Monday, September 29, 2025

Today is Silent Movie Day !

The Louise Brooks Society is pleased to join in the celebration for Silent Movie Day, an annual day dedicated to celebrating and preserving silent movies!

According to their must-visit website at silentmovieday.org, "Silent Movie Day is an annual celebration of silent movies, a vastly misunderstood and neglected cinematic art form. We believe that silent motion pictures are a vital, beautiful, and often powerful part of film history, and we are united with others in the goal to advocate for their presentation and preservation.

This day provides an opportunity for academics, aficionados, programmers, archivists and enthusiasts to gather around their shared appreciation of this unique period in visual arts and culture. It is also a time to rally around silent film initiatives for preservation and access, as well as raise awareness of the small percentage of film that remains from this period of the motion picture industry." 

Bebe Daniels and Robert Frazer in Miss Bluebeard (1925);
 Image courtesy of Bruce Calvert.

On their must-visit website at silentmovieday.org, you'll find links to dozens of screenings and other events all around the world which celebrate silent film as part of this international effort. Among them is a screening of the Louise Brooks classic, Pandora's Box, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 

There is also additional information about Silent Movie Day, links to related resources, some merchandise, and more. Check it out.

Gloria Swanson in The Affairs of Anatol (1921);
Image courtesy of Bruce Calvert, Silent Film Still Archive.

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

Saturday, September 27, 2025

Pandora's Box, starring Louise Brooks, screens in Philadelphia on Sept 29 ( Silent Movie Day )

Pandora's Box, starring Louise Brooks, will be shown at Film Society East in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at 4 pm and 7 pm on September 29th. This special screening, sponsored by the Philadelphia Film Society, is part of the international Silent Movie Day celebration. More information about the two screenings can be found HERE.


The event description reads:

G. W. PABST | GERMANY | 1929 | 141 MIN | NR | SILENT W/ INTERTITLES 

In honor of Silent Movie Day, PFS presents one of the greatest achievements of the silent film era from renowned German cinema master G. W. Pabst. The surprisingly modern epic follows the exploits of an alluring young woman and her intoxicating beauty that draws a string of lovers into her orbit, leading to a tragic chain of betrayal, obsessions, and self-destruction.

Cast: Louise Brooks, Fritz Kortner, Francis Lederer, Carl Goetz



More information about Silent Movie Day, an international events with dozens of screenings around the world, can be found on its website at silentmovieday.org/

More information about the celebrated G. W. Pabst film can be found on the acclaimed and recently expanded Pandora's Box (filmography page) on the 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 content copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Friday, September 26, 2025

It's the Old Army Game, starring Louise Brooks and W.C. Fields, screens in Indiana on Sept. 27

It seems as though the world can't get enough of Louise Brooks, as there are multiple screening of her films scheduled for the fall all across the United States and Europe. Here is one I just heard about.... It's the Old Army Game (1926), starring W.C. Fields and Louise Brooks, will be shown this Saturday, September 27th at Preservation Hall, 1274 Logan St. in Noblesville, Indiana. 

The showing of It's the Old Army Game will feature a live piano score by Roger Lippincott. And what's more, admission is free, and complimentary popcorn and beverages will be served! Doors open at 7 p.m., and showtime is 7:30 p.m.

Louise Brooks and W. C. Fields in It's the Old Army Game


This screening is put on by the Noblesville Cultural Arts Commission and sponsored by the Lacy Arts Building, who have a Vintage Film Series which runs throughout the year. This year's series includes silent films with Douglas Fairbanks, Anna May Wong, Lon Chaney, Buster Keaton and Indiana's own Ken Maynard. More information on the series can be found HERE.

I wondered, had It's the Old Army Game been shown in Noblesville when the film was first released? YES, it was shown at the now demolished, 800 seat Wild Opera House for two days in June, 1926. Also on the bill was a chapter from a serial, The Radio Detective. Admission was 25 cents for the balcony, 35 cents for the main floor, and 10 cents for children (no matter where they sat).

I paged through the local Noblesville Daily Ledger, but could not find any sort of review or article. BTW: back in 1926, Noblesville had another venue for films, the Olympic Theater, which was then showing The Eagle, a Rudolph Valentino film.


More information about this celebrated W.C. Fields film can be found on the acclaimed and recently expanded It's the Old Army Game (filmography page) on the 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 content copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Thursday, September 25, 2025

Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film

Beggars of Life is, in my opinion, Louise Brooks best American silent, and alongside Pandora's Box and Diary of a Lost Girl, one of her very best films. If you would like to learn more about this William Wellman directed masterpiece, I would recommend my 2017 book Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film. This book, a publication of the Louise Brooks Society, is available on amazon.com and elsewhere on the internet.


This first ever study of Beggars of Life looks at the film Oscar-winning director William Wellman thought his finest silent movie. Based on Jim Tully’s bestselling book of hobo life—and filmed by Wellman the year after he made Wings (the first film to win the Best Picture Oscar), Beggars of Life is a riveting drama about an orphan girl (screen legend Louise Brooks) who kills her abusive stepfather and flees the law. She meets a boy tramp (leading man Richard Arlen), and together they ride the rails through a dangerous hobo underground ruled over by Oklahoma Red (future Oscar winner Wallace Beery). Beggars of Life showcases Brooks in her best American silent—a film the Cleveland Plain Dealer once described as “a raw, sometimes bleeding slice of life.” With more than 50 little seen images, and a foreword by William Wellman, Jr. 

