Showing posts with label Birthdays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Birthdays. Show all posts

Saturday, February 4, 2017

Pulp fiction


Apologies for not getting this up on the blog earlier this morning.  I was wide awake at 4:30am, and thought about nipping out to the old laptop to put the post together so it would go “live” (an expression we use in the blogging bidness) at 7am but instead I just turned over and willed myself back to sleep.  Today is my father’s natal anniversary; he celebrates Number 85 (though “celebrate” is probably not the word he would use—he jokingly told me he’s going to start counting backward from now on, so he maintains he’s 83) and as such, Mom has whipped up a lot of his favorites in the kitchen here at Rancho Yesteryear.  This morning’s breakfast menu: sausage gravy and biscuits.

One of the birthday gifts Dad received was a chess set...so he can practice and not be humiliated the next time he plays his grandson.
In examining the Thrilling Days of Yesteryear prize closet last week, I learned to my dismay that there were only two items left…and they were way in the back, where I had difficulty seeing them.  (I have an appointment with the optometrist this week.)  So I have decided to do another TDOY “bundle,” seeing as both prizes have a connection to what Dictionary.com defines as “fiction dealing with lurid or sensational subjects, often printed on rough, low-quality paper manufactured from wood pulp.”

In May of 2010, I gave away copies of Nick Carter, Master Detective: Volume 1—a Radio Spirits collection featuring eighteen broadcasts from the popular radio series featuring the shamus author/pulp fiction historian John J. “Jess” Jevins once described as “the grandfather of superheroes.”  (The set is now OOP, so consider yourself fortunate if you snagged a copy.)  I didn’t do the liner notes on that collection—come to think of it, I don’t think it had one—but I did compose the booklet for Chasing Crime, another Nick Carter radio show compendium released in 2015.  This set (SRP: $31.95) hosts sixteen episodes broadcast between 1945 and 1949.

Though he’s often classified as the American answer to the legendary British sleuth Sherlock Holmes, Nick Carter made his first literary appearance nearly a year before the Baker Street investigator, in “The Old Detective’s Pupil; or, The Mysterious Crime of Madison Square,” written by John Russell Coryell and published by Street & Smith’s New York Weekly in the September 18, 1886 issue.  Nick would eventually graduate to his own magazine in Nick Carter Weekly, and when that ceased publication in 1915 “the most famous of all manhunters” moved to the company’s Detective Story Magazine until 1927.  In the 1930s, the popularity of The Shadow and Doc Savage led to a revival of Carter in Nick Carter Detective Magazine, and Carter’s career in comic books, films, etc. was set—a radio version of the shamus premiered over Mutual on April 11, 1943, and became one of that network’s most durable programs until September 25, 1955.

Carter’s comic book career began with Shadow Comics in March of 1940; the namesake of that magazine also enjoyed a long, healthy stay in the pulps though his fame started as the host of a program inspired by a magazine he didn’t even appear in!  The Detective Story Hour debuted over CBS Radio on July 31, 1930, and “The Shadow” was the unseen narrator of a dramatic anthology sponsored by Street & Smith to promote Detective Story Magazine.  Within a few months, news dealers started getting customer inquiries as to if they sold a magazine with “that Shadow character from the radio.”  Street & Smith moved quickly to get a Shadow magazine into circulation, which they did in April of 1931—the first adventure, “The Living Shadow,” was written by Maxwell Grant (the nom de plume of author/magician Walter B. Gibson), and Grant would eventually become The Shadow’s “biographer,” cranking out the equivalent of 283 novels.  (He liked to write.  He liked to write a lot.)

The program that listeners remember as The Shadow didn’t come into being until the fall of 1937 on Mutual, with the mysterious hero taking center stage, clouding men’s minds so that they could not see him.  Eighteen classic broadcasts of that long-running series (it was heard over Mutual until 1954) are available in Dead Men Tell (SRP: $35.95), featuring Orson Welles, Bill Johnstone, and Bret Morrison taking turns portraying the crimefighter “who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men.”  (I wrote the notes for this collection, too—my third for Radio Spirits.)

So I have a copy of Chasing Crime and one of Dead Man Tell to hand out to one lucky member of the TDOY faithful…here are the rules of the giveaway:

1) Send me an e-mail with “Pulp Fiction” in the subject header to igsjrotr(at)gmail(dot)com.  You have until 11:59pm EST on February 11, 2017 (next Saturday) to enter.

2) Make sure you are a U.S. resident or have a U.S. mailing address.  (Even though it’s a new year, the wolf is still at the door of the House of Yesteryear.)

