Thursday, July 31, 2025

New page on Louise Brooks Society website highlights cinematic tributes to Louise Brooks

What do films of Alfred Hitchcock, Michelangelo Antonioni, and Martin Scorsese have in common? Each has included an image of Louise Brooks unrelated to the film.


I just posted a new webpage on the Louise Brooks Society website (page number 261) titled "Louise Brooks: An Image on the Wall." It surveys 10 different films and one television show which include an image of Brooks which otherwise have little or nothing to do with the film. This illustrated surveys begins with Hitchcock's Stage Freight (1949) and ends with Marielle Heller's Can You Ever Forgive Me? (2018). In between are Withnail and I (1987), Chicago (2002), HUGO (2011), Blue is the Warmest Color (2012) and others.

A side note: while prepping this page, I came across a reference to another film which supposedly contained an unrelated image of Louise Brooks, namely Frederico Fellini's La Dolce Vita (1960). I hadn't been aware of this occurrence, nor had I seen Fellini's masterpiece. I asked a search engine, hoping someone might have posted a screen grab, but ened up with this response.

You would think it was there, but it ain't. I borrowed a copy of La Dolce Vita from my local library and watched the film. It is a gorgeous work of cinematic art, and a great film. BUT, an image of Louise Brooks ain't in it, or in other words non c'è un'immagine di Louise Brooks. Please, prove me wrong.

I encourage everyone to check out "Louise Brooks: An Image on the Wall." Is there a film or TV show which I've missed? And why is actor Richard E. Grant pictured twice? How can it be that one actor appeared in two films near an image of Louise Brooks more than 20 years apart. Does a secret force move through film history?


THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original contents copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. 

Monday, July 28, 2025

Tilly No-Body - the Story of Tilly Wedekind, Plays at Edinburgh Fringe Festival

Back in 2010, I wrote and article and posted a blog about a then new play called Tilly No-Body: Catastrophes of Love. The play, which is about Tilly Wedekind, the wife of Frank Wedekind - the author of the Lulu plays, is authored and performed by Bella Merlin. I wrote another blog in 2014 about the work when it was performed in Northern California.

Just recently, Bella Merlin contacted me to let me know she has revisited her work and will be performing it in August at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival (August 1-25). The author's website for the play can be found at https://www.tillynobody.com

 

Tilly No-Body is a 60-minute, one-person play inspired by the life and love of Frank Wedekind (Spring Awakening; the Lulu Sex Tragedies) and his muse-wife and actress, Tilly. With 5 original cabaret songs, this love-drama weaves together mischief, magic and poignancy with puppets, circus balls and moments of surprise. 

"Why is romantic love so complicated? 

Why do we stay in relationships when they're no longer healthy? 

What does it mean to be an actor?"

And why a play about Tilly Wedekind? As Bella Merlin said in her email, "I am fascinated with Frank Wedekind, his wife, the role of Lulu, and how potent the imagery of both the Louise Brooks film and the original aesthetic are... " But that's only a small part of the story. 

 

According to the author's website, in the early 1990s, Bella Merlin was cast as Frank Wedekind's Lulu at the Chelsea Centre Theatre, London.

“The role is elusive, almost fantastical. And as part of my research, I discovered the autobiography of Wedekind's wife, Tilly. The book was called Lulu: The Role of My Life, and I imagined that I would discover within its contents the ways in which playing Lulu had launched Tilly into a dramatically successful career. As I was then in my early twenties, I was hoping for the same...”

​But the book was written in German. So, clutching her schoolgirl German dictionary, Merlin began the lengthy process of translating it into English.

“Bit by bit, I discovered that Tilly had coined the title for her autobiography because, in fact, Frank had turned her into Lulu in the course of their turbulent marriage. Frank would take parts of their married life, turn them into provocative plays, stage them for public consumption, and expect Tilly to enact the female roles. The boundaries between fact and fiction became increasingly blurred. And Frank became increasingly jealous. It was an absolute powder keg!”

One early write-up about the play, which includes an interview with Bella Merlin, can be found on the loureviews.blog


THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original contents copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. 

