It’s
that time of the year when critics, journalists, bloggers and others
issue their "Best of" lists - the year’s recommended new releases in the
world of books, movies, music and more. Here's the best of 2012 with a
twist, exceptional new releases for fans of the silent film star Louise
Brooks.
Like
last year, 2012 saw the release of a small but distinguished number of
new releases related to the legendary silent film star. Prominent among
them is Laura Moriarty's widely acclaimed bestselling novel, The Chaperone, as well as a handful of DVD's including the first ever DVD release of Brooks' last film, Overland Stage Raiders. Fans of the actress will want to check out all of these recent releases.
In 1922, only a few years before becoming a famous silent-film
star, fifteen-year-old Louise Brooks left Wichita, Kansas to study dance
in New York City. Accompanying Brooks was her thirty-six-year-old,
somewhat stodgy neighbor, who acted as chaperone. Based on these few
facts, Laura Moriarty has penned a captivating, quietly powerful, and
moving historical novel about these two woman and the summer they spent
together which changed them both. Both critically acclaimed and a New York Times bestseller, this new book is highly recommended. Also available as an audio book read by actress Elizabeth McGovern. (Riverhead)
It's no secret that Louise Brooks appeared in mostly mediocre
sound films. With her career in decline, the one-time silent era star
took what roles came her way in the sound era. God's Gift to Women,
one of three films she made in 1931, is easily the actress' best
talkie. It is also an enjoyable pre-Code romp, a comedy about romance
with an impressive cast that includes Frank Fay, Laura La Plante, Joan
Blondell, Charles Winninger, Yola d'Avril and Margaret Livingston
(Brooks' voice double in The Canary Murder Case).
Brooks doesn't have a very big part in this farce, but she makes an
impression in a bedroom scene when some of the film's pulchritude gets
into a cat fight. (Warner Archive)
BOOK: Valentina come Louise Brooks. Il libro nascosto, edited by Vincenzo Mollica and Antonio Crepax.
This Italian book was the companion publication to "Valentina
Movie," an exhibit held this past summer at the Palazzo Incontro in
Rome. It featured the work of the late Italian comix artist Guido
Crepax, a longtime admirer of Louise Brooks. The exhibit detailed the
influence the actress had on the creation and development of Crepax's
best known creation, Valentina, a popular character who appeared in
numerous comic strips, graphic novels, books, and spin-off films.
Whether or not you read Italian, the dedicated fan will want to own this
illustrated book. (Fandango Libri)
DVD/BluRay: Overland Stage Raiders, directed by George Sherman.
Louise Brooks' film career came to an end in 1938 with a supporting role in Overland Stage Raiders,
a B-western starring a young John Wayne. This new release marks the
film's first official release on DVD and Blu-Ray. (It had been released
on VHS some years ago, and is now hard to find.) Said to be only for the
John Wayne or Louise Brooks completist, Overland Stage Raiders (presented here in a 1950's revival print) is worth watching at least once.
Brooks, 32 years old and sporting a new look, is still alluring and
holds her own in what is essentially a guy's film. (Olive Films)
EBOOK: Benevolent Siren: Remembering Louise Brooks, by Ross Berkal.
While a young man in the early 1980s, Berkal had the almost unique experience of meeting and befriending the
then older and reclusive Louise Brooks. The story of that friendship is
chronicled in this self-published, ebook-only release. (It is also
referenced in Barry Paris' 1989 biography.) Benevolent Siren is a brief recounting, which in the end leaves you wanting more. (Smashwords) Also keep in mind Youthful Places,
a small collection of poetry also by Berkal. It contains "MLB," a poem
about and dedicated to the actress. (Amazon Digital Services)
DVD/BluRay: La Canarina Assassinita (Canary Murder Case), directed by Malcolm St. Clair.
The Canary Murder Case (1929), with Brooks in the title role of the
"Canary," has not yet been released on DVD in the United States. But it
has been, at least twice, in Italy. This new release is the latest out
of Europe. Not seen at time of review. (Ermitage Cinema) Also keep in mind Mystery Movies Series of 1930's Hollywood, by Ron Backer. This recommended book opens with The Canary Murder Case and details the many subsequent Philo Vance films which followed. (McFarland)
This collection of academic essays on popular German literature of the late nineteenth century includes "Taking Sex to Market: Tagebuch einer Verlorenen: Von einerToten and Josefine Mutzenbacher, Die Lebensgeschichte einer wienerischen Dirne, von ihr selbst erzählt,"
by the English academic Elizabeth Boa. The essay, by a noted German
scholar whose fields of interest include Frank Wedekind, looks at the
book which was the basis for the 1929 Louise Brooks' film, The Diary of a Lost Girl. That book was Margarete Bohme's Tagebuch einer Verlorenen, a controversial bestseller which sold more than 1.2 million copies. In its review of this new book, the Times Literary Supplement
said, "The essays are often fascinating and always informative. The
best of them make their arguments against the forgetting of their
once-bestselling authors exciting. They share a passion for getting to
the bottom of why, in or outside Germany, we know so little about books
that were, in the main, not just flashes in the pan, as they often
endured for up to a century." That's true for Boa's take on Bohme's
still valuable and provocative work. (Camden House)
ALSO KEEP IN MIND....
Colleen Moore was the cute-as-a-button silent era actress who first achieved stardom in Flaming Youth
(1923). It was in that film, in which Moore plays a flapper, that the
actress first sported bobbed-hair. That was also a couple years before
Louise Brooks entered films and made her own mark. Both actresses were
known for their signature look, a straight bob with bangs, and that fact
has led some to wonder who first wore the iconic hair style. Codori
discusses that question and more in this appealing biography.
(McFarland)
Mae Murray, popularly known as "the girl with the bee-stung lips,"
was a fiery presence in silent-era Hollywood. Renowned for her sultry
beauty, Murray rocketed to stardom as a dancer with the Ziegfeld Follies
before entering films. She appeared in The Delicious Little Devil (1919), Jazzmania (1923), and most famously, The Merry Widow
(1925). With the coming of sound, her career went into decline, and
eventually Murray found herself nearly destitute. The parallels with
Louise Brooks' career are striking. This highly recommended biography,
featuring much original research, includes never before published
observations about Murray drawn from Brooks' letters to Kevin Brownlow. (University Press of Kentucky)
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