the opera stage. His last film with MacDonald was I Married an Angel (W.S. Van Dyke, 1942). Nelson Eddy also appeared with other leading ladies over the years, such as in Rosalie (W.S. Van Dyke, 1937) with Eleanor Powell and Balalaika (Reinhold Schünzel, 1939), where he appeared alongside Ilona Massey. The Chocolate Soldier (Roy Del Ruth, 1941) was an adaptation of a Viennese operetta by Ferenc Molnár. Eddy appeared in a double role alongside Met singer Risë Stevens. Critics nearly always panned his acting. After the financial failure of I Married an Angel, Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald left MGM. In 1943, Eddy signed a contract with Universal for two films: Phantom of the Opera and Follow the Boys. The musical Phantom of the Opera (Arthur Lubin, 1943), lavishly produced in Technicolor, was based on the well-known novel by Gaston Leroux and songs by Edward Ward. Eddy appeared in it alongside Susanna Foster and Claude Rains but was so dissatisfied with the film afterwards that he abandoned the filming of Follow the Boys, in which he would have appeared again alongside Jeanette MacDonald, and left Universal. In his home studio, he recorded three-part harmonies (tenor, baritone, & bass) for his role as a multiple-voiced singing whale in the animated Walt Disney feature, 'The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met', the concluding sequence in the animated musical anthology film Make Mine Music (Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi, a.o., 1946). Eddy appeared with Ilona Massey in his last film, the musical Western Northwest Outpost (Allan Dwan, 1947), produced by Republic. Nelson Eddy had a large radio following. His theme song was 'Short'nin Bread'. In 1959 Eddy and MacDonald issued a recording of their film hits which sold well. In 1953 he had a fairly successful nightclub routine with Gale Sherwood which ran until he died in 1967. He suffered a fatal stroke while performing in concert. He was interred at Hollywood Memorial Cemetery, now called Hollywood Forever. Nelson Eddy and his wife Anne Denitz had no children. He had one child, Jon, with ex-girlfriend Maybelle Marston, born in the early 1930s, and he had a stepson, Sidney Franklin Jr.

Source: Ed Stephan (IMDb), Wikipedia (Dutch, German and English) and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Alice Terry in Confessions of a Queen (1925) by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Alice Terry in Confessions of a Queen (1925)

German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 1299/1, 1927-1928. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Alice Terry in Confessions of a Queen (Victor Sjöström, 1925).

Alice Terry, originally Alice Frances Taeffe (1900–1987) was an American film actress and director, who began her career during the silent film era and appeared in almost 40 films between 1916 and 1933. Though a brunette, Terry's trademark look was her blonde hair, for which she wore wigs from 1920 onwards, e.g. in her most acclaimed role in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (Rex Ingram, 1921) starring Rudolph Valentino. Ingram, who married her in 1921, would shoot her in many of his films and often paired her with Ramon Novarro, but also with other ‘Latin Lovers’ such as Antonio Moreno and Ivan Petrovich. Later on, Terry proved in films without her husband’s direction she was a legitimate star. In 1923 the couple moved to the French Riviera, where they set up a small studio in Nice and made several films on location in North Africa, Spain, and Italy for MGM and others. In the late 1920s, they returned to Los Angeles. In 1933, Terry made her last film appearance in Baroud, which she also co-directed with her husband, and which was partly shot in Morocco.

