A cinephilac blog about an actress, silent film, and the Jazz Age, with occasional posts about related books, music, art, and history written by Thomas Gladysz. Visit the Louise Brooks Society™ at www.pandorasbox.com
Good news! The Louise Brooks Society blog has been selected by FEEDSPOT as one of the Top 20 Silent Movies Blogs. As a matter of fact, the LBS blog was chosen as the 4th "best" silent film blog. Check out the entire list HERE. There are some great blogs ahead and behind the Louise Brooks Society blog. And for more good reading, be sure and check out the BLOGS WORTH READING list on the lower right hand side of this page. There are lots of silent film and early film resources listed and linked.
According to Feedspot, the LBS blog has 2,820 Facebook fans and 4,781 Twitter followers. These blogs are ranked based on following criteria
Google reputation and Google search ranking
Influence and popularity on Facebook, twitter and other social media sites
Three of Louise Brooks' best films will be shown in England in mid-September. The sensational 1929 Louise Brooks films, Diary of a Lost Girl and Pandora's Box, will be shown in England on September 14 and 16. (More information about this special double bill may be found HERE.) Also showing on September 16th is Beggars of Life, with live musical accompaniment by The Dodge Brothers. (More information about this latter event may be found HERE.)
A masterpiece of the German silent era, Diary of a Lost Girl was the
second and final collaboration of actress Louise Brooks and director
G.W. Pabst a mere months after their first collaboration in the
now-legendary Pandora’s Box (1929). Brooks plays Thymian Henning, a beautiful young woman raped by an
unscrupulous character employed at her father’s pharmacy (played with
gusto by Fritz Rasp, the degenerate villain of such Fritz Lang classics
as Metropolis, Spione, and Frau im Mond). After Thymian gives birth to
his child and rejects her family’s expectations of marriage, the baby is
torn from her care, and Thymian enters a purgatorial reform school that
seems less an institute of learning than a conduit for fulfilling the
headmistress’s sadistic sexual fantasies. The screening will have a specially recorded audio intro by author and critic Pamela Hutchinson with live music on piano by Jonny Best (Yorkshire Silent Film Festival).
G.W. Pabst’s 1929 silent masterpiece Pandora’s Box stars Louise
Brooks in the role that secured her place as one of the immortal
goddesses of the silver screen. This controversial, and in its day heavily censored, film is
regularly ranked in the Top 100 films of all time (including Cahiers du
Cinema and Sight & Sound). Brooks is unforgettable as Lulu (Louise
Brooks), a sexy, amoral dancer who creates a trail of devastation as she
blazes through Weimar-era Berlin, breaking hearts and destroying lives.
From Germany, she flies to France, and finally to London, where tragedy
strikes. This stunning photographed film is loosely based on the
controversial Lulu plays by Frank Wedekind, and also features one of the
cinemas earliest lesbian characters. New 2K DCP of the 2009 restoration of Munich Film Museum’s definitive
cut, with score by Peer Raben. Showing as part of this year’s Heritage
Open Weekend which celebrates Heritage sites all over the UK.
But wait, there's more....
The Louise Brooks film Beggars Of Life (1928) will be shown on September 16 at the Bridport Electric Palace in Bridport with live musical accompaniment by The Dodge Brothers. Following the film, there will be a Q&A with Mark Kermode (The Observer chief Film Critic, BBC TV Presenter), Neil Brand (writer & presenter BBC 4 series ‘Sounds of Cinema : The Music That Made The Movies’) and Dr Mike Hammond (Associate Professor, Film Department, University of Southampton). More information about this event can be found HERE.
Following his Best Picture win at the inaugural Academy Awards, William A. Wellman made Beggars of Life, an adaptation of Jim Tully’s best-selling hobo memoir. This gripping drama casts Brooks as a girl on the lam after killing her lecherous step-father. Dressed in boy’s clothes, she navigates through a dangerous tramp underworld with the help of a handsome and devoted drifter (Richard Arlen) and encounters the dangerous, but warm-hearted hobo Oklahoma Red (Wallace Beery). Loaded with stunning visuals and empathetic performances, this dark, realistic drama is Brooks’ best American film and a masterpiece of late-silent era feature films.
The Dodge Brothers have played to silent films at the finest venues in
the land, The Barbican, The National Film Theatre, BFI, The National
Media Museum and anywhere that the high art of playing live to silent
film is appreciated. In 2014 The Dodge Brothers were the first band to
accompany a silent film (Beggars of Life)at Glastonbury Festival.
