Wonderland Burlesque's
Let's All Go To The Movies:
She's A Lady!
Part III
Sometimes? It takes a lady.
Or so these films would have us believe.
They promise lots of drama, the occasional comedy or musical, and a little bit of dirt!
Let's take a walk down Hollywood Blvd. and shine a light on these magnificent classic films.
This way, if you please. But remember...
Ladies first!
Or so these films would have us believe.
They promise lots of drama, the occasional comedy or musical, and a little bit of dirt!
Let's take a walk down Hollywood Blvd. and shine a light on these magnificent classic films.
This way, if you please. But remember...
Ladies first!
--- ---
The Lady
(1925)
Like many of Talmadge's silent films of the 1920s, The Lady is derived from a stage play. The play, The Lady, ran on Broadway from December 4, 1923 to February 1924 at Charles Frohman's Empire Theatre. It was produced by A. H. Woods. Mary Nash played Talmadge's part of Polly Pearl and Elizabeth Risdon played Fanny Le Clare which, in the film, was played by Doris Lloyd.
The Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, formed by the film industry in 1922, regulated the content of films using a list of subjects that were to be avoided. While Talmadge portrayed a prostitute in The Lady, this was acceptable under the rules as prostitution was not explicitly barred so long as it was not forced (i.e., white slavery) and aspects of her work was not shown in the film. To accomplish the latter, while staying at the brothel, her work is limited to being a cabaret singer.
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The Lady Who Lied
(1925)
Based on a novel by Robert Hichens, this American silent melodrama was produced and distributed by First National Pictures, directed by Edwin Carewe, and stars Virginia Valli, Nita Naldi, and Lewis Stone.
Nita Naldi
Due to the financial reversals caused by her retirement from films, as well as the Great Depression, Naldi filed for bankruptcy in 1932. She returned to the stage with Queer People and The Firebird in 1933. The press had been critical of her weight since 1924, but reviews of her appearances in both plays were especially harsh this time around - so harsh in fact that Naldi filed suit against one paper in 1934 for $500,000. The suit was dismissed in 1938.
In 1929, seven years after the success of Blood and Sand, Naldi was named as a party in the divorce proceedings between 54-year-old millionaire J. Searle Barclay and his wife of 16 years. Barclay and Naldi had met during her stage career a decade earlier and had lived together with her sister in New York since 1920. The pair married in France in August 1929. Naldi, alone, returned to the United States two years later and filed for bankruptcy in 1934. Naldi did not speak publicly about Barclay until after his death in 1945. He died penniless.
Despite Hollywood gossip and published rumors, Naldi denied ever being romantically involved with either Valentino or Barrymore. In 1956, she was rumored to be engaged to a Park Avenue man named Larry Hall, but no union took place. Naldi had no children.
--- ---
The Lady And The Mob
(1939)
Society-lady Hattie Leonard organizes her own band of 'gang-busters' when she discovers a garment she sent to the dry-cleaners had been taxed 25 cents to pay for gang 'protection' She sends to New York City for a reformed gangster she had befriended, Frankie O'Fallon, and he hires the manpower needed from the usual Columbia hoods. Her gang hijacks the racketeers, recovers the merchant's money and returns it to them. Lila Thorne, engaged to Hattie's son Fred, throws in with her future mother-in-law when she sees that the old lady is fighting for the American principle of freedom of choice...and action. Lila frames the gang-leader, George Watson, and Hattie's big-city vigilantes kidnap him and extract the information that the town-mayor, Johnny "J.J." Jones, is the brains behind the protection-gang and is getting the big cut of the money. But Hattie must still rob a bank before she can secure the evidence needed to convict the mayor. All in a day's work for a crusading society dame.
Fay Bainter was an American film and stage actress who won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for Jezebel (1938).That same year, she was also nominated for Best Actress for her work in White Banners (1938).
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The Lady Is Willing
(1942)
This American screwball comedy was produced by Columbia Pictures, directed by Mitchell Leisen, and stars Marlene Dietrich and Fred MacMurray.
Early in the shooting, Marlene Dietrich tripped while carrying child actor David James. She twisted her body to save the baby from striking the floor, but severely injured her right ankle in the fall, and her entire right leg had to be placed in a cast. That's why film she is always shown in full-length outfits (gowns, slacks, etc.) with just one shot of her unclothed leg, and that is in shadow.
The Lady Vanishes
(1979)
And that's all for now, folks.
Tune in next time...
Same place, same channel.
The Lady Vanishes - Movie Trailer
(1979)
2 comments:
That's some interesting poster art for "The Lady Vanishes."
Now I wanna watch The Lady Vanishes!
Off to Prime I go.
And Nita Naldi's life IS a movie!!!!
XOXO
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