Starting off the first of four consecutive photo postings between now and New Year's, we reveal a candid shot of Claudette Colbert... I love those early Paramount Pictures films she did in the thirties. Especially in those pre-codes. It might be because she was obsessed with how she was photographed. She even preferred to do her own hair and makeup. But these candid shots, sent to me by James Culpepper, are a fascinating tid-bit in the life of the actress. A Christmas wreath bearing her image was hung on a pole on Vine Street in California in November or December of 1932. This was the same year Cecil B. DeMille's Sign of the Cross was released and Colbert plays the cruel, seductive Empress Poppaea, and appeared topless in the notorious milk bath sequence.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Friday, December 13, 2013
Radio Rides the Range Book
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Radio Rides the Range |
One of Jim Cox's hobbies is authoring encyclopedias about old-time radio. In particular are subject-oriented topics such as The Great Radio Audience Participation Shows (2008), The Great Radio Sitcoms (2012) and The Great Radio Soap Operas (1999). Jim rarely attends old-time radio conventions and when he does, his appearance is usually brief. One year in Cincinnati I remember visiting Jim in his hotel room. He was trying to finish the index for his next book. "Why don't you come down to the show and chat with the attendees?" I asked. His response was that he already put in his appearance, chatted with folks who share a common interest, and his priority was finishing his latest project on the laptop.
To date, Jim has authored 18 books with a labor of love and so it was bound to happen eventually: a book devoted to the Westerns on old-time radio. Despite the historic popularity of Western drama, there has never been one volume to encompass them all. Good friends Jack French and David Siegel put this one together, saving Jim from another challenging project he might otherwise take on. Someone had to do it and I for one am glad Jack and Dave filled in the gap. My bookshelves at home contain a wealth of reference guides and with this addition, which just arrived in my mail box, I am not sure what there is left that could be written about that cries for desperation. I fear future books devoted to old-time radio will start duplicating past endeavors. This has happened three times in the past two years and I had no other choice but to resell the books that offered nothing more than the ones on my book shelf. Perhaps the only option left is for historians to focus on the really, really, really obscure. Murphy's Law dictates that if you take time to write a book that even the geeks will want to own and read... only the geeks will buy and read it. I guess time will tell.
Radio Rides the Range, available in paperback format, is a reference guide to Western drama on the air (1929 to 1967). More than 100 dramatic radio programs are documented, with careful selection of the programs. Jack and Dave chose to avoid programs designated as all-music (Grand Ol' Opry is one such example). Western frontiersman such as Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett were dismissed. Programs such as Dakota Days and Chisholm Trail had insufficient data to be classified and included. What the authors/editors chose to do was include five basic types of Western dramas: anthology programs such as Empire Builders and Frontier Fighters; juvenile adventure dramas such as Hopalong Cassidy and The Lone Ranger; legend and lore such as Chief Grey Wolf and Red Goose Indian Tales; adult Westerns such as Gunsmoke and Frontier Gentlemen; and soap operas such as Lone Journey and Cactus Kate.
The book also clarifies the portrayal of Mexicans and American Indians, how stereotyping began to change during World War II, how children programs began painting a picture of racial intolerance, and the portrayal of American Indians from heavies to sidekicks. One program I was not familiar with was Light on the West, where a woman played the role of a law enforcement officer. Women played minor roles in radio Westerns, primarily as love interests, schoolmarms or victimized widows. The plight and progress of women in the West is chronicled throughout the book.
A pleasant surprise: Will Hutchins, Tom Brewster of television's Sugarfoot, submitted a great foreword, both enthusiastic and praising of radio drama and the book.
With over 100 entries, a tome of this scope is more difficult than a book focused on a single subject. Jack and Dave recognized that no one person can put together such a book without errors slipping, so they consulted historians (myself included, full disclosure) and researchers who would devote long hours of research and ensure the accuracy of the information contained in this book. A total of 36 submissions were received from 20 contributors, with Jack and Dave authoring about 60 entries. Some of the entries were obviously created with only one or two sources such as a Variety review or a newspaper clipping. Other entries were created by fans of the program who devoted considerable amount of their writeup citing the cast (probably because content and script information was not available). Among the impressive entries were J. David Goldin's Tales from the Diamond K (1951), Goldin's Hoofbeats (1936-37), Stan Claussen's Frontier Town (1949-53), Jack and Dave's Ranch House Jim (1943-44), and Ryan Ellett's Life on Red Horse Ranch (1935-36).
