Pre-Code Corner: Setting Sail on The Sin Ship

Setting Sail on The Sin Ship

For years The Sin Ship‘s frequent appearances on TCM’s monthly lineup repeatedly caught my eye. Besides the saucy title and potential for pre-Code shenanigans with a 1931 release date, I was drawn to the somewhat grim sounding logline (“A ship’s captain fights to protect a female passenger from his crew”), the accompanying contemplative image of star Mary Astor, and of course, the 65 minute run time. Also, there’s this poster.

The Sin Ship poster, 1931The Sin Ship, 1931

It took a few tries, but the timing was finally right for me to book passage on The Sin Ship. One could argue that TCM’s synopsis is technically correct, but it really misses the point of the picture. Captain-fighting-crew time was minimal; rather, what awaited me was one of the more unusual love triangles I’ve come across – if you can call it that – involving brusque Captain Sam McVey (Louis Wolheim, pulling double duty as director and star), alluring Frisco Kitty (Mary Astor), and her self-assertive husband Smiley Mardsen (Ian Keith).

On the lam from authorities following a bank robbery, Kitty and Smiley don the cover of a minister and his wife and hop aboard Sam’s ship to make their getaway. Sam makes a pass at Kitty, and she strongly chastises him under the veil of her benevolent lady facade. I mean, she gives it to him good. To everyone’s surprise, her words straighten Sam out instantaneously, and of course he falls hard for Kitty in the process. Being the shady man he is, Smiley senses an opportunity to use Kitty as bait to keep Sam from returning to port and potentially spilling the beans as to their whereabouts. Realizing Sam is actually one of the only decent men around, Kitty abhors the idea of playing him, but with a drunken Smiley leading the charge, she has little choice, even as her feelings of contempt are redirected from the captain to her partner in crime.

The Sin Ship 1931, Ian KeithCan you tell Slimey, I mean Smiley, isn’t really a great guy?

To be honest, I don’t think I’d take a repeat voyage on The Sin Ship. A relatively simple story with a lean cast and rather confined locations somehow meanders its way to an ending – and don’t forget, the movie only runs 65 minutes. Plus, two of the three main characters, Sam and Kitty, display initial compelling characteristics that diminish considerably, which dulls the proceedings and results in a pretty improbable romance.

Though The Sin Ship is nowhere near as hedonistic as the title implies, the excursion does glide by a number of recognizable pre-Code displays, listed below for your reading pleasure:

Sex(ism):
One look at the back of Kitty at the start of the picture, and Sam is mesmerized. “A woman’s a woman, ain’t she?” he remarks upon setting eyes upon her from a distance. “That’s the kind I like.” Evidently at sea too long and mesmerized by the vague shape of a woman, his lustful infatuation works in Kitty and Smiley’s favor, as they miss their steamer, and wouldn’t you know, Sam’s got space on his vessel. Literally, Kitty’s body won their passage, but she won’t be any safer on board: most of the male characters in this picture – from Sam to Smiley to the crewmembers – view women as objects to claim as their own or handle as they please, at one point or another.

The Sin Ship, 1931The first time Sam lays eyes on Kitty, this is what he sees, and that’s enough for him.

Booze and attempted assault:
To be clear, drunken, egotistical characters like Smiley aren’t unique to the era, but here alcohol plays a role in a thwarted incident that pre-Codes were more likely to confront, albeit off-screen. Sam lures invites Kitty to his room for tea, aka an alcoholic beverage. He’s banking on the drink leading to much more, you know, to cover Kitty and Smiley’s ‘fare.’ While not explicitly implying rape, one can assume Kitty wouldn’t submit willingly, which brings me to my next point…

Strong women (or woman, cause there’s really just one in this movie):
What Sam certainly does not expect is for Kitty to spring right back at him with a series of sanctimonious presages and declarations that he’s the worst of the crew.  But her closing zinger – that Sam clean up his mind, body and soul – hits a nerve, prompting a complete 180 in Sam’s attitude and demeanor overnight.  True, Kitty delivered this diatribe under her righteous guise, but I’ve also got to give the real Kitty credit for having the strength to change her ways and own up to her mistakes later on, which she does … well, read on.

The Sin Ship, 1931, Louis Wolheim, Mary AstorSam: 0, Kitty: 1

The end:
In stark contrast to Sam’s instant rapture, Kitty comes around slowly; she’s got her conscience and a pompous, intemperate partner to reckon with, after all, but by the end of the picture, it’s obvious that she wants out of her lifestyle. Though Smiley gets what’s coming to him in the end (post-Code style), miraculously Kitty goes scot free (pre-Code style), despite admitting that she wants to face her past and pay for her misdeeds (post-Code style again). Oh, well.  Only during this era could two characters like Kitty and Sam walk off into the distance together, hand in hand and free to go as they please.

The Sin Ship, 1931, Louis Wolheim, Mary AstorAnd they lived happily ever after. Presumably.

The Sin Ship is far from the strongest entry of the period that I’ve seen, and it’s not half as wild as it leads you to believe. That said, if you embark on the journey, you’ll take in some pre-Code sights – and sail at your own risk.

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 -Kim Luperi for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Kim’s Pre-Code Corner articles here.

Kim Luperi is a New Jersey transplant living in sunny Los Angeles. She counts her weekly research in the Academy’s Production Code Administration files as a hobby and has written for TCM, AFI Fest, the Pre-Code Companion, MovieMaker Magazine and the American Cinematheque. You can read more of Kim’s articles at I See A Dark Theater or by following her on twitter at @Kimbo3200.

Posted in Posts by Kim Luperi, Pre-Code Corner | Tagged , , | 8 Comments

Neglected Clowns: Exclusive Guest Post by Author Steve Massa (Slapstick Divas)

Neglected Clowns

The unsung ladies of slapstick comedy are a selection of mean landladies, vamps, spinsters, flirty fat girls, mother-in-laws, society snobs, dingbats, and busybodies who performed yeoman service making up the universe of the silent comedy films. Whether fierce, maternal, or straight-laced, they were well-seasoned veterans who were past masters of timing, and at providing much needed comic tension. Some, due to their physicality, specialized in one specific type, while others were more chameleon-like and played all kinds of roles. The backbone of the genre – many of these women were ubiquitous, turning up in film after film from practically all of the various comedy units. Four talented comediennes in particular have fallen through the cracks of film history.

