Saturday, January 31, 2026

R.I.P. film historian John Bengtson

I am saddened to learn of the passing of John Bengtson, a business lawyer, film historian, author and longtime friend. John was also a friend to the Louise Brooks Society. Back in 2018, we collaborated on John's three-part look W.C. Fields and the 1926 Louise Brooks' film It's the Old Army Game: It’s The Old Army Game – W.C. Fields and Louise Brooks in Ocala Florida – Part One“ -- “W.C. Fields in Palm Beach – It’s the Old Army Game” --  “It’s The Old Army Game – W.C. Fields and Louise Brooks Bring Magazines to Life”.

Here is a snapshot from one of the many San Francisco Silent Film Festivals we attended. That's me (left), Suzanne Lloyd (Harold Lloyd's granddaughter), and John Bengtson.


I am a BIG admirer of John's groundbreaking books, each of which look at location shooting of their subjects. John's three books are Silent Echoes: Discovering Early Hollywood Through the Films of Buster Keaton (1999), Silent Traces: Discovering Early Hollywood Through the Films of Charlie Chaplin (2006), and Silent Visions: Discovering Early Hollywood and New York Through the Films of Harold Lloyd (2011). Each are highly recommended. If you have an interest in Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin or Harold Lloyd, you must (and likely already do) own one of these books. 

 

Though not an academic or archivist affiliated with an institution, John was nevertheless a great film historian. I say that because I always found him to be both enthusiastic and generous in sharing information (his deep dive original research), as well as in sharing his time. Once, he even took the time to give me some free legal advice. John, you are missed.

Here is a piece I wrote about John back in 2011. I recall he was pleased to have been referred to as a silent film archeologist.


 

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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. 

Friday, January 30, 2026

Pandora's Box, starring Louise Brooks, was approved for release on this day in 1929

Pandora's Box, directed by G.W. Pabst and starring Louise Brooks, was approved for release on this day in 1929, though the film did not premiere until February 9, 1929. That first showing -- the film's premiere -- took place at the Gloria–Palast in Berlin. (And despite what has been stated elsewhere, Louise Brooks did not attend the premiere. She had already returned to the United States.)

Pandora’s Box was based on two plays by the acclaimed German dramatist Frank Wedekind. Despite it being a German production made from a well known work of German literature, German censors were taken aback by what was then considered the film’s frank portrayal of sexuality. The modernist poet H.D. (Hilda Doolittle), writing in the English / Swiss film journal Close-Up, noted the controversy when she stated the film had only “passed by the German censors after a stormy discussion of several hours duration.”  

On January 30, 1929, the production received an approval card (No. 21540) from the Berlin Film Censorship Board which allowed for its public screening.** 

Some ten days later, the G.W. Pabst-directed film debuted at the Gloria-Palast in Berlin. Writing in Film-Kurier on February 11, Georg Herzberg thought it inevitable that the film would contain less provocative material than Wedekind’s stage play. The reason the reviewer suggests was “self-censorship” — because unlike the stage-play, the film was aimed at a larger audience, not only in Germany, but also overseas. Herzberg notes “… the filmmaker had to tone things down.” And then asks, “In popular cinema, how will one understand the character of Countess Geschwitz and her relationship with Lulu?” 

** On April 9, 1934 the Reich Minister for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda revoked the January 30, 1929 approval card, thereby banning the film in Germany. Please visit the Louise Brooks Society website for more on Pandora's Box and its history of censorship around the world. 

 
And, more about Pandora's Box can be found on the newly revamped Louise Brooks Society website on its Pandora's Box (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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.    

