“Growing Up Hollywood” Book Giveaway: Victoria Riskin, William Wellman Jr. and Alan Rode

“Growing Up Hollywood” Book Giveaway
A Prize Package to Kick Off our Screen Classics Discussion Series

CMH is happy to announce the very first of our year-long monthly book giveaways as part of our partnership with University Press of Kentucky!

Our first book giveaway is in celebration of Growing Up Hollywood, the premiere event in our exclusive Classic Movie Hub Screen Classics Discussion Video Series with University Press of Kentucky, and co-host Aurora from Once Upon a Screen!

The event premiered earlier tonight on Facebook, and featured author Alan Rode leading a discussion with two children of Hollywood legends – Victoria Riskin and William Wellman Jr – who shared some wonderful and very personal stories about growing up in Hollywood with their very famous parents.

That said, to celebrate, we will be giving away one prize package of three classic movie biographies, courtesy of University Press of Kentucky:

In order to qualify to win this Prize Package via this contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, April 17 at 6PM EST.

  • April 17: One Winner (wins all three books)

We will announce one lucky winner on Twitter @ClassicMovieHub, the day after the winner is picked around 9PM EST — in other words, we will announce the winner on Sunday April 18 around 9PM EST on Twitter. And, please note that you don’t have to have a Twitter account to enter; just see below for the details.

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And now on to the contest!

ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, April 17, 2021 at 6PM EST —

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

2) Then TWEET (not DM) the following message*:
Just entered to win the “Growing Up Hollywood” THREE-Book #Giveaway courtesy of @KentuckyPress & @ClassicMovieHub – biographies from Alan Rode @alancinephile Victoria Riskin @vriskin & William Wellman Jr — #EnterToWin here: http://ow.ly/Eoro50Ei9fL

THE QUESTION:
In your opinion, what would be the most exciting or coolest thing about growing up with famous parents during the Golden Age of Hollywood?

*If you do not have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

ALSO: Please allow us 48 hours to approve your comments. Sorry about that, but we are being overwhelmed with spam, and must sort through 100s of comments…

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If you missed the premiere event, you can catch it here on YouTube:

“Growing Up Hollywood” Screen Classics Discussion with Alan Rode, Victoria Riskin and William Wellman Jr.

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About the Books: 

Michael Curtiz: A Life in Film: In the first biography of this colorful, instinctual artist, Alan K. Rode illuminates the life and work of one of the film industry’s most complex figures. He explores the director’s little-known early life and career in his native Hungary, revealing how Curtiz shaped the earliest days of silent cinema in Europe before immigrating to the United States in 1926. In Hollywood, Curtiz earned a reputation for explosive tantrums, his difficulty with English, and disregard for the well-being of others. However, few directors elicited more memorable portrayals from their casts, and ten different actors delivered Oscar-nominated performances under his direction.

Fay Wray and Robert Riskin: A Hollywood Memoir: A love story, memoir, and dual biography of two of Hollywood’s most famous figures, Fay Wray and Robert Riskin explores the fascinating lives of two exceptionally talented people at the center of Hollywood’s Golden Age. In this moving and masterful work, Wray and Riskin’s daughter, Victoria, interweaves the story of their lives and connects them to one of the most interesting periods in Hollywood history. At the heart of Fay Wray and Robert Riskin is a great love story, backed by a cast of characters that includes the greatest stars, filmmakers, screenwriters, and moguls of the era.

Wild Bill Wellman: Hollywood Rebel: Drawing on his father’s unpublished letters, diaries, and unfinished memoir, William Wellman, Jr. presents a boisterous portrait of the handsome, tough-talking, hard-drinking, uncompromising maverick. Wellman emerges as a juvenile delinquent, a professional ice-hockey player, and a World War I flying ace in the Lafayette Escadrille. As a highly decorated pilot, he fought the enemy. As an in-demand director, he fought producers and the great studio moguls — some with his fists — for the right to make his films his way. His passionate and roguish personality comes vividly to life in his son’s hands. Wild Bill Wellman offers an unprecedented look at a man who directed “like a general trying to break out of a beachhead” and explores his years working with stars including Clark Gable, Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck, Gregory Peck, John Wayne, Lauren Bacall, and Clint Eastwood. Full of humorous anecdotes and behind-the-scenes insights from the Golden Age, this riveting biography sheds new light on the life and legacy of a true Hollywood legend.

Click here for the full contest rules. 

Please note that only United States (excluding the territory of Puerto Rico) and Canada entrants are eligible.

Good Luck!

And if you can’t wait to win the books, you can purchase them on amazon by clicking below:

          

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Books, Contests & Giveaways, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | Tagged , , , , | 17 Comments

Silver Screen Standards: Stagecoach (1939)

Silver Screen Standards: Stagecoach (1939)

I took a short ride in a stagecoach once, at the Old Tucson Western theme park in Arizona, and it permanently altered my impression of films like Stagecoach (1939), where travelers make long journeys in those noisy, dusty, bumpy conveyances. Anybody who spends days riding in a stagecoach must really be desperate or determined to reach their destination. Luckily for us, John Ford’s classic Western features just those types of passengers, each making the perilous trip for his or her own reasons, and in spite of all the dangers that accompany the uncomfortable ride. Ford’s film, while a star-making moment for John Wayne and a hugely influential picture far beyond its own genre, suffers most of the usual problems of the Western as American mythology, but its powerful narrative about people thrust together in dire circumstances is its heart and soul, and the cast assembled to tell that story is simply brilliant. As a study in complex characters, Stagecoach achieves true greatness, which makes it well worth revisiting if you haven’t seen it lately.

Stagecoach (1939) John Wayne
John Wayne became a star thanks to his role as the Ringo Kid, seen here in an iconic image with Ford’s beloved Monument Valley in the background. Wayne continued to wear this same hat in later films until it was falling apart.