Ethel Teare portraitPortrait of Ethel Teare.

Ethe Teare is a neglected lady clown whose starring films for Kalem and Fox have almost all vanished without a trace. After going on stage at fourteen she toured all over in vaudeville and with stock companies before starting at the Kalem Studio in 1914. Teare was statuesque and quite a beauty, but wasn’t afraid to go to extremes in make-up and costume in the name of comedy. In her second film appearance, the surviving The No-Account Count (1914), she plays the hideous daughter of the rich Mr. Hardup, who’s finding it impossible to get a husband for her.

Ethel Teare seems interested in tramp Lloyd Hamilton in THE WINNING WASH (1915).Ethel Teare seems interested in tramp Lloyd Hamilton in The Winning Wash (1915).

Since she’s covered with warts and knobs all over her face, when her father gets a scheme to hook her up with a certain Count De Bluffe, he sends her to the beauty doctor to get sand blasted, and while she’s there it’s revealed that she’s bald as well, with nothing but a few transparent wisps of hair on the shiny dome under her wig. In other shorts Teare was allowed to be pretty, and had an earnestness and sweetness which led her to take a low-keyed approach to gags and seriously play her characters. A toothy smile that was just a hair too large and a slightly bow-legged walk, her with rear sticking a bit, out completed her comic persona.

Ethel Teare threatens Tom Kennedy and Lois Scott with a limp cat in Mary's Little Lobster (1920).Ethel Teare threatens Tom Kennedy and Lois Scott with a limp cat in Mary’s Little Lobster (1920).

Busy at Kalem in comedies that she starred in, as well as working with their comedy team of Ham and Bud, Teare moved to greener pastures in 1917 when she joined Mack Sennett’s Keystone Company. Although her stay there was brief, it gave her career a boost, and gave her the opportunity to work with pros like Mack Swain, Polly Moran, and Chester Conklin. Her next stop was the Fox Studio where they took advantage of her talent and headlined her in a series as a gawky and innocent country girl character.

Outfitted in loud checkered dresses and with her hair in little buns on either side of her head, the use of white-face make-up gave her an innocent look. With her big-toothed smile and hesitant gestures she gallumped her way through entries like Her First Kiss (1919), The Roaring BathtubPretty Lady (both 1920), and The Baby (1921). After 1921 she left Fox, went back to vaudeville where she worked with the Marx Brothers in Chicago, and after a few more pictures finally retired in 1924. Sadly almost all of her starring comedies are missing which has left her reputation in limbo.

Western portrait of Jane Bernoudy.Western portrait of Jane Bernoudy.

Most of the screen comediennes came from vaudeville, but Jane Bernoudy got her start in Wild West Shows, where she won awards for fancy riding and roping. Her cowgirl expertise was her ticket for entering films in 1913 to make westerns for Vitagraph, Kay-Bee, Broncho, and Bison, but after going to Universal in 1914 she gravitated to their comedies. In 1915 she was teamed with comic Victor Potel in a series of domestic comedies where Bernoudy was headlined as the family’s maid Sally Slopus. In shorts like Slim, Fat or Medium (1915), When a Wife Worries, and Love Laughs at Dyspepsia (both 1916) Bernoudy toiled as a slightly addled young servant with her pail and mop, lop-sided maid’s cap, checkered blouses, and voluminous aprons. Bernoudy continued in occasional appearances as Ms. Sloppus, as well as played spinsters and other characters in shorts like Mixed Matrimony, The Topsy Turvy Twins (both 1917), Don’t Flirt (1918), and The Movie Queen (1919) until she left films in 1919.

Jane Bernoudy as Sally Sloppus with soon to be director Edward Sedgwick in LIZZIE'S WATERLOO (1919).Jane Bernoudy as Sally Sloppus with soon to be director Edward Sedgwick in Lizzie’s Waterloo (1919).

Children and animals are always sure-fire “scene-stealers,” and two forgotten silent examples are little Hannah Washington and Cameo the dog. Hannah Washington was the niece of popular West Coast singer and dancer Mildred Washington, who started in films at age three and was soon a regular in the Bray Company’s McDougal Alley Kids Comedies. The McDougals were one of the many imitations of Hal Roach’s Our Gang shorts, and Hannah was an imitation of Our Gang’s Farina. Named “Oatmeal” and dressed as a boy she was the tag-along younger sibling, who toddled around in too-big shoes and always created problems for the gang, like in The Big Pie Raid (1927) where Oatmeal finds a “kitty,” which of course is a skunk, and brings it to the big pie fight.

After about a year and a half of the McDougal shorts Hannah moved on to other kids’ series such as Mickey McGuire and Winnie Winkle Comedies, as well as a couple of shorts for producer Al Christie. Eventually she ended up at Universal and became a regular in their Buster Brown series. Little Arthur Trimble who starred as Buster wasn’t funny, so Hannah became their comedy ace in the hole for the series – still playing Oatmeal and dressed as a boy. A good example of her work is in the surviving Knockout Buster (1929) where the opening half of the picture is a boxing match between Buster and his fat friend Albert. Hannah plays the referee who gets all the laughs, and most of the punches, as she tries to dodge the blows to no avail, even taking one on the chin that turns her into a human pinwheel spinning wildly on the ringside ropes.

Cameo all ready for her close-up Mr. DeMille.Cameo all ready for her close-up Mr. DeMille.

After the series ended in 1929 Washington’s appearances became sporadic and difficult to chart. Her last known role is the slave girl Sally Ann in Shirley Temple’s The Littlest Rebel (1935). It’s a shame that Hannah was stuck in the Bray and Stern Brothers low-budget left-overs instead of working for more upscale producers like Mack Sennett or Jack White. With good material (or at least some kind of material) her funny presence and natural comic timing could have been developed and resulted in some solid comedy films.

