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* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
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* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
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* *
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* Issue 37 -- January 1996 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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Mary Miles Minter in Hawaii
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Mary Miles Minter Moves Out
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Minter and Chaplin
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What is TAYLOROLOGY?
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TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
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Taylor, a top Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
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death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
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scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
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(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
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murder on Hollywood and the nation; (d) Taylor's associates and the Hollywood
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silent film industry in which Taylor worked. Primary emphasis will be given
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toward reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it
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for accuracy.
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Mary Miles Minter in Hawaii
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Six weeks after Taylor's murder, Mary Miles Minter and her grandmother
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sailed to Hawaii.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 15, 1922
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SAN FRANCISCO CALL
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Mary Miles Minter Sails for Orient under Assumed Name
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Dainty Mary Miles Minter, comely motion picture star, sailed today from
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San Francisco on the Matson liner Wilhelmina for Honolulu and an extended
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tour of the Orient.
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Every effort was made to keep her identity a secret. On the ship's
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passenger list Miss Minter used the name Miss J. B. Shelby. Accompanying her
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was Mrs. J. B. Miles, her grandmother. Shelby is her mother's name.
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Passengers on the Wilhelmina did not recognize the motion picture star
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as she strolled about the decks just before sailing time.
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Attired in a jaunty tailor-made suit of lavender colored cloth and
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evidently enjoying the situation of wandering about unknown, Miss Minter's
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joy was short-lived when representatives of The Call approached her.
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"Oh, and I had so hoped to get away without any publicity!" she
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exclaimed.
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"And to think that in twenty minutes more I would have been sailing out
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the Golden Gate with nobody the wiser.
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"Well, boys, I suppose I must be interviewed. Please don't ask me
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anything about the Taylor case. That has been gone over and over. I want to
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forget all of its horrors. I was an unfortunate victim of circumstances in
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that case because of some foolish girl notes written to a man I admired
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greatly as a friend. Please don't ask me to give any statement regarding
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that case."
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Miss Minter was asked where she was going on her trip.
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"Both Grandmother Miles and myself are physically worn out with the
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recent affair in Los Angeles. This came on top of many weeks of hard work on
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a picture I am to appear in. We decided upon a rest and will go to Honolulu,
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Hong Kong and other Oriental ports. We will be gone several months.
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"On our return I will 'pitch in' on three pictures my contract calls
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for. I hope to make three pictures a year. To do this I must be in the best
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of physical and mental trim."
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 15, 1922
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OAKLAND TRIBUNE
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......"This terrible murder of Mr. Taylor has fallen like a shadow
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across my path. I must get away from America for a while, so people will
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keep from talking to me about it. In Los Angeles my home is besieged from
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morning till night by newspaper reporters and by mere curiosity seekers. It
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is driving me crazy and I must forget. That is why I am going to Honolulu."
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From behind the window of her stateroom Miss Minter so declared five
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minutes before the vessel had removed from its dock.
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Though her face still bore traces of the studio paint and rouge, the
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youthful actress seemed sad and forlorn and her gray eyes had a haunted look.
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Miss Miles stated that her granddaughter is also suffering from a severe
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cold, which is troubling the family, and which they believe can only be
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broken by a sea voyage and visit to Honolulu...
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 22, 1922
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E.D.B.
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HONOLULU ADVERTISER
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A dainty, sweet rosebud is Mary Miles Minter, winsome and petite, and
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like a rose opening to the morning sun her large, expressive eyes gazed in
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wonderment at the mountains and hills as the last rays of the Hawaiian sun
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set them a-gleam when the Wilhelmina steamed into the harbor last evening.
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The little screen favorite was more than interested in the changing
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panorama of the Oahuan shore as the Wilhelmina passed by Waikiki, for she has
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just finished a picture called "South of Suva," and that, of course, dealt
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with the great Pacific, the South Seas, and the Hawaiian Islands are South
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Seas to many. There was the tropical setting of mountain, valley, shore and
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sea, just such scenes as are portrayed in "South of Suva." So her first
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impressions of Honolulu were delightful.
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Mary Miles Minter is a rosebud, but for the adornment of that bud came
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trunks and trunks--all no doubt, filled with the dainty frocks which must be
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just like dainty little Mary. She appeared on the deck as the vessel
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approached the harbor, clad in a pretty outing suit of flannel and a fetching
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droopy-rimmed hat, all seeming to blend charmingly with her fair hair.
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"I have come to Honolulu because I have heard it is all so charming,"
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said the screen favorite. "I came also because I know I can get rid of a
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cold. I know that Honolulu will be a pleasant place for a sojourn, and if I
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can, I hope to be able to learn how to ride a surfboard at Waikiki. Anyhow,
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I'm here to enjoy all that I have heard so much about and to forget about
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pictures for a while."
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Miss Minter is accompanied by her grandmother, Mrs. Miles and the
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grandparent showed just as much interest in the new scenes as her talented
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granddaughter.
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When the Wilhelmina docked and the band played many pretty melodies of
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Hawaii, Miss Minter told Chief Engineer Forbes, who looks after all the young
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folks on board the Wilhelmina when Captain Soule isn't crowding the spotlight
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in that role, that it was just lovely.
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When she came down the gangplank there were whisperings in the crowd
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below. There were excited pointings.
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"There she is, there she is!"
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And then some one would dart out and throw a fragrant lei about her
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shoulders. More leis came, and as she emerged from the wharf she was
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plentifully adorned with these Hawaiian expressions of "Aloha."
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But her ordeal was when she started for a motor car. The boys
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recognized a favorite of the screen. They ran after her and crowded about
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and became so dense that the car had difficulty plowing through the mass of
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young humanity. At first the little actress wondered, and then began to
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realize that it was merely youth interested in what to it are the greatest of
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all people--those who delight them on the silver screen.
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And then she was whisked out to the Moana, beside Waikiki beach. Who
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knows but that Mary Miles Minter may use a little of all this in a photoplay
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some day!
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 22, 1922
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Martin Connor
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HONOLULU STAR-BULLETIN
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Hey boy! Page Madam Pele!
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Miss J. Shelby is in Honolulu.
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What's that? You don't know her?
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Well, that's funny, for she is none other than Mary Miles Minter, famed
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motion picture star, who arrived her yesterday on the Wilhelmina for a visit
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in Hawaii.
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And her real name is Shelby, but she is known to thousands the world
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over as Miss Minter.
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Mary had lots of pilikia--though she doesn't yet use that word--on the
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trip from the mainland.
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Chum, her dog playmate, missed the boat and had to remain on the coast,
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forsaken and forgotten.
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No, not forgotten, for Mary thinks of him every minute.
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"Oh, if Chum isn't sent down on the next boat I'll have to return to the
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coast," signed the beautiful screen actress, as she leaned over the steamer's
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rail to catch a view of Diamond Head and Waikiki beach.
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"I am not like most folks," explained the film star, "when it comes to
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dogs. The majority of people like dogs, but I love them; and when Chum isn't
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around I feel dreadfully lonesome; in fact I can hardly live without
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Chum."[1]
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"What are your future plans regarding films?" Miss Minter was asked.
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"Please don't ask that question," entreated Mary, "for I can't answer it
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other than to say that I am here to escape from the strenuous life of the
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studio. Motion picture people work hard and the life they lead is strenuous,
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and when they get a chance to play they want to really play and not talk
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about films. I am here not on business, but for a rest. I can't say how
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long I will remain in Hawaii; that depends upon conditions and how the beauty
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of Hawaii charms me. Still, Honolulu looks beautiful after a week at sea.
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I am sure that I can't learn to ride the surfboard, but I am willing to try
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that sport."
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Miss Minter is accompanied by her grandmother, Mrs. Julia Miles of Los
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Angeles, a motherly woman, who won the hearts of every passenger on the
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Wilhelmina during the trip from San Francisco. They will stay at the Moana
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while in Honolulu.
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When the newspapermen boarded the Wilhelmina off port yesterday
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afternoon they saw many trunks just outside the stateroom of the pretty film
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actress.
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They contained--clothes.
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"Yes, I brought along a few gowns," smiled Miss Minter.
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Miss Minter was wearing a white sports suit when the Wilhelmina arrived.
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She was reading a book when the newspaper reporters appeared. It was "Mr.
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Wu," a weird tale of Chinese intrigue, by Sax Rohmer, and it had a snappy
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yellow cover.
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"Excuse me," said the film star, "I must return this book." She ran
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quickly up the steps leading from the social hall of the steamer and in a
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twinkling of an eye had returned to answer the questions of the reporters.
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Miss Minter possesses beautiful blue eyes and a dazzling peach and cream
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complexion. She has an animated expression and her eyes shyly rise and fall
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when one asks questions that really interest her.
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She is a charming little lady, as one of the stewards expressed it.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 25, 1922
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HONOLULU ADVERTISER
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Garbed in the most sensational purple imported French model bathing robe
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of the finest silk with the very latest "Hula" model bathing cap, Mary Miles
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Minter yesterday afternoon took her first dip in the water at Waikiki after a
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most enjoyable ride in a canoe piloted by Duke Kahanamoku, world champion
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sprint swimmer. Waikiki bathers crowded and pushed their way toward the
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attractive star of filmdom.
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"Wow, but it was exciting. Honolulu is just full of surprises and
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thrills and this was one of them. Your water is wonderful and I don't
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believe I'll miss a day after this," said Miss Minter as she was helped to
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alight from her canoe by Duke.
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"Do you suppose I can learn to master the surf boards? I should just
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love it."