Most of the players are beloved character actors with several regulars in Ford’s casts, and every one of them delivers a memorable performance here, from Claire Trevor in her top-billed role as the disreputable Dallas to Donald Meek as the milquetoast whiskey drummer Mr. Peacock. Classic oater fans instantly recognize the distinctive voice of Andy Devine as stagecoach driver Buck (as well as the breathtaking stunts being performed by Yakima Canutt), while John Carradine, Thomas Mitchell, and George Bancroft are familiar faces to almost anyone who loves movies from the 30s and 40s. Less familiar are Berton Churchill, who nails his role as the obnoxious banker Gatewood, and Louise Platt as the prim but very pregnant Mrs. Mallory. Wayne, the most iconic of Western stars, makes his first appearance after all of the other characters are underway, which gives his Ringo Kid a particularly memorable introduction that helps to set the stage for Wayne’s emergence as a true leading man after years in lower-profile pictures and roles.


John Wayne, John Carradine, George Bancroft, Berton Churchill, Andy Devine, Francis Ford, Tim Holt, Donald Meek, Thomas Mitchell, Louise Platt, and Claire Trevor in Stagecoach (1939)
The travelers gather around a table at the first stop of the journey, where their behavior toward Dallas reveals their own prejudices or humanity.

The audience might come for any one or all of these actors, but they stay for the characters being depicted. With the exception of Gatewood, who is utterly without scruples, each traveler is a complex mix of strengths and weaknesses, each capable of unexpected greatness when the moment demands. The film opens by introducing us to its pariahs, as Dallas and the alcoholic Doc Boone (Mitchell) are being run out of town by a thin-lipped flock of harpies who consider themselves the local arbiters of morality. Their failures are obvious, and their departure on the stage forced. Barely more reputable is the gambler Hatfield (Carradine), an ex-Confederate officer with a genteel manner who impulsively decides to board the stage when he recognizes Mrs. Mallory as the daughter of his former commander. Nobody makes him go, but the old flame of chivalry reignites his heart as he declares himself the lady’s protector. Mrs. Mallory – despite the most delicate of delicate conditions – is going to meet her husband, but her cold rejection of Dallas dampens our sympathy for her until she learns to appreciate the other woman. Poor Mr. Peacock is the most blameless of the lot and just wants to get home to his family, but he’s a nervous greenhorn out of place in this rough and dangerous territory, and he lets Doc Boone gulp down his entire stock of whiskey. Buck and Marshal Curley (Bancroft) are in their element and the most at home on the journey, but they also have personalities to explore. Their shared fondness for Ringo provides insight into the Kid’s nature and their own, especially since the Marshal intends to throw Ringo back in jail, and their competence keeps the stage going in spite of every obstacle.

Stagecoach (1939) Andy Devine, George Bancroft
Andy Devine got the role of Buck thanks to his ability to drive a team of horses, while George Bancroft rides shotgun as Marshal Curley. Both characters have a fondness for the Ringo Kid and take an interest in his welfare.

We learn more about each character as their journey presses forward and the dangers mount. Gatewood rants and asserts his privilege, even manspreading egregiously in the crowded coach as he hogs the seat between the two women. When Mrs. Mallory gives birth at a wayside station, Gatewood actually proposes leaving her behind, to the utter abhorrence of every other traveler. Doc Boone and even Hatfield have their moments of redemption, Mr. Peacock’s gentle humanity becomes a needed antidote to Gatewood’s selfishness, and Ringo wins the love of both Dallas and the viewer by insistently treating her as a lady deserving of respect and kindness. It’s worth noting that this group of characters is far more sympathetic than those found in the original Guy de Maupassant story, “Boule de Suif,” which inspired Ernest Haycox to write the 1937 short story, “The Stage to Lordsburg,” that Dudley Nichols then adapted for the screenplay. Still, the idea of a microcosm of a culture’s characters exists in each; we recognize the Western types each character represents but are surprised to find out how complex and human they are. That combination of recognition and surprise is what makes Stagecoach such a powerful story. We think we know these people until we realize that we don’t. By the last scene, we know a lot more, and hopefully, we know that our real lives are one big stagecoach journey, fraught with peril, and we ought not to make assumptions about our fellow passengers.

John Wayne, John Carradine, George Bancroft, Berton Churchill, Andy Devine, Chris-Pin Martin, Donald Meek, Louise Platt, and Claire Trevor in Stagecoach (1939)
Stagecoach features a fantastic ensemble cast of favorite stars, each creating a memorable character. Notice the Ringo Kid (John Wayne) holding the coach door open for Dallas (Claire Trevor) while every other man’s attention is fixed on the more respectable Mrs. Mallory (Louise Platt).

I don’t want to spoil the third act too much for those who might not have seen the picture, but I will say that Stagecoach is a solid pick if you normally don’t go in for Westerns but want to give them a try. The film earned seven Oscar nominations, and Thomas Mitchell, who also appeared in Gone with the Wind in 1939, won his Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his performance as Doc Boone. Young John Wayne is sweeter and leaner than the grizzled version we usually imagine, and the ensemble cast provides someone for every viewer to appreciate. If you’re concerned about the depiction and treatment of Native Americans in Westerns (as you certainly should be), couple Stagecoach and other John Ford Westerns with a viewing of the 2009 documentary, Reel Injun, directed by Cree-Canadian filmmaker Neil Diamond.

— Jennifer Garlen for Classic Movie Hub

Jennifer Garlen pens our monthly Silver Screen Standards column. You can read all of Jennifer’s Silver Screen Standards articles here.

Jennifer is a former college professor with a PhD in English Literature and a lifelong obsession with film. She writes about classic movies at her blog, Virtual Virago, and presents classic film programs for lifetime learning groups and retirement communities. She’s the author of Beyond Casablanca: 100 Classic Movies Worth Watching and its sequel, Beyond Casablanca II: 101 Classic Movies Worth Watching, and she is also the co-editor of two books about the works of Jim Henson.

Posted in Posts by Jennifer Garlen, Silver Screen Standards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Classic Movie Stars Born in Nebraska

Happy National Nebraska Day!

In celebration of National Nebraska Day today, April 5th, I just thought I’d share some Classic Movie Nebraska birthdays with you! Many thanks to my friend and fellow film fan @Nebraskanellie who ‘educated’ me on all the iconic stars born in Nebraska! Can’t wait to visit their birthplaces one day… Oh, and by the way, the most surprising of all for me, was Marlon Brando!