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Focus on Louise Brooks Blu-ray set for release TODAY

Focus on Louise Brooks, the new disc of never-before-released films featuring Louise Brooks, is set for release today on the Flicker Alley website. (Amazon.com has a later release date set as February 13.) Focus on Louise Brooks is a must-have disc. Why? Because this is Louise Brooks like you haven't seen her before... this is Louise Brooks as she hasn't been seen in nearly 100 years! More information can be found on the Flicker Alley website HERE.

regular release (left)   and the   limited edition (right)

Focus on Louise Brooks, a single-disc Blu-ray compilation of the iconic star’s early performances, including her film debut in Herbert Brenon's The Street of Forgotten Men. This exceptional 1925 melodrama has been fully restored and is being made available for the very first time, joined by extant materials from three additional Brooks features, The American Venus (1926), Just Another Blonde (1926), and Now We’re in the Air (1927). 

The Louise Brooks Society has long been intimately involved with this project, which was ten years in the making. This multi-region Blu-ray contains a treasure trove of early & rare Brooks performances with extant material from her earliest films brought together in one place, newly restored, and presented in a deluxe edition. Fore more about each title, see the LBS pages about each film.

  • The Street of Forgotten Men /1925 / Directed by Herbert Brenon / 75 minutes / U.S. / Famous Players-Lasky Corporation (LBS pages on the film)

  • The American Venus (Extant Materials) / 1926 / Directed by Frank Tuttle / 8 minutes / Famous Players–Lasky (LBS pages on the film)

  • Just Another Blonde (Fragment) / 1926 / Directed by Alfred Santell / 32 minutes / First National (LBS pages on the film)

  • Now We’re in the Air (Fragment) / 1927 / Directed by Frank R. Strayer / 23 minutes / Paramount Pictures (LBS pages on the film)

Besides the above mentioned films and the rarely seen trailer of Just Another Blonde (which contains footage not seen in the surviving fragment), Focus on Louise Brooks also contains a generous selection of bonus materials. 
  • Restoration Demo - A look at the painstaking process that went into preserving the films included in this set

  • Audio Commentaries - Informative audio tracks are included with film scholar Pamela Hutchinson on The Street of Forgotten Men, with author and film historians Thomas Gladysz and Kathy Rose O’Regan on Just Another Blonde, and with Gladysz and Robert Byrne on The American Venus and Now We’re in the Air.

  • Looking at Lulu - Explore the fascinating behind the scenes life of Louise Brooks with an extended featurette hosted by historian Pamela Hutchinson 

  • Image Galleries - Featuring production stills and promotional material

  • Booklet Insert - With an essay by film historian Thomas Gladysz and restoration notes by Rob Byrne

  • English closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing, as well as subtitle tracks in English, Spanish, French, and German

  • Blu-ray Authoring by David Mackenzie of Fidelity In Motion

  • All Region Encoding (A,B,C)
And if that isn't enough to tempt you... There is a gorgeous limited edition spot gloss slipcover only available at the Flicker Alley website and select indie retailers. No major retailers will be stocking this item.

Louise Brooks may well be the only actress in the history of film who's uncredited bit part in her film debut nevertheless got her a review, in the Los Angeles Times, no less. As another newspaper stated following the release of Just Another Blonde, “Louise Brooks, who is said to be Clara Bow’s only rival as cinema’s most ravishing flapper, is a convincing argument in favor of modernism.” 

Focus on Louise Brooks presents Louise Brooks as she hasn't been seen in nearly 100 years. She is lively, coy, flirty, drop-dead gorgeous and a joy to behold. She is, indeed, something else. This new release is a disc silent film and Louise Brooks fans will want to own. 

Focus on Louise Brooks represents the first entry in a new Flicker Fusion series that will explore newly restored films, some lost and/or fragmentary, ripe for rediscovery, and featuring some of early cinema’s biggest names. I'll end this post with a few screen grabs which may tempt you further.



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

More information can be found on the Flicker Alley website HERE.

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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.   

Monday, January 26, 2026

The tangled and convoluted history of the release of The American Venus

Of all of Louise Brooks American silents, The American Venus may well have the most tangled and convoluted of release histories. 