Alice Terry was born Alice Frances Taaffe in 1899 in Vincennes, Indiana, USA. Alice started as an extra in films at age 15 to help her family financially. She made her film debut in Not My Sister (Charles Giblyn, 1916), opposite Bessie Barriscale and William Desmond Taylor. It was produced by legendary film pioneer Thomas Ince. She worked in "Inceville", Ince's studio, and would appear as an extra as several characters in his pacifist allegorical drama Civilization (Reginald Barker, Thomas H. Ince, 1916). The film was a big-budget spectacle that was compared to both The Birth of a Nation (D.W. Griffith, 1915) and the paintings of Jean-François Millet. Civilization was a popular success and was credited by the Democratic National Committee with helping to re-elect Woodrow Wilson as the U.S. President in 1916. She was shy and was also interested in other motion picture jobs, considering work as a script girl or a cutter behind the camera as preferable to performing in front of it. For two years Alice worked in cutting rooms at Famous-Players-Lasky. This work would help her later on when she worked with Rex Ingram on his films. It was while she was working as an extra on The Devil's Passkey (Erich von Stroheim, 1920) that Alice was first noticed, by director Erich von Stroheim. Sadly, her insecurity caused her to rapidly leave the Universal lot. She never even stopped to pick up her paycheck. In 1917, she met director Rex Ingram. Ingram promoted her to small parts in his early Metro Pictures films in the late teens. He also directed her physical transformation, overseeing a program of weight loss and dental repair, and creating “Alice Terry” — both the name and the image — as his protege. He gave her her first significant role in Hearts Are Trumps (Rex Ingram, 1920). It was during preparation for this role that Alice discovered what would become her trademark. IMDb: 'She was putting on her make-up and saw a blonde wig on the table next to her. She put it on but thought it looked silly. Just then the director Rex Ingram (who was already an admirer, both personally and professionally) walked in and saw her in it. He insisted she wear it in the film. Alice wasn't convinced until she saw the rushes the next day. "When I appeared on the screen, I looked so different, and from that time I never got rid of the wig."' Wikipedia adds that she put on her first blonde wig in Hearts Are Trumps (1920) 'to look different from Francelia Billington, the other actress in the film.' Ingram and Terry would marry in 1921. It was also in 1921 that Alice would gain acclaim as Marguerite in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921), with the blonde wig. Often regarded as one of the first true anti-war films, it had a huge cultural impact and became the top-grossing film of 1921, beating out Charlie Chaplin's The Kid (1921). The film turned then-little-known actor Rudolph Valentino into a superstar and associated him with the image of the Latin Lover. The film also inspired a tango craze and such fashion fads as gaucho pants. For her husband, she would continue to play the heroine in such masterpieces as The Prisoner of Zenda (Rex Ingram, 1922) in which she appeared as Princess Flavia opposite Lewis Stone and the upcoming Ramon Novarro as the bad guy, and Scaramouche (Rex Ingram, 1923), now featuring Ramon Novarro. Both films were smash hits. Heidi Kenaga at Women Film Pioneer's Project: '“Rex and His Queen” were one of the more celebrated director-actress teams of the 1920s, but there are indications that performing was only one dimension of Terry’s contribution to their work together.' In 1924 and 1925 the marriage between Terry and Ingram was in jeopardy, according to Wikipedia, and in that period, she worked under other directors. Alice worked on five films, and particularly her roles in Any Woman (Henry King, 1925) and Sackcloth and Scarlet (Henry King, 1925), both by Paramount Pictures, proved that Alice was a legitimate star away from her husband. She also would make the Western melodrama The Great Divide (Reginald Barker, 1924) with Conway Tearle and Wallace Beery.

In 1924, Metro would merge into the new MGM and both Rex Ingram and Alice Terry would work there. She would be directed again by Ingram in The Arab (1924), which was filmed in North Africa and owed much to the influence of screen idol Valentino. When they got back together, Terry took on a more behind-the-scenes role. During the making of The Arab (Rex Ingram, 1924) in Tunisia, they met a street child named Kada-Abd-el-Kader, whom they adopted upon learning that he was an orphan. Allegedly, el-Kader misrepresented his age to make himself seem younger than his adoptive parents. In 1925 Ingram co-directed Ben-Hur, filming parts of it in Italy. The two decided to move to the French Riviera, where they set up a small studio in Nice and started to make films on location in North Africa, Spain, and Italy. Alice would get her chance to play the wicked woman in Mare Nostrum (Rex Ingram, 1926). Filmed in Italy and Spain, this film was both a critical and financial success for the couple. Ingram would make his third independent film in Italy when he directed Alice in The Garden of Allah (Rex Ingram, 1927). Later that year, Alice would be reunited with Ramon Novarro in Lovers? (John M. Stahl, 1927), but the film would not be as well received as their earlier films. When sound came to the screen Alice and Rex retired. Her last film appearance was in the sound film Baroud (1933) starring Pierre Batcheff, which she also co-directed with her husband. Alice helped so much that she was named co-director and she directed all the scenes Ingram himself appeared in. Wikipedia: 'Baroud (Rex Ingram, Alice Terry, 1933) highlighted Alice's ability as an all-around filmmaker but she never took that further.' Terry and Ingram retired in the 1930s and took up painting. Once Terry and Ingram moved back to the United States they started having problems with their adopted son, Kada-Abd-el-Kader. According to Wikipedia, He 'began associating with fast women and fast cars throughout the San Fernando Valley.' Terry and Ingram sent him back to Morocco 'to finish school.' Kada-Abd-el-Kader never went back to school, but he later became a tourist guide in Morocco and Algiers. El-Kader would always tell tourists that he was the adopted son of Rex Ingram and Alice Terry. In 1950, Rex Ingram passed away. Terry was open-minded and she invited four of Rex's mistresses to his funeral. Wikipedia quotes her saying: 'Who cares, I'm the only one that can call herself Mrs. Rex Ingram.' A year later, when Columbia released Valentino (Lewis Allen, 1951), featuring Eleanor Parker and Anthony Dexter, Alice Terry filed suit against Columbia and the producers because of the way the film "falsely portrayed a clandestine relationship between Valentino and Terry". Columbia settled out of court for an undisclosed sum. In 1960, she was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6628 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California. Terry was still active in the 1970s. She loved hosting Sunday afternoon parties and going out to dinner in extravagant, floor-length mink coats. Alzheimer's put a stop to Terry's parties and fun. Following her death in 1987 in Burbank, California by pneumonia, Alice Terry was interred at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood. Alice Terry made 29 films, not counting four appearances as an extra. Of these 29, 17 are lost films. Six exist in archives around the world and six survive on video and television broadcast releases. About her part in Rex Ingram's films, Picture Play commented in a 1924 article, that she was set apart by “her unrestrained enthusiasm for her husband, her unqualified praise for his work, with absolutely no mention of her own minor but definite achievements.” Heidi Kenaga gives her at Women Film Pioneer's Project full credit for the films she made with Ingram and cites film historian Anthony Slide: 'although Terry is only given on-screen credit for Baroud — a sound film made after Ingram’s heyday and outside the US studio system — it is possible she also co-directed some parts of Ingram’s motion pictures between 1921 and 1929.'