Here we go:

Born in Omaha:

fred astaire
Fred Astaire, born Frederick Austerlitz in Omaha, May 10, 1899
brando streetcar
Marlon Brando, born Marlon Brando Jr. in Omaha, April 3, 1924
Montgomery Clift
Montgomery Clift, born Edward Montgomery Clift in Omaha, October 17, 1920
dorothy mcguire old yeller
Dorothy McGuire born Dorothy Hackett McGuire in Omaha, June 14, 1916

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Born in Grand Island:

henry fonda 12 angry men
Henry Fonda, born Henry Jaynes Fonda in Omaha, May 16, 1905

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Born in Filley:

Robert Taylor, born Spangler Arlington Brugh in Filley, August 5, 1911

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Born in Burchard:

harold lloyd safety last
Harold Lloyd, born Harold Clayton Lloyd in Omaha, April 20, 1893

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Born in Laurel:

james coburn charade
James Coburn, born James Harrison Coburn III in Laurel, August 31, 1928

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Born in Hastings:

sandy dennis the out of towners
Sandy Dennis, born Sandra Dale Dennis in Hastings, April 27, 1937[1]

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Born in Benkelman:

ward bond
Ward Bond, born Wardell Edwin Bond in Benkelman, April 9, 1903

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And, a bunch more 🙂

  • Ruth Etting – David City
  • Dick Cavett – Gibbon
  • David Janssen – Naponee
  • Leland Hayward – Nebraska City
  • Thurl Ravenscroft – Norfolk
  • Swoosie Kurt – Omaha
  • Louis D. Lighton – Omaha
  • Nick Nolte – Omaha
  • Coleen Gray – Staplehurst
  • Hoot Gibson – Tekamah
  • Darryl F. Zanuck – Wahoo
  • Fred Niblo – York

Am I missing anyone?

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Birthday DATABASE, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | 1 Comment

What’s Streaming in April on the CMH Channel at Best Classics Ever? Royal Wedding, Oliver Twist, The Snows of Kilimanjaro

Our April Picks on the Classic Movie Hub Channel
April Birthdays and Springtime Fun!

Here we go… This month’s free streaming picks for our Classic Movie Hub Channel at Best Classics Ever (BCE) – the mega streaming channel for classic movies and TV shows!

That said, here are some of our April classic movie picks available for FREE STREAMING all month long on the CMH Channel. All you need to do is click on the movie/show of your choice, then click ‘play’ — you do not have to opt for a 7-day trial.

In celebration of April Birthdays, we’re featuring two comic geniuses – Charlie Chaplin (born Apr 16, 1889) with his silent classic, The Kid, from 1921, and Harold Lloyd (April 20, 1893) with his screwball talkie, The Milky Way, from 1936. We’re also celebrating Spencer Tracy’s birthday (Apr 5, 1900) with Father’s Little Dividend, also starring Elizabeth Taylor and Joan Bennett — as well as Gregory Peck’s birthday (April 5, 1916) with The Snows of Kilimanjaro. We’ll also be showing Of Human Bondage starring Bette Davis (born April 5, 1908), Oliver Twist starring Sir Alec Guinness (born April 2, 1914), and Royal Wedding starring Jane Powell (April 1, 1929) co-starring Fred Astaire and directed by Stanley Donen (April 13, 1924).

the kid 1921 poster
The Kid, 1921 silent film by Charlie Chaplin, starring Chaplin, Jackie Coogan, and Edna Purviance
fathers little dividend poster
Father’s Little Dividend from 1951, directed by Vincente Minnelli, and starring Spencer Tracy, Elizabeth Taylor, and Joan Bennet. This was the follow-up to 1950’s Father of the Bride.
snows of kilimanjaro poster
From 1952, The Snows of Kilimanjaro, starring Gregory Peck, Susan Hayward, and Ava Gardner

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We’re also getting ready for some Springtime Fun with some rapid-fire dialog, mistaken identities, and some fun tunes.

his girl friday poster
His Girl Friday, the 1940 Howard Hawks screwball comedy classic starring Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell, and Ralph Bellamy
happy go lovely poster
From 1951, Happy Go Lovely, the musical comedy starring David Niven, Vera-Ellen and Cesar Romero

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For those of you who aren’t familiar with the service, Best Classics Ever is a new mega streaming channel built especially for classic movie and TV lovers. The idea of the channel is to make lots of classic titles accessible and affordable for all. That said, Classic Movie Hub is curating titles each month that our fans can stream for free on the Classic Movie Hub Channelat Best Classics Ever. If you’d like access to the entire selection of Best Classics Ever titles, you can subscribe to everything for a low monthly fee of $4.99/month (Best Stars Ever, Best Westerns Ever, Best Mysteries Ever, Best TV Ever) or for an individual channel for only $1.99/month.

You can read more about Best Classics Ever and our partnership here.

Hope you enjoy!

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Classic Movie Hub Channel, Posts by Annmarie Gatti, Streaming Movies & TV Shows | 1 Comment

Classic Movie Travels: Jean Porter

Classic Movie Travels: Jean Porter
Illinois, Texas and California

Jean Porter
Jean Porter

Jean Porter was one of Hollywood’s many ingénues, appearing in roles both on television and in films. Though her film career was short-lived in comparison to some of her peers, she remains a cheery and energetic presence in several classic films.

Bennie Jean Porter was born on December 8, 1922, in Cisco, Texas. Her father, H.C. Porter, worked for the Pacific Railway while her mother, Oma Thelma Simper, taught piano. Even at an early age, Porter was already particularly photogenic, dubbed the “Most Beautiful Baby” of Eastland County.

As she grew, so did her engaging personality, entertaining the residence of Dallas by hosting a Saturday morning radio show for the local WRR station by the age of 10. Later, she would secure a summer position touring with performer Ted Lewis and his band.

After spending her childhood in entertainment, Porter and her family moved to Hollywood, where Porter would begin training and work to find a role in the film industry. She won an all-expense-paid trip there and developed her craft as a performer. By age 12, she was taking dance lessons and the Fanchon and Marco dance school, leading to her being discovered by director Allan Dwan. Her first film appearance would be in an uncredited role as part of Song and Dance Man (1936). Porter would continue on in a succession of several uncredited roles before eventually moving on to appearances in B-movies as a bit player or supporting ingénue. Her early roles also included The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1938) and One Million B.C. (1940) until she moved on to be cast in MGM films routinely.

