Noir Nook: Stranger than Fiction – Part 2 (Leon Ames and Ruth Roman)

Stranger than Fiction – Part 2
(Leon Ames and Ruth Roman)

“Truth is stranger than fiction,” Mark Twain once informed us, “but it is because fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities. Truth isn’t.” 

This month’s Noir Nook serves up the next installment in my series that looks at “stranger than fiction” lives of actors and actresses from the noir era. This time around, I’m taking a look at two performers: Leon Ames and Ruth Roman.


Leon Ames

When you think of Leon Ames, do you envision the authoritative patriarch of the Smith clan in Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)? Or maybe Doris Day’s father in On Moonlight Bay (1951) and By the Light of the Silvery Moon (1953)? Not me. In my book, Ames’s standout roles were the calculating attorneys he played in two first-rate noirs, The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) and Angel Face (1953). He also contributed memorably to three additional films from the era: Lady in the Lake (1947), The Velvet Touch (1948), and Scene of the Crime (1949).

The Postman Always Rings Twice, Leon Ames and Hume Cronyn
The Postman Always Rings Twice, Leon Ames and Hume Cronyn

Away from the silver screen, Ames opened a Studio City Ford dealership in the mid-1940s that he later expanded into one of the largest automobile franchises in the west. It was this successful business that indirectly led to the actor’s real-life stranger than fiction encounter.

The incident began on the morning of February 12, 1964, when 21-year-old Lynn Wayne Benner – later described as handsome and “cool as a cucumber” – forced his way inside the Ames home, held the actor and his wife, Christine, at gunpoint, and demanded $50,000. Also held captive was a houseguest, Herbert Baumgarteker, who was visiting the Ames family. Ames later told reporters that he pretended to be sick, planning to try and grab Benner’s gun, but “then I realized that was silly.”

Instead, Ames played it safe and contacted Ralph Williams, the manager of his Encino dealership, instructing his employee to bring the money to his home. While they were waiting for Williams to arrive, Ames later recalled, Benner “drank six cups of coffee and he smoked all my cigarettes. [And my] bulldog just sat there licking the guy’s hands.”

Leon Ames Robbery

When Williams arrived with the money, Ames was bound with surgical tape and Benner locked Benner and Baumbarteker in the trunk of Ames’s car. Benner then drove off in his own car, with Christine Ames as a hostage. But he didn’t get far. Before arriving with the cash, Williams had tipped off a bank manager, who’d notified police, and Benner was stopped by police just a few blocks from the Ames house. Also arrested was Benner’s wife, Patricia Louise, who was waiting in a car nearby. In the vehicle with her was the Benners’s three-year-old daughter.

“I was frightened,” Christine Ames said later. “When he saw the police closing in, he pushed the gun into my side. I said, ‘Please don’t do that.’ He dropped it and put his hands up. . . . He didn’t look like the type at all. I told him so.”

Benner later pleaded guilty to the robbery-kidnapping and was sentenced to life in prison. His probation report indicated that Ames and his wife had promised to communicate with Benner in prison “in order to encourage him to become a useful citizen.”

By the way, a few hours after the traumatic incident came to an end, Leon Ames was able to make light of his experience, telling the press: “I’ve played a lot of these parts before.”


Ruth Roman

In the shadowy realm of noir, Ruth Roman is probably best known for her role as Farley Granger’s fiancée in Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train (1951), and the distaff half of a murderous married couple in The Window (1949). She also left her mark in several other noirs, including the Bette Davis starrer Beyond the Forest (1949) and Tomorrow is Another Day (1951).

Strangers on a Train, Ruth Roman
Strangers on a Train, Ruth Roman

But in the summer of 1956, Roman was on the pages of newspapers nationwide for more than just reviews for her movie performances. In July, she was traveling from Italy with her three-year-old son, Dickie, via the SS Andrea Doria luxury liner. On the evening of July 25th, Dickie was in bed in the family’s stateroom and Roman was reportedly dancing in the ship’s first-class lounge as the ship sailed through a thick fog. Suddenly, Roman later recalled, she “heard a big explosion, like a firecracker.” But it was no firecracker. The sound she heard was caused by a collision between the Andrea Doria and the MS Stockholm off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts. The Stockholm struck the Andrea Doria on its starboard side, causing the ship to list heavily and rendering many of its lifeboats inaccessible.  

Seeing smoke coming from the area near her cabin, Roman removed her high heels and found her way to her son, telling him that they were going on a picnic. Meanwhile, numerous boats and ships headed for the area to assist, including a United Fruit freighter, a Navy transport, and the SS Ile de France. With rescue efforts underway, Dickie was lowered into a lifeboat by a seaman, and Roman began climbing down a rope ladder – but when she was only halfway down, her son’s lifeboat pulled away. She was put on another lifeboat and wound up on the nearby Ile de France, while Dickie was taken to the Stockholm. The mother and son were reunited in New York; a total of 46 passengers and five crew died aboard the Andrea Doria – Roman and Dickie were among the 760 survivors.

Ruth Roman reunited with her son Dickie
Ruth Roman reunited with her son Dickie

And despite her frightening experience, Roman didn’t avoid shipboard travel – just four months later, she was aboard a Norwegian freighter called the Beranger, travelling with her soon-to-be husband, talent agent Bud Moss.

Stay tuned for the next entry in the Noir Nook’s look at noir performers with lives that were Stranger Than Fiction!

– Karen Burroughs Hannsberry for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Karen’s Noir Nook articles here.

Karen Burroughs Hannsberry is the author of the Shadows and Satin blog, which focuses on movies and performers from the film noir and pre-Code eras, and the editor-in-chief of The Dark Pages, a bimonthly newsletter devoted to all things film noir. Karen is also the author of two books on film noir – Femme Noir: The Bad Girls of Film and Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. You can follow Karen on Twitter at @TheDarkPages.
If you’re interested in learning more about Karen’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

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Monsters and Matinees: Horror films to Celebrate National Classic Movie Day

Horror films to Celebrate National Classic Movie Day

The “national day” trend of recent years can be fun. National Doughnut Day (June 5) is something I celebrate every day, but I do take advantage of doughnut specials offered for this day. National Go Barefoot Day (June 1) is a big no for me (I always wear my socks), but you can go ahead and take off yours if you must.

Then there’s National Classic Movie Day (May 16), a date that has been gaining international recognition over the past few years since it was created by Classic Movie Blog Association founder Rick Armstrong. While I celebrate classic movies daily, this is a great excuse to talk about them with friends who don’t share my enthusiasm and share suggestions of my favorites.

As you would expect, many of the films I see are classic horror. I don’t watch much that’s new because they are too graphic, too creepy, too realistic for me. I believe in the evil of possessed dolls like Annabelle and haunted houses like the Conjuring franchise because they’re based on true events! Devils and exorcisms scare the heck out of me – don’t event talk about them. (For the record, I don’t watch the masterful 1973 William Friedkin film The Exorcist either.) I have tried to watch The Curse of La Llorona because a sequel was filmed recently in my hometown of Buffalo, but the creepy trailer is too much for me.

One of the giant ants towers over people in Them!, one of the greatest of the big-bug movies.

Others can celebrate those newer films for National Horror Movie Day on Oct. 23, a date that is visionary horror director Sam Raimi’s birthday and works as a lead-up to Halloween. Meanwhile, I will share the classic horror films that are a part of my DNA for National Classic Movie Day.

* * * * *

Where did my preoccupation with classic horror movies come from? There’s the family “legend” that my parents saw a Peter CushingChristopher Lee film when Mom was pregnant with me. They always joked that’s why I was so obsessed with horror films growing up. While that’s a fun story, that’s not why.

Nothing gets the imagination going like the giant crab attack in Mysterious Island.

We know our movie interests are often related to what we watched with our family growing up. Well, Dad fed me a steady diet of horror movies. Universal Monsters, science-fiction films and giant creatures were my early education. While my parents were careful of what I watched (I will always remember not being allowed to see Mario Bava’s Black Sunday, which in retrospect was a good thing) they understood these films spurred my imagination.