The book has received some very good reviews. 

"I can say (with head bowed modestly) that I know more about the career of director William A. Wellman than pretty much anybody anywhere -- always excepting my friend and co-author John Gallagher -- but there are things in Thomas Gladysz's new book on Wellman's Beggars of Life that I didn't know. More important, the writing is so good and the research so deep that even when I was reading about facts that were familiar to me, I was enjoying myself hugely." -- Frank Thompson, co-author of Nothing Sacred: The Cinema of William Wellman

"
Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film is a quick, satisfying read, illustrated with promotional material, posters and stills as well as press clippings. In these pages, Gladysz takes us through the making and the reception of the film and clears up a few mysteries too.... Beggars of Life is a fascinating movie, made by some of the silent film industry's most colourful characters. This highly readable book will deepen your enjoyment and understanding of a silent Hollywood classic." -- Pamela Hutchinson, Silent London

"I cannot help but give this an enthusiastic two thumbs up. It really is the perfect companion, before or after you have seen the film. The volume might be slim, but, it is packed with information and rare photographs. It has been impeccably researched and beautifully executed.... This is a thorough examination of the film from start to finish and written in a breezy style that is not only informative, it is a very entertaining read." -- Donna Hill,
Strictly Vintage Hollywood

"Read your book. I love it. It is thorough and extremely interesting. The art work is compelling." -- William Wellman, Jr., author of
Wild Bill Wellman

"Gladysz has written a brief but informative book .... offers a profound and true insight." -- Jack Garner, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle

"For this film, including details on what is known about the original recorded soundtrack, I highly recommend Thomas Gladysz's book
Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film." -- Rodney Sauer, Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra

"There is an affordable and highly recommended book that goes perfectly with the blu ray. Gladysz, director of the Louise Brooks Society, has written a companion book to the movie that features a wealth of information, insight, and photos. It really puts this film into historical perspective and helps to further understand and more deeply appreciate its status as a screen classic." -- James Neibur, film historian and author
 

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

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Louise Brooks, Beggars of Life and Jacumba, California

I have a bunch of YouTube channels which I like, watch and subscribe to -- among them Sidetrack Adventures, which explores the highways and byways of the Southwestern United States, especially California. A couple of months ago, the channel posted a 25 minute video on the Jacumba Hot Springs near the United States - Mexico border. HERE is a link to that video, which is also embedded below.

The video description reads: "Jacumba, California was once an extremely popular resort destination, attracting the rich and famous, but after the trains stopped coming and the freeway bypassed the town, it’s golden age is long in the past. Articles have even been written about it, calling it a ghost town. But as we found out on a recent visit, there is still life in this town. Located on old Highway 80 in the southeast corner of San Diego County, right on the border with Mexico, Jacumba is an interesting place.  In this video we head to Jacumba and explore its history including the railroad, its 1920s boom, a desert lake, and the return to being a resort town."

Jacumba is also the town where Louise Brooks and the cast and crew of Beggars of Life were located while filming the 1928 William Wellman directed film. And as a matter of fact, this short travel video contains a shout-out to the Brooks' film. Check it out.
 

Back in 2017, I authored a book titled Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film. This Louise Brooks Society publication, with a foreword by William Wellman Jr., coincided with the recommended Kino Lorber release of the film on DVD and Blu-ray. (I also provided one of two audio commentaries on the disc.) Here are a few related excerpts from my book, which is available on amazon.

"Production work on the film took place between May 18 and June 18, 1928, with location shooting near Jacumba, California taking place between May 30 and June 15.... The location work on Beggars of Life took place in and around the Carrizo Gorge, a rough stretch of railway some fifty miles to the east of Jacumba. The trains that road on this track belonged to the SD&A (San Diego & Arizona) Railway." 

"The film’s company, numbering 75, nearly took over Jacumba, California—a hot, dry, resort town of 400 inhabitants located near the Mexican border. The movie’s seventeen days of nearby outdoor location work were filled with not only hair-raising stunts, but also, undoubtedly—as there were very few women on location—carousing, drinking, rough housing and male camaraderie.  The extras, Brooks recalled in “On Location with Billy Wellman,” were “twenty riotous hobos selected by Billy from among the outcasts who financed leisurely drunks by working as extras in films.” 


"Another far more likely story suggested the revelry at least some enjoyed: “The company filming Jim Tully’s story, Beggars of Life, recently went on location at Jacumba, a little town near the Mexican border. Jacumba sleeps during the day but at night four of the more talented citizens gather to form an orchestra and there is a dance—held next door to the one hotel. Louise Brooks, trying to sleep after a hard day before the cameras, finally arose, slipped a coat on over pajamas, and went to the dance hall. ‘How much do you make a night?’ she inquired of the orchestra leader. ‘Oh, about ten dollars,’ he said. ‘Here’s fifteen,’ said Miss Brooks, holding out the currency. ‘I’m hiring you to not play any more tonight’.”

"... Brooks didn’t dislike everyone. She came to admire Wellman, as a director. And, she was fond of Wellman’s 17-year old brother-in-law, Jack Chapin, who had a bit part in the film as well as a crush on the 21-year old Brooks. They hung around the town pool in Jacumba. 

Surprisingly, Brooks also liked Wallace Beery. The two had worked together the previous year in Now We’re in the Air, a comedy set during the 1st World War. The actor drove Brooks to Jacumba in his own car, and they talked about working in Hollywood and what to expect working under Wellman."