Jean Porter Young
A young Jean Porter

Though Porter never achieved superstardom from her films, she appeared in some fairly popular endeavors. Among her screen successes were The Youngest Profession (1943), Andy Hardy’s Blonde Trouble (1944), Bathing Beauty (1944), Thrill of a Romance (1945), Bud Abbott and Lou Costello in Hollywood (1945), Till the End of Time (1946), and Easy to Wed (1946).

While working on Till the End of Time, Porter met director Edward Dmytryk, who would become her husband. Porter had replaced Shirley Temple in the role. They married in 1948 in Ellicott City, Maryland, and had three children: Richard, Victoria, and Rebecca. Unfortunately, Dmytryk was blacklisted due to his refusal to respond to allegations of communism. He would become one of the Hollywood Ten most prominently blacklisted individuals of the film industry. As a result, the couple fled to England. Though they would return to the U.S. in 1951, it was not without challenges. Dmytryk was imprisoned for six months due to contempt of congress. He gave testimony and was eventually given a reprieve, leading him to be allowed to return to directing.

Porter’s career in films, however, would soon end. Dick Powell gave her a small part in Cry Danger (1951), which helped her to keep working while Dmytryk was in jail. During this period, Porter predominantly worked in television, appearing in shows like The Red Skelton Show, Sea Hunt, and 77 Sunset Strip. Her last film was The Left Hand of God (1955), directed by her husband. She retired from acting altogether in 1961.

Richard Erdman and Jean Porter in Cry Danger (1951)
Richard Erdman and Jean Porter in Cry Danger (1951)

Despite the many challenges they faced, Porter and Dmytryk remained married until Dmytryk’s death in 1999. The couple authored On Screen Actingtogether in 1984. Porter herself wrote frequently as a byline contributor for Classic Images as well as an unpublished book about Dmytryk and herself called The Cost of Living. Well into her 80s, Porter also published Hollywood’s Golden Age: As Told By One Who Lived It Alland Chicago Jazz and The Some: As Told by One of the Original Chicagoans, Jess Stacy. She would also regularly attend various film-related events.

Porter passed away on January 13, 2018, in Canoga Park, California, at age 95.

Over the years, Porter maintained many properties and moved fairly frequently. She and Dmytryk traveled often but many residences where she lived remain.

In 1947, she had a residence at 1220 N. State Parkway in Chicago, Illinois. The original structure remains.

Jean Porter 1220 N. State Parkway, Chicago, Illinois
1220 N. State Parkway, Chicago, Illinois

She also owned a property at 1400 Lorrain St. in Austin, Texas. This is the property today:

Jean Porter 1400 Lorrain St., Austin, Texas
1400 Lorrain St., Austin, Texas

From 1956 to 1962, Porter and Dmytryk resided at 609 Saint Cloud Rd in Westwood, California. The home also stands today.

Jean Porter 609 Saint Cloud Road, Westwood, California
609 Saint Cloud Road, Westwood, California

1n 1983, Porter lived at 8729 Lookout Mountain Ave. in Los Angeles, California. Here is the home today:

Jean Porter 8729 Lookout Mountain Ave., Los Angeles, California
8729 Lookout Mountain Ave., Los Angeles, California

By 1988, she relocated to 588 Cold Canyon Rd in Calabasas, California. This is the home today:

Jean Porter 588 Cold Canyon Road, Calabasas, California
588 Cold Canyon Road, Calabasas, California

In 1996, Porter resided at 3945 Westfall Dr. in Encino, California. This is the home at present:

Jean Porter 3945 Westfall Dr., Encino, California
3945 Westfall Dr., Encino, California

Today, Porter can still be remembered through her films as well as her intriguing written output both with her husband and independently.

–Annette Bochenek for Classic Movie Hub

Annette Bochenek pens our monthly Classic Movie Travels column. You can read all of Annette’s Classic Movie Travel articles here.

Annette Bochenek of Chicago, Illinois, is a PhD student at Dominican University and an independent scholar of Hollywood’s Golden Age. She manages the Hometowns to Hollywood blog, in which she writes about her trips exploring the legacies and hometowns of Golden Age stars. Annette also hosts the “Hometowns to Hollywood” film series throughout the Chicago area. She has been featured on Turner Classic Movies and is the president of TCM Backlot’s Chicago chapter. In addition to writing for Classic Movie Hub, she also writes for Silent Film Quarterly, Nostalgia Digest, and Chicago Art Deco SocietyMagazine.

Posted in Classic Movie Travels, Posts by Annette Bochenek | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Western RoundUp: Will Penny (1967)

Western RoundUp: Will Penny (1967)

In my February Western RoundUp column, I wrote about Rio Bravo (1959), an old favorite I’ve seen countless times over most of my life.

This month I chose to write about a film I’ve never seen before, which is also possibly the “newest” Western I’ve ever written about here: Will Penny (1967), starring Charlton Heston in the title role.

Will Penny (1967) movie poster
Will Penny (1967) movie poster

Will Penny has been highly recommended to me by several people over the years, including my dad, a fellow Western fan who praised its authenticity and called it a “classic loner Western.” This month it was finally time for me to pull it out of my mile-high viewing stack!  Sometimes when one finally sees a film it doesn’t live up to recommendations, but I’m happy to say that Will Penny did not disappoint.

The movie was captivating from its opening cattle drive scenes, filmed somewhere around Bishop or Lone Pine, California, and scored by David Raksin (Laura). This sequence captures the rough, dirty life of a cowboy with gritty realism, including what it was like working in near-freezing weather.

Will Penny (1967) Charlton Heston
Charlton Heston

The movie filmed in February, and one could tell the bundled-up actors were genuinely cold; in his book, The Actor’s Life: Journals 1956-1976 Heston wrote “it was the wind that washed fatigue through all of us, all day.”

It was worth it, though, as Heston recorded that the dailies looked “marvelous.” And indeed, the final film is absolutely beautiful.

As laid out in the opening sequence, Will is a cowboy, teased about his age by the younger men on the drive. He’s not educated — he can only make his “mark” in the receipt book instead of signing when he’s paid — but he has the kind of knowledge, of men and nature, that isn’t learned in books.

