Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Double Indemnity






One of the films I absolutely love from the Film Noir genre is "Double Indemnity (1944)." I was forced to watch the film during a film class I took in college and have been hooked on black and whites, and film noir ever since. If you haven't seen it, you have to check it out. The rainy day weather is perfect for it. Here's some fun facts about the film:

**The character Walter Neff was originally named Walter Ness, but director/writer Billy Wilder found out that there was a man living in Beverly Hills named Walter Ness who was actually an insurance salesman. To avoid being sued for defamation of character, they changed the name. In the novel, his name is Walter Huff, and Dietrichson is Nirdlinger.

**The scene where Neff and Dietrichson can't get their car started after the murder was added by Wilder after his car wouldn't start at the end of a shooting day.

**Dick Powell wanted the role of Walter Neff, but he was under contract to another studio and they wouldn't allow it. He was enraged and tore up his contract. The role went to Fred MacMurray.

**The blonde wig that Barbara Stanwyck is wearing throughout the movie was the idea of Billy Wilder. A month into shooting Wilder suddenly realized how bad it looked, but by then it was too late to re-shoot the earlier scenes. To rationalize this mistake, in later interviews Wilder claimed that the bad-looking wig was intentional.

**In the first scene in which Walter first kisses Phyllis, we see a wedding ring on Walter's hand. Fred MacMurray was married and the ring was not noticed until post-production.

**Silver dust was mixed with some subtle smoke effects to create the illusion of waning sunlight in Phyllis Dietrichson's house.

**In 2007, the American Film Institute ranked this as the #29 Greatest Movie of All Time.

**The movie was based on the novel by James M. Cain, which in turn was based on the true story of Ruth Snyder, the subject of a notorious 1920s murder trial.

**Barbara Stanwyck was the first choice to play Phyllis, but she was unnerved when seeing the role was of a ruthless killer. When she expressed her concern to Billy Wilder, he asked her, "Are you a mouse or an actress?"

**In the early 1970s Paramount had plans to remake Double Indemnity (1944) with Robert Redford in the Fred MacMurray role. The project never got off the ground.

**Director Billy Wilder originally filmed an ending where Keyes watches Walter Neff go to the gas chamber.

PLEASE DON'T FORGET TO ENTER MY GIVEAWAY BEFORE FRIDAY!!!!! SO EXCITED!!!

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Monday, March 29, 2010

Telephone Operators







I didn't plan to post again today, but came across these great pics of old school telephone operators. Wow, things have really changed huh? Oh, just as a side note, Jerry and I have broken up. Just thought I'd let you know, since some of you often send us well wishes. I am doing fine and am ready to begin the next chapter! Have a great night!

Oh, don't forget to enter my giveaway!

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Winchester Mansion




It's been years since I've visited, but one place I recommend all to see is the Winchester Mansion in San Jose, CA. The Winchester rifle was known as "the gun that won the West." It was used to kill many, especially Native Americans.

All of the Winchester family met their demise quite early. Sarah Winchester was the only one left. She moved out West and proceeded to build a mansion that kept growing until her death.

Because of all the deaths the Winchester Rifle caused, it was recommended to Sarah by a Boston medium to move west and build a house for the spirits of those killed. She felt that if she continued to build for them, they would allow her to live. It became her obsession.

In 1884 she purchased a piece of land in San Jose, CA and began building for the next 38 years.

There are many odd things about the house. There are staircases that lead to nowhere, doors that open onto the outside concrete, and the number 13 everywhere. You have to read about her or check out the house for yourself! Here are some pics in the meantime. Have you visited? What did you think?

And, don't forget to enter the giveaway before Friday!

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Friday, March 26, 2010

Oh Marilyn...








I thought it's about time for some new pics of Marilyn. Enjoy your weekend friends!

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Thursday, March 25, 2010

Mystery Letter--Too Cute!





This article appeared yesterday on Yahoo News. I love stories like this.

"Earlier this month, as Mike Trogdon was going about his routine as director of operations for postal services at Duke University, he ran across something rather startling: a letter from Salem, Va., postmarked Feb. 12, 1934.

He told Yahoo! News that his first thought was "Where in the world could this have been for all these years?"

The letter — which bore a 2-cent stamp and a 1-cent stamp — was addressed to a "Miss Margaret Davey c/o Duke Hospital, Duke University."

Trogdon checked the university’s records for any mention of that name in the employee database. When that came up empty, he decided to open the envelope. Inside he found a Valentine's Day card adorned with numerous hearts and a giraffe.

Earlier this month, as Mike Trogdon was going about his routine as director of operations for postal services at Duke University, he ran across something rather startling: a letter from Salem, Va., postmarked Feb. 12, 1934.

He told Yahoo! News that his first thought was "Where in the world could this have been for all these years?"

The letter — which bore a 2-cent stamp and a 1-cent stamp — was addressed to a "Miss Margaret Davey c/o Duke Hospital, Duke University."

