Showing posts with label Douglas Fairbanks Sr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Douglas Fairbanks Sr. Show all posts
Thursday, October 22, 2009
The Mystery of the Leaping Fish (1916)
The Mystery of the Leaping Fish
Directors: Christy Cabanne and John Emerson
USA 1916
35 min
Starring: Douglas Fairbanks, Bessie Love, Alma Rubens and Allan Sears, among others.
It is available on YouTube, but some idiot put modern techno music over it. I fixed another version and upped it on Blip.tv here: link
Oh mighty Demons, can this film be for real...?
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Anna May Wong (1905-1961)
"There seems little for me in Hollywood, because, rather than real Chinese, producers prefer Hungarians, Mexicans, American Indians for Chinese roles."
Anna May Wong was the first Chinese American movie star in Hollywood, and the first Asian American actress to become an international star. Her on-screen coolness and sophistication caught my interest in Josef von Sternberg's classic Marlene Dietrich vehicle Shanghai Express (1932), but it was first when I listened to one of the top five songs that lies closest to my heart, These Foolish Things sung by Bryan Ferry, that I decided to write a portrayal post on Anna May.
What was her connection to that song? Read on, dahlin'!
***
Anna May Wong was born Huang Liu Tsong (meaning "frosted yellow willows") January 3, 1905, near the Chinatown neighborhood of Los Angeles. Her parents were second-generation Chinese-American, her father owning a laundrette, and Anna May was the second child of seven siblings.
When Anna May was five years old, in 1910, her family moved across the hill to another Los Angeles neighborhood, at Figueroa Street. Their new neighborhood was mostly populated by Mexicans and Eastern Europeans, making the Wong family the only Chinese in the area. Being separated from Chinatown helped Anna May to assimilate into the American culture, but it seemed like the American culture had problems assimilating with the Wongs. Anna May and her older sister were targets for racist bullying in school, and soon they had to attend a Chinese school instead. The classes were however still taught in English.
It was about this time that the film industry relocated to the west, to flee from the Edison's patent costs on film cameras. Films were shot all around the neighborhood where the Wongs lived. Anna May went to Nickelodeon movie theatres, and fell in love with the movies. She actually fell so hard that she skipped classes in school and used up her lunch money on the film theatres.
She decided to make a career in movies at the age of nine, despite her father's disliking. She visited the film sets, begging for a part in the movies, and soon earned the nickname "C.C.C." ("Curious Chinese Child"). At age 11, she made up the stage name Anna May Wong.
When Anna May was 14 she had a job at Hollywood's Ville de Paris department store, when Hollywood needed 300 extras for Alla Nazimova's film The Red Lantern (1919). At this time, Anna May had gotten herself a film connection (a friend of her unknowing father's), who helped her land a part as one of the extras. Now Anna May was officially in the Hollywood business.
In 1921 Anna May dropped out of school to concentrate fully on her Hollywood career, which payed off in 1922 and the leading role as Lotus Flower in The Toll of the Sea (my first film review on this blog, read it here). Variety magazine praised her "extraordinarily fine acting". She was 17 years old!
"Miss Wong stirs in the spectator all the sympathy her part calls for, and she never repels one by an excess of theatrical 'feeling'. She has a difficult role, a role that is botched nine times out of ten, but hers is the tenth performance. Completely unconscious of the camera, with a fine sense of proportion and remarkable pantomimic accuracy ... She should be seen again and often on the screen."The New York Times onAnna May Wong in The Toll of the Sea
Despite her great reviews, Hollywood didn't seem to know what to do with their new star. The next few years followed with supporting roles of "exotic" nature. She couldn't land any leadning lady parts, due to the anti-miscegenation Film Production Code. An Asian woman was not allowed to kiss a Caucasian man in "yellowface" on-screen, or vice versa. So as long there wasn't any Asian leading man to play opposite Anna May (there was only one of those active during this era, Sessue Hayakawa), she had to stick to supporting parts.
The most degrading thing about this situation was that Anna May lost a lot of parts she was well suited for, written for Chinese women, to Caucasian actresses in yellowface. (See American Myrna Loy and German Luise Rainer.)
When Anna May played a typical "dragon lady" part as the Mongol slave in the Douglas Fairbanks film The Thief of Bagdad (1924), she was surprisingly noticed by the audience once again. The film grossed over $2 million and helped Anna May's career, and now she could move out of her family home into her own apartment.
Anna May realized that people, even though she was born in America, concidered her a foreign born, and decided to do something about it. She cultivated a flapper image (which she succeeded with, often being referred to as "the first Chinese American flapper"), became a popular fashion model, and even planned to start up her own film company. The company, called Anna May Wong Productions, was supposed to concentrate on Chinese myths, but her business partner was shown to be a crook. She sued him, and the plans of an own film company was dissolved.
Again, Anna May was stuck with supporting roles. She tried to do something different by joining a group of serial actors on a vaudeville tour in 1925. It turned out to be a failure, and it was back to Hollywood for Anna May: back to Butterflies and Dragon Ladies.
In 1926 she and Norma Talmadge put the first rivet in the groundbreaking Grauman's Chinese Theatre ceremony, even though she wasn't invited to put her hand- and foot-prints in the cement. In 1927 she lost another leading part to a non-Asian actress, this time to French Renée Adorée, in the Lon Chaney (my post on him here) film Mr. Wu, and instead got to play a small part as Loo Song.
Scene from Mr. Wu (1927).
Anna May Wong (right) and Renée Adorée in yellowface (left). Like you needed me to tell the real Asian from the fakie.

