“Forgotten Hollywood” – Latest Book Milestone…

August 22nd, 2014

Manny P. here…M1100_title

   Son of Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History has just passed 1100 in sales. The latest milestone is due to the purchases made at our monthly MCA-I event involving media professionals in the Orange County, CA area, and at a local chapter of  Rotary International function in Carpinteria, just outside of Santa Barbara.

MCAI Logo   rotary3wheels-150x150

FINALfrontcover-sonofforgottenhol   More sales are expected next week for the book series as I head to Vista, CA in San Diego for a Rotary luncheon; and CINECON 50, the annual film festival held on Labor Day weekend in Hollywood. Each year, I do quite well at this event.

Cinecon titlecard3

—————————————————-

   Thank you to J.L. Slade of UpThereVideo for providing highlights on YouTube at my recent chat with MCA-I media industry professionals to talk about Branding Your Career. Check out the enticingly positive review and video piece by cutting and pasting the following links:

http://www.mcai-oc.org/893-review-of-august-2014-meeting-social-media-branding-for-your-business-and-aerial-mastcam

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d8opoWU4KT8

   As they say… onward and forward!

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- A Voice For the Ages is Gone…

August 19th, 2014

Manny P. here…Don Pardo

   Don Pardo was a radio and television announcer whose career spanned over seven decades. A member of the Television Hall of Fame, Pardo was noted for his 70-year tenure with NBC, working as the announcer for early incarnations of such notable shows as The Price Is RightJeopardy (with Art Fleming), and the NBC Nightly News. His longest and best-known announcing gig was for Saturday Night Live, a job he held for 38 seasons, from the show’s debut in 1975 until his passing.               DON PARDO –>

   He joined NBC as an in-house announcer in 1944, remaining on the network staff for 60 years. During World War II, Pardo worked as a war reporter for NBC Radio. Pardo made his mark quickly, reading news dispatches on the radio filed from the front lines during World War II. After the war, he was the announcer for such shows as the Colgate Comedy Hour and Your Show of Shows.

   In the early 1950s, he served as announcer for many of RCA’s and NBC’s closed-circuit color television demonstrations. Pardo squeezed in many other assignments at NBC, including the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Pardo was the on-duty live booth announcer for WNBC-TV in New York and the NBC network on November 22, 1963, and he was first to announce to network viewers that President John F. Kennedy had been shot in Dallas.

   Pardo appeared in several movies, mostly as himself, including Woody Allen’s Radio Days, an homage to the Golden Age of Broadcasting; and Honeymoon in Vegas. On television, he appeared in 30 Rock and his voice was  used in an episode of The Simpsons.

   The venerable Don Pardo was 96.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Debbie Reynolds to be Honored…

August 18th, 2014

Manny P. here…

thecollection_title-150x150  <–DEBBIE REYNOLDS – actor, singer, dancer, author, champion for the preservation of the artifacts of film history, and understanding and treatment of mental illness – has been named the 51st recipient of SAG-AFTRA’s highest honor: SAG Life Achievement Award for career and humanitarian accomplishment. Given annually to a  legendary actor who fosters the finest ideals of the acting profession, the union’s highest accolade will be presented to Oscar, Emmy, and Tony-nominated Reynolds at the 21st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards, which will be simulcast live on TNT and TBS on Sunday, January. 25th, 2015.

   Star of more than 50 motion pictures, two Broadway shows, two television series, as well as dozens of cabaret and concert appearances, here and abroad, the 82-year-old Reynolds is celebrating her 66th year in show business. Debbie made iconic films, including The Unsinkable Molly Brown, for which she was nominated for an Academy Award  for her title role performance; and the Cinerama epic, How the West Was Won.

Thalians logo

   In 1955, Reynolds, along with Jack Haley Jr., Hugh O’Brian, and others, founded a charity to fight the stigma of mental illness, calling themselves The Thalians, after the goddess of comedy, Thalia. Over nearly 60 years, The Thalians have raised over $30 million, endowing The Thalians’ Mental Health Center at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. When the center’s priorities shifted to other types of illnesses, The Thalians moved to UCLA’s Operation Mend, which provides medical and mental health support to returning wounded military personnel. Reynolds was elected The Thalians’ president in 1957, and for many years alternated between that role and the chair of the board with Ruta Lee, and currently serves as the organization’s president emeritus. Reynolds has also been a lifelong supporter and fundraiser for the Girl Scouts.