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[A photo taken on the beach, showing Mary and Duke Kahanamoku standing
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by a surfboard, accompanies the original newspaper item.]
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 26, 1922
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Ruth Stacker
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HONOLULU ADVERTISER
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Mary Miles Minter, mistress of her own Los Angeles Company, and whose
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pictures are released through the Lasky Famous Players, is visiting in
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Honolulu and resting preparatory to returning to Los Angeles to do one of her
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biggest productions.
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for the benefit of Miss Minter's admirers, let me say that she is a real
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blonde with a real complexion. The three freckles which she has already
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acquired under the tropical sun of Hawaii and quickly eliminated with the
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powder puff, but being a real sportswoman she doesn't care and wouldn't for
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one moment give up a minute's pleasure for the sake of the much advertised
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complexion. She has a smile which is deliciously refreshing showing an even
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set of ivory white teeth. But her smile isn't in any way limited to her
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mouth. Nope, it is much more evident through two Irish blue eyes, but the
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Irish part I'll tell you about later.
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Miss Minter, who by the way is registered at her hotel as Juliette
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Shelby with her grandmother, Mrs. Miles, has often been said to have risen
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from obscurity. She emphatically denies this. That is, since she was five
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years old she has played on the legitimate stage, her first real success
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having been in Mark Twain's "Prince and the Pauper." She has had a constant
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string of success to her credit ever since and these successes embrace widely
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different roles on both the speaking stage and the silver screen.
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And she is not yet 20. She'll not be 20 until April.
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"You know," said Mary the other day when we were up in her room looking
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over the sea and she was trying on various hats for my particular benefit,
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"some people think I've been 16 for eight years. But I really haven't. I'll
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tell you how it happened. A long, long time ago, when I was about eight and
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a half years old we were playing in Chicago where they had passed a law
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whereby children under 16 could not appear upon the stage, I took the long
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jump and was 16. I got by, but it's rather hard on me now."
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But really, anyone who looked at her might know that Mary Miles Minter
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(dressed up) and Juliette Shelby with the very feminine fondness for hats as
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she appeared very intimately in a Paris model dressing gown, barefooted and
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trying on those hats over undressed blonde hair might think that she had just
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passed her seventeenth year.
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"It was then that I changed my name from Juliette Shelby to Mary Miles
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Minter, the name of my little dead cousin who had she lived would have been
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16 that year, and the name stuck. You see, my real, very real name is just
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plain Julia O'Reiley!" [sic] And that's where she gets the little twinkle in
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her eye.
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Mary Minter speaks French. She doesn't mince it, she really speaks it
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when she isn't answering the telephone or arranging the masses of floral
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tributes which arrive at the hotel daily, she sits down and reads poetry in
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the original French. She loves bits of Oscar Wilde, Shakespeare, Milton and
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Elinor Glyn and carries with her at all times volumes of each author.
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"I love Madame Glyn awfully," said Miss Minter, after I had made
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reference to one of Elinor Glyn's latest novels. "She's a perfect dear with
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red, red hair and the most queenly air, and besides she wears her clothes
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awfully well. She's a sister of Lucille, you know."
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When asked if Hawaiian scenarios were passe and no longer consider
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"possible" by the directors, Miss Minter said:
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"Oh--I should say not. Very emphatically NO. In the picture before the
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last, 'The Sultan of Suva,' we played a lot of South Sea location and I loved
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it and think it one of my very best. It is to be released shortly. Everyone
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loves the Hawaiian Islands, and Hawaiian atmosphere is always very popular in
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pictures."
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Miss Minter was asked what her very favorite role was.
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"'Anne of Green Gables.' I loved Anne. Played it when I was 17 and
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have never forgotten it. I write sometimes for magazines and when I do I
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always use the name Anne and sometimes Anne Shirley, the heroine of Green
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Gables."
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Miss Minter's very best chum is her six months old collie by that name
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...Then her next best chum is Jeanie McPherson, the star scenario writer for
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Cecil B. DeMille.
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"But my grandmother is my very best sweetheart, and as long as I have
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her with me I can't possibly be lonesome."
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And so Mary Miles Minter, the very "real thing," is in Honolulu and will
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remain until May third when she will depart for San Francisco and then
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immediately go out on location for the new production.
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She loves Honolulu, Chinatown best of all, and declares that it is the
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only place in the world that has lived up to her expectations. "It's
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wonderful and I love it and some day I'm coming back to make a picture here.
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"And before you go, won't you please thank the people of Honolulu for
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their kindness and hospitality and particularly the very nice man who, in
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behalf of Honolulu, put those joyous leis around my neck when I landed," and
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then Mary, with her very sweet smile, closed the door and I went down in the
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elevator and came back to the office just wanting to write the nicest story
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in the world about her. Thank you, Mary.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 28, 1922
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HONOLULU STAR-BULLETIN
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Movie Actress has Candy and Kisses for Dog
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Love me, love my dog.
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Flowers, candy, kisses and lovin'.
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Chum, the beautiful Scotch collie belonging to Mary Miles Minter, was
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the recipient of all of these goodies this morning when the dainty movie
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actress met the Matsonia off-port and greeted her canine pal who was left
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behind when Mary sailed for Honolulu a few weeks ago.
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Mary got up before breakfast this morning to meet the Matsonia and Chum,
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and even went out to the ship in a tug to hasten the happy reunion, climbing
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the swaying ladder to the liner's deck with commendable bravery. Damage done
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by tears and kisses bestowed on Chum was quickly repaired with powder puff
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and lipstick.
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"We are both very happy," Mary smiled through a veil of tears. "Chum
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and I have been such good pals that I could hardly wait for the boat to
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arrive. I know that Chum has missed me and I have certainly missed him."
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Miss Minter was wreathed in smiles as she stooped down and patted Chum
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and the manner in which the collie looked into his mistress' face as he
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curled up at her feet showed plainly that Mary's affection was returned.
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The little actress and her dog were alone on the steamer, as far as they
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were concerned, and Miss Minter kissed her pal again and again. Chum was as
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enthusiastic over the meeting as his mistress, and returned each kiss with
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tongueful tenderness.
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It was a big occasion for both and the rest of the world was forgotten
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for the moment. Husbands were greeting wives who had just returned from the
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mainland, and everyone on the deck was waving to friends on the dock, but
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none of the greetings appeared more sincere than those exchanged by Chum and
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his mistress.
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"Yes, we will have to be separated for a few days more," Miss Minter
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replied when reminded that Chum must be held in quarantine. The smile
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disappeared for a moment and then her face lighted again as she said, "But I
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can go down and visit with him every day. Of course Chum must go to
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quarantine the same as other people's dogs do. There is no reason why I
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should be given any special privileges. Everyone has been very kind in
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helping me."
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"Oh, by the way!" the little actress exclaimed suddenly, "I am meeting
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you as a fellow newspaper representative today. I am your--what do you call
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it now? Oh, yes! I am a 'sob-sister.' I went out on a small boat this
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morning and met the Matsonia off-port, and they let me go aboard up the
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ladder just like you newspapermen do, so you see I am a real, honest-to-
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goodness newspaperwoman."
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After this outburst Miss Minter turned to Chum again and the press was
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forgotten for a moment.
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"Oh, pardon me just a moment," Miss Minter exclaimed suddenly, and she
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was gone again. She hurried along the deck of the Matsonia, down the
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gangplank and opened the door of her car, which was waiting just outside the
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dock. First several bouquets were lifted from the machine and then she
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produced a huge basket of roses. She set them down on the ground and called
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Chum.
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Whether or not Chum really appreciates flowers is a question, but at any
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rate he showed his good breeding by dancing around the bouquets and thanking
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his mistress for her gifts with looks and actions which showed plainly that
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he knew he was the guest of honor.
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A moment later the quarantine officials arrived and informed Miss Minter
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that the time had come for Chum to be taken from her again. Mary picked up
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the dog and carried it to the automobile, but while saying farewell she
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suddenly decided it wasn't necessary to part just yet and with a hasty "Good-
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bye, everybody," she jumped into the machine and accompanied the officials to
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the dog quarantine station.
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Under the present regulations Chum will have to remain in quarantine for
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36 days, according to the authorities, and even if the anti-rabies serum
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arrived on the boat this morning, which could not be ascertained until the
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mail was distributed, special permission would have to be granted by the
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governor and the board of health before it would be possible to release Chum
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from quarantine in less than the required length of time.
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Chum enjoyed his voyage from the coast. He wasn't sick a minute and did
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full justice to his chicken bones and dog biscuits three times a day.
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And he didn't flirt with any of the girl passengers; he is a one-girl
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dog, and the girl is Mary Miles Minter.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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March 29, 1922
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E.D.B.
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HONOLULU ADVERTISER
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Mary Miles Minter (Miss Shelby), famed in the realm of the silvered
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screen as an interpreter of "sweet-young-thing" and flapper roles, branched
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out as a "stunt queen" at Honolulu's harbor mouth yesterday morning.
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Encumbered by a heavy fur-trimmed cloak, and quite unused to the
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eccentricities of the festive ground-swell, the dainty little picture star,
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disguised as a "sob-sister," hurled herself from a rolling launch to a
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Jacob's ladder suspended from the main deck of the Matsonia and made her
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perilous way upward amidst the encouraging cheers of the incoming passengers
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and a party of local celebrities on the small craft below.
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And all for the sake of a dog!