3) If you’ve been a previous winner of a TDOY giveaway, I ask that you wait thirty days before entering another contest only because it’s just good manners to allow those not as fortunate a chance to pick up some swell swag.  Roy Rogers would be proud of you if you do.

4) I will choose a winner the morning (via the Random Number Generator at Random.com) of February 12th and contact them via e-mail as to their enormous good fortune.  When you enter, it’s not necessary to provide a snail-mail address (your name will suffice) if you’re concerned about your undisclosed location falling into the wrong hands.  You can provide me the details should you receive a “Congratulations!” e-mail.

5) As always…there is no number five.

So just don’t stand there looking stupid, grasping your hands in pain—you’ve got a giveaway to enter!  And remember: Thrilling Days of Yesteryear is the phrase that pays!

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Montego eBay


It pains me to have to relay this bad news…but our weekly Serial Saturdays foray will have to be postponed this week, and it looks as if we’ll lose Doris Day(s), too.  When I explained that the one-day delay in Doris’ misadventures was due to that puzzling dresser drawer incident on Facebook, many of you used the occasion to demonstrate that while 10,000 comedians might be looking for work you were more than willing to do it for free.  So I hope what I’m about to transcribe here releases your inner Henny Youngman, good people.

We’re in the middle of a dodgy financial patch here at Rancho Yesteryear—well, it’s really not as dire as it sounds, though…I mean…we’re not having to eat out of garbage cans yet.  But Mater has suggested to me that it might be prudent if we had a little extra spending money to alleviate the pain of a couple of looming expenses crises…and if you’ve been reading the blog a while, you know what that means.  Yes, it’s back to the environs of eBay with my tin cup in hand, selling off bits and pieces of the dusty Thrilling Days of Yesteryear archives.  I’m not wild about doing this, seeing as how my DVD library has really taken a hit in the past few years…but I’m also not crazy about watching my parents stand outside of Publix and dance for change.  So I’ve spent the past few days familiarizing myself with the phrase “Sophie’s choice,” and believe you me—as a dedicated cinephile and DVD collector it is often heartbreakingly tragic parting with movies I’d much rather keep.

I’ll be introducing items to be sold later this evening at 9pm EDT (6pm PDT), and then in the ensuing days adding more and more discs as soon as I’m able to organize a little better.  There’s a lot of used Warner Archive product that you can capitalize on, as far as discounts go…and of course, because I have a bad habit of buying DVDs and then being painfully slow to getting around to look at them, a lot of the discs remain in an unopened state.  (I will put up a “button” on the right side of the blog that will whisk you away to my eBay auctions with winged feet once the first one starts.)

Because I have to do this, it means that the normal blogging will slow to a temporary trickle whilst I juggle my outside assignments (blogathons, RS, CF, etc.) so I hope you will be patient until these storm clouds pass.  In closing, I’d like to wish my sister Debbie the happiest of birthdays and leave you with a selfie of her and my niece, brandishing her new braces.

Monday, May 5, 2014

Power-Mad – The Tyrone Power Centennial Blogathon: Nightmare Alley (1947)


The following essay is Thrilling Days of Yesteryear’s contribution to Power-Mad, a blogathon celebrating the centennial birthday of actor Tyrone Power and hosted by The Lady Eve at The Lady Eve’s Reel Life and Patti at They Don’t Make ‘Em Like They Used To.  For a list of the participating blogs and topics discussed, click here.  (Warning: I give away the ending to this remarkable film…so on the off-chance you’ve not yet seen it you might want to wait until you have before reading.)


Here at Thrilling Days of Yesteryear, I’ve joked in the past about a creation of mine I call The Blind Squirrel Theory of Film™; it states that no matter how much animosity I possess toward a particular classic film performer, I can usually find something they were in that allows me to say in complete honesty, “I liked him (or her) in that.”  For example—I’m on record as often referring to a certain revered child actress on the blog as She Who Must Not Be Named…but I thought she gave a great performance in Our Vines Have Tender Grapes (1945).  On the male side of the coin, I thought Mickey Rooney (my other bĂȘte noire when it comes to kiddie thesps) did phenomenal work in Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962).  (The theory was inspired by the old maxim “Even a blind squirrel finds a nut now and then.”)

