1592 lines
103 KiB
Plaintext
1592 lines
103 KiB
Plaintext
*****************************************************************************
|
|
* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
|
|
* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
|
|
* *
|
|
* Issue 54 -- June 1997 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
|
|
* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
|
|
Mabel Normand Here and There
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
What is TAYLOROLOGY?
|
|
TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
|
|
Taylor, a top Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
|
|
death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
|
|
scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
|
|
(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
|
|
murder on Hollywood and the nation; (d) Taylor's associates and the Hollywood
|
|
silent film industry in which Taylor worked. Primary emphasis will be on
|
|
reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it
|
|
for accuracy.
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
William T. Sherman has set up a web site tribute to Mabel Normand, at
|
|
http://members.aol.com/GunJones1/Mabel1.html
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
Jamie Gilcig is writing a screenplay based on the life of Mabel Normand, and
|
|
is seeking previously unpublished information about her. His e-mail address
|
|
is gilgic@discovland.net.
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
The web site http://www.etext.org/Zines/ is now capable of doing "full text"
|
|
searches of back issues of Taylorology.
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
|
|
Mabel Normand Here and There
|
|
|
|
Two excellent books have been published about Mabel Normand--MABEL:
|
|
HOLLYWOOD'S FIRST I-DON'T-CARE GIRL by Betty Fussell, and MABEL NORMAND:
|
|
A SOURCE BOOK TO HER LIFE AND FILMS by William Thomas Sherman. Below are
|
|
some fragments of information not mentioned in those two books, which may be
|
|
of use to future biographers of Mabel Normand.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
October 5, 1912
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
The old Bison plant at Edendale has now been turned over to the
|
|
Keystone company, which comprises among others Fred Mace and Mabel Normand,
|
|
with Mack Sennett as director, and split reel comedies are being turned out
|
|
at a merry rate. The company is working much faster than its schedule of
|
|
releases so as to pile up a surplus against possible accidents or other
|
|
interruptions. Last week Sennett completed a 500-foot comedy in a single day
|
|
and claims a record on the feat. The Keystone company is a distinct
|
|
organization, having no official connection with any other motion picture
|
|
company, although it is owned by men who also own the New York Motion Picture
|
|
Company as well as other motion picture concerns.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 7, 1912
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Some of the friends of Director Ince, of the Kay-Bee Company, decoyed
|
|
him to the Venice Country Club the night of November 15, where he was made
|
|
the victim of a gigantic conspiracy. When he arrived there were about 300
|
|
grown-ups waiting for him to remind him in a vociferous manner of something
|
|
that had entirely slipped his mind, namely, that it was his birthday. Never
|
|
mind, it was one that comes after 21.
|
|
All the members of the Kay-Bee and the Broncho companies were present
|
|
and a number of specially invited guests from other motion picture companies
|
|
in the vicinity, among the latter being Mack Sennett and Mabel Normand of the
|
|
Keystone, and Mr. and Mrs. James Young Deer of the Pathe Western Company.
|
|
There was a banquet, an impromptu entertainment and a dance and it took
|
|
until nearly 4 o'clock in the morning to run through the program. During the
|
|
evening they made Ince stand up and look sheepish while a presentation speech
|
|
was made as a preliminary to handing him a topaz ring, the big stone
|
|
surrounded with small diamonds. The topaz is supposed to have special
|
|
significance for those born in November. After that Ince made a speech
|
|
forgiving everybody for their share in the conspiracy.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 12, 1913
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
Little Mabel Normand, leading woman with the Keystone company, who is
|
|
to lead the grand march of the photoplayers' ball with President Mace,
|
|
Saturday evening, has had many hazardous experiences during her career as a
|
|
photoplayer.
|
|
She says that while most people believe there are not risks to be taken
|
|
in the making of comedy pictures, conditions are quite the reverse. In
|
|
comedy, with which Miss Normand has been identified since her advent into the
|
|
picture-making profession, action alone scores. In dramatic pictures, the
|
|
spectator is given time to fathom the story and the action is much slower.
|
|
"In comedies," asserts the dainty little Mabel, "we have risks as
|
|
great, if not greater, than those necessary in dramas.
|
|
"About a year ago, I made an aeroplane flight with the late Phil
|
|
Parmalee. It was my first time in the air. We reached an altitude of about
|
|
1000 feet, and suddenly the engine went dead. It seemed that one could have
|
|
heard the proverbial pin drop.
|
|
"Gliding down, we landed unhurt. Mr. Parmalee discovered that his
|
|
gasoline had been tampered with; and in some way paraffine had worked into
|
|
the carburetor. When I was told of this, I realized the danger to which we
|
|
had been exposed; but the picture had to be made, and several more flights
|
|
were necessary."
|
|
Miss Normand has had many adventures, such as being thrown from cliffs
|
|
and into the ocean; but aside from a few scratches and bruises, she has never
|
|
been injured.
|
|
A short time ago she was tied to a rock in Santa Monica Bay, about 100
|
|
feet from the shore. The continual breaking of the waves over her body
|
|
washed her adrift. She has always been considered a clever swimmer, but was
|
|
unable to successfully battle with the waves in her weakened condition. As
|
|
she was sinking, members of the company came to her assistance and carried
|
|
her to the shore.
|
|
"With all its risks and hard work," says the little actress, "there is
|
|
a certain fascination about the profession which holds one. I went into
|
|
pictures three years ago without any previous experience, out of a convent.
|
|
Since then I have played in a picture and a half a week without a break.
|
|
They say I have made good and I will very probably play in pictures for the
|
|
rest of my days."
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 26, 1913
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
Mabel Normand started something big when she appeared at the Garrick
|
|
Theater in person Thursday night and was introduced during both performances.
|
|
This custom is to be followed regularly, and Fred Mace is to be introduced
|
|
tomorrow evening. After the members of the Keystone company have all been
|
|
presented the Tannhauser company is to be introduced one and a time. When
|
|
Miss Normand appeared 1500 feet of films in which she was shown were run off.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
June 7, 1913
|
|
W. A. Cory
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
There was something doing every moment on Photo Players' Day in San
|
|
Francisco. The Motion Picture Exhibitors' League worked hard to make May
|
|
2nd, a day worthy of remembrance, and they were paid for their efforts by a
|
|
grand turn-out all along the line of the parade. A fact worthy of note in
|
|
passing was the general comment by everyone that there were three times as
|
|
many people lining the curbs to watch the parade as there were the previous
|
|
day to see the big circus parade.
|
|
The excitement began at 9:30 in the morning, with the arrival of Mabel
|
|
Normand of the Keystone Company, Carlyle Blackwell of the Kalem Company, and
|
|
Miss Anne Schaeffer and George C. Stanley of the Western Vitagraph Company.
|
|
The players were met by the State Secretary, W. A. Cory, and representatives
|
|
of the Golden Gate and General Film Exchange, who took the players to their
|
|
hotel, where they made ready for the pageant, which started at noon at Van
|
|
Ness Avenue and Market Street.
|
|
Mabel Normand having been voted the most popular player in California
|
|
was chosen queen of the occasion, and occupied the first automobile with
|
|
Carlyle Blackwell and W. A. Cory and wife. Then came the two Vitagraphers,
|
|
and following them, Mr. Gilbert M. Anderson, the popular "Broncho Billy" of
|
|
the Essanay Company, followed by twenty-four of Anderson's daring cowboys and
|
|
cowgirls in picture costume and mounted on their cow-ponies. The famous old
|
|
stage coach which we have seen "Broncho Billy" hold up countless times, was
|
|
also there in all its glory. Several beautiful floats, representing
|
|
miniature picture shows, and other spectacular features followed. Next came
|
|
the members of the San Francisco and Oakland Exhibitors' Leagues in gaily
|
|
decorated automobiles, headed by a band of twenty pieces. The parade made a
|
|
beautiful spectacle, and proved the best sort of advertising for the ball
|
|
which opened at 9:30 that night, with Mayor and Mrs. Rolph leading the grand
|
|
march. Following Mayor and Mrs. Rolph, came the visiting actors and
|
|
actresses, the committee in charge of arrangements and their ladies, with
|
|
Anderson's cowboys and cowgirls dressed in Wild West costume, followed by the
|
|
different members of the league and the dancers.
|
|
The actors and actresses were introduced by Chairman Cory, and made
|
|
happy little speeches, which were greatly appreciated by the great throngs
|
|
present. The only one to avoid making a speech was "Alkalai Ike" who, owing
|
|
to his diminutive stature was enabled to hide behind the skirts of some kind
|
|
lady and could not be found until the dancing was well under way.
|
|
Motion pictures of the parade, which were taken by Miles Brothers, and
|
|
were exhibited on a screen, caused a great deal of merriment among the
|
|
spectators as they recognized themselves in the photographs.
|
|
No expense was spared in the management of the affair; the aim of the
|
|
committee being to boost the business in general, rather than make money out
|
|
of this particular occasion. The entire Scottish Rite Temple, which is the
|
|
most beautiful building of its kind in San Francisco, was rented for the
|
|
occasion, one floor being reserved for society dances, another for those who
|
|
wanted to rag, large orchestras being provided in each hall. This
|
|
arrangement left everybody happy, and the crowd divided up according to
|
|
individual taste. The ball broke up about two o'clock Saturday morning, with
|
|
everybody voting it a grand success, and eagerly awaiting next year's second
|
|
annual grand ball.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
August 9, 1913
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Miss Mabel Normand, whose picture is presented on our cover this week,
|
|
is the charming leading lady of the Keystone Film Company, and is considered
|
|
one of the most beautiful as well as capable artists on the screen.
|
|
Before her present connection with the Keystone Company, Miss Normand
|
|
was well and favorably known as a clever performer, both with the Vitagraph
|
|
and later with the Biograph Company. Her work with these two organizations
|
|
attracted considerable attention and praise and when the Keystone Film
|
|
Company was formed Miss Normand was taken over, together with Mack Sennett,
|
|
Fred Mace and Ford Sterling. This famous company of fun-makers made an
|
|
enviable reputation for themselves while the Biograph Company and the
|
|
Keystone Film Company are to be complimented on their business acumen in
|
|
securing these prominent players.
|
|
Miss Normand, besides her personal charm and beauty, has an original
|
|
style all her own while working in pictures and in the particular style of
|
|
comedy which the above company is now making a specialty of. Miss Normand
|
|
has attracted attention by her work from picture-play fans all over the
|
|
country.
|
|
She is an accomplished horsewoman and a champion swimmer and high diver
|
|
and before entering picture work was recognized as one of the best women
|
|
swimmers in the world. She is athletic to a degree and fond of outdoor
|
|
sports of all kinds, in many of which she excels her male competitors.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 13, 1913
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Mabel Normand, leading woman with Keystone, will hereafter direct every
|
|
picture in which she appears. Madame Blache has been the only woman director
|
|
for some time, but she now has a rival in Mabel who will both act and direct.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
August 15, 1914
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Miss Mabel Normand, of the Keystone companies, is learning aviation
|
|
from Walter Brookin, the permanent Keystone aviator, and has made three
|
|
flights alone, driving the machine herself. Miss Normand hopes to soon be
|
|
able to do the loop, when a motion picture will be made.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
August 15, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Despite an article that recently appeared that Miss Mabel Normand, the
|
|
Keystone comedy star, was married off to the director general of that company
|
|
without her knowledge or consent, Miss Normand wishes to emphatically state
|
|
that not a wedding bell in the whole city of Los Angeles or any other city
|
|
ever struck a note in her behalf.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 5, 1914
|
|
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
|
|
Not content with an aeroplane and a Mercer racer, Mabel Normand has
|
|
entered the amateur field, having purchased the seven horsepower cyclecar
|
|
made by Shirley Williams, age 16 years, with which he won third place in the
|
|
Vanderbilt, Jr., races at Ascot Park, Los Angeles, July 4th, making the fifty
|
|
miles in one hour and six minutes. The cyclecar has a speed of fifty-five
|
|
miles an hour.