Jim Tully, Louise Brooks, Wallace Beery & Richard Arlen
on location during the filming of Beggars of Life.

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

Monday, September 22, 2025

Beggars of Life, starring Louise Brooks, was released on this day in 1928

Beggars of Life, starring Louise Brooks, was released on this day in 1928. Directed by William Wellman the year after he made Wings (the first film to win an Academy Award), Beggars of Life is a terse drama about a girl (Louise Brooks) dressed as a boy who flees the law after killing her abusive stepfather. With the help of a young hobo, she rides the rails through a male dominated underworld in which danger is close at hand. Picture Play magazine described the film as “Sordid, grim and unpleasant,” adding, “it is nevertheless interesting and is certainly a departure from the usual movie.”

More about the film can be found on the Louise Brooks Society website filmography page.


Beggars of Life is based on the 1924 novelistic memoir of the same name by Jim Tully, a celebrated “hobo author” highly regarded by H.L. Mencken and other literati of the time. Though shot as a silent and released in that format, Beggars of Life has the distinction of being Paramount’s first sound film: a synchronized musical score, sound effects, a few lines of dialogue and a song were added to some prints at the time of the film’s release. Advertisements for the film boasted “Come hear Wallace Beery sing!” The gravel-voiced character actor and future Oscar winner plays Oklahoma Red, a tough hobo with a soft heart. Richard Arlen, who the year before had starred in Wings, plays a vagabond and Brooks’ romantic interest.

In 1928, Beggars of Life was named one of the six best films for October by the Chicago Tribune; it also made the honor roll for best films of the year in an annual poll conducted by Film Daily. Musical Courier called Beggars of Life ” . . . one of the most entertaining films of the littered season.” And Photoplay thought it “good entertainment.” Nevertheless, it is not especially well known today, and its grim story set among the desperate and the downtrodden drew mixed reviews upon release. One Baltimore newspaper said it would have limited appeal, quipping, “Tully tale not a flapper fetcher for the daytime trade.”

Louella Parsons, writing in the Los Angeles Examiner, echoed the sentiment when she stated, “I was a little disappointed in Louise Brooks. She is so much more the modern flapper type, the Ziegfeld Follies girl, who wears clothes and is always gay and flippant. This girl is somber, worried to distraction and in no comedy mood. Miss Brooks is infinitely better when she has her lighter moments.” Her cross-town colleague, Harrison Carroll, added to the drumbeat of disdain when he wrote in the Los Angeles Evening Herald, “Considered from a moral standpoint, Beggars of Life is questionable, for it throws the glamour of adventure over tramp life and is occupied with building sympathy for an escaping murderess. As entertainment, however, it has tenseness and rugged earthy humor.”

Critics in New York were also divided on the merits of Beggars of Life, and many of them instead focused on Brooks’ unconventional, cross-dressing appearance. In the New York Times, Mordaunt Hall noted, “Louise Brooks figures as Nancy. She is seen for the greater part of this subject in male attire, having decided to wear these clothes to avoid being apprehended. Miss Brooks really acts well, better than she has in most of her other pictures.” The New York Morning Telegraph stated, “Louise Brooks, in a complete departure from the pert flapper that it has been her wont to portray, here definitely places herself on the map as a fine actress. Her characterizations, drawn with the utmost simplicity, is genuinely affecting.” While Quinn Martin of the New York World wrote, “Here we have Louise Brooks, that handsome brunette, playing the part of a fugitive from justice, and playing as if she meant it, and with a certain impressive authority and manner. This is the best acting this remarkable young woman has done.”

Also getting attention for their role in Beggars of Life was Edgar “Blue” Washington. The Afro-American newspaper wrote, “In Beggars of Life, Edgar Blue Washington, race star, was signed by Paramount for what is regarded as the most important Negro screen role of the year, that of Big Mose. The part is that of a sympathetic character, hardly less important to the epic of tramp life than those of Wallace Beery, Louise Brooks and Richard Arlen, who head the cast.”

Girls dressed as boys, pastoral life gone wrong, the mingling of races, desperation depicted among the glitz and glamour of the twenties — there is a lot happening in Beggars of Life. It is, arguably, Brooks’ best American silent.


Under its American title, documented screenings of the film took place in Australia (including Tasmania), Bermuda, British Malaysia (Singapore), Canada, China, Dutch East Indies (Indonesia), France, India, Ireland, Jamaica, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United Kingdom (England, Isle of Man, Northern Ireland and Scotland). In the United States, the film was presented under the title Mendigos de la Vida (Spanish-language press) and Il Mendicante di Vita (Italian language press).

Elsewhere, Beggars of Life was shown under the title Les mendiants de la vie (Algeria); Bettler des Lebens (Austria); Meias indiscretag and Mendigos da vida (Brazil); Mendigos de la Vida (Chile); Mendigos de la Vida (Costa Rica); Mendigos de la Vida (Cuba); Žebráci života and Žebráky živote (Czechoslovakia); De Lovløses Tog (Denmark); Menschen Zijn Nooit Tevreden (Dutch East Indies – Indonesia); Elu wõõraslapsed and Eluvõõrad hinged (Estonia); Les mendiants de la vie (France); Az élet koldusai and Az orszagutak angyala (Hungary); I mendicanti della vita (Italy); Bettler des Lebens and Dzives ubagi (Latvia); Bettlers des Lebens (Les Mendiants de la Vie) (Luxembourg); Mendigos de vida (Mexico); Menschen Zijn Nooit Tevreden and Zwervers (The Netherlands); Ludzie bezdomni (Poland); Mendigos da Vida (Portugal); Strada cersetorilor (Romania); Mendigos de vida and Los mendigos de la vida (Spain) and Captaires de vida (Spain, Catalonian language); and Les mendiants de la vie (Switzerland).

