Here is a reminder that their will be a Louise Brooks-related book signing taking place at this year's Cinecon classic film festival taking place in Hollywood this weekend. Here's what's happening.
THE DIARY OF A LOST GIRL (Louise Brooks edition)
PandorasBox Press
Edited By Thomas Gladysz
The
1929 Louise Brooks film, Diary image of a Lost Girl, is based on a once
famous and controversial book by Margarete Bohme which is counted among
the bestselling titles of its time. The "Louise Brooks edition" of
Bohme's book, edited by Thomas Gladysz (Director of the Louise Brooks
Society), includes dozens of illustrations and an introductory essay
detailing the book’s remarkable history and relationship to the
acclaimed silent film. Gladysz also provided the audio commentary to
last year's DVD & Blu-ray release of the film from Kino Lorber.
The book signings are part of the Cinecon Memorabilia Show which is
normally located in the third floor meeting area of the Loews Hollywood
Hotel but this year will be relocated to the mezzanine level (second
floor) of the hotel.
For more information and a complete list of signings, check out
THIS PAGE. "Who else will be there," you ask?
SILENT TRACES: Discovering Early Hollywood Through The Films of Charlie Chaplin
SILENT ECHOES: Discovering Early Hollywood Through The Films of Buster Keaton
SILENT VISIONS: Discovering Early Hollywood Through The Films of Harold Lloyd
Santa Monica Press
By John Bengston
The
books provide a unique visual history of early Hollywood as depicted in
the silent comedians’ classic movies by combining images from various
films with archival photographs, historic maps, and scores of dramatic
“then” and “now” photos, revealing dozens of movie locations that lay
undiscovered in Hollywood for over 80 years. John has given
presentations at past Cinecons based on his research for these books and
then conducted walking tours showing the actual movie locations
depicted in the books.
A THOUSAND CUTS: the Bizarre Underground World of Collectors and Dealers Who Saved the Movies
University Press of Mississippi
By Dennis Bartok and Jeff Joseph
This
book is a candid exploration of one of America’s strangest and most
quickly vanishing subcultures. It is about the death of physical film in
the digital era and about a paranoid, secretive, eccentric, and
sometimes obsessive group of film-mad collectors who made movies and
their projection a private religion in the time before DVDs and
Blu-rays. It also examines one of the least-known episodes in modern
legal history: the FBI’s and Justice Department’s campaign to harass,
intimidate, and arrest film dealers and collectors in the early 1970s.
Victims included Roddy McDowall, who was arrested in 1974 for film
collecting and forced to name names of fellow collectors, including Rock
Hudson and Mel Tormé. A Thousand Cuts explores the obsessions of the
colorful individuals who created their own screening rooms, spent vast
sums, negotiated underground networks, and even risked legal jeopardy to
pursue their passion for real, physical film.
HOLLYWOOD CELEBRATES THE HOLIDAYS 1920-1970
Schiffer
By Karie Bible & Mary Mallory
Marvelously
illustrated with more than 200 rare images from the silent era through
the 1970s, this joyous treasure trove features film and television's
most famous actors and actresses celebrating the holidays in lavishly
produced photographs. Legends such as Judy Garland, Elizabeth Taylor,
Joan Crawford, and Audrey Hepburn spread holiday cheer throughout the
calendar year in iconic, ironic, and illustrious style. These images,
taken by legendary still photographers, hearken back to the Golden Age
of Hollywood, when motion picture studios devised elaborate publicity
campaigns to promote their stars and to keep their names and faces in
front of the movie-going public all year round.
THEDA BARA MY MENTOR: Under the Wings of Hollywood's First Femme Fatale
McFarland
By Joan Craig with Beverly F. Stout
As
movie patrons sat in darkened theaters in January 1914, they were
mesmerized by an alluring temptress with long sable hair and kohl-rimmed
eyes. Theda Bara—“the vamp,” as she would come to be known—would soon
be one of the highest paid film stars of the 1910s, earning an unheard
of $4,000 per week, before retiring from the screen in 1926. Although
Theda was retired she was very much a part of Hollywood. Hollywood
celebrities flowed through her front door!
In 1946, at
age five, the author met Bara—then 61—at her Beverly Hills home and the
actress became her mentor. This memoir is the story of their
friendship.
FORGOTTEN HOLLYWOOD FORGOTTEN HISTORY
Book Publishers Network
By Manny Pacheco
Nothing
grabs the mind like a finely crafted image film. Memorable lines strike
an instant impression, and imagery provides celluloid art to enjoy time
and again. Bypassing the legendary stars from the studio era's golden
age, Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History focuses on the character
actors and actresses that consistently delivered stellar performances,
and it offers a bold fresh new take of our human journey.
And Manny will also be bringing his follow-up book -
Son of Forgotten Hollywood Forgotten History
HARLOW IN HOLLYOOD: The Blonde Bombshell in the Glamour Capital, 1928-1937
Angel City Press
By Darrell Rooney and Mark Vieira
In
her short decade in Hollywood, Harlow created a new genre of movie
star--her fans idolized her for her peerless image, her beautiful body,
and her gorgeous facade. "Harlow in Hollywood" is the story of how a
town and an industry created her, a story that's never been told before.
In these pages, renowned Harlow expert Darrell Rooney and Hollywood
historian Mark Vieira team to present the most beautiful--and
accurate--book on Harlow ever produced. With more than 280 rare images,
the authors not only make a case for Harlow as an Art Deco artifact,
they showcase the fabulous places where she lived, worked and played
from her white-on-white Beverly Glen mansion to the Art Deco sets of
"Dinner at Eight" to the foyer of the Cafe Trocadero. "Harlow in
Hollywood" is a must for every film buff, Harlow collector, and book
lover.
LAUREL & HARDY: The Magic Behind the Movies
Bonaventure Press
By Randy Skretvedt
This
is a massively expanded and updated edition of the book, which was
originally published in 1987. The new hard cover edition with 632 pages
has twice as much text as the original and four times as many
photographs (now 1,000 of them). Most of the photos are previously
unpublished and many of them are one-of-a-kind items from Oliver Hardy's
personal collection. The text is based on interviews done in the 1970s
and early '80s with 65 of Laurel and Hardy's working associates, along
with original scripts and studio files.
WILD BILL WELLMAN: Hollywood Rebel
Pantheon
By William Wellman, Jr.
William
Wellman, Jr. has written this great new biography about his legendary
father, famed director William "Wild Bill" Wellman. Here is a revealing,
boisterous portrait of the handsome, tough-talking, hard-drinking,
uncompromising maverick juvenile delinquent whose own life story was
more adventurous and more unpredictable than anything in the movies.
William Wellman is famous for directing such iconic pictures as: the
pioneering World War I epic Wings (winner of the first Academy Award for
best picture), Public Enemy, Nothing Sacred, the original A Star Is
Born, Beggars of Life, The Call of the Wild, The Ox-Bow Incident,
Battleground, The High and the Mighty.