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..."I'm so afraid he'll have forgotten me," signed Mary, as she gazed up
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the towering side of the Matsonia and waited for a chance to climb on board;
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"he's such a puppy--only six months old--and I am not yet sure as to how
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heartily he reciprocates my affection for him."
|
|
She knows now. Everything that an ecstatic canine with half-a-year's
|
|
experience in this world of ours could do to express his delight over the
|
|
reunion, "Chum" did--and then repeated it all several times over, lest there
|
|
by any mistake about the state of his emotions.
|
|
..."Don't you worry, baby," said Miss Minter at parting, "It will only
|
|
be for a little while, and then what romps we'll have in this wonderful
|
|
little place. I'll be down to see you every day, puppykins, and these nice
|
|
men have promised to take wonderful care of you when I'm not here!"
|
|
Whereupon "Chum" gave a final wiggle of his caudal appendage and
|
|
disappeared into the building set aside for the observation of visiting
|
|
canines...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 29, 1922
|
|
HONOLULU STAR-BULLETIN
|
|
Mary Miles Minter, movie star now on a vacation here, made adoring
|
|
friends of 1400 children this morning.
|
|
"Oh, I just love them to death!" exclaimed Miss Minter as she clasped an
|
|
armful of little ones to her at the Kauluwela school, where she took part in
|
|
the morning flag raising exercises.
|
|
For several days the children had been studying unusually hard, having
|
|
been told by their principal, Mrs. Isabella L. Creighton, that if they were
|
|
good Miss Minter would visit them. The film star has been the chief interest
|
|
and topic of conversation at the school ever since her arrival on the
|
|
Wilhelmina last Tuesday. Now the children idolize her.
|
|
"Your singing is finer than any I have ever heard in any school or
|
|
church," Miss Minter said sincerely after the children had sung to her in
|
|
English and Hawaiian. "I love the school children in California but when
|
|
they sing it sounds like dish pans and whisk brooms. I have to stop my ears.
|
|
But your singing is real music and is magnificent.
|
|
"I am coming back to see you again and many times for I love your
|
|
islands."
|
|
The children lavished adoring looks at Miss Minter, many of them
|
|
speechless in their excitement. It was a never-to-be-forgotten day for them.
|
|
Duke Kahanamoku accompanied Miss Minter to the school and the two of
|
|
them posed for many pictures with the children and their teachers.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
April 13, 1922
|
|
HONOLULU ADVERTISER
|
|
Miss Minter Tells Women to Find Selves
|
|
|
|
"Every human being is endowed with full intelligence and there is
|
|
nothing you cannot accomplish if you make up your mind to do it," Mary Miles
|
|
Minter told members of the Business and Professional Women's club at their
|
|
meeting yesterday.
|
|
"Charles Paddock is an example of this. He found that he could run
|
|
better than he could do anything else and developing that talent has made him
|
|
the fastest runner in the world.
|
|
"Find the thing for which you are best suited and then don't let anyone
|
|
dissuade you until you have accomplished your purpose. There is something in
|
|
everyone of us to be expressed--no one is put into the world without a
|
|
reason, although sometimes it is difficult to find the thing which we can
|
|
best express," she said.
|
|
If any member of the club had any illusions as to the romance of motion
|
|
picture producing or novel writing Miss Minter dispelled them. She related
|
|
an incident in a conversation with Elinor Glyn, the novelist, in which the
|
|
author said that she did not write her books to be read but to make money.
|
|
And taking up the same theme in movies and the cry for uplifting pictures
|
|
Miss Minter said: "While everyone is talking about uplifting movies I want
|
|
you to bear one thing in mind. Movies are not being made for you or for me--
|
|
they sell best to the masses. When we make pictures we make them to please
|
|
'Lizzie' in the audience and she likes problem plays."
|
|
The actress gave an amusing account of the actual making of pictures
|
|
using some of the studio slang.
|
|
"It takes 30 days to make a picture," she said, "and it is seldom that
|
|
the scenes are taken consecutively--lots of times I fall off a cliff into the
|
|
water on Monday and don't get out of the water until Saturday, and then for
|
|
the 10 days during the taking of the picture I have to go about in wet
|
|
clothes.
|
|
"I do not believe that anyone but the extremely intelligent should be
|
|
allowed inside of the studios because the scenery and make-believe houses
|
|
seem so unreal, so false. The motion picture industry is just a giant child
|
|
which no one seems to understand, least of all those of us who are in the
|
|
business. It seems to be a mystery which fills a need in the world today."
|
|
Miss Minter said that she was a great "fan" of Rudolph Valentino who
|
|
appeared in the "Sheik" last week...
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
April 14, 1922
|
|
HONOLULU ADVERTISER
|
|
Arbuckle Will Again Be Seen In Film World
|
|
|
|
Mary Miles Minter Believes He Will Regain Former Popularity
|
|
|
|
[after the announcement that Arbuckle had been acquitted in the Rappe
|
|
manslaughter case] "Roscoe Arbuckle has been done a grave injustice. I am
|
|
glad that he has been vindicated," said Mary Miles Minter over the luncheon
|
|
table at the Moana yesterday.
|
|
"I think that I am speaking not only for Filmdom, but for the whole
|
|
world in general, when I say this.
|
|
"His pictures, which have been of a wholesome, clean variety, have
|
|
brought happiness to millions of people, particularly to the children and I
|
|
am glad that we will have them back again. For, of course, we will. A
|
|
meeting of the producers may be held, but the public want those $5,000,000
|
|
worth of films, ready to be released, which have been held up for the past
|
|
few months, awaiting this final verdict of the jury."
|
|
...Mary Miles Minter left for Hilo on the Maui yesterday afternoon with
|
|
her grandmother, Mrs. Miles. They will visit the volcano and Hilo, returning
|
|
on Monday...
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
April 14, 1922
|
|
HONOLULU ADVERTISER
|
|
Miss Minter Loses Present From Taylor
|
|
|
|
A little gold mesh bag with a diamond shaped top disclosing the initials
|
|
"M. M. M.," the property of Mary Miles Minter, has been lost sometime this
|
|
week, somewhere in Honolulu. Has anyone picket it up?
|
|
According to Miss Minter, the bag was first missed about a week ago.
|
|
A rigorous search of her suite of rooms at the Moana has not revealed it.
|
|
"It is not the bag. There are millions of them," she said, "but it is
|
|
its sentimental value. It is a little token of friendship given to me by the
|
|
late William Desmond Taylor, and I want it back very, very much."
|
|
If anyone has found the little bag which means so very much to the film
|
|
actress, will they please return it to the Moana hotel to her and receive a
|
|
reward?
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
April 10-19, 1922
|
|
HONOLULU STAR-BULLETIN
|
|
R-E-E-L L-I-F-E
|
|
|
|
A Series of Articles on "How to Break into the Movies,"
|
|
written for The Star-Bulletin by--
|
|
|
|
Mary Miles Minter,
|
|
|
|
Famous film star who is now in Honolulu
|
|
|
|
|
|
When The Star-Bulletin asked Mary Miles Minter to write a series of
|
|
articles on "How to Break into the Movies," the little star of the silver
|
|
screen was diffident.
|
|
"Do you really think that people of Hawaii would be interested in what I
|
|
would write about the movies?" she asked. "If you think so, I will be
|
|
willing to write a series of articles, for it has been one of my principles
|
|
never to refuse any reasonable request."
|
|
Assured that the people would be interested in what she might have to
|
|
say, Miss Minter replied:
|
|
"All right. I will write the articles on one condition. That I may say
|
|
just what I really think--that I may be sincere."
|
|
And that's why Miss Minter chose "Sincerity" as the title for her first
|
|
chapter.
|
|
|
|
by Mary Miles Minter
|
|
|
|
Chapter One--Sincerity
|
|
|
|
There is no royal road to learning and neither is there any royal
|
|
pathway to success in the world of motion pictures.
|
|
If there is any short cut to success in the film world I am not aware of
|
|
it.
|
|
Such is my sincere belief, and that is why I must affirm that sincerity
|
|
is one of the greatest attributes leading toward the achievement of success
|
|
in movieland.
|
|
Without sincerity one cannot succeed in anything, and this is
|
|
particularly true in the world of pictures.
|
|
While I do not pretend to be a "leading authority on how to break into
|
|
the movies," if I were asked to define just what is needed most by aspirants
|
|
to screen honors I would sum it all up in one word--
|
|
S-I-N-C-E-R-I-T-Y!
|
|
If you are sincere you will succeed, whether it be starring in the land
|
|
of pictures or selling shoes in a country village.
|
|
Nine-tenths of the qualifications needed to achieve even a modest
|
|
success in pictures may be totaled in sincerity and determination.
|
|
Express yourself. Be sincere. Don't ape another actor or actress for
|
|
you will fail to bring out your latent qualities and will become commonplace,
|
|
and if you become common there is no room for you in the world of pictures.
|
|
There is only one Mary Pickford, so don't attempt to become a useless
|
|
imitation.
|
|
If you are a flapper, be a real one. Don't flap mildly, but flap
|
|
wildly. Be sincere and express yourself.
|
|
If you are a burglar, be a bold, bold one. Even criminals admire
|
|
originality!
|
|
And if you want to be a motion picture player try to be a real one by
|
|
expressing your natural self.
|
|
In other worlds, develop your ego--it's the real Y-O-U and it will pay
|
|
thrice over, and I am not speaking primarily of material rewards, for the
|
|
sense of satisfaction that comes from expressing yourself sincerely far
|
|
exceeds in pleasure the monetary returns of life, regardless of all opinions
|
|
to the contrary.
|
|
Summed up, the first key to success in the world of pictures, is S-I-N-C-
|
|
E-R-I-T-Y.
|
|
Tomorrow I will talk about the part the Goddess of Luck plays in the
|
|
land of the movies.