SOME THINGS ABOUT THE FILM YOU MAY NOT KNOW:

Beggars of Life was under consideration by Paramount as early as September of 1925. 

— With an added musical score, sound effects, and a song sung by Wallace Berry (either “Hark the Bells” or “Don’t You Hear Them Bells?” or “I Wonder Where She Sits Tonight”), Beggars of Life is considered Paramount’s first sound film. In Baltimore, Beggars of Life was the first “talking sequence picture” to play in the Century Theater.

— “Beggars of Life” by J. Keirn Brennan and Karl Hajos was recorded by The Troubadours, Scrappy Lambert and other artists and released as a 78 rpm recording. The label of these recordings describe it as “Theme Song of the Motion Picture production.”

— Edgar Washington (1898 – 1970) was a prizefighter and noted semi-pro baseball player (in the Negro Leagues) before entering films in the late Teens. He was a pioneer among African-American actors, and was given the nickname “Blue” by friend Frank Capra. Also in the film in a bit part was Michael Donlin, an outfielder whose Major League career spanned from 1899 to 1914.

— In 1965, director William Wellman wanted to bring Louise Brooks to San Francisco and screen Beggars of Life as part of the San Francisco International Film Festival, but it never came to be. Instead, he screened Wings for a packed house at the local Masonic auditorium.

— The first ever book on the film, Beggars of Life: A Companion to the 1928 Film, was published by the Louise Brooks Society in 2017. The book is authored by LBS Director Thomas Gladysz, and features a foreword by author and actor William Wellman Jr.  (Purchase on amazon.)


More about Beggars of Life can be found on the newly revamped Louise Brooks Society website on its Beggars of Life (filmography page)

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

Saturday, September 20, 2025

Overland Stage Raiders, with Louise Brooks, was released on this day in 1938

Overland Stage Raiders, starring John Wayne, was released on this day in 1938. It was Louise Brooks' last film. In Overland Stage Raiders, the “Three Mesquiteers” (led by Wayne) fight bad guys in the modern-day west. The “stages” being raided are buses bearing gold shipments to the east. Airborne hijackers steal the gold, but the Mesquiteers defeat the crooks and then parachute to safety. The film stars John Wayne, who was then on the brink of stardom. Brooks plays his love interest.

More about the film can be found on the Louise Brooks Society website filmography page.

 

For Brooks, Overland Stage Raiders was little more than a $300.00 paycheck. For columnists and critics, Brooks’ supporting role in this lowly B-western was yet another attempt at a comeback for a once famous star. Louella Parsons wrote “Louise Brooks, who used to get glamour girl publicity about her famous legs, is starting all over again as a leading lady in a Western with John Wayne.”

In the Fox West Coast Bulletin, the East Coast Preview Committee noted “The production is well acted and directed and presents several novel touches, as well as excellent photography.” Film Daily thought the “Fast-moving cowboy and bandit story will entertain the western fans. . . . George Sherman directed the picture, and gets a maximum of action and speed from the story.”

Variety went further, “This series improves with each new adventure. Starting out as typical cow country stories, Republic has seemingly upped the budget as successive chapters caught on. Raiders is as modern as today, yet contains plenty of cross-country hoss chases and six-shooter activity. . . . Louise Brooks is the femme appeal with nothing much to do except look glamorous in a shoulder-length straight-banged coiffure. . . . Should please juveniles and elders alike.”

Despite Brooks’ new hairstyle, and despite her appearance in this lesser film, there is little to redeem it. Brooks adored Wayne, but could not stand the humiliation of this sort of film. Overland Stage Raiders would be Louise Brooks’ last movie. She soon left Hollywood, and slid into decades-long obscurity.

As the years passed, John Wayne became of superstar, and in the 1950s his early films were re-released both in the United States and in Europe. And once gain, Overland Stage Raiders was shown in movie theaters, and in the 1960s and 1970s, on television. (Brooks was sometimes mentioned in the TV listings.) The posters and lobby cards for the later reissue emphasized Wayne’s name, while Brooks’ was deleted.

 

Under its American title, documented screenings of the film took place in the late 1930s and early 1940s in Australia, Bermuda, Canada, Netherlands Antilles, Palestine (Israel), Sweden, and the United Kingdom (including England, Isle of Man, Northern Ireland, and Scotland); in the last-decades of the 20th Century, the film has also been shown, either in theaters or on television, in Australia, Canada, England, Ireland, The Netherlands, and elsewhere. In a few instances in the United States, the film was also promoted under the title 3 Mesquiteers.

Elsewhere, Overland Stage Raiders was shown under the title Bandidos Encobertos (Brazil); Pozemní stádioví lupiči (Czechoslovakia); Guet-apens dans les airs (France); Gold in den Wolken (Germany); Cavalca e spara (Italy); Ringo Cavalca e spara (Italy – later retitle); Gouddorst (The Netherlands); Gold in den Wolken (Poland); Guet-apens dans les airs (Switzerland); Грабители дилижансов (U.S.S.R.); Cavalca e spara (Vatican City); Ringo cavalca e spara (Vatican City – later retitle); Cabalga y dispara (Venezuela). In Italy, Overland Stage Raiders was re-released along with another John Wayne film, Red River Range, under the joint title Cavalca e spara.