The same theorem can be applied to the man whose centennial birthday we’re observing with today’s blogathon…although to be honest, I’m a bit more charitable when it comes to Tyrone Power in that I can think of more than one movie he graced that I like—Jesse James (1939), The Mark of Zorro (1940), Rawhide (1951) and Witness for the Prosecution (1957) to name a few examples.  But the one film of Power’s that I can sit down with over and over again is a cult noir classic that the actor had to fight his boss, 20th Century-Fox’s Darryl F. Zanuck, to make.  In 1946, author William Lindsay Gresham published a best seller that showed readers the seamy side of the human condition with a sordid tale about carnival hustlers…and in 1947, it reached motion picture screens: Nightmare Alley.

Con man Stanton Carlisle (Power) is working as a barker in a traveling carnival, alongside a phony mystic named Mademoiselle Zeena (Joan Blondell) and her besotted husband Pete (Ian Keith).  Zeena and Pete were once the toast of vaudeville with a boffo mindreading act that relied heavily on a words-and-numbers code…but the couple’s fortunes have since fallen, because Pete climbed into a bottle and pulled the stopper in after him years ago due to one of his wife’s indiscretions.  Zeena is still supportive of Pete, and believes that she could raise enough scratch to send Pete to detox by selling their code (what she calls their “nest egg”), but Stanton quickly has other ideas.

One of the interesting visual touches in Alley: as Stan Carlisle (Tyrone Power) whistles a happy tune, the word "geek" appears above him on the tent...foreshadowing his life station by the end of the film.
While playing a town in Texas, Stan purchases a quart of moonshine from a fellow carny and after taking a few swallows, hides it in a prop trunk when he spots Pete knocking on the carny’s trailer door in search of booze.  Stan takes pity on Pete’s condition (Zeena has cut down his intake considerably), and hands him the ‘shine from the trunk…only to discover to his horror that he accidentally gave Pete a bottle of wood alcohol Zeena used in the act when the carnival folk find Pete dead as a doornail the next morning.  Zeena is then forced to keep the act going with Carlisle replacing Pete, and she teaches him the code that the couple used so successfully in vaudeville.

Carlisle has ambitions beyond the popcorn-and-sawdust circuit, however.  To stave off any romantic notions that Zeena might have, Stan learns the code alongside a young carnival performer named Molly (Coleen Gray), with whom he’s flirted in the past.  This arrangement does not sit well with her protector, Bruno (Mike Mazurki)…and when it’s learned by Zeena, Bruno and the other carnies that Stan has had his way with Molly, they force the two lovers into a shotgun marriage.  This doesn’t turn out to be as bad as Carlisle had anticipated; the couple soon find themselves playing swanky Chicago nightclubs in a mindreading act that bills Stan as “The Great Stanton.”  It is during a performance that Carlisle crosses paths with a psychiatrist named Lilith Ritter (Helen Walker), whose recordings made of patients seeking help will prove an invaluable asset to Stan’s unquenchable ambition.

The light patterns from the window in Lilith's (Walker) office form a spider web...with the good doctor in the role of black widow (seen here with patient Julia Dean).

With Lilith’s help, Stan cons a nightclub patron (Julia Dean) into believing he can communicate with the dead…and his scam proves so convincing that a millionaire named Ezra Grindle (Taylor Holmes) soon becomes Stan’s patron—with a big payoff guaranteed if Carlisle can conjure up the spirit of Grindle’s deceased love.  Stan will need Molly to pose as the dead woman, but she’s starting to have second thoughts about the direction their lives is taking…it was fine when it was just show business, but she considers Stanton’s claims of communicating with spirits to be blasphemy.  She reluctantly goes along with the scheme…until she has a change of heart at the sight of Grindle begging The Almighty for forgiveness.  With Stan’s racket exposed, he and Molly will need to take a fast train out of the Windy City at their earliest opportunity.

I can smell the corn dogs and funnel cake from here.
Stan asks Molly to wait for him at the station while he collects money that he left for safekeeping with Dr. Ritter.  The con man learns that he himself has been bamboozled—and when he returns to Lilith’s to demand what’s his she proves herself to be every bit his equal, threatening to reveal to the authorities the circumstances behind Pete’s demise (the details of which she surreptitiously recorded one night as Carlisle was unburdening his troubles on her).  Stan gives Molly what little money he has as the train pulls out of the station without him.

Carlisle descends into alcoholism, and winds up destitute at a carnival whose manager (Roy Roberts) has the perfect job for him: performing as “the geek.”  Asked if he’s up to the task, he drunkenly slurs “Mister…I was made for it.”  And so our anti-hero embarks on a life of biting the heads of chickens in exchange for a bottle a day and a warm place to sleep.  Nightmare Alley ends on a small note of redemption when Molly discovers the true identity of the new “geek” and, consoling her husband, vows to nurse him back to health.