|
|
Miss Normand has had the little racer finished in an elegant manner at
|
|
one of the local garages, and for the next two months the young driver and
|
|
maker of the car will use it, in giving exhibition mile runs at fairs and
|
|
amateur race meets, the largest one he will attend being that at Tacoma,
|
|
Wash., on Labor Day, when there will be a purse of $750 and three cups for
|
|
the two fifty-mile races.
|
|
[A photo of Mabel Normand in her racer can be seen in the MOTION
|
|
PICTURE NEWS, September 12, 1914, page 58.]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 19, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Poor little Mabel Normand wants to take a trip "back home" to New York,
|
|
she confided to us one Saturday afternoon. "I've been out here ever since
|
|
the Keystone started, and they won't let me go at all," she says, and that is
|
|
two years ago. Mabel is busy directing her own company and is putting on
|
|
some real good comedy.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
October 31, 1914
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
[the following took place in New York]
|
|
The Cinema Camera Club made of its invitation party-dance on the night
|
|
of October 10 a well managed and a pleasant affair. Pabst Coliseum, where
|
|
the dancing party was held, was gayly decorated in tissue paper streamers of
|
|
many colors and the lights turned on the dancers were of many hues. The
|
|
balcony was divided into boxes and these were representative of the
|
|
respective film companies. There was a grand march which began at midnight,
|
|
and had as its head Clara Kimball Young and the new president of the Screen
|
|
Club, James D. Kirkwood. Miss Young was a gray silken maiden of Hong Kong,
|
|
she and "Jimmie" Young having chosen this costume in that city two years ago
|
|
on their around-the-world trip. In her hand Miss Young held a Chinese
|
|
lantern in which a candle gleamed during the march-figures in which other
|
|
lights were momentarily extinguished. Mabel Normand, on from the west on her
|
|
eastern rest-trip, was one of the marchers and there were many others of
|
|
screen note, among whom were Edward Earl, Bessie Learn, Hughie Mack, Herbert
|
|
Brenon, Alec Francis, Jessie Stevens, William Tooker, "Andy" Clark, Sally
|
|
Crute, Jack Pickford, Mabel Green, Ned Finley, Alice Learn and William
|
|
Wadsworth. Mary Pickford enjoyed the march from her Famous Player box and
|
|
afterward joined the dancers. Ad Kessel and C. O. Baumann were in
|
|
attendance, as also were Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Zukor, Mr. and Mrs. C. Lang
|
|
Cobb, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Charles Seay, Miss Bessie Bannon and Frank A. Bannon,
|
|
James A. Young, Joe Varnham, Carl Gregory and David Thompson of the New
|
|
Rochelle studio, Joe Brandt, Bill Barry, A. Kauffman, Owen and Matt Moore,
|
|
Fred Mace, Marguerite Leveridge and others. Buttons requesting "Let us have
|
|
universal peace" was the Universal's contribution to the evening.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
October 31, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
"Keystone Mabel" Normand, the renowned Keystone comedian, has been
|
|
spending her vacation in New York and, needless to say, she is having the
|
|
time of her young life. Being well-known in New York, previous to her going
|
|
to the Coast where she has been for two and a half years, all her old friends
|
|
have been waiting for this vacation and she has been wined and dined
|
|
incessantly.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 19, 1914
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
The first annual ball to be given under the auspices of the Screen Club
|
|
of San Francisco took place on Saturday, November 28, at the Coliseum, 200
|
|
Baker street. The Screen Club was organized on October 19 of the present
|
|
year and the holding of such a successful ball so shortly after its formation
|
|
is not only an evidence of the desires of its members to make it a success,
|
|
but of their energy and ability to work in harmony, as well, Sid Grauman,
|
|
president of the club and one of its organizers, was chairman of the floor
|
|
committee and also head of the reception committee, and stood at the main
|
|
entrance during the first part of the evening welcoming the distinguished
|
|
guests, of which there were a large number. Some idea of the size of the
|
|
assemblage may be judged from the fact that approximately six thousand
|
|
tickets were sold at the door, in addition to many that were sold at the box
|
|
office of the theaters and by various exchanges. It is estimated that the
|
|
total attendance was between eight and nine thousand persons. The regular
|
|
reception committee consisted of sixty members of the club, while twenty of
|
|
the leading city and state officials made up the honorary reception
|
|
committee.
|
|
The grand march was scheduled to start at nine o'clock and it was just
|
|
a few minutes after this hour when the march, led by Mayor and Mrs. James
|
|
Rolph, Jr., commenced its circuit of the immense hall. Following the leaders
|
|
were a galaxy of moving picture stars brought from the studios around the Bay
|
|
and from the southern part of the State, together with the officials of the
|
|
club. By this time the crowd had become so dense that it was impossible to
|
|
keep it from encroaching on the floor, and the grand march became a triumphal
|
|
procession through a populace anxious to catch a glimpse of their screen
|
|
favorites in person. When the floor was partly cleared dancing was indulged
|
|
in, the numbers being interspersed with singing, the enactment of moving
|
|
picture roles and feature acts from downtown theaters.
|
|
An event of the evening was a short address by Mayor James Rolph, Jr.,
|
|
from the balcony of the hall. He pronounced the ball the greatest event of
|
|
its kind in the history of the city and declared that it eclipsed anything he
|
|
had ever seen in the line of a hall gathering. He said: "The moving picture
|
|
business is here to stay, and the immense interest that is taken in screen
|
|
productions can be judged by this assemblage. Much credit is due the Screen
|
|
Club for the unqualified success of this event and I wish to thank it for
|
|
bringing so many player folks here that we might meet them personally."
|
|
He then read a list of those present and these were brought to the front of
|
|
the balcony and introduced, amid great enthusiasm. Among those who were
|
|
presented were: Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Arbuckle, Mabel Normand and Charles
|
|
Chaplin, of the Keystone, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Potel, Harry H. Todd, Margaret
|
|
Joslin Todd, Evelyn Selbie, Ernest Van Pelt and wife, of the Western Essanay
|
|
Company, Max Asher, of the Universal; Lee Willard, True Boardman, Fritz
|
|
Wintermeier, Lila McClemmon and Miss Ruth Hedington. Ford Sterling planned
|
|
to be present but was taken ill with pneumonia and could not come. Lillian
|
|
[Dorothy] Gish was injured in an automobile accident and was compelled to
|
|
send regrets. Another star who was prevented from attending through an
|
|
accident was Margaret Clayton, of the Western Essanay Company, one of the
|
|
first to respond to the invitation of the Screen Club. She recently suffered
|
|
a fractured leg in a stage accident.
|
|
The attendance at the ball steadily increased until midnight, and
|
|
tickets were sold as late as two o'clock. The Screen Club expects to net a
|
|
neat profit from the affair and this money is to be expended in fitting up
|
|
the club rooms in some convenient location in the downtown district.
|
|
A portion of the funds secured is to be donated to the Associated Charities.
|
|
The remarkable success of the monster ball, as it is now known, was due
|
|
in a large measure to the great publicity that was given it. For weeks
|
|
before the event it was advertised in all the moving picture houses by means
|
|
of attractive slides, the fact being emphasized that the leading players were
|
|
to be present in person. Billboard advertising was used extensively and a
|
|
real old-time circus stunt was used during the week preceding the event, this
|
|
being the handing of colored banners on the span wires of the downtown
|
|
trolley system.
|
|
A very attractive program of fifty-six pages was distributed, but,
|
|
owing to the unlooked for attendance, this was given only to the fair sex and
|
|
was much in demand. This contained pictures of the officers of the Screen
|
|
Club and of some of the leading actors and actresses in the moving picture
|
|
profession. It was well filled with announcements from Western producers,
|
|
exchanges and the local theaters. An interesting feature was the dance
|
|
program, consisting of fifty-five numbers, each of which bore some
|
|
distinctive name of general interest. A few of these selected at random
|
|
were: Keystone Rag, Sterling Two-Step, Chaplin Three-Step, Dorothy Gish Dip,
|
|
Bronco Billy Gallop, Arbuckle Walk, Slippery Slim Two-Step, General
|
|
Hesitation, Tivoli Three-Step, Dahnken Glide, Mary Pickford Waltz, Kleine Two-
|
|
Step, Bunny Hug, Crone Rag, Lesser Two-Step and Kohn Lame Duck...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
March 23, 1915
|
|
PHOTO-PLAY REVIEW
|
|
The Lady on the Cover
|
|
|
|
Miss Mabel Normand...is at present directing all the comedies in which
|
|
she works. She is reputed to be the only actress director in the country
|
|
today.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
April 20, 1915
|
|
PHOTO-PLAY REVIEW
|
|
Mabel Normand Not Married
|
|
|
|
An ambitious but misguided press agent of a Los Angeles theatre started
|
|
a rumor to the effect that Mabel Normand, "Queen of the Movies," and Bert
|
|
Levey, a theatrical agent, were married and the affair caused Miss Normand
|
|
much annoyance. She was in San Francisco at the time and when the report
|
|
reached her ears she sent the following telegram to the Keystone studios at
|
|
Edendale:
|
|
"To all my friends in the Keystone, Greetings: Be assured that I am
|
|
not married and have no such thought. Some foolish person evidently thought
|
|
to perpetrate an April fool joke which was both cruel and misplaced. My love
|
|
and best wishes to you all. Please post on bulletin.
|
|
Mabel Normand"
|
|
At about the same time Mr. Levey sent a wire discharging the press
|
|
agent. Levey is not even a friend of Miss Normand--merely an acquaintance of
|
|
the most casual sort, having met her in connection with the "Tillie's
|
|
Punctured Romance" feature which Mr. Levey controls in several states.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
June 27, 1915
|
|
Clem Pope
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
(Los Angeles)--Pretty soft for some of these Keystone actors this nice
|
|
warm weather. While the mercury is trying to blow out the top of the bulb,
|
|
the water in the Keystone tank gurgles merrily while the actors do the sea
|
|
nymph stuff. The other day Fred Fishback, in diving in the plunge, misjudged
|
|
the distance and collided gracefully and firmly with the concrete wall, and
|
|
was rendered temporarily helpless. Mabel Normand did the Carnegie stunt and
|
|
saved him. Sure I know that Fred Palmer is a publicity man, he has to make a
|
|
living some way.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
July 17, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Last week the Los Angeles Baseball Club held a benefit for the widow of
|
|
"Hap" Hogan, who died here recently. The picture people gave their generous
|
|
support, there being representatives from several companies to draw the
|
|
crowds. Charlie Chaplin and some Essanayers were there, and Ford and Mabel,
|
|
with Roscoe, frolicked around on the lawns. James Snyder, while taking part
|
|
in the funny ball game, fell and broke his shoulder.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
July 31, 1915
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...The crowning event of the convention [held in San Francisco,
|
|
July 13-17, 1915] was the grand ball, held in the Municipal Auditorium in the
|
|
Civic Center. This event had been widely heralded, and extensive
|
|
preparations made, a feature of the arrangements having been the bringing
|
|
from Los Angeles of almost fifty prominent screen artists from the leading
|
|
studios. As was the case with the convention itself, the task of arranging
|
|
the details of the ball devolved upon the chairman of the Convention
|
|
Committee, M. E. Cory, and much of the credit for the success of this affair
|
|
must be given him.