Anna May Wong (right) and Renée Adorée in yellowface (left). Like you needed me to tell the real Asian from the fakie.
The next year Anna May finally got another leading part, as Dragon Horse in The Silk Bouquet (1926). This was one of the first American films to co-produce with a Chinese production company, San Fransisco's Chinese Six Companies. The film was set during the Ming Dynasty in China, and the Asian parts were played by Asian actors (!).
Unfortunately, this film seems to be lost.
In 1928, Anna May had had enough of being type-cast and loosing good Chinese parts to non-Asian actors, so she moved to Europe. She became a sensation with German films like Show Life (Schmutziges Geld, 1928) and City Butterfly (Großstadtschmetterling , 1929)
Interestingly enough, the Europeans seemed like they wanted to neglect her American nationality, and only concentrated on her Asian origins.
She continued her European success with the operetta Tschun Tschi in Vienna, which she played in fluent German.
"Wong is acclaimed not only as an actress of transcendent talent but as a great beauty."The New York Times onGermany's response to Show Life
"Fräulein Wong had the audience perfectly in her power and the unobtrusive tragedy of her acting was deeply moving, carrying off the difficult German-speaking part very successfully."Austrian critic on Anna May Wong'sperformance in Tschun Tschi
While in Germany, Anna May befriended director Leni Riefenstahl (who later directed nazi-propaganda films for Adolf Hitler, like Triumph des Willens, 1935), and they became inseparable. Anna May's close relationships with women, such as Marlene Dietrich and Cecil Cunningham started rumours about Anna May being a lesbian, which hurt her career and embarrassed her family (who already didn't like her choice of profession).


Anna May managed however to continue her European career, now in England. She played in a classical Chinese vers play, Circle of Chalk, on stage with none other than Laurence Olivier, changing her Californian accent for a British one.
In 1929 she made her last silent film, and first of five films made in England, a crime drama called Piccadilly, in which she had the starring role. Polish actress Gilda Gray had the top billing, but it was no doubts about who was the star of the picture. Variety commented:
"From the moment Miss Wong dances in the kitchen's rear, she steals 'Piccadilly' from Miss Gray."
Even though Anna May was presented in a very sensual role, she was none the less forbidden to kiss her love interest on-screen. A kissing scene was planned, but the cencor scissors got ahold of it before it had time to upset anyone.
Piccadilly is one of those films who, after having been forgotten for decades, finally have been restored for modern audiences to see.
And here is the part where I link Anna May Wong to my favourite love song, These Foolish Things. While in London, Anna May was romantically involved with a song writer, Eric Maschwitz. He supposedly followed her to Hollywood, where they broke up and he returned to England. In 1935 he wrote These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You) about his longing for her, and how every trivial little thing reminds him of his lost love.
There are countless versions of this beloved song. Among many others, it has been sung by Bing Crosby, Billie Holiday, Frankie Laine, Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr, Nat "King" Cole, Rod Stewart and, my absolute favorite version - Bryan Ferry.
Bryan Ferry's version of These Foolish Things. The 1970's goes 1930's, when Ferry's broken down anti-hero drowns his sorrows in alcohol and cigarettes. Gives me goose bumps all over!
In the 1930's, the American studios was looking for a fresh, European talent, and for some reason they finally took a good look at Anna May Wong again. She signed a Paramount Contract in 1930. Soon after that she made a huge success on Broadway, playing a Japanese woman in On the Spot. The play's director wanted her to play her part with stereotypical Japanese mannerism, but she refused. Instead she used her knowledge of Chinese gestures and mannerism, making her performance authentic. And it proved successful.
She accepted a stereotypical role in Daughter of the Dragon (1931), with the promise of working with the famous Josef von Sternberg.
She did that the next year, playing alongside Marlene Dietrich's Shanghai Lily as a self-sacrificing courtesan in Shanghai Express (1932).