|
|
|
|
Chapter Two--The Goddess of Luck
|
|
|
|
"'Tis all a Chequer-board of Nights and Days
|
|
Where Destiny with Men for Pieces plays:
|
|
Hither and thither moves, and mates and slays,
|
|
And one by one back in the closet lays."
|
|
--From the Rubaiyat
|
|
|
|
So said Omar, the poet.
|
|
The philosophy of a fatalist?
|
|
Yes, but who can gainsay the truth of his utterances?
|
|
Is it not true that fate, or the goddess of luck, plays the leading role
|
|
even in the lives of the most ordinary people?
|
|
Look back on your life for a moment.
|
|
Did not chance put you in your present position?
|
|
Or was it deliberate choice?
|
|
Be honest.
|
|
If you are sincere you'll have to admit that luck has dominated many
|
|
phases of your life as well as those about you.
|
|
And luck, or term it what you will, also plays an important role in the
|
|
lives of both successful and unsuccessful motion picture actors and
|
|
actresses, in fact, many film celebrities of my acquaintance have arisen to
|
|
the heights due to no other reason than that they were favorites of the
|
|
goddess of luck!
|
|
Trivial incidents often have proved the turning point in the lives of
|
|
most film stars.
|
|
I know a star of the "movies" whose whole current of life was changed by
|
|
her decision to walk down Main St. rather than down Broadway.
|
|
Many film favorites, on whom fortune has lavished favors, possess real
|
|
acting ability and probably would have succeeded regardless of circumstances.
|
|
Yet luck favored them and they rose quickly to fame and wealth.
|
|
Other film stars on whom the fickle goddess cast her favors did not
|
|
possess any talent whatsoever. They just happened to land a "job in the
|
|
movies" and stuck: luck did the rest, and moved them into the gallery of the
|
|
famous.
|
|
Sill other screen favorites got into the motion picture industry when it
|
|
was in its formative stage and naturally "grew up" with the business. They
|
|
merely followed the procession and it doesn't take "brains" to follow a
|
|
crowd.
|
|
Please do not misunderstand me. I am not trying to belittle the motion
|
|
picture profession. Far from that, for I am proud to be a member of the
|
|
profession that compromises so many gifted and talented people. What I have
|
|
to say in this respect applies to all lines of human endeavor, and I am only
|
|
speaking of the motion picture world in this connection because I know it
|
|
better than any other profession.
|
|
Incidentally I am attempting to explode the theory that film stars rise
|
|
to the heights by "sheer ability alone."
|
|
Ability counts, of course, but if you are lucky it's better than being
|
|
wise--in the film world, and elsewhere!
|
|
Examples? I could cite a score.
|
|
Take the case of Rudolph Valentino, the talented screen star who
|
|
appeared recently at the Liberty theater in "The Sheik." Mr. Valentino
|
|
sprang into fame overnight with his work in "The Four Horsemen of the
|
|
Apocalypse." That's all the public knows; yet back of Mr. Valentino's
|
|
success is a story of sacrifice and heartbreaking disappointments. For weeks
|
|
at a time he haunted the studios asking for small parts only to be refused by
|
|
the directors. Just when he was on the verge of despair he was given an
|
|
opportunity to prove his worth. A short time afterward he appeared in The
|
|
Four Horsemen and the rest of his career is well known.
|
|
That was luck and not ability, although Mr. Valentino is an actor of
|
|
exceptional merit; but his first real chance was due to the Goddess of Luck,
|
|
rather than to ability.
|
|
And now you'll want to know how to acquire luck!
|
|
I cannot tell you how to acquire the smiles of the little goddess any
|
|
more than the scientist can explain the futurity of human existence.
|
|
I only know when one has luck and when one hasn't it!
|
|
So if you want to achieve fame or fortune in the "movies" you must at
|
|
least pay heed to the Goddess of Luck.
|
|
|
|
Chapter Three--Personal Appearance
|
|
|
|
Ever since the day Eve began to adorn her person with leaves, humanity
|
|
has laid stress on clothes, which, for the want of a better term, has been
|
|
called personal appearance.
|
|
Now according to my viewpoint, clothes, little or many, do not mean
|
|
"personal appearance."
|
|
By personal appearance I mean one's personality, for clothes are merely
|
|
the outward expression of your inner self.
|
|
They do not make personal appearance, but extend personalities. They
|
|
bring out the best or worst, that's all.
|
|
You have often met people whose appearance jars you. Perhaps you cannot
|
|
explain just why, but you feel uncomfortable in their presence. That's
|
|
clothes without personal appearance, nine times out of ten.
|
|
Such people are generally wearing clothes which do not express their
|
|
ego, character or personality. They are not to be blamed, for in many
|
|
instances they do not realize that personal appearance is distinct from
|
|
clothes, though they may be made to agree by the selection of apparel
|
|
suitable to their personalities.
|
|
The world today, that is, a certain element of it, is greatly perturbed
|
|
over the "flapper."
|
|
"What is to become of our daughters?" sighs the anxious parent. "She
|
|
wears such outlandish clothes. I don't understand her at all."
|
|
Yet the flapper is moving in the right direction. She is attempting to
|
|
express herself by adapting her inner self to her apparel.
|
|
And that is where I agree with the flapper. Let the modern girl flap if
|
|
she wants to, but see to it that her personal appearance is in keeping with
|
|
her clothes and vice versa.
|
|
Personal appearance plus clothes counts for much in movieland; in fact
|
|
it plays almost as important a role as luck does.
|
|
A film star who wishes to remain before the public must have a personal
|
|
appearance that commands respect and attention, for movie audiences are
|
|
critical. Such an appearance cannot be manufactured by modistes, though it
|
|
must be admitted that the fashion makers are of great assistance.
|
|
Personal appearance is your real self and what you wear is pretense, or
|
|
the feathers of the peacock. If the "feathers" harmonize with your inner
|
|
soul you'll have "personal appearance."
|
|
If I were not a film actress and wanted to get a start in pictures I
|
|
would study my personal appearance.
|
|
I would find out just what colors agreed with my complexion and use
|
|
them.
|
|
I would wear the right kind of hats, shoes and stockings.
|
|
I would wear nothing that "jarred" with my personality.
|
|
Then I would try myself out on my friends. I would parade before them
|
|
and watch for their approval or disapproval.
|
|
If they disapproved, and they will do so if they think you are "jarring"
|
|
athem, I would return to my room and begin again, until I had succeeded in
|
|
achieving a personal appearance that would attract and hold the attention of
|
|
the most critical person.
|
|
|
|
Chapter Four--What to Read
|
|
|
|
"It were to be wished that they who devote their lives to study
|
|
would at once believe nothing too great for their attainment, and
|
|
consider nothing as too little for their regard; that they would
|
|
extend their nature alike to science and life, and unite some knowledge
|
|
of the present world to their acquaintance with past ages and
|
|
remote events."
|
|
--Samuel Johnson.
|
|
|
|
It is a truism to say that books have influenced people to do something
|
|
worthwhile with their lives.
|
|
It is a statement that should be reiterated, for many screen aspirants
|
|
seem to think that success in pictures requires no mental effort; and if they
|
|
only had the face of a Gloria Swanson, or the physique of a William Farnum
|
|
fame would camp on their doorsteps.
|
|
Such is not the case, for nearly all the film people of my acquaintance
|
|
are students and have an insatiable thirst for the knowledge contained in
|
|
books.
|
|
What do they read?
|
|
Well, that is really not a fair question, for it doesn't really matter
|
|
so much what one reads as how you read, though in the final analysis one
|
|
should, at least, know something of Oscar Wilde, Shelley and Keats among the
|
|
poets; and Stevenson, Samuel Johnson, Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt and
|
|
Addison should be read for beautiful prose; Bacon, Spencer, Aristotle and
|
|
Omar Khayam for philosophy. And, of course, it goes without saying that the
|
|
would-be screen star should know Shakespeare, the master dramatist.
|
|
So much for the writers of the past. Let us consider the writers of
|
|
today, though I must confess that few modern authors really interest me.
|
|
Since the film actor or actress appears before the "masses" I would
|
|
suggest that a careful study be made of psychology, particularly as it
|
|
relates to the crowd.
|
|
Perhaps the most recent book, and one of the best I have read on the
|
|
subject of psychology is "The Behaviour of Crowds," by Everett Dean Martin.
|
|
It is an interesting book and is a truthful cross-section of how the
|
|
crowd mind works, acts, and reacts under certain conditions. It is
|
|
invaluable to the actor or actress or to any one who has to appear before an
|
|
audience.
|
|
Screen aspirants also should read textbooks on the technique of the
|
|
photoplay. Sargeant has written an excellent book on this subject though
|
|
there are other books on the photo drama equally as good, and the number is
|
|
constantly growing.
|
|
The list of authors mentioned in this article is not complete by any
|
|
means; in fact I might name a thousand books that would aid a screen aspirant
|
|
in the pursuit of his or her goal; yet space will not permit.
|
|
Summed up are ten rules, as I see it, regarding the use of books:
|
|
1. Real books that appeal to your ambition; to your inner self.
|
|
2. Make it a practice to read an hour each day.
|
|
3. Memorize stanzas from the best poems; not for display but for the
|
|
cultivation of your mind.
|
|
4. Learn the principles of psychology by reading standard textbooks.
|
|
5. Do not accept the statements of any author without reflection.
|
|
6. Do not read for entertainment, but for knowledge.
|
|
7. Do not waste life's precious moments by devouring trash--
|
|
Fitzgerald's "The Beautiful and the Damned," for example.