Saturday, July 26, 2025

The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond

Following the 100th anniversary of the debut of Louise Brooks' first film, The Street of Forgotten Men, I thought to post this about my 2023 book, The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond, the most recent publication of the Louise Brooks Society. Click HERE to purchase a copy. Or, click HERE to learn about other publications of the LBS.

 

The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond is a deep dive into the history of a single film - its literary source, its making, exhibition history, critical reception, and, most surprising of all, its little known legacy. Few film titles become a catchphrase, let alone a catchphrase which remained in use for half-a-century and resonated throughout American culture. The Street of Forgotten Men (1925) is one such film.

This provocative stab at realism was described as "strange" and "startling" at the time of its release.
The Street of Forgotten Men was directed by Herbert Brenon, who is best known for Peter Pan, The Great Gatsby, Beau Geste, Laugh, Clown, Laugh and other early classics. The film was shot by Harold Rosson, one of the great cinematographers whose credits include Gone with the Wind and Singin' in the Rain. And, it features a stellar cast (Percy Marmont, Mary Brian, Neil Hamilton) which includes a future screen legend at the very beginning of her career (Louise Brooks).

At 389 pages and with more than a hundred illustrations both large and small, The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond tells the story of the film in rich, historical detail. As this book shows, this forgotten gem is exemplary of film making & film culture in the mid-1920s. Along with vintage clippings and unusual images - including rare production stills and location shots, this new book features all manner of historical documents including the short story on which the film was based, the scenario, a rare French fictionalization, newspaper advertisements, lobby cards, posters, and more. Among the book's many revelations:

-- Multiple accounts of the making of the film - suggesting what it was like on the set of a silent film.
-- A survey of the film's many reviews, including one by the Pulitzer Prize winning poet Carl Sandburg, another by a contributor to Weird Tales, and another by Catholic icon Dorothy Day, a candidate for sainthood.
-- Newly revealed identities of some of the film's bit players - a noted journalist, a future screenwriter, a soon to be famous actress, and a world champion boxer - which include accounts of their working on the film. There is also the story of Lassie's role in the film (no, not that Lassie, the first screen Lassie).
-- A look at the music associated with this silent film: the music played on set, the music depicted in the film, the music heard before the film was shown, and the music played to accompany the film itself (including the rare Paramount cue sheet and an alternative score).
-- And more... from the film's censorship records to its mention on the floor of Congress to its showing in multiple churches to its purchase by the United States Navy to a notice for the film's last documented public screening - at, of all places, a Y.M.C.A. in Shanghai, China in 1931 - six years after its release!

The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond includes dozens of illustrations and images and features two forewords; one is by noted film preservationist Robert Byrne, whose restoration of The Street of Forgotten Men saved it from undeserving obscurity. The other, by acclaimed film historian Kevin Brownlow, is an appreciation of Herbert Brenon which reveals little known details about the movie drawn, in part, from his correspondence with Louise Brooks.

All-together, there is much to recommend about The Street of Forgotten Men, which was both a popular and critical success at the time of its release. The film is based on a story by a noted writer of the time; it was made by a significant director, shot by a great cinematographer, and features a fine cast which includes a future screen legend.... these are just some of the many points of interest. My book is a deep dive into the history of just one film, though the primary intention of this book to show how one film might be exemplary of film making and film culture during the silent era.

There is more to this story.... One of John Donne's famous poems begins "No man is an island entire of itself; every man / is a piece of the continent, a part of the main". To me, what Donne's verse says about humanity is what I believe about significant works of art, including films. Everything is connected in some way, in that nothing is created in a vacuum. I have kept Donne's lines in mind while writing this book. If anything, this book achieves one thing - it places
The Street of Forgotten Men in the rich cinematic and cultural context of its time. 
 
I had long thought of writing a book about
The Street of Forgotten Men, and have been unknowingly gathering material for years, if not decades .... With the film's restoration, it should begin to make its way into the stream of available films. I hope this book prompts the interest of film buffs and film scholars alike, and acts as a companion work for those who have the opportunity to see the film. I also wrote this book for another reason, because it is a book I would like to read about this or any film. Does it matter that The Street of Forgotten Men is a somewhat lesser film in the larger scheme of things, or in the history of film? 
 
No. Because, no film is an island.