Trogdon checked the university’s records for any mention of that name in the employee database. When that came up empty, he decided to open the envelope. Inside he found a Valentine's Day card adorned with numerous hearts and a giraffe.

The message read: "In the race for my affection, you win by a long neck, so be my valentine!!"

At the bottom of the card was a signature: "Joyce."

Trogdon contacted the school's alumni department to see if anyone named Margaret Davey had attended Duke in 1934, and indeed she had.

Davey had graduated from the Duke School of Nursing in 1935, went on to enjoy a long career as a registered nurse in Virginia and Florida, and married a World War II veteran. Together they raised a son and daughter.

But sadly, the dig for information about Margaret Davey revealed something rather unfortunate: She died in January of this year at the age of 96 — just two months before her Depression-era valentine caught Trogdon’s eye.

Still, Trogdon was determined to get the word out. He contacted Leanora Minai, the school's director of communications and editor of its employee newsletter. She tracked down a few of Davey's surviving family members, including her son, and they set about trying to crack the other mystery of the card: Who had sent it? Eventually, they established that in 1934, Margaret Davey had a 6-year-old niece named Joyce living in Salem. Joyce — now Joyce Galbraith Colony — turns 82 in April and lives in Charlottesville, Va.

"My mother wrote both the envelope and the 'Joyce' signature inside," Joyce Galbraith Colony told Minai in a piece for Duke Today. Colony's mother, Florence, was Davey's older sister. "She was my favorite aunt."

One mystery will probably remain unsolved, though: just where the card has been hiding these past 76 years. Trogdon’s best guess is that it fell behind a mail counter, where a vigilant postal worker finally retrieved it.

But that doesn’t account for another recent revelation: A second envelope addressed to Margaret Davey at Duke University has also recently surfaced at the U.S. Postal Service’s Processing and Distribution Center in Raleigh, N.C. — and it, too, was signed by someone named Joyce. The missive was postmarked in Salem on Jan. 15, 1935 — nearly a year after Joyce had sent off her valentine. Postal officials sent this wayward letter to Margaret Davey's other niece, and included an explanatory note.

"We believe it may have been left in a mailbag and overlooked by our personnel who emptied the contents," the note read. "Occasionally, an envelope may stick to the seam inside a bag."

The missing-mail saga is already causing a stir around the Duke campus — even as the student body is obsessed with how far the school’s famed Blue Devils basketball squad will go in this year’s NCAA tournament. Davey no doubt would have enjoyed hearing her name crop up amid all the hoops mania, Minai suggests.

"Margaret was an avid Duke basketball fan," Minai told Yahoo! News, proudly noting that she kept "a poster of the team, signed by Coach K, above her bed in the nursing home."

Article written by Michael Dykes

So cute, don't you think?

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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Ra Ra Ra, Sis Boom Ba!






Check out these pics I found of cheerleaders from the 1950's! Aren't they so adorable? The outfits are so conservative and look at the length of those skirts!

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Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Gone With the Wind





Can you believe I've never seen Gone With the Wind? I know, I'm probably the only person in America! I always want to watch it, but somehow seem overwhelmed by the length. I found some great trivia to get me interested so here goes:

--When Gary Cooper turned down the role for Rhett Butler, he was passionately against it. He is quoted saying both, "Gone with the Wind (1939) is going to be the biggest flop in Hollywood history," and, "I'm just glad it'll be Clark Gable who's falling on his face and not Gary Cooper."

--The movie's line "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn." was voted as the #1 movie quote by the American Film Institute (out of 100).

--First color film to win the Best Picture Oscar.

--Of all the many actresses who tested for the part of Scarlett, only Paulette Goddard and Vivien Leigh were filmed in color.

--Although he was dismissed from the production, George Cukor continued to privately coach both Vivien Leigh and Olivia de Havilland at their request on weekends.

--The estimated production costs were $3.9 million. At the time, only Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925) and Hell's Angels (1930) had cost more.

--The film had its first preview on 9 September 1939 at the Fox Theatre in Riverside, California. In attendance were David O. Selznick, his wife Irene Mayer Selznick, investor John Hay Whitney and editor Hal C. Kern. Kern called for the manager and explained that his theater had been chosen for the first public screening of Gone with the Wind (1939) though the identity of the film was to remain undisclosed to the audience until the very moment it began. People were permitted to leave only if they didn't want to hang around for a film that they didn't know the name of, but after they'd gone, the theater was to be sealed with no re-admissions and no phone calls. The manager was reluctant but eventually agreed. His one request was to call his wife to come to the theater immediately, although he was forbidden to tell her what film she was about to see. Indeed, Kern stood by him while he made his phone call to ensure he maintained the secret. When the film began, the audience started yelling with excitement. They had been reading about this film for nearly 2 years, so were naturally thrilled to see it for themselves.

--The Ku Klux Klan was written out of the screenplay as the organization to which Frank Kennedy turns after Scarlett is attacked in Shantytown. Producer David O. Selznick said that he had no desire to remake The Birth of a Nation (1915), telling screenwriter Sidney Howard in 1937, "I do hope you will agree with me on this omission of what might come out as an unintentional advertisement for intolerant societies in these fascist-ridden times. . . ."