There were two qualities about our favorite films: they had low budgets and giant creatures. Give us giant everything! Nothing was sacred or safe from becoming super-sized, usually from a well-meaning scientist trying to help humanity or nuclear testing.

The giant title creature of my nightmares approaches a house in Tarantula.

A benevolent scientist trying to solve world hunger created the giant arachnid In Tarantula (1955), our all-time favorite. No matter how many times we watched it (too numerous to remember), Dad always reminded me to look for those few seconds when Clint Eastwood appeared as the jet pilot. He loved to share that trivia. Tarantula gave me nightmares as a kid that a house-sized arachnid would crush our home, but I still watched – as I do today.

Then there was Ray Harryhausen’s giant octopus in It Came from Beneath the Sea (1955). The beast was so large that it could wrap itself around the Golden Gate Bridge as thousands ran to escape its lengthy tentacles. Not everyone succeeded.

It was exciting to watch the giant ants in Them!. That high-pitched sound signaling they were nearby remains effective. More trivia: the fact that James Whitmore had Buffalo connections was always mentioned. (He was born in White Plains, N.Y., but went to school here so that counts.)

The attention-grabbing (not for a good reason) big hand in Attack of the 50-Foot Woman.

The giant people movies weren’t as interesting as the big-bug films but we watched. The Amazing Colossal Man (1957) reminded me too much of Mr. Clean in TV commercials. Those pedicured paper-mache hands of the title character in Attack of the 50-Foot Woman (1958) aren’t the greatest, but they are attention grabbing.

The ultimate Ruberto family favorite that has been passed down for generations is Mysterious Island (1961). This adaptation of the Jules Verne novel has the unforgettable giant triumvirate of an oversized crab, chicken and bees. One after another they would appear on screen, delighting us while they threatened the characters. We knew the film so well that we would look at each other in anticipation right before the big creatures appeared. The thought of being caught in the crab’s claw still gives me chills. And I must admit to devising plans to escape from a giant honeycomb – because you just never know when you’ll need to do that.

On the wall in my home are two prized possessions: My Mysterious Island DVD cover autographed by Ray Harryhausen and the drawing done by a nephew of us watching the film.

We were excited to introduce my twin nephews to “Mysterious Island” and it became a family weekend tradition. Years later, we introduced their kids to the film. One nephew drew a picture of the DVD cover that I still have hanging on a wall. His younger brother, who recently graduated college, still mentions “the giant crab” movie and smiles. In a time when CGI controls our movies – and our imaginations – that speaks volumes about the enduring power of the classics.

* * * * *

Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee fight the terror aboard The Horror Express.

For National Classic Movie Day, here are three topics worth exploring.

Watch a Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee collaboration. While they individually starred in an impressive 200-plus movies, it was the 22 films Cushing and Lee teamed up in that made them horror icons. Begin at the beginning with Curse of Frankenstein (1957). It was their first collaboration and the first in a string of four eclectic films they made over two years for Hammer, all directed by Terence Fisher: Curse of Frankenstein, Horror of Dracula (1958), Hound of the Baskervilles (1959) and The Mummy (1959). They are all well worth watching. I also recommend Horror Express (1972), a fun movie with a morbid sense of humor that finds Cushing and Lee working together (at times) to fend off the terror on a train. (There will be brain surgery and one of my favorite film quotes: “The brain has been drained. The memory removed like chalk from a blackboard.”)

Vincent Price fights off the zombie/vampires in Last Man on Earth, based on a Richard Matheson novel.

Take your pick of a Vincent Price film – or two. Price may be synonymous with horror, but his roles were surprisingly varied. Watch him as the wronged sculptor going to extremes to replicate his Marie Antoinette in House of Wax (1953, see it in 3D if possible); as the millionaire having fun in William Castle’s entertaining House on Haunted Hill (1959); and the sympathetic main character in the tragic vampire/zombie film The Last Man on Earth (1964). Finally, you may be surprised to learn that Price was a Universal monster, playing the title character in The Invisible Man Returns (1940).

Michael Redgrave and friend in a creepy segment from the horror anthology Dead of Night.

Get more with an anthology. Why watch one movie when you can get three or more in the same film that are boosted with impressive star power? Twice Told Tales (1963) showcases three short stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Black Sabbath (1963) is a three-part anthology from horror master Mario Bava with Boris Karloff. Twice Told Tales (1963) has three short stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The Amicus film The House That Dripped Blood (1971) shares the fate of inhabitants of a British cottage and stars Cushing and Lee. In Dead of Night (1945), a man insists he knows the strangers in an old house who each has a story to tell. The most famous of the tales is the unforgettable The Ventriloquist’s Dummy, starring Michael Redgrave and his creepy doll.

 Toni Ruberto for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Toni’s Monsters and Matinees articles here.

Toni Ruberto, born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., is an editor and writer at The Buffalo News. She shares her love for classic movies in her blog, Watching Forever and is a member and board chair of the Classic Movie Blog Association. Toni was the president of the former Buffalo chapter of TCM Backlot and led the offshoot group, Buffalo Classic Movie Buffs. She is proud to have put Buffalo and its glorious old movie palaces in the spotlight as the inaugural winner of the TCM in Your Hometown contest. You can find Toni on Twitter at @toniruberto or on Bluesky at @watchingforever.bsky.social

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Silver Screen Standards: Courage and Cowardice in High Noon (1952)

Courage and Cowardice in High Noon (1952)

They say good help is hard to find, but Gary Cooper’s frontier marshal in High Noon (1952) experiences a life and death example of how difficult it is to get people to show up for you, even when it’s in their own best interest to do so. The iconic Western has long provoked debate about its political message, which originated in the era of McCarthyism and screenwriter Carl Foreman’s confrontation with the House Un-American Activities Committee, and most fans of the Western genre already know that John Wayne and Howard Hawks so disliked the themes of High Noon that they made Rio Bravo (1959) as a direct rebuttal. Despite such well-noted disapproval, High Noon has aged beautifully and still offers a powerful narrative about how willingly “good” people abandon their obligations to one another when standing up means facing certain danger. It asks us, as viewers, to examine our own commitment to our principles and community and honestly consider what we would do if Will Kane came knocking on our doors to ask us for help in a desperate time.

High Noon wedding
We first see Will Kane (Gary Cooper) and Amy (Grace Kelly) at their wedding, but their happiness will not last even for an hour.

Cooper plays the aging Marshal Will Kane, looking rather worse for wear and preparing to hang up his gun as he weds a much younger Quaker bride, Amy (Grace Kelly), on a hot Sunday morning in the frontier town of Hadleyville. News comes that a dangerous outlaw, Frank Miller (Ian MacDonald), is out of prison and arriving on the noon train that very day to avenge himself against Kane and everyone else he blames for his arrest. Kane’s friends urge him to leave town with Amy immediately, but Kane realizes that they will never be safe as long as Miller has a score to settle, and he returns to town with hope of raising the local men to stand with him against Miller’s violent gang. Unfortunately, nobody seems to share Kane’s concerns, and as noon draws near it looks like Kane will have to stand alone against four ruthless killers.

High Noon, Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly
When newlyweds leave town in order to escape before the noon train brings Frank Miller, the decision doesn’t sit well with Kane.