   Reynolds other abiding passion has been the collection and preservation of memorabilia from Hollywood’s first half-century of filmmaking. Beginning with the landmark 1970 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer auction, she amassed thousands of costumes, props, and mementos of Hollywood’s studios and their greatest stars, building the largest individual collection of Hollywood memorabilia, including Marilyn Monroe’s white dress from The Seven Year Itch, Judy Garland’s ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz, Elizabeth Taylor’s headdress and Richard Burton’s costume from Cleopatra, and Audrey Hepburn’s Ascot gown from My Fair Lady. While the collection was showcased at Reynolds’ Las Vegas hotel in the 1990’s, sadly, after numerous attempts over 50 years to establish a Hollywood Motion Picture and Television Museum to give the collection a permanent home, Reynolds sold the memorabilia to private collectors at a series of auctions in between 2011 and 2014.

   Congratulations to the Unsinkable Debbie Reynolds on her latest accolade…

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Bacall to be Honored for Fashion…

August 14th, 2014

Manny P. here…

Lauren-Bacall-med   Next spring, The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology — with the help of FIT graduate students learning how to curate — will focus on five designers who helped define Lauren Bacall’s subtle seductiveness, her sophisticated mix of classic femininity, and raw masculine authority in fashion. Hundreds of personal garments she donated will be turned into an exhibition about her style.

   The exhibit on FIT’s Manhattan campus will focus mostly on Bacall’s looks from the 1950s and 1960s. A model at 16, later a pal of Yves Saint Laurent and a frequent wearer of designs by Norman Norell, some of her clothes by the designer will be joined by other designs Bacall donated from Marc Bohan for Christian Dior, Yves Saint Laurent, Pierre Cardin, and Ungaro. Bacall gave FIT roughly 700 garments.

   Much like the fashion of Marlene Dietrich, Bacall was never elevated to muse for any one designer. Plenty, though, were touched by her style over the decades: Bill Blass, Perry Ellis, her friend Yves Saint Laurent, Donna Karan, and Ralph Lauren, among them.

   Lauren Bacall’s only condition on the exhibition… make it a high quality process. After her passing, it will be elevated to a tribute to the actress.

—————————————————————-

tcmnav_top

   Turner Classic Movies is celebrating the life and career of Lauren Bacall (above) with a 24-hour marathon of memorable performances, including all four films in which she co-starred with husband Humphrey Bogart. TCM’s tribute to Bacall will begin airing Monday, September 15th, at 8p, and conclude Tuesday, September 16th, her 90th birthday. The cable channel will open its remembrance of Bacall’s extraordinary life and career with the TCM original Private Screenings: Lauren Bacall.

   For a complete listing, go to the TCM website at:

https://pressroom.turner.com/us/tcm/tcm-remembers/tcm-remembers-lauren-bacall#.U-0Q-E0g-5R

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Stunning Siren is Silenced…

August 12th, 2014

Manny P. here… Lauren_bacall_promo_photo

   Lauren Betty Bacall was Hollywood royalty, at one time married to Humphrey Bogart, and later, to Jason Robards. She became a part-time fashion model. Howard Hawks’ wife spotted her in a very small picture in Vogue and urged Hawks to have her take a screen test for To Have and Have Not. Her meeting with the star led to a screen couple known simply as Bogie and Bacall. A tune was written about their legendary love, appropriately called Key Largo.                         LAUREN BACALL —–>

Dark_passage_trailer_bogart_bacall   Hawks asked his secretary to find out more about her, but the secretary misunderstood and sent her a ticket to Hollywood for the audition. He signed her to a seven-year personal contract and brought her to Hollywood. During screen tests for To Have and Have Not, Bacall was nervous. To minimize her quivering, she pressed her chin against her chest and to face the camera, tilted her eyes upward. This effect became known as The Look, Bacall’s trademark. Through her storied career, she appeared with Bogie in four more motion pictures, including The Big Sleep, Dark Passage (left), Key Largo, and a cameo in Two Guys in Milwaukee.

