“Forgotten Hollywood”- Royal Albert Hall Singin’ in the Rain!

January 24th, 2013

Manny P. here…

  The terracotta-colored Royal Albert Hall is one of London’s favorite concert venues. While it remains most famous for classical music , it also holds rock and pop concerts, sports events, and award ceremonies. Now, you can add Hollywood’s Golden Age themed events.

singin-in-the-rain   The Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra will celebrate the 60th anniversary of Singin’ in the Rain by performing the iconic soundtrack while the re-mastered musical is played on the big screen. The score includes songs like Make ’em Laugh, Moses Supposes, and the classic title track. Singing’ in the Rain will screen on March 8th at 7:30p.

   The Royal Albert Hall commemorates the death of Prince Albert in 1861. Queen Victoria laid the foundation stone in 1867, and opened four years later. It’s located is in Kensington.

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les-miserables   Meanwhile, a live version of Singin’ in the Rain is at The Palace  Theatre in London’s West End. This location is well known for theatrical productions, including the longest running play in the history of modern theatre… Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap. Currently, one can catch Phantom of the Opera, Les Miserables, The Lion King, Wicked, and Jersey Boys, among others, along the West End.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- The Inauguration Connection…

January 22nd, 2013

Manny P. here…

   As President Obama was sworn in for his Second Term as Commander-In-Chief, Gary Lycan, the radio columnist of the Orange County Register, made me aware of an amusing historical connection with Hollywood. This had to do with a comparison made with the inauguration of Dwight D. Eisenhower.

i love lucy   On January 19th, 1953, a record 71.7% of televisions in the US – more than the First Term swearing-in of President Eisenhower the following day – tuned in for the birth of Little Ricky on I Love Lucy. To increase publicity of this episode, the original air-date was chosen to coincide with Lucille Ball’s real-life delivery of Desi Jr. by caesarean section. Happy 60th birthday to Little Ricky!

   At last evening’s Inaugural Balls, the re-elected team of President Obama, Vice President Biden, and their wives were serenaded by Oscar winners: Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls); and Jamie Foxx (Ray). They sang Let’s Stay Together and I Can’t Stop Loving You. By the way, after the inauguration of President James Madison in 1809, the tradition of the Inaugural Ball was started.

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                                JENNIFER HUDSON             JAMIE FOXX

   Winning an Academy Award and an election has consequences…

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- My 2013 SAG Awards Film Ballot…

January 21st, 2013

Manny P. here… sag_logo_bw_19th_horizontal

   For the fourth straight year, here’s my ballot for this year’s Screen Actors Guild Awards. I consider 2012 a mixed year of cinema. And, several folks and films in most of the categories should be considered for specific awards. Let me explain:

   OUTSTANDING MALE:  Daniel Day Lewis (Lincoln)

   This is a clear selection. Lewis embodies Abraham Lincoln with humanity; a certain degree of duplicitous frailties; and with a smaller-than-life depiction. The final tumultuous weeks of our 16th President’s iconic career as a politician is a stunning revelation under Steven Spielberg’s able direction.

   OUTSTANDING FEMALE:  Jessica Chastain (Zero Dark Thirty)

   The film has a docudrama feel to it. Wonderfully directed, and Jessica Chastain is in almost every scene. Considering it runs 2 1/2 hours, it’s a strong performance. She underplays her role, responding to the testosterone that fills the screen. The only flaw to this movie is it lacks a dramatic soul; no hand-wringing while sitting in the theatre. But technically, the film is a modern epic. This is a close call, because I also loved Naomi Watts in The Impossible.

   OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING MALE:  Alan Arkin (Argo)

   The best Supporting Male performance has been completely overlooked this year. I’ve not been shy about my choice of David Strathairn as Secretary of State Henry Seward (Lincoln). However, since his omission was clearly intended by the makers of the motion picture… I don’t adopt the conventional wisdom that Tommy Lee Jones (Lincoln) or Cristoph Waltz (Django Unchained) should get my vote. Alan Arkin provides the needed comedic elements in Argo. His acting is believable and laugh-out-loud funny. This side of Strathairn, he did a great job.

