Tuesday, February 28, 2006

The LBS gift shop

The LBS gift shop at Cafepress has been updated. I've added a few new products, and removed a few that never sold. I am especially pleased with the four new postcard designs. Each are based on rare vintage images of Louise Brooks. The pinback buttons are nifty too. I want to come up with some sort of new t-shirt design for the  centenary. I will work on that, and have something done by Spring or Summer. The LBS gift shop at Cafepress. com can be found athttp://www.cafepress.com/louisebrooks  Please, check it out.

Monday, February 27, 2006

"Beggars of Life" title card not available to those of limited means

A lobby card from the 1928 Louise Brooks film Beggars of Life is being offered on eBay for the ridiculous price of $3,245. (Perhaps they meant $32.45 ?) The description reads "Title Lobby card 11 x 14” (28 x 35 cm.), U.S. This early William Wellman silent film is universally acknowledged as the finest American film done by Louise Brooks. She plays a young woman who murders her sexually abusive guardian and then goes on the run as a hobo, dressed as a boy. This card is in unbelievable condition---except for a couple of tiny marginal bumps, it is utterly perfect. MINT"  Thank the heavens they are offering free shipping to the lucky winner.

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Pandora's Box to be released in Portugal

Kieren Valente, a fan and LBS member from Portugal, emailed to let everyone know that a special, 2-DVD edition of Pandora's Box will be released in Portugal on November 14th, the Louise Brooks' centenary. This new edition of A Caixa de Pandora ( or A Buceta de Pandora ) will contain the "as much as possible of the original Portuguese intertitles." The second disc will features stills from the film, cast biographies, and the outstanding Hugh Neely documentaryLooking For Lulu.  Interestingly, Kieren Valente notes, the company releasing this DVD is the same that first distributed the film in Portugal in 1931.

Saturday, February 25, 2006

Mrs Harris on HBO

Tonight, HBO is showing a film called Mrs Harris, new movie about Jean Harris' conviction for the 1980 shooting death of "Scarsdale Diet" Dr. Herman Tarnower. Apparently, near the beginning, Louise Brooks makes "an appearance." Some of the articles reporting on the film have noted, "Barely has the title scrolled across the screen when gunfire erupts in excerpted, classic-movie scenes of Louise Brooks, Joan Crawford, Gloria Swanson and others portraying women pushed to extremes." I don't subscribe to HBO. If anyone does, and has a chance to watch this film, please report back on what it all means.

Friday, February 24, 2006

"Lulu in Berlin" screening / "Pandora's Box" screening

I just found out . . . .  Richard Leacock's fascinating documentary, Lulu in Berlin, will be screened at the De Young Museum as part of a "Leacock / Pennebaker: Pioneers of Cinema Verite" series taking place in San Francisco. Leacock's 1984 film will be shown at the De Young Museum (in Golden Gate Park) on Thursday, March 2nd at 7:30 pm. And what's more, Richard Leacock will be on hand to introduce the film. If you are a Louise Brooks fan, and haven't seen this film, you should! The series is sponsored by the Documentary Film Institute, which is part of the International center for the Arts at San Francisco State University. Tickets can be had for $10.00 through www.ticketweb.com

For more information about these films and Richard Leacock and D.A. Pennebaker visit www.collegeofcreativearts.org/DFI/


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I've just heard that a newly struck print of Pandora's Box will be shown at the historic Castro Theater as part of the annual San Francisco Silent Film Festival in July. This year, the festival will take place on July 14 - 16. Pandora's Box will likely be shown on Saturday, the 15th. More about the festival (though this year's schedule has not been posted) can be found at www.silentfilm.org.      I am very excitied to see this screening. And you can bet I will be there.

And some more late breaking news . . . . Another new book about Louise Brooks - this one published in Austria - is due out near the end of the year!

For the latest on Louise Brooks centenary news, please visit this page.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

I am distraught

This morning, I had used my computer to check email, read the news, etc.... Everthing was working fine. Then I headed off to the library. When I returned, I booted up my computer and my secondary hard drive - a storage drive, failed. I am distraught. All of my RadioLulu files (more than 100 mp3's), all of my Cafepress work, and all of my work on other Louise Brooks related projects was stored on that drive. I am very anxious that this data may be lost or it may cost me a shitload of money to get back it through the services of a data retrieval company. And, I wasted all afternoon chasing down solutions in the vain hope  I might be able to reverse the situation. Apparently, this particular Maxtor hard drive has a history of firmware corruption. The Louise Brooks Society shall not depend on Maxtor hard drives ever again!

Continueing my pursuit

Continueing my pursuit of Louise Brooks / Denishawn material from college newspapers, today I looked at an interlibrary loan of the Daily Iowan (the student newspaper at the University of Iowa). I found a few good articles and a couple of advertisements, though no review, regarding the February, 1924 Denishawn performance in Iowa City. I was impressed by the Daily Iowan. It was a pretty decent college newspaper for the time. I think it the equal of the papers from the University of Michaigana, UCLA and the University of California, Berkeley.

I also looked at a small town newspaper, the Altoona Tribune, from Altoona, Pennsylvannia. I found lots of material on the October, 1922 Denishawn performance - though only a little on the March, 1924 engagement. Nevertheless, my pursuit goes on . . . I mean to be thorough. I had also requested a couple of later reels of the Altoona Tribune. And, I found some stuff on screenings of The Street of Forgotten Men and The American Venus, including a few nice advertisements! I will add those to the files, and add citations to the appropriate LBS bibliographies.

Here is a rather busy, though rather typical advertisement I came across today. I think it is rather nifty - so wordy! Notice the adjoining advertisement for the Hipitty Hop Girls. I hadn't realized hip-hop went back so far. . . .

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Wil Wheaton reblogged

Back in December, Wil Wheaton (of Star Trek fame, actor, author, and blogger extraordinare) posted a blog headlined "girls in corsets juggling knives." The entry read thus. "If you like:
and you're not on dial-up, you simply must go watch this video from The Ditty Bops." I would suggest taking his advice! The Ditty Bops video is nifty - very surreal, and the Ditty Bops themselves look smashing in their dual bobs. (Does Wil Wheaton know that the Squirrel Nut Zippers once used an image of Louise Brooks on a concert poster?)

Monday, February 20, 2006

A Girl in Every Port

On this day in 1928, A Girl in Every Port, starring Victor McLaglen and Robert Armstrong and featuring Louise Brooks, premiered at the Roxy Theater in New York City. It was a big hit in the big apple. It would also prove popular in France.
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