|
|
Owing to the fact that the historic old Liberty Bell arrived in San
|
|
Francisco late Friday evening, some of the plans for the ball had to be
|
|
changed at the last minute and many of the dignitaries of the state and city
|
|
were unable to be present until the festivities of the evening were well
|
|
under way. Governor Johnson, who was to have led the grand march with
|
|
Geraldine Farrar, was a member of the committee that brought the historic
|
|
relic to the exposition grounds and unfortunately could not be present.
|
|
Mayor Rolph was also absent, but representatives of the city government were
|
|
on hand to grace the occasion.
|
|
The gathering of screen favorites was fully up to the expectation of
|
|
the ball committee, and during the early part of the evening the boxes they
|
|
occupied were surrounded by eager throngs of admirers, the floor officers
|
|
finding difficulty in keeping the crowd moving.
|
|
In keeping with the exposition and Liberty Bell spirit which prevailed,
|
|
the hall was tastefully decorated in the exposition and national colors, and
|
|
after the commencement of the grand march the scene was further enlivened by
|
|
the releasing of hundreds of colored balloons.
|
|
The grand march was led by Carlyle Blackwell and Blanche Sweet,
|
|
followed by other leading picture players, the new and retiring officers of
|
|
the National League and the state and local organizations. Following this,
|
|
the regular dance program began and lasted until the early morning hours.
|
|
Owing to the immense size of the auditorium, and the fact that many who
|
|
attended were onlookers occupying seats in the balcony, the floor was crowded
|
|
at no time, and the attendance was larger than appeared to be the case.
|
|
Motion Pictures were taken of the grand march by Mills Brothers. Mr.
|
|
Sciaroni was in charge of the lighting and photographing. The pictures were
|
|
shown at the Empress theater on Saturday evening...
|
|
Among the player folks and film men who were present and occupied boxes
|
|
were Geraldine Farrar, Blanche Sweet, Carlyle Blackwell, Mabel Normand,
|
|
Raymond Hitchcock, Mrs. Raymond Hitchcock (Flora Zabelle), Mack Sennett, Owen
|
|
Moore, "Diamond Jim" Brady, Barney Baruch, Fred Mace, Marshall Neilan, Ella
|
|
Hall, Robert Leonard, Hobart Bosworth, Hobart Henley, M. L. Markowitz, Bessie
|
|
Barriscale, Howard Hickman, Frank Keenan, W. S. Hart, House Peters, Kenneth
|
|
O'Hara, Myrtle Gonzales, Mrs. Gonzalez, Sam Spedon, William Duncan, Jesse
|
|
Lasky, Morris Gest and wife, C. B. De Mille, W. W. Hodkinson, wife and party,
|
|
Bobbie Harron, Mae Marsh, Dorothy and Lillian Gish, Mrs. Gish, Francix X.
|
|
Bushman, Marguerite Snow, Irving Ackerman, Fred J. Balshofer, Marie Empress,
|
|
Art Smith, aviator; Mrs. Smith and Manager William Bastar and Mrs. Bastar,
|
|
G. M. Anderson, Victor Potel and Mrs. Potel, Ben Turpin, Jesse Jackson, and
|
|
Shorty Jack Hamilton...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
August 21, 1915
|
|
PHOTO-PLAY REVIEW
|
|
[photo caption] Mabel Normand and "Big Ben," the tame seal, disporting
|
|
in the surf at Santa Catalina, Cal.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
August 21, 1915
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Reunion at Keystone
|
|
There was a grand reunion of the big factors in the success of the New
|
|
York Motion Picture Corporation at the Keystone studios at Los Angeles the
|
|
day following the signing of the incorporation papers of the Triangle Film
|
|
Corporation, when Messrs. Kessel, Bauman and Sennett arrived from Colorado,
|
|
where the $5,000,000 corporation was put over.
|
|
The accompanying picture shows the gathering at the Keystone studio and
|
|
reading from left to right in the picture one beholds Charles Kessel, Mabel
|
|
Normand, Adam Kessel, Jr., C. O. Baumann and Mack Sennett.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
August 28, 1915
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
On Monday, August 2, the Los Angeles Boosters' Club show was given at
|
|
Shrine Auditorium to a capacity audience and hundreds were turned away.
|
|
Managing Director Mack Sennett of the Keystone Film Company supplied over one-
|
|
third of the program. The Keystone artists who appeared with the permission
|
|
of Mr. Sennett were Raymond Hitchcock, Jean Schwartz, Fred Mace, Harry
|
|
Williams, Eddie Foy, Flora Zabelle, Charlie Murray, Ford Sterling, Roscoe
|
|
Arbuckle, Syd Chaplin, Mack Swain, Chester Conklin, Mabel Normand and others.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 11, 1915
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
Lillian Gish entertained recently at the Fine Arts studio Mabel
|
|
Normand, the popular Keystone Triangle comedienne; Blanche Sweet and a party
|
|
of friends. They remained to witness Miss Gish, Rozsika Dolly and Wilfred
|
|
Lucas play a scene in their present starring vehicle, "The Lily and the
|
|
Rose."
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 11, 1915
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
While Gus Edwards was playing the Orpheum theater in Los Angeles he and
|
|
his "Song Review" stars, together with Nan Halperin and a number of others on
|
|
the bill, visited the Keystone studios at the invitation of Mabel Normand and
|
|
spent an interesting morning watching the making of scenes for the Sennett
|
|
feature. They were guests of Miss Normand at dinner the same night, as were
|
|
Eddie Foy, Mrs. Foy and the famous seven Foylets.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 25, 1915
|
|
MOTOGRAPHY
|
|
A brilliant after-dinner dance was given at the Hotel Alexandria
|
|
Saturday, September 4, in honor of the three new vice-presidents of the
|
|
Triangle Film Company, David W. Griffith, Thos. H. Ince and Mack Sennett.
|
|
Many notable film stars were present to do honor to the heads of the Reliance-
|
|
Majestic, New York Motion Picture Corporation and Keystone Film Company.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 25, 1915
|
|
Paul Conlon
|
|
NEW YORK CLIPPER
|
|
Mabel Normand may have occasional days of temperament and "nerves," but
|
|
in a crisis she seems to be on the job. This week, when a laborer was run
|
|
over by a street car in front of the studio, the men nearby were panic-
|
|
stricken. Mabel kept her head, ordered the men to get water, 'phoned for an
|
|
ambulance and, tearing an undergarment into strips, bound the man's wounds.
|
|
The plucky girl's first aid treatment saved the man's life.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
October 9, 1915
|
|
Paul Conlon
|
|
NEW YORK CLIPPER
|
|
Mabel Normand is on the way to recovery, and her thousands of friends
|
|
are sighing with relief. For four long days the little Keystone actress lay
|
|
unconscious, and the doctors held out little hope. Mabel was injured in a
|
|
fall at the studio about two weeks ago.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
January 18, 1916
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Mabel Normand and Roscoe Arbuckle spent their first New Year's in
|
|
several seasons within the charmed circle of New York stageland. The white
|
|
lights beamed merrily for them, the cup of joy effervesced, and the plaudits
|
|
of admiring throngs for their real selves brought a novel pleasure. In plain
|
|
vernacular, Fatty and Mabel are on the job in New York. With their Eastern
|
|
Keystone Company, including Minta Durfee, Al St. John and others, they
|
|
arrived in the metropolis Thursday afternoon, December 30. The party came
|
|
through direct from the Coast, escorted by Traveling Passenger Pike of the
|
|
San Pedro Road. They were met at Grand Central Station by Frank Myers of the
|
|
New York Central, and a number of the New York Motion Picture and Triangle
|
|
executives.
|
|
Miss Normand is looking fresh as a daisy, but it was deemed best not to
|
|
break the journey for picture-taking en route, since her recovery from
|
|
serious accident has been so recent. Mr. Arbuckle, the director of the
|
|
company, said he would start work soon at the Willat studios in Fort Lee.
|
|
Mrs. Ford Sterling (Teddy Sampson) and Syd Chaplin were among the friends who
|
|
greeted the newcomers at the station.
|
|
On New Year's night, Mr. Arbuckle, Miss Normand and the other
|
|
Keystoners were the guests of the New York Globe at the Lexington Opera
|
|
House. They saw "Peter Rabbit in Dreamland," and two thousand people saw
|
|
Fatty and "the Keystone girl" and applauded the flesh-and-blood authors of
|
|
millions of laughs. After the hard, grueling work at Edendale, the Keystone
|
|
folk enjoyed every minute of the New Year's festivities.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
March 4, 1916
|
|
Lynde Denig
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Garden Capacity Taxed
|
|
|
|
Madison Square Garden accommodates the population of a fair sized town.
|
|
For small affairs like the circus or the horse show it does very well, and
|
|
the architects designed it for just such moderate demands with never a
|
|
thought of magnetic motion pictures. They did not foresee that on the night
|
|
of February 19 so many New Yorkers would insist upon entering the Garden
|
|
because of the first annual ball arranged by the Screen Club and the
|
|
Exhibitors' League.
|
|
Five, eight, ten thousand, so the numbers rose, until along towards
|
|
midnight the police and fire departments cried, "Enough." Uncounted hundreds
|
|
were turned back to the sharp wind in Madison avenue. And to think, had it
|
|
only been June instead of February, had the breezes been less keen, Gail
|
|
Kane, burdened with diamonds; Clara Kimball Young, more glorious than ever
|
|
after her stay in Cuba; Florence LaBadie, on her towering float, might have
|
|
visited an overflow meeting in Madison Square Park. The incense wafted from
|
|
Miss LaBadie's throne must have given "Arabian Nights" dreams to the men who
|
|
sleep in the open. But it was too cold.
|
|
Visitors at the Garden were divided into two classes, those who came to
|
|
see and those marked for the spotlight. Members jammed the aisles until
|
|
congestion was slightly relieved by the opening of the second balcony. The
|
|
others, those who came to be seen, occupied the boxes encircling the arena,
|
|
converted into a dancing floor. In the center was a stand large enough to
|
|
hold several bands. Joe Humphrys and various officials of the Exhibitors'
|
|
League and the Screen Club. Publicity promoters, every so busy, kept in
|
|
close touch with Announcer Humphrys and effected a wireless communication
|
|
with manipulators of the spotlights. Arthur James, Harry Reichenback, Leon
|
|
J. Rubenstein, Paul Gulick, P. A. Parsons and others expert at adding lustre
|
|
to a star improved each passing moment.
|
|
Metro was on especially friendly terms with the decorator. In whatever
|
|
direction the eye wandered it met giant banners bearing a simple declarative
|
|
sentence, such as "Metro Wins." Attention was drawn to the well-filled Pathe
|
|
boxes, including that of the Arrow Film Corporation, by the name displayed in
|
|
electric lights; Universal had Red Feather banners galore floating above the
|
|
heads of the dancers, whereas Thanhouser, Triangle, World Film and Equitable,
|
|
Vitagraph, Edison and other box holders figured in the decorations.