   OUTSTANDING SUPPORTING FEMALE:  Sally Field (Lincoln)

   Anne Hathaway will probably win this. For the 15 minutes she’s on-screen, it’s her best work to date. And, her live performance of I Dreamed a Dream is stunning. But, I don’t vote based on a great rendition of a showtune. Sally Field is overshadowed only by Day Lewis. Her spitfire interpretation of Mary Todd Lincoln provides much of the Lincoln’s private angst… and Field delivers in spades. She captures an earlier form, when she earned a 2nd Oscar for Places in the Heart. I like her… I really liked her…

Lincoln   OUTSTANDING CAST IN A MOTION PICTURE:  Lincoln

   Flat out, the Best Picture in a decade! It’s almost unfair to match a Spielberg / Day Lewis collaboration against other motion pictures. That said, I thoroughly enjoyed Argo. It could win this award. The ensemble is perfectly cast, with a story adroitly told by director Ben Affleck. This is truly a close call.

~ My 2012 Top 101. Lincoln  2. Argo  3. Zero Dark Thirty  4. The Impossible  5. Flight  6. Les Miserables  7. Hitchcock  8. The Sessions  9. Rust and Bone  10. Hyde Park on Hudson

   Highlights in 2012 television include: Downton Abbey (Drama Cast); The Big Bang Theory (Comedy Cast); and Hatfields & McCoys (Mini-Series Cast).

   The SAG Awards will air on January 27th on TNT and TBS. We’ll see how I do this year…

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Another Milestone For the Franchise!

January 20th, 2013

Manny P. here… 2700

   Thanks to the Orange County Branch membership of the California Writer’s Club, and a few timely eBook purchases, Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History (my first work in the series), can NOW be found in the hands of 2700 readers. In its Second Printing, the paperback still finds an interested market of folks who love Hollywood and American history.

cwclogo100   My wife Laurie and I had a great time yesterday with the members of the writer’s club at  their monthly meeting held at the Orange Public Library & History Center. I was the guest speaker, and we had a lively discussion on the topic of Self-Publishing your literary material. Board member Allene Symons recently made a contribution to our INDIEGOGO campaign to raise money for development of the Forgotten Hollywood Documentary (Pilot).

By the way, if you would like further information and/or care to make a generous contribution (of any amount), please click on the following link:

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http://www.indiegogo.com/forgottenhollywoodseries/x/1999460

   The eBooks were sold on Nook through Barnes & Noble; and on Apple iPad with iBooks.

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   I want to personally thank the LATINO AUTHOR website. They have a new section called The Voice. It’s a page devoted to the current words from stories written by the top natiowide Latino scribes. They have included a link to a blog story I recently wrote (below) entitled: Evolution of the Modern Screenwriter.

   Among the featured authors: Kathleen de Azevedo, Paulina Rael Jaramillo, Laura Lacámara, Maria de Lourdes Victoria, and Corina Martinez Chaudhry, among others.

   For the complete collection of stories on The Voice, here’s a link to this fabulous online site:

http://www.thelatinoauthor.com/voice/

Until next time>                                “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Invite to Self-Publishing Lesson!

January 18th, 2013

Manny P. here…

   A word from our sponsors…

Orange County Branch of California Writers Club

Celebrating over 100 Years of Literary History

Meets second Saturdays of every month at
The Orange Public Library & History Center
407 E. Chapman Ave., Orange, CA
from 11:00 to 12:30 p.m.
January 19th (3rd Saturday, this month only)
Members $3, Non-members $8 (CASH ONLY, PLEASE)
January Speaker – MANNY PACHECOpacheco

Award-winning author of Forgotten Hollywood Book Series, and radio personality, will discuss Self-publishing Techniques that Work.”

 CWC members write novels, short stories, screen plays, poetry, nonfiction articles & books, and more. Over half are published.
 