One of the grimmest entries in all of film noir, Alley was adapted from an out-of-the-box best seller from the aforementioned William Lindsay Gresham, who was inspired to write the novel from conversations he had with an ex-carnival worker while the two fought for the Loyalist cause in the Spanish Civil War.  Gresham later pounded out Alley while working as an editor for a NYC magazine; like his protagonist Stanton Carlisle, the book represented his one big chance to grab the brass ring—but he was never able to follow up its initial success and ended up overdosing on pills in a hotel in 1962…the very same hotel in which he once worked on Nightmare Alley.

Alley provided the grist for what is truly one of the grimmest entries in the film noir style.  Its seedy carnival show business milieu offers an ironic commentary on the country’s malaise after World War II.  The main character, while receiving a little Hollywood redemption at the end of the film (though it’s not hard to imagine he’ll wind up in the same fate as the alcoholic Pete), shares many facets of what we would recognize as sociopathic behavior; Stanton Carlisle uses his glib, superficial charm and knack for manipulation to swindle “marks” and inch closer and closer to meeting his lofty goals.  Though he does romance a trio of women throughout the film, his relationships often seem to be means to an end—any compassion or emotion seems feigned and insincere.  Furthermore, he doesn’t seem to exhibit any remorse or guilt for his pathological lying; Carlisle’s background is pockmarked with a history of juvenile delinquency and other misbehavior from an early age.

The fascinating aspect of Nightmare Alley is that despite the caddishness on full display from Stanton Carlisle, he’s a piker compared to femme fatale Dr. Lilith Ritter, who’s truly a piece of work (she reminds me of that line from Out of the Past, “just a bit cold around the heart”).  It’s interesting to note that while we expect the carnival people to be a bit on the dishonest side (they have sort of acquired that reputation); they do adhere to some semblance of a moral code (they pledge to Zeena that they’ll keep Pete away from the booze…and also insist on the marriage of Stan and Molly) whereas the wealthy, respectable Ritter has thrown away the rule book and eventually brings about the downfall of Stanton with her wonderfully wicked amorality.  As the icy cold Lilith Ritter, Helen Walker would have the greatest role of her tragically short career…and later made return trips to Noir City in vehicles like Call Northside 777 and The Big Combo. 

The other themes addressed in the film involve spirituality and religion; Stan and Zeena play on the primal fears of the unknown of the various rubes that attend their carnival performances…yet Zeena fervently believes in the power of her Tarot cards (which predict the demise of Pete…and how Stan will eventually follow in his footsteps).  Joan Blondell made her reputation at the Warner Brothers studio in the 1930s gracing Depression-era musicals and racy pre-Codes…but because age comes to us all, her career in the 1940s took the character actress exit ramp and she started getting good notices for mature turns in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and Alley—which I think showcases Joan at her finest. 

It is hinted that Carlisle might actually exhibit a small amount of psychic ability (I personally chalk it up to an intuitive talent that some sociopaths are known to possess) despite his conviction that it’s nothing but bunk.  Unbothered at first by using all this as a means to obtain a fast buck, Molly later experiences a crisis of conscience…she’s convinced that her husband is trespassing in God’s domain and that he risks being struck dead on the spot.  Up-and-comer Coleen Gray plays the sweetly supportive Molly; Gray would use this film as a stepping stone (as well as the same year’s Kiss of Death) for later noirs like Kansas City Confidential and The Killing.

Shocking.  Positively shocking.

Another noir icon in the form of former athlete Mike Mazurki is on hand in Alley; playing the menacing Bruno, Mazurki’s best known as the hulking Moose Malloy from the hard-boiled classic Murder, My Sweet…but in addition, he made unforgettable impressions in Night and the City and Dark City.  Character favorites Ian Keith and Taylor Holmes also do excellent work, plus there are plenty of TDOY faves such as Oliver Blake, George Chandler, Emmett Lynn (as the hobos who make Carlisle’s acquaintance toward the end), Harry Cheshire, Julia Dean, Roy Roberts, Gene Roth (as a masseuse!) and Marjorie Wood (OTR announcer John Wald can also be heard plying his trade).

