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1600 lines
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* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
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* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
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* *
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* Issue 47 -- November 1996 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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The Photoplayers' Club
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What is TAYLOROLOGY?
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TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
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Taylor, a top Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
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death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
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scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
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(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
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murder on Hollywood and the nation; (d) Taylor's associates and the Hollywood
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silent film industry in which Taylor worked. Primary emphasis will be given
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toward reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it
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for accuracy.
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Ramona Miller has set up a web page on the Taylor murder at
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http://mailer.fsu.edu/~rkmiller/taylor.html
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The Photoplayers' Club
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The Photoplayers' Club was the first social organization of the motion
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picture industry in Southern California. It was founded in 1912, at about
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the same time that William Desmond Taylor began his movie career. Taylor
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became a very active member of the Photoplayers' Club and was elected an
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officer during 1914-1915, foreshadowing his three terms as president of the
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Motion Picture Directors' Association. Like the Screen Club in New York, the
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Photoplayers' Club was for men only; some of their social events were "stag"
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events, but at some special events (dances, etc.) female guests were
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permitted or tickets were sold to the general public.
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The Photoplayers' Club lasted less than three years, and had disbanded
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by mid-1915. Its demise was evidently due to mounting debts from their
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clubhouse. All of the items below, which trace the brief history of the
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Photoplayers' Club, were datelined at Los Angeles.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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December 21, 1912
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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Reel Club Formed at Los Angeles with More than Forty Charter Members
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Forty-three men, the majority of whose names are widely known throughout
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the motion picture world, signed the charter which was drafted at a meeting
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just held in this city when the Reel Club of Los Angeles was organized. The
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Los Angeles club is formed along lines almost identical with those of the
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Screen Club of New York. Membership is to be confined to persons connected
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with the producing branch of the business and to writers connected with
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publications devoted to the industry.
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The meeting, which was held in Brink's Cafe, was the outgrowth of a
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movement to form a California branch of the Screen Club, but sentiment seemed
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to favor a separate organization and led to the other name being adopted.
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Fred Mace called the meeting to order and was later chosen as temporary
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chairman with every prospect that his position as president will be made
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permanent. George H. Melford, director of the Kalem Glendale company,
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consented to act as temporary secretary and Charles Giblyn was authorized to
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take charge of the organization's funds until permanent officers are chosen.
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A committee appointed to take the necessary steps for a permanent
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organization, which includes obtaining articles of incorporation, consists of
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Mace, Melford, Frank E. ("Spectator") Woods, T. H. Nash, P. C. Hartigan,
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Frank Montgomery and Joseph DeGrasse.
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Before the meeting adjourned, C. A. ("Doc") Willat, treasurer of the New
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York Screen Club, was given an opportunity to make a speech.
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Only those who were enrolled at the first meeting will have the honor of
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being charter members. Additional names will have to go before a membership
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committee in the usual way. The full list of the charter members is as
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follows: Charles Avery, Russell Bassett, William Bertram, Al. E. Christie,
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Joseph DeGrasse, William C. Dowlan, Charles Edler, Frank Ford, Arthur Forde,
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Tom Fortune, Charles Giblyn, P. C. Hartigan, Harry Harvey, Dell Henderson,
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Thomas Ince, Edgar Keller, Charles Kessel, Joseph King, David Kirkland,
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Harvey Lehrman, Edward Lyons, Donald W. Macdonald, Fred Mace, Arthur Mackley,
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Ray S. Manker, George H. Melford, Frank Montgomery, Lee Moran, Lee Morris, E.
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L. Morrow, W. Ray Myers, T. H. Nash, Harry Otto, Henry W. Otto, P. M. Powell,
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Mack Sennett, J. B. Sherry, Richard Stanton, R. T. Thornby, David Wall,
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Raymond B. West, William E. Wing, Frank E. Woods.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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December 21, 1912
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MOTOGRAPHY
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Reel Club Forms in Los Angeles
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The Reel Club is the latest development on the social horizon of things
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motion picturesque. It was ushered into existence by forty boosters of the
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picture world of Los Angeles and vicinity and at the acclaim of the original
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forty, more than one hundred directors, producers and players celebrated the
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club's second meeting and declared themselves Reel brothers.
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The chairman of the Reelers is Fred Mace. George Melrose was declared
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secretary and Charles Giblyn treasurer. Ten dollars was decided upon as an
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appropriate sum for the purchasing of a membership, one-half of that being
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payable upon application.
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Chairman Mace appointed A. L. Christie, Frank Montgomery and W. E. Wing
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a committee on constitution and by-laws, the committee being authorized to
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employ an attorney to draft necessary papers for making application to the
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secretary of state for a charter.
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...Those who added their names to the list at the second meeting and who
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also become charter members are: Eugene H. Allen, Nick Cogley, Walter
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Wright, John E. Brennan, Marshell Milan [sic], Sherman Bambridge, P. H.
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Level, W. H. Gillis, Ford Sterling, Charles Bartlett, Charles E. Basley, W.
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H. Ryno, H. A. Lockwood, A. M. Kennedy, A. Brandt, C. L. Fuller, James L.
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McGee, L. D. Maloney, S. J. Edwards, Herbert Rawlinson, E. M. Langley, W. A.
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Carroll, Bob Leonard, George E. Gebhardt, Paul M. Santchi, Alvin Wyckoff, J.
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A. Crosby, Jack Obrien, Art Acord, Richard Garrick, Walter E. Stradling, L.
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D. Clawson, Rowland Sturgeon, Frank B. Shaw, Howard Davies, Milton H.
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Fahrney, Robert H. Grey, Lewis W. Short, Charles E. Inslee, Richard Willis,
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William Clifford, Roy Watson, Mack Sennett, Felix Modjeska, Al Ernest Garcia,
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Henry McCrae, Edwin August, Horace Davey, Otto Lederer, Lenard M. Smith,
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Charles Dodley, J. L. Leonard, True Boardman and George E. Stanley.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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December 28, 1912
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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The newly organized Reel Club of Los Angeles, consisting of men engaged
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in the producing end of the motion picture industry in Southern California,
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has obtained a clubhouse. A lease has been signed whereby it takes
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possession jointly with the Gamut Club of the latter's building in South Hope
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Street. The Gamut Club is an organization of professional musicians.
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The name chosen on the spur of the moment for the new motion picture
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organization has not met with the approval of the members and in all
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probability it will be changed before the articles of incorporation, which
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are now being prepared, are filed with the Secretary of State. One objection
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to the name Reel Club is that it suggests an organization of fishermen.
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Negotiations are now in progress with the Screen Club in New York
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looking toward an affiliation of the Los Angeles organization with the New
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York organization.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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January 4, 1913
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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The Reel Club of Los Angeles, to Southern California what the Screen
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Club is to New York, now has 150 members, all of them men actively engaged in
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the producing end of the motion picture industry, and it still has a name
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which no one is satisfied with, because outsiders mistake it for an
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organization of fishermen.
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Naturally, most of the members wanted to call it the Screen Club of Los
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Angeles, but would not, of course, take that name without the consent of the
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New York organization.
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The Screen Club, when it was officially notified by telegraph that the
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California organization had been formed, sent on a letter, asking that the
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membership list of the new club be sent to New York City to be censored, and
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that $275 in the treasury be sent on also to apply on the dues of $6 a year
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which the Southern California members will be expected to pay. The letter
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from the East was read at a meeting of the club, and from the way most of the
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members acted, an outsider might have supposed they were very happy about
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something. One of the motion picture producers who was present made an
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application for a copy of the letter, saying that he wanted to turn it over
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to the scenario editor of his company. "It would make a scream of a split
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reel comedy with very little re-writing," he said. Another man suggested
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that the request of the Screen Club be complied with, and that at the same
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time the Screen Club be requested to send on its membership list, so it can
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be censored at this end. "It's only a question of time before all the motion
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picture people in the United States will come here to locate," he said, "and
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of course, since they will be using our clubrooms, we will want to make sure
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they are all desirable." There was also a suggestion that the Screen Club be
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requested to send on $6 for each of its members, since turn about is but fair
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play.
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...As a preliminary to incorporation the club, at its regular meeting
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December 14th, elected a full set of officers including 11 directors, who are
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to be known as the Board of Control, since the word "director" has a
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technical significance in the industry. As soon as the incorporation is
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perfected there will probably be another set of officers elected. Several of
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those who were named pleaded that they are too busy to serve, and only
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consented to act for the purpose of getting things started. The officers
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are: President, Fred Mace; secretary, George H. Melford; treasurer, Charles
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Giblyn; directors, Russell Bassett, Charles Giblyn, Joseph DeGrass, P. C.
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Hartigan, Arthur Mackley, Frank E. Montgomery, Thomas S. Nash, P. M. Powell,
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J. Barney Sherry, William E. Wing and Frank E. Woods.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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January 11, 1913
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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Reel Club Changes Its Name
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"The Photoplayers" is the permanent name which has been adopted for the
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club of motion picture people recently formed in this city, under the
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temporary name of the Reel Club. The new name was selected by a popular vote
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of the members at a regular meeting held the night of December 21st. Among
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the names which were balloted on but rejected were "Film Club," "Silent Drama
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League," "Photo Reel Club," "Cinema Club" and "The Photoplayers' Club." The
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members liked "The Photoplayers," but rejected the word "club" in connection
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with it.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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January 4, 1913
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MOTOGRAPHY
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Reel Club Changes Its Name
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About one hundred members of the Los Angeles Reel Club (temporarily so
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named) met at the Gamut Club, on the evening of Saturday, December 21, and by
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a unanimous vote of those present, decided that the articles of
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incorporation, now being filed at Sacramento, should bear the name of the
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"Photo Players" and in the name of the club, a letter was mailed to the New
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York kindred club, the Screen Club, so advising and extending the hand of co-
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operation and affiliation.
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Another meeting was held Saturday evening, December 28, to decide upon
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the permanent leasing of a club house. Upon this occasion stars from the
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Lombardi Opera Company, the Great Raymond, and leading acts from the
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vaudeville theaters added to the joy of the affair.
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Among the plans will be a masked ball on or about February 14, and
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somewhat later a double-header vaudeville performance by the club members,
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who, aided by the auxiliary talent of the actresses employed in the photoplay
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industry of Southern California, will present a diversified array of
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histrionic ability.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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January 25, 1913
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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Photoplayers to Give St. Valentine Ball
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Plans for the St. Valentine's Ball to be given by the photoplayers on
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the night of February 14 have been perfected. The ball will be given in
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Shrine Auditorium, the largest dancing floor in Southern California, having a
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capacity of 6,000 persons. William E. Wing has been appointed "manager of
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the ball" and will devote his entire time to it between now and the big date.
