Sunday, June 07, 2015
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Sunday, September 30, 2012
LET'S GO NATIVE (1930) photos
Labels: jack Oakie, Jeanette MacDonald, Kay Francis, LET's GO NATIVE (1930)
Wednesday, August 01, 2012
Lonesome (1928), The Last Performance (1929), and Broadway (1929) DVD release
Labels: Barbara Kent, Conrad Veidt, Evelyn Brent, Glen Tryon, Mary Philbin, Merna Kennedy, Paul Fejos
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
FOUR JILLS IN A JEEP (1944) photos
Labels: Carole Landis, FOUR JILLS IN A JEEP (1944), Kay Francis, Martha Raye, Mitzi Mayfair
Sunday, June 24, 2012
ALLOTMENT WIVES (1945) photos
Labels: ALLOTMENT WIVES (1945), Film Noir, Kay Francis, Otto Kruger, Paul Kelly
Monday, May 28, 2012
DIVORCE (1945) photos
Labels: Bruce Cabot, Divorce (1945), Helen Mack, Kay Francis
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Play Girl (1941) photos
Labels: Hamilton Nigel Bruce, James Ellison, Kay Francis, Margaret, Mildred Coles, PLAY GIRL (1941)
Sunday, March 25, 2012
LITTLE MEN (1940) photos
Labels: George Bancroft, Kay Francis, Little Men (1940)
Sunday, February 19, 2012
HAM AND EGGS AT THE FRONT (1927) with Myrna Loy
Partial synopsis from The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States: Feature Films, 1921–1930, referenced from the AFI website:
"Ham and Eggs, privates in an all-black regiment, become buddies in training camp and are stationed together in a small French Village....Friml, an enemy spy...has Fifi, his Negro waitress, flirt with the soldiers to get...information...(T)he pair are sent to the front...they are accidentally cast adrift in a balloon, and in parachuting to safety, they 'capture' Friml. They are later decorated for their bravery."
Partial VARIETY review from March 14, 1928:
"This colored version of war life, handled in a comical vein, though barren of novelty...should get a good play in the neighborhoods...It has been well handled in production. Despite that most of the gags have been previously used, the laughs are there and in sufficient quantity...Usual complications. Action slows up too often...Mere idea of a colored regiment at the front should be sufficient to draw business with proper exploitation."
From the website themakeupgallery (http://www.themakeupgallery.info/racial/afro/ham.htm) which cites Myrna Loy: Being and Becoming by James Kotsilibas-Davis and Myrna Loy:
""In her autobiography Being and Becoming Myrna Loy referred to the way she was cast in exotic roles in her early film and dismissed her participation in Ham and Eggs at the Front as ‘shameful’:
But these exotica started to predominate. My bit as a mulatto in The Heart of Maryland led to a role that I’m very much ashamed of. Zanuck wrote Ham and Eggs at the Front, a blackface parody of What Price Glory? casting me as a spy. How could I ever have put on blackface? When I think of it now, it horrifies me. Well, our awareness broadens, thank God! It was a tasteless slapstick comedy that I mercifully recall very little about.""
Labels: blackface, ham and Eggs at the Front (1927), Heinie Conklin, lost films, Myrna Loy, silent film, Tom Wilson
Sunday, January 29, 2012
ALWAYS IN MY HEART (1942) photos
Labels: Always In My Heart 1942, Frankie Thomas, Gloria Warren, Kay Francis, Patti Hale, Walter Huston