ANNIVERSARY ON LEAP YEAR:
February 29, 1948 - Shirley Booth is heard on radio in The Fred Allen Show.
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I have always loved black & white films, especially silent films - though I know that few people share my appreciation. So I am quite happily surprised to learn that The Artist has been awarded top honors at the Academy Awards. It's great to know that silent films have not been forgotten!
The Artist won five Oscars, including Best Picture (to Producer Thomas Langmann), Best Director to Michel Hazanavicius, Best Actor to Jean Dujardin, Best Score, and Best Costume Design.
Congratulations to Thomas, Michel, Jean and all those connected with ta truly superb production!
What would be truly wonderful is if The Artist got widespread theatrical release - but there's not much chance theater owners would expect a silent black & white film to sell many tickets nowadays!
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Speaking of silents, I remember enjoying silent comedies back in the 1970’s thanks to watching PBS' "The Silent Years," hosted by Orson Welles and Lilian Gish.
Also, I always enjoyed those clips assembled in the films of producer/screenwriter Robert Youngson (November 27, 1917 - April 8, 1974) made from 1957 to 1970.
It’s these films that I have come to re-watch again recently after so many years since first seeing them. I have found that they still hold up as a great assemblage of silent film comedy. Youngson spent countless hours watching literally several thousand hours of films to put together these amazing compilation films.
If you have never seen and appreciated silent film comedies, then Youngson’s films would be a perfect starting point. And for those quite familiar with these classics, I would still recommend seeing these compilation films…they are quite entertaining and well-made.
The list of talents seems endless - for example there's Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle, Billy Bevan, Charlie Chaplin, Charlie Chase, Vernon Dent, Jean Harlow, Buster Keaton, Edgar Kennedy, Harry Langdon, Carole Lombard, Snub Pollard, Will Rogers, Ben Turpin, Andy Clyde, Charles Murray, the Keystone Cops, and the list can go on and on...
This is the Youngson films:
The Golden Age of Comedy (1957)
When Comedy Was King (1960)
Days of Thrills and Laughter (1961)
30 Years of Fun (1963)
MGM's The Big Parade of Comedy (1964)
Laurel & Hardy's Laughing 20's (1965)
The Further Perils of Laurel & Hardy (1967)
Four Clowns (1970)
I am aware that the first three (and The Further Perils) are available on DVD. Several others were on VHS.
Youngson uses for theme music my favorite composition of all time, the amazingly beautiful melodic Etude, Opus 10, No.3. That superb and nostalgic composition by Frederic Chopin opens and closes the films (see my side panel with a link to Valentina Lisitsa playing it).
Anyone remember these films?
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THANKS FOR VISITING!
JOIN ME AGAIN TOMORROW!
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For purchasing any of my books, you can visit Amazon.com
You can also check www.bookfinder.com
which offers the best prices on new & used copies.
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For Bill, His Pinup Girl: The Shirley Booth & Bill Baker Story
by Jim Manago
Foreword by Leslie Sodaro
Published December 1, 2010
Further details at: http://shirleybooth.blogspot.com
THANKS FOR VISITING!
JOIN ME AGAIN TOMORROW!
*****
For purchasing any of my books, you can visit Amazon.com
You can also check www.bookfinder.com
which offers the best prices on new & used copies.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For Bill, His Pinup Girl: The Shirley Booth & Bill Baker Story
by Jim Manago
Foreword by Leslie Sodaro
Published December 1, 2010
Further details at: http://shirleybooth.blogspot.com
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Love is the Reason for it All: The Shirley Booth Story
by Jim Manago
Radio Research by Donna Manago
Foreword by Ted Key
BearManor Media, May 2008
http://bearmanormedia.bizland.com
by Jim Manago
Radio Research by Donna Manago
Foreword by Ted Key
BearManor Media, May 2008
http://bearmanormedia.bizland.com
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