Sources: Heidi Kenaga (Women Film Pioneer's Project), Tony Fontana (IMDb), Wikipedia and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Katharine Hepburn and Turhan Bey in Dragon Seed (1944) by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Katharine Hepburn and Turhan Bey in Dragon Seed (1944)

Belgian postcard by LAB, (Les Editions d'Art, Bruxelles) no. 2023. Photo: Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Katharine Hepburn and Turhan Bey in Dragon Seed (Harold S. Bucquet, Jack Conway, 1944).

Katharine Hepburn (1907-2003) was an indomitable American stage and film actress, known as a spirited performer with a touch of eccentricity. She introduced into her roles a strength of character previously considered to be undesirable in Hollywood leading ladies. As an actress, she was noted for her brisk upper-class New England accent and tomboyish beauty.

Katharine Houghton Hepburn was born in 1907 in Hartford, Connecticut, U.S. Her father was a wealthy and prominent Connecticut surgeon, and her mother was a leader in the women's suffrage movement. From early childhood, Hepburn was continually encouraged to expand her intellectual horizons, speak nothing but the truth, and keep herself in top physical condition at all times. She would apply all of these ingrained values to her acting career, which began in earnest after she graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1928. That year she made her Broadway debut in Night Hostess, appearing under the alias Katharine Burns. Hepburn scored her first major Broadway success in The Warrior’s Husband (1932), a comedy set in the land of the Amazons. Shortly thereafter she was invited to Hollywood by RKO Radio Pictures. Hepburn was an unlikely Hollywood star. Possessing a distinctive speech pattern and an abundance of quirky mannerisms, she earned unqualified praise from her admirers and unmerciful criticism from her detractors. Unabashedly outspoken and iconoclastic, she did as she pleased, refusing to grant interviews, wearing casual clothes at a time when actresses were expected to exude glamour 24 hours a day, and openly clashing with her more experienced coworkers whenever they failed to meet her standards. She nonetheless made an impressive movie debut in George Cukor’s A Bill of Divorcement (1932), a drama that also starred John Barrymore. Hepburn was then cast as an aviator in Dorothy Arzner’s Christopher Strong (1933). For her third film, Morning Glory (1933), Hepburn won an Academy Award for her portrayal of an aspiring actress.

However, Katharine Hepburn’s much-publicized return to Broadway, in The Lake (1933), proved to be a flop. And while moviegoers enjoyed her performances in homespun entertainments such as Little Women (1933) and Alice Adams (1935), they were largely resistant to historical vehicles such as Mary of Scotland (1936), A Woman Rebels (1936), and Quality Street (1937). Hepburn recovered some lost ground with her sparkling performances in the screwball comedies Bringing Up Baby (1938) and Holiday (1938), both of which also starred Cary Grant. However, it was too late: a group of leading film exhibitors had already written off Hepburn as “box office poison.” Undaunted, Hepburn accepted a role written specifically for her in Philip Barry’s 1938 Broadway comedy The Philadelphia Story, about a socialite whose ex-husband tries to win her back. It was a huge hit, and she purchased the motion picture rights to the play. The 1940 film version—in which she reteamed with Cukor and Grant—was a critical and commercial success, and it jump-started her Hollywood career. She continued to make periodic returns to the stage (notably as the title character in the 1969 Broadway musical Coco), but Hepburn remained essentially a film actor for the remainder of her career. Her stature increased as she chalked up such cinematic triumphs as John Huston’s The African Queen (1951), in which she played a missionary who escapes German troops with the aid of a riverboat captain (Humphrey Bogart), and David Lean’s Summertime (1955), a love story set in Venice. In Long Day’s Journey into Night (1962), an adaptation of Eugene O’Neill’s acclaimed play, Hepburn was cast as a drug-addicted mother.