|
|
Shortly after eleven o'clock there was a flurry of excitement caused by
|
|
the entrance of Clara Kimball Young, soon to be named as the winner of the
|
|
Popularity Contest. By this time the floor had been cleared of dancers and
|
|
the arrival of each screen celebrity was befittingly ceremonious. Then World
|
|
Film-Equitable Reichenbach opened the game in earnest by leading his trump
|
|
card--Gail Kane, resplendent in diamonds and an orchid-colored gown. Lights
|
|
were lowered to make more effective the play of the "spot" on Miss Kane and
|
|
her jewels as she circled the Garden, accompanied by an Hawaiian quintet and
|
|
an escort of police officers.
|
|
Metro followed with a miniature operetta, enacted by a score of girls
|
|
in Pierrot costumes bearing letters to spell "Metro Wins." They danced to
|
|
the tune of "Hello, 'Frisco," easily altered to "Hello Metro." Then those
|
|
who came to see, witnessed the sad spectacle of a man in evening clothes
|
|
reeling across the floor, all too obviously unable to control his movements.
|
|
It was Billie Reeves in a comedy interlude. King Baggot and Edna Hunter led
|
|
the first delegation of Universal stars and while they were going the rounds,
|
|
Director Sullivan, of Thanhouser, was marshaling his forces for the
|
|
spectacular entrance of Florence LaBadie. Looking like a veritable queen of
|
|
ancient history, lolling gracefully in a golden chair, carried on the
|
|
shoulders of Nubian slaves, she was the center of a splendid procession.
|
|
No beauty of the screen ever was given a more gorgeous setting and her
|
|
triumphal march brought applause from every corner of the Garden.
|
|
Violet Merserau and Hobart Henley guided an assemblage of Red Feather
|
|
stars around the circuit, and a few moments later the great popularity of
|
|
Anita Stewart and Earl Williams, leaders of the Vitagraph delegation, was
|
|
attested by a generous ovation. Presently Mr. Reichenbach, filling the place
|
|
of Announcer Humphrys for the time being, called attention to the box in
|
|
which a popular actress was seated. The spotlight plainly indicated Clara
|
|
Kimball Young, who soon appeared on the floor, with Nicholas Dunaew, in a
|
|
striking Russian costume.
|
|
In the second Thanhouser promenade there was a liberal New Rochelle
|
|
delegation. The crowd roared its approval when Roscoe Arbuckle and Mabel
|
|
Normand appeared. Edison made a good showing with Viola Dana and Richard
|
|
Tucker in the lead, whereas an imposing Universal assemblage had President
|
|
Carl Laemmle and Pat Powers as its center. Accompanying these officials were
|
|
Violet Mersereau, Hobart Henley, King Baggot, Sydney Bracy and Dorothy
|
|
Phillips. Frank Powell appeared with Nance O'Neill, Alfred Hickman, Victor
|
|
Benoit and Mr. and Mrs. William Teller. Gail Kane made another circuit of
|
|
the building and the Screen Club and White Rats each had their turn. Among
|
|
Biograph players were Claire McDowell, Charles H. Mailes, Vola Smith and Vera
|
|
Sisson. Nicholas Power was represented by Jack Skerrett, Edward Earl and
|
|
William Barry.
|
|
It was past midnight when Joe Humphyrs announced the winners of the New
|
|
York American's popularity contest and awarded the prizes, first, a $500
|
|
diamond bracelet to Clara Kimball Young; second, a $75 wrist watch to Anita
|
|
Stewart, and third, a traveling bag, to Virginia Norden. Each of the winners
|
|
appeared on the platform and acknowledged the applause of fellow players and
|
|
the public. Miss Young and Billy Quirk, president of the Screen Club, led
|
|
the grand march, followed by Lee A. Ochs, president of the Exhibitors' League
|
|
and Miss Stewart.
|
|
Edwin Thanhouser, duplicating his offer at the Boston Exhibitors' ball,
|
|
agreed to feature with Miss LaBadie, the girl selected as the most beautiful
|
|
at the ball, the only stipulation being an amateur standing. The platform
|
|
was immediately besieged by hundreds of eager young women and it appeared for
|
|
awhile as if the Thanhouser Company had staged a riot or a bargain day. The
|
|
committee of five, comprising Lee Ochs, Otto Lederer, Tefft Johnson, Frank
|
|
Carroll and John Humphyrs, finally chose Pearl Shepard, of New York Public
|
|
School No. 23.
|
|
An enjoyable feature of the evening was the entertainment furnished by
|
|
Metro in the concert hall on the balcony floor. Refreshments were served to
|
|
Metro guests and an orchestra supplied music for dancing, Mary Miles Minter
|
|
being among the hostesses.
|
|
Among the out-of-town guests were Siegmund Lubin, who brought Helen
|
|
Green and several other players from Philadelphia; Frederick J. Harrington,
|
|
president of the Exhibitors' National Organization; Ernest H. Horstmann,
|
|
president of the Massachusetts League; Frank J. Howard, Samuel Grant, Russel
|
|
E. Shanahan and H. H. Buxbaum.
|
|
The box-holders were: Metro, nine boxes; Pathe, six; Universal, six;
|
|
World and Equitable, five; Mutual, four; Triangle, four; Vitagraph, three; N.
|
|
Y. American, three; city officials and judges, two; Fox, two; N. Y. Motion
|
|
Picture, two; Edison, Great Northern, Frank Powell, Nicholas Power, Greenwich
|
|
Lithographing, Robert Warwick, Marshall Farnum, King Baggot, Ivan Film,
|
|
American Seating Col, Novelty Slide, Lubin, J. H. Hallberg.
|
|
[This was probably the first time that Mabel Normand and Mary Miles Minter
|
|
were both at the same place.]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
May 9, 1916
|
|
Grace Kingsley
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
Thumbnail Sketches.
|
|
...Mabel Normand: Champagne at a wake; red roses in the lettuce patch.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
May 27, 1916
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Mabel Normand, the popular Triangle star, was the guest of honor at the
|
|
Pals Club last Saturday. She was welcomed by a host of Los Angeles friends,
|
|
and a notable program had been arranged for the evening.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
August 5, 1916
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Tod Browning, director for the Triangle-Fine Arts Company, on July 12
|
|
was tendered a surprise party by his friends at the Reiter Arms Apartments,
|
|
Hollywood. The affair was given in honor of Browning's twenty-third
|
|
birthday.
|
|
Miss Alice Wilson had charge of the arrangements. Browning was taken
|
|
to the downtown district for dinner. One of the members of the party soon
|
|
after the dinner pleaded a severe headache and they all adjourned to the
|
|
Reiter Arms, where Browning was met by the three hundred guests who were
|
|
invited to the affair, including notable film people from the various studios
|
|
in the motion picture colony. Charles Murray, the Keystone comedian, acted
|
|
as master of ceremonies, and welcomed Browning home with a traditional
|
|
Keystone bit of comedy.
|
|
A buffet luncheon was served in the Reiter Arms ballroom, and the
|
|
evening was spent in dancing.
|
|
Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dillon, Chet Withey, Mabel
|
|
Normand, Fay Tincher, Dorothy Gish, Robert Harron, Wallace Reid, Dorothy
|
|
Davenport, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ingraham, J. C. Epping, Ruth Stonehouse,
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Cabanne, Bessie Love, Mae and Marguerite Marsh,
|
|
Mrs. Marsh, Mary H. O'Connor, Hettie Gray Baker, Constance Talmadge, Mr. and
|
|
Mrs. Elmer Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Long, Bernard McConville, Roy
|
|
Somerville, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wilson and others. Hettie Gray Baker, of the
|
|
scenario department of the Fine Arts Company, celebrated her birthday at the
|
|
same time.
|
|
Eddie Dillon presented Browning with a sponge cake containing twenty-
|
|
three red peppermint candies, arranged so as to form Browning's initials.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 17, 1917
|
|
Bob Doman
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Paris as Seen by a New Yorker
|
|
...Charlot (Charlie Chaplin), Lolot (Mabel Normand), and Marie Dressler
|
|
have the cinema audiences of the Grand Boulevards at their mercy. The French
|
|
want what they want when they want it, and in a cinema in the Boulevard des
|
|
Italiens the other night a near-riot was precipitated when the management
|
|
delayed presenting Charlot, Lolot and Miss "Dresslaire" on the screen.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
March 4, 1917
|
|
E. V. Durling
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
(Los Angeles)--H. B. Rosen of the Harriman National Bank of New York gave
|
|
a party to Adolph Zukor coincident with that gentleman's return to New York
|
|
City. A special orchestra provided the music, and in order to make things
|
|
harmonize with the quality of the gathering the dinner was served on the
|
|
Alexandria gold plate. The list of guests included Mary Pickford, Mr. and
|
|
Mrs. Cecil de Mille, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. C. De Mille, Marco Hellman, Carl Paige,
|
|
Fannie Ward, Jack Dean, Margaret Illington, Mae Murray, Mrs. Beatrice De
|
|
Mille, Marian Selby, Mme. Aldrich, Mabel Normand, Olive Thomas, Jeanie
|
|
MacPherson, Blanche Sweet, Dorothy Gish, Elliott Dexter, Jack Pickford,
|
|
Antonio Moreno and Marshall Neilan.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
March 10, 1917
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
...Production of Keystone pictures began on July 4, 1912, on which date
|
|
Mack Sennett took a small party of players including Mabel Normand and Ford
|
|
Sterling, to Fort Lee, N.J...The first day they started out in grand style in
|
|
a hired automobile. They found a good-natured man over at Fort Lee who
|
|
loaned them his house. The interior of the house was too dark to take
|
|
pictures and there were no lights available. As he simply had to have an
|
|
interior, Sennett moved his friend's furniture out on the lawn and took the
|
|
"interior" there.
|
|
When he came to settle the automobile bill that first day Sennett had
|
|
to dig up twenty dollars. As the whole payroll of the company only amounted
|
|
to fifteen dollars at that time, they decided they would have to cut out the
|
|
automobile. Thereafter the little Keystone company plodded out to work every
|
|
day in the street cars. And when the actors got to the end of the street car
|
|
line they went on the human hoof. The cameraman carried the camera over his
|
|
shoulder and the actors packed the props on their backs. Being very husky by
|
|
nature, Sennett took to himself the honor and distinction of carrying most of
|
|
the scenery on his own back....
|
|
In September, 1912, Mack Sennett and his players came to Los Angeles
|
|
and took possession of the studio that had been the original site of the
|
|
Bison company. The older division of the New York Motion Picture Corporation
|
|
had removed to Santa Ynez Canyon near the end of 1911. It wasn't much of a
|
|
studio. A vacant lot, a couple of dilapidated sheds and a rickety stage were
|
|
about all. Mack Sennett did most of the work himself. He wrote all the
|
|
scenarios, lent a hand with the scenery, acted as telephone girl and gateman
|
|
most of the time. After the day's work as an actor, he came back at night
|
|
and cut film until early morning.
|
|
When Sennett's first California comedy was sent east the verdict was
|
|
quick and positive. It was punk [terrible]. Nobody would buy it.
|
|
With bulldog tenacity he struggled on. Finally he landed with a comedy
|
|
in which he had no faith and which was a careless makeshift affair. A Grand
|
|
Army of the Republic convention happened to be in Los Angeles. Without any
|
|
very definite idea in mind, Sennett had his cameraman take pictures of this
|
|
parade. From another company he bought some cast-off battle pictures. He
|
|
rigged up one of his comedians as a soldier, had him dash in and out of some
|
|
smoke from a smudge pot and make up a ramshackle comedy out of it. For some
|
|
reason or other, this was an instant hit. The East demanded more like it.
|
|
The Keystone found itself all of a sudden on the map.
|
|
The demand for Keystone comedies soon became so great that the one
|
|
little company couldn't meet the demand. Another company became absolutely
|
|
necessary. Where were they to get a director and how were they to pay for a
|
|
director?
|
|
Mabel Normand threw herself into the breach. She offered to direct a
|
|
company herself. Miss Normand, accordingly, became the first woman director
|
|
of comedies. The actors who worked in her first company say there were
|
|
occasionally some wild scenes. She was not what you call a phlegmatic
|
|
director, but she was a good one...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
June 24, 1917.