   She also starred with Charles Boyer in Confidential Agent; Kirk Douglas and Doris Day in Young Man with a Horn; Marilyn Monroe and Betty Grable in How to Marry a Millionaire; Clifton Webb and Van Heflin in Woman’s World; John Wayne in Blood Alley; Richard Widmark in The Cobweb; Rock Hudson in Written in the Wind; Henry Fonda, Tony Curtis, and Natalie Wood in Sex and the Single Girl; Paul Newman in Harper; Albert Finney, Sean Connery, and Ingrid Bergman, among others in Murder on the Orient Express; and once again, John Wayne in his final film, The Shootist. Though nominated, she surprisingly never won a competitive Academy Award in her sparkling career. Bacall also notably became the off-screen voice for Turner Classic Movies.

   Lauren used her star-power for personal political causes. She and Bogart led a contingent of actors to Washington to fight against the persecution of artisans accused of belonging to  Communist organizations. Their group called itself the Committee for the First Amendment, and testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee. She campaigned for Democratic candidate, Adlai Stevenson, in the 1952 Presidential election, and for Robert Kennedy in his 1964 run for Senate.

   On Broadway, she shined in Cactus Flower, Applause, the musical based on the movie All About Eve, Goodbye Charlie, and Woman of the Year. On a personal note, the first stage play I ever saw as a young man was Applause. Betty Bacall helped me develop a lifetime love for musical theatre.

 Lauren_Bacall_in_The_Big_Sleep_trailer  Over the decades, her pals included Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn (a friendship that began during location filming of The African Queen), Frank Sinatra, Louella Parsons, and Swifty Lazar. Gregory Peck became a confidante during the production of Designing Women, which was made as Bogart’s health declined. He died before the film was completed. Betty also became friends with historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and journalist Alistair Cooke.

   Bacall received the Kennedy Center Honors in 1997. Two years later, she was voted one of the 25 most significant female movie stars in history by the American Film Institute. Bacall was selected by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to receive an Honorary Oscar. The award was presented at the inaugural Governors Awards in 2009.

   She was ever protective of the Bogart legacy, lashing out at those who tried to profit from his image. In 1997, she appeared at the Chinese Theater in Hollywood for ceremonies launching the US Postal Service’s Humphrey Bogart stamp.

   An undeniable movie star of the highest order (she defined the term), the actress taught a whole generation of movie-goers to whistle. Lauren Bacall was 89.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Robin Williams Takes His Own Life…

August 11th, 2014

Manny P. here…380px-Robin-Williams

   Robin Williams has died from an apparent suicide. A master improvisational comedian, he successfully transitioned to television and film. Williams won an Oscar for his supporting performance in Good Will Hunting in 1997.

   A native of Chicago, he was accepted into the Juilliard Academy, where he had several classes in which he and Christopher Reeve were the only students and John Houseman was the teacher. Encouraged by Houseman to pursue comedy, Williams identified with the wildest and angriest of performers: Jonathan Winters, Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor, George Carlin.

   Williams gained notoriety on the television program Mork & Mindy, which also co-starred Winters. It was developed after a number of successful appearances on Laugh-In, Eight is Enough, and especially, The Richard Pryor Show, and Happy Days. He was able to play himself on Saturday Night Live and The Larry Sanders Show. Robin last appeared in a weekly sit-com called The Crazy Ones.

   It was his groundbreaking performance on Mork & Mindy that allowed the manic actor to transition to motion pictures. He had roles in Popeye, The World According to Garp, Moscow on the Hudson, Good Morning Vietnam, Dead Poet’s Society, Awakenings, The Fisher King, Hook, Mrs. Doubtfire, Jumanji, The Bird Cage, Patch Adams, and as the voice of the Genie in Aladdin.

robin   In many instances, he was considered to garner various parts in the Batman series of films as the Joker and the Riddler. Williams actively campaigned to appear as a notable villain, though it never came to fruition.

    Williams was found unconscious in his home in unincorporated Tiburon, California. The Marin County Coroner Division suspects his passing to be suicide by asphyxia, pending an investigation. According to his publicist, Williams was battling severe depression in the time before his death.