“It’s very much a ‘start to finish’ look at the film’s history…. The book is not only a deep dive into the history of this particular film, but it also serves as an excellent example of precisely how silent Hollywood created and marketed some of its finest products back in its heyday. It’ll be both interesting and helpful for film history scholars, and perhaps be a springboard for similar book projects in the future.” — Lea Stans, Silent-ology 

AUTOGRAPHED copies available direct from the author @ $35.00 (includes shipping & handling within the USA). To place an order via PayPal, please send an email to louisebrookssociety AT gmailDOTcom ||| Or buy NEW online from Amazon (USA) | Bookshop.orgBarnes & Noble | Books-a-Million
 
The English-language edition may also be purchased through Amazon in Australia | Brazil | Canada | France | Germany | India | Italy | Japan | Mexico | Netherlands | Poland | Singapore | Spain | Turkey | United Arab Emirates | United Kingdom ||| Additionally, the English-language edition is available from Saxo (Denmark) | Open Trolley (Indonesia) | MightyApe (New Zealand) | Waterstones (UK)

More about the film can be found on The Street of Forgotten Men (filmography page) on the Louise Brooks Society website, which this year is celebrating its 30th anniversary online.

THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original contents copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. 

Thursday, July 24, 2025

First reviews of Louise Brooks' first film, The Street of Forgotten Men

Louise Brooks first appeared on a movie screen on July 19, 1925. The occasion was the debut of The Street of Forgotten Men at the Rivoli theater in New York City. (See the previous Louise Brooks Society blog post, "Today in history: 100th anniversary of Louise Brooks' first screen appearance," for more about this event.)


In the first few days that followed,  the film’s debut received more than a dozen local reviews, as well as smaller write-ups in other newspapers located in the metropolis’ five boroughs, including Brooklyn. The majority of reviews were positive – even glowing, though a few were tempered, and one critical. 

Connie Miles, film critic for the New York Evening World, was one who described The Street of Forgotten Men favorably. Miles thought the movie “. . . one of those too rare offerings that have everything to be desired in a film production,” adding, “As might be expected from the direction of Herbert Brenon, this Paramount picture has action from start to finish, moves gracefully over the course of an unusual love theme and reaches heights of dramatic values that might not have been except for such a capable cast.” Katherine Zimmerman, of the New York Telegram, echoed her colleague’s assessment. Zimmerman described the film as “an excellent motion picture,” noting “It has humanity, sentiment, drama, atmosphere and love. And it has Percy Marmont in the best bit of acting he has done yet". In a review titled “Remarkable Photoplay,” Dorothy Herzog of the Daily Mirror declared, “Every now and then, a picture that is different comes to the silver sheet. Such a picture plays the Rivoli this week.” Mildred Spain of the Daily News took a more nuanced approach, describing the film as “Altogether a nourishing movie meal, but not for the children.” Similarly, Donald Burney of the New York Review (one of the few male critics on the scene) thought the film an “entertaining and dramatically effective picture,” adding, “it should prove a winning attraction.”

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle also offered praise. The paper’s critic, Martin B. Dickstein, declared, “This is a film which misses by inches being Herbert Brenon's proudest accomplishment…. There are to be had in the Rivoli film more than one glimpse of ingenious direction. There is much evidence, as well, of capable acting.” A few days before, the Brooklyn Daily Times made a point of noting the picture “deals with the professional beggars who haunted the Bowery some years ago.” 

A number of NYC reviews also emphasized the film’s local color. In “Old Bowery Days Pictured at Rivoli,” the anonymous critic of the New York American, who “heartily enjoyed” the film, thought it “Almost as fascinating as its setting, partly because of its setting.” Likewise, the New York Evening Journal stated “this unusual and extremely pleasing film” contained “some excellent scenes of the Bowery of two decades ago.” Connie Miles of the New York Evening World began her piece by stating, “The glamour of the old Bowery has been revived through the medium of the motion picture screen. It comes back via the Rivoli theater this week in the film The Street of Forgotten Men, comes back vividly in several phases of its interesting past.” 