SOME THINGS ABOUT THE FILM YOU MAY NOT KNOW:

— There were three movies based on William Colt MacDonald’s Three Mesquiteers books, all made before Republic took their turn with the series. Hoot Gibson played Stony Brooke in RKO’s Powdersmoke Range (1935), with Harry Carey as Tucson Smith and Guinn ‘Big Boy’ Williams as Lullaby Joslin. The movie was billed as ‘The Barnum and Bailey of Westerns!’ — its cast of cowboy stars, included Bob Steele and Tom Tyler (both would later become Mesquiteers in the series), along with William Farnum, William Desmond, Buzz Barton, Wally Wales, Art Mix, Buffalo Bill Jr., Buddy Roosevelt, and Franklyn Farnum.

— In the course of the 51 Republic movies, there were twelve actors who played the Mesquiteers in nine different teams. Robert Livingston was the first to play the part of Stoney Brooke in the Republic series. Wayne played the lead in eight of the 51 films in the Three Mesquiteers series released between 1936 and 1943.

Overland Stage Raiders was one of two Westerns John Wayne filmed at Iverson Ranch in Chatsworth, California — a well known location for genre films. The other, made a few months after Overland Stage Raiders, was John Ford’s legendary Stagecoach (1939).

— On August 3, 1938 Joseph I. Breen, a film censor with the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, wrote to  M. J. Siegel of the Republic Pictures Corporation recommending that the number of killings in the film be reduced and pointing out actions cut by censor boards, such as firing into the camera.

— Yakima Canutt and Tommy Coats performed stunts in Overland Stage Raiders.

 

More about  Overland Stage Raiders can be found on the newly revamped Louise Brooks Society website on its Overland Stage Raiders (filmography page)

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

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

A Reference to the Louise Brooks Society from 1922

Oh, what a difference a comma makes! Check out this mention of the Louise Brooks Society from way back in 1922, which is pretty darn amazing because -- as a matter of public record -- the Louise Brooks Society was launched in 1995. Oh, what a difference a comma, makes! 

 

For more on this "other Louise Brooks," be sure and check out this 2022 LBS blog,"The Unlikely Louise Brooks, number 3 in an occasional series."

For more about the actual and very real Louise Brooks Society, including a detailed account of its 30 year history, check out the Louise Brooks Society ABOUT page

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

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Pandora's Box screens in Wichita (Louise Brooks' home town) on October 14th

The classic 1929 silent film, Pandora's Box, will be shown in Wichita, Kansas on Tuesday, October 14th at 7 pm. This special screening will be accompanied by Donnie Rankin on the Mighty Wurlitzer. This event is sponsored by the Tallgrass Film Festival and Wichita Wurlitzer. More information HERE.

The event description reads: "Step back in time to the golden age of silent film with a stunning screening featuring the magnetic Louise Brooks (Kansas native and Wichita resident) in her most unforgettable role as Lulu. Experience this landmark film as it was meant to be seen - with a live musical score performed by Donnie Rankin on the Wichita Wurlitzer organ, a treasured piece of Wichita history and the finest theater organ in the country." 

The film will be screened at the Century II Exhibition Hall. Tickets are on sale and may be purchased HERE.  


I described the event as "special," not only because it will be taking place in Wichita (Louise Brooks' hometown) and that it will have a live musical accompaniment (which is always a treat), but because of the history of the Mighty Wurlitzer instrument on which the musical accompaniment will be performed. The organ located in the Century II Exhibition Hall has accompanied Brooks films in the past. 

According to Wikipedia, this 1926 Wurlitzer organ was removed from the Paramount Theatre in New York City prior to that theater's demolition and installed in the Century II Convention Hall! The October 14th screening will reunite the instrument which accompanied some of Brooks' American silents. More about Wichita Wurlitzer can be found on their Facebook page.

 

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

Friday, September 12, 2025

A moment with the McCarthy Sisters

The McCarthy Sisters were a vaudeville team who specialized in “comedy-syncopated songs” which often had a blues or jazz feel. The act, composed of Margaret and Dorothy McCarthy, sported sharp, short Jazz Age bobs (just like Louise Brooks) and performed in the “George White’s Scandals” and “Greenwich Village Follies” and elsewhere. Among the performers with whom they played was Tom Patricola, who was in the George White’s Scandals” alongside Louise Brooks.


Perhaps their best remembers recording is "Can't Your Friend Get a Friend For Me" (1925). Here is a YouTube video from the wonderful Desdemona202 channel. (If you like early jazz -- from the 1920s and 1930s -- check it out.)


And here is a caricature of the "cute" sister act, which suggests they were known for dancing the Charleston. 


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

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Diary of a Lost Girl, starring Louise Brooks, screens in Denver

This just in .... 

Diary of a Lost Girl (1929), starring Louise Brooks, will be shown in Denver, Colorado on Sunday, September 14th. This late afternoon screening is one of a number of films being shown as part of the Denver Silent Film Festival. More information about this screening, which will feature live musical accompaniment, can be found HERE.