--Olivia de Havilland was a contract player at Warner Brothers when MGM made the call to her for the part of Melanie. De Havilland was very keen to take the part and managed to convince her boss Jack L. Warner to let her out of her contract, mainly by getting his wife to exert her influence.

--Leslie Howard privately felt that he was much too old to play Ashley Wilkes (the character was supposed to be about 21 at the start of the film). He wore extra make-up and a hairpiece to make him appear younger. Selznick was only able to persuade him to take the part by offering him a producer credit on Intermezzo: A Love Story (1939).

--The only four actors David O. Selznick ever seriously considered for the role Rhett Butler were Clark Gable, Gary Cooper, Errol Flynn and Ronald Colman. The chief impediment to Gable's casting was his MGM contract. Gable was not drawn to the material; he didn't see himself in a period production, and didn't believe that he could live up to the public's anticipation of the character. Eventually, he was persuaded by a $50,000 bonus which would enable him to divorce his second wife Maria ("Ria") and marry Carole Lombard.

--All four principal characters appear together in the same scene only once, after the raid on Shantytown, when Rhett tells the anxious group of the fate of Scarlett's second husband, Frank Kennedy.

--To portray Melanie, Olivia de Havilland spent most of the film in drab, dowdy costumes. She wore 2 elaborate dresses in the film: one when Melanie and Ashley announce their engagement, and a striking blue taffeta dress that Melanie wears to Scarlett's first wedding. Unfortunately, due to film aspect ratio at the time (long before the advent of widescreen), the screen could not accommodate two dresses built up with hoop skirts, so they had to be removed. Thus, de Havilland's rare appearance in a beautiful dress was shot from the waist up, with the skirt hanging limp.

--1,400 actresses were interviewed for the part of Scarlett O'Hara. 400 were asked to do readings.

--Among the many famous actress considered for the part of Scarlett were Jean Arthur, Lucille Ball, Tallulah Bankhead, Bette Davis, Claudette Colbert, Joan Crawford, Paulette Goddard, Katharine Hepburn, Olivia de Havilland, Carole Lombard, Norma Shearer, Barbara Stanwyck, and Margaret Sullavan. Bankhead (an authentic "Southern Belle" from Alabama) was the clear front-runner, but her unsavory personal life made producers reluctant to hire her.

--There is historical dispute and ambiguity over exactly when Vivien Leigh was contracted to play Scarlett O'Hara. One theory holds that David O. Selznick had already secretly signed her for the role as early as February 1938, and that the nationwide "Search For Scarlett O'Hara", during which thousands of dollars were spent "testing" aspiring actresses for the part, was actually a well orchestrated publicity stunt on the part of David O. Selznick to keep alive interest in a very expensive film for which he did not yet have the money to produce. The other, more dramatic and interesting story is that Selznick's brother Myron Selznick, an agent, introduced Vivien Leigh to David O. Selznick during the filming of the Atlanta fire and said "David, meet your Scarlett O'Hara". The truth of the matter is unknown, and may never be resolved.

--In the scene where Scarlett searches for Dr. Meade, making her way among 1,600 suffering and dying Confederate soldiers, to cut costs and still comply with a union rule that dictated the use of a certain percentage of extras in the cast, 800 dummies were scattered among 800 extras.

--Vivien Leigh worked for 125 days and received about $25,000. Clark Gable worked for 71 days and received over $120,000.

--The horse that Thomas Mitchell rode was later Silver of "The Lone Ranger" (1949) fame.

--Hattie McDaniel became the first African-American to be nominated for, and win, an Academy Award.

--The Tara plantation façade was located at the NW corner of the Forty Acres backlot in Culver City, CA and was dismantled in 1959. The location was later used for the Stalag 13 outdoor set of "Hogan's Heroes" (1965).

--Olivia de Havilland who has been the lone survivor of the four principal leads since the death of Vivien Leigh in 1967, was the only major cast member to live to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the picture's premiere on December 15 2009.

What do you think? Should I watch it?

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Monday, March 22, 2010

Vintage Cigarette Ads







With the laws being so strict on smoking in California, it is hard for me to remember people even smoking in restaurants eons ago. Remember when you had to request smoking or non? I am so fascinated by the vintage cigarette ads. I guess they didn't really know how much damage the cigs would do at the time? The ads are so glamorous. Check out the one with Ronald Regan in the background. What about the gloves that have a compartment for your cigarettes? Wow. What do you think?

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Wednesday, March 17, 2010

New Blog!


Hello all! Happy "hump" and "St. Patrick's Day" to ya! I forgot to wear green as usual, so let's hope I don't get pinched lol. I have created a new blog for my 11th graders called "What Gatsby?" I would love for you to check it out! Please give me any feedback you can. I will be using it as a tool to help them through the novel, but would love you to join too! It is a work in progress, but again, I would love to know what you think. Have a wonderful day friends!

check it out!

What Gatsby?



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