The narrative probes the nature of courage and cowardice through Kane’s interactions with his fellow citizens, showing us different facets of both traits. Kane himself is no glib action hero; he is a man past his prime, ready for peace and family life, and all too aware of the odds against him in an unfair fight against Miller’s gang. When he makes out his will just before noon, it’s clear that he does not expect to survive the hour, but that doesn’t stop him from doing what he feels is both necessary and right, even though the people he thought were his friends have abandoned him. His brash, ambitious deputy, Harvey (Lloyd Bridges), would rather fight with Kane than help him, and his mentor, Martin (Lon Chaney Jr.), pleads age and arthritis as his excuse. The same friends who stood with Kane at his wedding mere minutes before betray him. Sam Fuller (Harry Morgan) makes his wife lie to Kane about being at home, while the mayor (Thomas Mitchell) first praises Kane and then condemns him when Kane disrupts the Sunday morning church service looking for volunteers. Some of the townspeople at the church argue on Kane’s behalf, but none of them actually join him, and his only successful recruit eventually backs out when no other volunteers appear. They have plenty of excuses for their behavior, and they point a lot of fingers, but they waste Kane’s precious minutes with their useless words. Only a few individuals show themselves to be worthy of Kane’s regard, even if they are the least suited to the task at hand. A grizzled, half-blind drunk and a teenager both beg Kane to let them help, but Kane knows neither of them would survive the fight. Kane’s former lover, Helen (Katy Jurado), can’t protect him, but she despises the town for its cowardice and urges Amy to fight for her man. Luckily for Kane, Amy ultimately takes Helen’s advice, even though her Quaker faith opposes violence.

High Noon, Katy Jurado and Lloyd Bridges
Helen (Katy Jurado) doesn’t think much of her current lover, Harvey (Lloyd Bridges), especially when he behaves childishly about Kane.

The citizens of Hadleyville offer all kinds of justifications for their cowardice, but the most specious is that this is not their fight, that it’s a private matter between Kane and Miller that doesn’t concern them. We know from the church debate that Miller’s gang once made Hadleyville unsafe for women and children, and we see at the train depot at the very beginning that men also fear Miller’s lackeys. Like Helen, we viewers can see that the town’s failure to support Kane now will mean the collapse of the whole community, with Miller and his friends returning the town to a violent, drunken state of chaos where lawless men are free to wreak havoc. The townspeople obey Miller’s will in advance out of fear that he will turn his wrath on them; they see him as an unbeatable strong man with armed thugs to do his bidding, and they refuse to risk their immediate safety to protect Kane or their own long-term survival. Although he is a marshal, Kane never presents himself as a figure of unquestionable authority just because he wears a badge. He does not issue commands because he understands himself to be a public servant and a member of the community, and Kane’s ethical perspective of the law also means that he cannot preempt it by arresting Miller’s gang before they actually commit any crimes. Over the course of the film, which unfolds in real time as the omnipresent clocks tick toward noon, Kane’s increasingly haggard looks convey not only his grief at facing death but his disillusionment as he comes to realize how little his supposed friends are willing to risk to help him or save themselves from a grim future under Miller’s rule. Because of their cowardice, High Noon has one of the unhappiest happy endings you’ll ever see in a film, but it challenges us to be better than the people of Hadleyville when the call for help comes to us, lest we betray the ideals we claim to cherish and the people who most embody them. If we let the Will Kanes of our own time be gunned down, there will be no one left to protect us when we inevitably become targets of the same violent men.

High Noon, Lon Chaney and Gary Cooper
Kane hopes that his lifelong friend and father figure, Martin (Lon Chaney Jr.), will offer him useful assistance, but Martin is bitterly disillusioned.

As a result of his refusal to cooperate with HUAC officials, screenwriter Carl Foreman was blacklisted in Hollywood and left the United States for England, where he wrote a screenplay draft for The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957). He later wrote and produced The Key (1958), The Guns of Navarone (1961), and Mackenna’s Gold (1969). Gary Cooper won the Oscar for Best Actor for his performance as Will Kane, and the picture also won Academy Awards for Editing, Score, and Song. For more from director Fred Zinnemann, see From Here to Eternity (1953), Oklahoma! (1955), and A Man for All Seasons (1966). If you appreciate the way composer Dimitri Tiomkin uses the theme song, with lyrics sung by Tex Ritter, throughout the picture, listen to his other Western scores in Red River (1948), Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), and Rio Bravo (1959). High Noon is often included in lists of revisionist and psychological Westerns, so try pairing it with other, similarly thoughtful films like The Ox-Bow Incident (1943), The Gunfighter (1950), Shane (1953), or 3:10 to Yuma (1957).

— Jennifer Garlen for Classic Movie Hub

Jennifer Garlen pens our monthly Silver Screen Standards column. You can read all of Jennifer’s Silver Screen Standards articles here.

Jennifer is a former college professor with a PhD in English Literature and a lifelong obsession with film. She writes about classic movies at her blog, Virtual Virago, and presents classic film programs for lifetime learning groups and retirement communities. She’s the author of Beyond Casablanca: 100 Classic Movies Worth Watching and its sequel, Beyond Casablanca II: 101 Classic Movies Worth Watching, and she is also the co-editor of two books about the works of Jim Henson.

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Western RoundUp: Final Resting Places, Western Filmmakers

Final Resting Places

It’s time for another of my periodic tributes to Western filmmakers through sharing visits to their final resting places.

This is one of the ways I reflect on what each person’s work has contributed to the Western genre, giving all of us many happy hours of entertainment.

On Easter Sunday this year I paid a visit to Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills, where by pure chance I stumbled across the grave of the great Western screenwriter Borden Chase.  A special plaque on a nearby wall called my attention to his gravesite.

Borden Chase 1

Borden Chase wrote the screenplays for some of the greatest Westerns ever made, including Red River (1948), Winchester ’73 (1950), Bend of the River (1952), and The Far Country (1954). I’ve written about many of his films here over the years, including listing Bend of the River as one of my all-time favorite Westerns in my very first post here, back in 2018. I also wrote about a TCM Classic Film Festival screening of Winchester ’73 in 2019.

Borden Chase 2

Actor David Carradine is also at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills. His entire family has quite a legacy in Westerns, including his father John appearing in John Ford’s classic Stagecoach (1939). David’s Western work included appearing with his brothers Keith and Robert in The Long Riders (1980), in which David played Cole Younger. Robert, who was a regular guest at the Lone Pine Film Festival, sadly passed away earlier this year.

David Carradine

Another actor who played Cole Younger was Frank Lovejoy, who starred in the title role in Cole Younger, Gunfighter (1958).  Lovejoy, a prominent radio actor along with starring in movies, also appeared in the Westerns Black Bart (1948) and The Charge at Feather River (1953). Sadly, Lovejoy was only 50 when he died unexpectedly of a heart attack. He’s buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California, alongside his wife, actress Joan Banks. Joan appeared in a small handful of TV Western episodes.

Frank Lovejoy

Another highly regarded screenwriter, Nunnally Johnson, whose remains are interred at Westwood Village Memorial Park, wrote several Westerns, including Jesse James (1939), Along Came Jones (1945), and The Gunfighter (1950).

Johnson’s wife Dorris Bowdon, who is memorialized at his final resting place, had a brief screen career, including appearing in three John Ford films, one of which was The Grapes of Wrath (1940). 

The Grapes of Wrath was written by Bowdon’s husband and costarred David Carradine’s father John.  Bowdon and Carradine were also both in Ford’s Revolutionary War era Drums Along the Mohawk (1939), set on the New York frontier. As readers of past Final Resting Places columns may have noticed, there are endless connections to be found among the classic era filmmakers remembered here.

Nunnally Johnson, Dorris Bowdon

Tyrone Power’s leading lady in Jesse James (1939), written by Nunnally Johnson, was Nancy Kelly; she is memorialized on a plaque at Westwood Village Memorial Park. Kelly won a Tony Award for the Broadway production of The Bad Seed (1955) and was the older sister of Jack Kelly, who starred as Bart Maverick on TV’s Maverick

Nancy Kelly Closeup

Robert Lowery – who coincidentally made at least one film with Nancy Kelly — was a busy working actor for three decades ahead of his early passing in 1971, aged 58.  Lowery appeared in numerous “B” Westerns alongside stars such as Don “Red” Barry and “Wild Bill” Elliott, including I Shot Billy the Kid (1950) and The Homesteaders (1953). Later in his career Lowery appeared in some of the ‘60s “Geezer Westerns” produced by A.C. Lyles, who I wrote about in a column last year. Robert Lowery is buried at Valhalla Memorial Park in North Hollywood, California.