If Miles was nearly nostalgic, then Mildred Spain of the Daily News was almost rhapsodic. She thought the film entertaining and teaming with color, stating “The Street of Forgotten Men dips into the dark pools of life. It shows you the beggars of life – apologies to Jim Tully – and in showing them it shows them up. They aren’t beggars, they’re professional men whose art calls for more acting than a first performance on Broadway.”  The New York Post held a similar, though more prosaic, opinion. The paper headlined its review “More of the Bowery’s Chicanery Comes to Light,” and suggested the film playing at the Rivoli “might be carelessly mistaken for anti-beggar propaganda.” 

Even more than the film or its setting, its cast came in for praise. Most was heaped on the film’s star. “Percy Marmont, in a vivid characterization, ads new laurels to his fine career,” wrote Dorothy Herzog in the Daily Mirror. Connie Miles of the New York Evening World likewise stated, “Percy Marmont is such a capable actor that he seems never to be miscast…. Marmont scores one hundred percent in Pantomimic achievement.” Two others singled out for special praise time and again were John Harrington and Juliet Brenon. The New York Review, Daily Mirror, and New York Herald Tribune praised each for their excellent work.

One of the film’s most favorable reviews was published in the New York Morning Telegraph. Its article, titled “Herbert Brenon Contributes Absorbing Film at Rivoli,” was penned by Dorothy Day, a one-time bohemian journalist and later social activist who, in more recent years, has become a candidate for sainthood in the Catholic Church. Day begins her review by setting the scene. “The feature film at the Rivoli this week The Street of Forgotten Men, is an absorbing story, done by cast the people who really know how to act and directed in a skillful manner by Herbert Brenon. It is one of those ‘miracle men’ themes, showing the trade of a group of charlatans who play on the sympathy of people in order to make a living.... Day concludes by stating, “Mr. Brenon has done some interesting things in the directorial line and achieves some splendid effects. All in all The Street of Forgotten Men makes for an absorbing and entertaining session.” 

A few of the other local critics, however, were less impressed with the production. After giving high marks to the entertainment which preceded the film, Harriet Underhill of the New York Herald Tribune opined, “Then comes the feature, The Street of Forgotten Men. This was rather disappointing, and we can’t say just why. Percy Marmont as Easy Money Charlie couldn’t have been better, and the scenes on the Bowery were very well done. The old cafe where, almost in the twinkling of an eye, strong, upright men become lame, halt and blind, was interesting, too. In fact, the screened prologue was full of promise. But…” Underhill added, “this promissory note was not redeemed.” 

The critic for the New York World, writing under the initials W.R., also professed a vague dissatisfaction. “We could not summon any fierce enthusiasm over this melancholy matter. It does not bother much with the subtleties of sorrow nor cry its heart out quietly. It sighs for sympathy in bulk.” The Moviegoer, the anonymous by-line for a critic writing in the New York Sun, similarly thought the photoplay “picturesque and interesting,” but oddly added, “to me it seemed somewhat undramatic.” 

Underhill’s review in the New York Herald Tribune and The Moviegoer’s review in the New York Sun come-off as opaque rumblings of discontent. Not so with the New York Times, which was far more exacting in its critique. The anonymous critic who penned the piece may or may not have been Mordaunt Hall, the first regularly assigned motion picture critic for the paper who worked for the Times between 1924 and 1934. However, Hall’s writing style, which was described in his Times obituary as “chatty, irreverent, and not particularly analytical,” seems at odds with this particular piece. Unlike other critics, Hall was said not to be interested in analyzing cinematographic technique. Yet, this review is full of such analysis.

The Times review, titled, “The Bowery and Afterward,” begins “This picture just misses being a notable one, but it will never be accorded the highest rank, although a great many people are going to like it. Unfortunately it is not a case of there being one or two week spots, which could be ignored in favor of the whole impression, but of there being continual infinitesimal blemishes…. What appears to be wrong is the lack of imaginative elasticity in the directing, that is to say, elasticity enough to take in all the detail of the production.” The Times reviewer concludes by putting forth some favorable aspects to the production, noting “There is much to interest audiences in the picture, however, all these things aside. No one can say it is not unusual and colorful."

Surprisingly, none mentioned Louise Brooks, despite the fact she was something of a minor celebrity in the city. The actress would have to wait until her next film, The American Venus, was released in order to receive a review in a New York City newspaper.