|
|
8. Avoid sex stories unless they are treated in an unoffensive and
|
|
truthful manner.
|
|
9. Discuss the books you read with friends. Such discussions challenge
|
|
your memory.
|
|
10. Read the newspapers for it is the history of each day.
|
|
|
|
Chapter Four--Happy Endings
|
|
|
|
I received a letter from a reader of these articles just as I was
|
|
preparing to leave Honolulu for a trip to the island of Hawaii.
|
|
The writer, who is apparently an ardent movie fan, said in part:
|
|
"Dear Miss Minter: I have read your articles in The Star-Bulletin with
|
|
interest, especially the first, 'Sincerity.' Believing that you are
|
|
attempting to give what you think is an accurate picture of studio life I am
|
|
taking the liberty of asking you two questions.
|
|
"1. When are the film producers going to stop turning out screen
|
|
stories that end happily?
|
|
"2. Have you ever appeared in sex photoplays, and what do you think of
|
|
them?
|
|
(Signed) "A FRIEND."
|
|
This letter appealed strongly to me for the questions asked in it have
|
|
been running through my mind for several weeks. They are "live" questions
|
|
and deserve better answers than I will be able to give in the narrow confines
|
|
of this column. However, I will attempt to set down what I think the answers
|
|
are.
|
|
Let us consider the first question: "When are film producers going to
|
|
stop turning out screen stories that end happily?"
|
|
Frankly, I don't know; but I hope that time will never come, for the
|
|
world needs screen stories that end happily.
|
|
However, I do not think that all screen tales should end with the hero
|
|
and heroine clasping hands at the "finis." Life, real life, should be shown
|
|
on the screen as well as romance, and realistic pictures, as a rule, do not
|
|
end happily.
|
|
But one must be practical in this age. The "film game" is a business
|
|
proposition. Producers want to make money and they must give the public what
|
|
it wants--stories that end happily.
|
|
"Broken Blossom," Which appeared here, I understand, some time ago, was
|
|
one of the best realistic pictures ever shown, according to the dramatic
|
|
critics. Several actors and actresses who appeared in this production told
|
|
me that they were actually inspired while acting in that picture. Yet
|
|
"Broken Blossoms" was not a financial success.
|
|
Such instances could be enumerated by the score, for many of the finest
|
|
pictures from a pictorial and acting standpoint have turned out to be
|
|
failures as box office attractions.
|
|
In the face of these facts, the film producers cannot be blamed for
|
|
making pictures that appeal to the popular taste, even if the stories do end
|
|
happily and are in reality "grown up fairy tales." It costs considerable
|
|
money to make a picture and film producers must cater to the popular demand,
|
|
or be forced to retire penniless.
|
|
The remedy?
|
|
Again I say I don't know, yet I believe that if the American people were
|
|
educated up to a point where they demanded "real pictures" instead of the
|
|
"stuff" that is now being shown I think that the United States would lead the
|
|
world in the production of real and beautiful pictures.
|
|
The American people, however, must be educated up to this point. The
|
|
minute the American public demands screen tales that are realistic in their
|
|
portrayal the producers will be more than willing to meet the demand.
|
|
Meanwhile we must not blame the producers for catering to the popular taste.
|
|
Now for the second question: "Have you ever appeared in sex photoplays
|
|
and what do you think of them?"
|
|
No, I never have appeared in "sex" photoplays. Nearly all my work has
|
|
been the portrayal of "the American girl." Of course, I have had offers to
|
|
appear in "sex" tales, but I never signed the contracts. Wholesome plays,
|
|
free of smut and free love stories, have been my vehicles regardless of all
|
|
reports to the contrary.
|
|
What do I think of sex photoplays?
|
|
Well, between thee, me and the gatepost, "I would hate to tell you!"
|
|
|
|
Chapter Five--Getting a Job in the Movies
|
|
|
|
The problem that presents itself for solution to the aspirant for screen
|
|
honors is not how to get a job in the movies, but how to keep it when
|
|
obtained!
|
|
During the time I have been in the land of the movies I have seen many
|
|
people come and go. Some of these people retained their positions for years;
|
|
others for moths, and still others were only able to hold on after a bitter
|
|
struggle.
|
|
Many other screen aspirants, after a few weeks as extras, became
|
|
discouraged and were swallowed up by the "herd" and were seen no more in the
|
|
studios.
|
|
Now there is no magic method that may be used in obtaining a position in
|
|
the movies. It is like other lines of endeavor. The motion picture game is
|
|
strictly a business proposition, devoid of romance, and the inefficient and
|
|
the week are crowded to the wall as in other lines of human activity.
|
|
Only the fit survive, and it is perhaps best that this is so, for there
|
|
is not sufficient room at the top of the ladder for all the talented
|
|
aspirants to screen honors.
|
|
So, in the first analysis, getting a job in the movies is quite similar
|
|
to obtaining a position in a shoe factory.
|
|
Most film aspirants that I have known have begun their careers as
|
|
extras. An extra is one who plays only in a few scenes. Others have started
|
|
in the business office of the film companies, and through contact with the
|
|
directors, have been given an opportunity to appear on the screen. If they
|
|
photograph well and can act, the chances of their remaining are excellent.
|
|
As I said before there is no magic method about getting a job in the
|
|
movies. Much depends on luck, though if you are connected in some manner
|
|
with the film industry, no matter in what capacity, and want to act, you will
|
|
find a way.
|
|
Pull, of course, like in other occupations, counts. I don't say that it
|
|
will make an actor or actress, but it will smooth the road to success. Many
|
|
actresses of my acquaintance have gained their positions through "pull,"
|
|
though such cases are rarer than is commonly supposed.
|
|
In my own case I was on the stage before I entered the motion pictures.
|
|
I was playing in Chicago at the time, and a very good friend of the family,
|
|
who was in the film game, suggested that I enter motion pictures. At that
|
|
time the movies were more of an experiment than a real business, and of
|
|
course I hesitated about accepting a position in a new and untried field. At
|
|
that time I was only 13 years old and my salary was sufficiently large to
|
|
keep me on the stage.
|
|
My mother was consulted and after several months of discussion it was
|
|
decided that I should take the plunge and enter pictures. I did so and I
|
|
have never regretted my first step, though I have had my ups and downs like
|
|
other screen aspirants. My first salary was $85 a week and I earned it!
|
|
Hard work was my portion, for I had some difficulty in adjusting myself to
|
|
facing ca camera rather than the faces of the audience.
|
|
I cannot tell you the title of my first picture! However, I will state
|
|
that one of the scenes in my first picture was that of a prison. It was the
|
|
first time that any picture of a prison had been taken for motion picture
|
|
purposes.
|
|
And that is how I got my first job in the motion pictures.
|
|
|
|
Chapter Six--Is the Day of the Film Star Waning?
|
|
|
|
George Randolph Chester, the author who of recent years has devoted much
|
|
time to writing stories for the screen, declared recently in the Saturday
|
|
evening Post that the day of the film star is waning.
|
|
His article is too long to quote here, but the substance of his article,
|
|
was I recall it, was that the public was becoming "tired" of seeing a star,
|
|
and were demanding more and more the work of noted writers. In other words,
|
|
according to Mr. Chester, the American public does not want to view "stars"
|
|
any longer, but prefers to see "literary masterpieces" produced on the screen
|
|
and played by capable actors and actresses. "The day of the star is waning,"
|
|
states Mr. Chester.
|
|
While I do not wish to enter into any controversy with Mr. Chester
|
|
regarding this statement I wish to say here that I do not believe that the
|
|
"day of the star is waning."
|
|
I believe that the star of the movies is here to stay, although one
|
|
cannot be too sure of anything in this world of changing conditions; still, I
|
|
think the American public wants, and will continue to want, the "star."
|
|
There are four reasons why I think the American people will continue to
|
|
demand the appearances of stars.
|
|
1. America is a land of hero worshippers.
|
|
2. The stage has its stars; why not the screen?
|
|
3. Leading personalities are needed on the screen because they appeal
|
|
to the ego of each member of the audience.
|
|
4. Box office receipts.
|
|
Let us discuss the first reason. Take baseball for an example. Time
|
|
was when the "baseball writers" declared that the day of "star players" was
|
|
waning. Is it true? No. Baseball has a stronger hold than ever on the
|
|
American public. Everyone knows "Babe" Ruth, the home run king of New York;
|
|
Hornsby and Ty Cobb. Imagine what would happen if the baseball managers
|
|
would issue a statement saying "The day of the baseball star is passed." The
|
|
howls of the fans would be heard the world over.
|
|
Now for the second reason. For years the growth of the legitimate stage
|
|
has been the progress of its stars. In fact there would be no stage if it
|
|
was not for the great actors and actresses.
|
|
It is generally recognized that the motion picture has come to stay. If
|
|
that is true, and of course it is, there is no reason why the screen cannot
|
|
continue to retain its "stars"; for, like the stage, the growth of the film
|
|
industry is the progress of its "stars." And that will continue to be true
|
|
for many moons to come.
|
|
The third reason is one of the best reasons of all, for it has to deal
|
|
with the ego of the crowd mind.
|
|
Everyone has a hero. Boys worship their fathers; girls their mothers.
|
|
As we grow older our heroes and heroines assume different roles; yet every
|
|
one worships "the ideal," the apparently unattainable; the person or thing
|
|
that we feel we could emulate if given a chance.