Robert Lowery

Another veteran of Lyles’ “Geezer Westerns” was Bill Williams, who is buried at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills under his real name, Herman A. W. Katt.  Williams had a long career in Westerns, including The Cariboo Trail (1950), a Randolph Scott film which I wrote about here 2020. He met his wife, actress Barbara Hale, when they filmed the “B” Western West of the Pecos (1945), which starred a young Robert Mitchum.

Bill Williams, Barbara Hale

As of my last visit to Forest Lawn, Barbara Hale’s gravesite alongside her husband was unmarked, as seen above.  Hale, best known as a star of TV’s Perry Mason, appeared in many Westerns, including The Lone Hand (1953) with Joel McCrea, which I wrote about here after it was shown at McCrea Ranch in 2023.  Williams and Hale’s three children include actor William Katt (The Greatest American Hero).

In 2019 I included Hale’s Perry Mason costar William Talman in my column on “Unexpected Western Leads” thanks to his role in the enjoyable Two-Gun Lady (1955), which costarred Peggie Castle and Marie Windsor.  Talman also appeared with Dana Andrews in Smoke Signal (1955).

William Talman

Our final visit in this column honors character actor Griff Barnett, whose film career began with the serial The Lone Ranger (1938). Over the course of his 20-year career Barnett appeared in a great many Westerns of all types, with favorites including Cattle Drive (1951) and The Duel at Silver Creek (1952). His 1954 appearance in a Lone Ranger TV episode brought his career rather “full circle”!  Barnett is buried at Rose Hills Memorial Park in Whittier, California.

Griff Barnett

For additional photos of the burial places of Western filmmakers, please visit my tribute columns from May 2019, February 2022, November 2, 2022, November 29, 2022, April 2023, November 2023, March 2024, July 2024, February 2025, and November 2025.

– Laura Grieve for Classic Movie Hub

Laura can be found at her blog, Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings, where she’s been writing about movies since 2005, and on Twitter at @LaurasMiscMovie. A lifelong film fan, Laura loves the classics including Disney, Film Noir, Musicals, and Westerns.  She regularly covers Southern California classic film festivals.  Laura will scribe on all things western at the ‘Western RoundUp’ for CMH.

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Silents are Golden: A Closer Look At The Wind (1928)

A Closer Look At The Wind (1928)

Lillian Gish The Wind
Lillian Gish, The Wind

In 1927, cinema was famously experiencing a time of transition from the silent to talkies, kickstarted by the popularity of Al Jolson’s The Jazz Singer (1927). Directors and stars would soon be faced with a decision, whether deliberate or inadvertent: which silent would be their last before the move to recorded sound? Would they be lucky enough to make a final silent film worthy of praise in that uncertain time? In Lillian Gish’s case her final silent did not seem like a triumph at first, thanks to being a flop at the box office in spite of some critical praise. But its reputation would grow steadily over time, and today it’s widely considered one of the great masterpieces of the late 1920s.

Lillian Gish The Wind

One of the silent era’s top American actresses, Gish had left the stage in 1912 to act in Biograph films along with her sister Dorothy. The two would work closely with director D.W. Griffith for a number of years, especially the dedicated and driven Lillian, who some would consider Griffith’s “muse.” As the industry began to change in the 1920s, Gish would star in The White Sister (1923) for Metro, which soon became part of the brand-new MGM studio. She would remain with the prestigious MGM until the end of the silent era.

Gish had considerable influence on her pictures at MGM, being known for her dedication to artistry. She would even turn down a $1 million-per-picture deal in favor of getting a percentage of film profits, wanting to ensure more of the budget would go towards hiring talented writers and actors. It was her idea to make The Wind, based on a dramatic novel by Dorothy Scarborough. It told the story of a young woman who goes to live on a ranch in the Texas plains that’s plagued with constant wind. She marries a Texan out of necessity and also fends off advances from a different man, all while the blasting wind slowly drives her mad. The gritty setting and elements of psychological horror excited Gish’s imagination, and The Wind would go into production in late April of 1927.

Lillian Gish on location
Lillian on location.

The distinguished Swedish director Victor Sjöström was hand-picked by Gish for the new project. She had previously worked with him on The Scarlet Letter (1926) and had been impressed by his meticulous nature and encouragement of subtle acting. One of her co-stars was be Lars Hansen, another Swedish import who was also a co-star from The Scarlet Letter–The Wind was very much a reunion of several fine talents. The Australian-born Dorothy Cumming and frequent screen villain Montagu Love rounded out the rest of the cast.

Lillian Gish and Lars Hanson in The Wind (1928)
Lillian Gish and Lars Hanson.

Much of the film was shot in the Mojave desert, which even in the spring was growing unbearably hot. By the time shooting ended in late June temps were nearing 120 degrees and the completed film reels had to be frozen to keep the coating from melting. Gish would remember the shoot as the most difficult one she had ever experienced, even more difficult than the icy river scenes in Way Down East (1920). Crewmembers had to wear tall boots to guard against rattlesnakes and goggles to protect their eyes from blowing sand. But the actors were not always so lucky. To simulate the blasting Texas winds, eight airplane propellers were brought in and sawdust and pots of sulphur helped add to the illusion of billowing sand. Gish recalled the sulphur nearly ruining her hair and being constantly worried about getting blinded by blowing debris.

Lillian Gish The Wind

Fortunately, all the hardships resulted in a stunningly memorable film. Sjöström magnificently blended the psychological aspects of the drama with the film’s harsh natural surroundings and rustic buildings. The wind is as much of a character as Letty or Lars Hansen’s Lige, its relentless blasts echoing the characters’ inner turmoils and desires. The exceptionally strong “norther” wind is represented by a ghostly horse during the film’s most dramatic moments, an effect that can be nearly sublime.

Lillian Gish The Wind 3

Gish, of course, handled the tragic aspects of the story with her renowned skill. In some scenes, such as a frightening moment where she peers through a window, her emotions were conveyed entirely through her eyes. These skills were well-matched with Sjöström’s thoughtful “show, don’t tell” touches, such as a scene where different shots show Letty and Lige’s feet pacing the floor just before a dramatic moment.

One bit of trivia about The Wind turned out to be folklore. Gish would always recall that they filmed an ending that was faithful to the novel, showing the heroine running out into the sandstorm and being whirled away by the wind. She would say that MGM insisted on shooting a happier ending, certain that audiences would be turned off. Apparently no such tragic ending was actually shot, possibly pointing to a lapse in Gish’s memory. In any case, the happier ending may seem trite at first glance but may have been considered more modern at the time, if a little cliched.

Lillian Gish The Wind 4

The Wind received a decent amount of critical praise but produced little box office luster in the U.S. Most audiences were already intrigued by the new talkies and silents were starting to look passé. Gish would leave MGM after The Wind’s financial disappointment and in subsequent years she would start to favor the stage over the movies. But her masterpiece would truly stand the test of time. We know today that the late 1920s produced some of the era’s finest silent films, and while it would take many years for that fact to be recognized, The Wind is now considered an unmissable highlight of the silent era. Lillian was–and likely still is–justly proud.

–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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Monsters and Matinees: Diving into ‘The Monster That Challenged the World’

Diving into ‘The Monster That Challenged the World’

Oh, the horrors of 1950s B-movies. And I’m not talking scary good, but scary bad.

So many of the creative ideas for monsters were never realized because of low budgets and ridiculously short shooting schedules. Viewers accept that the creatures in these films might look cheap and even laughable, perhaps because that’s considered part of the charm.

But sometimes a low-budget creature can be interesting enough to grab your attention. That’s what happened when I saw photos of the title creature in The Monster That Challenged the World (1957).

The creature rises from the ocean in The Monster That Challenged the World.

It was a giant slug with two big eyes and was surprisingly intriguing. I can’t put my finger on why it looked interesting instead of cheap or ridiculous, but it did. So I went with my gut, watched the film and wasn’t disappointed. Even the writing surprised me in a good way with a touch of humor, characters with some depth and the many tropes we love from ‘50s horror films.