Katharine Hepburn won a second Academy Award for Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner (1967), a dramedy about interracial marriage; a third for The Lion in Winter (1968), in which she played Eleanor of Aquitaine; and an unprecedented fourth Oscar for On Golden Pond (1981), about long-married New Englanders (Hepburn and Henry Fonda). Her 12 Academy Award nominations also set a record, which stood until 2003, when broken by Meryl Streep. In addition, Hepburn appeared frequently on television in the 1970s and ’80s. She was nominated for an Emmy Award for her memorable portrayal of Amanda Wingfield in Tennessee Williams’s The Glass Menagerie (1973), and she won the award for her performance opposite Laurence Olivier in Love Among the Ruins (1975), which reunited her with her favourite director, Cukor. Though hampered by a progressive neurological disease, Hepburn was nonetheless still active in the early ’90s, appearing prominently in films such as Love Affair (1994), which was her last movie. Hepburn was married once, to Philadelphia broker Ludlow Ogden Smith, but the union was dissolved in 1934. While filming Woman of the Year in 1942, she began an enduring intimate relationship with her costar, Spencer Tracy, with whom she would appear in films such as Adam’s Rib (1949) and Pat and Mike (1952); both were directed by Cukor. Tracy and Hepburn never married—he was Roman Catholic and would not divorce his wife—but they remained close both personally and professionally until his death in 1967, just days after completing the filming of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner. Hepburn had suspended her career for nearly five years to nurse Tracy through what turned out to be his final illness. In 1999 the American Film Institute named Hepburn the top female American screen legend of all time. She wrote several memoirs, including Me: Stories of My Life (1991). Katharine Hepburn died in 2003 in Old Saybrook, Connecticut.

Sources: Encyclopaedia Britannica, Wikipedia and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

John Carroll by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

John Carroll

Dutch postcard by 't Sticht, no. 3095. Photo: Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Collection Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

Dark-haired and tall John Carroll (1906-1979) was an American actor and singer. Combining a good singing voice and dashing looks, Carroll appeared in over 50 films during his 24-year career. He reached his peak in the 1940s when MGM gave him leading roles in second-rate Westerns and musicals. Incidentally, he worked with famous directors like Howard Hawks, George Cukor and Orson Welles. He was married briefly to exotic leading lady Steffi Duna, and later to one of the first female Hollywood studio executives, Lucille Ryman.

John Carroll was born Julian Joseph Lafaye Jr. in 1906 in New Orleans, Louisiana. His parents were Julian Joseph Lafaye Sr. and Emma Genevieve Calongne deFauconne. Carroll left home at the age of twelve and then kept his head above water with odd jobs as a newsboy, steelworker and seaman. He later went to Europe to study singing opera in Italy. He drove racing cars before turning to acting. He first appeared on screen in Marianne (1929), where he played a soldier. Until 1935, he played small roles in films under his birth name. He first used the name John Carroll in the comedy Hi, Gaucho! (Tommy Atkins, 1935) with Steffi Duna, Rod La Rocque, and Montagu Love. Carroll played James Vega and his masked alter ego Zorro in the 12-chapter Republic serial Zorro Rides Again (William Witney, John English, 1937). He also sang the title song as a modern descendant of the original Zorro. Carroll was the male love interest in the Marx Brothers' Western comedy Go West (Edward Buzzell, 1940). Probably his best-known role was as Woody Jason in the patriotic War film Flying Tigers (Edmund Grainger, 1942) with John Wayne and Anna Lee. He was also notable as a Cajun soldier, aptly nicknamed Wolf, in the comedy A Letter for Evie (Jules Dassin 1945) with Marsha Hunt and Hume Cronyn. The story is a spinoff of Cyrano de Bergerac, updated to a modern setting.

John Carroll interrupted his film career during World War II. He served as a U.S. Army Air Corps pilot in North Africa. He broke his back in a crash but recovered and resumed his acting career. His wife Lucille was a casting director at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). In 1948, the fledgling movie actress Marilyn Monroe moved into their house. They helped support her emotionally and financially during her difficult transition period. Their support was essential in her success as an actress. For Republic, he appeared in several Westerns such as Wyoming (Joseph Kane, 1947) with Bill Elliott, The Fabulous Texan (Edward Ludwig, 1947) and Belle LeGrand (Allan Dwan, 1951) with Vera Ralston. Carroll worked steadily through the mid-1950s, but his career began to fade in the latter half of the decade. He played a memorable role in the Western Decision at Sundown (Budd Boetticher, 1957) as Tate Kimbrough, the evil nemesis of Randolph Scott's character. In the late 1950s and 1960s, he was involved in several legal controversies. In 1959, he agreed to pay a settlement of $176,000 to an 81-year-old widow who had claimed that he had courted her for her fortune. In 1965, he gave up a position on the Louisiana Tourist Development Commission amid allegations of improprieties. His last roles were in Ride in a Pink Car (Robert J. Emery, 1974) and in Orson Welles' The Other Side of the Wind (1970-1976), which he joined in 1975. The satirical drama finally had its world premiere at the 75th Venice International Film Festival in 2018. John Carroll was married twice. His first wife was Hungarian-born actress Steffi Duna with whom he had a daughter, Julianna Benito. They divorced after one year. From 1948 till his death, he was married to Lucille Ryman. John Carroll died of leukaemia at the age of 72 in Hollywood, California. He was buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills.