In the same pace as her fame grew, Anna May became more outspoken. She openly made political criticism (for example on the Mukden Accident and the invasion of Manchuria in 1931), and under the head line "I Protest" (a clever reference on Emile Zola's J'Accuse?) she criticized the negative stereotyping of Asians in Hollywood film:
"Why is it that the screen Chinese is always the villain? And so crude a villain – murderous, treacherous, a snake in the grass! We are not like that. How could we be, with a civilization that is so many times older than the West?"Anna May Wong onAsian stereotypes
Unfortunately, even after the success of Shanghai Express, Anna May Wong's career followed in the same footsteps as before - loosing parts to white actresses in yellowface. She returned to England for three years, appearing in four films and appearing in King George V's Silver Jubilee program in 1935.
In the film Java Head (1934), Anna May got to kiss a male white star in pictures for the first time, her husband in the film. An Anna May Wong biographer, Graham Russell Hodges, thought this might be the reason that this film, which otherwise wasn't considered great, was among Anna May's personal favorites.


In 1937 MGM planned on making a film adaption of a best-selling Pearl Buck novel about family life in a Chinese village. Since the book was published in 1931, Anna May had made it clear that she wanted the part of O-Lan, the leading female character. Even Los Angeles newspapers had in 1933 boasted on Anna May being the most suitable actress for the part. But by now, we know the story - the leading man was played by Scarface Paul Muni in yellowface, and the part of O-Lan went to Luise Rainer. Anna May was offered the part of Lotus, a singer who helps destroying the family and seduces the eldest son. Anna May refused to play the part, with the following words:
"If you let me play O-lan, I will be very glad. But you're asking me – with Chinese blood – to do the only unsympathetic role in the picture featuring an all-American cast portraying Chinese characters."
Luise Rainer won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of O-Lan.
After that disappointment Anna May announced that she was going on a year-long tour in China, to visit her father and her younger siblings who had moved to Taishan, China in 1934. She wanted to learn more about Chinese theatre and how to perform Chinese plays better before international audiences.
"... for a year, I shall study the land of my fathers. Perhaps upon my arrival, I shall feel like an outsider. Perhaps instead, I shall find my past life assuming a dreamlike quality of unreality.
This did however not turn out to be as ideal as it sounded at first. Being raised with the Taishan dialect rather than the more common Mandarin, Anna May had to use a translator to be able to communicate in many parts of China. The press was obstinate and didn't leave her alone, and on top of that the Chinese government was hostile to the star. This resulted in depression, heavy drinking and excessive smoking.
Feeling irritable when confronting a crowd in Hong Kong, Anna May w a s unusually aggressive, resulting in an offended crowd shouting things like "Down with Huang Liu Tsong – the stooge that disgraces China. Don't let her go ashore."
She joined her family in Hong Kong, where she spent several days while the situation cooled down.
After having returned to Hollywood Anna May stated:
"I am convinced that I could never play in the Chinese Theatre. I have no feeling for it. It's a pretty sad situation to be rejected by Chinese because I'm 'too American' and by American producers because they prefer other races to act Chinese parts."
Finishing off her contract with Paramount, Anna May appeared in a series of B-movies in the late 1930's. This had however a positive effect - low-budget films had the advantage that they could be bolder than the big-budget films. Anna May was offered non-stereotypical roles, praised by the Chinese American press for its positive portrayal of the Chinese.
Among these films her roles as Lan Ying Lin in Daughter of Shanghai (1937) and Dr. Mary Ling (she plays a surgeon) in King of Chinatown (1939) are worth mentioning.