But Nightmare Alley is Tyrone Power’s show all the way—Ty was never better as a hustler whose reach clearly exceeds his grasp.  Upon his discharge from the U.S. Marines in January of 1946, First Lieutenant Power was anxious to start making films again; his last movie was 1943’s Crash Dive, and Ty wanted very much to shake off that romantic, swashbuckling image that marked many of his earlier vehicles by seeking out the types of more mature roles he had played on stage.  His first post-War production was The Razor’s Edge, based on the 1944 novel by W. Somerset Maugham, which wound up being nominated for four Academy Awards (winning one for Anne Baxter as Best Supporting Actress).  Ty then moved onto his next project; he purchased the rights to Gresham’s Alley for $60,000 and was determined to bring the book to the silver screen over the objections of Fox studio head Zanuck.  The actor was able to use his pull in the industry to bring the movie to light…and despite his reservations, Zanuck awarded what would normally be B-movie material the production values of an A-film…even going so far as constructing a full working carnival (complete with 100 sideshow attractions and plenty of extras) on ten acres of Fox’s backlot to make the proceedings “realistic.”

Director Edmund Goulding—who had been at the helm of Power’s previous Razor’s Edge and whose cinematic oeuvre included Grand Hotel and Dark Victory—was picked to ride herd on a film produced by, of all people, “Toastmaster General” George Jessel.  (“Georgie” had been producing many of Fox’s splashy Technicolor musicals since the mid-40s.)  Jules Furthman, an expert at scripting films with complicated, labyrinthine plots (hello Big Sleep!), adapted Gresham’s book and did an expert job…even though he did have to tack on a more optimistic ending at Zanuck’s request.  With breathtaking cinematography courtesy of Lee Garmes (and special photography effects from Fred Sersen), the result was a gorgeous-looking “A” picture containing non-mainstream elements like geeks, dipsomaniacs and premarital sex…which does not result in negative consequences, oddly enough.

One can only imagine if Darryl F. Zanuck had a “told you so” dance in his holster; Nightmare Alley did dismal box office and D.F.Z. eventually pulled the film without giving a re-release a second thought.  Those critics that did see the film, however, gave Tyrone Power some of the best notices of his career…and with Alley, the actor demonstrated to naysayers (myself included) that he was more than just a pretty face.  From the time I read Danny Peary’s essay on this essential film noir in the movie buff’s bible, Cult Movies, I sought out Nightmare Alley with a fervor and passion unparalleled in the annals of film aficionado-dom.  This was before the wonders of the Internets; I finally tracked it down one Saturday morning on Cinemax (the cable channel used to have a regular feature then entitled “Not Available on Home Video”) and later got a repeat showing via the glory days of American Movie Classics, when it was featured in a film noir festival.  For a time, television was the only readily accessible way to see Alley; sticky legal complications between the Jessel estate and other involved parties kept the movie out of the VHS racks for a number of years but in June of 2005 it was finally released on DVD.  I’ve enjoyed the movie countless times since then.  Mister…I was made for it.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

“Well, Leonard gave me lots of inspiration…”*


There are a number of nostalgia notables celebrating birthdays today: actress Peggy Cummins, star of such cult classics as Gun Crazy (1950) and Night of the Demon (1957), turns eighty-eight today…and December 18 also marks natal anniversaries for the likes of directors Jules Dassin and George Stevens as well as OTR scribes Abe Burrows and Hal Kanter and silver screen icon Betty Grable.  (There are, of course, many more.)  But the man who played an important role in my classic film education also celebrates another trip around the sun: film historian and critic Leonard Maltin is sixty-three today.

I could speculate that my passion for the “black-and-white,” as sister Kat refers to my classic movie love, would have flourished without my exposure to Maltin’s reference books at an early age…but then I would have to dismiss that as crazy talk.  I’ve always loved cartoons, and when my parents gifted me with a copy of Leonard’s Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons one Christmas I became almost as dedicated a disciple to the animated arts as Brandie at True Classics.  My exposure to the Columbia comedy shorts in my youth, where I was first introduced to funsters like Buster Keaton, Charley Chase and Harry Langdon, fueled my desire to learn more about these precious two-reel comedies…and Leonard Maltin’s The Great Movie Shorts (also known as Selected Short Subjects: From Spanky to The Three Stooges) was just the fix to satisfy that jones.  Movie Comedy Teams, The Great Movie Comedians, The Disney Films, The Great American Broadcast and Our Gang: The Life and Times of The Little Rascals (co-authored with historian Richard Bann)—all of these books have occupied space on the movie bookshelf here at Rancho Yesteryear one time or another, and I would recommend without hesitation any one of them to the budding classic movie enthusiast.

Maltin’s best-known contribution to books on film remains his yearly Movie Guide, first published in 1969 as TV Movies and renamed several times since that (Leonard Maltin’s Movie and Video Guide, etc.) first appearance.  The first copy that I can remember buying was the 1979-80 edition (on your left), and I remember that updated editions were a necessary purchase in the House of Yesteryear (when they were eventually published every year) and that the wait for such was almost as bad as that for Christmas.  I didn’t always agree with many of Leonard’s ratings—I’ve seen more than my share of movies that he’s overrated, and an equal amount that I believe he’s given short shrift—but my preference in comedy films matches his more often than not, as well as animated features (though again, he thinks a lot more of the recent Disney releases than I).