And here is what the festival has to say about the event. "Louise Brooks was far less than the international phenomenon she became when she first arrived in Germany in 1926  1928 to make the scandalous Pandora’s Box with Pabst. Diary mounted another serious attack on bourgeois German morality with its story of a young girl raped, and sent to a morally rigid “reform school” from which she escapes and eventually works in a brothel before finding a way to rise in social standing."

Musical accompaniment by Rodney Sauer.

Diary of a Lost Girl will be shown at the Sie Film Center, Denver's Only Independent Movie Theater, located at 2510 E. Colfax Ave., Denver, CO 80206


For more information about Diary of a Lost Girl, be sure and visit the Louise Brooks Society filmography page devoted to the film.

Want to learn even more? Back in 2010, the Louise Brooks Society published the "Louise Brooks edition" of Margarete Bohme's The Diary of a Lost Girl, the book the film was based on. It's a sensational read. Order your copy today at amazon.com

The 1929 Louise Brooks film, Diary of a Lost Girl, is based on a controversial and bestselling book first published in Germany in 1905. Though little known today, it was a literary sensation at the beginning of the 20th century. By the end of the 1920s, it had been translated into 14 languages and sold more than 1,200,000 copies - ranking it among the bestselling books of its time.

Was it - as many believed - the real-life diary of a young woman forced by circumstance into a life of prostitution? Or a sensational and clever fake, one of the first novels of its kind? This contested work -
a work of unusual historical significance as well as literary sophistication - inspired a sequel, a play, a parody, a score of imitators, and two silent films. The best remembered of these is the oft revived G.W. Pabst film starring Louise Brooks.

This corrected and annotated edition of the original English language translation brought this important book back into print after more than 100 years. It includes an introduction by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society, detailing the book's remarkable history and relationship to the 1929 silent film. This special "Louise Brooks Edition" also includes more than three dozen vintage illustrations.
REVIEWS OF THE LOUISE BROOKS SOCIETY EDITION:

"In today's parlance this would be called a movie tie-in edition, but that seems a rather glib way to describe yet another privately published work that reveals an enormous amount of research and passion." - Leonard Maltin 
"Long relegated to the shadows, Margarete Böhme's 1905 novel, The Diary of a Lost Girl has at last made a triumphant return. In reissuing the rare 1907 English translation of Böhme's German text, Thomas Gladysz makes an important contribution to film history, literature, and, in as much as Böhme told her tale with much detail and background contemporary to the day, sociology and history. He gives us the original novel, his informative introduction, and many beautiful and rare illustrations. This reissue is long overdue, and in all ways it is a volume of uncommon merit." - Richard Buller, author of A Beautiful Fairy Tale: The Life of Actress Lois Moran
"Read today, it's a fascinating time-trip back to another age, and yet remains compelling. As a bonus, Gladysz richly illustrates the text with stills of Brooks from the famous film." - Jack Garner, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle 

"Thomas Gladysz is the leading authority on all matters pertaining to the legendary Louise Brooks. We owe him a debt of gratitude for bringing the groundbreaking novel, The Diary of a Lost Girl, back from obscurity." --Lon Davis, author of Silent Lives

"It was such a pleasure to come upon your well documented and beautifully presented edition." -- Elizabeth Boa, University of Nottingham
 
REVIEWS OF THE ORIGINAL ENGLISH LANGUAGE EDITION:

"The saddest of modern books." -
Nelson Evening Mail (1909)

The "poignant story of a great-hearted girl who kept her soul alive amidst all the mire that surrounded her poor body." - Hall Caine (1907)

"There are many readers, however, who find it very shocking, and Mr. Bram Stoker, the advocate of book censoring . . . would ban it promptly." -
New York Times (1907)

"The fact that one German critic asserted the impossibility of a woman herself immune from vice having written such a book, is proof that besides truth of matter there was compelling art in Margarete Böhme's book." - Percival Pollard (1909)

"The moral justification of such a publication is to be found in the fact that it shrivels up sentimentality; the weak thing cannot stand and look at such stark degradation." -
Manchester Guardian (1907)

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

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Louise Brooks Society blog revamped (pun intended)

The Louise Brooks Society blog has been revamped - pun intended. Specifically, new functionality and new content has been added to the right hand column. A translate menu can now be found at the top of the column for the blog's many international visitors. Also newly added are linked lists for "Key Pages on the LBS Website" and "More Key Pages on the LBS Website," as well as a list for "Popular Posts" here on the LBS blog.

Along with half-a-dozen other little refinements, the "Other Early Film Blogs", "Other Early Film Websites", "Podcasts", and "Festival / Venues" linked lists have also been updated. The Louise Brooks Society and its blog are part of the film community, and these linked lists are meant to serve as resources for individuals who wish to explore early film across the world wide web. I expect to add a few more small and not so small refinements in the coming weeks. 

The Louise Brooks Society™ has been blogging about the actress, silent film, and the Jazz Age, as well as fashion, dance, books, music, art, and other related topics for a long time. 
 
As a matter of fact, the Louise Brooks Society started blogging in 2002, first on LiveJournal and then on Blogger beginning in 2009. Between the two forums, there are more than 3800 posts, most all of which now reside on the LBS blog at louisebrookssociety.blogspot.com. At last count, the LBS blog has been visited / read well more than 2.8 million times.
 
 It is a longtime member of various affiliations, including the CMBA (Classic Movie Blog Association), CMH (Classic Movie Hub), and LAMB (Large Association of Movie Blogs). In 2018, the CMBA profiled the LBS, and in 2023, the CMH named the LBS one of the 5 best early film blogs.
 