   Robin Williams, a comedic genius, was 63.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Television Loses Another Actor…

August 10th, 2014

Manny P. here…

   Ed Nelson was best known for his noted role as Dr. Michael Rossi in the long-running ABC television series Peyton Place. Late in the run, after many of the actors left the program, he received top billing. However, he guest-starred in numerous small screen shows, more than fifty motion pictures, and hundreds of stage productions.

Ed_Nelson    Early in his career, Ed worked with famed B-movie producer Roger Corman. But, it was television where the durable actor excelled. Nelson was cast in episodes of such Westerns as Maverick, Wagon Train, Have Gun-Will Travel, GunsmokeThe Rifleman, Laramie, and Bonanza. He appeared on drama and adventure series too, including The Fugitive, The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, and two episodes of Perry Mason. During the 1980s, Nelson took on the role of Senator Mark Denning in the daytime soap opera Capitol.     ED NELSON  —->

   In his later life, Nelson taught acting in Louisiana at Tulane University. During interviews, he expressed great joy that his face was familiar to audiences, while his name remained in relative obscurity.

   Ed Nelson was 85.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Smile, You’re on Candid Camera…

August 9th, 2014

Manny P. here…

   Starting Monday, TV Land will air a new version of Candid Camera, the hidden-camera show that first debuted in 1948. The 10-episode series is produced by Peter Funt, son of the original show’s creator and host, Allen Funt. He will co-host with Mayim Bialik of The Big Bang Theory. Guest stars including Reggie Jackson and Carnie Wilson will help pull off the gags.

   The original show’s catchphrase was Smile, you’re on Candid Camera, which is how people learned they had been pranked. Versions of the show have returned to television several times since its initial run. It is a pioneer in the genre of reality television.

Allen_Funt_1972   Funt brought his program to ABCand then switched to NBC in the fall of 1949. The format moved to syndication in 1951 and continued for three years before returning to NBC in 1958 as a segment of Jack Paar’s The Tonight Show. The segment re-appeared in 1959 on CBS as a feature on The Garry Moore Show, before becoming a stand-alone show in 1960.      ALLEN FUNT —>

   The program’s longest uninterrupted run came on the 1960–1967 CBS version on late Sunday nights. Producer / host Funt was joined on stage by CBS veteran Arthur Godfrey the first season; Garry Moore Show announcer/sidekick Durward Kirby from 1961 to 1966; and Bess Myerson for the final season of the run, at which time, it also began broadcasting in color.

   In its first week, new episodes of Candid Camera will air at 8p, Monday through Thursday. The show will then air weekly on Tuesdays, starting August 19th.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Happy Birthday Smokey Bear…

August 8th, 2014

Manny P. here…

1960s   Smokey Bear is turning 70 on Saturday. As the friendly bruin with the brimmed hat and shovel enters his golden years, his steadfast message of responsible fire prevention hasn’t changed.

   Smokey Bear was created in 1944 because of fears that America’s enemies would set forest fires while most firefighters were in battle overseas. When the war ended, Smokey stuck around — and he is at the center of the longest-running public service announcement campaign in US history. Research shows he is known by 96%  of American adults, and ranks near Mickey Mouse and Santa Claus for name recognition. His creation was a collaborative effort of the  National Association of State Foresters, US Forest Serviceand the Ad Council.

   Smokey traditionally never spoke in his public service messages except for his signature line — Only You Can Prevent Forest Fires. When he first debuted, television was in its infancy and posters were hand-drawn. Smokey Bear’s ad campaign got a boost in 1950 when a real bear cub that had been rescued from a New Mexico wildfire was nursed back to health and sent to the National Zoo in Washington, DC, as the living Smokey.

head-logo

   Now, Smokey is a social media connoisseur and a prolific blogger, with his own accounts on Facebook, Twitter (@Smokey_Bear), Instagramand Flickr. He has more than 300,000 friends on Facebook and 24,000 people follow him on Twitter. Fans can sign a virtual card and upload pictures at www.smokeybear.com. People still enjoy contacting Smokey the old-fashioned way, too. He has his own ZIP code (20252 in 1952), as his popularity soared, and it was reactivated in the summer. A series of YouTube videos created around his latest birthday show Smokey giving hugs (#SmokeyBearHug) to campers who properly build and extinguish camp fires, and also safely dispose of used barbeque charcoal, among other things.

callout-smokey-mask   Happy birthday to the cultural icon of a most reliable campaign… Smokey Bear!