There were many canine comedians in silent films – Teddy, Brownie, Pal, Buddy, and the famous Pete the pup – but perhaps the best, and the only comedienne of the litter, was Cameo. Owned by supporting comic Hap Ward, Cameo had been a sickly pup who was nursed around the clock by Ward, and afterward would do whatever he asked her. Hap Ward was appearing in Chester Comedies’ Snooky the Human-Zee two-reelers, and Cameo made her screen debut in titles like Ladies Pets and Ready to Serve (both 1921). It wasn’t long before she branched out as a sidekick to the likes of Baby Peggy and Lige Conley, but some of her best work was done at the Mack Sennett Studio.

Cameo reports to Billy Bevan with the details of Harry Gribbon's cards in NIP AND TUCK (1923).Cameo reports to Billy Bevan with the details of Harry Gribbon’s cards in Nip and Tuck (1923).

In Nip and Tuck (1923) Cameo plays an unbelievable poker game with Billy Bevan and Harry Gribbon. Cheating for her master Billy she nonchalantly takes a few peeks at Harry’s cards, and whenever he catches her she looks away with split-second timing, leading to a hilarious back and forth routine. From the mid-1920s on she was all over the silent comedy map – shorts such as Low Tide, and Baby Be Good (both 1925), in addition to many “A” features like Penrod and Sam (1923), Mary Pickford’s Little Annie Rooney (1925), and Ham and Eggs at the Front (1927). Known as the “Buster Keaton of dogdom,” Cameo went from studio to studio as the total film dog. Hap Ward told reporters that Cameo never had any set tricks, but understood what he told her and would do it. Her appearances in the sound era were less frequent, probably due to her advancing age, and she passed away at sixteen (one hundred and six human years) in 1935.

These four ladies are just the tip of the iceberg of overlooked silent comediennes. Although their names are forgotten, when their films are played today they still get their laughs and bring delight to viewers.

–Steve Massa for Classic Movie Hub

Steve Massa is the author of Slapstick Divas: The Women of Silent ComedyLame Brains and Lunatics: The Good, The Bad, and The Forgotten of Silent Comedy and Marcel Perez: The International Mirth-Maker. He has organized and curated comedy film programs for the Museum of Modern Art, The Library of Congress, The Museum of the Moving Image, The Smithsonian Institution, and The Pordenone Silent Film Festival.

If you’re interested in learning more about Steve’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

             

 

 

Posted in Books, Guest Posts, Silent Films | Tagged , , | 8 Comments

Win Tickets to see “TCM Big Screen Classics: Bonnie and Clyde (50th Anniversary)” (Giveaway runs July 14 – July 29)

Win Tickets to see “Bonnie and Clyde” on the Big Screen!

In Select Cinemas Nationwide Sunday, August 13 & Wednesday, August 16!

“This here’s Miss Bonnie Parker. I’m Clyde Barrow. We rob banks.”

Yay! The contest is over and the winners are: Liliana R, Chris T, Ofelia R, Jeff C, Tom W, Susan B, Richard L and Mark P!

CMH is thrilled to announce the 10th of our 14 movie ticket giveaways this year, courtesy of Fathom Events!

That said, we’ll be giving away EIGHT PAIRS of tickets to see “TCM Big Screen Classics: Bonnie and Clyde” – the timeless classic starring Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty— the way it was meant to be seen — on the Big Screen!

In order to qualify to win a pair of movie tickets via this contest, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, July 29 at 6 PM EST.

We will announce the winner(s) on Twitter on Sunday, July 30, between 6PM EST and 7PM EST. If a winner(s) does not have a Twitter account, we will announce that winner(s) via this blog in the comment section below.

Bonnie and Clyde TCM Big Screen Presents Fathom Events

The film will be playing in select cinemas nationwide for a special two-day-only event on Sunday, August 13 and Wednesday, August 16 at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. local time. Winners will be responsible for their own transportation to the Event. Only United States entries are eligible. Please click here before you enter to ensure that the Event is scheduled at a theater near you and that you are able to attend. (please note that there might be slightly different theater listings for each date)

About the film:  

Faye Dunaway is Bonnie Parker and Warren Beatty is Clyde Barrow in Arthur Penn’s violent, sexually charged and deeply influential crime drama, a nostalgic look back at notorious outlaws filmed with the passion and zeal of filmmakers who were beginning to explore the boundaries of their craft. Features supporting performances by an exemplary cast that includes Gene Wilder, Gene Hackman, Michael J. Pollard and Estelle Parsons.

ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, July 29 at 6PM EST…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:

What is it about “Bonnie and Clyde” that, in your opinion, makes it a Classic? And, if you haven’t seen it, why do you want to see it on the Big Screen? 

2) Then TWEET* (not DM) the following message:

Just entered to win tickets to see “Bonnie and Clyde” on the Big Screen courtesy of @ClassicMovieHub & @FathomEvents #TCMBigScreen

*If you don’t have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

Please note that only United States residents are eligible to enter this giveaway contest. (see contest rules for further information)

BlogHub members ARE also eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

You can follow Fathom Events on Twitter at @fathomevents

Good Luck!

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Contests & Giveaways, Fathom Events, TCM Big Screen Classics | 27 Comments

Harry Langdon: King of Silent Comedy: Facebook/Blog Book Giveaway Contest (July)

“Harry Langdon: King of Silent Comedy”
Book Giveaway 
via Facebook and this Blog

Okay, now it’s time for the Facebook/Blog version of our “Harry Langdon: King of Silent Comedy” Giveaway Contest! This time we’ll be giving away one copy of the book via Facebook and this blog, courtesy of University Press of Kentucky. And, remember, we’re also giving away FIVE MORE copies via Twitter this month as well, so please feel free to enter that contest too…

In order to qualify to win this prize via this Facebook/Blog contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, August 5 at 10PM ESTWe will pick one winner via a random drawing and announce him/her on Facebook and here on this Blog the day after the contest ends (Sunday August 6).