With all the attention (pro and con) paid to the film in the New York press, The Street of Forgotten Men proved to be a BIG hit. Originally scheduled to play just one week, the film was held over and played a second. It also outperformed the competition, which included a new Norma Shearer film, A Slave of Fashion, and the popular Rin Tin Tin vehicle, Tracked in the Snow Country. In fact, the Brenon film took in more than $60,000 in admissions during its two-week run – a remarkable amount considering Rivoli tickets were then priced at 50, 85 and 99 cents. Variety observed “Ben Bernie and this feature surprised” before breaking down the numbers for the second week. “Figured after first week’s big box office return business due for drop and it would be off possibly to the extent of $3,500 or $4,000 dollars. Instead, house got $30,410.70. [Only] $400 less than business of previous week.” 

During the summer of 1925 the Rivoli experienced a $100,000 increase in business over the prior year, according to reports from the time. What’s notable is that a substantial part of the theater’s summer boom – more than $60,000 – was taken in during the two-week run of The Street of Forgotten Men. Some of that increase was due to the overlapping appearance of the popular musical act, Ben Bernie, as well as to newly installed air conditioning – though the Capitol, another NYC theater with a new air-plant, failed to see a rise in its summer revenue. 

Within a week of its July debut, The Street of Forgotten Men opened in a handful of other major markets including Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chicago, and Bridgeport, Connecticut – followed by Philadelphia and San Francisco. As the film’s national roll-out continued, and as prints shipped out from one of the 30 Paramount exchanges located around the country, The Street of Forgotten Men came to play in most cities and towns across the United States and Canada. By the end of 1926, there were few North American markets that hadn’t shown the film at least once. In fact, the film continued to play here and there well into 1927 and even 1928. In an era before home video and streaming – when the only way to see a movie was in person – popular or well-regarded films continued to show as long as there was interest. The Street of Forgotten Men’s two-week run at the Rivoli marked not only its debut, and also the start of the film’s long, four-year exhibition history.

Can you spot Louise Brooks in this screen grab?

 * Most of the above information and images was adapted from my 2023 book, The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond. It is available on amazon and other online shops. Click HERE to purchase a copy.

This 389 page book includes numerous illustrations, a bibliography, index and more, as well as two forwards -- one by film preservationist Robert Byrne, and one by film historian and Academy Award honoree Kevin Brownlow. The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond is a publication of the Louise Brooks Society.

More about the film can be found on The Street of Forgotten Men (filmography page) on the Louise Brooks Society website, which this year is celebrating its 30th anniversary online.

THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original contents copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

Saturday, July 19, 2025

Today in history: 100th anniversary of Louise Brooks' first screen appearance

It is 100 years ago today that Louise Brooks first appeared on a movie screen. The occasion was the debut of the actress' first film, The Street of Forgotten Men, which was first shown at the Rivoli theater in New York City on Sunday, July 19, 1925. The film's very first public screening was an afternoon matinee. Pictured below is one of only two known stills which depict/include Brooks, who had an uncredited bit part in the Herbert Brenon directed film.

(Notably, the film was officially released more than a month later, on August 24th, but like other films during the silent era, it was put into circulation and shown before its official release date. Additionally, and for the record, the film was copyrighted two days before its official release, on August 22, 1925 by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation.) 

The film's two-week run at the Rivoli -- where it generated a reported $60,000 in ticket sales -- marked not only a very successful debut, but also the start of what would turn out to be a long, four-year run in the United States. Within a week of its Rivoli debut, The Street of Forgotten Men opened in a handful of other major markets including Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chicago, and Bridgeport, Connecticut – followed by Philadelphia and San Francisco. From there, the film would be shown just about everywhere across the country (including pre-statehood Hawaii and the U.S. Virgin Islands) and in all manner of venues including churches, school gymnasiums, town hall, Y.M.C.A.s and even U.S. naval bases. Its last documented screening in the United States took place at the Savoy theater in Chicago, where it was shown for one-day on December 15, 1928. [* This Chicago screening has come to light only recently. My 2023 book on the film noted the last documented screening of the film in the United States took place at the Dumont Theater in Hackensack, New Jersey, where it showed for one-day on August 15, 1928.]