|
|
It is here the motion picture steps in. Each star represents a certain
|
|
type of crowd mind, a hero or heroine, if you prefer; but the result is the
|
|
same, for the public must be given its "star." Each member of the audience
|
|
recognizes their type on the screen, or the type of a person that he or she
|
|
would like to be in reality. If the present film stars were to pass away in
|
|
a day the crowd mind, or the audience, would create new stars. This is a
|
|
fact all producers and directors recognize.
|
|
Now for the fourth and final reason; the greatest reason of all--the box
|
|
office.
|
|
One may theorize until doomsday, but the box office in the film industry
|
|
is the barometer of public demand. When the day arrives, if it ever does,
|
|
when the American public doesn't want to see film stars the box office will
|
|
indicate it.
|
|
That day has not yet arrived, for the present stars are proving to be
|
|
bigger box office attractions than ever before and there is no indication
|
|
that the demand for special films with big stars has abated in the slightest
|
|
degree.
|
|
|
|
Chapter Seven--Dogs
|
|
|
|
Dogs!
|
|
Fat dogs, lean dogs, small dogs, pretty dogs, ugly dogs, crippled dogs,
|
|
medium sized, bulldogs, dogs of all colors, sizes and shapes.
|
|
I love 'em!
|
|
They are truly man's best friend.
|
|
It may seem a little out of place to discuss what a dog means to me in
|
|
this series of articles on "How to Break into the Movies," but I cannot help
|
|
it.
|
|
Anyway, The Star-Bulletin man told me that I might discuss anything I
|
|
pleased, and with the utmost sincerity.
|
|
So here goes:
|
|
There is something about a dog, even the worse kind of a canine that
|
|
catches hold of one's heart-strings.
|
|
Perhaps it is their sincerity, steadfastness and constant loyalty that
|
|
appeals to me. I cannot say for sure; for I never attempted to make a
|
|
critical analysis of a dog's affection for a human being.
|
|
One's best friends may fail in your hour of need, but a dog's friendship
|
|
burns steadily on like the rays of a lighthouse. A dog serves and never
|
|
demands.
|
|
Nations may rise and fall; men may succeed or fail; yet the love of a
|
|
dog changes not.
|
|
Patient, lovable creatures!
|
|
I love 'em!
|
|
In the face of these well known facts one might well ask, "Does a dog
|
|
use reasoning powers?"
|
|
Jack London, lover of dogs and author of that delightful dog story, "The
|
|
Call of the Wild," said in one of his last books that he thought dogs used
|
|
reason rather than instinct, as has been commonly supposed.
|
|
I agree with Jack London. I am sure that dogs, judging from my
|
|
observation, use reasoning powers.
|
|
The other day I was automobile riding along Beretania St. A few hundred
|
|
feet ahead of the machine was a dog trying to get across the street. As our
|
|
machine neared him the dog stopped and looked up inquiringly as if to ask,
|
|
"Which way are you going?"
|
|
I honked the horn and swerved slightly to the right of the street. The
|
|
dog looked at the machine out of one corner of his eye and then trotted
|
|
contentedly across the street to safety.
|
|
Now I contend that the dog used reason rather than instinct in this
|
|
instance. He gauged the distance of my automobile and then realizing that I
|
|
would turn to the right, stood still. That's how he reasoned it out.
|
|
I could cite many such instances, for "Chum," who has just been released
|
|
from the quarantine station, is my constant companion and I have observed his
|
|
actions closely for many months, and am convinced that dogs reason much like
|
|
human beings. Of course they use instinct a great deal, but so do human
|
|
beings! Instinct is something that is implanted in every animal that
|
|
breathes.
|
|
Just one other instance regarding the reasoning power of dogs.
|
|
One summer I was making a picture in the mountains of San Bernardino in
|
|
Southern California.
|
|
One of my friends had a dog called by that ancient name of Rover. Rover
|
|
liked to hunt; and so do I. So we were the best of chums. I never taught
|
|
him any tricks, but the reasoning-powers of that dog were wonderful.
|
|
Sitting on the veranda (Lanai in Hawaii) of the house one day I casually
|
|
remarked in the presence of Rover:
|
|
"Yes, I must go and get the gun. We need some game for dinner."
|
|
Rover jumped up, looked at me and began to wag his tail. I repeated my
|
|
words. Rover went wild with joy and barked loudly, and ran in the direction
|
|
of the woods.
|
|
Now I had never used these words before to Rover; yet he knew what the
|
|
word gun was and "reasoned" that I was going to go hunting. Surely one
|
|
cannot call such things instinct!
|
|
At least I don't think so.
|
|
What do you think?
|
|
|
|
Chapter Eight--My Philosophy of Life
|
|
|
|
No matter what station we occupy in the world each individual has a
|
|
philosophy of life, expressed or unexpressed.
|
|
In this, my last article for The Star-Bulletin, I am going to attempt to
|
|
set down what I think about this "sorry scheme of things" which men term
|
|
life.
|
|
I have three subject heads to my philosophy of life:
|
|
1. Sincerity.
|
|
2. Luck.
|
|
3. Egoism.
|
|
Sincerity, of course, sums it all up, for unless one has sincerity, as I
|
|
pointed out in my first article, one is likely to have nothing else. It is
|
|
the crux of my philosophy for I want to be sincere in everything I do.
|
|
However, in the first of these articles I outlined my "sincerity"
|
|
platform and there is no need to discuss it in this article.
|
|
I also have discussed the part luck plays in the life of every one,
|
|
including film people, and there is no occasion to add to it in this article.
|
|
This leads us up to the third and last subject heads of my philosophy--
|
|
Egoism.
|
|
Now when I speak of egoism I do not use the word in the common sense.
|
|
Egoism is a term often used to denote conceit or an inflated opinion of self.
|
|
I do not mean that when I speak of egoism.
|
|
The self philosophy, in which I believe, is nothing more that the
|
|
elimination of self--an acknowledgment that "I" is not important.
|
|
That sounds shocking, but let us look a little deeper.
|
|
It is recognized that life is a fleeting thing: a mere breath, despite
|
|
all opinions to the contrary. In other words our lives are so brief that it
|
|
hardly behooves any of us to worry. As the slang saying goes: "It will be
|
|
all the same in 100 years." And it's true.
|
|
In face of these facts how can anyone, regardless of position or birth,
|
|
exalt self? I cannot.
|
|
I may achieve success, as the world terms it, yet I know I am
|
|
unimportant, for I, like you, must soon leave this stage of life.
|
|
Comfortless philosophy?
|
|
Yes, perhaps so.
|
|
But is it not true? And let us be sincere at all costs.
|
|
However, this philosophy is not as gloomy as it seems.
|
|
Instead of sitting down and bemoaning our ultimate end, it is better to
|
|
wake to the realization that life is a fleeting thing at the best, and help
|
|
mankind to lift itself from the dregs, instead of exalting self because one
|
|
owns a fine home, automobile or what not.
|
|
Material things, including human beings, pass away; but things of the
|
|
spirit--truth, sincerity, love, kindness and virtue, live on and on.
|
|
Realize this and judge your conduct accordingly, for happiness will be
|
|
your portion, I am sure.
|
|
Strive each day to achieve the best in yourself by uplifting humanity:
|
|
by preaching the gospel of sincerity, kindness and brotherhood toward every
|
|
living creature.
|
|
Then, if man does live on in another world he need have no fear of it.
|
|
|
|
(The End)
|
|
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
|
|
Mary Miles Minter Moves Out
|
|
|
|
When Mary returned from Hawaii, the friction between Mary and her mother
|
|
increased, and before the end of 1922 Mary left the family home and rented a
|
|
house where she could live alone. The following is the first public
|
|
interview given after she moved out, but before the public battle with her
|
|
mother erupted the following August [see TAYLOROLOGY #11].
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
December 28, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
..."It has been reported that you and your mother have quarreled, and at
|
|
the end of your $1,000,000 Lasky contract you now find yourself practically
|
|
penniless and that because of all this you have left home and are going to
|
|
live by yourself. Is this true?" Miss Minter was asked.
|
|
Miss Minter fairly bristled. She bit her lip. Her eyes of periwinkle
|
|
blue flashed. Incidentally, her real name is Juliette O'Reilly [sic].
|
|
"Oh! Oh! Oh! These horrible people who start such rumors" was her
|
|
first utterance after she had regained her composure. She warmly defended
|
|
her mother from the "studio gossip."
|
|
"My mother abandoned her stage career in helping me gain fame on the
|
|
stage. All I am I owe to her. She's had some pretty raw deals put over on
|
|
her and she's had to be businesslike. But to me she always has been the
|
|
ideal mother. Before we had much of anything at Christmas times I have known
|
|
her to deprive herself of things so that we might be happy," she said.
|
|
"It's true we have quarreled, but they were only motherly and daughter
|
|
quarrels such as happen in any family. At the other house [Casa Margarita]
|
|
everything was in confusion from the carpenters. When I came home from the
|
|
studio and wanted by dinner, mother would say, 'Oh, yes, dinner!'
|
|
"So I told her I wanted a home of my own. I wanted a kitchen and a
|
|
bathroom to play with. I wanted a place where I could do the funny little
|
|
things I like to do; where I could give parties and plan dinners such as I
|
|
always wanted to eat. And so I got me one.
|
|
"I find a home awfully engrossing. Why, today the grocer called me on
|
|
the phone and said, 'Miss Minter, please we want our dough.' Then I
|
|
remembered I hadn't paid him for two months because the check book I god from
|
|
the bank didn't have any more papers in it. But I fixed that up right away.
|
|
"Mother and I are not estranged. Why, she was here the other night
|
|
helping me fix my Christmas tree. The other day when my check from the
|
|
studio had a lot of notations on it about clothes, hooks and eyes and needles
|
|
and thread I called her up right away and she straightened it out for me.
