"Oh, Anne! With your small head and pert nose and oversized, ready smile and glossy pixie cut and squeakily tuneful speaking voice, uttering lines like “It came true!” as you gaze at your newly won Oscar with moistened doe-eyes, wearing a powder-pink Prada gown adorned with diamonds and bows:
Why are you so annoying?"
posted by vidur
on Feb 28, 2013 -
140 comments
'TV historians will tell you that “Felix the Cat” was one of the first images ever broadcast on television (when RCA broadcast a Felix doll in 1928 on experimental station W2XBS) — but it wasn’t until the late ’40s that the first animated character was created expressly for TV.
Crusader Rabbit appeared for the very first time on KNBH (Los Angeles) on August 1, 1950, and featured a Don Quixote-like title character aided by his friend Ragland T. “Rags” Tiger as they pursued adventures in serial (i.e. cliffhanger) installments.' On November 8th, the voice of Crusader Rabbit, Lucille Bliss,
passed away at the age of 96. Ms. Bliss may be more familiar to younger fans as the voice of
Smurfette, from
The Smurfs, or as
Ms. Bitters on Invader ZIM.
[more inside]
posted by zarq
on Nov 15, 2012 -
18 comments
He told me his gorilla suit had been taken by his landlady in Pensacola, Florida because he could not pay his back rent. She kept his trunk with all his possessions as well. So his movie days were over...
A brief, thoughtful recollection of the last days of the elusive
Emil Van Horn, who, with pioneers like
Charles Gemora,
Ray "Crash" Corrigan,
Steve Calvert,
George Barrows,
Janos Prohaska, and
Bob Burns, established the
golden age of
Hollywood gorilla men.
posted by Chinese Jet Pilot
on May 19, 2011 -
7 comments
On May 26, 1907, a 13 pound baby boy named Marion Morrison was born in
Winterset, Iowa. Nicknamed "Little Duke"
after his childhood dog, he grew up to become the most
famous icon of
American patriotism in the
world. When he was a football player at USC, Western filmstar
Tom Mix got him a summer job at Fox in exchange for game tickets. After two years working as a prop man for $75 a week, his first acting role was in
The Big Trail in 1930. "Marion Morrison" didn't sound like the right name for a trail scout though, so the studio took the last name from a Revolutionary War
general and replaced "Anthony" with "John."
Voila! A working actor from 1930 through the 1970s, this year John Wayne placed
third among America's favorite film stars, the only deceased star on the list and the only one who has appeared every year. He was an
opinionated patriot who, surprisingly, called himself
a liberal... bigger than life, the consummate
cowboy star, and the ultimate symbol of
heroic action and the
Code of the West. In the end, acting actually took his life indirectly thanks to
radiation poisoning during a
movie shoot in Utah (of the 220 persons on set, 91 had contracted cancer by the early 1980s), and almost three decades after his death, his
family continues to carry on his
legacy. He has an
an airport, an
elementary school, and various
Cancer Foundations named after him, and while he wasn't much of a
singer or
dancer, he remains the ultimate symbol of
American manliness to this day. Apparently there are
hundreds of reasons to love the guy.
And for the record... no,
he wasn't gay.
posted by miss lynnster
on May 27, 2007 -
73 comments
There was a time when his scowling, oversized visage, his battered black fedora, and his long black coat, were as familiar to horror fans as such characters as Frankenstein and Dracula. This character, who appeared in three films, was called
"The Brute Man" or "The Creeper."
Only that terrifying face wasn't a mask or a creation of makeup. It was an actual face, a product of a condition called
agromegaly. And The Creeper never planned to be an actor at all, he was simply decorated war veteran-turned-
Tampa reporter who had shown up one day to cover a film. The movie's director noticed him and recommended he move to Hollywood and pursue a career as a character actor.
He was
Rondo Hatton.
posted by Astro Zombie
on Mar 5, 2006 -
18 comments