If you’re also on Twitter, please feel free to visit us at  @ClassicMovieHub for additional giveaways — because we’ll be giving away FIVE MORE books there as well! PS: you don’t even need a twitter account to enter! (Click here for twitter contest details as well as more information about the book.)

Harry Landon: King of Silent Comedy

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ENTRY TASK to be completed by Saturday, August 5 at 1oPM EST —

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:
What is your favorite Harry Langdon film and why? And if you’re not familiar with Harry Langdon’s work, tell us why you’d like to win this book.

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

…..

About the Book:  Among silent film comedians, three names stand out―Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd―but Harry Langdon indisputably deserves to sit among them as the fourth “king.” In films such as The Strong Man (1926) and Long Pants (1927), Langdon parlayed his pantomime talents, expressive eyes, and childlike innocence into silent-era stardom. This in-depth biography, which features behind-the-scenes accounts and personal recollections compiled by Langdon’s late wife, provides a full and thoughtful picture of this multifaceted entertainer and his meteoric rise and fall. Featuring never-before-published stories and photos from his immediate family, this biography is a fascinating and revealing look at an unsung silent film giant.…..

Click here for the full contest rules. 

Please note that only Continental United States (excluding Alaska, Hawaii, and the territory of Puerto Rico) entrants are eligible.

And — BlogHub members ARE eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

Good Luck!

And if you can’t wait to win the book, you can purchase it on amazon via the below link (click on image):

Good Luck!

…..

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Books, Contests & Giveaways, Posts by Annmarie Gatti, Silent Films | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Women Comedy Directors: Exclusive Guest Post by Author Steve Massa (Slapstick Divas)

Women Comedy Directors

More neglected than onscreen comediennes are the women who worked in silent comedy as directors – the number of whom can practically be counted on the fingers of one hand. Alice Guy-Blache is a bona-fide cinema pioneer, having started her career at France’s Gaumont Company as a secretary in 1895, soon becoming the office manager and producing and directing silent and early sound films (known as Chronophone Films). In 1906 she came to America with her husband Herbert Blache to help introduce the Chronophone system in the U.S., and in 1910 she formed the Solax Film Company. Over four years Solax, based in Fort Lee, New Jersey, turned out all types of films, including a large number of comedies for which Madame Blache had a definite flair.

Alice Guy BlacheStudy of film pioneer Alice Guy-Blache.

While in France she had directed some very funny slapstick shorts, and at Solax she directed many situational comedies such as When Mary Was Little (1911), Canned Harmony (1912), and Burstup Holmes’ Murder Case (1913). These were very similar to the comedies coming out of the Vitagraph Studio – in Officer Henderson (1913) two cops dress as women to nab purse snatchers, A House Divided (1913) has a battling husband and wife living in separate parts of their house and only communicating through notes, and His Double (1912) even contains an early version of the “mirror routine” made famous by the Marx Brothers in Duck Soup (1933). After 1914 Guy-Blache moved on to dramatic features and ended her film career in 1920.

Mabel NormandMabel Normand.

The most all-around famous woman in silent comedy is Mabel Normand, but the least known aspect of her career is her work as a film director. Starting in films in 1910, by 1911 Mabel was becoming popular in the comedies made by Mack Sennett for the Biograph Company, and when Sennett set up his Keystone Studio in 1912 she was one of his main stars. Starting in late 1913 Normand began calling the shots for her films:

Mabel Normand, leading woman with the Keystone, will hereafter direct every picture in which she appears. Madame Blache has been the only woman director for some time, but now she will have a rival in Mabel who will both act and direct. (Motion Picture News, December 13, 1913)

Keystone Ad with Mabel NormandEasy to see who was the main draw on the Keystone program.

Sennett had been getting busier dealing with studio business and administrative duties, so he began curtailing his directing work and started giving his star comics the opportunity to supervise their own films. Mabel was the first, and she began her directorial efforts with The Champion (1913). Unfortunately it’s hard to discern a strong directorial style as more than half of her directed films are missing. The earliest survivor is the recently rediscovered Won in a Closet (1914) where Mabel follows the regular keystone recipe very well – getting in all the required knockabout – but there is one striking sequence that shows unusual directorial imagination. Mabel and her beau spy one another and are drawn to each other like magnets – first in long lingering close-ups, and then finally in a creative double-exposure shot where the pair are on either side of the screen and traveling closer and closer together.

Mabel Normand with dogMabel and canine friend.

Three others – Mabel’s Strange Predicament, Mabel at the Wheel, and Caught in a Cabaret (all 1914) – survive, most likely thanks to Charlie Chaplin’s presence in the casts. Again they are in the standard Keystone mold, but Mabel slows down the breakneck pace a bit to give the performers more leisure to partake and react to what’s happening around them. All three give a good deal of the focus to the young Chaplin’s antics, and Caught in a Cabaret in particular has a lot of atmosphere in a seedy cabaret with detailed character work coming from Minta Durfee, Hank Mann, Chester Conklin, Phyllis Allen, and Mack Swain as its denizens. Mabel stopped directing after Mabel’s Nerve (1914) and years later in the 1920s she was asked about her directorial work. She responded that filmmaking was so primitive in 1913 and 1914 that you really couldn’t call it directing by modern standards. So with typical modesty she dismissed her work as one of America’s first woman slapstick comedy directors.

Mabel and FordMabel and a large-mustached Ford Sterling in an unidentified Keystone short.

In 1914 Lucille McVey was a young actress who had recently joined the Vitagraph Company. McVey had spent six years presenting recitations on the concert stage and was said to have been one of the foremost child dialect readers in America. Appearing in small roles at Vitagraph in the films directed by and starring Sidney Drew, a romance developed between the twenty-four year-old McVey and the forty-nine and recently widowed Drew, which led to their teaming in real life and on the screen. Together the pair found fame as Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Drew, in a series of comedies that chronicled the misadventures of the average married couple. Surviving examples such as The Professional Scapegoat, Boobley’s Baby (both 1915), and His Wife Knew about It (1916) still delight today, and the Drews were a true team writing and directing their films together. Their success continued unabated until Sidney Drew’s death in 1919.