During the WWII years, Anna May put her Hollywood career on ice to engage in support of the Chinese Struggle against Japan. She made two anti-Japanese propagande film during this period, Lady from Chungking (1942) and Bombs Over Burma (1943). She donated her salary to United China Relief. Her performances in these films got great reviews, even though the films themselves were considered poor.
Later in life, Anna May didn't appear in many films. She invested in real estate and owned a lot of Hollywood properties, and between the late 1940's and 1956 she served as an apartment house manager before moving in with her brother in Santa Monica.
In 1951 Anna May starred in a detective TV-series, especially written for her, called The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong (names after her birth name). She plays an art collector who gets involved in adventures and mysteries.
There are no known copies of the show in existence.
After the detective series, Anna May's health began to decline, and in late 1953 she suffered an internal hemorrhage, probably caused by heavy drinking and financial worries.
In 1956 Anna May hosted one of the first American documentaries on China, using footage from her 1936 China tour. She also did guest appearances on Adventure in Paradise, The Barbara Stanwyck Show and The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp.
1960 was the year of Anna May Wong's last appearance in a motion picture. The film was a thriller drama called Portrait in Black, and starred Lana Turner and Anthony Quinn.
In 1961 Anna May Wong suffered a heart attack in her home at Santa Monica. Her cremated remains were buried in her mother's grave, who had died in a car accident in 1930.
In 1961 Anna May Wong suffered a heart attack in her home at Santa Monica. Her cremated remains were buried in her mother's grave, who had died in a car accident in 1930.
She was never married. When she in 1936 was asked if she planned to ever get married, she answered:
"No, I am wedded to my art."
Remember now to send a thought to the passionate Anna May Wong every time you hear These Foolish Things. And turn up the volume!
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Douglas Fairbanks book
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Since I'm a part of this young Internet generation, I simply had to google these guys. First I came over their IMDb profiles (written by each other, how cute), and then found my way to their blog Two Modern Guys in Classic Hollywood. Candy!

And that's were I get to the Douglas Fairbanks part of this ordeal - they obviously not too long time ago write a biography about Douglas Fairbanks (names quite simply "Douglas Fairbanks"), and before that Jeffrey Vance has written the biographies "Chaplin: Genius of Cinema", "Buster Keaton Remembered" and "Harold Lloyd: Master Comedian". (Take a look at their short presentation text at the bottom of their blog, fascinating. How do you become a film historian when you're just a little lass from Sweden?)
My point is: How can that book (and the others, for that matter) be anything but totally awesome? I just ordered Mick Lasalle's honoured book "Complicated Women: Sex and Power in Pre-Code Hollywood" - but I guess my next order will be something Vance/Maietta related.
Here's a trailer I snatched from their blog:
Don't Tom Cruise look awefully plastic? And why the Backstreet Boys haircut? The pretty faces of United Artists are probably gone forever...
Labels:
about Lolita,
Douglas Fairbanks Sr,
litterature
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Poll's closed # 9
A long, long time ago...
... I had this poll about who was your favourite on-screen swordsman. I just realized that I never published the results! So, here they are:
The greatest loss was Henry Daniell's, with only one vote. He thanks that one voter, and tries to kill Errol Flynn out of jealousy.

Douglas Fairbanks Sr only got two votes, but he is a proud man - he won't show himself weak with a beautiful Billie Dove in his arms.

Claude Rains really thought that he would get more than three votes, and lost his sword in his despair. (Okay, I just couldn't find a picture of him fencing - so blame me!)

Tyrone Power got a well-deserved third place with four votes, and shows off with his fencing skills in his favourite costume. (I bet no one thought that Tyrone wouldn't make it into the top-three, huh?)

Even though he almost always played villains, Basil Rathbone still fixed the second place with five votes. And why not, when he is so inspired that he practises at home?