Perhaps the most beneficial aspect of this book is the inclusion of radio programs where no surviving recordings exist, or which very few recordings are known to exist. Thankfully, with but one or two entries where the contributors chose to "speculate" rather than "verify" the contents of a radio program where recordings are sparse, the entire book stays focused on the facts. (It bugs me when I read books that mistake speculation for facts and mislead the readers.) For the rarities, print documentation was used to fill in a gap that was sorely needed. This reason, among all reasons, is why this book provides a major contribution to the preservation of old-time radio. "It will definitely be a strong asset in any reference repository, whether in a large public library or just the book shelf of a collector," Jack told me. That just about fits the bill.
Thank you, Jack and Dave.
You can purchase a copy of the book from Amazon.com but I recommend you purchase your copy direct from McFarland Publishing. (a direct link here: www.mcfarlandpub.com) A direct purchase from the publisher will ensure the largest royalties to the authors. We're probably talking pennies here, but the price is the same so there's no reason to shop elsewhere.
Monday, December 9, 2013
The Lone Ranger in NYC
This December, in New York City, the Metropolitan Transit Authority is running their Nostalgia Holiday Special Train consisting of subway cars of the past that have long been retired, including many of the original advertisements that were once posted within the trains. They are running every Sunday this month along the 6th Avenue Subway line. Check out the LONE RANGER advertisement for station WOR that was captured on digital camera (courtesy of Brian Hochberg) yesterday!
Friday, December 6, 2013
Recent Auction Sales
Looking for something to buy this Christmas? Check out some of these auction items from the past year!
Judy Garland's WIZARD OF OZ Dress... Sold!
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Judy Garland's WIZARD OF OZ dress. |
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Fake Babe Ruth baseball mitt. |
Beware of Ebay Scammers
A California man pleaded
guilty in a Manhattan federal courtroom in June 2012 for trying to sell a
baseball glove he falsely claimed was once
owned by Yankees legend Babe Ruth for $200,000. "I sold a baseball glove
and falsely claimed it was Babe Ruth’s,"
Irving Scheib, age 50, told U.S. District Judge Robert Patterson. "I
feel
horrible about it, Your Honor, but those are the facts." Scheib bought
an authentic 19th century baseball glove on eBay for
$750, then turned around and tried to resell it for $200,000, starting
in January. To entice buyers, Scheib wrote a fake handwritten note he
said was from Ruth and concocted an elaborate story about the glove that
made it appear to have been one of the Bambino's treasured possessions
The
fake document was then sent to an individual interested in purchasing
the glove (the buyer). After paying for the glove, the buyer asked
Scheib to notarize one of the letters attesting to the glove's
provenance that was signed by Scheib and purportedly signed by Scheib's
wife, who is Robert Young's granddaughter. Scheib refused to do so ad
the buyer promptly returned the glove.
Scheib then tried
to con another man by alleging that Babe Ruth owned the glove. But this
potential buyer turned out to be an investigator for the U.S. Attorney's
Office. In addition to probation, the judge ordered Scheib to pay a
$25,000 fine. He also agreed to forfeit the glove to the United States.
Martin Luther King Audio Tape
Stephon
Tull was going through his attic, cleaning it out, when he stumbled on a
box formerly owned by his father, a Chattanooga insurance salesman. A
rare reel-to-reel tape consisting of a interview his father had with
Martin Luther King, Jr., dated December 21, 1960. For ten minutes King
discussed the topic of civil rights and the movement and a recent trip
to Africa. It seems Stephon's father had plans to write a book about
King but was never completed. Made four years before the Civil Rights
Act, the tape was put up for auction earlier this year.