The Monster That Challenged the World follows the horror B-movie formula: An opening narration to set the scene, some type of research/experiments, natural disaster, mysterious deaths and a plucky group of officials and townsfolk who will save the world. Lest not forget grand proclamations which, in this film, include “I’ve never seen anything like this!” and my favorite, “From the moment they’re born, they’re hungry!!” Cue the dramatic music and the warning for humanity. This is why we love these films.

That opening voice-over is usually done by a deep-voiced narrator who holds our attention with his serious tone. Not here. This guy speaks in an odd monotone like a school principal making an announcement on the loudspeaker. By the end of the film, I realized the deadpan tone may have been on purpose since the movie has an unexpected dry sense of humor. (More on that later.)

A mysterious gooey substance is left behind when people go missing in The Monster That Challenged the World.

Our narrator sets the scene in Southern California at the Salton Sea, a strange (and real) phenomenon of 400 square miles of salt water in the desert. So it’s also the site of secret experiments and a Naval research base. Jump-starting the story is a small earthquake, a parachute jumper and two sailors in a patrol boat. We’ll quickly have our first three victims and plenty of questions, like what is that gooey substance on the boat?

Never fear, we’ll get answers along with talk of radioactivity, ancient waterways and prehistoric eggs that means there’s more than one creature, plus explanations of how the dead are drained of blood and water.

It even has the educational nature film scene, also common in these horror movies, where the smart guy explains what’s going on. He’s found that whatever is killing people is like a prehistoric mollusk (think snails). We see one genus, the gonaxis, that has “scissor-like teeth” to shred the flesh off its victims. They are such tiny little teeth that the gonaxis is somehow cute and creepy at the same time.

Two eyes and tiny little teeth – how cute. A nature film shown during The Monster That Challenged the World shows the small mollusk known as the gonaxis that is now growing taller than a human.

Beaches will be quarantined and patrols will roam the highways, but the body count continues. It’s up to Dr. Rogers (played by Hans Conried), Commander John Twillinger (Tim Holt) and Dr. Tad Jones (played by familiar face Max Showalter who is billed here as Casey Adams) to use their varied skills to get to the bottom of everything.

Also in the mix are Gail MacKenzie (Audrey Dalton), a widowed secretary at the research facility, and her adorable little daughter Sandy (Mimi Gibson) who just wants to spend time with the bunnies in the lab. What could go wrong? Exactly what you might expect, so be prepared for a tense scene as one of the creatures looks for its next meal.

An oversized mollusk attacks a child in this terrifying scene from The Monster That Challenged the World.

I think the creature scenes work well because they don’t show too much. We don’t see it “walking,” for example. When it shows up, it makes a statement like when it rises out of the water to tower over a boat or when one tears apart a door with its sharp teeth.

In an interview with Tom Weaver for his book Return of the B Science Fiction and Horror Heroes, producer Arthur Gardner said the creature was made by special effects man Augie Lohman. It stood about 10 feet high and weighed about 1,500 pounds. with a Fiberglas exterior. It took three men – Lohman and two assistants – to control it through a series of air pressure valves.

As tragedy strikes, Commander Twillinger (Tim Holt) softens up to others including Gail (Audrey Dalton).

Unexpected humor, even depth

Since scripts for B-horror movies are so formulaic, there’s usually not much to say about them. But screenwriter Pat Fielder has done a nice job that raises the film up a notch. Her characters have backstories and I like how Commander Twillinger lightened up from being a terse military dude in early scenes to become more patient and likeable.

There’s a low-key humor that allows viewers to smile and even laugh. Case in point is a scene at the morgue:

“The lieutenant said there was something unnatural about the condition of one of the bodies,” says a doctor.

“There was – it was shriveled,” deadpans Commander Twillinger, which made me laugh.

Wait until you meet museum archivist Lewis Clark Dobbs, played by Milton Parsons. It’s a small role that is uncredited in the film, yet it takes over the two scenes he is in. Navy officials visit the museum seeking maps of underground rivers to find more creatures. There, they meet the droll archivist who puts an odd emphasis on words as he speaks, drawing raised eyebrows.

Milton Parsons, left, plays a museum curator with a hilariously droll personality. He may be the best thing about The Monster That Challenged the World.

Credit Parsons, a character actor who played more than 150 roles, for the portrayal. But also thank Fielder who smartly gave him a running joke about the failure of “Proposition 14A” (it would have allowed the museum to add a room for maps and other documents). Dobbs repeatedly brings it up, to reinforce the fact that the museum doesn’t have maps because Proposition 14A failed.

“Every once in a while, somebody dies and leaves us a whole lot of documents for our room – the one [room] we didn’t get, you understand. Proposition 14A was defeated,” the archivist says.

I wanted more of this character, but realize too much of him would have spoiled it. He would have been a great recurring character on television sitcom.

Background and trivia

  • Fielder and director Arnold Laven also worked together on The Vampire (1957), The Return of Dracula (1958) and Geronimo (1962). Her name was all over television from the late 1950s through the early 1980s. She wrote multiple episodes of The Rifleman, Baretta, The Eleventh Hour and McMillan & Wife, plus the 1981 mini-series Goliath Awaits with Christopher Lee, and single episodes of everything from Starsky and Hutch to The Love Boat and B.J. and the Bear and The High Chaparral.
  • In 1951, Laven formed a production company with Jules V. Levy and Arthur Gardner which eventually became Levy-Gardner-Laven. He came up with the concept for the television series The Rifleman and was an executive producer on The Big Valley.
  • Look for Jody McCrea, son of Joel McCrea and Frances Dee, in the brief role as doomed Seaman Fred Johnson.

 Toni Ruberto for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Toni’s Monsters and Matinees articles here.

Toni Ruberto, born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., is an editor and writer at The Buffalo News. She shares her love for classic movies in her blog, Watching Forever and is a member and board chair of the Classic Movie Blog Association. Toni was the president of the former Buffalo chapter of TCM Backlot and led the offshoot group, Buffalo Classic Movie Buffs. She is proud to have put Buffalo and its glorious old movie palaces in the spotlight as the inaugural winner of the TCM in Your Hometown contest. You can find Toni on Twitter at @toniruberto or on Bluesky at @watchingforever.bsky.social

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Noir Nook: Veda’s Villainy – Mildred’s Fault?

Veda’s Villainy – Mildred’s Fault?

One of my many favorite podcasts is Front Row Classics – the host, Brandon Davis, covers a wide variety of classic films, with a spate of first-rate guests, and in such interesting ways. An episode I heard recently centered on villains in classic films, and one of the characters in the spotlight was Veda, brought to life by Ann Blyth in the 1945 classic Mildred Pierce. I’ve long seen Veda as a villain myself – she possessed a deceptively attractive exterior that masked a self-absorbed sociopath – but during the podcast discussion, the theory was posited that it was Veda’s hard-working mother, Mildred (played by Oscar-winner Joan Crawford), who made Veda the way she was.

And that gave me pause. A long pause.

Joan Crawford, Ann Blyth, Mildred Pierce 1
Joan Crawford and Ann Blyth, Mildred Pierce

You may already know that Mildred Pierce is one of my top 10 noirs, and that I’m quite fond of the film’s titular femme (and not just because she’s the divorced mother of two girls and loves to bake! Twinning!). She’s flawed, sure, but is she the root cause of her daughter’s villainous conduct? In this month’s Noir Nook, I’m taking a deep dive into this notion. (And watch your step going forward – spoilers abound!)

The film opens with the murder of the dapper Monte Beragon (Zachary Scott), and while we don’t see the responsible party, we clearly hear Monte’s last word: “Mildred.” The story leading up to this deadly deed is told mostly in flashback, focusing squarely on Mildred – wife to recently unemployed Bert (Bruce Bennett), stay-at-home mother to Veda and her younger sister, Kay (Jo Ann Marlowe), and pie-baker extraordinaire. When Bert spends a bit too much time with the attractive neighborhood divorcee, Mrs. Biederhof (Lee Patrick), Mildred gives him the boot, making ends meet by working as a waitress, and later parlaying her talents in the kitchen into a chain of popular restaurants. Others in Mildred’s sphere include her closest friend Ida Corwin (Eve Arden); Wally Fay (Jack Carson), Bert’s former business partner and an investor in Mildred’s restaurant business; and Mildred’s second husband, the ill-fated Monte. And speaking of ill fates, we learn in the film’s riveting climax that the purveyor of bullets in the first scene was none other than Veda – who, we also discover, had been carrying on an affair with her mom’s handsome hubby. (I told you there’d be spoilers!)