With no less than 16 votes, Errol Flynn was the obvious winner of this contest. Look how satisfied he is!

Friday, April 17, 2009
Film books from 1920
My aunt found these film books from 1920 in her country house. They belonged to her husbands uncle, who passed away some years ago. She instantly thought of me and gave them to me. They're real treasures! I'm so thrilled. They're in Swedish, but a lot of Hollywood stars drape the pages of the books. I thought I'd share with you!

Here they are - Filmjournalen (The Film Journal) 1920 and Filmen (The film) from the same year. On the front of Filmen you see Swedish Actress Mary Johnson. She appeared as Elsalill in Sir Arne's Treasure (Herr Arnes Pengar), a film from 1919 by Swedish director Mauritz Stiller, who brought Greta Garbo to America in 1925.
Mary Johnson later made some films in Germany, and married the German silent star Rudolf Klein-Rogge.

On this page you see an article about the dangers actors are put through while shooting some films, they really earn their money! You can see Douglas Fairbanks Sr climbing a wall, and Olive Thomas at the top stating "And then they claim that shooting a film is so easy" while taming a bull.

Two Swedish profiles - actor Lars Hanson and director Victor Sjöström (Körkarlen or The Phantom Carriage, 1921), who would be successful in America working with Lon Chaney Sr among others. Lars Hanson starred opposite Lillian Gish in The Wind (1928).

"The audience's favourites" reads the head line. Among others we have:
Wallace Reid - Wallie is born in St. Louis and was in the film industry in the olden days of Vitagraph. And he has also been a newspaper man, before becoming the famous character actor he is today.
John Barrymore - "The Winnerstrand of the film" he was named, when he for the first time appeared for the Swedish audience in "Amatörtjuven" (Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman, 1917) and won an incontestable success.
Mary Pickford - "All the world's Mary", America's most popular and lovable actress, that the Swedish audience only have heard about, but this season gets the opportunity to familiarize themselves with in Stockholm's newest ans biggest film theatre, Palladium.
Charles Chaplin - No one of the artists of the film is as controversial as Chaplin, but no one will deny, that he always gets the laughers on his side.
Marguerite Clark - A delightful little creature, with big brown child eyes and bushy brown hair - one of the America's as well as Europe's most celebrated stars in the film market.

On the right page the head line reads "Thomas H. Ince directing Dorothy Dalton."
[The mysterious death of Thomas Ince was an interesting story. He died on William Randolph Hearst's yacht in 1924. The circumstances of his death were never fully revealed by the crew, that consisted of W.R. Hearst, his wife Marion Davies, Charles Chaplin, author Elinor Glyn and others. One theory is that Ince was shot by Hearst, who thought he had aimed on Chaplin who had been having an affair with Marion Davies.
That theory is the plot of Peter Bogdanovich's film The Cat's Meow (2001), with Kirsten Dunst as Marion Davies, Eddie Izzard as Chaplin and Cary Elwes as Ince. Pretty good film, actually.]

Douglas Fairbanks raising money for America's war debts - five million dollars so far. (I wrote about his and his wife Mary Pickford's WWII efforts in this post.)

Mabel Normand, Mae Marsh, Marguerite Clark and Bessie Love on the same page!

An article called "The adaptability of the scenic art", showing pictures of Marguerite Clark, Juanita Hansen, Louise Glaume, Theda Bara and Mary Pickford.

Violet Mercereau. Born in New York 1897. Her father was a Frenchman and the mother English. Her scenic course started as early as when she was seven years old in a child role, which she played with a charm, that after that never left her. Norma Talmadge takes care of her garden with the same interest she has for film acting.

"The film kiss demands grace and refinement to be beautiful. Eugene O'Brien and Norma Talmadge have enough of those products to teach others."
"For your information, this happy young couple is Harry Browne and Constance Talmadge."
"Regretfully the name of the film hero above is unknown to us. But it doesn't matter: the person that denies Norma a kiss is not worth being remembered."
A Christmas competition called "Where did they go?". Can you guess who the cut out actors are?
Charles Chaplin on the left, a caricature of Asta Nielsen, Die Asta, to the right. (Remember her from my post on The Abyss from 1910? You can see her provocative dance in my post on the film here!)