But back to the beginning... and a little context.


Pictured above is a July 19th newspaper advertisement for the first showing of The Street of Forgotten Men. Along with the film, the ad also promotes the theater’s recently installed, “unbelievably cool” air conditioning, as well as the appearance of popular band leader Ben Bernie, who provided some of the pre-film entertainment. 

Along with Bernie, there was also a film short – a Grantland Rice Sportlight titled Why Kids Leave Home, which Variety said carried “considerable kick” – as well as a novelty program of old-fashioned “Songs that You Have Sung” performed by house organist Harold Ramsbottom. Also part of the pre-film entertainment was an 11-minute pictorial featuring brief films from International, Pathé, Fox, and Kinograms. An additional program titled “Evolution” was shown on Wednesday mornings. Its presentation coincided with the just concluded Scopes Monkey trial

The summer months could be a challenging time to release a film. In the mid-1920s, relatively few theaters were air-conditioned, and with warmer seasonal weather, many theaters became stuffy and uncomfortable. Movie attendance was expected to fall off, and usually did. In fact, in many parts of the United States, moviegoers who went to see a picture during the summer often brought their own fan.

The 2,000-plus seat Rivoli was considered a prestige venue, a “movie palace,” and one of the grandest theaters on the East Coast. Over the years, many notable Famous Players-Lasky and Paramount productions played there. Some six weeks prior to the debut of The Street of Forgotten Men, Willis Carrier completed the installation of his much-vaunted air-cooling system at the Rivoli. The installation, among the first in any theater in New York City, would be an important test for Paramount, so much so, studio head Adolph Zukor came from California to experience the new system firsthand. The occasion of Zukor's visit coincided with the showing of an earlier Herbert Brenon release, The Little French Girl, starring Mary Brian. With the system up and running, the Rivoli began to promote itself as “New York’s Refrigerated Cooling Station.” 

The Rivoli, some six weeks prior to it showing The Street of Forgotten Men.

Along with air-conditioning, the other main attraction on the bill for July 19 was Ben Bernie. He was a popular bandleader whose signature expression, “yowsah, yowsah, yowsah,” became a national catchphrase. Bernie was also a radio personality and recording artist who would go on to record a handful of popular songs. Among them was “Sweet Georgia Brown,” which Bernie co-wrote and which hit #1 in July 1925, just as his orchestra was appearing at the Rivoli.  

Notably, Bernie and his band had already appeared in a 1925 DeForest Phonofilm, a sound short titled Ben Bernie and All the Lads. Happily, that early sound film is still extant. To get a feel for what the Rivoli audience likely experienced during the run of The Street of Forgotten Men, check out this early sound film on YouTube.

In scheduling Bernie’s 11-man group (which, at the time, included noted saxophonist Jack Pettis and a teenage Oscar Levant on piano), the Rivoli was daring to offer something different from what most theaters offered – namely “hot jazz.” Typically, theaters might offer light orchestral music, an organist, or novelty numbers – though nothing that might compete with the theater’s main attraction, the feature film. At a time when jazz, especially up-tempo jazz, was considered suspect in some quarters, Rivoli ads like the one above assured patrons “Everybody Likes the New Jazz Policy.”

Not surprisingly, Bernie proved popular. Variety described the group’s musical offerings – which included a musical sketch titled “Montmartre” (after the bohemian neighborhood in Paris) as a “wow” which went over “tremendously.” Also well reviewed was the featured film, The Street of Forgotten Men.

In the 1920s, New York City was home to a more than two dozen newspapers. And not surprisingly, a number of local critics took an almost proprietary interest in The Street of Forgotten Men, a movie which was set and made in the city, and which featured a handful of local actors likely familiar to critics and to those who went to the theater. One newspaper encouraged every New Yorker to see the film. While another billed the movie as “New York’s Own Picture.”

In fact, the film’s Rivoli debut received more than a dozen local reviews, as well as other write-ups in other newspapers located in the metropolis’ five boroughs, including Brooklyn. The majority of reviews were positive – even glowing, though a few were tempered, and one critical. None, surprisingly, mentioned Louise Brooks, despite the fact she was something of a minor celebrity in the city.