With the cattle drive ended, Will tags along with fellow cowboys Blue (Lee Majors) and Dutchy (Anthony Zerbe) on their way to look for new work. An unfortunate encounter with the mean Quint family, including the father “Preacher” Quint (Donald Pleasence) and his sons (Bruce Dern, Matt Clark, and Gene Rutherford) leaves one of the Quint boys dead and Dutchy “gut shot,” seemingly likely to die.

Will Penny (1967) Charlton Heston and Lee Majors
Heston & Lee Majors

Will and Blue manage to get Dutchy to a doctor (William Schallert), after which Will leaves; he’s eventually hired by Alex (Ben Johnson), the no-nonsense foreman of the Flat Iron Ranch. Will is given a job manning a remote line cabin for the winter and told under no circumstances can any trespasser he encounters remain on Flat Iron land.

This rule causes quite a problem when Will arrives at the cabin and finds Catherine Allen (Joan Hackett) and her son Horace (Jon Francis), who had been abandoned by the guide hired to deliver them to her husband’s new farm in Oregon.

Will Penny (1967) Jon Francis and Joan Hackett
Jon Francis and Joan Hackett

Will doesn’t have the heart to turn the Allens out before they can move on in the spring, and as time goes on the trio become close. Long-time loner Will loves teaching the little boy about the outdoors and comes to love Catherine. But Catherine’s far-off husband, the nearby Quints, and Will’s own fear of commitment all may stand in the way of Will and the Allens being able to remain a permanent family unit.

As with many Western films, part of the pleasure in watching is noticing the echoes of Westerns past. The Quints called to mind Uncle Shiloh Clegg (Charles Kemper) and his “boys” (including James Arness and Hank Worden) from John Ford‘s Wagon Master (1950), with a touch of the Clantons from Ford’s My Darling Clementine (1946) on the side.

Without intending to be too spoiler-y, the ending made me think a bit of Shane (1953). Tying all these points in Western film history together is Ben Johnson, who appeared in both Wagon Master and Shane and is seen here as Will’s ranch boss.  

Will Penny (1967) Lobby Card
Charlton Heston often said that of all the films he made, this was his favorite.

Heston is superb in the title role, playing a man who struggles to articulate his newly discovered strong feelings. With a history in Westerns going back to the early ’50s, including William Wyler‘s classic The Big Country (1958), Heston seems completely at home both in the saddle and in the part of an aging cowboy.

Heston would write in his 1995 memoir In the Arena: An Autobiography that Will Penny was “one of the best [films] I’ve made, certainly among my best performances…the film itself remains my best satisfaction.”

I was surprised to notice Heston’s wife, Lydia Clarke, in a bit role as the doctor’s wife. This was her first film in 14 years since she had a role in her husband’s film Bad For Each Other (1953). Heston noted in his journal that she did the part as “a convenience” for the production, saying, “I don’t think she enjoyed it, really, though she’s obviously far better than anyone they could’ve gotten.”

Heston also writes in his memoirs that Lee Remick, Jean Simmons, and Eva Marie Saint either turned down the role of Catherine Allen or weren’t available, but he was extremely happy with the lesser-known Hackett’s performance, saying she “couldn’t have been bettered.”

Charlton Heston, Joan Hackett and Jon Francis Will Penny (1967)
Charlton Heston, Joan Hackett and Jon Francis

Hackett has a nicely rounded role, as a “proper” woman traveling with a silver teakettle and books to educate her son; at the same time, she demonstrates nerve from the first time Will meets her at a road outpost, traveling west with no one but an unreliable guide and her little boy.

When Catherine discovers Will and Blue have a grievously wounded man in their wagon, she does her best to comfort him and advocate on his behalf; it’s an interesting scene as Will and Blue, unsure of what to do for their friend, almost try to avoid dealing with it — and their emotions — by going inside the station to drink.

Catherine might have more nerve than sense, letting Will know she’s a lone woman at the line cabin when they unexpectedly meet again in that isolated setting, but she’s a hard worker and when the chips are down she can be counted on to do her part in a life-threatening situation. It’s a wonderful role, and Hackett was fortunate the other fine actresses cleared the way for her to get the part.

It’s fun to note that just a couple of years later Hackett and Dern, who plays a despicable villain here, reunited in a far different kind of Western, the comedy Support Your Local Sheriff! (1969).

Jon Francis, who is very appealing as Catherine’s son, was born Jonathan Francis Gries and was the son of screenwriter-director Tom Gries. The senior Gries had mostly directed in television up to that point, and this was his son’s first acting role. The younger Gries has continued to act up to the current day, as Jonathan or Jon Gries.

I was intrigued that Lee Majors received an “introducing” credit in this film, although he’d been starring on TV’s The Big Valley for the previous two years. Heston noted that Majors had hoped to do a wagon-driving stunt near the end of the film but was turned down by stunt coordinator Joe Canutt in favor of legendary stuntman Joe Yrigoyen, which turned out to be a good thing when the camera car filming the scene crashed.

Ben Johnson is a pure pleasure to watch as the commanding ranch foreman, and the rest of the cast, including Slim Pickens and G.D. Spradlin, is strong as well.

Lobby card for Will Penny (1967)
Lobby card for Will Penny (1967)

Beyond the story and performances, my favorite aspect of the film was the location shooting. A significant percentage of the film takes place in the great outdoors, with Mount Whitney hovering in the background. The Inyo County locations look wonderfully familiar, and as mentioned, the film evocatively portrays the area’s winter weather.

One of my favorite scenes, when Will shows up at the Flat Iron Ranch, was filmed in the rain, and it looks absolutely wonderful. Heston wrote that as filming continued into March and snow on the ground started to melt, bare spots were filled in with detergent foam “snow.”

My only quibble with the film is I might have preferred a different ending, though at the same time it would raise some moral questions, but I’ll say no more about that here.

Given my own enjoyment of the movie, it was nice to read the memories of Heston’s daughter Holly; in a 2016 interview, she named Will Penny as her favorite of her father’s films, saying “It was one of my dad’s favorite movies. I love the movie, too. Because it’s just so full of emotion. I remember being on that set a lot and having really happy times. It was a happy time for us.”

Will Penny is a happy time for viewers, as well.   It’s an excellent film which I recommend.