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
Spike Robinson, the old-time British fighter, and Stella Dominguez, the
|
|
beautiful daughter of Ramon Dominguez, wealthy cattle king, were married in
|
|
Los Angeles recently. Bull Montana, the Italian wrestler, was best man, and
|
|
Bennie Zeidman and Ed Durling guests. Spike and Bull are in Douglas
|
|
Fairbanks's company, and the film star presented Spike with a beautiful
|
|
silver dinner set after the wedding supper. Many well known film personages,
|
|
including Mabel Normand, Wally Reid, Eileen Percy, Charles Murray, Charlie
|
|
Chaplin, Ford Sterling, Herbert Rawlinson, James Cruz, Jack Mulhall, Louise
|
|
Fazenda, Tom Mix, Tom Santschi, Nat Goodwin and others, went to the cafe
|
|
where the supper was given and danced until the wee small hours to help
|
|
celebrate.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
November 10, 1917
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD
|
|
Mabel Normand Speaks for the Loan
|
|
|
|
Mabel Normand, Goldwyn star, made a whirlwind speaking tour in eight
|
|
New York theatres Monday night, October 22, in behalf of the Liberty Loan.
|
|
Beginning at 8:30 in the evening at Marcus Loew's American theatre, Miss
|
|
Normand made a two-minute talk first to an audience on the roof-top theater
|
|
and a few minutes later met the audience in the main ground floor theatre.
|
|
Thereafter, she averaged one theater every fifteen minutes, appearing at
|
|
Mitchel H. Mark's Strand theater at 9 o'clock. Marcus Loew's New York
|
|
theater came next at 9:15 and was followed by trips to Loew's Circle, Loew's
|
|
Lincoln and Loew's New York roof. The last stop of the evening was at A. L.
|
|
Shakman's Eighty-first street theater.
|
|
If there was any need of the affection in which Mabel Normand is held
|
|
by the public this Liberty Loan speaking tour was all that was required. In
|
|
the course of the evening she faced a total audience of from 18,000 to 20,000
|
|
persons and the greeting they gave Goldwyn's beautiful little star showed
|
|
that her power is as great as ever.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 28, 1918
|
|
Grace Kingsley
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
Just as Mabel Normand, Goldwyn star, was happily settled in her
|
|
Hollywood home, and was planning a nice house-warming party, along came the
|
|
flu and not only threw cold water on all her nice little social plans, but
|
|
stopped work on "Sis Hopkins." Miss Normand is reported to be seriously ill.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 29, 1918
|
|
Grace Kingsley
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
From Mabel Normand comes the glad news that so far as she is concerned
|
|
the flu has flown, and that she expects to sit up today and take nourishment.
|
|
Moreover, she thinks she'll be able again to don her Sis Hopkins makeup next
|
|
week.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 30, 1918
|
|
Grace Kingsley
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
The health of two of Goldwyn's most famous stars is improving. Mae
|
|
Marsh, who has been ill for some time, has so far recovered that she is to
|
|
commence work on a Goldwyn production on January 13. Her director will be
|
|
Roy Trimble, and the story is not yet ready for announcement. Mabel Normand,
|
|
likewise expects to be able to don her "Sis Hopkins" make-up within a few
|
|
days. She took a nice long motor trip yesterday.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
January 12, 1919
|
|
Grace Kingsley
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
When we told Mabel Normand that she looked as lovely as ever, even in
|
|
the Sis Hopkins make-up, she responded, "Never mind the tip! The fact which
|
|
principally matters is that I'm happy to be back here in California."
|
|
"Aren't you lonely for New York, then?"
|
|
"Lonesome!" exclaimed Mabel. "Yes, lonesome as a traffic cop at
|
|
Seventh and Broadway on Saturday afternoon! Why, all my friends are out
|
|
here, and they've been just too lovely to me for anything. Even when I had
|
|
the 'flu' they kept me jolly with letters and telegrams and flowers and candy I
|
|
couldn't eat. But I'll tell you a secret. I got a chance to read a lot of
|
|
books I've been wanting to read for a long time. Just as Carlyle used to
|
|
read yellow-back novels as a rest from serious labors, so the joyous
|
|
comedienne as tragedy relief, so to speak, turns to highbrow literature.
|
|
So I've been reading history and all kinds of stiff things, with H. G. Wells
|
|
as the very lightest one of all!"
|
|
Of course it wouldn't be Mabel's picture, "Sis Hopkins," unless some
|
|
funny little human thing happened during the making of it. This time it was
|
|
a dog, which relieved the sad motonony of comedy making. A scene on which
|
|
depended an important development of the story was one in which a dog sniffs
|
|
at "Sis's" market basket and in doing so overturns the oil-can, which rolls
|
|
into the spring, and--but there, I mustn't tell any more of the story. The
|
|
point is, the dog must do all those things. But none of the dogs brought to
|
|
the studio could be brought to enact the combination of incidents. Then
|
|
Mabel made a suggestion.
|
|
"Why don't you go to the pound and get a poor, starved cur," was Miss
|
|
Normand's happy suggestion. "It will eat anything." Sure enough, a poor,
|
|
neglected, dirty fox terrier was chosen and brought from the pound.
|
|
"And it was right then," said Miss Normand, "he became a ham actor.
|
|
He showed a ravenous appetite for ham. In his hunt for ham, the oil can was
|
|
overturned, tumbled beautifully, and rolled right into the spring. And the
|
|
play was saved."
|
|
Of course, Miss Normand insisted the forlorn canine be kept at the
|
|
studios, and she calls him "Ham," and says hunger will make a good actor of
|
|
anyone.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 2, 1919
|
|
Grace Kingsley
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
Mabel Normand is still somewhat weak from the severe attack of
|
|
influenza which she suffered a few weeks ago. She is compelled occasionally
|
|
to rest a day, and last Friday took a day off from labor.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
May 18, 1919
|
|
Margaret Ettinger
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
Mickey Neilan truly started something when he pulled that party a
|
|
little more than a month ago. Every one had such a good time that they
|
|
thought it would be right jolly to have the bunch get together about once a
|
|
month for just such an affair. Therefore the old Forty Club was resurrected,
|
|
renamed the Sixty Club, and the first monthly party was given in the ballroom
|
|
of the Alexandria on Saturday, May 10.
|
|
Mickey and Joe Engel were two of the prominent hosts. All the colony
|
|
turned out for it, and a few of those present were: Mabel Normand, Mr. and
|
|
Mrs. Joseph Kilgour, Jack Pickford, Eileen Percy, Tom Moore, Mildred
|
|
Considine, Arthur Houseman, Marjorie Daw, Harry Ham, Pauline Frederick, Lew
|
|
Cody, Antonio Moreno, Viola Dana, Seena Owen, Anita Stewart, Rudolph Cameron,
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Lyons, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Moran, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ray,
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Franklin, Grace La Rue,
|
|
Edwin Carewe, Ruth Roland, Harry Cohn, Jean Darnell, Agnes Johnson, Harry
|
|
Millarde and Hale Hamilton.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 1919
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
Chief Justice of Celluloidia
|
|
|
|
If there is any lawyer in the theatrical or photoplay business who has
|
|
ever occupied so unique a position as Nathan Burkan, we'd like to know it.
|
|
If there ever has been one, we'd like to know it. He is certainly the
|
|
wholesale representative. Representing Charlie Chaplin, he drew his first
|
|
million-dollar contract. Representing Sydney Chaplin, he drew his recent
|
|
contract with Famous Players. Representing Marshall Neilan, he made that
|
|
director's contract with First National. He is also the legal representative
|
|
of Mabel Normand, Theda Bara, Olive Thomas, Jack Pickford, Pearl White, Hale
|
|
Hamilton, Texas Guinan, Blanche Sweet, Mae Murray, Robert Leonard, Fannie
|
|
Ward, Charlotte Walker, Marjorie Rambeau, Ina Claire, Henry Lehrman and
|
|
Carlyle Blackwell. He represents, also, these authors: Edwin Milton Royle,
|
|
LeRoi Cooper Megrue, Winchell Smith, John Golden and Bayard Vellier. He is
|
|
attorney for and on the board of directors of the "Big Four"--the United
|
|
Artists. He is attorney for the Society of Authors & Composers. He is the
|
|
attorney for Victor Herbert, and for John Phillip Sousa. He is the attorney
|
|
for the Producing Managers' Association of New York City, and represented
|
|
them throughout the Actors' Equity trouble. He was Jewel Carmen's attorney
|
|
in her successful action against Fox. In addition to these people and
|
|
institutions he represents more than one hundred men and women of the
|
|
theatre, and scores of outside individuals and businesses.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
July 16, 1920
|
|
VARIETY
|
|
[This item gives an indication of the success of Mabel Normand's most popular
|
|
film, "Mickey":]
|
|
You can't always sometimes tell--even the shrewdest guess wrong. When
|
|
"Mickey" was offered State-right buyers a couple of years ago J. Frank Hatch,
|
|
one of the cleverest of the State-right purchasers, offered $8,000 for Ohio,
|
|
refusing to raise his bid. He could have bought it for $9,000. Harry
|
|
Grelle, of Pittsburgh, paid $12,000 for Ohio and $10,000 for Pennsylvania for
|
|
a three years' lease of the picture, which still has a year to go. Up to
|
|
date Grelle has cleaned up a profit of $323,000 on Ohio and Pennsylvania, the
|
|
bulk of which was made in Ohio. At the conclusion of the lease of "Mickey"
|
|
Grelle will retire, satisfied with his accumulated "pile." The picture was
|
|
put into Pittsburgh for a run which cleaned up a profit of $60,000 on the
|
|
engagement.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
May 1921
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
...And we can now present to you--Mr. and Mrs. Tom Moore.
|
|
Tom Moore and Renee Adoree met in New York New Year's Eve.
|
|
They were married in Beverly Hills, California, on February 12th.
|
|
...They were married, in the lovely drawing room of Tom Moore's home in
|
|
Beverly Hills, just at noon. Nice, fat, jolly Judge Summerfield married them,
|
|
and Mabel Normand was maid of honor, and Jack Pickford was best man. Dear old
|
|
Mrs. Moore, mother of the Moores, was the only guest present.
|
|
...Afterwards they drove to a famous Inn in Pasadena, where a bridal
|
|
breakfast was served for forty of their friends, among them May Allison,
|
|
Alice Lake, Edna Purviance, Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Hamilton, Lottie Pickford,
|
|
Teddy Sampson, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Robertson, Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Gibbons,
|
|
and the bridal party.