The mission of CWC is to educate writers of all genres and levels of expertise in craft and marketing of their work. CWC is a nonprofit educational corporation. Visit the state site www.calwriters.org.
`
Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- A Television Mainstay Passes Away…

January 17th, 2013

Manny P. here… Conrad_Bain_in_1983

   Conrad Bain was a situation comedy-stalwart on television for three decades. He is best remembered for playing Philip Drummond on Diff’rent Strokes, a father to a pioneering Modern Family… He also reprised his character on The Facts of Life and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. The Canadian actor also had a starring role on Maude.                                                                  CONRAD BAIN ———->

   Bain studied in New York at the American Academy of Dramatic Artsand his classmates included Charles Durning and comedian Don Rickles. He became a naturalized citizen of the US in 1946. His hard work led to steady casting in Broadway shows. His theatre credits include a revival of The Iceman Cometh, Candide, Advise and Consent, and On Borrowed Time. In the early 1960s, Bain was one of the principal organizers of the Actors Federal Credit Union, which met with great enthusiasm among his peers at Actors’ Equity. He served as the Credit Union’s first president.

500px-Conrad_Bain_Arthur_Harmon_Maude_1975<- Conrad Bain had a brief career in cinema. He had roles in Star!, Madigan, I Never Sang For My Father, Coogan’s Bluff, Lovers and Other Strangers, Bananas, The Anderson Tapes, and Postcards From the Edge.

   In addition to Maude and Diff’rent Strokes, he guest-starred in The Defenders, The Edge of NightThe Waverly Wonders, four episodes of Dark Shadowsand The Love Boat.

   Conrad Bain died of natural causes. He was 89.

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Dear Abby   The woman who created the Dear Abby column has died. Abigail Van Buren was the pen name for Pauline Phillips who wrote her advice column and hosted a radio show since 1956. Her twin sister was columnist Ann Landers. Her chosen first name was from the Bible’s Old Testament for Abigail, the widow of Nabel; who later married King David. Her last name was inspired by the eighth president, Martin Van Buren.

    Phillips began her career at the San Francisco Chronicle, and eventually, she authored six books.  The Dear Abby Show aired on the CBS Radio Network for over twelve years. She was an honorary member of Women in CommunicationsAmerican College of Psychiatrists, and the National Council of Jewish Women.

    In 2002, after Landers died, Van Buren was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Her daughter Jeanne assumed all the writing responsibilities of Dear Abby, which she had co-written with her mother since 1987.

   Pauline Phillips was 94.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Let’s Look at the Tote Board (#2) …

January 16th, 2013

Manny P. here…

   After almost weeks, the Indiegogo funding campaign for our FORGOTTEN HOLLYWOOD  Documentary Pilot (Development) is taking off because of folks who truly believe in the project. For complete information… click on the Indiegogo link:

 http://www.indiegogo.com/forgottenhollywoodseries/x/1999460

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CONTRIBUTIONS geno scala

~ Geno Scala ($50) – Geno Scala is a multi award-winning screenwriter and owner of Shark-Eating Man Productions, with offices in Beverly Hills and Alabama. The company is dedicated to the creation of feature films, two-reelers, television, and stage productions. Geno is totally committed to family-friendly cinematic faire, and he is promoting our campaign in his social network.

Deborah Kafka~ Deborah Kafka-Hirsch ($25) – Debbie Kafka-Hirsch is a friend and  former classmate of mine from Van Nuys High School. She is a healthcare professional with business administration expertise. She has also created innovative curriculum targeted at patients, physicians, para-professionals, and college students. Her focus is on a patient-care ecosystem resulting in satisfaction driven by high quality outcomes. Debbie is certified from the National Commission for Health Education Credentialing.

kat romo~ Kat Romo ($10) – A former student at the Academy of Radio and Television, Kat Romo is an aspiring broadcast announcer. She currently dabbles on several internet radio programs. I also want to thank Kat for  linking the FORGOTTEN HOLLYWOOD Documentary Pilot campaign on her Facebook page.

* * * * *

   Throughout this 2013 campaign, I’m asking my friends, family, and supporters of our FORGOTTEN HOLLYWOOD franchise to help us reach a 120-day goal of $5000. We are currently at 4%YOU can contribute ANY AMOUNT. This step will ensure Develpment, and we’ll be able to:

  1. Hire a research archivist to track down footage and photos; and secure licensing
  2. Hire a consultant / casting director to book actors and behind-the-scenes folks from Hollywood’s Golden Age; plus cinematic historians for original interviews
  3. Set up a production shoot to tape these candid moments

Again, here’s the Indiegogo link for your chance to participate:

http://www.indiegogo.com/forgottenhollywoodseries/x/1999460

   I appreciate your official future consideration… And, THANKS to our new contributors and supporters (above).