– Laura Grieve for Classic Movie Hub

Laura can be found at her blog, Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings, where she’s been writing about movies since 2005, and on Twitter at @LaurasMiscMovie. A lifelong film fan, Laura loves the classics including Disney, Film Noir, Musicals, and Westerns.  She regularly covers Southern California classic film festivals.  Laura will scribe on all things western at the ‘Western RoundUp’ for CMH.

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Announcing our Long-Term Partnership with University Press of Kentucky for Exclusive Screen Classics Interviews and Book Giveaways

CMH partners with University Press of Kentucky for 2021!
With Exclusive Screen Classics Discussion Video Series
and Lots of Classic Movie Book Giveaways

Classic Movie Hub is thrilled to announce our partnership with University Press of Kentucky to bring you exclusive classic movie video interviews throughout the year, plus lots and lots of exciting book giveaways — all in celebration of UPK’s 2021 Screen Classic book releases!

For the Screen Classics Discussion Video Series, Classic Movie Hub, University Press of Kentucky, and co-host Aurora from Once Upon a Screen, will be presenting a series of exclusive video interviews with and by classic movie biographers. Our first event, Growing Up Hollywood, will premiere on Monday, April 5 at 9pm ET on the Classic Movie Hub Facebook page. Author Alan Rode (Michael Curtiz: A Life In Film) will be speaking with the children of Hollywood legends who are also successful biographers of their parents: Victoria Riskin (Fay Wray and Robert Riskin: A Hollywood Memoir) and William Wellman, Jr. (Wild Bill Wellman: Hollywood Rebel).

Growing Up Hollywood FB Event

And to make things even more exciting, CMH will be giving away lots of UPK classic movie books throughout the year! There are too many titles to list here, but just to give you a hint, we’ll be including books about Joan Crawford, Patricia Neal, Jayne Mansfield, Charles Boyer, Hitchcock, Vitagraph, the Studios and more!

Hope to see you on Facebook for our first event! Would LOVE to know what you think!

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

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Classic Movie Chat with Victoria Riskin

Classic Movie Chat with Victoria Riskin
(Daughter of Fay Wray and Robert Riskin)

I’m so excited to share our Facebook Live Chat with Victoria Riskin from a few weeks ago (now posted on YouTube as well). Aurora from Once Upon a Screen and I were able to spend some quality time with Victoria to chat about her very famous parents – actress Fay Wray and screenwriter Robert Riskin. We talked about their careers, their marriage, and the Golden Age of Hollywood, and Victoria also shared some very special memories about her parents and the stars that were their neighbors and friends.

We probably all know this, but I’ll say it here anyway for context — Fay Wray starred in over 100 films and TV episodes but is probably best remembered for her role as Ann Darrow in the iconic 1933 film, King Kong. Robert Riskin was an American Academy Award-winning screenwriter, best known for his work with Frank Capra including It Happened One Night, Mr. Deeds Goes to Town, Lost Horizon, You Can’t Take It with You, and Meet John Doe.

If you’d like to read a little bit more about Robert Riskin and his ‘words’, check out our Blogathon article about him. And, for more Classic Movie video interviews, please visit us here on YouTube.

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

BTW, if you’d like to pick up Victoria’s book, “A Hollywood Memoir: Fay Wray and Robert Riskin” you can find it here on amazon.

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Lives Behind the Legends: Grace Kelly

Grace Kelly: The Family Outsider

Grace kelly
Grace Kelly

Grace Kelly is a legend unlike any other: both classic Hollywood star and real-life princess. She seemed to embody the glamour and class of Hollywood’s Golden Age. With her timeless sense of style and effortless beauty, she is still a role model to many women around the world. She made it look so easy: becoming a worldfamous actress, then quitting at the top of her game to become European royalty. And she did it all, excuse the pun, with grace. But behind the ease and elegance, Grace was a woman who fought to make something of herself, trying to be her own person against a dominant force throughout her life: her family. It may come as a surprise to some, but Princess Grace was an ‘outsider’ to her family. However, if it was not for this family dynamic, Grace may have never made it to Hollywood or Monaco.

Grace was born into a ‘new money’ family in Philadelphia that enjoyed a significant amount of status within their community. Grace’s father, John Sr. (Jack), had won three Olympic gold medals, owned a successful brickwork contracting company, and was almost elected Mayor of Philadelphia in 1935. Her mother Margaret was the first woman to coach women’s athletics at the University of Pennsylvania. Quite an accomplished pair! Her parents valued athleticism and a grounded attitude above all, but Grace was a sensitive, shy and creative little girl. Her parents, particularly her father, made no secret of the fact that they did not understand her. Grace’s three siblings all took after their athletic and boisterous parents, making her the odd one out. As a child, she was usually putting her creative imagination to good use, playing make-believe with her dolls.  

Grace kelly (upper left) and her family
Grace Kelly (upper left) and her family

Grace also had poor timing when it came to siblings: her older brother Kell was the only son, and her older sister Peggy was the first (and favorite) daughter. The only thing Grace had going for her, as the third born, was being the baby of the family, but this changed when her younger sister Lizanne was born when Grace was four years old. Grace openly stated that she resented Lizanne, and Lizanne later admitted that she truly was a ‘brat sister.’ Lizanne loved to make Grace’s life miserable, and older sister Peggy would make Grace do her chores for her. Meanwhile, Kell was busy being groomed to be his father’s successor. Grace was left to fend for herself. ‘We were always competing for everything – competing for love,’ Grace later admitted. Still, she loved her family deeply. But the only person in her family she could really relate to, was her uncle George. As a gay, Pulitzer Prize-winning screenwriter, he was just as much the odd one out as Grace, in their rough and tumble family. They had a great bond and, to Grace, he was a role model in sophistication.

Even though she was ridiculed by her family for her acting aspirations, Grace was undeterred. Acting was her passion and she couldn’t wait to start her life as a young adult in New York City. She turned to her uncle George who helped her get into the Academy of Dramatic Arts. While there, Grace worked hard to get rid of her nasal voice and Philadelphia accent, ending up with a slight British accent instead. Imitating her new accent became the latest joke in the Kelly family. Still, Grace was determined to make something of herself. Her sister Lizanne later admitted that Grace ‘wanted to show daddy she could do it’. Grace would later look at her college days as some of the best days of her life. Finally, she was among like-minded people. She had inherited a strong work ethic from her parents; she worked hard to perfect her craft and made money by modeling on the side.  