Sources: High Noon, Wikipedia (English and German) and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Jeanette Macdonald by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Jeanette Macdonald

Dutch postcard by 't Sticht, no. 3017. Photo: Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

Red-headed and blue-green-eyed operatic singer Jeanette MacDonald (1903-1965) was discovered for the cinema by Ernst Lubitsch, who cast her opposite Maurice Chevalier in The Love Parade (1929). Later 'the Iron Butterfly' co-starred with Nelson Eddy in a string of successful musicals and played opposite Clark Gable in San Francisco (1936).

Jeannette Anna McDonald was born in Philadelphia in 1903 as the third daughter of Daniel and Anne MacDonald. She began her career at age 6, where she had small roles in stage plays and operas. By age 13, she was winning singing contests along with the eastern United States. She was the younger sister to Blossom (MGM's character actress Marie Blake), whom she followed to New York and a chorus job in 1920. She was busy with a string of musical productions. In 1928 Paramount tested and rejected her, but a year later Ernst Lubitsch saw her test and picked her to play opposite Maurice Chevalier in The Love Parade (1929). She was 25 years old and made several films at Paramount. But musicals went into decline and Paramount dropped her in 1931. Her next pictures with Chevalier for Fox and UA went nowhere. She went to Europe where she met Irving Thalberg and his wife Norma Shearer (whom she loaned both her hairdresser and chauffeur). She got the lead in Thalberg's property The Merry Widow (Ernst Lubitsch, 1934), and her next MGM vehicle, Naughty Marietta (W.S. van Dyke, Robert Z. Leonard, 1935) brought her together with Nelson Eddy. They were a smash hit. The pair made eight pictures together, and from then on forever known as America's Singing Sweethearts. For her next project, she insisted Clark Gable should co-star. He at first refused - "I just sit there while she sings. None of that stuff for me." - the film, of course, was San Francisco (W.S. van Dyke, 1936).

Jeanette MacDonald was known as 'The Iron Butterfly', as one of the most lady-like and beautiful women of Hollywood, but when it came to her contracts, she was tough and could strike a deal quickly that suited her. In 1937, she married actor Gene Raymond, in a spectacular Hollywood fashion - it was the best-attended wedding of the decade. The marriage lasted 28 years till her death in 1965. After making Cairo (W.S. van Dyke, 1942), Jeanette left MGM. During World War II she often did USO shows. She hoped to enter the grand opera. Donovan Webber at IMDb: "Jeanette was a very talented operatic singer/lyrical soprano, with a wide vocal range, E above high C, close to 3 octaves." She took lessons and in 1943, she made her operatic debut in Montreal, Canada. In 1944, she began starring in such stage musicals as The King and I. In 1948, MacDonald returned to MGM to make her last two films, Three Daring Daughters (Fred M. Wilcox, 1948), with Jane Powell and The Sun Comes Up (Richard Thorpe, 1949). The 1950s were spent mainly resting due to her weakening heart although she and Nelson Eddy teamed on television. Their renewed popularity led to a 1958 record album with Nelson Eddy singing their favourite songs. The album went gold. Her last public appearance, singing 'Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life', was at the funeral of Louis B. Mayer. She suffered heart ailments and, after an arterial transplant in 1963, died of a heart attack in Houston in 1965. Hysterical crowds listened to recordings of 'Ah, Sweet Mystery' at her Forest Lawn funeral.

Sources: Donovan Webber (IMDb), Ed Stephan (IMDb), and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Tex Avery - Magical Maestro (1952) [Uncensored Version] by Sunnyboiiii

© Sunnyboiiii, all rights reserved.

Tex Avery - Magical Maestro (1952) [Uncensored Version]

In the segment with Butch, Mysto alters him according to how he performs with his magic wand in "Magical Maestro," directed by Tex Avery. I decided to highlight the funniest moments of Butch's transformations because a lot of YouTubers have cut out the best bits, leaving out certain scenes and rearranging them. The fruit hat dance scene, for instance, is frequently overlooked, along with other hilarious moments. Additionally, you won't see this aired on modern television due to the offensive stereotype of the Chinese scene and the blackface scene, which may not sit well with some audiences.

Joan Crawford by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Joan Crawford

Dutch postcard by J.S.A. Photo: M.G.M. / M.P.E. Collection: Geoffrey Donaldson Institute.

American film star Joan Crawford (1904-1977) had a career that would span many decades, studios, and controversies. In her silent films, she made an impact as a vivacious Jazz Age flapper and later she matured into a star of psychological melodramas.