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- October is Buster Keaton Month…

August 6th, 2014

Manny P. here…

Michigan is the state to visit in the Fall for the 20th annual Buster Keaton Convention. Here are the details…

Header

2014ConventionLogo

   Pre-registration will be available during the day for early birds on Wednesday, October 1st at the Shoreline Inn, 750 Terrace Point Blvd. You can also register online at:

http://www.busterkeaton.com/

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Monster Mash…

August 2nd, 2014

Manny P. here…

   American Cinematheque’s Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood is featuring Universal Monster Mash August 7th – 9th.

universal monsters 2

   The frights begin Thursday night with two horror flicks starring Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff – The Black Cat and The Raven. There’s a triple bill on Friday with Dracula with Lugosi; the 1943 version of The Phantom of the Opera with Claude Rains; and The Wolf Man. On tap for Saturday is a monster triple feature with Karloff:  Frankenstein, Bride of Frankenstein, and Son of Frankenstein.

   FYI – The following week: Modern School Of Film’s FILM: MASTERS series returns with actor Alfred Molina’s (below) cinematic pick – Kubrick’s visually-stunning 1960 epic Spartacus. Molina will participate in a discussion after the show with Modern School of Film founder Robert Milazzo. The event takes place on Sunday, August 10th. The screening will begin at 7p.

Spartacus_sheetA   1024px-Alfred_Molina

   The Egyptian Theatre is located at 6712 Hollywood Blvd.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Sir Alec Celebrates 100…

August 1st, 2014

Manny P. here…10021718_gal

   A centennial salute to Alec Guinness is taking place at the Aero Theatre week retrospective will take place over three Thursday’s, beginning August 7th. In honor of his 100th birthday, join the Aero for some of Alec Guinness’ greatest roles, including Oliver Twist, The Lavender Hill Mob, The Man in the White SuitThe Ladykillers, The Scapegoat, Father Brown, Last Holiday, The Card, Damn the Defiant!, Our Man in Havana, and Tunes of Glory.

   Sir Alec Guinness (1914 – 2000) was one of the most versatile and accomplished actors; a master of stage and screen, equally adept at drama, comedy, and action. After establishing himself as a theater performer, Guinness made a name for himself in classic Ealing comedies, most notably, Kind Hearts and Coronets (in which he played eight characters).                       ALEC GUINNESS  —->

   He also proved to be a dramatic heavyweight in his collaborations with director David Lean, beginning in 1946 with Great Expectations. Lean cast the performer in five additional films, including such masterpieces as The Bridge on the River Kwai (for which Guinness won a Best Actor Oscar), Lawrence of Arabia, and Doctor Zhivago.

   Guinness found a whole new audience when George Lucas put a light saber in his hand as Obi-Wan Kenobi in Star Wars (for which the actor received another Oscar nomination). A rather reluctant Jedi – this was an actor raised on the works of Shakespeare and Dickens – Guinness would nonetheless find that the box office success of the film gave him the freedom to choose roles independent of financial concerns for the rest of his life.

   Presented by the American Cinematheque in collaboration with the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, Los Angeles. The Aero Theatre is located at 1328 Montana Ave. in Santa Monica.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Two From the Industry are Gone…

July 31st, 2014

Manny P. here…

   Hollywood has lost two major talents from its Golden Age…

imagegen~ DICK SMITH – Dick was a pioneering special effects make-up artist (nicknamed The Godfather of Make-Up)  known for his efforts on such films as Little Big Man, The Exorcist, Taxi Driver, The Godfather, The Stepford Wives, and Midnight Cowboy. He won a 1985 Oscar for Makeup for his fine work on Amadeus, plus, received an honorary Academy Award for his career’s work in 2012.    DICK SMITH —->

   On television, Smith provided special make-up for two episodes of the vampire soap opera, Dark Shadows. He published an instructional book, Dick Smith’s Do-It-Yourself Monster Make-up Handbook, from a special edition of Forrest J. Ackerman’s Famous Monsters of Filmland magazine series.