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Courtesy of the Associated Press with permission. |
$20,000 Buys You a Piece of WWII History
If
you had $20,000 loose change in the sofa, you could have owned a piece
of WWII history. A naval cable signaling the end of the war against
Japan was sold on auction. The cable was on a piece of paper, 8 inches
by 6 inches, a dispatch from President Harry S. Truman's Navy Secretary
to Rear Admiral Francis Denebrink (the commander of the Pacific sub
fleet aboard the U.S.S. Holland) and read: "All hands of the United
States Navy, Marine Corpse and Coast Guard may take satisfaction in the
conclusion of the war against Japan." Bob York, age 65, sold the
dispatch formerly owned by his father, Robert W. York, a WWII veteran
who was on the U.S.S. Holland on August 15, 1945. It was a prized
possession of his father's but since the veteran recently passed away,
his son put it up for auction and the winning bid was $20,000.
Pieces of the Dead Sea Scrolls for Sale
In 1947, a Bedouin shepherd threw a stone into a dark cave along the Dead Sea east of Jerusalem and heard the sound of something breaking. Inside, he found clay jars, some of them with rolled-up scrolls inside. He and some companions ended up finding seven scrolls -- the Dead Sea Scrolls -- one of the greatest archaeological finds of the 20th Century. These were the world's oldest biblical manuscripts, and the Bedouins who found them sold three to a Hebrew University professor and four to William Kando, a Christian cobbler.
The Kando family ended up selling most of the scrolls to scholars and institutions, but Mr. Kando's son still has fragments that he's kept in a Swiss safe deposit box for years that he recently decided to make for sale. Most of the fragments are barely the size of a postage stamp, and some are blank, with no writing on them at all. But there is still keen interest from many evangelical Christian collectors and institutions in the U.S. The reason Kando is selling on the down-low is that Israel wants the scraps to be recognized as Israeli cultural property. But money talks, doesn't it?
Jackie Robinson's Baseball Glove for Sale
The baseball glove believed worn by Jackie Robinson during the 1955 and 1956 World Series sold for $373,002 in an auction that ended June 3 by Steiner Sports, based in New York. It was not the most ever paid for a baseball glove at an auction. That honor goes to the mitt advertised as the last one used by Lou Gehrig; it fetched $387,500 at Sotheby's in 1999.
Bob Hope's House for Sale
A known fact that Bob Hope invested his money in real estate led to a startling revelation: at one point he was one of California's largest individual property holders, owning some 10,000 acres in the San Fernando Valley alone. Now his home in a San Fernando valley walnut grove, first built in 1939, is up for sale... the asking price is $27.5 million. The 5.16 acre Toluca Lake estate was expanded on over the years to fit Bob Hope's needs, hobbies and family. In the surrounding area, zip codes, Beverly Hills, Studio City, Encino, Holmby Hills and Sherman Oaks, there are supposedly only 22 properties that have more than 5 acres so anyone wanting a lot of land in California needs to look no further than Bob Hope's private residence. There are a number of personal mementos that come with the house, catered to Hope, including the letter 'H' on the giant iron gate. Six bedrooms, seven bathrooms and an indoor and outdoor swimming pool.
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An aerial view of Bob Hope's house. |
A known fact that Bob Hope invested his money in real estate led to a startling revelation: at one point he was one of California's largest individual property holders, owning some 10,000 acres in the San Fernando Valley alone. Now his home in a San Fernando valley walnut grove, first built in 1939, is up for sale... the asking price is $27.5 million. The 5.16 acre Toluca Lake estate was expanded on over the years to fit Bob Hope's needs, hobbies and family. In the surrounding area, zip codes, Beverly Hills, Studio City, Encino, Holmby Hills and Sherman Oaks, there are supposedly only 22 properties that have more than 5 acres so anyone wanting a lot of land in California needs to look no further than Bob Hope's private residence. There are a number of personal mementos that come with the house, catered to Hope, including the letter 'H' on the giant iron gate. Six bedrooms, seven bathrooms and an indoor and outdoor swimming pool.