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Loretta Young Exhibit Now Open…

January 14th, 2013

Manny P. here…

   The Hollywood Museum and co-sponsor The Hollywood Reporter have debuted Loretta Young: Hollywood Legend, the most comprehensive collection of Hollywood memorabilia ever assembled, to mark the 100th anniversary of the life of the durable actress. Young’s longevity spanned over seven decades – beginning as a child ingénue during the Silent Era of motion pictures; attaining star status as a romantic leading lady during Hollywood’s Golden Age; and onto television as the host of her own popular dramatic series, The Loretta Young Show, on NBC. She won the Best Actress Oscar for her role in the 1947 film The Farmer’s Daughter.

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443px-Loretta_Young_Argentinean_Magazine_AD      According to their press release, the exhibit includes:

  1. Awards – A complete collection of her accolades
  2. Costumes – Garments from her 20th Century Fox films
  3. Movie Star Make-up – She was the first Max Factor Girl. A dressing table highlighted by photos of Loretta Young with Max Factor will compliment his signature line of make-up designed for his famous brunettes
  4. Hollywood History – An international collection of movie posters and items gathered from around the world, and in four languages
  5. Humanitarian – Tributes for Miss Young’s Catholic and charity work
  6. Behind the Scenes – Home movies, plus photos and memorabilia provides a private look at Miss Young’s life and career

   And, Jean Louis, Academy Award-winning Hollywood costume designer and Loretta Young’s husband, is featured in an exclusive glamorous costume display.  Mr. Louis was the designer for many mega stars including Rita Hayworth, Marlene Dietrich, Judy Garland, Joan Crawford, Betty Grable, Doris Day, Julie Andrews and Marilyn Monroe.

   The Hollywood Museum is in the Max Factor Building, located at 1660 N. Highland Ave. at Hollywood Blvd.

   For complete information, click on the Hollywood Museum website link:

http://www.thehollywoodmuseum.com/loretta-young-hollywood-legend

~  ~  ~  ~  ~

loretta-young-dvd   On February 12th, Timeless Media Group will release the The Loretta Young Show: Best of The Complete Series – 100th Birthday Edition. It highlights a number of episodes never before on DVD and loaded with bonus features, including an interview with Young’s children, rare family home movies and a featurette of Young discussing her storied career. This 17-DVD box set is a must-have for fans of Golden Age Television and classic Hollywood aficionados.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Book Series Visits Bedford Falls…

January 12th, 2013

Manny P. here…

   The Forgotten Hollywood Book Series have found a new home in Seneca Falls, New York. The hamlet is located Western Upstate New York. Some believe that Seneca Falls may have been the inspiration for the fictional town of Bedford Falls portrayed in Frank Capra’s 1946 classic film It’s a Wonderful Life.

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movie_bros   In that spirit, the Seneca Falls It’s a Wonderful Life Museum has just ordered Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History and Son of Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History for their really quaint book shop. Many of the character actors featured in my paperbacks are in the motion picture, including Thomas Mitchell (with James Stewart–> Lionel Barrymore, Ward Bond, Gloria Grahame, and Beulah Bondi.

movie_store   As I previously reported, the museum opened in the Winter of 2010. The ribbon-cutting event was attended by Karolyn Grimes, who played Zuzu in the movie. The location is free to the public during the week, and  displays exhibitions of film posters, photographs, magazine covers, and memorabilia.

   Seneca Falls annually decorates its Main Street with holiday lights and wreaths, and resembles the fictional town. Though, Frank Capra never acknowledged the societal homage, he often visited an aunt in nearby Auburn. Characters in the flick also refer to cities close to the hamlet (Elmira & Rochester).

   The Seneca Falls It’s a Wonderful Life Museum is open year-round. It’s at 32 Fall St.,  you can visit Tuesday-Saturday, 11a–4p. Each day, an It’s a Wonderful Walking Tour takes place.

   It’s nice to see that my guardian angel Clarence is officially watching over my Book Series…

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   I’m spending a lot of time this weekend on the radio on AM 15-10 Financial News and Talk. My Forgotten Hollywood program will air today at 3p (pst). We’re spending an hour exploring the work of Michael Feinstein, the official ambassador of The Great American Songbook. This wonderful partnership with the Library of Congress is combing the nation to retrieve the lost compositions of the Gershwins, Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin, Cole Porter, etc.