   Dick Smith was 92.

James_Shigeta_1968~ JAMES SHIGETA – Shigeta played the lead in the musical Flower Drum Song, particularly memorable in Midway, and he had a role in the first Die Hard. Shigeta provided a voice for the Disney animated  Mulan. He was also a Standards singer for musical theater, nightclub performer, and recording artist.

   Born in Hawaii, he gained national fame as a singer when he won the grand prize in the televised talent show, The Original Amateur Hour. He appeared in episodes of Naked City, The Outer Limits, Dr. Kildare, Perry Mason, Ben Casey, Mission: Impossible, Hawaii 5-0, I SpyLittle House on the Prairie, Fantasy Island, Ironside, It Takes a Thief, Magnum P.I., and The Streets of San Francisco. He also had a recurring role on Medical Center.                   JAMES SHIGETA

    James Shigeta was 85.

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Gable Foundation Celebrates GWTW

July 28th, 2014

Manny Pacheco…

The Clark Gable Foundation in Cadiz, Ohio is celebrating the 75th anniversary of Gone with the Wind. The special screening will take place on the campus of Kent State University. Here are the details:

gableheader

Gone with the Wind

   The Clark Gable Foundation is located at 138 Charleston St. in Cadiz, Ohio.

————————————————-

txtr_logo_web_92x70px

Forgotten Hollywood cover   Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History eBook can now be found on txtr, a leading provider of eReading solutions with clients in Europe, North America and South East Asia. Their products and services encompasses a catalog of over a million titles in ePub and PDF formats, as well as, a cloud-based reading service for smartphones, tablets, eReaders, and PCs.

   txtr recently launched Beagle, a companion eInk reader for smartphones. The company was founded in 2008, and privately funded. 3M New Ventures has been a strategic investor in txtr since June 2011.

Here is a link to order the eReader:

https://us.txtr.com/catalog/document/rfego89/forgotten-hollywood-forgotten-history–manny-pacheco/#share

Until next time>                               “never forget”

“Forgotten Hollywood”- Hal Roach Retrospective in Full Swing

July 27th, 2014

Manny P. here…   The Hollywood Museum has unveiled its new exhibit, 100 Years of Hal Roach Studios: Laurel & Hardy, ‘Our Gang’ and Harold Lloyd in distinct honor of the Hollywood icon’s centennial, open to the public through August 31st.  The fun exhibit contains authentic photos, costumes and props from the rich history of Hal Roach Studios and the legendary talents that emanated from there in the early 1900’s.

   Sons of the Desert, the official International Laurel & Hardy Society, is co-sponsoring the exhibition in the heart of Hollywood. Laurel and Hardy were solo performers who were cast separately in silent films, but within a year after they were fortuitously paired together at the Hal Roach Studios in 1926

   Hal Roach’s life was colorful, as anything ever portrayed on film. In addition to Laurel and Hardy, Hal Roach Studios brought to fame such actors as Harold Lloyd, the Our Gang tots (better known as The Little Rascals or Hal Roach’s Rascals), bombshell actress Thelma Todd, Zasu Pitts, and Charley Chase. Other performers who graduated from Roach comedies on the path to stardom were such actors as Jean Harlow, Janet Gaynor, Fay Wray, Paulette Goddard, Jean Arthur, and Boris Karloff.

   Roach’s powerful film of John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men was possibly his masterwork and One Million B.C. was notable for his collaboration with D.W. Griffith. John Wayne, Buster Keaton and John Ford were among the many big name stars and directors who worked on Roach television shows.

   Objects pertaining to Hal Roach include his honorary 1984 Oscar and a Hal Roach Studios camera, while Harold Lloyd items include a makeup case, glasses, and rare film posters and photos. Additional Laurel & Hardy ephemeras consist of film posters, photographs, scripts, sheet music, scrapbooks, personal photos and letters, and Al Hirschfield-designed window cards.

   The Hollywood Museum in the historic Max Factor Building is located at 1660 N. Highland Ave. at Hollywood and Highland.

Until next time>                               “never forget”