Joan Crawford was born Lucille Fay LeSueur in 1904, in San Antonio, Texas. Her parents were Anna Belle (Johnson) and Thomas E. LeSueur, a laundry labourer. By the time she was born, her parents had separated. The young Lucille was bullied and shunned at Scaritt Elementary School in Kansas City by the other students due to her poor home life. She worked with her mother in a laundry and felt that her classmates could smell the chemicals and cleaners on her. She said that her love of taking showers and being obsessed with cleanliness had begun early in life as an attempt to wash off the smell of the laundry. Her stepfather Henry Cassin allegedly began sexually abusing her when she was eleven years old, and the abuse continued until she was sent to St. Agnes Academy, a Catholic girls' school. By the time she was a teenager, she'd had three stepfathers. Lucille LeSueur worked a variety of menial jobs. She was a good dancer, though, and she entered several contests, one of which landed her a spot in a chorus line. Before long, she was dancing in the choruses of travelling revues in big Midwestern and East Coast cities. She was spotted dancing in Detroit by famous New York producer Jacob J. Shubert. Shubert put her in the chorus line for his show 'Innocent Eyes'(1924) at the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway. Then followed another Schubert production, 'The Passing Show of 1924'. After hours, she danced for pay in the town it-spot, Club Richman, which was run by the 'Passing Show' stage manager Nils Granlund and popular local personality Harry Richman. In December 1924, Granlund called Lucille to tell her that Al Altman, a NYC-based talent scout from MGM had caught her in 'The Passing Show of 1924' and wanted her to do a screen test. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) offered Crawford a contract at $75 a week. On New Year's Day 1925 she boarded the train for Culver City. Credited as Lucille LeSueur, her first film part was as a showgirl in Lady of the Night (Monta Bell, 1925), starring MGM's most popular female star, Norma Shearer. Crawford was determined to succeed, and shortly after she also appeared in The Circle (Frank Borzage, 1925) and Pretty Ladies (Monta Bell, 1925), starring comedian ZaSu Pitts. She also appeared in a small role in Erich von Stroheim's classic The Merry Widow (1925) with Mae Murray and John Gilbert. MGM publicity head Pete Smith recognised her ability to become a major star but felt her name sounded fake. He told studio head, Louis B. Mayer, that her last name, LeSueur, reminded him of a sewer. Smith organised a contest called 'Name the Star' in Movie Weekly to allow readers to select her new stage name. The initial choice was 'Joan Arden', but after another actress was found to have a prior claim to that name, the alternate surname 'Crawford' became the choice. She first made an impression on audiences in Edmund Goulding's showgirl tale Sally, Irene, and Mary (1925). The film, which co-starred Constance Bennett and Sally O'Neil, was a hit. Joan's popularity grew so quickly afterwards that two films in which she was still billed as Lucille Le Sueur: Old Clothes (Edward F. Cline, 1925) with Jackie Coogan, and The Only Thing (Jack Conway, 1925) were recalled, and her name on the billings was changed to Joan Crawford. In 1926, Crawford was named one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars, and she starred opposite Charles Ray in Paris (Edmund Goulding, 1926). Within a few years, she became the romantic female lead to many of MGM's top male stars, including Ramón Novarro, John Gilbert, and action star Tim McCoy. She appeared alongside her close friend, William Haines in the comedy Spring Fever (Edward Sedgwick, 1927). It was the second film starring Haines and Crawford (the first had been Sally, Irene, and Mary (1925), and their first onscreen romantic teaming. Then, Crawford appeared in the silent horror film The Unknown (Tod Browning, 1927), starring Lon Chaney, Sr., who played Alonzo the Armless, a circus freak who uses his feet to toss knives. Crawford played his skimpily-clad young carnival assistant whom he hopes to marry. She stated that she learned more about acting from watching Chaney work than from anyone else in her career. Her role as Diana Medford in Our Dancing Daughters (Harry Beaumont, 1928) elevated her to star status. Joan co-starred with Anita Page and Dorothy Sebastian, and her spunky wild-but-moral flapper character struck a chord with the public and zeitgeist. Wikipedia: "The role established her as a symbol of modern 1920s-style femininity which rivaled Clara Bow, the original It girl, then Hollywood's foremost flapper. A stream of hits followed Our Dancing Daughters, including two more flapper-themed movies, in which Crawford embodied for her legion of fans (many of whom were women) an idealized vision of the free-spirited, all-American girl." The fan mail began pouring in and from that point on Joan was a bonafide star. Crawford had cleared the first big hurdle; now came the second, in the form of talkies. But Crawford wasn't felled by sound. Her first talkie, the romantic drama Untamed (Jack Conway, 1929) with Robert Montgomery, was a success. Michael Eliott at IMDb: "It's rather amazing to see how well she transformed into a sound star and you have to think that she was among the best to do so."