|
|
"I know who has started all this horrible gossip. It's a woman who
|
|
writes things. She has hated me and mother ever since the day I wouldn't
|
|
pose in the door of a laundry for her, so she could use the picture in a
|
|
magazine story she was writing," she concluded.[2]
|
|
Thereupon she displayed some of her Christmas gifts. A beaded bag
|
|
costly enough to ransom and king in these days of low-priced royalty gave up
|
|
an ebony cigarette holder, an octagonal mirror of platinum, a cigarette case
|
|
bedight with the same precious metal.
|
|
"But surely you're not going to live here alone," was the caller's next
|
|
cast.
|
|
"It is said that you are going to marry Gaston Glass," Mary was told.
|
|
"Yes?" was her rejoinder. "That's the second time I've heard that about
|
|
him. To tell you a secret, I'm going to marry him when I get rid of my
|
|
husband and seven children."
|
|
In all seriousness "M to the third power" then declared she intended
|
|
never to wed.
|
|
She three times refused to talk about what she intends to do when her
|
|
Lasky contract is terminated by the completion of her present picture. She
|
|
evaded the question as to her return to the stage.
|
|
Then she diverted the reporters by showing them her declared ideals of
|
|
life, that is two of them, the kitchen and the pantry. From the vantage
|
|
point of the porch she pointed out Los Angeles, the lights of which glittered
|
|
like costly gems at the feet of a queen.
|
|
"Mary Miles Minter says she has but one regret at leaving home. She had
|
|
to leave behind her Collie dog "Chummy." The owner of the place bars dogs,
|
|
it seems, and detected dog hairs in the texture of the living-room rug.
|
|
"I just adore collies. I love to run my fingers through Chummy's woozly
|
|
hair," she said in ecstasy at the thought.
|
|
Mary says she will be twenty-one next April. She enjoys handling her
|
|
own business affairs and declares she intends to do so from now on.
|
|
Mrs. Miles, Mary's grandmother, declares she is temperamental and moved
|
|
because she "couldn't stand the noise" at the New Hampshire avenue house.
|
|
But Mary now declares she is for the first time in her life doing the
|
|
"funny little things" she likes to do.
|
|
The late "Littlest Rebel," her first role of national repute, is openly
|
|
rebellious at the thought of maternal apron strings regarding her ideas of
|
|
kitchen, bedroom and bath. She loves the solitude of her Hollywood hillside
|
|
and declares she is going to continue to love it.
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
|
|
Minter and Chaplin
|
|
|
|
Early in 1924, Charles Chaplin and Mary Miles Minter were on a date together,
|
|
when an altercation brought the evening wide publicity.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
April 1924
|
|
PHOTOPLAY
|
|
The monthly Hollywood sensation is Charlie Chaplin's victorious fistic
|
|
encounter.
|
|
Much to his own amazement and chagrin, Charlie was one of the principals
|
|
of a sensational fistic duel, fought in a well known Hollywood cafe, in the
|
|
presence of his former wife, Mildred Harris, and his own guest of the
|
|
evening, Mary Miles Minter.
|
|
The gentleman on the other end of Charlie's mighty right--and the other
|
|
end was the floor, believe me--was C. C. Julian, a well known oil operator in
|
|
Los Angeles.
|
|
It happened like this.
|
|
Charlie and Miss Minter and another couple were dining at the new and
|
|
very fashionable Cafe Petroushka on Hollywood Boulevard. This new eating
|
|
place is the latest favorite with the film colony--being run by a Russian
|
|
princess and cooked for by the chef of the late Czar Nicholas--and there was
|
|
a large crowd present on this Sunday evening.
|
|
Another party, a large one, which included Mildred Harris and Peggy
|
|
Browne, a friend of hers, came in and took the next table to Charlie and his
|
|
party. According to all reports the ladies had nothing to do with the
|
|
ensuing encounter.
|
|
Julian, it is stated by all witnesses to the affair, even the ladies of
|
|
his own party, was extremely boisterous, knocked over a lamp and did various
|
|
other damage, before, on one of his trips about the room, he knocked against
|
|
the chair occupied by Mr. Chaplin. The famous comedian asked him to be
|
|
careful, whereupon Julian assaulted him, striking him in the face.
|
|
Whereupon Mr. Chaplin arose and with a neat lift-right sent Mr. Julian
|
|
to the floor. Spectators declare it was a very nifty and forceful piece of
|
|
work.
|
|
Charlie, who is always a most gentlemanly and well-conducted person, was
|
|
much upset by the fight forced upon him and especially by the fact that
|
|
anyone might believe either Miss Harris or Miss Minter was involved in the
|
|
matter.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
March 3, 1924
|
|
AMERICAN WEEKLY
|
|
Charlie Chaplin's prowess as the champion of custard-pie combats and
|
|
slap-stick free-for-alls has been firmly established for some time, but it
|
|
took a real bare-fisted encounter with a wealthy oil magnate in a Hollywood
|
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cafe to qualify him as a runner-up for the bantamweight championship.
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Charlie launched his pugilistic conquests with a knockout in the second
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round, despite the fact that his adversary out-weighted him, "out-stood" him
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and out-reached him.
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Occupying ring-side seats at the table d'hote arena in which the world-
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famed comedian staged his first ring battle were a score of noted screen
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celebrities, artists and musicians, who cheered the young battler as he
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landed right and left punches to the jaw of his opponent with an unerring
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precision that Charlie attributes to years of experience in hurling pies.
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The famous comedian's sparring partner, according to a signed statement
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issued by Chaplin, and according to numerous witnesses to the affray, was C.
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C. Julian, millionaire young oil promoter. Julian, however, denies that he
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was the man who crossed fists with the agile comedian.
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Despite this denial the management of the Club Petroushka, exclusive
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Hollywood cafe maintained by a group of Russian artists, in which the fracas
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occurred, stated that the oil man's agents paid a bill for nearly $600 to
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cover damage to musical instruments, spotlights and furniture that were
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shattered by the combatants in their brief but furious exchange of blows.
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In the sport writer's parlance Chaplin was the first to enter his
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corner, accompanied by Mary Miles Minter and Mr. and Mrs. Carey Wilson.
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Little did they realize as the preliminary dinner progressed that with the
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serving of the last course they would be called upon to act as seconds for
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the genial host.
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It was some time later, shortly after midnight, to be exact, before the
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Julian party arrived at the duellists' rendezvous.
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Accompanying the oil man were Mildred Harris, former wife of the noted
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comedian, Peggy Browne, film actress and member of an old Washington family,
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two other men, one of whom is said to have been Julian's brother, and another
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woman, whose name was not learned.
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The Julian party, it was learned subsequently, had started earlier in
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the evening at the Montmarte, another popular Hollywood cafe, and it was en
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|
route to the Petroushka that Mildred Harris and Peggy Browne had rather
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reluctantly consented to join the party.
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|
Seated at points of vantage about the "ringside" at the time Julian
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|
entered his corner, in addition to the notables in Chaplin's party, were
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Nicholas Dunaev, Russian author and actor, as the guest of Prince and
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|
Princess Narichkin, and Jascha Heifetz, world-renown violinist. Dunsev had
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|
just returned to Los Angeles after a long illness in New York.
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|
The preliminaries to the main event occurred simultaneously with the
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|
arrival of the Julian party, when the host, in a hilarious and high-spirited
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mood, collided with the stage spotlight.
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|
Apparently resenting the inability of the adamant and inanimate object
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|
to remove itself from the course the newcomer wished to pursue, he hurled it
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|
to the floor with a loud clatter and crash of glass.
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|
The incident, witnesses aver, may have been merely a demonstration of
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|
physical strength conceived to strike terror into the heart of the diminutive
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|
comedian who a few minutes later was destined to "cross swords" with the six-
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|
foot promoter.
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|
Stepping over the debris of the wrecked spotlight Julian and the members
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|
of his party proceeded toward a table in an enclosed booth.
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|
Attracted by the crash and lusty shouts of the new arrival a corps of
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|
waiters and attaches of the cafe rushed forward in an attempt to be of
|
|
assistance and to smooth the apparently ruffled temper of the guest.
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|
"Get out of here!" Julian shouted.
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|
"Don't bother me. What difference does it make what I break up around
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|
here?" the young oil millionaire continued.
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|
Fumbling in his pockets the visitor pulled forth diverse wads of bills,
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|
fifteen or twenty of them. They all bore $1,000$ on the face. Waving a
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|
handful of the currency above his head he again addressed the assembled
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|
aggregation of dumfounded waiters:
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|
"Look here!
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|
"I've got money enough to buy out this whole blooming place and a couple
|
|
more if I wanted to! Away with you!"
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|
The "preliminaries" were fine, thought the spectators, who settled back
|
|
for another sip of coffee as Julian and his party were escorted to seats in a
|
|
booth directly adjoining the one occupied by Chaplin and his party.
|
|
Peace and quietness were not to have sway long, however. Members of the
|
|
Chaplin quartet turned occasionally to see where the hilarious din came from,
|
|
but Charlie says that at that time he was entirely unaware of the identity of
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|
the occupants of the adjoining booth.
|
|
The square-off for the first round, without the customary formal
|
|
introduction, sans the smiling bow and sans the subsequent applause, came a
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|
few moments later, when the new arrival arose somewhat heavily and lurched
|
|
against one of the women guests at the Chaplin table.
|
|
Chaplin looked up, plainly registering irritation.
|
|
Julian leered.
|
|
"Please be careful," said Chaplin in a low voice.