The DrewsMr. & Mrs. Sidney Drew in a publicity shot for their Metro Comedies.

With a contract to fulfill Mrs. Drew soldiered on herself, writing and directing the shorts Bunkered and A Sisterly Scheme (both 1919). Being forced to branch out on her own she continued turning out material in the “Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Drew” style. Besides sophisticated scripts like A Gay Old Dog (1919) and The Night of the Dub (1920), in 1920 she launched a series of two-reelers she wrote and directed based on the After Thirty stories of popular writer Julian Street. Four shorts were made – The Charming Mrs. Chase, The Stimulating Mrs. Barton, The Emotional Miss Vaughan, and The Unconventional Mrs. Barton (all 1920) – and were well-received. Following these After Thirty shorts she only had one more project. In 1921 she returned to Vitagraph to direct the screen adaptation of the play Cousin Kate. According to reviews the feature appears to have been gentle and character-driven, with focus given to the small details. Sadly there were no other films, and she died in 1926 at the premature age of thirty-five after a battle with cancer. While many of her films with Sidney Drew survive today, virtually nothing of her solo work is known to exist. In 1926 Motion Picture Magazine reported:

The funeral of Mrs. Sidney Drew was attended by only twenty persons. And yet Mrs. Drew was one of the cleverest and kindest women ever in motion pictures. But apparently, after the death of her husband and her retirement from the screen, the movie colony forgot all about her. As a rule, Hollywood tries to be kind. In this case there’s a black mark against it.

Drew BunkeredMrs. Drew in her first solo outing BUNKERED (1919).

The legacy of the women silent comedy directors has been treated in much the same manner, and it’s hoped that information and the films themselves can be gathered to bring attention to their contribution to film history.

…..

–Steve Massa for Classic Movie Hub

Steve Massa is the author of Slapstick Divas: The Women of Silent ComedyLame Brains and Lunatics: The Good, The Bad, and The Forgotten of Silent Comedy and Marcel Perez: The International Mirth-Maker. He has organized and curated comedy film programs for the Museum of Modern Art, The Library of Congress, The Museum of the Moving Image, The Smithsonian Institution, and The Pordenone Silent Film Festival.

If you’re interested in learning more about Steve’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

             

 

Posted in Books, Guest Posts | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Harry Langdon: King of Silent Comedy Book Giveaway (via Twitter in July)

“Harry Langdon: King of Silent Comedy”
Book Giveaway via Twitter

Time for our next book giveaway! This time, CMH will be giving away FIVE COPIES of “Harry Langdon: King of Silent Comedy” by authors by Gabriella Oldham and Mabel Langdon, courtesy of University Press of Kentucky, from July 3 through Aug 5. (plus ONE more copy via Facebook and this Blog, details to follow on Wednesday).

In order to qualify to win one of these prizes via this contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, August 5 at 10PM EST. However, the sooner you enter, the better chance you have of winning, because we will pick a winner on five different days within the contest period, via random drawings, as listed below… So if you don’t win the first week that you enter, you will still be eligible to win during the following weeks until the contest is over.

  • July 8: One Winner
  • July 15: One Winner
  • July 22: One Winner
  • July 29: One Winner
  • August 5: One Winner

We will announce each week’s winner on Twitter @ClassicMovieHub, the day after each winner is picked at 10PM EST — for example, we will announce our first week’s winner on Sunday July 9 at 10PM EST on Twitter. And, please note that you don’t have to have a Twitter account to enter; just see below for the details…

If you’re also on Facebook, please feel free to visit us at Classic Movie Hub on Facebook for additional giveaways (or check back on this Blog in a few days) — because we’ll be giving away ONE MORE cop via Facebook/Blog as well!

Harry Landon: King of Silent Comedy

…..

ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, August 5 at 1oPM EST — BUT remember, the sooner you enter, the more chances you have to win…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:
What do you love most about Harry Langdon? And, if you’re not familiar with his work, why do you want to win this book? 

2) Then TWEET (not DM) the following message*:
Just entered to win “Harry Langdon: King of Silent Comedy” #BookGiveaway courtesy of @KentuckyPress & @ClassicMovieHub

*If you do not have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

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About the Book:  Among silent film comedians, three names stand out―Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd―but Harry Langdon indisputably deserves to sit among them as the fourth “king.” In films such as The Strong Man (1926) and Long Pants (1927), Langdon parlayed his pantomime talents, expressive eyes, and childlike innocence into silent-era stardom. This in-depth biography, which features behind-the-scenes accounts and personal recollections compiled by Langdon’s late wife, provides a full and thoughtful picture of this multifaceted entertainer and his meteoric rise and fall. Featuring never-before-published stories and photos from his immediate family, this biography is a fascinating and revealing look at an unsung silent film giant.

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Click here for the full contest rules. 

Please note that only Continental United States (excluding Alaska, Hawaii, and the territory of Puerto Rico) entrants are eligible.

And — BlogHub members ARE eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

Good Luck!

And if you can’t wait to win the book, you can purchase it on amazon via the below link (click on image):

Good Luck!

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Books, Contests & Giveaways, Posts by Annmarie Gatti, Silent Films | Tagged , , | 15 Comments

Film Noir Review: The Sniper (1952)

“Stop me — Find me and stop me. I’m going to do it again.”

By 1951, filmmaker Edward Dmytryk was persona non grata in Hollywood. Blacklisted as one of the Hollywood Ten in 1947, the Oscar nominee was jailed for his Communist ties and forced to throw himself at the mercy of the HUAC. After agreeing to name names, however, Dmytryk returned to a studio system whose only response was a cold shoulder. He was vilified by both the right and the left. The press took every opportunity to label him “informer” and “rat.” At the time, he was quoted as saying “They pretty much have buried me.”

It was only through a three-picture deal with producer Stanley Kramer that Dmytryk was able to dig his way out of his premature grave. But by then, the sting of isolation had taken its toll, and would go on to heavily influence the tone of his 1952 comeback film, The Sniper.

