Showing posts with label Norma Talmadge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norma Talmadge. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2009

Smoking women - part 5

Now with a header!

Part 1
I'm sorry, guys - I didn't realize that I hadn't supplied you with any gorgeous, smoking women since June. That's just unforgivable.

Part five of my Smoking Women series is completed with a smashing new wallpaper of my own creation, depicting the German femme fatale Marlene Dietrich (smoking, of course).
Fetch necessary tools and enjoy the ride! (Now, was I just too disgusting there, or what..? Please say a prayer for me, because I don't.)

And you know the drill - click on the photos to enlarge them. Duh.


Ann Dvorak (1917-1979)
(Natural causes)

[It is usually pictures like these that make my bofriend unusually interested in my passion for classic cinema. He would lean over my shoulder and yell "side boob!".]

For some reason this magnificent actress gave up her Hollywood career, making her last film in 1951. I will mention her role as the sister with an incestuous relationship to Paul Muni in Scarface (1932) and her role as the drug addict mother in Three On a Match (1932), and if you haven't seen her in them - be very ashamed. "Oh-oh..."
Also, this picture says everything about why I smoke.
Funny quote about how to pronounce her name:

"My name is properly pronounced "vor'shack." The D remains silent. I have had quite a time with the name, having been called practically everything from Balzac to Bickelsrock."


Audrey Hepburn (1929-1993)
(Appendicular cancer)

The greatest fashion icon of the 1960's. Why can't I be tall, slim and rich?



Born in Bordeaux, I guess Mademoiselle Darrieux has fine wines mixed in her DNA, resulting in her astonishing beauty. She played opposite Charles Boyer in Max Ophüls' Madame de... (1953), a film I still find myself waiting impatiently to see.


Natalie Wood (1938-1981)
(Drowning)

Together in this picture with (no shit) Frank Sinatra, whom she made the war drama Kings Go Forth (1958) with. She died in late November 1981, at the age of 43, while sailing with her husband Robert Wagner and their friend Christopher Walken. She fell over board and drowned - according to some conspiracies she was murdered.



Heard of her? No? According to IMDb she only made two films in her career, including Thirteen Women (1932) [post], falling to her death in a trapeze act. Good looking woman, though. Can't find any date of death, so maybe she is 103 years old now?



Like Ingrid Bergman, Moreau is that kind of beauty who looks best with almost no make up at all. Cool gal.


Joan Bennett (1910-1990)
(Heart attack)

The younger sister of Constance Bennett made no less than five films for German director Fritz Lang, more than any other American actor or actress.



One of the coolest on-screen personas in motion picture history, I believe. (I have her autograph!)


Norma Talmadge (1893-1957)
(Stroke)

[Side boob!]
The first one to put her footprints on the cement outside Grauman's Chinese Theater in 1927. By accident.


Marlene Dietrich (1901-1992)
(Kidney failure)

Click on your screen resolution below, and get a form fitting wallpaper from ImageShack.



Monday, May 18, 2009

Forbidden art

I found this beautiful compilation of old film clips, forced to be cut out because of its erotic nature. Look at it - it is almost magical.






Today, May 18th, is also the day when silent star Norma Talmadge signed her footprints outside Grauman's Chinese Theatre in 1927, after having stepped in the wet concrete by mistake. As we all know by this time, a trend had been introduced.


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.



"Norma Talmadge is an exponent of refined and tasteful toilette luxuaries."



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.

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.


Douglas Fairbanks - look how strong he is!



The kiss on film

"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!)


"The Talmadge girls".


- "But, it is my wedding day..." Poor Constance Talmadge.



And last but not least - Mary Johnson for the third time in this post!


I hope you enjoyed my post. If I screwed up the translation you can just ask me if something is unclear! Have a nice weekend.