Eve Arden, Mildred Pierce 2
Eve Arden

But other than being a homewrecking murderess, who is Veda, exactly? Let’s take a look.

When the movie first flashes back, we meet Veda on her way home from school, as she and Kay watch their father load a suitcase and an armful of clothes into his car and drive away. Veda and Kay, incidentally, couldn’t be more different – Kay is a tomboy who wears pigtails and plays football in the street with the neighborhood boys, while Veda wouldn’t be caught dead in pants and exudes an air of sophistication and superiority, even as a young teen. Within a matter of minutes, Veda gives us three salient and revelatory clues to her personality. First, Veda snootily informs her sister that she acts like a “peasant,” adding, “I think you ought to take a little more pride in the way you look.” Second, Veda tells Mildred that she’s learning a new piece from her piano teacher called “Valse Brilliante,” and offers an imperious translation: “That means “Brilliant Waltz.” And finally, after Mildred delivers a vague explanation for the split between her and her husband, Veda responds, “If you mean Mrs. Biederhof, Mother, I must say my sympathy is all with you. She’s distinctly middle class.”

Ann Blyth, Zachary Scott, Joan Crawford, Mildred Pierce 3
Ann Blyth, Zachary Scott and Joan Crawford

These examples are just the tip of the Veda iceberg; throughout the film, we continue to see just what kind of person she is, even if her mother doesn’t. And we also see the lengths to which Mildred is willing to go in her futile attempt to secure Veda’s happiness. But the question lingers: could Mildred have chosen another way? For one, she certainly could have called Veda on her snarky comments and disrespectful asides, like in the scene where Mildred overhears Veda complaining about her new dress. (“I wouldn’t be seen dead in this rag. It’s horrible. How could she have bought me such a thing?”) Instead of getting all in her feelings, Mildred should’ve snatched that dress off of Veda and told her she could get a babysitting job and buy her own damn clothes. Or the scene where Veda makes it clear that she’d want her mother to marry a man she doesn’t love if it would result in material gain – although Mildred doesn’t let the comment completely slide, she certainly could have been more forceful in confronting Veda’s selfishness and illuminating the moral deficiency of her sentiments.

Joan Crawford, Mildred Pierce 4

Instead, we seldom see Mildred chastising Veda, questioning her motives, or exacting punishments, except in the scene when Mildred learns that her daughter has engaged in an extortion scheme by falsely claiming to be pregnant. She memorably orders Veda to leave their home – “Get out before I kill you,” she tells her – and we practically cheer. As it turns out, though, Mildred later reverts to form and, ironically, marries a man she doesn’t love (Monte Beragon) in order to give Veda the type of upper-crusty lifestyle she craves.

But is this kind of behavior on Mildred’s part the cause of Veda’s villainy? In my opinion, absolutely not.

In my view, the relationship between Mildred and Veda is reminiscent of those cases where someone marries a partner who has exhibited clear red flags, hoping that love can “change” them. Mildred, I think, believes that Veda’s happiness can be secured through material means, and that this will translate into daughterly love and respect. But it’s not Mildred’s viewpoint and resulting actions that make Veda who she is – nor does Mildred degrade Veda’s character by buying her a car or installing her in a renovated mansion. Veda is simply Veda from the beginning.

Ann Blyth, Joan Crawford, Mildred Pierce 6

An exchange between Mildred and Bert shines an illuminating light on this entire matter. When Bert picks up the girls for their trip to Lake Arrowhead, Mildred explains her plans to file for divorce – ostensibly for financial reasons and for the sake of the children, but especially for Veda, since Kay “doesn’t need so much thinking about.” Bert responds that Kay is “twice the girl Veda is and always will be. She thinks you’re wonderful.” And Mildred’s reply is telling: “Maybe that’s why I keep trying to please Veda.”

In this brief conversation, Mildred recognizes that she is more fully valued by her younger daughter, and that her persistent drive to win Veda’s approval shapes her actions. Bert, for his part, demonstrates a clear-eyed understanding not only of his daughters’ qualities but of the family dynamic as a whole, warning Mildred that she will “always get kicked around” in her efforts to win Veda over.

Ann Blyth, Joan Crawford, Mildred Pierce 7

One might speculate that Veda could have wound up on a different course if Mildred had dispensed a few more slaps, as she did in the scene where she reveals her waitressing job. Or that Veda would have reformed if Mildred had directly challenged her daughter about her bad behavior instead of blaming Monte’s influence and showering Veda with more gifts. But I don’t think so. From Day One, Veda was exactly what Mildred called her after learning about her extortion scheme – cheap and horrible. I don’t know what took Mildred so long to acknowledge that, but I certainly don’t think she was the cause of this flaw in Veda’s makeup. Veda’s contempt and disrespect for her mother, and her sociopathic self-absorption, were qualities that were present long before Mildred dispensed her first present or overlooked her first nasty comment. (Don’t get me started on nurture vs. nature – Kay was an absolute doll.)

And just one more observation. Near the end of the film, where Veda is seen desperately begging her mother not to turn her in to the police, she finally stops Mildred in her tracks with the claim, “It’s your fault I’m the way I am.” I’m certain that this single line can be regarded by many as a transparent truism, but not for me. It was tossed out by Veda in a last-ditch effort to secure Mildred’s aid following Monte’s murder, but I don’t swallow it any more than Mildred should have. Instead, I look at another declaration offered by Veda – this one earlier in the picture, when Mildred encounters Veda at Wally’s riverfront dive and begs her to return home. Without missing a beat, Veda declines the offer, telling Mildred that the way her mother wants to live “isn’t good enough” for her, and, most significantly, affirming: “You know how I am.”

Jo Ann Marlowe, Ann Blyth and Joan Crawford, Mildred Pierce 8
Jo Ann Marlowe, Ann Blyth and Joan Crawford

For my money, that says it in a nutshell. Along with the viewer, Veda knows exactly how she is. Bert does as well, and Ida. And Wally. And although it takes Mildred a long while, eventually she, too, has to admit what kind of person she’d brought into the world – and that there’s nothing she could do about it.

And that’s all I have to say about that.

What do you think? Let me know in the comments!

– Karen Burroughs Hannsberry for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Karen’s Noir Nook articles here.

Karen Burroughs Hannsberry is the author of the Shadows and Satin blog, which focuses on movies and performers from the film noir and pre-Code eras, and the editor-in-chief of The Dark Pages, a bimonthly newsletter devoted to all things film noir. Karen is also the author of two books on film noir – Femme Noir: The Bad Girls of Film and Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. You can follow Karen on Twitter at @TheDarkPages.
If you’re interested in learning more about Karen’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

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Classic Movie Travels: James Shigeta

Classic Movie Travels: James Shigeta

James Shigeta
James Shigeta

James Saburo Shigeta was born in Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, on June 17, 1929, to Satoko Tamura Shigeta and Howard Koichi Shigeta. His father was a contractor who immigrated from Japan.

Shigeta was a third-generation Japanese American, graduating from President Theodore Roosevelt High School and studying drama at New York University. When completing ROTC, he enlisted in the Hawaii National Guard’s 258th Infantry, ultimately enlisting in the U.S. Marine Corps during the Korean War. He served for two-and-a-half years, achieving the rank of Staff Sergeant.

Prior to enlisting in 1951, he won first prize on Ted Mack’s The Original Amateur Hour television show in 1950. He soon embarked on a singing career, teamed with Charles K.L. Davis, a Hawaiian operatic tenor. Their agent gave them the “non-ethnic” stage names for Guy Brion (Shigeta) and Charles Durand (Davis). They performed at superclubs in the United States, singing at the Mocambo, Los Angeles Players Club, and more.