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Nearly all of the local exhibitors have agreed to run stereopticon slides in
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their houses for a week before the event and advertising space has been
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contracted for in all the daily newspapers. Every member of the
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organization, which now comprises practically every motion picture actor,
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director and camera man in this locality, is to be required to be on hand
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with his white breasted clothes. The women of the various production
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companies have promised to help in every way in their power, so that there is
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a reasonable prospect that the industry will be well represented. As for the
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public; tickets are one dollar and everything else thrown in.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 1, 1913
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MOTOGRAPHY
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Photoplayers' First Ball Ticket Brings $75
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The Photoplayers Club of Los Angeles is to dance, on St. Valentine's
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night, at the Shrine Auditorium. The first ticket to the club's first ball
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brought seventy-five dollars, David Wall securing the ticket and the honor
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its possession entails. There was sharp rivalry for the purchase of the
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ticket by Frank Montgomery, James Young Deer and Mr. Wall, the two latter
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each bidding the purchase price and Mr. Young Deer losing out on account of
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his not yet having signed a membership blank. Before his extended fee of
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five dollars could change hands, Mr. Wall was declared owner of the disputed
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ticket. W. E. Wing is chairman of the entertainment committee and other
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committees were appointed by President Mace.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 3, 1913
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LOS ANGELES TIMES
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The Photoplayers' benefit ball, which is to take place on the evening of
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February 14, at the Shrine Auditorium, promises to be one of the greatest
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social events of the entire season.
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Practically all arrangements for this gigantic dancing party have been
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completed by the committee in charge; and judging from the sale of tickets
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reported by members of the profession, it will be better attended than any
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benefit ball ever held in this city.
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It has been definitely decided that the ball will be strictly a formal
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affair. No costumes are to be worn by either the motion picture artists or
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the guests. Only those dressed in the conventional attire are to be allowed
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on the ball-room floor.
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The reason given by the members of the committee for this arrangement is
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so that it will give the guests an opportunity to meet the photoplayers as
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they appear in private life rather than in the parts they play for production
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on the canvas.
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Saturday night [February 8], the picture players are to parade the
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streets of this city. This parade is expected to be one of the most novel
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ever seen in Los Angeles. Practically all the companies working in this
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section will be represented in the line of march.
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Wild animals, automobiles, Indians, cowboys and prize horses, are to be
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among the features of the column.
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Police protection has been granted and the official route is to be
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announced tomorrow.
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The Selig company will furnish the wild animal feature. "Big" Otto has
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been appointed marshal of this division and has had his big automobile
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decorated with a new coat of red paint especially for the occasion.
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"Toddles," the educated elephant, known to members of the film
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profession as the "King of Comedy," is to ride on a big motor truck with
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"Curley," his trainer. Lion "Duke," the "King of Tragedy," is to ride in his
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cage on a truck.
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Hobart Bosworth is to ride "Busy" his trained horse.
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Henry McRae and Miss Kathlyn Williams are to lead the automobiles of the
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company. The local Selig branch has fourteen machines and they are all to be
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in the parade Saturday night.
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The Universal, is to be well represented by cowboys and Indians. Four-
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year-old Mattie, leader of the juvenile colony at Universal City and his
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father, H. C. Mathews, are to ride horses.
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Indians and cowboys will also be in the column from the 101 Bison
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company.
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A large automobile fleet is to carry members of the Kalem company.
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Fred Mace in his big touring car is to lead the Keystone division.
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Miss Elenor Blevins is to ride in her own machine.
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According to C. L. Card, there will be more than 100 automobiles in the
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line, aside from the many other features offered by the different companies.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 4, 1913
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LOS ANGELES TIMES
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The Los Angeles Photoplayers' Club now has a membership of 230 and is
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expected to pass the New York Screen Club in point of numbers within a very
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short time.
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This organization was born November 27, with a membership of forty-five.
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Fred Mace sent out fifty letters and forty-five film stars met at
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Brink's for a little informal supper. The plan was announced and all those
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present paid the sum of $5 into the treasury and became charter members of
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the Photoplayers' Club.
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Meetings have been held regularly each week since the organization.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 8, 1913
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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The Photoplayers is now a sure enough club. Following the arrival of
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the organization's charter from the Secretary of State, the members held
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their first formal election of officers the night of January 10 and chose
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Fred Mace, of the Keystone Company, president. Mace had been serving as
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temporary president and was entitled to the honor which was given him
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unanimously. That the club exists today is due more to his efforts than
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those of any other person.
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The other officers elected were Arthur Mackley, of the Essanay, and
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Joseph DeGrass, of the Pathe, first and second vice presidents respectively;
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George Melford, of the Kalem, secretary; William E. Wing, corresponding
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secretary, and Charles Giblyn, treasurer.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 15, 1913
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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Seventeen seems to be the new magic membership number for The
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Photoplayers. At each of the last three meetings seventeen new members have
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been taken in. The total active membership is now very close to 250. The
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next meeting is certain to produce enough new members to put the club over
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the 250 mark. That a social organization of such proportions could be formed
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in about two months exclusively among men actively engaged in the production
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of motion pictures shows what an important producing center Los Angeles has
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grown to be. The members of the club held a special election at their last
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meeting to decide which of the many leading women of the Southern California
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companies should lead the grand march with President Fred Mace at the St.
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Valentine's ball in Shrine Auditorium the night of February 14. There were
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22 nominations and Mabel Normand, of the Keystone company, won by a small
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margin.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 6, 1913
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LOS ANGELES TIMES
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Fred Mace, founder and president of the Photoplayers, has at last
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announced the official route of the Photoplayers' parade, which is scheduled
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for Saturday night.
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The parade is to form at Tenth street and Grand avenue at 7 o'clock.
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The lime of the march is north on Grand to Eighth, east on Eighth to
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Broadway, north on Broadway to Second, east on Second to Spring, south on
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Spring to Ninth, east on Ninth to Main, north on Main to Temple and disband.
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An escort of mounted police is to lead the pageant. President Mace and
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Miss Mabel Normand are to head the parade in a decorated automobile.
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According to the Executive Committee, there will be more than 200 machines in
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line, carrying the managers and directors of the forty-four companies located
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here and members of their companies...
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Richard Garrick has been appointed chief marshal and Tom Santchez, vice-
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marshal...
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Tom Santchez, the husky sergeant-at-arms of the Photoplayers, has been
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instructed to muster a band of brother screen actors of equal husk for the
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heavy service at the Photoplayers' ball, which is to be held at the Shrine
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Auditorium, February 14. With this crew on the floor there is little chance
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of anything getting by.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 7, 1913
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LOS ANGELES TIMES
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Henry McRae, the Selig director, has studded with electric lights the
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automobile in which he and Kathlyn Williams will ride in the Photoplayer's
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parade Saturday night. Not willing to be outdone, Fred Mace, president of
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The Photoplayers, has rigged lights both inside and outside of the car in
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which he and Miss Mabel Normand will lead the parade.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 14, 1913
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LOS ANGELES TIMES
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Prominent photoplayers, representing practically all of the forty-five
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companies operating in Los Angeles, gathered at the Selig studios in Edendale
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last night to rehearse the grand march for the photoplayers' ball, which is
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to be held at the Shrine Auditorium this evening.
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Besides the rehearsal, a brief business meeting was held by officers and
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members of the Photoplayers.
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The tickets for the ball which were not sold, were turned in and an
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accounting took place. It was discovered that out of the 10,000 tickets
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issued there were 9856 sold.
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It was decided to sell tickets at the office of the Shrine Auditorium
|
|
before the ball this evening, as many have become interested in the ball
|
|
during the last two days and have not been able to secure their tickets.
|
|
This promises to be the greatest ball ever held in Los Angeles. There
|
|
will be a great many of those who have tickets who will not attend, but there
|
|
should be at least 8000 people in the ballroom.
|
|
According to members of the Executive Committee, 1800 couples may dance
|
|
on the Shrine floor at one time with comfort. Naturally there will be a
|
|
great many people at the ball as spectators, and these will in no way crowd
|
|
the dancers, as there is a seating capacity for several thousand people in
|
|
the building.
|
|
The music is to be furnished by a band of twenty-two pieces ant there
|
|
has been nothing left undone by those in charge of the affair, which would
|
|
tend to add to the enjoyment of the guests.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 15, 1913
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
They Really Have Voices
|
|
Photoplayers Meet Audience and Say "Hello"
|
|
Their Inaugural Ball Very Largely Attended
|
|
Ten Thousand Dollars for Clubhouse Fund
|
|
|
|
Friends of years standing heard one another speak for the first time
|
|
last night at the photoplayers' inaugural ball in Shrine Auditorium. Actors
|
|
in the motion pictures met and mingled with their audience and greatly
|
|
enjoyed the experience. The audience long had wondered what the voices of
|
|
their favorites sounded like, and how these men and women of a make-believe
|
|
world really looked in the flesh. Curiosity in this direction was pleasantly
|
|
gratified at this remarkably successful affair.
|
|
Nearly 10,000 tickets were sold and more than half that number of
|
|
persons attended the event. Even before the grand march virtually every seat
|
|
was occupied. The scene was one of brilliant color. Beautiful women more
|
|
familiar to the onlookers in the guise of western heroines, picturesquely
|
|
attired in rough-and-ready garments known to the plains in pioneer days were
|
|
there in gorgeous gowns of Parisian make, but they were recognized just the
|
|
same.
|
|
Devotees of the moving picture shows were as interested in picking their
|
|
photo-drama friends from the merry throng as they would have been in
|
|
witnessing their actions in the latest thrilling melodrama of the theater
|
|
screen. A spirit of the utmost friendliness pervaded the atmosphere and the
|
|
hosts and hostesses made it manifest that they were delighted to be in such
|
|
close touch with the people who their principal purpose in life it is to
|
|
entertain. The entertainment last night was in different form than they had
|
|
ever before offered in Los Angeles, and it was all the more enjoyable on that
|
|
account.
|
|
Fred Mace, president of the Photoplayers' Club, and Miss Mabel Normand,
|
|
leading lady of the Keystone Company, led the grand march, in which eighty-
|
|
four couples, all prominent members of the local photoplay colony,
|
|
participated. There were nearly 2000 motion picture actors and actresses in
|
|
attendance, but only the leading men and women, the directors and the
|
|
managers, appeared in the opening number. Elaborate gowns were very much in
|
|
evidence.
|
|
The twenty-four dances were cleverly marked on the programme. There was
|
|
the "Mace meander" and then came the "studio stumble." The dramatic drag,
|
|
silent slide, camera cavort, screen scoot, reel rave, foreground frolic,
|
|
actors' amble, hospital hop, directors' dirge, switchback sway and pay-day
|
|
prance, were some of the others.
|
|
Los Angeles is the present home of forty-five moving picture companies
|
|
and all of them were represented almost in their entirety. Besides the
|
|
Southern California notables several photoplay persons of the East were in
|
|
attendance. Among these were Dave Horsley, one of the owners of the Nestor
|
|
Company, whose home is in New York; Charles O. Bauman of New York, president
|
|
of the New York Motion Picture Company; E. A. Smith of New York, president of
|
|
the Vitagraph Company; Samuel Long of New York, president of the Kalem
|
|
Company; Charles Kessel of New York, general manager of the New York Motion
|
|
Picture Company, and F. J. Balshofer, another official of this same company.