The Louise Brooks Society is a cinephilac blog. It is written on a regular basis by Thomas Gladysz, with occasional guest contributors. When you visit the LBS blog, be sure to like, share and subscribe. And, please leave a comment if you are so inclined. 
 
THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original content copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

Monday, September 8, 2025

Screen Deco series begins at Film Forum in NYC ( includes Pandora's Box )

Film Forum in New York City has announced the launched of a weekly series devoted to "Screen Deco." The series, which starts today, runs every Monday through January 1. And what's more, the series will include a Louise Brooks film exemplifying the deco aesthetic, God's Gift to Women (1931) directed by Michael Curtiz (oops I mean) Pandora's Box (1929), directed by G. W. Pabst. The screening for the 1929 German classic will take place on November 4th and it will feature an in-person introduction by author Daniel Kehlmann, whose recent novel,  The Director, was inspired by the life of G.W. Pabst. (Louise Brooks is a character in the novel as well.) More information about this new series can be found HERE

“If movies promised life, liberty, and the pursuit of riches,
then Art Deco provided the perfect setting.” 
– Howard Mandelbaum and Eric Myers, Screen Deco: A Celebration of High Style in Hollywood


Here is what the Film Forum website has to say about this new series.

"Commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Exposition des Arts Decoratifs and Industriels Modernes in Paris, which introduced this revolutionary new design movement to the world, the festival includes over 25 films from the 1920s and 1930s, all stellar examples of movies designed in the style now known as Art Deco, a term not coined until the 1960s.

Festival highlights include silents OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS, with Joan Crawford, the first Hollywood movie with extensive Deco production design; A WOMAN OF AFFAIRS, with Greta Garbo; PANDORA’S BOX, with Louise Brooks; and the insanely Deco French film L’INHUMAINE. Pre-Code movies in the festival include Michael Curtiz’s FEMALE; Edgar G. Ulmer’s THE BLACK CAT, with Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi; William Wyler’s COUNSELLOR AT LAW, with John Barrymore; GRAND HOTEL, with Garbo and Barrymore; Ernst Lubitsch’s ONE HOUR WITH YOU and TROUBLE IN PARADISE; the Busby Berkeley musical FOOTLIGHT PARADE, with James Cagney, Ruby Keeler, and Dick Powell; INTERNATIONAL HOUSE, with W.C. Fields, Burns & Allen, and Cab Calloway; and TOP HAT, with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, and many others. 

Says festival curator Bruce Goldstein, Film Forum’s Repertory Artistic Director, “Art Deco was introduced to Hollywood movies with a vengeance by MGM’s supervising art director Cedric Gibbons – the only studio designer to have attended the Paris exhibition – in the Joan Crawford silent OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS, the opening film in our series. ‘Moderne’ remained a predominant style in Hollywood until World War II. But it’s the racy Pre-Code era that fits it like a silver lamé gown.”

In their book Screen Deco: A Celebration of Hollywood High Style, co-authors Howard Mandelbaum and Eric Myers write, “Art Deco encompasses everything from the ornate zigzags of the movement’s infancy in the early 20s through the stripped-down, streamlined geometric forms of 30s Moderne. It was closely allied to the fantasies of wealth and elegance in America between the wars. Naturally, it was right at home in Hollywood.” As part of the festival, Mr. Mandelbaum and Mr. Myers will present a 50-minute illustrated presentation on the history of Art Deco in movies on Monday, November 24 at 7:30.

Other special guests in the festival include author and film critic Molly Haskell; Scott Eyman, author of a new biography of Joan Crawford; author and playwright Gray Horan, great niece of Greta Garbo; Casey Lalonde, grandson of Joan Crawford; Daniel Kehlmann, author of The Director, a new novel inspired by PANDORA’S BOX director G.W. Pabst; Kim Luperi and Danny Reid, co-authors of a new TCM book on Pre-Code movies; pianist and musicologist Peter Mintun, a specialist of music of the 1920s and 30s; Linda Zagaria of the Art Deco Society of New York; and Shane Fleming, a 21-year-old film historian, collector and archivist, who recently discovered a lost film featuring Ginger Rogers in her debut. 

Two presentations by Goldstein, originally delivered at editions of the TCM Classic Film Festival in Hollywood, will accompany the Thursday, November 27, 7:00 screening of FOOTLIGHT PARADE and the Sunday, December 7, 3:40 screening of INTERNATIONAL HOUSE.

SCREEN DECO is presented in association with the Art Deco Society of New York."


Pictured above is a publicity still of Louise Brooks in her most deco film, God's Gift to Women, which was directed by Michael Curtiz. It's a talkie from 1931, and enjoyable to watch. And, it features the adorable "Sisters G". God's Gift to Women is available on DVD.
 
If you don't live in New York City or can't make the series, be sure and check out the schedule of films as it makes for a worthwhile list of films to track down and see! 
 
THE LEGAL STUFF: The Louise Brooks Society™ blog is authored by Thomas Gladysz, Director of the Louise Brooks Society  (www.pandorasbox.com). Original content copyright © 2025. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. 

Sunday, September 7, 2025

Louise Brooks, tariffs, and eBay -- It's a sign of the times

I was scrolling through eBay listings looking for Louise Brooks related material -- something I've been doing for decades -- when I noticed a copy of Australian TV Week

The magazine, dating from June 2001, carried an article about Louise Brooks. That's what caught my attention.