It should then come as no surprise that The Sniper defies the conventions of the period. “High among police problems is that of the sex criminal,” reads the opening text, adding that “adequate and understanding laws do not exist” and “law enforcement is helpless” when it comes to offering proper care. It’s a brazen stance to take in a documentary-style noir, a historically pro-government sect of film noir, but the idea of humanizing a sex criminal– the very definition of an outcast– was nothing if not attention-grabbing.

The Sniper, 1952, The film's appropriately grim poster.The film’s appropriately grim poster.

As the film opens, we meet our outcast, Eddie Miller (Arthur Franz), in the midst of preparing a murder. He carefully loads his rifle, and takes aim at the couple necking outside of his apartment window. Yet when the moment comes to shoot, he hesitates. The perverse gleam in his eye, one that viewers had previously seen in films like He Walked by Night (1948) and Dial 1119 (1950), fades into a look of disgust. Miller hastily shoves the rifle back in his dresser drawer, and tosses the dresser key in a fit of shame. Inner-demons are practically bursting through his trigger finger, but in this brief moment of defiance, Miller earns our sympathy — he knows, as we do, that there is a serious problem.

It’s briefly alluded to that Miller has dealt with battery charges in the past, and he spends the first act of the film trying to facilitate a peaceful solution. He contacts a doctor, attempts to commit himself to a local hospital, and even goes as far as to burn his hand on a stovetop. The latter plays out with unnerving intimacy, as the low camera angle captures the manic torture on Miller’s face. These attempts are curtailed, however, when he meets a seductive singer named Jean Darr (the always mischievous Marie Windsor), discovers that she’s already spoken for, and falls back into a murderous fit.

The Sniper, 1952,  Miller (Arthur Franz) is entraped by Jean Dorr's charm.Jean Darr picked the wrong fellow to string along.

Darr’s murder outside on the street marks the breaking point of our main character. Miller’s rifle sends her body smashing through a glass display case and onto the floor with deafening silence. And yet, in the aftermath of this horrific action, he clings to our empathy like a cancer. He’s noticeably ashamed, and the film makes note of this through his modus operandi: the sniper rifle. He uses it not as a means of preference, but as an excuse to distance himself from his guilt, to retreat into anonymity.

Dmytryk directs the rest of the film as a cruel game of cause and effect: the more insensitive people are to Miller’s issues, the more violence he commits against women. In one instance, Miller stumbles upon a group of kids playing stickball. A ball gets hit his way, and he happily tosses the ball back in. Come to find out, he actually ruined the game, as one jaded player puts it: “It’s all your fault! Why don’t you leave us alone and go play your own game!?” The player is, in fact, a little girl. It may be juvenile, but this crushing of Miller’s already-fragile state ranks among noir’s most mean-spirited scenes.

"Please stop me." Arthur Franz, The Sniper 1952“Stop me — Find me and stop me. I’m going to do it again.”

Working from a relatively tight budget, Dmytryk’s camerawork is more energetic than in his previous efforts. He and cinematographer Burnett Guffey take full advantage of San Francisco’s famed landscapes, as they follow Miller through lesser-known areas and landmarks that have since perished– Admirers of the city will want to come for the scenery alone. The driving sense of paranoia, which afflicts both Miller and his victims, is also handled chillingly during the night scenes, where angular streets and pitch-black alleyways make it seem as though San Francisco is practically complicit in his killing spree.

As Miller, Arthur Franz is so unwavering that at times he can be challenging to watch. In the aforementioned stickball fiasco, or his failed pick-up attempt at a bar, Miller’s humiliation is subdued and mannered to the point of perverse voyeurism. Additionally, Franz brings a naiveté to the role, like a little boy who is still seeking validation from others. As Police Lt. Kafka (Adolphe Menjou) tracks his movements, he leaves behind notes begging to be caught: “Stop me — Find me and stop me.” These aren’t meant to imply some larger cat-and-mouse game, but rather to extend his need for validation — he wants needs Kafka to know that he too finds his crimes unforgivable.

The Sniper, 1952, Arthur Franz, Eddie Miller in actionEddie Miller in action.

The search for validation comes to a head in the finale. Having pinned down Miller’s location, Kafka and the police ready themselves for combat. Most films noir would’ve opted for a resolution via violent shootout, but Dmytryk, being mindful of his outcast, subverts our expectations one last time. Miller meets his fate not with resistance, but a single tear of relief. He goes quietly, knowing that he never really had a chance. Dmytryk’s own resolution would come two years later, when The Caine Mutiny restored his public image and earned him a Best Picture nomination.

Largely overlooked since its release, The Sniper still manages to provoke and shock in equal measure. By daring to present a serial killer as a complex human being, pity and all, the film not only served as the inspiration for New Hollywood classics like Targets (1968) and Taxi Driver (1976), but expanded the psychological breadth of where film noir could go heading into the 1950s. A

TRIVIA: Taxi Driver director Martin Scorsese provides the DVD introduction for The Sniper on the Columbia Pictures Film Noir Classics Collection.

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–Danilo Castro for Classic Movie Hub

Danilo Castro is a film noir specialist and Contributing Writer for Classic Movie Hub. You can read more of Danilo’s articles and reviews at the Film Noir Archive, or you can follow Danilo on Twitter @DaniloSCastro.

Posted in Film Noir Review, Films, Posts by Danilo Castro | Tagged | 2 Comments

Win Tickets to see “TCM Big Screen Classics: Fast Times at Ridgemont High (35th Anniversary)” (Giveaway runs June 30 – July 15)

Win Tickets to see “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” on the Big Screen!

In Select Cinemas Nationwide Sunday, July 30 & Wednesday, August 2!

‘”Aloha, Mr. Hand.”

Yay! The contest is over and the winners are:
Tracy S, George G, Cory K, Ashley H, Lillian H, Colby P, Dave B, and A Long!

CMH is thrilled to announce the 9th of our 14 movie ticket giveaways this year, courtesy of Fathom Events!