The actress, however, didn't go completely unnoticed. In 1928, after she became a star, film magazines carried a piece -- likely a piece of balleywho -- about Brooks' debut and her reaction to praise sent by a fan. “Louise Brooks must have been very satisfied when she received her first fan letter from a girl in Brooklyn who said she saw her in The Street of Forgotten Men, because after reading it, she immediately took a photograph of herself that she had hanging in her dressing room and sent it to the girl in thanks.” 


Pictured above is a screen grab from the restored print of The Street of Forgotten Men which shows Louise Brooks in her one and only scene. In the film, Brooks plays a "moll," the girlfriend or companion to a gangster or criminal. The bad guy in question, Bridgeport White-Eye, a fake beggar who feigns blindness, is played by John Harrington. He is pictured above seated next to Brooks.

Despite the brevity of Brooks' role, she did manage to garner one "review". It appeared in the Los Angeles Times on August 31, 1925. The newspaper's anonymous critic ended their critique by highlighting the work of an uncredited, bit player in the film. It was the only publication to do so. “And there was a little rowdy, obviously attached to the ‘blind’ man, who did some vital work during her few short scenes. She was not listed.” This brief notice turned out to be Brooks' first film review.

* Most of the above information was adapted from my 2023 book, The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond. It is available on amazon and other online shops. Click HERE to purchase a copy.

This 389 page book includes numerous illustrations, a bibliography, index and more, as well as two forwards -- one by film preservationist Robert Byrne, and one by film historian and Academy Award honoree Kevin Brownlow. The Street of Forgotten Men: From Story to Screen and Beyond is a publication of the Louise Brooks Society.

More about the film can be found on The Street of Forgotten Men (filmography page) on the Louise Brooks Society website, which this year is celebrating its 30th anniversary online.

THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original contents copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Pandora's Box subject of new WeimarCinema.org dossier

The WeimarCinema website is a scholarly, online archive for the research and teaching of Weimar film in its historical and theoretical contexts. If you have any interest in German movies (think Nosferatu, Metropolis, etc...) of the inter-war period (here 1918 - 1933), then you will want to check out this really interesting site. Its url, appropriately, is WeimarCinema.org.

The WeimarCinema website contains various resources as well as information about related publications and restorations. There are also a smattering of essays on topics like G.W. Pabst, expressionism, Babylon Berlin, early queer cinema, and more. 

The site's primary asset is its growing collection of film dossiers, groupings of pages which collect "historical materials that reconstruct the cultural milieu in which a given film was made and first reviewed. It also illuminates the film’s afterlives including contemporary appropriations in various media."


Earlier this month, the site posted a film dossier on Die Büchse der Pandora (aka Pandora's Box). It is authored by Shoshana Schwebel, a scholar at the University of British Columbia.  Besides being a major addition to Weimar cinema scholarship, this dossier is something every fan of Pandora's Box or Louise Brooks will want to check out. This dossier, like the others,  contains lightly illustrated sections (or chapters) on "Production and Restoration", "Historical Essays and Reviews", "Concepts and Constellations", "Related Films", "Afterlives", and "Readings". There are also links to all manner or resources scattered across the web.

I was in touch with the author some months ago, and helped where I could. The Pandora's Box dossier contains a number of citations and references not only to my writings on Louise Brooks, but also to the Louise Brooks Society website -- especially its dossier pages on Pandora's Box


I would enjoy hearing your thoughts on WeimarCinema website page on Pandora's Box.

THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original contents copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. 

Monday, July 14, 2025

More on Love Em and Leave Em (1926) with Louise Brooks

As noted in the prior blog, the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts is set to screen the seldom shown 1926 film, Love ‘Em and Leave ‘Em, on July 25 at Lincoln Center in New York City. The flapper drama stars Evelyn Brent, Lawrence Gray and Louise Brooks. More about this event can be found HERE.