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                                           MICHAEL FEINSTEIN

   I’m also a Sunday guest on Close Up, a public affairs show. We’ll be chatting about this year’s film-award season, including the Golden Globes; and last Thursday’s announcement of the Academy Awards nominations. The interview will air twice – 6a and 6p (pst).

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   Here’s a link to listen if you live outside the Southern California broadcast area, and if you love the motion picture industry (past and present):

http://radio.securenetsystems.net/v4/index.cfm?stationCallSign=KSPA

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Let’s Look at Tote Board (#1) …

January 11th, 2013

Manny P. here…

   The Indiegogo funding campaign for our FORGOTTEN HOLLYWOOD Documentary Pilot – Development Phase – is off to a brisk start. For complete information on the project… click on the Indiegogo link:

http://www.indiegogo.com/forgottenhollywoodseries/x/1999460

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CONTRIBUTIONS

thelma reyna~ Thelma Reyna ($40) – Thelma Reyna is author of The Heavens Weep for Us and Other Stories (2009: Outskirts Press). Her stories, poems, essays, book reviews, and other nonfiction have earned publication in literary and academic journals, textbooks, anthologies, blogs, and in regional media for over 30 years. She has served as a city commissioner in Pasadena, and has been an adjunct professor at California State University, Los Angeles. Dr. Reyna writes for the following blogs:

American Latina/o Writers Today  http://www.LatinoWritersToday.blogspot.com

The Literary Self  http://www.TheLiterarySelf.blogspot.com

Powerful Latinas – http://www.PowerfulLatinas.com

AlleneOct232011_jpg_w180h276~ Allene Symons ($25) – Allene Symons published work includes books, reviews,  columns, and magazine articles as a staff editor and freelance writer covering topics from travel to business, health care to the arts. She’s affiliated with the California Writers Club, National Book Critics Circle, Authors Guild, PEN West and Southern California Independent Booksellers Association. Symons is an instructor for Communications / Media Studies at Santa Ana College.

   Radio and television interviews include on Today Show (1997), Regis Philbin (1988), CNN, three Los Angeles programs, and a dozen national and regional radio programs, and twice as a spokesperson for Publishers Weekly.

steph~ Stephanie Martindale ($25) – Stephanie Martindale is a typographer at the Book Publishers Network. The programs she uses are InDesign CS5, Acrobat Professional, and PrintShop Pro. Her work has been extensive, laying out hundreds of books since 2002 (including Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History and Son of Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History).

   Martindale previously worked for Epicenter Press, John Broadbanks Publishing, Great Little Book Publishing, SMB Nation, and Forward Books.

PROMOTIONS / LINKS

   Thanks to the following folks who are helping me promote the FORGOTTEN HOLLYWOOD Documentary Pilot on their social network sites (Facebook):

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Stephanie Martindale ~ Laura Danforth (Danforth Book Distribution) ~ Michelle Merker  Deborah “Cookie” Cooke ~ Ray Jordan

 * * * * *

   Through this initial 2013 campaign, I’m asking my friends, family, and supporters of our FORGOTTEN HOLLYWOOD franchise to help us reach a 120-day goal of $5000YOU can  contribute ANY AMOUNT. This step will ensure the Develpment Phase, and we’ll be able to:

  1. Hire a research archivist to track down footage and photos; and secure licensing
  2. Hire a consultant / casting director to book actors and behind-the-scenes folks from Hollywood’s Golden Age; plus cinematic historians for original interviews
  3. Set up a production shoot to tape these candid moments

   Again, here’s the link for your chance to participate:

http://www.indiegogo.com/forgottenhollywoodseries/x/1999460

   I appreciate your official future consideration… And, THANKS SO MUCH to our valued initial contributors and supporters (above).

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Evolution of Modern Screenwriter…

January 9th, 2013

Manny P. here… 400px-Gatsby_1925_jacket

   It seems, no novel has been adapted to the screen more times than The Great Gatsby. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s work has been filmed five times, and is again, in production. Notable versions include a 1926 silent film starring Warner Baxter and a very young William Powell; a 1949 Golden Age  motion picture with Alan Ladd and Shelly Winters; and arguably, the most popular adaptation in 1974, featuring Robert Redford, Mia Farrow, and Sam Waterston, and a script by Francis Ford Coppola. The upcoming epic will star Leonardo DiCaprio, Carey Mulligan, and Tobey Maguire.