During the war, he entertained troops in California. While on the way to Korea, the ceasefire led him to Japan. He was discharged from the Marines and hired by the theatrical division of Japan’s Toho Studios. He did not speak Japanese until Toho Studios invited him to be a musical star, working under his real name. He soon became a success and was dubbed “The Frank Sinatra of Japan.”

 In 1958, Tokyo’s Nichigeki Theater starred Shigeta as the lead in their Cherry Blossom Show, bringing the show to Australia. The production toured throughout the country and Shigeta received many positive reviews.

Shigeta returned to the United States to perform on The Dinah Shore Show and later performed in Holiday in Japan at the New Frontier Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Shigeta made his screen debut in Crimson Kimono (1959). This role was progressive for its time, as Shigeta, an Asian American, portrayed an Asian American detective with typical American speech patterns, rather than a non-Asian actor passing as Asian American and speaking in broken English.

He also appeared in Walk Like a Dragon (1960) while also continuing his Holiday in Japan performances. He was even transported by ambulance from his last Holiday in Japan show to Paramount’s studio to ensure that he would arrive on time.

Additionally, Shigeta appeared in Cry for Happy (1961) alongside Glenn Ford, Donald O’Connor, and Miyoshi Umeki. He also appeared as Wang Ta in the Academy Award-nominated film version of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein’s Flower Drum Song (1961) with Nancy Kwan and Umeki. He appeared in Bridge to the Sun (1961) with Carroll Baker and Paradise, Hawaiian Style (1965) with Elvis Presley.

Miyoshi Umeki and James Shigeta, Flower Drum Song
Miyoshi Umeki and James Shigeta, Flower Drum Song

He also secured the lead in The King and I, touring the United States as part of the production in 1969.

Shigeta carried out many guest appearances and recurring roles on television, including a guest appearance on Perry Mason and a recurring role in Medical Center. He continued his film work with Midway (1976), Die Hard (1988), Cage II: The Arena of Death (1994), and a voice role in Mulan (1998). His final film role was in The People I’ve Slept With (2009).

Shigeta passed away in his sleep on July 28, 2014, in West Hollywood, California. He was 85 years old. His funeral service was held at the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles, and he was interred in the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii.

In 1930 and 1940, the family resided at 1625 Liliha St., Honolulu, Hawaii. Shigeta’s father worked as a plumber and pipefitter at this time. In 1950, the family moved to 419A Liliha Court Ln., Honolulu, Hawaii. At this point, Shigeta’s father worked as a shop foreman for an engineering company and his mother worked as a salesperson at a bakery. Both homes no longer stand.

President Theodore Roosevelt High School continues to operate and is located at 1120 Nehoa St., Honolulu, Hawaii.

President Theodore Roosevelt High School
President Theodore Roosevelt High School

The National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific is located at 2177 Pūowaina Dr., Honolulu, Hawaii.

–Annette Bochenek for Classic Movie Hub

Annette Bochenek pens our monthly Classic Movie Travels column. You can read all of Annette’s Classic Movie Travel articles here.

Annette Bochenek, Ph.D., is a film historian, professor, and avid scholar of Hollywood’s Golden Age. She manages the “Hometowns to Hollywood” blog, in which she profiles her trips to the hometowns of classic Hollywood stars. She has also been featured on the popular classic film-oriented television network, Turner Classic Movies. A regular columnist for Classic Movie Hub, her articles have appeared in TCM Backlot, Silent Film Quarterly, Nostalgia Digest, The Dark Pages Film Noir Newsletter, and Chicago Art Deco Society Magazine.

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Silver Screen Standards: Love and Language in Ball of Fire (1941)

Love and Language in Ball of Fire (1941)

With a title like Ball of Fire, you expect real fireworks, and this 1941 screwball comedy delivers them with spectacular energy and skill. There’s so much to love about the film that it’s hard to know where to start, much less how to boil it down to a single, short discussion of the picture’s many outstanding qualities. We start with a modernized twist on the Snow White fairy tale penned by Billy Wilder, Thomas Monroe, and Charles Brackett, which is brought to life by direction from Howard Hawks and the acting talents of a first-rate cast, including Barbara Stanwyck as the titular (and titillating) ball of fire and Gary Cooper as the academic bachelor who gets overheated in her presence. Supporting the two leads are iconic classic stars like Dana Andrews, Dan Duryea, Henry Travers, S.Z. Sakall, Oscar Homolka, Leonid Kinskey, and Richard Haydn, each of them giving memorable performances that keep the large ensemble from becoming muddled. As a former academic myself, I love the re-imagining of the fairy tale dwarfs as scholars and the ways in which their intellectual specialties drive both the dialogue and the plot, and I find their found family dynamic a deeply moving element of the story. With Gary Cooper’s character specializing in language, it’s little wonder that language and love are entwined in this story, and those two elements seem worthy of some additional examination, given the many ways they manifest in the picture.

This promotional still highlights the romantic chemistry of Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper as the leads and also the beautiful Edith Head gown Stanwyck wears in her first scenes.
This promotional still highlights the romantic chemistry of Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper as the leads and also the beautiful Edith Head gown Stanwyck wears in her first scenes.

Cooper plays Professor Bertram Potts, a former child prodigy now grown and leading a group of scholars in their creation of a large encyclopedia on which they have already been working for nine years. The men, all bachelors except for the widower, Professor Oddly (Richard Haydn), live together and commit all their energy to their work until Bertram accidentally gives night club singer Sugarpuss O’Shea (Barbara Stanwyck) the idea of hiding out from the police in their house. Sugarpuss is already involved with wanted gangster Joe Lilac (Dana Andrews), but that doesn’t stop her from lighting a fire in Bertram’s inexperienced heart. Unfortunately, Joe realizes that a wife can’t be made to testify against her husband, so Sugarpuss has to choose between marrying the mobster or the scholar, and Joe is willing to take extreme measures to influence her decision.

Sugarpuss (Stanwyck) and her cold foot appeal to the assembled scholars for mercy after Bertram Potts (Cooper) says she can’t stay overnight in their house.
Sugarpuss (Stanwyck) and her cold foot appeal to the assembled scholars for mercy after Bertram Potts (Cooper) says she can’t stay overnight in their house.

Bertram’s desire to learn modern American slang creates the opportunity for Sugarpuss to enter his life but also hints at his unconscious urge to leave his monastic confinement for a freer, more fully realized existence in the world. As a linguist, Bertram knows many words and their meanings, but his brief summary of his own life reveals that he has been constantly locked away with his studies since early childhood, leaving little time for him to comprehend words like “passion” and “sex,” much less “love” in a romantic context. If Sugarpuss is Snow White (albeit rather drifted, as the joke goes) then Bertram is Rapunzel or Sleeping Beauty, awaiting rescue from the imprisoning tower of a dry scholarly life. He ventures into the nightclubs and city streets to find a living language at work and play, but he doesn’t really begin to imagine having that kind of life for himself until Sugarpuss boogies her way into his heart.

The most important word that Sugarpuss and the other consultants teach Bertram is “corn,” a slang term that classic movie fans know well from the description of Frank Capra’s sentimental movies as “Capra-corn.” Critics originally meant the term derisively, but Ball of Fire argues that corn can be endearing and lovable, especially when embodied in a package that looks like Gary Cooper. For all its gangsters and third act hijinks, Ball of Fire is an unabashedly corny movie, one that sees its heroine exchange her jaded view and materialist aims for true love with a shy, naïve scholar who, as she says, “doesn’t know how to kiss, the jerk.” Bertram’s love for her is passionate, but, ironically, the linguist can’t find the words to express that to her. It’s shown not told, in the way sunlight on her hair mesmerizes him, in the way he rushes off to cool his neck after she kisses him, and in the way he literally learns to fight for her by studying a boxing guide on his way to stop her from marrying Joe Lilac.

Bertram and the professors find themselves held hostage by gangster Duke Pastrami (Dan Duryea).
Bertram and the professors find themselves held hostage by gangster Duke Pastrami (Dan Duryea).