Want to learn more about the film? Last Spring saw the release of my well reviewed new book, Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film, and last Summer saw the release of a new DVD / Blu-ray of the film from Kino Lorber. (The DVD features a commentary by your's truly, Thomas Gladysz. If you haven't secured your
own copy of either the book or the DVD / Blu-ray, why not do so
today? Each is an essential addition to your Louise Brooks collection, and both are available on amazon.UK
There is a new book out which should be of interest to many interested in Louise Brooks. It's The Rocky Twins: Norway's Outrageous Jazz Age Beauties. If they seem familiar, that because I have written about them earlier on this blog. What follows is some information from the publisher.
Admired for being stunningly handsome, the Norwegian Rocky
Twins were dancers who had a ten-year career in Europe and America
appearing on stage and in film during the Jazz Age between 1927-1937.
Their beauty, their androgynous looks and their outrageous antics
imitating the Dolly Sisters in drag made them legendary
The Norwegian Rocky Twins (born Leif and Paal Roschberg) were
deliciously handsome, outrageous and lived life to the full. They made a
name for themselves as dancers in the Paris music hall in the late
1920s at the tender age of eighteen. Their act took Paris by storm
because in one of their numbers, they dressed up in drag and imitated
the famous Dolly Sisters, who had just retired. Their unique
performance enabled them to star on the stage and in film across Europe
and America (Paris, London, Vienna, Budapest, Berlin, Oslo, Stockholm,
Copenhagen, New York and Los Angeles) and at the same time their good
looks became highly sought after by connoisseurs of the body beautiful of
either sex.
Gary Chapman's new book is:
The first illustrated biography of the dancing Norwegian Rocky Twins
who were stars of film and stage in the Jazz Age on both sides of the
Atlantic.
Based on extensive research over 30 years.
Includes 114 black and white photographs.
Insight and detail about nightlife and the entertainment world in
London, Paris, New York, Vienna, Scandinavia, New York and Hollywood in
the golden age of stage and screen.
Exposes some of the secrets of pre-code Hollywood in the early 1930s.
Explores the secret gay world on both side of the Atlantic and the ‘Pansy Craze’ in America in the early 1930s.
They were regarded as two of the best dressed and most handsome men in the world.
Their impersonation in drag of the Dolly Sisters became legendary.
A colourful life story that has made them ‘gay legends.’
They were once called ‘The Black Orchids of the North.’
Covers their career as the Rocky Twins and their later life during and after World War Two.
In 1930, a German magazine ran a piece on an autographed coat signed by various German film personalities, among them four associated with the 1929 classic Pandora's Box. Director G.W. Pabst signed the coat, as did actors Fritz Kortner and Franz Lederer and Louise Brooks. The Kansas-born actress who played Lulu -- one of the few non-German's to add their autograph -- signed the coat on the bottom right panel, and added "Hollywood" beneath her name.
Among the other well known names asked to autograph the coat are Lilian Harvey, Ivan Mosjoukin, Harry Liedtke, Henny Porten, and Werner Krauss. The latter starred in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari as well as the earlier version of The Diary of a Lost Girl (1918). I wonder, where is that coat now?
Here is something of a follow-up to yesterday's "Cutie Complex" post. This one features two clippings from Romanian magazines. The first is a 1930 "Modern Women" advertisement with a strikingly Louise Brooks / Lulu look-alike image, and the second is a 1928 article & diagram explaining what makes the "ideal woman" - in movie star terms.
The Chaperone is set to premiere at the Los Angeles Film Festival on September 23. More information about this special event -- including ticket availability -- can be found HERE.
Haley Lu Richardson, who plays Louise Brooks in The Chaperone, was recently quoted in Indiewire about the 103 minute film.
“I’d never played a real character, and she’s pretty iconic,” Richardson said. “And I don’t look anything like her! But what we did have in common is her moving from a small town to New York when she’s 15, 16 years old to pursue dancing. A chaperone, who’s Elizabeth McGovern, comes with her and it’s the story about how they affect one another. That resonated with me, because I moved to LA from Arizona when I was 16 to dance and act and my mom came with me and [we have] this bond and we learned from each other.”
About The Film
Against the backdrop of the tumultuous times of the early 1920’s, a
genteel Kansan named Norma decides to break out of her comfort zone and
visit the city of her birth. She offers her services as a chaperone to a
beautiful and talented 15-year-old dancer named Louise Brooks, and the
two head to New York City for the summer. One of them is eager to
fulfill her destiny of dance and movie stardom; the other is on a
mission to unearth the mysteries of her past.
Based on Laura Moriarty’s best-selling American novel, The Chaperone reunites the writer, director and star of Downtown Abbey.
Scripted by Julian Fellowes with an eye toward personal details, and
enhanced by Michael Engler’s direction, offering up moments effortlessly
shifting between introspection and wonder. Elizabeth McGovern brings
charm and a welcome spark to a fish out of water, while Haley Lu
Richardson radiates as the effervescent Louise Brooks.
Details are still emerging about this new play....