|
|
Everybody drank the bride's health--in the stuff that runs under
|
|
bridges, we suppose--and they motored away in a cloud of rice, and blessings
|
|
to Santa Barbara, Del Monte, San Francisco and finally took shop to Honolulu,
|
|
where they spent a three weeks honeymoon.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
June 1921
|
|
Hazel Shelly
|
|
MOTION PICTURE CLASSIC
|
|
The grill room of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles is rapidly
|
|
becoming the Mecca for movie people. When Mr. And Mrs. Star need diversion
|
|
recreation, or food, nowadays, instead of hieing themselves in their Packards
|
|
to the Alexandria or Sunset Inn, they drive to the Ambassador. Not only is
|
|
this Hotel de Luxe nearer their habitats, but it is twice as expensive as any
|
|
other hostelry.
|
|
The other evening Ruth Roland was there tripping the light fantastic
|
|
with some good-looking chap. She wore a peach-colored chiffon evening dress.
|
|
Among the other dancers was Rosemary Theby in grey, and a grey picture hat,
|
|
and Eileen Percy in an emerald-green chiffon frock and hat. To my mind
|
|
Gloria Swanson was the most beautiful woman in the room. She was wearing a
|
|
flame-colored evening gown trimmed with flame-colored sequins. Her hair was
|
|
dressed in a new fashion, parted in the middle and bound close to her head.
|
|
She was accompanied solely by her husband, H. K. Somborn
|
|
Another evening Mahlon Hamilton and his handsome young wife were there
|
|
in a party, which included Mabel Normand and William D. Taylor.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 11, 1921
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
From the manner in which Nazimova's modernized "Camille" held the
|
|
attention of the audience which viewed it, for the first time, in the
|
|
ballroom of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, New York, the evening of Wednesday,
|
|
September 7; from the applause the picture evoked and from outspoken
|
|
commendation of it by professional personages there, Metro officials believe
|
|
that in the screen version of the great Dumas play it has one of the most
|
|
powerful box office attractions ever produced...
|
|
Nazimova was present in person at the showing, as also were Rudolph
|
|
Valentino, who played Armand, and Natacha Rambova, who designed the settings.
|
|
Following the exhibition there was a reception in the Crystal Room.
|
|
The production was directed by Ray C. Smallwood and the scenario
|
|
written by June Mathis.
|
|
The photoplay was viewed by an audience whose composite photograph
|
|
might have been entitled "A Celebrity."
|
|
Among the guests were...Miss Lillian Gish, Miss Dorothy Gish, Miss
|
|
Norma Talmadge, Miss Constance Talmadge, Joseph M. Schenck, Richard
|
|
Barthelmess,...Adolph Zukor, D. W. Griffith, Mary Pickford, Douglas
|
|
Fairbanks, Mabel Normand...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 18, 1921
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH
|
|
All the leading film lights in New York were present on Thursday night
|
|
at the Apollo Theatre when "Little Lord Fauntleroy" made its bow to the
|
|
public. A casual eye swept over the audience during the intermission
|
|
revealed such well-known people as Norma Talmadge, Constance Talmadge, Mrs.
|
|
Margaret Talmadge, Samuel Goldwyn, Joseph Schenck, Dorothy Gish, Edgar
|
|
Selwyn, Mabel Normand, Marshall Neilan, Anita Loos, John Emerson, Mr. and
|
|
Mrs. J. D. Williams, Albert Parker, Hiram Abrams, Nathan Burkan, Dennis
|
|
O'Brien, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Grey, Mae Murray, Robert Leonard, and, of
|
|
course, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Douglas, Jr., Jack Pickford and
|
|
Mrs. Charlotte Pickford.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
October 1921
|
|
Adela Rogers St. Johns
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
Hollywood has been literally overrun with swimming parties this hot
|
|
month. Everybody who has a swimming pool--and numerous screen celebrities
|
|
have--is enjoying it themselves and inviting their friends to do likewise.
|
|
Wally Reid's hillside estate sports a very grand pool, with a walled-in
|
|
sand pile, completely shut in from the road and Mrs. Reid--who was pretty
|
|
Dorothy Davenport--is found in it about eight hours out of every twenty-four.
|
|
The other afternoon she and Wally were joined by pretty Wanda Hawley--who
|
|
looks very nice indeed in a blue one piece affair, which she fills with
|
|
curving completeness--Mabel Normand, and was there every anybody before or
|
|
since who could look like Mabel in one of those Italian silk suits of
|
|
unrelieved black--T. Roy Barnes, and his wife Bessie Crawford, Bill Hart, May
|
|
Allison, who is just learning to swim and does it with fascinating timidity
|
|
amid prolific masculine instruction--and wears a modest, taffeta bathing
|
|
dress that looks very French and ties in the back. Not to mention young Bill
|
|
Reid, who at the age of four has learned to swim under water like an enlarged
|
|
minnow, but can't swim if his nose gets above water.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
November 12, 1921
|
|
LOS ANGELES RECORD
|
|
In spite of the fact that November 10 is known to Mabel Normand and her
|
|
intimates, as her birthday, it made little difference to that young lady when
|
|
she arose to greet the day that meant the beginning of a new year in her
|
|
life. She received and accepted an invitation from her producer, Mack
|
|
Sennett, to take dinner with him and a friend, at his home. The hour was set
|
|
for 7 and as usual Mabel was on time.
|
|
As Mr. Sennett escorted Miss Normand to the dining room, which was
|
|
darkened to that time, the lights were turned on and eleven of Mabel's
|
|
friends rushed her to wish many happy returns of the day.
|
|
A beautiful three-piece silver tea set was the gift of the entire
|
|
company. Many less pretentious gifts were presented from the people who
|
|
worked with her on the last picture, "Molly 'O," including an alarm clock
|
|
from her director, Dick Jones.
|
|
Those who helped toward making the party a complete success, were Mabel
|
|
Normand, William D. Taylor, Mrs. Catherine Sennett, Fay Borden, Mack Sennett,
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Asher, Dick Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mueller and John
|
|
Grey.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 2, 1921
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
"The Writers" last night threw down the gauntlet to "The Lambs."
|
|
Vying in half a dozen qualities these two famous clubs of the West and
|
|
the East promise a lively rivalry hereafter...
|
|
"The Writers' Cramp" was the occasion of the affair.
|
|
Just how the cramp originated is not made public, but it is generally
|
|
supposed that it was first noticed in the region of the pocketbook when
|
|
equipment for the "Writers'" new athletic field was to be provided.
|
|
In a spasm of optimism some one--they do say it was Marion Fairfax--
|
|
conceived the idea of raising money to allay this cramp by a big public
|
|
gathering. The public was entirely willing. In fact, some 1200 strong,
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. Public responded with such a rush that the baby stars of filmdom
|
|
who were selling tickets had to requisition trucks to carry home the money.
|
|
Whatever the financial result, the social development of the affair was
|
|
remarkable. Folk of the studios met society on terms of equal footing, and a
|
|
bond of common interest created which will make last night's dinner dance one
|
|
of the memorable events of local history.
|
|
The array of distinguished men and woman assembled would alone have
|
|
been worth all the price of admission. The fact that the cotillion form of
|
|
dance was observed permitting every guest to dance with his or her screen
|
|
favorite was a further pleasure provided, and finally a specially staged
|
|
entertainment of wit, beauty and music completed the brilliance of an affair
|
|
which every guest may recall with happiness for years to come...
|
|
As the lovely women stepped into the picture we forgot the world was
|
|
made for anything but beauty...
|
|
Gloria Swanson, wisteria velvet embroidered in silver, rhinestones and
|
|
pearls...
|
|
Colleen Moore, imported French gown of lavender chiffon, embroidered in
|
|
blue and made over blue silk...
|
|
Bessie Love, pink tulle and pearl trimmings...
|
|
Mabel Normand, white and silver sequin with chiffon. Silver wreath in
|
|
her hair...
|
|
Blanche Sweet, black velvet trimmed with silver.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
January 8, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
Unattended by directors shouting "action" and in an atmosphere that was
|
|
utterly lacking in suggestion of the sets of a studio, Lottie Pickford Rupp,
|
|
sister to Mary Pickford, was married last night to Alan Forrest Fisher, known
|
|
to the cinema world in which he is a star as Alan Forrest.
|
|
The ceremony was performed in the First Methodist Church of Hollywood
|
|
by the Rev. Dr. Willsie Martin, its pastor, and in the presence of nearly
|
|
every motion picture star on the Pacific Coast, to say nothing of several
|
|
hundred residents of Hollywood and Los Angeles.
|
|
Following the wedding, the bridal party, accompanied by a few intimate
|
|
friends, went to the Ambassador Hotel, where a wedding dinner was served.
|
|
This morning Mr. and Mrs. Fisher will leave on an extended honeymoon jaunt.
|
|
Where are they going?
|
|
They refuse to tell.
|
|
The wedding ceremony was marked by its beautiful simplicity and lasted
|
|
less than ten minutes. Long before it began, though, the guests, both those
|
|
of the motion picture colony who knew the couple well and those who have met
|
|
them through the "silver screen," had gathered outside the church.
|
|
The doors were not opened until a few minutes before seven-thirty, the
|
|
hour set for the marriage. When the guests were finally admitted the large
|
|
edifice was filled within a few seconds and so large was the crowd that
|
|
failed to gain admittance that a detail of police officers from the Hollywood
|
|
station was pressed into service to handle it.
|
|
Arrangements had been made for the bride and groom to enter the church
|
|
from different vestibules, but when 7:30 came and it was time to start the
|
|
wedding march, "Mary and Doug" had not arrived and there was a short delay.
|
|
Miss Rupp arrived early with her mother, Mrs. Charlotte Pickford, and her
|
|
brother, Jack, who was to give her away.
|
|
When "Doug" and "Mary" arrived there was a hurried whispered conference
|
|
of all the party and "Doug" was sent into the church to take his seat with
|
|
the other members of the family.
|
|
"Doug's" appearance was the signal for an enthusiastic outburst of
|
|
applause from the ensembled guests. It was enthusiasm that could not be kept
|
|
down apparently, thought the edifice was a church and the occasion a wedding.
|
|
The object of the outburst, however, appeared none too well pleased and
|
|
attempted to gain silence by nodding his head. It had no effect.
|
|
Many times have the members of last night's wedding participated in
|
|
beautiful wedding ceremonies before the camera, but last night, face to face
|
|
with reality, the appeared lost, and they frankly admitted they felt that
|
|
way.
|
|
Miss Rupp was attended only by her sister. There was no bridesmaid and
|
|
no ring bearer or flower girls.
|
|
Just as the wedding march commenced, when Miss Rupp and her sister and
|
|
brother were waiting in the vestibule to start the processional, "Our Mary"
|
|
pleadingly asked what she was to do.
|
|
"I'm nervous," she said, and she meant it.
|
|
"I'm nervous too," responded Jack. "Don't ask me."
|
|
"Well, let's go in," added the bride.
|
|
There was a hurried scamper and Mary took a position before the other
|
|
two. No one was quite sure which arm Jack was supposed to offer the bride but
|
|
with the aid of a reporter they finally were straightened out and started
|
|
into the church.
|
|
Mary, forgetting her nervousness, head in the air and looking straight
|
|
ahead like a little grenadier, led the bride and her brother up the side
|
|
aisle and down the center of the chancel.
|
|
Both the bride and her maid-of-honor were beautifully gowned and both
|
|
deserved the subdued exclamation of homage that came from the standing
|
|
guests. The bride has always had an honest claim to be called pretty. As for
|
|
Mary--well, who is there in the world who doesn't know of her almost
|
|
childlike beauty, and she never looked prettier than last night.
|
|
The bridegroom and his best man, Eddie Sutherland, were waiting near
|
|
the foot of the chancel and as the bride and groom met, Doctor Martin entered
|
|
from the chancel door. Almost, it seemed, before the audience realized the
|
|
ceremony had begun, it had finished and the recessional began.
|
|
There was a mad rush on the part of the guests to reach the street
|
|
before Mr. and Mrs. Forrest were driven away. Only a few, however, succeeded
|
|
in getting near them. The ushers, Hoot Gibson, Al Roscoe and Harry Cohn,
|
|
anticipating just such a move, saw to it that bride and groom were well on
|
|
the way to the Ambassador before the church was half emptied.
|
|
Other members of the family made their exit from side doors and they
|
|
too were whirled away from the huge and curious crowd. "Doug" may have held
|
|
up the wedding by being just a little bit late but he managed to get to the
|
|
hotel before the rest of the party and was in possession when they arrived.
|
|
Among the guests at the wedding dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Moore,
|
|
Thomas Dixon, Steve Franklin, Hoot Gibson, Harry Cohn, Al Roscoe, May McAvoy,
|
|
Mabel Normand, Mr. and Mrs. Urson, Lila Lee, Mrs. Charlotte Pickford, Mary
|
|
Miles Minter, Bebe Daniels, Alice Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Canfield, Eddie
|
|
Sutherland, Mr. and Mrs. Scott, Jack Pickford, and "Doug and Mary."