|
|
The proceeds of the ball will be devoted to a fund being raised for the
|
|
construction of a home for the Photoplayers' Club. The programme alone
|
|
netted $3200, thanks to the heavy advertising patronage. The ticket sales
|
|
amounted to nearly $10,000. Plans for the clubhouse are only tentative as
|
|
yet, and its location has not been decided upon, but steps in this direction
|
|
will be taken in the near future.
|
|
All members of the club constituted the reception committee last night.
|
|
Richard Garrick was floor manager, and members of the Board of Control were
|
|
his assistants.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 1, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
How the Photoplayers Club Did It
|
|
Their First Ball
|
|
|
|
The Los Angeles Photoplayers' ball Valentine's night was a
|
|
disappointingly fine affair, as the Los Angeles Examiner expressed it. One
|
|
expected to see yelling "Injuns" and fat Dutchmen and cowboys and poor but
|
|
beautiful girls, too.
|
|
All this dream had to be discarded when one got a look at the ballroom
|
|
scene in the big Shrine Auditorium, for it was very much like several
|
|
brilliant predecessors. The men didn't dash in and say, "Halt!" or
|
|
"Curses!"; no damsels were succored, of trustful females there were none; one
|
|
did not glimpse any squalor or wretchedness. Nothing of all this happened.
|
|
On the contrary this affair merged all of them into a uniform
|
|
assemblage, the women in their kinemacolor clothes and the men with the open-
|
|
face accoutrement--in other words, evening garb.
|
|
The best known characters of the film world were there. There were
|
|
comedy men, serious men, character men, juveniles; there were heroes and
|
|
villains, kings and beggars, saints and thieves; then, of course, there were
|
|
heroines and poor little shop girls and old maids and little country lassies;
|
|
in fact, nothing missing.
|
|
The cruel landlord who that very afternoon had driven the supplicating
|
|
woman and her three weeping children out into the cold world for want of
|
|
twenty-five cents for the rent was discovered in agreeable conversation with
|
|
the same woman, whereas the children were trying the waxed floor for long
|
|
distance effects in sliding.
|
|
It was one of the biggest dancing crowds the auditorium every
|
|
accommodated, perhaps the biggest, and none ever could have been more
|
|
decorous. A few individuals somewhat inclined to levity had suggested that
|
|
"ragging" might be desirable when things warmed up a bit.
|
|
It is to be written very severely that there was no "ragging." A man
|
|
with a megaphone mounted into the band stand and executed a decisive flank
|
|
movement on all this kind of motive by announcing that any one who tried to
|
|
"rag" would suffer the ignominy of ejection. The giddy waltz, two-step,
|
|
etc., had to suffice.
|
|
It is a noteworthy fact that Los Angeles can assemble more photoplayers
|
|
than any other city in the country, also more noted ones. The forty-two
|
|
companies operating in and around the city were all so numerously represented
|
|
that everybody came but the livestock. Also most of them arrived in
|
|
automobiles, which is a pretty good argument there were no Cinderallas or
|
|
their male prototypes on hand.
|
|
The venerable dean of moving picture actors is Charles, otherwise "Pop,"
|
|
Manley. He is 82. He could have been playing in pictures before the Civil
|
|
War had they been invented then; however, he has been an actor longer than
|
|
that. Naturally he takes the part of an old man, though he doesn't look so
|
|
old. However, by dint of making up he gets the proper effect.
|
|
Another of those who can't play juvenile parts any more is Russell
|
|
Bassett, aged 66. His record is 45 years an actor. He is the funny old man
|
|
when you see him on the screen. He is the humorous father or perhaps the fat
|
|
farmer who was so surprised at seeing his dude son come home from college he
|
|
tipped over the pail of milk, then got mad and kicked the cow, also the son.
|
|
Among the throbbing throng was discoverable Charles Murray, formerly of
|
|
Murray and Mack. Mr. Murray says he has played everything up to date but a
|
|
lizard. He and Jack Dillon, another comedian, together played a horse, and
|
|
got a big laugh for the stunt--a horse laugh, maybe. Murray says it's great
|
|
to be in the photoplay game. He's gained eighteen pounds in the open air and
|
|
sunshine, and his beautiful wife, who is well known on the stage, watches him
|
|
do funny things and laughs so much she says she is getting fat.
|
|
You couldn't help seeing those wonderful children, Matty and Early. Two
|
|
guesses are required to know, from the names, which is the boy and which the
|
|
girl. The only violation of the anti-rag rule emanated from the active minds
|
|
and was transferred to the radio-active persons of Matty, the boy, and Early,
|
|
the girl. After a moment, however, the girl gave the boy a biff and said she
|
|
had had enough. So much for the decorousness of it.
|
|
Arthur Mackley is a villain. But, let it be added, only when he's being
|
|
wound up in the moving picture reel for delivery to all parts of the
|
|
habitable globe. There isn't a place on the several continents where they
|
|
have enough enterprise to get a moving picture show that Mr. Mackley hasn't
|
|
caused many an emotion of rage and hate, but he always gets "come up with."
|
|
He was one of the most benign and genial men at the ball.
|
|
To forget Fred Mace, president of the Photoplayers' Club and one of the
|
|
most popular of moving picture comedians, would be an omission as serious as
|
|
Mace is funny. He led the grand march with Miss Mabel Normand, a leading
|
|
woman. It was a beautiful, not to say gorgeous, grand march, but Mr. Mace
|
|
did not try to be funny.
|
|
Miss Mary Charleson recently made a great hit--she is said to be always
|
|
making them--by doing a picture all by herself, just she and her hat. She
|
|
didn't have the hat this night, but the famous moving picture referred to
|
|
couldn't have been any more effective than the one she made.
|
|
Besides the photoplayers the audience comprised between 2,000 and 3,000
|
|
friends and spectators, and not half of those who came to dance could find
|
|
room on the floor at the same time. The proceeds of the ball constitute the
|
|
foundation for a fund which will be used to build a clubhouse for the actors
|
|
belonging to the Photoplayers'.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 17, 1913
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
Charles O. Bauman was the first life member of the Photoplayers to pay
|
|
the fee of $100 into the treasury of the organization.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 1, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...In the same company [Powers] is "Pop" Manley, who will soon attain
|
|
four-score and ten and who without any doubt is the oldest actor in the
|
|
pictures. In consideration of his age, his standing and the esteem in which
|
|
everyone connected with motion pictures holds him, The Photoplayers, by
|
|
unanimous vote, at their last business meeting, elected him as the first
|
|
honorary life member of the new organization.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 15, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
After three months of wanderings The Photoplayers have finally come to
|
|
rest in a home of their own. Members of the board of control this week
|
|
signed a lease for the three-story building at 349 South Hill Street, in the
|
|
heart of the downtown business district. The club will occupy the two upper
|
|
floors, the ground floor being occupied by a cafe. The building was erected
|
|
for the use of the University Club and was occupied by that organization
|
|
until its membership grew so large that it was compelled to seek more
|
|
commodious quarters. However, there is room for a club of up to 500 members
|
|
and The Photoplayers at the present time has a little less than 300, so the
|
|
rooms will probably not be overcrowded for a year at least.
|
|
No sooner had the lease been signed than a force of decorators was put
|
|
at work redecorating the entire interior. The rooms will have practically
|
|
every convenience common to men's clubs and will be one of the most
|
|
comfortable in the city.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 22, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
With about $5,000 worth of new furniture and other equipment scattered
|
|
about the building "The Photoplayers" formally opened their new clubrooms the
|
|
night of March 8. The headquarters of the organization, which now has nearly
|
|
300 members, are located at 349 South Hill Street. On the first floor there
|
|
is a library filled with bookcases, reading tables and comfortable chairs, a
|
|
huge lounging room with a wide fireplace, settles, great deep club chairs and
|
|
smoking stands, a Dutch stein room, a dining-room and a well equipped
|
|
kitchen, in which there are accommodations for serving a banquet for between
|
|
300 and 400 persons, and a secretary's office. On the second floor there is
|
|
a large billiard room, with two pool and two billiard tables, and seats
|
|
around the walls, an English tap room, a dressing room, a large bathroom with
|
|
showers, a committee room, two guests' chambers, a room for the steward and a
|
|
storeroom. Every stick of furniture in the club was bought new, the walls
|
|
were all decorated and they and the rugs, carpets draperies and hangings form
|
|
a color scheme in which soft warm browns predominate.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
April 12, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
W. Christie Miller, the veteran character man of the Biograph company,
|
|
has been elected an honorary life member of "The Photoplayers" Club. Next to
|
|
"Pop" Manley, of the Powers company, who was also given the same honor, he is
|
|
the oldest actor in the business. Russell Bassett, of the Nestor company,
|
|
who is third on the list, has been promised an election as soon as he adopts
|
|
more sedate manners.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
May 3, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Members of "The Photoplayers" Club entertained their women friends
|
|
April 9, when the first "Ladies' Night" in the new club home was held. The
|
|
rooms were filled with cut flowers, there was special music and refreshments
|
|
and after the reception which occupied the early hours of the evening there
|
|
was an informal dance lasting until midnight. About 200 women guests were
|
|
entertained, many of them famous in the motion picture profession.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
May 17, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
The second public appearance of The Photoplayers will probably be made
|
|
the first week in June, when the club will give a burlesque show in the
|
|
Temple Auditorium in this city for three nights and a matinee. At a general
|
|
meeting of the club held last Saturday night a committee was appointed to
|
|
make the preliminary plans and report back to the club at a special meeting
|
|
next Saturday night. At that time the members will decide whether the data
|
|
as presented by the committee justifies the move. The committee will make a
|
|
favorable report, and since the sentiment in the club is strongly in favor of
|
|
the show it will probably be given. [No announcements indicated the show was
|
|
actually given.]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
June 7, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
After four futile efforts to adopt a new constitution and by-laws at a
|
|
general meeting of the club members, the Photoplayers have decided to hold a
|
|
two weeks' election to decide whether the new regulations shall be adopted or
|
|
rejected. The constitution was proposed by the board of control at a regular
|
|
meeting, but action was deferred until a larger attendance could be obtained.
|
|
Three times thereafter meetings were held, but at each succeeding meeting the
|
|
attendance shrank and the board of control was unwilling to have a matter of
|
|
such importance acted upon unless the action could be taken as the general
|
|
sentiment of the members. Accordingly it has now been decided to place a
|
|
ballot box in the club rooms for a period of two weeks, during which most of
|
|
the members will have an opportunity to express themselves.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
June 14, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
General Manager A. M. Kennedy, mayor-elect of University City, was given
|
|
a warm welcome by his many friends at the Photoplayer's club on election
|
|
night. Instead of "Hello, Kennedy," it was "Hello, Mayor."