That said, we’ll be giving away EIGHT PAIRS of tickets to see “TCM Big Screen Classics: Fast Times at Ridgemont High” – the timeless classic starring Sean Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, and Judge Reinhold— the way it was meant to be seen — on the Big Screen!

In order to qualify to win a pair of movie tickets via this contest, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, July 15 at 6 PM EST.

We will announce the winner(s) on Twitter on Sunday, July 16, between 6PM EST and 7PM EST. If a winner(s) does not have a Twitter account, we will announce that winner(s) via this blog in the comment section below.

Fast Times at Ridgemont High TCM Big Screen Classics Fathom Events

The film will be playing in select cinemas nationwide for a special two-day-only event on Sunday, July 30 and Wednesday, August 2 at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. local time. Winners will be responsible for their own transportation to the Event. Only United States entries are eligible. Please click here before you enter to ensure that the Event is scheduled at a theater near you and that you are able to attend. (please note that there might be slightly different theater listings for each date)

About the film:  

Director Amy Heckerling’s adaptation of Cameron Crowe’s book defined a generation by observing the behaviors and habits of teenagers in the early ‘80s with sharpness and an endless wellspring of humor.

ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, July 15 at 6PM EST…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:

“Fast Times at Ridgemont High” may not be a classic-era Classic Movie, but what is it in your opinion that makes it classic? And, if you haven’t seen it yet, why do you want to see it on the Big Screen?

2) Then TWEET* (not DM) the following message:

I entered to win tickets to see “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” on the Big Screen courtesy of @ClassicMovieHub & @FathomEvents #TCMBigScreen

*If you don’t have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

NOTE: If for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

Please note that only United States residents are eligible to enter this giveaway contest. (see contest rules for further information)

BlogHub members ARE also eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

You can follow Fathom Events on Twitter at @fathomevents

Good Luck!

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

 

Posted in Contests & Giveaways, Fathom Events, TCM Big Screen Classics | 41 Comments

Two Eves of Film Comedy: Exclusive Guest Post by Author Steve Massa (Slapstick Divas)

Two Eves of Film Comedy

Currently in American films there are two female comedy stars – Melissa McCarthy and Amy Schumer. That seems like a bounty as often there aren’t any acknowledged funny ladies, but the truth is they’re always around, but for whatever reason they never get the same attention as the funny men. This has always been true – when people talk about silent film comedians it’s always Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd, or Laurel & Hardy. Occasionally, just occasionally, there’s a mention of Mabel Normand or Marie Dressler, but that’s where it stops – nobody talks about the likes of Louise Fazenda, Colleen Moore, Marion Davies, or Fay Tincher.

Silent films were teeming with funny ladies and in my new book Slapstick Divas: The Women of Silent Comedy (BearManor Media) I’ve tried to bring some attention to their careers and work. The early silent comedies produced after 1900 were simple one-joke situations. The focus was on the brief story and the performers were anonymous and almost superfluous. This began to change around 1910 as filmmaking techniques became more sophisticated, and a number of woman began to headline in European slapstick shorts. Names like Sarah Duhamel, Valentina Frascaroli, Gigetta Morano, and Nilde Baracchi don’t mean anything today, but they became popular with the world’s movie audiences, and the American film industry began to follow suit.

Valentina FrascaroliValentina Frascaroli was known as “La Farfaletta” (“Little Butterfly”) in early French films.
Gigetta MoranoThe First Lady of silent Italian film comedy was Gigetta Morano.

Originally actors in U.S. films were never credited but audiences took it upon themselves to identify their favorites and create names for them. Biograph actress Gladys Smith was dubbed “Little Mary” by her public, and took that name when she re-christened herself Mary Pickford. After 1910 the names of players began to be issued by the studios but these would often vary from country to country. In the U.K. for instance Mabel Normand was known as Muriel Fortesque, Mack Sennett was Walter Terry, but the best moniker was saved for Fred Mace – Sidney Pinkhurst. Two of the first important comic actresses that took hold in American films both joined the industry in 1907 – 1908, and came from the stage.

The first, Florence Turner, is sometimes referred to as the original movie star as she’s thought to be the first to sign a contract when she joined the Vitagraph Company in 1907, but her duties in those early days also included being paymaster, accountant, and wardrobe woman. So much for star perks. The studio cranked out all types of pictures and Ms. Turner was versatile – she played in historical dramas, Shakespeare opuses, literary adaptations, and plain old melodramas – but her real flair was for character comedy.

Florence Turner Old DialsOne of Florence Turner’s later starring shorts, possibly OLD DIALS FOR NEW (1920).

In She Cried (1912) she portrays a slow girl who messes up the well-oiled assembly-line of a busy box-making plant, and dissolves into tears at any criticism or word from a boss or co-worker. Pumps (1913) presents her as a young woman at a fancy soiree whose tight shoes are killing her so she secretly takes them off under the table but then loses them. In her best surviving film, Daisy Doodad’s Dial (1914), she’s a wife competing with her husband to win an upcoming face-making contest who becomes so obsessed with the contest that she practices her grotesque faces on the street and gets arrested for disturbing the peace and being potentially crazy. She accuses her husband of arranging the arrest so she couldn’t win the contest, and after the fight with her hubby she has a nightmare where she’s haunted by all her various faces.

Florence Turner Film FavoritesA selection of impersonations from Florence Turner’s stage show which includes Charlie Chaplin and Larry Semon.

Turner was also a wicked mimic, and made films were she imitated and did parodies of her screen contemporaries like Ford Sterling, Broncho Billy Anderson, Mabel Normand, and Ben Turpin. At the peak of her career in 1913 she set up her own company in England, and made numerous features and shorts, but World War I interrupted her success. Later returning to America she eventually became a supporting actress, and even played Buster Keaton’s mother in his 1927 College, but by the time sound came in she was relegated to extra work and died at the Motion Picture Country Home in 1946.

Flora Finch FavoritesVitagraph Studio portrait of Flora Finch.