Perhaps as a result of the troubled relationship she had with her father, Grace almost exclusively dated older men. One of the first, was her acting instructor Don Richardson, who was married. This seemed to be a theme in Grace’s love life, as rumors of her dating married men in the industry were rampant once she became a star. The most controversial one was her affair with Dial M For Murder co-star Ray Milland. He reportedly left his wife of 20 years for her, and the press branded Grace as a home-wrecker and worse. Milland ultimately went back to his wife, but Grace’s Catholic family, who had worked hard for a respectable place in the upper echelons, was fed up with the scandalous news reports. So when a story about Grace and married actor William Holden hit the press, Grace’s father and brother stormed into the office of gossip magazine Confidentiality and roughed up some reporters.

Grace was embarrassed about her family, and her Catholic upbringing made her feel guilty. At the end of the day, what she really wanted was a family of her own. Grace felt she finally found that in designer Oleg Cassini, Gene Tierney’s ex-husband. He was the first man Grace publicly acknowledged as her partner. But tension already set in before he ever even met her family, with her brother Kell telling Time Magazine: ‘I don’t approve of these oddballs she goes out with. I wish she would go out with more athletic types.’ Although her mother kept a more open mind, the very Catholic Jack Kelly refused to accept the twice-divorced designer. Grace privately ranted about her family and told Cassini they should just elope, but in the end, she just couldn’t go against her father. Her family was too important to her.

Grace Kelly and boyfriend Oleg Cassini
Grace Kelly and boyfriend Oleg Cassini

Grace’s love life might have been messy, but she was still a superstar. She had won an Academy Award, starred in back-to-back box-office successes and was on the cover of magazines everywhere. Unfortunately, her family was a lot harder to impress than the public especially her father. When asked about her success, her father said: ‘I thought it would be Peggy. Anything that Grace could do, Peggy could always do better.’ Needless to say, Grace felt embarrassed that her father didn’t keep his condescending remarks in the family. She was also concerned about the press attacks on her, and worried that her career had nowhere to go but down.   

A solution presented itself in the form of Prince Rainier of Monaco. After meeting when Grace was in France for the Cannes Film Festival, the pair enjoyed a short courtship. Each party was charmed by the other. They wrote each other letters, and romantic feelings soon developed. It wasn’t lost on Grace that this romance could solve her problems. She was incredibly disillusioned with Hollywood, and becoming a Princess could be an exciting new chapter in her life. The rumors about her love life made her feel like a joke and Rainier could finally give her the respectability ánd the family of her own she so craved. Her family was also on her mind as well — after becoming a world-renowned star, they still would not give her the pat on the back she needed. Surely marrying a real-life Prince would suffice? It would give her ‘new money’ family, the ‘old money’ status that eluded them. Something her hard-working father would appreciate.

Grace Kelly, her parents and Rainier during the engagement announcement
Grace Kelly, her parents, and Rainier during the engagement announcement

Rainier was looking to solve a problem too. Monaco was not doing well financially, and without an heir, it would lose its independence. Grace’s Hollywood glamour could rub off on Monaco and attract tourists, and their marriage would hopefully produce an heir. More importantly, they were both ready to settle down and felt that they had found their perfect match. They married after a quick courtship and Grace moved to Monaco. The small principality was over the moon with their glamorous princess.

Grace’s mother was delighted that her daughter was now royalty. But if Grace married Prince Rainier for her father’s approval, she should not have bothered. Jack Kelly was used to being the most important man in any room, and he did not appreciate having a son-in-law who overshadowed him. When he visited the palace, he would ridicule the pretentiousness and protocol. In the six years between the wedding and his death, he only made two trips to Monaco. Still, Grace was heartbroken when her father passed away, and she was reportedly despondent for months after. As Rainier later said: ‘She was oversensitive to her family. They mattered terribly much to her – more, it certainly seemed, than she mattered to them. Though there were strong family ties with the Kelly’s, there wasn’t a lot of heart.’ But Grace refused to give up on them.

Although Grace struggled to adjust to palace life, the birth of her three children brought her much joy. She had hoped to return to acting with the lead in Hitchcock’s Marnie, but after outrage from the public, she accepted the fact that acting was a thing of the past. Instead, she found a creative outlet by making dry flower collages and doing poetry readings. Philanthropy also became important to her as well; among other things, she founded AMADE Mondiale, which promotes and protects the well-being of children around the world.

When Grace finally hit her stride in Monaco, she became the one her family could always turn to. She supported her sister Peggy through two divorces, as well as her brother Kell, when he left his wife for a transsexual woman and subsequently lost his nomination for mayor. She proudly told her friends that she was ‘mother confessor’ to her many nieces and nephews, and they teased her about her tendency to help solve all of her family’s problems. At the end of the day, it was Grace who was always there for her family. She never closed her heart to them and was proud to become the person her loved ones could always turn to.  

Grace Kelly and her grand-niece Ellen Jones at the Kelly family home in 1979
Grace Kelly and her grand-niece Ellen Jones at the Kelly family home in 1979

In hindsight, Grace’s struggles with her family may well have given her the motivation and perseverance she needed to become the person she wanted to be. Her creativity and sensitivity were a family oddity, and it’s a testament to her strength that she never changed to fit in, or pretended to be something she wasn’t. On the contrary, she fine-tuned these qualities, using them to make a living doing what she loved, and be the best person she could be. Although she felt unaccepted by her family, she always accepted them and reveled in her role as the one her family could always turn to when they needed help.

The sources for the quotes in this article are “Grace: Secret Lives of a Princess” by James Spada and “Grace Kelly: Hollywood Dream Girl” by Jay Jorgensen and Manoah Bowman. 

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— Arancha van der Veen for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Arancha’s Lives Behind the Legends Articles Here.

Arancha has been fascinated with Classic Hollywood and its stars for years. Her main area of expertise is the behind-the-scenes stories, though she’s pretty sure she could beat you at movie trivia night too. Her website, Classic Hollywood Central, is about everything Classic Hollywood, from actors’ life stories and movie facts to Classic Hollywood myths. You can follow her on Twitter at @ClassicHC.

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Silents are Golden: The Makeup of Silent Clowns

Silents are Golden: The Makeup of Silent Clowns

One of my 2019 articles for Classic Movie Hub concentrated on the distinct makeup that was used in silent films. Now let’s take a closer look at the era’s most distinct-looking makeup of all!