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
June 21, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Photoplayers' Beefsteak Dinner at Their Club in Los Angeles, May 31, 1913
|
|
|
|
[On page 1232 there was a photograph of this dinner, with 63 members in
|
|
attendance and identified in the photograph. Those in the photograph include
|
|
Fred Mace, George Melford, Francis Ford, Dell Henderson, Carlyle Blackwell,
|
|
Douglas Gerrard, Herbert Rawlinson, Eddie Lyons, Allan Dwan, Marshall Neilan,
|
|
Wallace Reid.]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
July 26, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
W. Hanson Durham, the scenario editor at the Western Vitagraph company
|
|
--or, rather--companies, at Santa Monica, has returned to his desk at the
|
|
studio after an absence of nearly three months. On March 8 he paid his first
|
|
visit to the club rooms of The Photoplayers, and before he had been in the
|
|
building five minutes he slipped on a steep staircase and fell down a flight
|
|
of stairs. One of his knees was broken and for several weeks thereafter he
|
|
performed his duties in a hospital room. To keep three active directors busy
|
|
is no snap for a well man, but Durham managed to hold the job down without
|
|
assistance during all the time he was incapacitated.
|
|
The adoption of a new constitution and by-laws made it necessary for The
|
|
Photoplayers to elect four additional members on the board of control, making
|
|
fifteen in all. There were nine nominations for the places--Henry Otto, Jack
|
|
O'Brien, Allan Dwan, J. E. LeSaint, Al Filson, George Gebhart, J. A. Crosby,
|
|
Marshall Neilan and Wilbert Melville. Mr. Melville withdrew because he has
|
|
plans which will require him to be absent from the city for some time and the
|
|
balloting resulted in the election of Otto, Filson, Crosby and O'Brien.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
September 13, 1913
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
In Benny Singer, the Photoplayers Club of Los Angeles possesses a live
|
|
manager. He not only runs the club with efficiency, but keeps the good will
|
|
of all its members. Mr. Singer is from New York, and was for a long time
|
|
connected with the Palmer and Madison Theaters, while he was stage director
|
|
for many of the Hoyt productions. He also had a long experience with club
|
|
and hotel business, being either manager or head steward for hotels in New
|
|
York, Buffalo, San Antonio, Texas, and Los Angeles. He ran the hotel at
|
|
Redondo Beach among others. Mr. Singer firmly believes that the Photoplayers
|
|
Club will be one of the foremost Bohemian clubs in the states, and it is
|
|
surely heading that way. The latest innovation is a Saturday night beefsteak
|
|
dinner--it is a popular one, too.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
September 20, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Fred Mace had a great send off when he went East with little Bud Duncan
|
|
and Harry Edwards to join the Thanhouser forces at New Rochelle. Mace is
|
|
president of the Photoplayers' Club and a fine president, too--it will be
|
|
hard to fill his shoes. By the way, the Photoplayers' Club is one of the
|
|
finest in the West and the membership list is assuming large proportions.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
October 4, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
At the Wednesday dinner at the Photoplayers' Club, Los Angeles, the boys
|
|
did a graceful thing when they sang the special song composed and written by
|
|
Photoplayers McCoy and Brady into a phonographic record--said song being
|
|
written about Fred Mace, the absent president. Later the boys filed past the
|
|
record and said nice things to Fred. The records were perfect and have been
|
|
shipped to Mace, and all are betting that he will spend most of his time in
|
|
front of a gramophone. Fred is missed, all right.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
October 18, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
It was ladies' night at the Photoplayers' Club, Los Angeles, last
|
|
Saturday night and the rooms were crowded. Visitors came from Santa Paula,
|
|
San Diego and Santa Barbara. The program comprised of music and dancing.
|
|
Everyone looks forward to ladies' night at the club. "Daddy" Charles Manley
|
|
and his wife came to bid the photoplayers good-bye and were presented with
|
|
some beautiful flowers. Daddy tried to make a speech, but broke down. This
|
|
fine old actor, who is 83 years of age, is returning to his home in the East.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
October 18, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
At the Photoplayers' Club in Los Angeles recently, popular Allan Dwan
|
|
took the chair and kept things going in capital style. Carl Laemmle was the
|
|
guest of honor and before the evening was through he was a life member. He
|
|
made a graceful speech and was enthusiastic over his reception and everything
|
|
pertaining to the club. Robert Leonard delivered two poems, one in praise of
|
|
Allan Dwan and the other welcoming Mr. Laemmle, both by Richard Willis, and
|
|
Bob's reading was immense. The club is going forward with leaps and bounds
|
|
both socially and financially.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
October 18, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Carlyle Blackwell received a great send off at the Photoplayers' Club,
|
|
Los Angeles, last Wednesday when he acted as toastmaster at the dinner. All
|
|
the boys wished him the best of luck upon his comparative new venture for Mr.
|
|
Blackwell will produce all his pictures at the old Essanay studios on the
|
|
borders of Hollywood and will have his own company and produce his own plays
|
|
under the Kalem brand.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 15, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
The Wednesday night dinners at the Photoplayers' Club in Los Angeles,
|
|
have become an institution and additional service has to be provided all the
|
|
time, every week sees its new toastmaster and witty, short speeches and
|
|
general good fellowship enliven the proceedings. The club is going ahead by
|
|
leaps and bounds.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 15, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
His numerous fellow members of the Photoplayers' organization of Los
|
|
Angeles are delighted to hear that the wife of True Boardman, of the Western
|
|
Essanay's players, has perpetuated herself, so to speak, in a small edition
|
|
of herself which she presented to her husband recently. The Club sent True
|
|
the official communication: "Congratulations and best wishes to the little
|
|
angel who has come to bless your lives. I read the announcement to sixty
|
|
Photoplayers who were gathered about the Fellowship dinner-table and there
|
|
were rousing cheers of 'God bless the little darling!' A toast was proposed
|
|
by Toastmaster Mackley and all present drank to your daughter's health and
|
|
long life. Hy. W. Otto, Secretary, The Photoplayers." The Mackley referred
|
|
to is Arthur Mackley who used to be one of Essanay's most popular players.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 22, 1913
|
|
NEW YORK CLIPPER
|
|
At the Photoplayers' Club, a wealth of witty and interesting material
|
|
can be gathered of interest to the public. The other evening in "swapping"
|
|
experiences, Herbert Rawlinson, of the Bosworth, Inc., Company, who, relating
|
|
how, at the age of fourteen, he ran away with a canvas circus show, touring
|
|
the smaller towns. He had an awful experience, and after several lickings he
|
|
escaped one night, and beat his way to Canada, fearful lest he be caught.
|
|
Herbert always goes to see a circus erect its canvas now, and often sees them
|
|
fold them too. It fascinates him.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 29, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Last Saturday evening the Photoplayers' Club of Los Angeles, held its
|
|
first boxing tourney and some excellent and exciting bouts were witnessed.
|
|
The boxing nights promise to be very popular.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
December 13, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
The boxing nights at the Photoplayers' Club have become very popular.
|
|
Last Saturday five good bouts and a wrestling match were staged. President
|
|
Fred Mace is on his way back and there is general rejoicing. He is an all
|
|
round good fellow.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
December 13, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Dave Hartford made a capital toastmaster at the last Wednesday night
|
|
dinner at the Photoplayers' Club, Los Angeles. He made a hit when he
|
|
announced that Fred Mace would be the next toastmaster. The boys made
|
|
considerable noise. Oh, yes, Fred is quite popular.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
December 27, 1913
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Wednesday, November 26, was a memorable night at the Photoplayers' Club.
|
|
In the first place it was the first birthday of the club and in the second
|
|
place the Toastmaster was no other than the Club's president, Fred Mace, who
|
|
returned to "his own" and everybody elses satisfaction. It was one great
|
|
evening. Fire Chief Ely was the guest of honor and he gave a humorous speech
|
|
in which he accused Herbert Rawlinson of trying to put three of his fireman
|
|
out of business, in doing a dangerous stunt. Herbert loosened a block of
|
|
wood which fell and injured a carpenter and just escaped the "really truly"
|
|
firemen who held the net below. Rawlinson was called upon to defend himself
|
|
and threatened to either make a speech or put the blame on the leading lady!
|
|
Being chivalrous gentlemen, the club members sorrowfully accepted the speech.
|
|
It was surely some night!
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
January 10, 1914
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
The Photoplayers' Club had one great big night recently, when Frank E.
|
|
Montgomery, the popular Kalem director, was toastmaster and provided the
|
|
entertainment. The entrance to the dining hall was a huge teepee and the
|
|
walls of the hall were covered with costly Indian relics, whilst the table
|
|
cloths were Indian blankets and on every plate was an Indian gift. During
|
|
the dinner Mona Darkfeather, in full Indian costume, ran down the hall and
|
|
sang an original song dedicated to the club. She was vociferously applauded.
|
|
At a given signal, another teepee opened and out came eight Indians in full
|
|
war paint and gave a dance which brought the diners to their feet. There was
|
|
an Indian poem of welcome to "Monty," by Richard Willis, and the usual yarns
|
|
and speeches interspersed with cabaret artists. It was a novel and costly
|
|
entertainment and was much enjoyed by everybody present. The supper is still
|
|
the talk of the town.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
January 24, 1914
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
At the Photoplayers' Club on Christmas eve the bachelors held high jinks
|
|
and then there was a big Christmas tree full of appropriate presents for
|
|
everybody. For instance, Dustin Farnum received a little tin sword "for use
|
|
in future productions." Fred Mace took the chair and it was one big, joyous
|
|
evening.
|
|
Russell Bassett, known as "Pop" Bassett, the famous old actor with Al E.
|
|
Christie's comedy company, was unanimously made a life member of the
|
|
Photoplayers' Club at the last dinner.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 4, 1914
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Great preparations are being made for the Photoplayers' Club second
|
|
annual ball to be held at the Shrine Auditorium on Saint Valentine's night.
|
|
A very beautiful souvenir book is being prepared. Several thousand tickets
|
|
have been sold and the financial success of the ball is as assured as the
|
|
social and artistic ends. [A copy of the souvenir book is in the Special
|
|
Collections section of the UCLA library. Taylor has a full-page photograph
|
|
in the book.]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 15, 1914
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
|
|
Movie Stars Shine at Ball
|
|
|
|
Summed up in one word, the Photoplayers' ball last night was as
|
|
follows: Clothes. Another might be added, to-wit: Pulchritude. It only
|
|
costs a nickel to go to a picture show, but there were five blocks of
|
|
automobiles around the Shrine Auditorium.
|
|
These are a few leading observations. It was a gala event, in all
|
|
respects scrumptious. However, the clothes scintillated upon all sides even
|
|
more impressively than the automobiles shone outside. The latest thing were
|
|
those pantalettes from Paris. They are so late, indeed, that you have to
|
|
set your watch a little ahead. The girl who wore them had beautiful blond
|
|
hair and blue eyes, and--
|
|
But, alas, she has disappeared in the crowd, lost in the well known
|
|
mazes, etc., and here comes Miss Kathlyn Williams with a Worth creation
|
|
creating admiration, the desire to emulate and various other poetic
|
|
emotions. Miss Williams walks into lion's dens and like Daniel, she never
|
|
gets bit. This is not because she isn't courageous. Unlike the ancient
|
|
hero she gets her picture on the screen and is a great favorite. She didn't
|
|
look like lions and tigers last night when she led the grand march with Fred
|
|
Mace. No, very demure.