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|
With that, witnesses aver, the first round started in a very
|
|
unceremonious manner.
|
|
For reply to the comedian's admonition to be careful, the newcomer is
|
|
alleged to have slapped the girl on the back and leaned on her chair.
|
|
"I asked you to please be careful," repeated Chaplin, warningly, in a
|
|
rising voice, filled with indignation at the intrusion.
|
|
"Oh, you did, did you?" scowled the intruder.
|
|
"Yes, I certainly did," retorted Chaplin. "I would appreciate it if you
|
|
would kindly leave."
|
|
In reply witnesses say Julian rapidly landed several blows on the
|
|
comedian before he had a chance to arise from the table.
|
|
Round one ended with the heavier adversary having a decided advantage.
|
|
Humiliated and angered by the sudden attack, Chaplin sprang to his feet.
|
|
As an opening move of round two Charlie, facing his opponent square in the
|
|
aisle, unleashed his "million dollar" wallop, catching the heavier man on the
|
|
point of the chin.
|
|
Plainly taken back by the comedian's ferocious attack, Julian swung
|
|
wildly at the agile Chaplin.
|
|
He missed, but Charlie connected with another stiff punch to the chin,
|
|
and the six-footer hit the floor for the count, a tiny stream of blood
|
|
trickling down his face.
|
|
By this time the cafe was in an uproar. Squads of waiters joined the
|
|
melee in an attempt to restore order.
|
|
Another member of the Julian party, said by witnesses to have been the
|
|
oil man's brother, also of athletic build, pounced onto Chaplin's back a
|
|
moment after the first knockout.
|
|
Again the film comic brought his small fists into a fast play and felled
|
|
the second assailant, while cafe attaches struggled to separate the other
|
|
combatants.
|
|
Nicholas Dunaev, by his own story, became a participant in the affray
|
|
shortly after Chaplin scored his first knock-down. While Chaplin was then
|
|
engaged in battling new adversaries Dunaev said he squared off with the oil
|
|
man after he had struggled to his feet, landed another stiff blow and sent
|
|
him to the floor for the second and last time.
|
|
When the din of shouts, curses, women's shrieks, thud of blows, and
|
|
crash of furniture had subsided, members of the Julian party quickly made
|
|
their exit, while cafe attaches began to take stock of the damage, which, in
|
|
addition to the crashed spotlight, included a valuable cello and several
|
|
chairs.
|
|
Mildred Harris and Peggy Browne declare they left the Julian party just
|
|
before the fisticuffs started. Miss Browne said Julian had been threatening
|
|
to "get" Chaplin in Miss Harris' presence and that Chaplin's former wife
|
|
pleaded with him not to create a scene.
|
|
The young actress declared that she and Miss Harris attempted to leave
|
|
but were observed by Julian as they slipped own a staircase, and that he gave
|
|
chase.
|
|
Frightened, Miss Browne related that the couple fled through a rear
|
|
door, scaled fences, and ran through underbrush to her home. When she
|
|
reached her bungalow, she bolted her door and sat up all night with a
|
|
revolver in her hand.
|
|
Immediately after the dust of battle had cleared away, Nat Arlock, owner
|
|
of the Club Petroushka, said he was given a check for $392 by a member of the
|
|
Julian party, covering "supper and damages."
|
|
The next day the cafe manager received $203 in cash from an emissary of
|
|
Julian for other damages.
|
|
"I saw the whole proceedings," said Arlock, "and am embarrassed that it
|
|
should have occurred in my place, which is a genteel establishment.
|
|
"Mr. Chaplin was listening to the music. He is very fond of Russian
|
|
music. Zamu Lenko, the Moscow violinist, was playing. Chaplin was very much
|
|
engrossed in listening to him when the trouble first started."
|
|
Princess Dagmara Saricheva, hostess of the club, and Mme. Malova, prima
|
|
donna, interposed themselves during the melee and attempted to hold Chaplin
|
|
back when he began to rain blows on his opponent.
|
|
Chef Spiridon Ignatowich, who was chef to Czar Nicholas II, of Russia
|
|
for twelve years, said he was too busy making borscht in the kitchen to take
|
|
part in the fracas.
|
|
Notwithstanding Chaplin's signed statement naming him, and the statement
|
|
of nearly a score of witnesses C. C. Julian, the oil magnate, has strongly
|
|
held to his denial that he was present or a participant in the affray.
|
|
Despite a subsequent admission that he was in Los Angeles on the morning
|
|
of the fight Julian has stoutly maintained that he was in San Francisco,
|
|
nearly 500 miles distant, when the now famous Chaplin combat took place less
|
|
than twenty-four hours later.
|
|
Other than to declare that he was in San Francisco with his wife Julian
|
|
declined to make any further comment, characterizing the reports of the cafe
|
|
row as "very amusing."
|
|
Miss Harris, recounting her story of the party, expressed deep regret
|
|
that her former husband had become innocently involved in the affair.
|
|
"Poor Charlie," she said. "I do hope my presence there will not be
|
|
misunderstood. I did not know Charlie was there and I am sure he didn't see
|
|
me.
|
|
"Charlie and I are perfectly good friends. Reports that the trouble
|
|
started through a quarrel over me are preposterous. As a matter of fact I
|
|
personally was not with Julian. I merely happened to be with my girl friend
|
|
who was a member of the party. Charlie is very sensitive. I sympathize with
|
|
him deeply in this affair because I know how dreadful it all must be to him."
|
|
Miss Browne's entry into the party came unexpectedly, she stated. She
|
|
was at home when Mildred Harris called her from the Montmarte Cafe, where the
|
|
Julian party started, invited her to join the group.
|
|
"Mildred and I were unescorted," Peggy declared. "We just went along
|
|
with the others because we couldn't very well get away after we joined them.
|
|
"After we arrived at the Petrouska, Julian told me I was 'too ritzie.'
|
|
I pushed back by chair and started to leave, but it wasn't any use. He
|
|
wouldn't let me go.
|
|
"All during the party Julian made scathing remarks about Mr. Chaplin.
|
|
Miss Harris urged him to discontinue his uncomplimentary utterances, and when
|
|
he refused a moment before the trouble started, she left the table. As soon
|
|
as I saw something was going to happen I became so frightened I ran down the
|
|
stairs to get away. I didn't see any blows struck."
|
|
Following the affair Chaplin issued a statement regarding his version of
|
|
it. The statement follows:
|
|
"In justice to the motion picture profession in general, I am compelled
|
|
by the seemingly unfair notoriety being forced on members of our industry and
|
|
myself to plead for fairness and justice from the press and public.
|
|
"The erroneous and flippant reports of the past incident in which I was
|
|
unfortunately present have placed me in the light of being a cafe brawler,
|
|
intimating that motion picture actresses were the cause of the affair. This
|
|
I wish to deny most emphatically, as it was the business men whom the press
|
|
have ignored but who were entirely responsible in causing the disturbance.
|
|
"I wish to state that I neither drink nor smoke.
|
|
"No one is more conscious or appreciative of my position with the
|
|
general public and the esteem and regard with which I respect them,
|
|
especially the children.
|
|
"I do not hold my position lightly and the obnoxious affair which was
|
|
forced on me in a public restaurant has compelled me to make this plea for
|
|
fair play in the press.
|
|
"The stories I have read report me as having stood on tables or
|
|
platforms issuing challenges to these men who attacked me. Nothing is
|
|
further from the truth and if it is necessary for the truth to be known I
|
|
will commence proceedings immediately.
|
|
"What actually happened was this:
|
|
"While I was dining with a few friends in a restaurant a party of men
|
|
and ladies arrived and seated themselves at a table nearby. The men acted
|
|
very boisterously, kicking over a spotlight lamp and generally conducting
|
|
themselves in a very loud manner.
|
|
"Later, one of the men, unknown to me but whom I am informed was C. C.
|
|
Julian, lurched towards me, striking at me while I was seated at the table.
|
|
"In self-protection I defended myself. He fell down. Then another
|
|
member of the party, who is said to be a brother, struck me from behind.
|
|
A general disturbance was caused until employees of the restaurant intervened
|
|
and quiet was restored.
|
|
"I am not a fighter, not a braggart of fistic prowess, as has been
|
|
reported. I have always endeavored to conduct myself as a gentleman and
|
|
appeal to the press and public to believe that my part in this affair was
|
|
forced on me and that I did only what any red-blooded man would have done had
|
|
he been in my place."
|
|
But meanwhile Hollywood boulevardiers are loudly singing peans of praise
|
|
to the fistic ability of one Charles Spencer Chaplin and greet him on all
|
|
sides with "How's the 'million dollar wallop'?"
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
NOTES:
|
|
[1] The dog, Chum, was given to her by William Desmond Taylor as a gift (See
|
|
TAYLOROLOGY #11), so it is natural that she would feel extreme affection for
|
|
the dog.
|
|
[2] The unidentified writer is probably Adela Rogers St. Johns, who at that
|
|
time was the Western editor for PHOTOPLAY. In the February 1923 issue of
|
|
PHOTOPLAY there was an article about investment property owned by film stars.
|
|
The fact that Minter owned stock in a laundry was mentioned in the article,
|
|
and a photograph of the laundry building was published with the article
|
|
(Minter was not in the laundry photograph).
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
For more information about Taylor, see
|
|
WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow Press, 1991)
|
|
Back issues of Taylorology are available via Gopher or FTP at
|
|
gopher.etext.org
|
|
in the directory Zines/Taylorology
|
|
***************************************************************************** |