On Thursday, September 27, there will be a voice reading of Bring a gun... the long night of Louise Brooks, by Jim Piazza and Sondra Lee. This benefit event is being put on by the Episcopal Actors Guild (EAG) in New York, who describe the work as "A woman in her 70s tells her tale of the roaring 20s in this reading of
Sondra Lee's and Jim Piazza's new play about a night in Hollywood you
will never forget!"
This special event takes place in Guild Hall, located on the second floor of The Little Church at 1 East 29th Street (between Madison and Fifth). Interestingly, The Little Church, which is also known as The Little Church Around the Corner, is the site of a couple of scenes from Louise Brooks' first film, The Street of Forgotten Men. Brooks wasn't in those particular scenes, but film stars Percy Marmont, Mary Brian, and Neil Hamilton(Commissioner Gordon on the Batman TV series of the 1960s) were. More information and ticket availability may be found HERE.
Three of Louise Brooks' best films will be shown in England in mid-September. The sensational 1929 Louise Brooks films, Diary of a Lost Girl and Pandora's Box, will be shown in England on September 14 and 16. (More information about this special double bill may be found HERE.) Also showing on September 16th is Beggars of Life, with live musical accompaniment by The Dodge Brothers. (More information about this latter event may be found HERE.)
A masterpiece of the German silent era, Diary of a Lost Girl was the
second and final collaboration of actress Louise Brooks and director
G.W. Pabst a mere months after their first collaboration in the
now-legendary Pandora’s Box (1929). Brooks plays Thymian Henning, a beautiful young woman raped by an
unscrupulous character employed at her father’s pharmacy (played with
gusto by Fritz Rasp, the degenerate villain of such Fritz Lang classics
as Metropolis, Spione, and Frau im Mond). After Thymian gives birth to
his child and rejects her family’s expectations of marriage, the baby is
torn from her care, and Thymian enters a purgatorial reform school that
seems less an institute of learning than a conduit for fulfilling the
headmistress’s sadistic sexual fantasies. The screening will have a specially recorded audio intro by author and critic Pamela Hutchinson with live music on piano by Jonny Best (Yorkshire Silent Film Festival).
G.W. Pabst’s 1929 silent masterpiece Pandora’s Box stars Louise
Brooks in the role that secured her place as one of the immortal
goddesses of the silver screen. This controversial, and in its day heavily censored, film is
regularly ranked in the Top 100 films of all time (including Cahiers du
Cinema and Sight & Sound). Brooks is unforgettable as Lulu (Louise
Brooks), a sexy, amoral dancer who creates a trail of devastation as she
blazes through Weimar-era Berlin, breaking hearts and destroying lives.
From Germany, she flies to France, and finally to London, where tragedy
strikes. This stunning photographed film is loosely based on the
controversial Lulu plays by Frank Wedekind, and also features one of the
cinemas earliest lesbian characters. New 2K DCP of the 2009 restoration of Munich Film Museum’s definitive
cut, with score by Peer Raben. Showing as part of this year’s Heritage
Open Weekend which celebrates Heritage sites all over the UK.
But wait, there's more....
The Louise Brooks film Beggars Of Life (1928) will be shown on September 16 at the Bridport Electric Palace in Bridport with live musical accompaniment by The Dodge Brothers. Following the film, there will be a Q&A with Mark Kermode (The Observer chief Film Critic, BBC TV Presenter), Neil Brand (writer & presenter BBC 4 series ‘Sounds of Cinema : The Music That Made The Movies’) and Dr Mike Hammond (Associate Professor, Film Department, University of Southampton). More information about this event can be found HERE.
Following his Best Picture win at the inaugural Academy Awards, William A. Wellman made Beggars of Life, an adaptation of Jim Tully’s best-selling hobo memoir. This gripping drama casts Brooks as a girl on the lam after killing her lecherous step-father. Dressed in boy’s clothes, she navigates through a dangerous tramp underworld with the help of a handsome and devoted drifter (Richard Arlen) and encounters the dangerous, but warm-hearted hobo Oklahoma Red (Wallace Beery). Loaded with stunning visuals and empathetic performances, this dark, realistic drama is Brooks’ best American film and a masterpiece of late-silent era feature films.
The Dodge Brothers have played to silent films at the finest venues in
the land, The Barbican, The National Film Theatre, BFI, The National
Media Museum and anywhere that the high art of playing live to silent
film is appreciated. In 2014 The Dodge Brothers were the first band to
accompany a silent film (Beggars of Life)at Glastonbury Festival.
Want to learn more about the film? Last Spring saw the release of my well reviewed new book, Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film, and last Summer saw the release of a new DVD / Blu-ray of the film from Kino Lorber. (The DVD features a commentary by your's truly, Thomas Gladysz. If you haven't secured your
own copy of either the book or the DVD / Blu-ray, why not do so
today? Each is an essential addition to your Louise Brooks collection, and both are available on amazon.UK