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 22, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
E. M. Asher, personal representative of Mack Sennett...confirmed that
|
|
Miss Normand sailed on the White Star Line steamship Majestic last Saturday,
|
|
December 16, to spend Christmas in England...
|
|
Confirming Miss Normand's return to Europe, which she visited in the
|
|
summer, Asher said she sailed rather suddenly, "with a party of friends," on
|
|
the Majestic merely to spend Christmas in London. He said she had advised
|
|
him she would sail on her return voyage two or three days after Christmas.
|
|
He denied the disclosure of Wally Reid's breakdown had any connection with
|
|
her sudden departure from the United States, but admitted she decided on the
|
|
trip somewhat unexpectedly.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
June 1923
|
|
Herb Howe
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
...It was while chatelaine of the Beaux Arts that Texas [Guinan] first
|
|
drew the eastern filmers together, achieving a big financial and social
|
|
success. She gave a farewell party for Pearl White before the star sailed
|
|
for France to seek seclusion in a convent. Mabel Normand, George Beban,
|
|
Anita Stewart, George Melford, Rubye de Remer, Nita Naldi, Allan Dwan, the
|
|
Dolly sisters, Kitty Gordon, Bebe Daniels and all Pearl's friends were there,
|
|
including the parish priest who counseled Miss White to seek serenity of mind
|
|
and spirit within convent walls.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
November 1923
|
|
Cal York
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
Jane Cowl's presentation in Los Angeles of "Romeo and Juliet"--one of the
|
|
finest things ever seen on the American stage--woke a storm of enthusiasm
|
|
among motion picture artists.
|
|
The opening night saw a really amazing gathering in the big auditorium.
|
|
Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford were there. Norma Talmadge, and Joe
|
|
Schenck, Constance Talmadge-in a green frock with a little tight silver
|
|
turban, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Earle Williams, Mabel Normand, with Paul
|
|
Bern and wearing the most exquisite summer evening frock of organdy lace and
|
|
embroidery over coral taffeta, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brabin (Theda Bara) in an
|
|
exquisitely draped gown of yellow satin, in a box with Mrs. Leslie Carter.
|
|
Pola Negri, in black with some artistic and fascinating dashes of Oriental
|
|
color, Charles Chaplin, William S. Hart, Ethel Clayton, May Allison, Leatrice
|
|
Joy, in apricot taffeta, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Meighan, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
|
|
MacLean, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ray, Mr. and Mrs. William de Mille, and Mr. and
|
|
Mrs. Fred Niblo (Enid Bennett).
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
January 2, 1924
|
|
Edward Doherty
|
|
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
|
Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 1--Mabel Normand and Edna Purviance, moving
|
|
picture stars, full of New Year's cheer and saturated with tears, were taken
|
|
into custody late tonight after Mabel's chauffeur had sent a bullet into the
|
|
breast of Courtland F. Dines, an oil operator from Denver, who is a friend of
|
|
Miss Purviance. Dines, according to first reports, was fatally hurt. Later
|
|
reports are more optimistic. One is that neither lung was pierced.
|
|
After the two moving picture actresses had been questioned by the
|
|
police and released they saw to it that Dines was properly cared for in the
|
|
Good Samaritan hospital. The chauffeur who fired the shot is H. A. Kelly,
|
|
alias Greer.
|
|
The first word of the shooting came to the police from Kelly himself.
|
|
He arrived at the university police station and said:
|
|
"I have just shot a man over at 325 North Vermont Avenue."
|
|
The police hurried over to the bungalow at that address. They found
|
|
the women weeping over Dines who was reclining on a sofa.
|
|
"I guess somebody shot him, Mister," said Mabel--with the right amount
|
|
of cheer in her voice.
|
|
Later Kelly, the chauffeur, was booked on a charge of assault with a
|
|
deadly weapon with intent to kill and the women were released and allowed to
|
|
go home.
|
|
The place where the shooting occurred, which had been rented by Dines
|
|
on his arrival from Denver six weeks ago, is a unit in a beautiful series of
|
|
court bungalows. Edna, who is said to be his fiancee, had been there much of
|
|
this afternoon. There had been obviously an abundance of drinkables.
|
|
Miss Normand says she went to the apartment at 8 o'clock p.m. in her
|
|
limousine and told her chauffeur she would call him when she wanted him.
|
|
"He came in about 9 o'clock or some time," Mabel said in the police
|
|
station, "without being called. Honest, nobody invited my chauffeur to the
|
|
party. Why the--well, why should we?
|
|
"And all of a sudden there's some shots. And poor Dines is hit.
|
|
"Honest I never saw the shooting. I didn't know nothing about it.
|
|
I was in the other room, putting some powder on my nose, or maybe smoking a
|
|
cigarette or something. And Edna was with me--see?"
|
|
Edna's story was much the same; but rather vague and indefinite. It
|
|
was plain though that she was doing her best to recollect. But she had
|
|
forgotten much. She had even forgotten to button her shoes, until she saw a
|
|
burly cop grinning at her ankles.
|
|
Then Mabel's chauffeur, whom she knows as Greer, told his story. He
|
|
said he wanted to protect Miss Normand.
|
|
"This guy Dines has got a lot of booze," he explained to the interested
|
|
police and newspaper men. "And he's been keeping poor Mabel so bleary-eyed
|
|
that she can't do anything. I felt sorry for the kid, and I determined to
|
|
put a stop to it.
|
|
"So this afternoon I went up to Mabel's room. And up in Mabel's room I
|
|
found this little gat.
|
|
"Well, about 8:30 o'clock I takes Mabel over to this Dines' place--on
|
|
the way to the depot. She was going to see some friends off to the east,
|
|
Mabel's great like that. Do anything to cheer a friend. She had some
|
|
flowers--she's always giving flowers to everybody. And she though she'd just
|
|
step in and say "hello" and "happy New Year's."
|
|
"I waited an hour for her to come out. And she didn't come. So I went
|
|
into the place.
|
|
"I saw that Mabel was in no condition to stay there any longer and that
|
|
Miss Purviance was--well, anyway, I said, 'Come on, Mabel, we're going away
|
|
from here.'
|
|
"She told me I was a kill-joy and that I wasn't a gentleman if I
|
|
insisted on going around killing her parties.
|
|
"I got rough with her--like any man would. And I told her if she
|
|
didn't come and come right away I'd chuck up the job. I wasn't going to
|
|
'chauf,' her around if she insisted on getting drunk every time she could.
|
|
"Well, she got up and put her arm on mine and we started out.
|
|
"Then this guy Dines started to pick up a bottle. I thought he was
|
|
going to hit me with it. I'm no roughneck; I'm no cave man. Look me over--
|
|
you don't see no ladies' delight about me. Little guy, I am. And him--well,
|
|
you seen him, didn't you?
|
|
"I wasn't going to let him crack me over the dome with no bottle--no
|
|
matter if it was a real Haig & Haig bottle. And I pulled the gat and let him
|
|
have it."
|
|
Greer fired three shots, and then ran out to the police station and
|
|
told the police he had "just shot a guy."
|
|
It was really an affecting meeting, that of the movie stars and the oil
|
|
man, in the ward of the shabby little receiving hospital. It was
|
|
approximately two hours after the shooting and the girls, having finished
|
|
with the police quiz, had become almost cold sober.
|
|
They were led from the detective bureau by a crowd of admiring cops.
|
|
Edna, dressed in a cloth of gold evening gown, gold satin slippers and gold
|
|
silk stockings, with a wrap of gold and green; and Mabel, a Gainsborough
|
|
picture in black velvet--and plenty of ostrich feathers on her hat.
|
|
"Gimmie a cigarette," begged Mabel just before the procession to the
|
|
receiving hospital began.
|
|
"O, daddy," was Edna's greeting to Dines in the hospital.
|
|
She took the wounded man's hand in hers and kissed it. The light shone
|
|
on a big diamond--Edna's.
|
|
"Is my sweetie hurt?" she asked of Dines.
|
|
The tears began to fall in great splotches from the blond lady's eyes.
|
|
"No--I'll be all right," said Dines.
|
|
"'Lo, Sweety," said Mabel, with just that exact note of cheer needed
|
|
for the sick room. "Hoy's the sweety?"
|
|
Edna shoved up the gold bandeau--it threatened to drop over her eyes,
|
|
and bent and kissed Dines.
|
|
"What do you think of that guy saying I tried to hit him with a
|
|
bottle--" Dines moaned. "Get me a drink of water."
|
|
"All my fault," said Mabel, still the cheerfullest soul in the room.
|
|
"Say, he told everybody I saw the shooting. Huh--and if he says it again
|
|
I'll take a couple shots at him."
|
|
Mabel pushed Edna out of the way and repeated that it was all her fault
|
|
and that she ought to take a couple of shots at somebody...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
January 3, 1924
|
|
Edward Doherty
|
|
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
|
|
(Los Angeles)--Jan. 2--Mabel Normand and Edna Purviance, movie stars,
|
|
who were present when Mabel's chauffeur shot Edna's sweetheart, Courtland S.
|
|
Dines, last night, will have to tell their stories to the police at least
|
|
once more.
|
|
...An unvoiced, passionate love for his "movie queen" employer and
|
|
jealousy of her host is believed by the police to have caused Horace A.
|
|
Greer, the driver, to shoot Dines.
|
|
But Mabel herself objects strenuously to this view;
|
|
"A chauffeur with a gun!" she said tonight. "Deliver me."
|
|
Mabel was more articulate today but not so full of pep. Her fingers
|
|
trembled a little as she lit a cigarette. She had just been reading the
|
|
newspapers and the police version of the affair seemed to anger her.
|
|
"Blah, blah," said Mabel. "Slush, the poor boob was nuts. He was only
|
|
one of the servants, and he was treated like one. Why, I didn't even treat
|
|
him like--well I've had a lot of good chauffeurs. And good gawd, I didn't
|
|
even hire this egg. My secretary did that."