Milena Brown at Penguin/Plume was gracious to send me a gratis copy of the latest edition of Len’s movie guide—titled Leonard Maltin’s 2014 Movie Guide: The Modern Era—a gesture for which I am most appreciative, because the last time I bought the Guide…well, it was the 2011 Edition.  To be honest, it’s ceased to be a yearly tradition for me anymore; though it’s not that the book isn’t still a must-own item for the movie fan, it’s just that a few years back the decision was made to prune the content of the book (the 2014 edition is over 1600 pages, with roughly 16,000 films covered) by shifting many of the pre-1965 movies to a tome entitled Leonard Maltin’s Classic Movie Guide…which isn’t revised as often as The Modern Era (there have been two editions of the CMG—one in 2005 and the other in 2010).  Sadly, I just don’t watch as many recent releases as I should, and as such The Modern Era editions must take a back seat as far as disposable income is concerned.

I’ve been leafing through the 2014 edition recently, however, and I’m verey pleased that it still measures up to the lofty standards estavlished in the preceding editions.  The great thing about the Movie Guide is that when I do decide to settle in with a newer movie, I can usually glean some first-rate suggestions from the entries in the book.  (Who knows—maybe one of these days I’ll get really crazy and pony up for a Netflix subscription.)  If I have a quibble about the Movie Guide, it’s that the decision to shift some of the older movies to another book seems to have been a half-hearted one; why not remove all of the classics, allowing for the book to become smaller (and less likely to cause concussion where it to fall on you one night)…or better still, include more recent movies (I’ve perused the book for a number of films, and they’re simply nowhere to be found) in the vacant space.  This is all just nitpicking, of course; in the final analysis Leonard Maltin’s Movie Guide is still the essential reference tome for cinephiles and I will brook no arguments about that.  I will also take the rest of this space to suggest that Leonard get a move on with the third edition of the Classic Movie Guide, because we classic film fans can turn into an ugly mob if we want to.  (We’ve seen Frankenstein (1931), and know how it’s done.)

Happy birthday, Mr. Maltin…from one classic movie fan to another.

*Lyric supplied by Merle Haggard’s “Leonard”—an ode to his friend, singer-songwriter Tommy Collins.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

A thriller of a birthday…and Thrilling Days of Yesteryear prize winners!


It was on this date in 1887 that William Henry Pratt made his entry into the world…and fans of the actor’s work know him, of course, as the one and only Boris Karloff.  Over at the Radio Spirits blog this morning, we decided to give him a birthday shout-out so if you’re in the neighborhood, we cordially invite you to drop in.  I have never made any secret of my love for the man’s work; you might remember my enthusiastic participation in the Boris Karloff Blogathon that was hosted by Frankensteinia back in 2009, when I looked at a few of his movies (including my favorite, Targets—which won me a CMBA Award) as well as Karloff’s work in radio and TV.  There’s no denying it—Boris is a true Thrilling Days of Yesteryear fave.

And speaking of TDOY faves (smooth as glass, I tells ya) I’m pleased to be able to announce the winners in the blog’s Steel True Giveway—whereupon two lucky entrants from the TDOY readership won copies of the new Barbara Stanwyck biography by author Victoria Wilson, A Life of Barbara Stanwyck: Steel-True 1907-1940.  I only wish I had been able to give out a copy to everyone who entered…and let me tell you, with the number of people we had enter this thing that would have been a buttload of copies; I had more entries in this than the previous record-holder, the Johnny Dollar: Confidential giveaway I did back in April 2011.  The two recipients of a copy of the book (valued at $40.00) are Elizabeth B. of Norcross, GA and Christine L. of Elverta, CA.  Congratulations to both of them, and I want to once again thank Elina Vaysbeyn at Simon & Schuster for generously donating the prizes.  I’m keeping my fingers crossed that I’ll have some more freebies to giveaway soon, so keep watching the skies!