The film was both a popular and critical success at the time of its release in December of 1926. In fact, the Chicago Tribune named the film one of the six best movies of the month. Its critic, Mae Tinee, proclaimed, “Love ‘Em and Leave ‘Em is one of the snappiest little comedy dramas of the season. Full of human interest. Splendidly directed. Acted beautifully.” Dorothy Herzog, film critic for the New York Daily Mirror (and Evelyn Brent’s later romantic partner) penned similarly, “A featherweight comedy drama that should register with the public because of the fine work done by the principals and its amusing gags. . . . Louise Brooks gives the best performance of her flicker career as the selfish, snappily dressed, alive number — Janie. Miss Brooks sizzles through this celluloider, a flapper lurer with a Ziegfeld figure and come-on eyes.”

Newspaper ad from the film's
NYC debut in Dec. 1926

Critics across the country likewise thought Brooks stole the show. The Los Angeles Record wrote, “Evelyn Brent is nominally starred in Love ‘Em and Leave ‘Em, but the work of Louise Brooks, suave enticing newcomer to the Lasky fold, stands out most. The flippant, self-centered little shop girl is given sly and knowing interpretation by Miss Brooks, who is, if memory serves aright, a graduate of that great American institute of learning, the Follies.” The Kansas City Times went further, “Louise Brooks does another of her flapper parts and is a good deal more realistic than the widely heralded Clara Bow. Miss Brooks uses the dumb bell rather than the spit-fire method. But she always gets what she wants.”

New York critics singled out the actress, lavishing praise on Brooks with the film almost an after-thought. The New York Herald Tribune critic opined, “Love ‘Em and Leave ‘Em . . . did manage to accomplish one thing. It has silenced, for the time being at least, the charge that Louise Brooks cannot act. Her portrayal of the predatory shop girl of the Abbott-Weaver tale was one of the bright spots of recent film histrionism.”

John S. Cohen Jr. of the New York Sun added, “The real surprise of the film is Louise Brooks. With practically all connoisseurs of beauty in the throes of adulation over her generally effectiveness, Miss Brooks has not heretofore impressed anyone as a roomful (as Lorelei says) of Duses. But in Love ‘Em and Leave ‘Em, unless I too have simply fallen under her spell, she gives an uncannily effective impersonation of a bad little notion counter vampire. Even her excellent acting, however, cannot approach in effectiveness the scenes where, in ‘Scandals’ attire, she does what we may call a mean Charleston.”

Roscoe McGowan, writing in the New York Daily News, added "“Director Tuttle has managed to present Louise Brooks in a role to which she lends some conviction as well as ornamentation . . . all very well and entertainingly done.”

Newspaper ad from the film's NYC debut in Dec. 1926

Here is a smattering of some of the praise the film received from elsewhere around the United States.

“The cast has three featured members – Evelyn Brent, Lawrence Gray and Louise Brooks. It would have been just as well to have reversed the order of the names, for Louise Brooks, playing an entirely unsympathetic role . . . runs away with the picture.” — Fred, Variety

“Louise Brooks, the sister who is responsible for all of her sorrow, personifies the popular conception of a modern flapper with faultless accuracy. Her so-called ‘million dollar’ legs contribute materially to this portrayal.” — Hake Herbert, St. Louis Times 

“The characterization, though, is excellent, made all the more so by the painstaking work of Evelyn Brent and Louise Brooks as the sisters. The former retains sympathy without being superhumanly saintly; the later, besides being a ravishing beauty, gives a deft portrayal of an utterly selfish and superficial creature.” — Carl B. Adams, Cincinnati Enquirer

“No other person than Louise Brooks, however, instills the spice in this concoction. Decidedly the flapper she is intended to characterize, Miss Brooks uses her accomplishments to advantage. She is a capricious young lady, with a knowledge of getting what she wants when she wants it. Not so convincing are the roles taken by Evelyn Brent and Lawrence Gray.” — Leona Pollack, Omaha World Herald

“To Louise Brooks go the acting laurels of the picture.” — Louise Kreisman, UCLA Daily Bruin

“Louise Brooks as the flapper sister practically runs away with the show.” — Harry Lang, San Francisco Examiner


For more on the film, be sure and check out the newly revamped (pun intended) Love Em and Leave Em (filmography page) on the expanded Louise Brooks Society website.

THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original contents copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. 

Visit the LOUISE BROOKS SOCIETY website at www.pandorasbox.com

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