   Fitzgerald joined Ernest Hemingway as American authors of novels and short stories, whose works reflected the times known as the Jazz Age. Before the start of their significant careers, works of noted living scribes weren’t considered  viable material for the stage and screen. Of course, the great works of Shakespeare, Dickens, Victor Hugo, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Jack London were often adapted by  early screenwriters. And, science fiction translated well on the silent screen (especially H.G. Wells and Jules Verne).

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   F. SCOTT FITZGERALD              ERNEST HEMINGWAY

   Influenced by the very-real social commentary of Sinclair Lewis and Upton Sinclair, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway used actual history as a backdrop to their fictional stories. Gertrude Stein dubbed these survivors of World War I (The Great War) as the Lost Generation, which included composer Cole Porter, singer Josephine Baker, dancer Isadora Duncan, and painter Pablo Picasso, among others. John Steinbeck also comes to mind as an American author who developed fiction based on the normal, if dreary, lives of real people. It was T.S. Eliot who first popularized the notion of turning modern fiction into dramatic theatre. Recently, Woody Allen paid homage to these artists of the Lost Generation in his 2012 film, Midnight in Paris.

Eugene_ONeill_stamp   Eugene O’Neill introduced into American drama a stylistic realism  associated with Russian playwright Anton Chekhov, Norwegian writer Henrik Ibsen, and Swedish playwright August Strindberg. American theatre was forever changed. Billed as an alternative to light musical comedy revues from folks like Florenz Ziegfeld, O’Neill’s plays included  dialogue in a popular vernacular, and involved characters on the fringes of society, where they struggle to maintain their hopes and aspirations, but ultimately slide into despair and disillusionment; plots resonating with Depression-era audiences.

   This style of writing led to a development of Broadway thespians, eventually discovered by movie moguls searching for new stars for their talkies of the 1930s. Actors such as Spencer Tracy, James Cagney, Paul Muni, Gary Cooper, Clark Gable, and Humphrey Bogart emerged in realistic cinematic dramas based on the writings of Hemingway, Steinbeck, and O’Neill. Early entries popular among film-goers included A Farewell to Arms, Strange Interludes, and Of Mice and Men.

   In the thirties, a European style of filmmaking became popular as Axis aggression swept two continents. Dubbed film noir… writers such as Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler were quickly hired by the movie studios to update how gangster-films were put together. Hammett was particularly adept at this gritty nuanced style, since elements of the technique were introduced in the Thin Man series of motion pictures of the 1930s. It came together in 1941 with the production of The Maltese Falcon. A hero with duplicitous motives, menacing dark evening streets, and a femme-fatale, made stars of Alan Ladd, John Garfield, Veronica Lake, Robert Mitchum, William Bendix, etc. Iconic movies, including The Glass Key, Out of the Fog, Double Indemnity, The Postman Always Rings Twice, and The Asphalt Jungle still play remarkably well in rich black-and-white cinematography, and a fascinating film noir script.

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                  DASHIELL HAMMETT

   Meanwhile, new productions were developed from Hemingway, Steinbeck, and O’Neill. For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Grapes of Wrath, and Mourning Becomes Electra were among the works receiving accolades from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences each year. And, these fine motion pictures inspired new generations of authors / playwrights. Tennessee Williams and Arthur Miller began influencing how actors studied their craft.

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                                            STANISLAVSKY

   The Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute trained actors in a technique known as The Method. This teaching style owed much to the Russian director, Stanislavsky, whose book, An Actor Prepares, dealt with the psychology of interpretation in acting. Actors such as Marlon Brando, James Dean, Paul Newman, Montgomery Clift, Marilyn Monroe; and early directors as Elia Kazan and Sidney Lumet embraced this theatrical concept.

