#movie magazine
We’re now in the middle of 24 hours of Olivia de Havilland on TCM for Summer Under the Stars. There are so many superlatives I could shower on Olivia that I’m definitely going to have to write a whole essay on her eventually! But, for now, here’s my recreation of the July 1947 cover of Cine-Mundial magazine featuring Olivia.
One bit I will mention today is that Olivia’s legacy was not simply her fantastic screen work, but the precedent for labor rights she set on this day in 1943 when she sued Warner Bros. for release from her contract with them. Basically, studios had redefined what a seven-year contract meant so that they could further extend their control over artists. The result was the De Havilland Law, which makes it explicit that a seven-year contract represents seven calendar years. This precedent is still used today to protect the rights of performers.
I wasn’t able to gather much information about the photo featured on this cover, but it was apparently one of a series of publicity shots for the film To Each His Own(1946). Coincidentally, this happens to be the first film Olivia made after the ruling and the film for which she won her first Best Actress Academy Award!
What is Cosplay Under the Stars?
If you’re new here, every August, Turner Classic Movies celebrates Summer Under the Stars. Each day of the month, a different film star gets a full 24 hours of programming. In 2017, on a whim, I decided to put together closet cosplays of every woman featured that month. And so, Cosplay Under the Stars was born.
Lana Turner’s Summer Under the Stars takeover is upon us! Here’s my recreation of the September 1941 cover of Movie Stars Parade magazine. Lana’s on the cover in promotion for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1941), which was released that month. Yes, that is really the photo they chose to run with a promo for a period horror film.
This promotional photo was obviously not taken for the movie, but the choice of the photo given the subject of the article illustrates a disappointing aspect of her stardom. Even today, when people talk about Lana Turner, they zero in on her glamorous-yet-approachable image or her dramatic personal life over her actual work. Frankly I disagree with the assertion that she wasn’t that good at acting. Of course, early on Lana was learning on the job. Though roles that challenged her range were sporadic, looking at her work from the mid-1940s on, she was always on point, she always matched the energy of each film. That’s why I’m glad TCM is mostly playing post-1945 Lana films. Hopefully, some people will take the day to reconsider their flippancy toward Lana and realize she was more than someone who looked good in a sweater!
What is Cosplay Under the Stars?
If you’re new here, every August, Turner Classic Movies celebrates Summer Under the Stars. Each day of the month, a different film star gets a full 24 hours of programming. In 2017, on a whim, I decided to put together closet cosplays of every woman featured that month. And so, Cosplay Under the Stars was born.
fromMotion Picture Classic, April 1922
Transcription:
NOW that America has seen and capitulated before his “Passion,” “Deception,” and “Gypsy Blood,” the personality and ideas of Ernest [sic] Lubitsch, the German director, must be of singular interest. During Herr Lubitsch’s recent visit to America, we had an opportunity to talk to this man whose cinema creations came silently out of an enemy land and won an antagonistic world.
Lubitsch is short and stocky, not in the least suggesting the actor. Yet for seven years he was a player on the Berlin stage in the famous organization of Max Reinhardt. Swarthy of complexion and ebony black of hair, he holds your interest with his alert eyes and his well-modulated voice. Yet his eyes are the eyes of a dreamer, rather than a doer, and, as for his voice, it is the voice of a poet.
Lubitsch is thirty—but he looks older. At the age of twenty he obtained employment as a super in the vast mobs utilized by that German master of stagecraft, Reinhardt. Out from the mob he advanced to play youthful comic rôles. And his steps have been steadily upward ever since.
Back in 1913—at the age of twenty-two—he began acting for the movies, altho he still played in Reinhardt productions. He began by appearing in one-reel comedies, creating broadly comic rôles of the Potash and Perlmutter type. It was at this time that he linked forces with Paul Davidson, who has since guided his destinies. The Lubitsch comedies grew in popularity and, in 1915, the director organized his own comedy company under the guidance of Herr Davidson. Lubitsch was now director, as well as star of the one-reel comedies.
Meanwhile the directorial genius of Lubitsch was asserting itself. The director decided to try his hand at serious drama. His first picture, in which he himself played the lead, was a flat failure. “Had I looked in my mirror I could have realized all that in advance,” he explains humorously.