So if you ask me, one of the best things about the big, zany, timelessly entertaining world of silent comedy is also one of the most dated – that crazy makeup.

Exhibit A, from The Champion (1915)

White faces, fake mustaches, painted-on eyebrows…it all has a weird, grotesque charm. And you might wonder – just why did comedians in the 1910s and 1920s have such cartoony looks? And why did the tradition stay mainly in the silent era (not counting Groucho Marx)?

Buster Keaton, Roscoe Arbuckle, and Al St. John sporting their looks.

Wearing exaggerated makeup was a centuries-long tradition in theatre. Candlelight or oil lamps were used to illuminate the stage, and thick makeup was necessary so audiences could make out the actors’ faces. The dimmer light usually hid the flaws of heavy makeup, although it could still look garish at times. Different types of characters had particular makeup looks, too, such as “youthful” characters having brightly rouged cheeks, or “elderly” characters having heavily lined faces.

Comedians adopted some of the most garish makeup of all, of course, and the tradition seems to have stuck even as theaters switched over to brighter gaslights in the 19th century. By the era of vaudeville in the U.S., comedians looked practically indistinguishable from actual clowns.

Vaudeville Clown Makeup
Which is which?

The foundation of this makeup was always pale greasepaint (a step up from the lard or butter concoctions from the candlelight days) spread evenly over the face and then set with plenty of powder, which was smoothed away with a brush. A few layers of powder and the comedian had his canvas for the rest of the look.

The next step was using a black or brown liner to carefully draw on the eyebrows and line the eyes. This liner tended to come in a tiny pan that had to be warmed up with a match before being applied. Putty could be used to create bulbous noses, warts, or rounder cheeks. And one of the most popular additions to any comedian’s makeup was a crepe mustache. The crepe was made of wool and came in a long braid. Pieces could be clipped off, combed out, and fashioned into a mustache or chin beard of any shape or size. Spirit gum was used to paste it to the face.

Several comic makeups in Just Imagination (1916)

Men and women alike sported whitened faces and boldly lined eyes and eyebrows – it was all part of the fun. And in the early 20th century certain comic characters had specific looks that would’ve been easily recognizable to audiences back in the day. In a time of increased immigration in the big cities, ethnic humor was popular (although it tended to signal “low” slapstick comedy), and some actors specialized in particular ethnic personas. An “Irish” comic would often have a bald cap and side-whiskers, a “French dandy” usually had a goatee and mustache, and a German character (called “Dutch” back then) had a round chin beard and spectacles. Blackface was also common on the stage – as you’re doubtless aware – and some black performers like the famed Bert Williams wore it as well. It’s no secret that anything and everything was up for spoofing in vaudeville, and the unpretentious power of heavy makeup was essential.

Lloyd Hamilton and Bud Duncan Ham & Bud
Slapstick duo Ham and Bud.

By the time film became popular, comedians carried their exaggerated looks over to the big screen. The limits of the old, orthochromatic film made the contrast of white faces and black-lined eyes even stronger than before, adding to the clown effect. The simple touches of liner and crepe also kept goofy reactions from disappearing under the klieg lights. The 1910s was probably the height of the exaggerated makeup style, pairing perfectly with the frenetic slapstick that characterized countless one- and two-reel shorts made by Keystone, Joker, Essanay, and many other studios.

Roscoe Arbuckle, Edgar Kennedy, and Louise Fazenda in Fatty’s Tintype Tangle (1915)
Roscoe Arbuckle, Edgar Kennedy, and Louise Fazenda inFatty’s Tintype Tangle (1915)

What was one key to becoming a successful screen comedian? Adopting a signature makeup look, of course. The most obvious example is Charlie Chaplin, whose small, neat “toothbrush” mustache, curving eyebrows and lined eyes were both expressive and instantly recognizable. More than one comedian literally copied Chaplin’s look, such as Billy West and the shameless Charlie Aplin (yes, Aplin).

Charlie Chaplin
The one and only Chaplin.

Ford Sterling was another popular comedian who had a signature look, a “Dutch” getup complete with chin whiskers. Billy Bevan had a drooping, cartoony mustache and arching eyebrows. Louise Fazenda had big lined eyes and spit curls. Larry Semon always had bold black eyebrows, and the slapstick duo Ham and Bud always sported chunky mustaches.

Keystone short 1910s Mack Swain, Chester Conklin, and Jack Cooper
Some glorious looks from a Keystone comedy.

Some comedians had more fearless styles than others, with varying results. Mack Swain had a wide mustache, heavily darkened eyes (the entire eye area, in fact), and a single lock of hair stuck to his forehead. Harold Lloyd initially tried to imitate Charlie Chaplin by adding two little dots of a mustache instead of just the toothbrush (it didn’t last long). Jimmy Aubrey had one of the most bizarre getups, with heavy eyebrows and a mustache that looked like two melting caterpillars.

Jimmy Aubrey
Holy cow, Aubrey.

By the 1920s, the old exaggerated makeup was going out of style, along with much of the ethnic humor (to the relief of some immigrant organizations). The crude, frenzied slapstick of the 1910s was replaced by subtler, toned-down comedy. And accordingly, comedy makeup got toned down too. Some comedians eventually stopped wearing crepe, while others kept their signature mustaches but made them more natural-looking and ditched the heavy liner. Some adopted clean-shaven “everyman” looks – even Larry Semon gave it a shot. And others, like Louise Fazenda, let go of their signature looks but found steady work in character parts.

Larry Semon in the 1910's and 1920's
Larry Semon in the ‘10s and ‘20s.

And yes, there were a hardy few who continued on their merry greasepaint ways, particularly the iconic Charlie Chaplin. But by the talkies, the heyday of bold eyeliner and eyebrows and wacky mustaches was largely in the past.

Snub Pollard
Snub Pollard held on for a long time.

In the ‘50s and ‘60s, the old silent comedy makeup style was nostalgic to many folks who remembered the silent clowns fondly. Nowadays the greasepaint and crepe mustaches seem old-timey to the point of being surreal. But I’d say that this very surrealism, combined with the joyous lack of pretension, will attract curious viewers – and new fans – for years to come.

–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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