In the early 1930s, tired of playing fun-loving flappers, Joan Crawford wanted to change her image. Thin lips would not do for her; she wanted big lips. Ignoring her natural lip contours, Max Factor ran a smear of colour across her upper and lower lips. It was just what she wanted. To Max, the Crawford look, which became her trademark, was always 'the smear'. As the 1930s progressed, Joan Crawford became one of the biggest stars at MGM. She developed a glamorous screen image, appearing often as a sumptuously gowned, fur-draped, successful career woman. She was in top form in films such as Grand Hotel (Edmund Goulding, 1932), Sadie McKee (Clarence Brown, 1934), No More Ladies (Edward H. Griffith, 1935), and Love on the Run (W.S. Van Dyke, 1936) with Clark Gable. Crawford often played hard-working young women who found romance and success. Movie patrons were enthralled, and studio executives were satisfied. Her fame rivalled, and later outlasted, that of MGM colleagues Norma Shearer and Greta Garbo. Among her early successes as a dramatic actress were The Women (George Cukor, 1939), Susan and God (1940), Strange Cargo (1940), and A Woman’s Face (1941). By the early 1940s, MGM was no longer giving Joan Crawford plum roles. Newcomers had arrived in Hollywood, and the public wanted to see them. Crawford left MGM for rival Warner Bros. In 1945 she landed the role of a lifetime in Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945). It is the story of an emotional and ambitious woman who rises from waitress to owner of a restaurant chain. The role gave her an opportunity to show her range as an actress, and her performance as a woman driven to give her daughter (Ann Blyth) everything garnered Crawford her first, and only, Oscar for Best Actress. The following year she appeared with John Garfield in the well-received Humoresque (Jean Negulesco, 1946). In 1947, she appeared as Louise Graham in Possessed (Curtis Bernhardt, 1947) with Van Heflin. Again she was nominated for the Best Actress award from the Academy, but she lost to Loretta Young in The Farmer's Daughter (H.C. Potter, 1947). Crawford continued to choose her roles carefully, and in 1952 she was nominated for a third time, for her depiction of Myra Hudson in Sudden Fear (David Miller, 1952) opposite Jack Palance and Gloria Grahame. This time the coveted Oscar went to Shirley Booth, for Come Back, Little Sheba (Daniel Mann, 1952). In 1955, Crawford became involved with the Pepsi-Cola Company through her marriage to company Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Alfred Steele. Crawford married four times. Her first three marriages to the actors Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. (1929–1933), Franchot Tone (1935–1939), and Phillip Terry (1942–1946) all had ended in divorce. After his death in 1959 she became a director of the company and in that role hired her friend Dorothy Arzner to film several Pepsi commercials. Crawford's film career slowed and she appeared in minor roles until 1962. Then she and Bette Davis co-starred in Whatever happened to Baby Jane? (Robert Aldrich, 1962). Their longstanding rivalry may have helped fuel their phenomenally vitriolic and well-received performances. Crawford's final appearance on the silver screen was in the bad monster movie Trog (Freddie Francis, 1970). It is said Bette Davis commented that if she had found herself starring in Trog, she'd commit suicide. Anyway, Joan Crawford retired from the screen, and following a public appearance in 1974 withdrew from public life. Turning to vodka more and more, she became increasingly reclusive. In 1977, Joan Crawford died of a heart attack in New York City. She was 72 years old. She had disinherited her adopted daughter Christina and son Christopher; the former wrote the controversial memoir 'Mommie Dearest' (1978). In 1981, Faye Dunaway starred in the film adaptation Mommie Dearest (Frank Perry, 1981) which did well at the box office. Joan Crawford is interred in a mausoleum in Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York.

Sources: Stephanie Jones (The Best of Everything), Michael Elliott (IMDb), Encyclopaedia Britannica, Wikipedia, and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Lillian Gish in The Scarlet Letter (1926) by Truus, Bob & Jan too!

© Truus, Bob & Jan too!, all rights reserved.

Lillian Gish in The Scarlet Letter (1926)

German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3424/2, 1928-1929. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Lillian Gish in The Scarlet Letter (Victor Sjöström, 1926).

American actress Lillian Gish (1893-1993) was 'The First Lady of the Silent Screen'. During the 1910s, she was one of director D.W. Griffith's greatest stars. She appeared in his features such as The Birth of a Nation (1915), Broken Blossoms (1919), and Orphans of the Storm (1921). After 13 years with Griffith, she moved to MGM, where her first picture was La Bohème (King Vidor, 1926). In the 1940s, after a long interval, she returned to the screen in a handful of films and received a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for her role as Laura Belle McCanles in Duel in the Sun (King Vidor, 1946). Again, a decade later, she was marvellous in the classic Film Noir The Night of the Hunter (Charles Laughton, 1955). Her last film was The Whales of August (Lindsay Anderson, 1987), in which she shared the lead with Bette Davis.