Then it was that Herr Davidson discovered Pola Negri and Lubitsch made his production of “Carmen,” which but recently reached these shores as “Gypsy Blood.” Mr. Lubitsch is at pains to describe the real Pola Negri and to set at rest all the strange stories America has heard of her so-called discovery in various German factories and department stores. Take Lubitsch’s word for it that she is Polish, that she first appeared before the public in Warsaw as a dancer, and that her first picture work was done in Poland. She drifted to Germany but until “Carmen,” had failed to attract attention. “Carmen” literally made her famous overnight—aside from establishing Lubitsch as a directorial force.
We asked Lubitsch to name his favorite film play. “The last is always my favorite,” he said: “I rush into them with such high spirits and live so close to my work that my mind always graps [sic] my last work as its favorite,” Lubitsch paused. “Possibly I like a little fantastic film of mine, ‘The Doll,’ best of all. No, America has not seen ‘The Doll’ yet.”
Next we put the age-old question of the screen’s future to Lubitsch. He shrugged his shoulders in true Teutonic fashion. “That will be dependent upon the people who make them. Our producers must be real leaders, must not be afraid to risk their all for experiments and must possess infinite imagination or the photoplay will slip into stagnant waters. Our biggest menace today lies in the difficulties facing film experiments. Yet we must experiment or the films will never break new paths.”
We asked Lubitsch to name what he considered the strengths and weaknesses of our native films. He diplomatically
(Continued on page 77)
Photo Caption:
The success of “Passion,” “Deception,” and “Gypsy Blood” has made the personality and ideas of their maker, Ernest [sic] Lubitsch, of singular interest. “The future of motion pictures will be dependent upon the people who make them. Our producers must be real leaders, must not be afraid to risk their all for experiments, and must possess infinite imagination, or the photoplay will slip into stagnant waters”
The Photoplay in Stagnant Waters
(Continued from page 34)
professed to have seen but few of them. One however, he named with genuine enthusiasm. It was Griffith’s “Broken Blossoms.” “That is a true work of art,” he said. And he enthused over the work of Charlie Chaplin. We asked him to name the foremost American film players and he again lapsed into diplomatic silence. But when we asked him to select that foremost film player of Europe, his eyes lighted and he named Pola Negri without a second’s hesitation. And he listed Emil Jannings, Paul Wegener and Weiner [sic] Krauss as among the foremost celluloid actors. Incidentally, Lubitsch confirmed the report that Jannings, the unforgettable Louis XV of “Passion” and Henry VIII of “Deception,” is of American blood. Jannings is of American parentage, altho he was born in Switzerland.
Lubitsch briefly explained his method of work, which differs but little from those of our own directors. Save in one important particular. Before starting a production, he goes away with his scenario editor and together they devote a month to working out the continuity.
Here Lubitsch pointed out that European continuity differs from American in one essential aspect. Motion pictures in Germany, Italy and Sweden are shown after the style of spoken plays—in acts, usually four in number, with intermissions between the parts. This necessitates building to act climaxes, after the fashion of the footlight drama. Lubitsch declares this to be easier than the American continuity, which must steadily build upward until it reaches its climax.
“My actual methods of direction are, I suppose, similar to American ways. I have but one fixed rule: I never use players until I know their personalities and real inner selves. In that way, I never ask more of them than they can give.”
Lubitsch looks but lightly upon the present film depression. “A war reaction,” he explains. “During the struggle the people of every country had more or less excess money to spend. And they had to do something steadily to forget. So even film rubbish attracted, for the war-time audiences sought only amusement.
“Now conditions are different. Money is scarce. People have no horror to forget. They think before entering a theater and they sit with a critical attitude. All over Europe conditions are psychologically the same as in America.”
Lubitsch laughs at the idea of German motion pictures injuring American film making. “We must interchange—for we all need the best products of every country. Never forget that the photoplay is international and that the people of every land are essentially the same in every way. And do not forget that the photoplay is the one art speaking all languages.”
This photo of Myrna Loy from the October 1928 issue of Motion Picture Magazine!
Caption text: “Real estate values in Chicago–particularly in the downtown districts–are expected soon to rise as suddenly as indiscreet politicians. For Myrna Loy is schedules next to appear in the title role of ‘State Street Sadie’”
Picture Play magazine, September 1929 (via Heritage Auctions).