|
|
Mace was the patron saint of the Photoplayers' Club. He brought seven
|
|
pairs of white gloves, which were stuffed about him here and there, giving
|
|
him some embonpoint. The reason for this equipment was his handshaking
|
|
stunt and getting the gloves soiled.
|
|
There were many jolly looking persons. Most of these were tragedians.
|
|
Those sad looking persons you may have seen are the comedians. They were
|
|
not losing any of their temperament; their sadness and their gladness,
|
|
whichever they make the money with, was all pent up. None of it got
|
|
spilled.
|
|
What of the man who makes you roar by being kicked down the stairs into
|
|
an ash barrel and coming up all sooty and sputtering? He was there. He was
|
|
wearing a low front effect, a narrow isthmus of vest skirting the southern
|
|
side of a broad sea of shirt. Innocent looking villains moved about; it was
|
|
hard to hate them. You could almost forget some of those crimes they have
|
|
committed. Cowboys who hang by a toe and an eyelash to a "rarin'" broncho
|
|
while they pick the maiden from the edge of the cliff; they were plentiful,
|
|
but proper. No guns on the hip. Even clothes and a ballroom transformed
|
|
them.
|
|
Oh, movies, what strenuosities are committed in thy name! Miss
|
|
Margaret Loveridge, who has beautiful blonde hair and blue eyes, is going to
|
|
remain a leading woman because she has conquered the demon fat it was
|
|
whispered. The same may be said of Miss Betty Schade, who had to walk 1100
|
|
miles before the manager, sighting along the curve of her chin, said she
|
|
would do for a leading woman. The famous line of Cassius's, "Let me have
|
|
men about me that are fat," doesn't apply to women in the moving picture
|
|
business unless it's for comedy.
|
|
"Pop" Bassett came, of course. He is the Nestor of the game. He was
|
|
there last year, but is several years younger now.
|
|
Anna Little, the "Indian" girl of the reel life, is very un-Indian in
|
|
real life--no war-whoops at all.
|
|
Charlie Murray, they said, has a pair of green trousers which he
|
|
expected to wear, but his courage failed him. His legs got to shaking and
|
|
shied from the green.
|
|
Laura Oakley, formerly sheriff of Universal City, did not fall in love
|
|
last night--particularly, that is. She said she loved everybody. "Jim"
|
|
McGee, with that famous earnest look of his, who is used to mingling with
|
|
the wild animals out at Eastlake, was exceedingly unsavage. He doesn't have
|
|
to have beasts of prey around him to be nice.
|
|
Colonel Pryce, late of the insurrecto army, did not shoot anyone.
|
|
Another milk-looking man with a history of sanguinary potentialities.
|
|
Take them by and large, they were a wilderness, and when you see them
|
|
in the pictures they are terrible or side-splitting, sad or poor, happy or
|
|
rich--all things, in fact--but at a ball they are "just folks." C. De Vidal-
|
|
Hundt managed the affair.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 21, 1914
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
The Photoplayers Club of Los Angeles held their second annual ball at
|
|
the huge Shrine Auditorium on St. Valentine's night. It was a brilliant
|
|
affair in every respect and benefited the Photoplayers artistically and
|
|
financially. From the time the band struck the first stirring strains for the
|
|
impressive grand march with its beautiful women and handsome men and the
|
|
wonderful dresses to the time the last of the boys returned to the club to
|
|
discuss the function by the rising sun, there was no hitch with the possible
|
|
exception that the floor was uncomfortably crowded at times. It is no use
|
|
giving a list of "those present" for everybody who was anybody "don't you
|
|
know" graced the ball with his or her august presence. A souvenir ball album
|
|
containing signed photographs of the stars was put up at auction and realized
|
|
$500, being knocked down to Fred Balshofer.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
April 25, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
William D. Taylor, leading man, who left Vitagraph last week, was the
|
|
eloquent toastmaster at the Wednesday night fellowship dinner of the
|
|
[Photoplayers'] club. He told how the actors should bear in mind "fellowship"
|
|
when at the club, and not to pair off and create cliques. His talk was
|
|
heartily received.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
May 2, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
The Photoplayers' Club has been torn up for a week. Carpenters have
|
|
been fixing the walls as the winter rains penetrated through the brick, and
|
|
the dampness wrought damage with the tinted surfaces.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
May 16, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
One good diversion the photoplayers of this locality have is the good
|
|
fellowship dinner on Wednesday evening when the elite of the studios fare
|
|
forth to partake of a feast, and to enjoy a good smoke and chat. Last week
|
|
the spread was that of a kingly kind. Max Asher was the mystifying toast
|
|
general, and he carried off the honors with a comedy night of fun. Max is of
|
|
German descent, and every member, in honor of the toaster's nativity, wore
|
|
chin "viskers" and amputated derby hats. The gathering looked like a
|
|
horseshoe table of a thousand twins. Everyone looked the same, and the
|
|
thousand and three laughs that were made filled the diners with delight. Not
|
|
satisfied with good jokes, musical numbers and other entertainment, the
|
|
comical Asher borrowed a pair of tangoers who performed some wonderfully
|
|
clever dances, to the great admiration of the assemblage.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
June 27, 1914
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Charles Ray, the clever young lead with Kay Bee and Broncho forces, was
|
|
toastmaster at the last Photoplay Club dinner, and a large attendance
|
|
testified to his popularity. Ray has been playing leads ever since he has
|
|
been in pictures, and is an athletic, clean and clever young actor. He makes
|
|
a bully good dinner speech, too.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
July 4, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
A local "pink sheet" this week had a headline story about how the lady
|
|
film players were going to desert the Photoplayer's club if the men did not
|
|
appear on Ladies' nights in evening dress. The story went on to tell that
|
|
Jack Dillon was beloved, because he was the only attender in the conventional
|
|
costume. He denies the story emphatically. Informal have been these
|
|
affairs, and informal they will be, say the men folks.
|
|
The Photoplayer's club members are organizing a glee club and will soon
|
|
make music at coming affairs. A large number of ex-singers and musicians
|
|
have placed their names on the long list of "musically inclined" as the
|
|
notice reads.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
July 11, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
At the Photoplayers' Club last week a delightful session was enjoyed by
|
|
many members. They reveled in a good old smoker, beerfest, and a few boxing
|
|
matches. Saturday evening last was ladies' night, and a great party it was.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
August 1, 1914
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
The members of the Photoplayers, now numbering more than 450 in good
|
|
standing, held a mass-meeting in the Little Theatre, Los Angeles, Sunday,
|
|
July 19, for the reorganization of the club, and the adoption or rejection of
|
|
several important by-laws.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
August 8, 1914
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
In reminiscing at the Los Angeles Photoplayers' Club one evening last
|
|
week, Charles Ray, the Kay-Bee lead, was describing his feelings when Thomas
|
|
Ince handed him his first contract. He says it is the first time that he
|
|
ever felt at all important, but the feeling soon wore off when he showed it
|
|
on the quiet to an old timer who squinted sideways at it and said "Huh! I've
|
|
got a box full of them."
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
August 15, 1914
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
At the regular weekly meeting of the Photoplayers, Inc., an organization
|
|
of actors and directors with a membership of more than 450, held Saturday
|
|
evening, July 25, the directors announced they had received a cable from Fred
|
|
Mace, now in Paris, resigning the presidency of the organization, and that
|
|
Joseph De Grasse, director for the Universal, had been elected to fill the
|
|
office for the remainder of the unexpired term.
|
|
William T. Taylor [sic], director of the Balboa company, was selected as
|
|
vice-president, and Bertram Bracken was named a director.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
August 9, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
For some time past, owing to the absence of Fred Mace in Europe, the
|
|
Photoplayers' Club of Los Angeles has been without a resident head and owing
|
|
to the calls of the beaches and hills during the Summer season the interest
|
|
in the club sagged a lot and the members in good standing met in several "get
|
|
together" conclaves with the result that interest has been revived and the
|
|
club was never in a more prosperous condition than now. On the night of the
|
|
twenty-ninth of July, a supper was given by the members who attended with
|
|
their sweethearts and wives, an excellent repast in which a cabaret
|
|
performance by members figured, followed by a dance. One hundred and forty
|
|
sat down to the supper and the event was so successful that it will be
|
|
repeated monthly. Joseph De Grasse is the present president of the club,
|
|
William D. Taylor, the vice president, and Bert Bracken, the second vice
|
|
president.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
August 15, 1914
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
A Photoplayers gambol is to be the big attraction in Los Angeles within
|
|
the next few weeks, according to plans made at the weekly meeting of the
|
|
Photoplayers, Inc., Saturday evening, July 25, at their club rooms on Hill
|
|
Street.
|
|
At this regular meeting the idea was suggested and received with cheers
|
|
on all sides. Rupert Julian, formerly of the Little Theatre here, and lead
|
|
in several big successes of London theatres, who is now with the Universal at
|
|
the Hollywood studio, was selected as chairman of a committee to make
|
|
arrangements for the first annual frolic.
|
|
Among the members of the Photoplayers are scores of former stage stars,
|
|
and all present gladly promised to do their part. Charles Murray, of Murray
|
|
and Mack, is with the Keystone Company, and was the first to respond to the
|
|
call for assistance with a number for the program.
|
|
...The program will probably be staged in four or five weeks and the net
|
|
receipts will go to the treasury of the organization...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
August 30, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
Manager Sullivan has resigned from the Photoplayers' Club and every one
|
|
regrets his going. The club has had a general shake-up and is settling down
|
|
to better things. The Wednesday night suppers are still popular.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
September 20, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
The Photoplayers' Club is looking up and the supper last Wednesday was
|
|
splendidly attended. Larry Peyton, recently returned from San Diego, was in
|
|
the chair, and a capital programme was provided. The well-known actor, Howard
|
|
Scott, was the guest of honor.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
October 11, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
We had a great supper at the Photoplayers' Club last Wednesday, although
|
|
the pleasures were tinctured with some reserve, for it was virtually a good-
|
|
bye dinner to Henry Walthall, who is leaving for the East. How we do hate to
|
|
see him go, for Wally is one of the most lovable of fellows as well as being
|
|
an accomplished motion picture actor. We made it very clear to him that he
|
|
was leaving some good pals behind.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
October 24, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Local players were delighted this week with Otis Turner as toastmaster
|
|
at the fellowship dinner of the Photoplayers.. The old-time director of
|
|
Universal fame had a rapid fire of amusements for the many artists, and his
|
|
evening was one of pleasure.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
October 24, 1914
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
The Photoplayers' Club of Los Angeles about sold out its tickets for
|
|
their jamboree on October 30 and 31, which high-jinks consists of a two
|
|
nights' vaudeville performance by famous people. Such names as Filson and
|
|
Errol, Deeley and Wain, Theodore Roberts, Jess Dandy, Ford Sterling, Charles
|
|
Murray, Hobard Bosworth, Charles Chaplin and Will Ritchie will be on the
|
|
program.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 9, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
The Photoplayers held their first annual gambol at the Mason Friday and
|
|
Saturday nights, and there was a collection of stars and near-stars, behind
|
|
and before the footlights, that would have made the most blase press agent
|
|
weep for joy.