I have a lot of Louise Brooks material from Australia in my "collection" -- which is both digital and physical in format, but this piece was something I hadn't seen before. 

What also caught my attention was the fact that an eBay notice banner popped up stating "Due to US policies, import fees for this item will need to be paid to customs or the shipping carrier on delivery. Learn More." Ouch! 

I suppose it's a sign of the times.... And it looks like Trump's tariffs will negatively impact even small-time movie memorabilia collectors like me. I imagine fewer and fewer overseas items related to the actress will be making their way into the United States. That's sad.

 Well, anyways, here's that anonymous article. It's titled "Movie Legends: Louise Brooks."

 

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

Friday, September 5, 2025

A NEW Louise Brooks Blu-ray is in the works

Sometime before the end of the year (fingers crossed), there will be a NEW Louise Brooks Blu-ray featuring never before released films -- some of it material not seen or shown in nearly 100 years! We won't say more about this disc at this time, except that the Louise Brooks Society is intimately involved and this is no April fools day joke.... and anyways, it ain't April first. Stay tuned to this channel for further details.

When this new disc is released, it will join the Louise Brooks Society page of Physical Media, which contains more than 125 different examples of  Louise Brooks VHS, Laser Disc, DVD and Blu-rays. Check it out. 

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

Thursday, September 4, 2025

On Second Thought: Louise Brooks and Jay House

Jay E. House (1868-1936) was a nationally known newspaper columnist in the 1920s. Early on, he wrote for the Topeka Daily Capital and other small town Kansas papers. Beginning in 1919, his column "On Second Thought" began running in the Philadelphia Public Ledger and then the New York Evening Post. He wrote, as well, for the Saturday Evening Post and other publications, authored books, and once even served as mayor of Topeka, where he first got his start.

I wasn't familiar with House, but just recently I ran across a couple of clipping in the Hutchinson News (a small town Kansas newspaper) which both piqued my interest and referenced Jay House and Louise Brooks.

Apparently, House mentioned Brooks in one of his Philadelphia Public Ledger columns, which in turn led the Hutchinson News to respond in an article on December 18, 1926. The Hutchinson News response was occasioned by the local showing of Love Em and Leave Em, the latest Louise Brooks' film. 

House's reference seemingly ruffled a few feathers, because a few days later, he responded to this tempest in a teapot. On December 21, the Hutchinson News ran House's column, which read in part.

This all may be nothing more than ballywho and local boosterism, but still, it shows that Brooks was kinda famous in Kansas even in 1926.

[I haven't been able to get a hold of House's original column -- nor access the archives of the Philadelphia Public Ledger for the period in question in order to track down the House column that started it all. Can anyone help?]

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

Monday, September 1, 2025

Peter Cowie's new memoir Flashbacks: A Passion for Film features Louise Brooks

Every Louise Brooks fan should know the name of Peter Cowie. He is a highly regarded film critic, film historian, publisher, and biographer, a longtime friend of Louise Brooks, and, he is the author of the gorgeous 2006 pictorial, Louise Brooks: Lulu Forever. It is a book that belongs on the shelf of every Brooks' fan. Find out more about Cowie's new book HERE.

Cowie has just published a memoir which I am excited to get my hands on. It is titled, Flashbacks: A Passion for Film, and it has just been released. (I just ordered a copy, as September 1st is its publication date.)

The publisher description reads, "In Flashbacks, Peter Cowie tells his story with the same clarity, curiosity and quiet authority that have made him one of cinema's most respected chroniclers. From his postwar childhood in the English countryside to decades spent in screening rooms, studios and film festivals around the world, Cowie reflects on a life shaped by cinema, and a career that has shaped how cinema is remembered, written about and understood. Along the way, he draws vivid portraits of the filmmakers and actors who left their mark on his life and work, including Ingmar Bergman, Alain Resnais, Orson Welles, Francis Ford Coppola, Louise Brooks, and a host of others. Flashbacks doubles as cultural history and personal meditation, on how a passion became a vocation - Sight and Sound declared that Cowie's Tantivy Press, which he acquired from his parents in 1963, "put film publishing on the map" - and fueled a lifelong conversation with the moving image. From the moment Bergman's The Seventh Seal first seized his imagination as a teenager, in 1959, Peter Cowie has been a significant force behind the way we watch and think about film."

And here is something about the author: "Peter Cowie lives in Switzerland. He is the author of more than 30 books on film, including Ingmar Bergman: A Critical Biography (1982), Coppola (1989); The Godfather Book (1997), Revolution! The Explosion of World Cinema in the Sixties (2004), Louise Brooks - Lulu Forever (2006) and God and The Devil: The Life and Work of Ingmar Bergman (2023). At the Tantivy Press from 1963 to 1981 he commissioned and published more than 70 books on film and film-making. From 1993 to 2000, he was International Publishing Director for Variety. For the Criterion Collection, he has contributed audio commentaries and essays for more than 40 releases. He has been a consultant to Dolby Laboratories and on the Main Competition jury at the Berlin Festival, the Caméra d'Or jury at the Cannes Festival, and the Opera Prima jury at the Venice Festival."

Peter Cowie's Flashbacks: A Passion for Film is 332 pages and is published by Sticking Place Books. More info HERE.

I hope to blog more about this book in the coming months. Stay tuned.

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

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