   This acting technique was extraordinarily popular in live television of the 1950s, particularly  in anthology dramas of the day. Teleplay writers emerged… Rod Serling and Paddy Chayevsky comes to mind. Rod Steiger, Robert Redford, Lee Remick, Joanne Woodward, George C. Scott, Jack Klugman, Cloris Leachman, among others, were plucked from the small screen to become cinematic stars. And, Requiem for a Heavyweight, Patterns, and Twelve Angry Men were  adapted into successful film productions.

   Later, Dustin Hoffman, Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, Harvey Keitel also ushered a new-realism that exists in movies today. The Hays Code, established in the 1930s, was a first casuality of this modern-day cinematic revolution. The Motion Picture Ratings were created in 1967 to  help families decide which films might be appropriate for their children. Screenwriters now had the dramatic license to tackle the most delicate of issues.

Gatsby_banner_art-275x300   It remains to be seen if F. Scott Fitzgerald’s work still excites theatre-goers. My guess is… if the material is strong and well-adapted… and if the actors hit their marks… ticket sales will be brisk. The Great Gatsby is set for a May 10, 2013 release.

 Until next time>                              “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Driving Miss Daisy Tours Australia…

January 7th, 2013

Manny P. here…

   Following the Brisbane premiere season of Alfred Uhry’s Pulitzer Prize-winning classic play Driving Miss Daisy, the production will tour to Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide. This latest  effort stars two of the world’s greatest living actors: Angela Lansbury and James Earl Jones.

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   This timeless American drama, which inspired the beloved Oscar-winning film, Driving Miss Daisy tells the affecting story of the decades-long relationship between an elderly Southern Jewish woman and her compassionate African-American chauffeur. In addition to performing on Broadway and London’s West End, Lansbury and Jones have also most recently been performing together in the Broadway production of Gore Vidal’s The Best Man.

Angela_Lansbury_in_The_Picture_of_Dorian_Gray_trailer    Broadway and Hollywood royalty, Angela Lansbury has garnered many of the industry’s top awards in cinema, theatre and television in a career that has now spanned seven decades. Nominated for three Oscars, including one for her motion picture debut in Gaslight (1944), Angela continued with a dazzling body of work on film (The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Manchurian Candidate, and Disney’s Beauty and the Beast); television (Murder She Wrote); and stage (Gypsy, Mame, Sweeney Todd, A Little Night Music, Hamlet).

james earl jones<— James Earl Jones voice is known by people of all ages (Star Wars fans know him as the voice of Darth Vader; children know him as Mufasa from Disney’s The Lion King). Jones made his Broadway debut in 1957, and has conquered Shakespeare (Othello, Macbeth, King Lear), as well as, stage classics (The Iceman Cometh, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, On Golden Pond). He was equally successful in movies (Dr. Strangelove, The Great White Hope, Field of Dreams,The Hunt for Red October); and television (Roots: The Next Generation. Last year, Jones was honored with an Lifetime Achievement Academy Award in recognition of his long and distinguished career.

   The tour Down Under begins February 3rd to an already sold-out crowd in Brisbane.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- TCM to Honor Two Comedians…

January 5th, 2013

Manny P. here… TCM_website_logo

   Turner Classic Movies is set to honor Danny Kaye and Dick Van Dyke with extensive programming. This is a great opportunity to re-visit their iconic work.

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~ DANNY KAYE – To celebrate his 100 birthday, TCM is planning to spend Sunday, January 20th with films and television programs devoted to this splendid humanitarian. Included will be the rarely aired Wonder Man and Hans Christian Andersen. Also in the collection of movies: The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, Up in Arms, The Kid From Brooklyn, The Court Jester, and A Song is Born. An episode from The Danny Kaye Show (1963), and The Dick Cavett Show  (1971) interview rounds out this outstanding day.

~ DICK VAN DYKE – On Tuesday, January 22nd, five motion pictures are on tap featuring the 2013 SAG Awards Lifetime Achievement honoree. The prime time lineup: Divorce American Style, Cold Turkey, Fitzwilly, Bye Bye Birdie, and Some Kind of A Nut.

   The Screen Actor’s Guild Awards will be announced the following Sunday on January 27th.

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bond b-day  The 85th Academy Awards program on February 24th is planning a tribute to the 50th anniversary of the James Bond motion picture series; the longest running cinematic franchise in history. Skyfall was released in November, and made a record $1 billion-plus worldwide.