|
|
Everybody in filmland was there, and the lobby was a veritable florist
|
|
shop, while eager men sought to buy candy, flowers and programmes from the
|
|
host of leading ladies and ingenues that seemed nearly unable to supply the
|
|
demand. Film heroes and heroines stepped from the portrait frames with a
|
|
cordiality that gave the whole affair an informal touch and made it such a
|
|
splendid success. Miss Laura Oakley, Chief of Police of Universal City, kept
|
|
the enormous crowd moving in the already packed theatre.
|
|
The audience was nearly as interesting as the show itself. It included
|
|
Isadore Bernstein, Mayor of Universal City; Mabel Van Buren, Beatrice Van,
|
|
Vera Sisson, Anna Little, Dorothy Davenport, Bessie Eyton, Edith Johnson,
|
|
Elsie Greeson, Enid Markey, Leona Hutton, Stella Razeto, the Gish sisters,
|
|
Cleo Madison, Grace Cunard, Mabel Normand, Carlyle Blackwell, Billy Stowell,
|
|
George Periolot, Donald Crisp, Bobby Harron, William Clifford, Herbert
|
|
Rawlinson, James Singleton, Wallace Reid, J. Warren Kerrigan, Harry Carter,
|
|
Tom Mix, Sidney Smith, Cortenay Foote and D. W. Griffith. There were many
|
|
others in evening dress making the rounds of the boxes greeting friends and
|
|
admirers.
|
|
Tom Wilson opened the song programme with original parodies that held
|
|
the audience from the start. His appearance in blackface was a
|
|
disappointment, as every one wanted to see him as he appeared on the screen.
|
|
In excellent voice and with a choice collection of semi-classical songs,
|
|
Myrtle Stedman of Bosworth, Inc., earned the plaudits of the audience.
|
|
Then came Ben Deeley with his famous "Good Old Common Sense" song, and
|
|
scored a hit. He was called to give an encore, and sang his latest popular
|
|
success, "My Heart's Way Out in California," which he put over in a fashion
|
|
that finally forced him to make a short speech, which was a gem in itself.
|
|
"Discovered," a short sketch, featuring Kathlyn Williams and a group of
|
|
Selig Players, was replete with tense situations, and the comedy climax
|
|
surprised and delighted every one. Miss Williams was ably assisted by Guy
|
|
Oliver, Wheeler Oakman, Charles Clary, and Jack McDonald. The act was superb,
|
|
every one scored a personal success. Mr. Clary as the friend, and Mr. Oakman
|
|
as the husband, were especially good, easily maintaining their reputations
|
|
behind the footlights that they have gained before the camera.
|
|
Max Asher with a patter act assisted by a pack of cards, showed a
|
|
dexterity with the pasteboards that won him instant favor. In faultless
|
|
evening clothes and grand opera voice, Wm. Worthington rendered operatic
|
|
selections to good advantage.
|
|
George Cohan's first sketch, with its laughable lines, was offered with
|
|
great success by Filson & Errol, who gave it the first production, and from
|
|
the way the house enjoyed it proved that it has not outgrown popularity. "The
|
|
Tip on the Derby" was very good.
|
|
After the intermission Ruth Roland, assisted by Harry McCoy at the
|
|
piano, proceeded to stop the show, the audience not being satisfied till the
|
|
supes brought the piano back and the pair sang another song. Miss Roland left
|
|
nothing to be desired either in her singing or her gowns, and the patter of
|
|
the act brought one continuous roar of laughter.
|
|
Charley Murray, of Murray & Mack, offered a monologue up to his usual
|
|
standard, and was given a big hand.
|
|
"The Sheriff of the Shasta," that Theodore Roberts made famous, was
|
|
offered with a cast that made the sketch far superior to its presentation in
|
|
vaudeville. Mr. Roberts is always good and, as the sheriff, he was a delight.
|
|
Miss Smythe, the only one of the original case, was equal to bearing the only
|
|
female role of the piece, and her scenes with Mr. Roberts were in her usual
|
|
inimitable manner. Murdock McQuarrie, as the jealous husband, and Hobart
|
|
Bosworth, as the acrobat, played these parts as only such actors of sterling
|
|
quality are able.
|
|
Lydia Yeamans Titus, with songs and character studies, fully contributed
|
|
to the enjoyment of the affair.
|
|
The Oz Film Company presented Violet McMillan, Frank Moore and Fred
|
|
Woodward. Miss McMillan has often been compared to a doll and, as she dances
|
|
like a sprite, her success was always assured. Woodward and Moore were great,
|
|
and "Hank" is a favorite wherever he goes. This trio presented one of the
|
|
cleverest acts on the programme, while one of the best dancing teams in
|
|
vaudeville closed a show that will be always be remembered and a credit to
|
|
the photo-players.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 14, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
About the hottest place for neutral people who like to argue is the
|
|
lounging room of the club. Players of all nationalities gather here and some
|
|
hot talks are the result...William H. Reid [is] the genial manager of the
|
|
Photoplayers Club...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 15, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
The Photoplayers' Club raised some $1,200 with their vaudeville
|
|
performance recently, but this was not enough to cover the club's
|
|
indebtedness. At a general meeting last Wednesday Isidore Bernstein suggested
|
|
bonds in values of $10, $20 and $50 denominations, and in less than five
|
|
minutes another $1,200 was raised by those present and today the club is free
|
|
from debt with a new spirit at the back of it. The Photoplayers' Club is far
|
|
too valuable to allow it to go by the board and the "buck up" was very
|
|
necessary.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 22, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
The Photoplayers Club has taken on new life with a vengeance. Last
|
|
Wednesday night the supper had a bumper attendance, and Carl Laemmle was
|
|
among "those present." The members have raised bonds among themselves to the
|
|
tune of over $2,000, and this, with the $1,200 raised by the vaudeville
|
|
performance, has cleared the club of debt and placed it on a good footing
|
|
again. Apart from this the right spirit has again been infused into the club,
|
|
and its future is of the brightest. On Saturday a tango supper will be held,
|
|
and the ladies have promised to be there in force. Good!
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 29, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
Theodore Roberts was the chairman at the Photo-Players weekly supper,
|
|
and there was a bumper attendance. Next week Fred Kley, of the Lasky studios,
|
|
will be the chairman, and he is a mighty popular man in the colony. Big
|
|
preparations are already being made regarding the annual ball to be held in
|
|
February, and all the members are giving their services free of charge. The
|
|
result can only be one way. The club is stronger today than ever before.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 22, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
At the weekly dinner at the Photoplayers' Club Fred Kley, the popular
|
|
studio manager for the Lasky forces, was chairman and there was an overflowing
|
|
house. William De Mille and Oscar Apfel were present and William made a witty
|
|
and interesting speech--very much in favor of the picture game.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
November 22, 1914
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
The Photoplayers' Club has conferred the honor upon Mary Pickford and J.
|
|
Warren Kerrigan of having their pictures upon the official programme of the
|
|
annual dance. Although several people of the film world bid for the position
|
|
it was decided that these two popular players should have the place.
|
|
This ball will in all probability be one of the largest affairs that the
|
|
club has ever attempted, and judging from the advance sale of tickets the
|
|
auditorium will be taxed to its utmost capacity. There are more of the film
|
|
folk in Los Angeles now than have ever been here before, and it is expected
|
|
that the majority will attend and eclipse all previous occasions.
|
|
As each celebrity enters the hall the name will be announced in order
|
|
that the public may see how their favorites look in real life, and may compare
|
|
them to their phantom selves. Special decorations, which have always made the
|
|
affair a success, are to be more elaborate this year than ever before.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
December 5, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...the first steps in preparing for the annual photoplayers' ball, at
|
|
the Shrine auditorium on February 14, were taken when a committee on
|
|
arrangements, consisting of Isadore Bernstein, Theodore Roberts, Charles Fais
|
|
and George Melford, was named.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
December 12, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Turkey Day was observed here this week with all the pomp and good
|
|
feeling and with an air of good fellowship among the photoplayers of the
|
|
colony...Many merry social parties marked the week, the most notable of which
|
|
was the photoplayers' ball at Venice. J. Barney Sherry, our friend the Irish
|
|
Prince, and Miss Mabel Normand, our queen of the movies, led the grand march.
|
|
A following of picture players in full dress was on hand, as were a thousand
|
|
actors and other movie people in costume and disguise. The night was one of
|
|
mardi gras, and for the first time in the history of the land Thanksgiving
|
|
eve was celebrated. The same night, Fred Kley, business manager of the Lasky
|
|
studio, issued the toasts at the good fellowship dinner at the club. His
|
|
party adjourned later to the Venice ball and took part in the grand march.
|
|
One of the best dinners ever was this week's, a large number of members being
|
|
present.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
December 26, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Allan Dwan was the popular toastmaster at the good fellowship dinner of
|
|
the Photoplayers this week. He had as his guest Claude Golden, a clever card
|
|
manipulator from the Orpheum who was on the bill last week. A goodly crowd
|
|
of screen folk were present and the program was all that could be desired,
|
|
Mr. Golden keeping the screen men in continuous laughter with his seemingly
|
|
impossible card tricks.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
January 23, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Carlyle Blackwell was the delighting toastmaster at the weekly dinner at
|
|
the Photoplayers. The Favorite Player was "there" with good entertainment and
|
|
a good crowd turned out to hear him. Many old faces were seen at the club and
|
|
the organization seems to be on the rise of late, and everyone is talking
|
|
about the big ball for next month. It will be a sure enough eclipse of any
|
|
ever previously held. The bulletin board here looks like a pepper tree, a
|
|
combination of red and green, so many Season's Greetings telegrams have been
|
|
received.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
January 30, 1915
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
At the last meeting of the Photoplayers Club of Los Angeles [held on
|
|
January 9, 1915], Del Henderson was elected president, succeeding Fred Mace,
|
|
who is now in the South. William D. Taylor was chosen first vice-president,
|
|
Henry Walthall second vice-president and Wallace Reid secretary-treasurer.
|
|
Otis Turner, Al W. Filson, Carlyle Blackwell, George Melford, J. C. Epping,
|
|
Douglas Gerrard, David Kirkland, George Siegman and Fred Kley are the men who
|
|
compose the new board of directors.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
January 30, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
With President Del Henderson at the heel, the Photoplayers' Wednesday
|
|
night fellowship dinner joy wagon broke all speed and attendance records this
|
|
week. It seemed as if the very hub had turned out in a body to attend the big
|
|
event when the new president of the club took hold. Never had so many members
|
|
been present, and a great time was had by all. Afterwards many more, who
|
|
could not be accommodated at dinner, returned and a general get-acquainted
|
|
session started. The evening was a joyous one, no business interfering with
|
|
the merry affair, although most everyone expressed their interest in the
|
|
coming ball in February.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 13, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Whether it is interest in the coming big 1915 ball, or whether it is
|
|
just an added impetus from new companies coming west, or just a natural
|
|
livening of things here, the Photoplayers' Club is a busy place. This week
|
|
Henry Balboa Walthall was the master of ceremonies, and a crowd equal to the
|
|
one of last week was present to hear him. Every kind of fun and
|
|
entertainment was offered the screen men; old timers met and new friends were
|
|
made, the evening being a record-breaker for floating attendance. Many man
|
|
came up to the club while en route to the Static ball on the same evening.