Monday, November 4, 2013

Milestones


Three years ago on the blog, I gave a birthday shout-out to the incomparable OTR actress Shirley Mitchell, who was celebrating her ninety-first natal anniversary.  Well, Ms. Mitchell is still going strong at age ninety-four, and you can get a quick look at her amazing career over at the Radio Spirits blog this a.m.  The screen capture above is from an appearance she made on The Real McCoys in 1957—to my knowledge, that was the only time she was on the program—and she played the wife of Mac Maginnis, a minor character on the program essayed by another OTR vet, Willard Waterman.  I find this episode (“Luke Gets His Freedom”) a delight because Mitchell and Waterman performed together on The Great Gildersleeve, the radio comedy featuring Shirley’s signature turn as flirtatious Southern belle (from Savannah, y’all) Leila Ransom.  (I also don’t think it’s a coincidence that Mrs. Maginnis’ first name is “Lela.”)  The two performers also worked in tandem on Leave it to Joan, a 1949-50 radio sitcom starring Joan Davis, and while Waterman was still alive they attended many an old-time radio convention.

As you’ll read over at Radio Spirits, Shirley worked on a good many sitcoms (the item to your left is an item from an issue of Radio Mirror that mentions she was a regular on a short-lived program, Tales of Willie Piper) where Southern women sort of became her stock-in-trade.  Mitchell is also the last surviving recurring cast member of I Love Lucy; she played one of Lucy Ricardo’s chums, Marion Strong, in three episodes of that iconic sitcom.  Thrilling Days of Yesteryear wishes her much love and luck on her birthday today—she is truly a show business treasure.

And speaking of Thrilling Days of Yesteryear (Gad! These segueways just write themselves!) it was ten years ago on this date when I was hanging out with some of the cool kids in the smoking area in back of the high school and one of them suggested I get myself a blog so that the others wouldn’t knock my cap off or steal my lunch money.  And thus…TDOY was born.  I honestly have difficulty believing sometimes that I’ve been doing this for a decade, and I’ve been enormously fortunate in that it’s not only something I love doing but that it opened up avenues to where I’ve been richly compensated (in a monetary sense), as witnessed by my long association with Radio Spirits (thanks to Mark, Nancy, Karen and the rest of them for all the work and support) and newest gig with ClassicFlix.  Thanks to L.B. for coming up with the idea in the first place; thanks to S.Z. and Scott C. for showing me not only how simple it was but also how I would never be able to compete with World O’Crap (not even after massive humor injections); thanks to Stacia for being my BBFF; thanks to Philip Schweier for the guest reviewery and cub reporters Larry Shell and Tom Stillabower; and thanks to each and every one of you out there who have encouraged my behavior over the past ten years.  Baby, you’re the greatest.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Fallow fields and butterfields


Honest to my grandma, I have been trying to find a spare hour or two in the day to return to these Thrilling Days of Yesteryear…but it seems like once I gather up my notes and start the ball rolling for a post I’m distracted with other projects competing for my attention.  (They’re like gentleman callers with candy and chocolates…rah-ly they are.)  I had to bow out of a scheduled CMBA function in order to get my blogathon entry done yesterday, and it looks like I’m going to putting out so many fires this week that a “Coming Distractions” for November before November will be out of the question.

This morning at the Radio Spirits blog, we break out the party hats and streamers to honor the 118th natal anniversary of veteran radio character actor Herbert Butterfield, whom you OTR aficionados know from The Halls of Ivy (as pain-in-the-tuchus Clarence Wellman), Dangerous Assignment (as “The Commissioner”) and the Lawrence Dobkin years of The Adventures of Ellery Queen (Herb was Ellery’s pop, Inspector Queen).  The photo at the beginning of this post was one that I was going to go with if I couldn’t find a better picture of Butterfield—fortunately, Karen at Radio Spirits came through in the clutch as always—it’s from 1954’s Shield for Murder, a noir potboiler starring (and co-directed by) Edward O’Brien.  Herb plays a police reporter in that one, and while I remember reviewing it on the blog a few years back it wasn’t until I put it on again last night that I could see why “the sweatiest man in noir” didn’t do more turns behind the camera…


…yes, it’s our old pal Mr. Boom Mike—big as day and obnoxious as all-get-out.  Still, Shield’s an entertaining little moon pitcher that also features John Agar (as O’Brien’s protĂ©gĂ©) and Emile Meyer; not to mention other familiar faces like Claude Akins, Carolyn Jones, Richard Deacon, William Schallert, Vito Scotti and Stafford “Officer O’Hara” Repp in his movie debut.

Also, too: I didn’t get the opportunity to plug this but I did another piece for RS on the anniversary of The Fred Allen Show last October 23—and at the all-new ClassicFlix site, a write-up on an underrated little crime melodrama that you’ll want to check out for yourselves: Show Them No Mercy! (1935).