|
|
Some one asked Mabel about the gat.
|
|
"Well my gawd," she said, "I didn't know how he had it. He says he got
|
|
it out of my room. What business had he in my room--my bedroom? Say, I hope I
|
|
drop dead if this ain't the truth--that man had been in my room only twice
|
|
that I know of--once to fix my curler and once to fix an electric plug.
|
|
Honest.
|
|
"Somebody gave me that gat to shoot bottles with. I broke a lot of nice
|
|
mountains shooting at bottles, but I had a lot of fun. And he says I was in
|
|
the room when he cut loose with the gat, and he wasn't shooting at bottles,
|
|
either. I wasn't in the room at all. I was in Edna's room. She was putting on
|
|
her evening gown and it wasn't hooked up and I didn't want this egg to see
|
|
her.
|
|
"Then all of a sudden, bang, bang, bang. I thought they were
|
|
firecrackers. The kind I used to throw at Ben Turpin. Poor old Ben, he'd look
|
|
at me so funny."
|
|
Mabel tried to give an imitation of Ben doing the east and west and
|
|
nearly strangled on cigarette smoke.
|
|
Edna was lying in bed when the reporters came. She was dressed in a
|
|
nightie and a pretty orchid kimono. Her blond hair was sadly disturbed, and
|
|
her eyes were hidden by dark glasses in horn rims. She remembered some
|
|
details overlooked or unrecalled last night. She was quite certain today
|
|
that Mabel was with her.
|
|
"Yes, I was powdering my nose," she said, "and Mabel came in and said,
|
|
'Don't be a pig, Eddie, let me see Mabel in the glass and give me some of
|
|
your powder.'"
|
|
This coincides with Mabel's story--but it is directly opposed to
|
|
Greer's.
|
|
"Mabel was sitting on the davenport," he said, "and she had just put
|
|
her arm on mine and we were going out when Dines makes a grab for that bottle
|
|
and I let him have it. Mabel screamed."
|
|
Greer said today he meant to fire only one, but he shot three bullets
|
|
out of the gun before he knew it. The gun jammed on the fourth shot.
|
|
"Why," Edna said, "that chauffeur just came in the door and started
|
|
shooting. That's all there was to it. No argument or anything so far as I
|
|
know."
|
|
Edna is not going to lose her job with Charlie Chaplin because of the
|
|
trouble--but Charlie plows nervous hands through his crinkly gray hair.
|
|
"The poor kid," he says, "she's worried stiff. She doesn't know
|
|
whether she's going to be fired or not. Of course I'm not going to fire her.
|
|
We all get into trouble some time.
|
|
"But whether she will have the lead in my next picture--I--uh--have a
|
|
cigar. You see, we've been trying out a lot of people for that role. We've
|
|
been trying to get a girl who is smaller than Edna, and --well, I don't know.
|
|
"But of course her present trouble has not a thing to do with that.
|
|
You understand how types are cast? That's it. We want a certain type for
|
|
the lead in my new picture."
|
|
There was talk during the interview with Charley and Edna about a
|
|
little strip of film showing a man removing a splinter from Edna's beautiful
|
|
knee.
|
|
"My God," said Edna.
|
|
"But you wouldn't publish that," said Charley. "What would be the
|
|
point?"
|
|
"No, we're not going to print that picture," the newspaper man assured
|
|
him. "We haven't found it."
|
|
Edna explained that she was and she wasn't engaged to Dines. For about
|
|
six months, she said, she and Court had an understanding, and, although he
|
|
hadn't given her a betrothal ring they intended to get married. She added
|
|
that she was terribly fond of the wounded man.
|
|
Edna then proceeded to touch more in detail the high spots of the
|
|
evening's events.
|
|
"I had promised Mr. Dines to have dinner and in the middle of the
|
|
afternoon I dropped in at his bungalow. There were some others there, too.
|
|
It was a sort of New Year's open house all over Hollywood and there were
|
|
callers at the bungalow through the whole afternoon.
|
|
"Soon after reaching the house I went to a telephone and called Mabel
|
|
and asked her to come on over. It wasn't long till she arrived. Her
|
|
chauffeur, Greer, brought her over.
|
|
"Folks kept dropping in and finally, shortly before 7, Mr. Dines said
|
|
he'd step into his room and dress for dinner.
|
|
"None of the three of us were intoxicated. We had some drinks, but not
|
|
many. Only a moment, it seemed, after Mr. Dines started to change his
|
|
clothes for dinner and just after Mabel and I were in a room leading off the
|
|
living room--powdering our noses--the three shots sounded from the other
|
|
room. That's the whole of it."
|
|
The police theory is that Greer was in love with Mabel, and that he
|
|
wanted to pose as a hero, a caveman, in her eyes, and take her away from the
|
|
man who was giving her booze.
|
|
"I wouldn't ever aspire to love such a wonderful, beautiful, great
|
|
movie star," Greer said today. "Me, one lung, a little guy? I like her and
|
|
all that, and she's been kinder to me than anybody I ever me. Gave me some
|
|
platinum cuff links Christmas day. Big hearted, that's what she is--always
|
|
doing something for somebody.
|
|
"Well, I told you how Miss Burns, Mabel's companion, got a call from
|
|
her, asking to have me sent over to Dines' for her. And how she told me a
|
|
man took Mabel from the phone and hollered that she wouldn't be home. I went
|
|
over there. I knew Mabel had to have an operation, for I guess it's
|
|
appendicitis. And I knew it wasn't doing her any good to get soused. But
|
|
you know Mabel--she can't say no--too darn good hearted."
|
|
Edna told reporters this afternoon that Mabel hadn't called Miss Edith
|
|
Burns, her housekeeper, or anybody else.
|
|
"I was with her all the time, of course, and I know she didn't use the
|
|
telephone," she insisted.
|
|
|
|
[These last two articles were written by Edward Doherty. In his
|
|
autobiography, "Gall and Honey: The Story of a Newspaperman", Doherty told of
|
|
visiting Mabel Normand in the hospital at a later date, at which time she
|
|
told him, "Eddie, I thought you were the devil himself, because you always
|
|
quoted me exactly as I talked."]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
September 1924
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
Did you ever run ten blocks to a fire and then find that it was only
|
|
some measly little woodshed burning? Sure you have and so have we. In fact
|
|
that is about the only kind we ever did run to until recently. And then we
|
|
felt repaid for all the futile miles we had run.
|
|
For this fire was different. It was a garage fire and among the eight
|
|
garages blazing was one that belonged to Mabel Normand. And in her garage
|
|
was a spick and span limousine. It was and still is the pride of her heart,
|
|
despite the fact that the flames damaged it about $1,000 worth.
|
|
But it was not the burning or saving of her limousine that made the
|
|
fire such a success from the spectators' viewpoint. The fair Mabel furnished
|
|
the excitement. Aroused from peaceful slumbers, she rushed to the garage
|
|
clad only in her pajamas, slippers and a filmy something thrown over her
|
|
shoulders. She has appeared in many fire scenes in pictures but never to
|
|
better advantage than she did that early morning.
|
|
The dashing comedienne took command of the firemen in directing their
|
|
work of saving her garage and limousine, and no firemen ever worked harder or
|
|
more valiantly than did those gallants of the Wilshire fire station.
|
|
When it was all over she took them into her home and served breakfast.
|
|
It was some fire and some breakfast.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
October 1924
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
At last Hollywood has seen Douglas Fairbanks' "The Thief of Bagdad."
|
|
No picture ever made has been awaited with such eager interest by the film
|
|
colony itself, and the opening night at Grauman's Hollywood theater was one
|
|
of those unforgettable occasions, marred only by the absence of Doug and
|
|
Mary, who were somewhere on the high seas, bound for America.
|
|
The scene was an amazing one, from the crowd that packed the streets
|
|
outside, to the interior of the theater, transformed for the production of
|
|
this picture into a veritable Arabian Nights palace, filled with incense and
|
|
Oriental perfumes, magnificent tapestries and rich colors, dancing girls and
|
|
throbbing Eastern music.
|
|
In the audience were Norma Talmadge, Constance Talmadge, Madame Alla
|
|
Nazimova, with the most fascinating new bob above a frock of gold and coral;
|
|
Florence Vidor, in cream chiffon with orchids; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Meighan,
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lloyd (Mildred wore the daintiest of Boue Souers frocks
|
|
under a summer evening wrap of pale pink chiffona du marabou); Mr. and Mrs.
|
|
Reginald Denny (Mrs. Denny in a smart taffeta frock of blended pastel
|
|
colors); Mr. and Mrs. Earle Williams, the latter stunning in cloth of gold
|
|
and flame net; Miss Jeanie MacPherson, wearing a gorgeous evening coat of
|
|
green silk shot with gold and banded with gold embroidery; Mr. and Mrs.
|
|
Walter Morosco (Corrine Griffith), Paul Bern, Mabel Normand, all in white
|
|
satin trimmed with rhinestones under an evening wrap of ermine; Mr. and Mrs.
|
|
George Archainbaud, Kathleen Clifford, in scalloped white chiffon ornamented
|
|
with red silken roses; Mae Busch, black and silver; Jack Pickford and Marilyn
|
|
Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Allan Forrest (Lottie Pickford), Mr. and Mrs. Robert
|
|
Leonard (Mae Murray--in some shimmering white and silver thing, with a coat
|
|
of delicate canary yellow); Mr. and Mrs. Norman Kerry, Priscilla Dean, in
|
|
autumn leaf brown, with a big picture hat of the same color; Mr. and Mrs.
|
|
Conrad Nagel, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas MacLean, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ray, George
|
|
Fitzmaurice, Eugene O'Brien and Mr. and Mrs. Monta Bell.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 1925
|
|
Herb Howe
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
When Mabel Normand went East to appear on the stage she listed her
|
|
house for rent...the agents rented it to Barbara La Marr.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
February 1926
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
Upon her return from Europe, Irene Rich was honored by the Warner
|
|
Brothers with a dinner dance at the Casa Lopez. She looked charming as ever,
|
|
but was quite apologetic because she hadn't had time to get a new gown for
|
|
the party. You see, Irene had taken her two daughters to Europe and placed
|
|
them in school in Switzerland, and their stay in Paris was spent outfitting
|
|
the children. So Mamma was neglected.
|
|
Nevertheless, the line formed to the right of Irene's table, and it
|
|
took all four Warner Brothers to fight off her prospective dancing partners.
|
|
Mabel Normand in an ermine wrap looked well and happy. Natacha Rambova
|
|
made her usual striking appearance in her draped turban. Clive Brook and
|
|
John Roche were among the most popular dancing partners.
|
|
After the dinner and some dancing, the Warner Brothers' newest opus,
|
|
"Lady Windermere's Fan," was run off for the guests...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
December 1928
|
|
Harry Lang
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
[from an interview with Hollywood psychic George Dareos, discussing the
|
|
stars who come to him for psychic readings]..."I know all the stars--they all
|
|
come to see me," Dareos went on. "Mabel Normand, Alice and Marceline Day,
|
|
Clarie Windsor, Olive Borden, Jetta Goudal, Joan Crawford..."
|
|
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
Back issues of Taylorology are available from the gopher server at
|
|
gopher.etext.org
|
|
in the directory Zines/Taylorology;
|
|
or on the Web at
|
|
http://www.angelfire.com/az/Taylorology
|
|
***************************************************************************** |