   The Oscars will be presented at the Dolby Theatre.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Democracy Counts at Skirball Center

January 3rd, 2013

Manny P. here…

democracy_button   The Skirball Cultural Center has established itself as one of the world’s most dynamic Jewish cultural institutions, and among the leading cultural venues in Los Angeles. Its mission is to explore the connections between Jewish heritage and the vitality of American democratic ideals. It seeks to inspire people of every ethnic identity in American life.

   Democracy Matters is an ongoing series of exhibits, tours, and panel discussions. A companion series of classics will be presented for FREE. The screenings are on a couple of Tuesdays at 1:30p.

12_angry_men_skirball_lg   inherit_the_wind_skirball_lg

12 ANGRY MEN                                             INHERIT THE WIND

~ 12 ANGRY MEN (January 8th) –  A compelling drama directed by iconic Sidney Lumet, 12 Angry Men highlights the importance of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. It features an all-star cast, including Henry Fonda, Jack Warden, Martin Balsam, Lee J. Cobb, E.G. Marshall, Ed Begley, and Jack Klugman, who died last month.

~ INHERIT THE WIND (February 12th) – In honor of Charles Darwin’s birthday, catch a free matinee of this acclaimed drama based on the famous John T. Scopes trial. The strength of the Constitution is examined in this Stanley Kramer production, which starred Spencer Tracy, Gene Kelly, Frederic March, Claude Akins, Florence Eldridge, and Dick York. Tracy received an Oscar nomination for his performance.

skirball   The Skirball Cultural Center is at 2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd., between San Fernando Valley and West Los Angeles.

For complete information, click on the link below:

http://www.skirball.org/programs/film

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517px-Patti_Page   Patti Page (right) was one of the early crossover country singers. Her pop hits included Doggie in the Window,Mockin’ Bird Hill, Allegheny Moon, Old Cape Cod, and Tennessee Waltz, her signature tune. Page also sang the title track to Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte.

   Page was quite memorable in a few motion pictures, including Elmer Gantry and Boy’s Night Out. By all accounts (from actors such as Burt Lancaster, Tony Randall, and James Garner), Patti was a joy to work with. Nice was the adjective used to describe the songstress. She became the first singer to have a television slot on all three major networks, including The Patti Page Show on ABC.

   Patti Page was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame in 1997. She will be posthumously honored with a Lifetime Achievement Grammy, a deserved accolade planned before her passing.

   Patti Page was 85.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Broadway in Revival Mode in 2013!

January 2nd, 2013

Manny P. here…

bwayhollywood-500x207   Revival productions are on tap in 2013 along 42nd Street. The works of Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote, William Inge, Frank Wildhorn, and Rodgers & Hammerstein seldom gets tired.  Broadway is attracting the Star power of Laurie Metcalf, Mare Winningham, Scarlett Johansson, Keith Carradine, Cicely Tyson, Hugh Jackman, Cuba Gooding Jr., Nicole Kidman, Ellen Burstyn, Linda Lavin, George Wendt, Vanessa Williams, Nathan Lane, Alec Baldwin, and Tom Hanks.

   Here are the details:

Picnic   Cat on a Hot Tin Roof   Cinderella

~ PICNIC – Won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and was later adapted into an Oscar-winning motion picture in 1955

~ CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF – The Broadway smash became an on-screen vehicle for Elizabeth Taylor, Paul Newman, Burl Ives, and Jack Carson

~ BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S – The iconic comedy featured Audrey Hepburn; and a fabulous Henry Mancini score

~ CINDERELLA – The classic musical is getting a dramatic makeover from Tony-nominated playwright Douglas Carter Beane

jekyll & hyde   Other great Broadway shows and Hollywood film classics being revived include A Trip to Bountiful, Jekyll & Hyde, Diner, A Few Good Men, Flashdance, The Philadelphia Story, and Bullets Over Broadway. In the works: Rebecca, Coal Miner’s Daughter, Kiss of the Spider Woman, Funny Girl, Sweet Bird of Youth, Dirty Dancing, Father of the Bride, Robin and the 7 Hoods, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, You Can’t Take it With You, Zorba, Brigadoon, and The Nutty Professor.

   Adaptations and remakes, popular in today’s cinema, offer nostalgia for theatre-goers in New York.

Until next time>                               “never forget”