Monday, September 16, 2013

Mother-Henning an idea for a post


As part of my ClassicFlix duties, I whip up a few birthday shout-outs to celebrity notables of the past on both Facebook and Twitter—today, for instance, actress-singer Janis Paige turns ninety-one…and I wrote a mercilessly short bio, mentioning a few of the movies that were graced by her amazing presence.

Sometimes there are people that I’d like to single out for mention but they get lost in the cracks—either because I’ve already got too many birthdays or I can’t find a decent photo of them on the Internets or in my collection.  Case in point: writer-producer Paul Henning was born on this date today in 1911.  The name is no doubt familiar to TV fans, since Henning was a major-type mogul in the world of television with series like The Dennis Day Show and The Bob Cummings Show (a.k.a. Love That Bob) to his credit…and then in the 1960s, executive producing the bucolic trilogy of The Beverly Hillbillies, Petticoat Junction and Green Acres.  Henning started out as a radio scribe; he cut his teeth assisting Don Quinn on Fibber McGee & Molly and then went to work for Joe E. Brown and Rudy Vallee before becoming Burns and Allen’s head writer in the 1940s (he also penned many of their TV scripts).

I bring up Paul Henning (and not just to make a bad pun in the title) because I got a pair of e-mails this weekend from TVShowsOnDVD.com announcing that the third season of Petticoat Junction and the fourth season of The Beverly Hillbillies are coming to DVD the first of October…in what are being termed “Walmart exclusives.”  Whether or not this means that the brick-and-mortar behemoth will be the only ones selling these sets I do not know; it may be one of those deals where the collections make their debut there before being released in a more inclusive fashion.  Still, I decided not to take a chance on this and so I ordered both sets, even though I will probably burn in a fiery hell for the rest of eternity shopping Walmart online.

Cultureshark proprietor Rick Brooks mentioned to me via Facebook that TSOD’s decision to announce the Hillbillies and Junction releases was influenced by a lively give-and-take at the Home Theater Forum, in which the webmasters from TSOD attempted to explain their decision not to give people a heads-up about the sets and were drowned out by loud cries of “Bullsh*t!”  I wasn’t aware of the fracas (any bulletin board that winds up driving Stephen Bowie away is probably not one I want to frequent) so I won’t labor over the details but I’m offering a doff of the TDOY chapeau to Messrs. Lacey and Lambert (The Men from T.S.O.D.) or TV Guide or whomever for changing their minds and letting folks know the news (again, I don’t frequent HTF as much as I did in the past because the administrator has a particularly annoying habit of curtailing people’s speech freedoms just when the conversation starts to get interesting).

There was a discussion on the HTF Beverly Hillbillies thread about the show itself and why it seems to have done so poorly with regards to DVD sales…particularly since it was the biggest thing to happen to CBS since they put I Love Lucy on the air.  There’s always been a stigma attached to the program—one I’ve never completely comprehended because I don’t think Hillbillies gets enough credit as being both a funny sitcom and a nice little slice of social satire.  My take on it is that if you’re familiar with George and Gracie’s radio show, you’re probably a fan of Beverly Hillbillies because the same “illogical logic” permeates both programs; the Clampetts, being the “fish out of water,” often take simple misunderstandings and make mountains out of them…and thereby producing classic comedy.  I think Green Acres also takes a lot from Burns & Allen (even though Henning was only the executive producer—Jay Sommers created it) as well—the character of Oliver Wendell Douglas is essentially a man trapped in a town populated by Gracies.

The other birthday I didn’t get to single out today is that of OTR actor Lawrence Dobkin, born on this date in 1918.  With Larry, it’s never a question of what did he do on radio…it’s more like “what didn’t he do.”  He’s best known as one of radio’s Ellery Queen’s—and for high-profile appearances on The Adventures of the Saint, The New Adventures of Nero Wolfe and Gunsmoke—but he also worked on such series as The Adventures of Philip Marlowe, Broadway is My Beat, Escape, Family Theatre, Jeff Regan, Investigator, Let George Do It, The Lux Radio Theatre, The Man Called X, Night Beat, Richard Diamond, Private Detective, Suspense, The Whistler and Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar…and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

Dobkin would later work in movies (Sweet Smell of Success, North by Northwest) and TV—he even became a noted small screen director with episodes of The Rifleman, 77 Sunset Strip, The Donna Reed Show and Star Trek to his credit (as well as a couple of episodes of the show featured here on the blog, The Doris Day Show).  Every Sunday night at 1am, I enjoy hearing Larry’s best-known TV gig on Me-TV—as narrator of the hour-long Naked City.  (“There are eight million stories in the naked city…this has been one of them.”)