Lillian Diana Gish was born in 1893 in Springfield, Ohio. Her restless father, James Lee Gish, was an alcoholic who was rarely at home and left the family to more or less to fend for themselves. Mary Robinson McConnell, a.k.a. Mary Gish, her mother, had entered into acting in local productions to make money to support the family. As soon as Lillian and her sister Dorothy were old enough, they joined her. Lillian was six years old when she first appeared in front of an audience. For the next 13 years, she and Dorothy appeared in melodramas before stage audiences with great success. To supplement their income, the two sisters also posed for pictures and paintings. In 1912, their former neighbour girl and child actress Mary Pickford introduced the sisters to film director David Wark Griffith and helped get them contracts with Biograph Studios. Griffith cast them in the short silent films An Unseen Enemy (D.W. Griffith, 1912), followed by The One She Loved (D.W. Griffith, 1912) and My Baby (D.W. Griffith, 1912). Griffith saw Lillian as an exquisitely fragile, ethereal beauty, and in 1912, she would make 12 films for him. With 25 films in the next two years, Lillian's exposure to the public was so great that she quickly became one of the top stars in the industry, right alongside Mary Pickford. With her doll-like looks and small frame, she portrayed innocent, virginal characters who are victimised by a cruel world. In 1915, Lillian starred as Elsie Stoneman in D.W. Griffith's most ambitious project to date, The Birth of a Nation (D.W. Griffith, 1915). It was the highest-grossing film of the silent era. The following year, she appeared in another Griffith classic, Intolerance: Love's Struggle Throughout the Ages (D.W. Griffith, 1916). Other famous Griffith productions in which Gish starred were Broken Blossoms or The Yellow Man and the Girl (D.W. Griffith, 1919), Way Down East (D.W. Griffith, 1920), and Orphans of the Storm (D.W. Griffith, 1921), opposite her sister Dorothy.

By the early 1920s, Lillian Gish was known as 'The First Lady of the American Cinema', according to Wikipedia. Lillian even tried her hand at film directing with Remodeling Her Husband (Lillian Gish, 1920), when D. W. Griffith took his unit on location. The film, starring her sister Dorothy Gish, is now considered lost. Then, she could make two films entirely in Italy. In the excellent The White Sister (Henry King, 1923), she played a young woman who becomes a nun when she believes her sweetheart (Ronald Colman) has been killed, but things get complicated when he returns alive. Henry King directed her and Colman also in the costume drama Romola (Henry King, 1924), in which also her sister Dorothy co-starred. D.W. Griffith’s career seemed on its way down. After 13 years with him, Lillian moved to MGM. Her new contract gave her control over the type of picture, the director, the supporting lead, and the cameraman. 1926 became her busiest year of the decade with roles in La Bohème (King Vidor, 1926) with John Gilbert and The Scarlet Letter (Victor Sjöström, 1926). Gish's favourite film of her MGM career, The Wind (Victor Sjöström, 1928), was a commercial failure but is now recognised as one of the most distinguished works of the silent period. As the decade wound to a close, ‘talkies’ were replacing silent films, and Gish began to appear on the radio and in acclaimed stage productions. In 1933, she appeared in one sound film, His Double Life (Arthur Hopkins, 1933) with Roland Young, and then didn't make another film for ten years. She appeared in stage roles as varied as Ophelia in Guthrie McClintic's 1936 production of Hamlet, with John Gielgud, and Marguerite in a limited run of La Dame aux Camélias. Tony Fontana at IMDb: “Lillian never forgot D.W. Griffith, even when everyone else in Hollywood did. She helped care for the ailing Griffith and his wife until Griffith died in 1948.”

When Lillian Gish returned to the screen in 1943, she played in two big-budget Hollywood pictures, the war drama Commandos Strike at Dawn (John Farrow, 1942) and Top Man (Charles Lamont, 1943). Denny Jackson at IMDb: “Although these roles did not bring her the attention she had in her early career, Lillian still proved she could hold her own with the best of them.” She earned an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actress for her role as Laura Belle McCanles in the Western Duel in the Sun (King Vidor, 1946). She now excelled playing wilful but conflicted women. One of the most critically acclaimed roles of her career came in the Film Noir The Night of the Hunter (Charles Laughton, 1955). She played a rural guardian angel protecting her charges from a murderous preacher played by Robert Mitchum. In 1969, she published her autobiography 'The Movies, Mr. Griffith, and Me'. A year later, she received a special Academy Award 'for superlative artistry and distinguished contributions to the progress of motion pictures'. In her later years, Gish became a dedicated advocate for the appreciation and preservation of silent film. At the age of 93, she made what was to be her last film, The Whales of August (Lindsay Anderson, 1987), in which she and Bette Davis starred as elderly sisters in Maine. It exposed her to a new generation of fans. In 1993, Lillian Gish died at age 99 peacefully in her sleep in New York City. Her 75-year film career is almost unbeatable. Gish never married or had children. She left her entire estate, which was valued at several million dollars, to actress Helen Hayes, who died 18 days after Gish.

Sources: Tony Fontana (IMDb), Denny Jackson (IMDb), Wikipedia, and IMDb.

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.