Here they are - Filmjournalen (The Film Journal) 1920 and Filmen (The film) from the same year. On the front of Filmen you see Swedish Actress Mary Johnson. She appeared as Elsalill in Sir Arne's Treasure (Herr Arnes Pengar), a film from 1919 by Swedish director Mauritz Stiller, who brought Greta Garbo to America in 1925.
Mary Johnson later made some films in Germany, and married the German silent star Rudolf Klein-Rogge.

On this page you see an article about the dangers actors are put through while shooting some films, they really earn their money! You can see Douglas Fairbanks Sr climbing a wall, and Olive Thomas at the top stating "And then they claim that shooting a film is so easy" while taming a bull.

Two Swedish profiles - actor Lars Hanson and director Victor Sjöström (Körkarlen or The Phantom Carriage, 1921), who would be successful in America working with Lon Chaney Sr among others. Lars Hanson starred opposite Lillian Gish in The Wind (1928).

"The audience's favourites" reads the head line. Among others we have:
Wallace Reid - Wallie is born in St. Louis and was in the film industry in the olden days of Vitagraph. And he has also been a newspaper man, before becoming the famous character actor he is today.
John Barrymore - "The Winnerstrand of the film" he was named, when he for the first time appeared for the Swedish audience in "Amatörtjuven" (Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman, 1917) and won an incontestable success.
Mary Pickford - "All the world's Mary", America's most popular and lovable actress, that the Swedish audience only have heard about, but this season gets the opportunity to familiarize themselves with in Stockholm's newest ans biggest film theatre, Palladium.
Charles Chaplin - No one of the artists of the film is as controversial as Chaplin, but no one will deny, that he always gets the laughers on his side.
Marguerite Clark - A delightful little creature, with big brown child eyes and bushy brown hair - one of the America's as well as Europe's most celebrated stars in the film market.

A film director at work
"Put more feelings into it!" "No! No! Be natural!" "That's good, keep that position!"
Thomas Ince have given us many enjoyable moments.
Thomas Ince have given us many enjoyable moments.
On the right page the head line reads "Thomas H. Ince directing Dorothy Dalton."
[The mysterious death of Thomas Ince was an interesting story. He died on William Randolph Hearst's yacht in 1924. The circumstances of his death were never fully revealed by the crew, that consisted of W.R. Hearst, his wife Marion Davies, Charles Chaplin, author Elinor Glyn and others. One theory is that Ince was shot by Hearst, who thought he had aimed on Chaplin who had been having an affair with Marion Davies.
That theory is the plot of Peter Bogdanovich's film The Cat's Meow (2001), with Kirsten Dunst as Marion Davies, Eddie Izzard as Chaplin and Cary Elwes as Ince. Pretty good film, actually.]

Douglas Fairbanks raising money for America's war debts - five million dollars so far. (I wrote about his and his wife Mary Pickford's WWII efforts in this post.)

Mabel Normand, Mae Marsh, Marguerite Clark and Bessie Love on the same page!

An article called "The adaptability of the scenic art", showing pictures of Marguerite Clark, Juanita Hansen, Louise Glaume, Theda Bara and Mary Pickford.

Violet Mercereau. Born in New York 1897. Her father was a Frenchman and the mother English. Her scenic course started as early as when she was seven years old in a child role, which she played with a charm, that after that never left her. Norma Talmadge takes care of her garden with the same interest she has for film acting.

"Is it you who betrayed me, Elsalill?"
The autumn's first Swedish premiere was Sir Arne's Treasure, Mauritz Stiller's great film adaption of Selma Lagerlöf's short story. The premiere took place at Röda Kvar [The Red Mill] in Stockholm, now the film is on a journey aorund Sweden. The leading roles are played by Mary Johnson as Elsalill and Richard Lund as Sir Archi. The picture displays the scene where Sir Archi finds out that Elsalill has betrayed him."The film kiss demands grace and refinement to be beautiful. Eugene O'Brien and Norma Talmadge have enough of those products to teach others."
"For your information, this happy young couple is Harry Browne and Constance Talmadge."
"Regretfully the name of the film hero above is unknown to us. But it doesn't matter: the person that denies Norma a kiss is not worth being remembered."


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