Next is the talented and supremely skinny Flora Finch. Best known for her screen partnership with the rotund John Bunny, Finch was the ideal surname for her as there was something very bird-like in the combination of her sharp, hawkish features and stork-thin length. Born in England, she worked on stage there, and after coming to America she entered films while trying to get a foothold on the U.S. stage. Her first films were for the Biograph Company under the direction of D.W. Griffith, but a couple of years later she relocated to the Vitagraph Studio in Brooklyn and there in 1911 she first worked with John Bunny.

Flora Finch CompanyExhibitor ad for the first release of Flora Finch’s own company.

The combination of the severe Finch with the expansive Bunny was a match made in comedy heaven. There was an instant combative chemistry (which may have been helped by the fact that they’re said to have had an active mutual dislike for each other), and their films together, called “Bunnyfinches” by fans, were hugely popular. The pair were often seen as married couples with Flora as the henpecking wife trying to keep Bunny from drinking, playing cards, or just enjoying himself. Other times she’d be a flirty rich widow that Bunny was trying to woo, or a mother attempting to keep their daughter from eloping with someone she didn’t approve of. While limited in her roles by her distinctive appearance, she still managed to find variations in her characters and never played stock harridans or shrews.

Finch The Feudists jpeg copyFrom left to right Josie Sadler and Sidney Drew make war not love with their neighbors Flora Finch and John Bunny in THE FEUDISTS (1913).

When John Bunny left films in 1914 Ms. Finch continued, and even had her own short-lived company – The Flora Finch Film Corporation. The rest of her career was playing a succession of aunts and spinsters in shorts and features such as Rudolph Valentino’s Monsieur Beaucaire (1924), The Cat and the Canary (1927), The Scarlet Letter (1934), and even Laurel & Hardy’s Way Out West (1937). Remaining a trouper to the end, her last known appearance was in The Women (1939) and she died in 1940.

Thanks to the popularity of players like Florence Turner and Flora Finch by 1911 the star system began to be firmly entrenched in the film industry and with the public, setting the stage for the performers who followed.

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–Steve Massa for Classic Movie Hub

Steve Massa is the author of Slapstick Divas: The Women of Silent Comedy, Lame Brains and Lunatics: The Good, The Bad, and The Forgotten of Silent Comedy and Marcel Perez: The International Mirth-Maker. He has organized and curated comedy film programs for the Museum of Modern Art, The Library of Congress, The Museum of the Moving Image, The Smithsonian Institution, and The Pordenone Silent Film Festival.

If you’re interested in learning more about Steve’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

             

Posted in Books, Guest Posts, Silent Films | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

“Slapstick Divas: The Women of Silent Comedy” Book Giveaway (June 26 – July 29)

“Slapstick Divas: The Women of Silent Comedy”
We have TEN Copies to Give Away in July!

It’s time for our next book giveaway! And, I am delighted to say that this time, we’ll be celebrating the women of silent comedy (and yes, it’s about time!). That said, we’ll be giving away TEN COPIES of “Slapstick Divas: The Women of Silent Comedy” by early American film scholar and historian, Steve Massa, courtesy of Bear Manor Books.

Before we start the giveaway, I just want to say that “Slapstick Divas” is a 600+ page treasure trove of information! Not only does it provide a chronological study of the pioneering women of the silents, it also includes over 450 mini-biographies, and over 440 wonderful pictures (most of which I’ve never seen before). It was such a pleasure to learn about these fascinating women, many of which have been forgotten over time — until now!

That said, let the contest begin!

In order to qualify to win one of these books via this contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, July 29 at 9PM EST. However, the sooner you enter, the better chance you have of winning, because we will pick two winners on five different days within the contest period, via random drawings, as listed below… So if you don’t win the first week that you enter, you will still be eligible to win during the following weeks until the contest is over.

  • July 1: Two Winners
  • July 8: Two Winners
  • July 15: Two Winners
  • July 22: Two Winners
  • July 29: Two Winners

We will announce each week’s winner on Twitter @ClassicMovieHub and/or right here on this Blog in the comment section below (depending on how you entered), the day after each winner is picked at 9PM EST — for example, we will announce our first week’s winner at 9PM EST on Sunday July 30.

Slapstick Divas: The Women of Silent Comedy

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ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, July 29 at 9PM EST — BUT remember, the sooner you enter, the more chances you have to win…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

2) *Then TWEET (not DM) the following message (if you don’t have twitter, see below):
Just entered to win the “Slapstick Divas” #BookGiveaway courtesy of @ClassicMovieHub and @BearManorMedia

THE QUESTION:
Who are some of your favorite silent comediennes and why? And, if you don’t have any favorites, why would you like to win this book?

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

*If you do not have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

Click here for the full contest rules and more details. 

Please note that only Continental United States (excluding Alaska, Hawaii, and the territory of Puerto Rico) are eligible.

And — BlogHub members ARE eligible to win if they live within the areas noted above.

…..

About the book: Funny girls, those comediennes from the silent movies, knew shtick from slapstick. Mabel Normand, Marie Dressler, Bebe Daniels, Dorothy Gish, Constance Talmadge, Marion Davies, and Colleen Moore brought riotous laughter to millions around the world, yet their hilarity may seem hidden to those only familiar with Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Laurel and Hardy, and Harold Lloyd. Discover the women of wit, from the supporting players to the stars. Author Steve Massa covers their contributions to comedy with in-depth analyses of the most hilarious heroines of humor, followed by 459 biographies of other droll divas from the famous to the forgotten. The book contains 440 rare movie scene shots, formal portraits, candid behind the scenes photos, film frame enlargements, trade magazine advertisements, lobby cards, stage photographs, artist’s renderings and caricatures, and casting guide entries.

About the Author: Steve Massa is the author of Lame Brains and Lunatics: The Good, The Bad, and The Forgotten of Silent Comedy and Marcel Perez: The International Mirth-Maker. He has organized and curated comedy film programs for the Museum of Modern Art, The Library of Congress, The Museum of the Moving Image, The Smithsonian Institution, and The Pordenone Silent Film Festival.

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If you don’t want to wait to win, you can purchase the book by clicking here

Good Luck!

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Books, Contests & Giveaways, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | Tagged , | 36 Comments