While Sugarpuss and Bertram teach each other about romantic love, they also come to appreciate the different kind of love experienced in the found family of scholars. It’s clear that the older scholars regard Bertram not only as their leader but also as a beloved younger brother or even son. They delight in the rambunctious energy Sugarpuss brings into their lives and root enthusiastically for the young couple. They even join Bertram’s heroic quest to save his lady love from forced marriage to Joe, although instead of a white charger they all ride a white garbage truck to the rescue. In a cast of veteran character actors and scene-stealers, it’s Richard Haydn, really the same age as Cooper but made up to look elderly, who gets the best bits of both physical comedy and sentiment. His Professor Oddly, the sole widower of the group, struggles to explain romantic love to Bertram given his Victorian sensibilities, but his tender memories of his long-dead wife are deeply moving to the audience and his fellow characters. When the scholars join together to sing “Sweet Genevieve” in tribute to Oddly’s lost love, it’s the epitome of corn in the very sweetest sense, old-fashioned and utterly sincere but so emotional for Oddly that he leaves the room because of the depth of feeling the gesture stirs. It’s clear that his friends love him very much, just as they love Bertram and extend their affection to Sugarpuss, who is no more immune to their corny charms than she is to those of Bertram. We don’t see their future together, but the other professors will always be part of the life Sugarpuss and Bertram share because they really are a family.

Bruised but victorious, Bertram wins his lady’s hand as Professors Oddly (Richard Haydn) and Magenbruch (S.Z. Sakall) react to the scene.
Bruised but victorious, Bertram wins his lady’s hand as Professors Oddly (Richard Haydn) and Magenbruch (S.Z. Sakall) react to the scene.

Ball of Fire earned four Oscar nominations, including a nod for Stanwyck as Best Actress, but it went home empty-handed in a year that also included Citizen Kane, How Green Was My Valley, The Maltese Falcon, and Sergeant York, for which Gary Cooper actually won Best Actor. Other screwball comedies from director Howard Hawks include Twentieth Century (1934), Bringing Up Baby (1938), and His Girl Friday (1940). For more comedy starring Barbara Stanwyck, see The Mad Miss Manton (1938), The Lady Eve (1941), and Christmas in Connecticut (1945), and for more of Cooper’s comedy roles, try Design for Living (1933), Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936), and Bluebeard’s Eighth Wife (1938). Stanwyck and Cooper also star together in Meet John Doe (1941) and Blowing Wild (1953). In 1948, Hawks directed Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo in a musical remake of Ball of Fire called A Song is Born, in which the focus shifts from language to music. Mary Field plays the same character, Miss Totten, in both versions.

— Jennifer Garlen for Classic Movie Hub

Jennifer Garlen pens our monthly Silver Screen Standards column. You can read all of Jennifer’s Silver Screen Standards articles here.

Jennifer is a former college professor with a PhD in English Literature and a lifelong obsession with film. She writes about classic movies at her blog, Virtual Virago, and presents classic film programs for lifetime learning groups and retirement communities. She’s the author of Beyond Casablanca: 100 Classic Movies Worth Watching and its sequel, Beyond Casablanca II: 101 Classic Movies Worth Watching, and she is also the co-editor of two books about the works of Jim Henson.

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Classic Movie Travels: Vera-Ellen

Classic Movie Travels: Vera-Ellen

Vera-Ellen
Vera-Ellen

Vera-Ellen was born Vera-Ellen Rohe on February 16, 1921, in Norwood, Ohio, to Alma Westemeier and Martin Rohe. Her father worked as a piano tuner. Both parents were of German descent.

Her mother wished to one day have a girl named Vera-Ellen, insisting that the hyphen be included in the name.

Rohe began dancing by the age of 10, attending dance classes at the Hessler Studio of Dancing in Cincinnati, Ohio, alongside fellow Ohioan, Doris Day—then still Doris Kappelhoff. The girls would often carpool together. At the age of 13, she placed as a winner on the Major Bowes Amateur Hour, soon initiating her professional career.

Vera-Ellen young

Vera-Ellen dropped her last name and was billed solely by her hyphenated first name when she made her Broadway debut in 1939 in the Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein musical Very Warm for May. She was also among the youngest Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall. These experiences soon led to more Broadway roles, including participating in productions of Panama Hattie, By Jupiter, and A Connecticut Yankee.

Vera-Ellen married fellow dancer, Robert Hightower, in 1941. They divorced in 1946.

While performing in A Connecticut Yankee, she was noticed by producer Sam Goldwyn. He ultimately cast her opposite Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo in Wonder Man (1945). While her singing voice was dubbed in Wonder Man, her vocals can be heard in two songs on the Decca Broadway Original Cast Album of the 1943 revival of A Connecticut Yankee: “I Feel at Home with You” and “You Always Love the Same Girl.”

Vera-Ellen danced with Gene Kelly in Words and Music (1948) as well as On the Town (1949). She also performed in the final Marx Brothers film, Love Happy (1949). Vera-Ellen worked alongside Fred Astaire in Three Little Words (1950) and The Belle of New York (1952). She co-starred with Donald O’Connor in Call Me Madam (1953). Her penultimate film role was in White Christmas (1954), co-starring Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, and Rosemary Clooney. Her final film role was in Let’s Be Happy (1957).

Vera-Ellen MGM

Vera-Ellen married oilman Victor Bennet Rothschild in 1954. In 1963, she gave birth to a daughter, Victoria Ellen, who passed away at just three months old from SIDS. The couple divorced in 1966.

In addition to her film roles, Vera-Ellen also made frequent guest appearances on television. Some of her final performances include her appearances on The Perry Como Show and The Dinah Shore Show, before retiring.

Vera-Ellen maintained a slim figure as she never discontinued her dance lessons and was an avid swimmer. Rumors of an eating disorder have not been proven and have been discredited by several of her friends and her niece by marriage.

Vera-Ellen passed away at the Los Angeles County General Hospital on August 30, 1981, from ovarian cancer. She was 60 years old. Her memorial service was held at Westwood Village Memorial Park and Mortuary. She is at rest at Glen Haven Memorial Park in Sylmar, California, next to her daughter and parents.

Hessler School of Dance has since been converted into a private residence. The structure stands at 1033 Monastery St., Cincinnati, Ohio.

Hessler School of Dance
Hessler School of Dance

In 1930, she and her parents lived at 2218 Cathedral Ave., Norwood, Ohio. This home stands.

2218 Cathedral Ave., Norwood, Ohio
2218 Cathedral Ave., Norwood, Ohio

In 1941, she and Hightower lived at 37 W. 88th St., New York, New York. This also remains.

37 W. 88th St., New York, New York
37 W. 88th St., New York City

By 1945, she lived at 1414 E. 14th St., Long Beach, California, which also stands.

1414 E. 14th St., Long Beach, California
1414 E. 14th St., Long Beach, California

In 1950, she and her mother resided at 4557 Camellia Ave., North Hollywood, California, which stands.

4557 Camellia Ave., North Hollywood, California
4557 Camellia Ave., North Hollywood, California

In 1958, she, Rothschild, and her mother lived at 1451 Miller Way, Los Angeles, California, which stands.

She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, honoring her work in motion pictures. It is located at 7083 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles, California.

Vera-Ellen Hollywood Walk of Fame star

[star]

Glen Haven Memorial Park is located at 13017 N. Lopez Canyon Rd., Sylmar, California.

–Annette Bochenek for Classic Movie Hub

Annette Bochenek pens our monthly Classic Movie Travels column. You can read all of Annette’s Classic Movie Travel articles here.

Annette Bochenek, Ph.D., is a film historian, professor, and avid scholar of Hollywood’s Golden Age. She manages the “Hometowns to Hollywood” blog, in which she profiles her trips to the hometowns of classic Hollywood stars. She has also been featured on the popular classic film-oriented television network, Turner Classic Movies. A regular columnist for Classic Movie Hub, her articles have appeared in TCM Backlot, Silent Film Quarterly, Nostalgia Digest, The Dark Pages Film Noir Newsletter, and Chicago Art Deco Society Magazine.

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