|
|
[The Static Club ball was held on January 10, 1915. The Static Club was the
|
|
organization of cameramen which would eventually evolve into the American
|
|
Society of Cinematographers.]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 13, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Saturday evening members of the Photoplayers' Club enjoyed a Dutch
|
|
dinner and entertainment at the Los Angeles Athletic Club as guests of the
|
|
entertainment committee, of which Leo P. Bergin is chairman. He attended the
|
|
fellowship dinner Wednesday evening and formally invited the boys to attend
|
|
the get-acquainted affair. The film fellows reported a jolly good time.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 20, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
The Photoplayers' club has been put through a whirlwind and shaken up
|
|
and cleaned up. A force of artificers are busily engaged in remodeling the
|
|
second floor. The bar is being taken out and a library put in with a card
|
|
room just off it. The bar goes to the main floor, where the grill and stein
|
|
room will be kept open all the time. This merge was made only after being
|
|
agitated for by Douglas Gerrard, a member of the board of control. Manager
|
|
Frank Cavender succeeds William Reid. Business has increased so much that a
|
|
bookkeeper has been added to the employee list.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 20, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Just a last word. Douglas Gerrard, in charge of the boxes for the
|
|
coming Photoplayers' ball said that the whole fifty-six compartments had been
|
|
sold; thus the outlook for the big affair shows that it will be a real world
|
|
beater.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 6, 1915
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
It appeared as if every prominent star and player of California's famed
|
|
motion picture colonies attended the grand ball of the Photoplayers' Club at
|
|
Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles, Saturday evening, Feb. 13. Miss Mary Pickford
|
|
presided as the reigning star of the evening and led the grand march with
|
|
Dell Henderson, president of the club.
|
|
All matters of state, screens and pictures were forgotten for the
|
|
evening. The stars and players had ceased to be. They simply acted natural,
|
|
and were a magnificent showing of highly cultivated, talented men and women.
|
|
Notable society leaders of Southern California and visitors from all parts of
|
|
the world now sojourning in California were among those present, while
|
|
dignitaries of the financial and commercial world, film magnates, producers,
|
|
cinematographers, writers and representative newspaper men added to the
|
|
cosmopolitan air of the gathering.
|
|
Seated in the rear of the gaily decorated boxes occupied by the people
|
|
of the "movies" were several thousand invited guests who participated in the
|
|
dancing and social greetings of the ball, each meeting his or her favorite of
|
|
the screen and interchanging confidences that bring warm-blood people into
|
|
equal appreciation of each other.
|
|
Promptly at 10 o'clock the megaphone announcer called the grand march
|
|
and the real ball festivities began, with Miss Pickford and Mr. Henderson in
|
|
the lead, responding to the strains of martial music by the orchestra.
|
|
They were followed by William D. Taylor, first vice-president of the
|
|
club, and Cleo Madison; Henry B. Walthall, second vice-president, and Ruth
|
|
Roland; Wallace Reid, secretary and treasurer, and Dorothy Davenport; George
|
|
Seigmann and Dorothy Gish; Carlyle Blackwell and Mabel Normand; Douglas
|
|
Gerrard and Fay Tincher; Fred Kley and Blanche Sweet; Isadore Bernstein and
|
|
Mrs. Bernstein; Jack Blystone and Victoria Forde; Charles Murray and Mrs.
|
|
Murray; Max Jennett and Myrtle Gonzales; J. Charles Haydon and Ethel Davis;
|
|
Max Figman and Lolita Robinson; Tom Mix and Bessie Eyton; James Kirkwood and
|
|
Ida Lewis; C. Ward and Marian Sais; Rupert Julian and Francelia Billington;
|
|
Sam DeGrasse and Olive Fuller Golden; Oscar Steyn and Marion Rollins, William
|
|
Franey and Lillian Peacock; C. E. Griffin and Juanita Hansen; Baron Winther
|
|
and Miss Hotchkiss; Courtenay Foote and Winifred Kingston; Robert Harron and
|
|
Mae Marsh; M. R. Shirley and Cleo Ridgeway; W. H. Long and Mrs. Long; D. W.
|
|
Smith and Ann Schaefer; Robert Leonard and Ella Hall; Chas. (Daddy) Manley
|
|
and Mrs. Manley; Charles Ray and Miss Mitchell; William Worthington and Laura
|
|
Oakley (chief of police Universal City); Lee Moran and Lena Rogers; L. Gray
|
|
and Rena Haynes; Ford Sterling and Mrs. Sterling; Roscoe Arbuckle and Minta
|
|
Durfee; Max Ascher and Gail Henry; John Dillon and Constance Johnson; H. Ford
|
|
and Mrs. Ford; Joseph Harris and Lucile Young; Arthur Shirley and Cleo
|
|
Frisbie; Victor Moore and Mrs. Moore; William Robert Daley and Miss Burnette;
|
|
John Post and Anita King; Lloyd McClan and Mrs. McClan; H. Miller Kent and
|
|
Miss Shoemaker; Harry McCoy and Mrs. Harry Davenport; L. Christian and Miss
|
|
Rudolph; C. M. Walther and Miss Stearns; Richard Cummings and Mrs. Cummings;
|
|
Gilbert Warrenton and Mrs. Lulu Warrenton; A. Peters and Mrs. Peters; Mr. H.
|
|
Hail and Miss Parker; Walter Long and Laura Huntley; Allan Dwan and Pauline
|
|
Bush; Joseph DeGrasse and Mrs. Degrasse; Russell Bassett and Mrs. Thomas
|
|
Nash; Frank McQuarrie and Mrs. McQuarrie; Baron von Ritzel and Miss Smith;
|
|
Gus Inglis and Miss Taylor; J. Kelsey and Miss Hunt; Mr. Cummings and Miss
|
|
Joos; Lloyd Winthrop and Miss Locke; "Jack" White and "Billy" McDonald.
|
|
There were many other notables who did not appear in the grand march,
|
|
but who enjoyed this diversion from their boxes, among whom were: Hobart
|
|
Bosworth and Adele Farrington and Philips Smalley and Lois Weber, Fritzi
|
|
Scheff, Myrtle Stedman, Lottie Pickford, Thomas Ince and Mrs. Ince, Mack
|
|
Sennett, Charles Giblyn and Mrs. Giblyn, Al Kaufman, Otis Turner, Albert W.
|
|
Hale, Miss "Billie" West, William C. Foster and Mrs. Foster, Virginia
|
|
Kirtley, Irene Hunt, Rena Rogers, Kathlyn Williams, J. Warren Kerrigan, Grace
|
|
Cunard, Jacques Jaccard, Webster Cullison, "Capt. Jack" Poland and Mrs.
|
|
Poland;, Leonard M. Smith, Charles G. Rosher, B. A. Rolfe, Sidney A.
|
|
Franklin, H. A. Scott, J. C. Epping, Dave Kirkland, George Melford, Al
|
|
Filson, Herschell Mayhall, Chas. D. Pike, Harry Pollard, Margarita Fischer,
|
|
Lucille Ward, Nan Christy, Jos. Singleton, W. A. Carroll, Henry Otto, Vera
|
|
Lewis, Ralph Lewis, Winnifred Grenwood, Billy Bitzer, Augusta Anderson,
|
|
George E. Reehm, Miss Isabella Rea, Irma Dawkins, Sam Behrendt, Theodore
|
|
Roberts, Cora Drew, W. W. Lawrence, Jack Dillon, Florence Crawford, Josephine
|
|
Bonaparte Crowell, Walter Long, F. A. Turner, John G. Adolfi, Huch C.
|
|
McClung, "Baldy" Belmont, Allen Curtis, Emma Katherine Oswald, Geo. E.
|
|
Periolat, Vera Sisson, Mark Fenton, Helen Wright, Robert Ross, Anna Little,
|
|
Herbert Rawlinson, H. M. Horkheimer, E. D. Horkheimer, Henry King, Gypsy
|
|
Abbott, Daniel Gilfether, Billy Sheer, Victoria Forde, Neal Burns, Billie
|
|
Rhodes, Eddie Lyons, Adolph Zukor, Neva Gerber, John J. Sheehan, Henry
|
|
Kernan, Homer A. Scott, William Brunton, Cecil B. De Mille, Jesse L. Lasky,
|
|
Samuel Goldfish, Carmen Phillips, Vola Smith, Gretchen Hartman, Alan Hale,
|
|
Charles Clary, Jackie Saunders, Mollie McConnell, Edwin Carewe, Kitty
|
|
Stevens, Raymond A. Zell, Gilbert P. Hamilton, Dot Farley, Archie McMackin,
|
|
Bertha Burnham, Felix Modjeska, Dustin Farnum, Marie Walcamp, Sessue
|
|
Hayakawa, Miss Tsuru Aoki, W. D. Mann, Henry McRae and many others.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 20, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Cuisine unexcelled! Entertainment de luxe! Goodfellowship unbounded!
|
|
That is what William D. Taylor, Carlyle Blackwell's director, gave the
|
|
regular fellows at the dinner Wednesday evening. As a toastmaster "Bill" is
|
|
a grand man, and the event will go down in club history as one of the big
|
|
times of the season.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 27, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Ha, ha, hat! Wow! Lookout, fellers, here comes the band! And so it
|
|
came to pass that another good time was written on the Photoplayers' history
|
|
book, that of Roscoe Arbuckle, one oversized comedian from the Keystone. He
|
|
was a toastmaster royal, and every member present pronounced the dinner a
|
|
grand success.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
[A photograph taken at a meeting of the Photoplayers' Club can be seen in the
|
|
April 10, 1915 issue of MOTOGRAPHY, page 576.]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
April 24, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...[On March 24, 1915] the Photoplayers held their regular weekly
|
|
fellowship dinner at their fine clubhouse in South Hill street.
|
|
Eugene Pallette was director-in-chief, and he started the ball rolling
|
|
with the first course of the excellent turkey dinner cooked in the kitchen of
|
|
the club. President Dell Henderson and Vice-President William Taylor were on
|
|
each side of the toastmaster. The event of the evening was the address by Al
|
|
Jennings, the man with a past, who claimed the right to a future--and he
|
|
proved his contention by winning it. It will be recalled that Mr. Jennings
|
|
recently appeared before the camera in "Beating Back," the story of which was
|
|
based on his own life. In his talk Mr. Jennings recounted some of the events
|
|
of his career. He did not spare himself--neither did he spare others.
|
|
There can be no gainsaying the fact that Al Jennings is a remarkable
|
|
man. He is a speaker of power. He has keen wit, a delivery that is all the
|
|
more impressive by its straightforwardness, its frankness and its direct
|
|
appeal to the hearer's sense of justice. His voice is raised just so high as
|
|
may reach the last auditor. It is well modulated. The former "lifer" is the
|
|
antithesis of the bad man as we are taught by those fiction writers and stage
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producers to believe him. He is short of stature and even of temper. He is
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magnetic, a natural leader. Not a bit of the drama in the story he unfolded
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was lost on the players and directors who with rapt attention followed him--
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from his birth in a fence corner in Virginia as his mother was fleeing from
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an invading army; how at fourteen years of age he was a fully grown man and
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knew no law but the blue barrel of a "forty-five." Mr. Jennings knows his
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Bible and uses its parables, and he knows, too, how most effectively to use
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them.
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The speaker was given an ovation when he finished. Others who were
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heard from in song or story or talk were Dick Cummings, Charles Mailes,
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Hirshall Mayall, Chet Withey, Harry Gribben, Al Filson, Dick Willis, John
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Sheehan, Elmer Redmond, Mr. Pallette, the father of the toastmaster; Jack
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Dillon and Eddie Dillon.
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The weekly dinner of the Photoplayers has been one of the features of
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the club since its organization.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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April 24, 1915
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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Herbert Rawlinson, toastmaster last Wednesday night at the club,
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introduced "a man who is soon to become a groom." The man got up and said a
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|
few words and we recognized Allan Dwan, who is to be wedded to Miss Pauline
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Bush, formerly his leading lady at the Universal. Everyone wished the F. P.
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[Famous Players] director the best in the world, and here is another wish for
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|
eternal happiness.
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|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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|
May 1, 1915
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MOVING PICTURE WORLD
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|
On Saturday night the Photoplayers, Inc., quietly passed away and is now
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|
in complete and resposeful oblivion. Everything belonging to the club has
|
|
been put in storage. The closing of the promising club was made because of
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the failure of a majority of the members to pay their dues. Of late much
|
|
money had been lost each week, and so it decided "to close while closing was
|
|
good," i.e., to stop the bills and pay those due while there was money on the
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hand.
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|
Wednesday night Eddie Dillon was to have been toastmaster, so the good
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|
members decided to hold a dinner at a local cafe, and to talk over the
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|
affair. The dinner was more of a success than any held before. The
|
|
officials say that the club ought to be reorganized within a month or so.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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|
|
|
[Although the Photoplayers Club was now officially dead, there were a few
|
|
more social gatherings held by ex-members, and a few meager attempts at
|
|
revival.]
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|
June 5, 1915
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|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
On the evening of Thursday, May 13, many of the men who were of the
|
|
membership of the late Photoplayers' Club assembled at one of the downtown
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|
restaurants [Levy's Cafe] for dinner. The coming of the actors had been
|
|
announced, and as a result there was a crush and a great many were turned
|
|
away. Later there was an impromptu entertainment, at which Henry Walthall
|
|
acted as master of ceremonies. Charles Chaplin led the orchestra for two
|
|
numbers. The was laughter as he began, but very shortly it was discovered he
|
|
really was leading; there was hearty applause for him. The other
|
|
entertainers were Charles Murray, Truly Shattuck, Roscoe Arbuckle, Martha
|
|
Golding, Porter Strong, Ruth Roland, Julian Eltinge, Victor Moore, Harry
|
|
Gribon, Leo White and Polly Moran. It was a great night.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
July 10, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...It was on May thirteenth last that at the restaurant in question
|
|
there was a stated gathering of photoplayers. For several days previously a
|
|
card near the entrance had announced the coming event. Seven o'clock on the
|
|
evening in question found two long tables in the center of the room. All
|
|
other tables were filled or engaged, and a goodly number waited an
|
|
opportunity to be accommodated. Many had taken the precaution to reserve
|
|
places, anticipating the demand. Some of the prominent players and directors
|
|
took their regular chairs.
|
|
It was nearly 8 o'clock when the long table began to fill. There was
|
|
handclapping for Henry Walthall, "the little Colonel," when he took his seat.
|
|
Some of those seen about the room--and no attempt was made to compile a list
|
|
--were Frank Bushman, just arrived in Los Angeles, delighted with the town
|
|
and mighty glad to see a man from the east; Fred Balshofer, Raymond
|
|
Hitchcock, Mack Sennett, Charles Arling, Hobart Henley, three weeks out from
|
|
New York having been transferred by President Laemmle at his own request to
|
|
the Western Universal from the Eastern; Travers Vale, Louise Vale, Franklin
|
|
Ritchie, Lottie Pickford, and more than a hundred others...
|
|
There were cheers when Mr. Walthall arrayed in his "little colonel"
|
|
flowing tie, arose at the head of the tables, just under the orchestra
|
|
platform. "I have the very great pleasure and the honor," he said in that
|
|
fine voice of his, "to announce that our fellow artist and photoplayer,
|
|
Charles Chaplin, will now lead the orchestra."
|
|
Mr. Chaplin made humorous reference to the large sum one of the papers
|
|
had announced as having been offered him. "You must know, of course, I have
|
|
been working very hard today," he said. "I have taken a fall and hurt my
|
|
elbow." The comedian removed his coat and immediately replaced it. He faced
|
|
the musicians and shook at them a mane that would have done credit to the
|
|
leader of the Royal Italian Band. Roars of laughter followed the gymnastic
|
|
efforts of the little funmaker. Suddenly it dawned on the big party that
|
|
what it had construed as comedy was as a matter of fact straight hard work.
|
|
Chaplin really was leading; the musicians were with him to a fraction of a
|
|
second. The body swayed, the masses of black hair flowed from side to side;
|
|
the most temperamental of Latin bandmasters apparently had in his bag of
|
|
tricks nothing Chaplin didn't expose. Stirring indeed was the execution of
|
|
Sousa's "Stars and Stripes Forever"' and absorbingly interesting it was, too,
|
|
to watch the serious, even stern, faces of the musicians. There was a hush
|
|
as Chaplin's arms rested at the cutting of the last note; then came a roar of
|
|
applause testifying the admiration of the comedian's confreres and of the
|
|
general public as well. An encore followed. Then the situation changed from
|
|
drama to comedy, and there were many laughs.
|
|
"I am not going to introduce but to announce Truly Shattuck," said Mr.
|
|
Walthall. The old-time player put her hands upon the toastmaster's face and
|
|
the diners cheered. Then followed "Gone are the days," and nearly every one
|
|
sang the chorus with Miss Shattuck. When there were calls for more the
|
|
singer beckoned to Charles Murray, and Mr. Murray came forward. He is always
|
|
at home in this house; frequently he has been known from his place at the
|
|
table down front to assist the orchestra leader. The two sang in fine voice
|
|
that which so often they have sung together on the stage--"Alma, where do you
|
|
live?"
|
|
Martha Golding gave a recitation in French patois and Roscoe Arbuckle
|
|
told two stories. Harry Gribon sang, so, too, did Polly Moran. Leo White
|
|
recited. Hal Williams sang "Tipperary." Tom Mix, who in the Rodeo had been
|
|
jumped on by a horse and badly hurt, was called up so that the party could
|
|
cheer him. Porter Strong in a dance with an Oriental touch made a lot of
|
|
fun.
|
|
Charlie Murray gave a recitation in blank verse; it was not a
|
|
recitation, either; it was more of a speech. He told of the woes of a comic,
|
|
he praised Charlie Chaplin and took off his hat to him. He spoke of Julian
|
|
Eltinge and of the dear old Burbank days. He said there were many familiar
|
|
faces out in front of him and that he could go down the line. For once Mr.
|
|
Murray was serious, but he carried the party with him all the time.
|
|
"Our distinguished guest, Julian Eltinge," announced Mr. Walthall, and
|
|
the ensuing applause was hearty. "I am very grateful to be here," said the
|
|
well-known impersonator. "I just came out on a little vacation. Now I am
|
|
not going to apologize for my voice but for my throat." In the splendid
|
|
singing of "The Crinoline Girl" that followed there seemed to be no occasion
|
|
for apologizing for either. Mr. Eltinge got his full mead of hearty praise.
|
|
Ruth Roland was given a reception that indicated in unmistakable manner
|
|
the affection her fellow players bear her. She sang sweetly and simply "Wrap
|
|
me in a bundle and take me home with you." The screen boys and girls would
|
|
not let her go, so she sang "California and You," and the diners helped her
|
|
with the chorus. This is a good place to say that Miss Roland is a
|
|
California girl--a San Franciscan. Dell Henderson, the last president of the
|
|
Photoplayers' Club, responded to the call of the toastmaster by giving a
|
|
recitation--and doing it well.
|
|
One of the hits of the night was Victor Moore. After an introductory
|
|
talk Mr. Moore told the story of the Broadway newsboy--"Partners." None of
|
|
the pathos of the poem was lost in its telling. The speaker did not have to
|
|
raise his voice; absolute silence was provided for him, or rather the art of
|
|
the actor and the heart appeal of the simple tale secured it for him. "Over
|
|
three thousand miles from here there is a little girl to whom I always drink
|
|
every night when I am away from home," said Mr. Moore, as he concluded the
|
|
story of the "newsy." "I'd dearly like to have you join me in drinking
|
|
tonight to the best of girls, the best of pals--my wife." Everybody joined
|
|
Mr. Moore. It may have been due to the influence of the story and perhaps it
|
|
may have been partly owing to appreciation of the fine sentiment behind the
|
|
toast or even again it might have been in a measure due to the reversion of
|
|
thoughts to homes and pals back East by many of the expatriates, but there
|
|
were more dry glasses than there were dry eyes.
|
|
And the foregoing is just a part of the story of one night among the
|
|
photoplayers of the West Coast.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
June 12, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Thursday night of this week the old standpatters from the Photoplayers
|
|
club gathered together for an evening of frivolity at a downtown cafe where
|
|
they go to most of the time. Two weeks ago there was a lively time and it
|
|
was eclipsed this week. Carlyle Blackwell was at the helm and the people he
|
|
called on were the best in the business.
|
|
Harry McCoy was the first filmer up, and he led out with the national
|
|
song, leading the big orchestra. Rena Rogers was next, followed by Jerry
|
|
Gerrard, Dick Smith, Myrtle Stedman, William Rock, Julian Eltinge, Ruth
|
|
Roland, Raymond Hitchcock, who gave the evening the proper comedy climax. He
|
|
produced a Keystone scene with Dell Henderson directing. The big director of
|
|
course ordered a retake, much to the surprise and approval of the vast
|
|
throng. Vast throng being a gathering of film admirers, who had heard of the
|
|
dinner. The place was practically all reserved by outsiders, although many
|
|
prominent canvas people were at side tables. Photoplayers only were allowed
|
|
at the two long tables.
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
Back issues of Taylorology are available at
|
|
gopher.etext.org
|
|
in the directory Zines/Taylorology
|
|
or on the Web at
|
|
http://www.angelfire.com/free/Taylor.html
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|