The American Venus is a romantic comedy set against the backdrop of a beauty pageant, namely the actual 1925 Miss America contest in Atlantic City. In the film, Brooks plays Miss Bayport, a beauty contestant and “mannequin” (then a term for a fashion model). The American Venus is the second film in which Brooks appeared, but the first for which she received screen credit. Brooks made something of a splash, and it was this film and her next, A Social Celebrity, which proved to be her “break-out” roles. Incidentally, both The American Venus and A Social Celebrity were named one of Photoplay magazine's "Six Best Films of the Month"-- and the rest, as they say, is history.

Apparently, The American Venus was originally set to open on Friday, November 27, 1925. However, due to delays in laboratory work on the film, it was postponed by nearly a month. (See the syndicated newspaper clipping shown here, which dates from December 17, 1925.) I wonder if the delay caused by laboratory work was due to the fact that part of the film was in Technicolor, which was then a new process?

According to Paramount corporate records, The American Venus was officially released on January 31, 1926. However, like many of Brooks' other films, it opened earlier  in this case a week earlier on January 24, 1926 at the Rivoli Theater in New York City. The following day, the film's copyright (LP22325) was registered by Famous Players-Lasky Corporation.

With that said, it should be noted that the film had already been shown a handful of times .... The American Venus was previewed at the Bellevue Theatre in Montclair, New Jersey on December 11, 1925, as reported after the fact in the local newspaper, the Montclair Times. (Preview screening were held in order to assess audience reaction to a film, and as such, the title to be previewed was not announced in advance.) 

The film was also privately screened at the Atlantic City Ambassador Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey as a benefit under the auspices of the Atlantic City Shrine Club on December 26, 1925. As the film had been, in part, set and shot in Atlantic City, there was local press coverage given to this special benefit event. (Those clipping are held in the Louise Brooks Society archive.) 

As well, there was another benefit screening of the film which took place at midnight on December 31, 1925 at the American Theater in Oakland, California — the hometown of star Fay Lanphier. Originally, the reigning Miss America was set to attend the Oakland benefit, but at the last minute she was named Rose Bowl Queen and was rushed off to Pasadena.

According to newspaper archives available online, a few other early screenings were announced. One was to be held at the Alvo Theatre in Medford, Oklahoma on December 28-29, 1925 (and then postponed to January 4-5, 1926); another was announced for the Gem Theatre in Pineville, Kentucky on December 31, 1925; and another was set for the Forsythe Theatre in East Chicago, Indiana on January 2, 1926. However, none of these ("seemingly random") small town screenings can be confirmed... as sometimes, films were announced, but never shown. The first confirmed engagement for The American Venus took place at the Colonial theater in Richmond, Virginia on January 4-6, 1926.

Otherwise, The American Venus "officially" premiered at the Stanley Theater in Atlantic City on January 11, 1926  nearly two weeks ahead of its regular NYC opening.

More about The American Venus can be found on the newly revamped Louise Brooks Society website on its The American Venus (filmography page). And BTW: the surviving footage from the film can be found on the Flicker Alley Blu-ray, Focus on Louise Brooks. Order your copy today.

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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.   

Saturday, January 24, 2026

The American Venus, featuring Louise Brooks, opened on this day in 1926

The American Venus, featuring Louise Brooks, opened on this day in 1926.** The film is a romantic comedy set against the backdrop of a beauty pageant, namely the actual 1925 Miss America contest in Atlantic City. In The American Venus, Brooks plays Miss Bayport, a beauty contestant and "mannequin" (then a term for a fashion model). The film is the second in which Louise Brooks appeared, but the first for which she received screen credit. Brooks made something of a splash, and it was this film and her next, A Social Celebrity, which proved to be her “break-out” roles.

Notably, The American Venus was among the earlier films to feature Technicolor. Based on what can be gleamed from surviving records and reportage of the time,  there are three scenes in the film which utilize the process. One is of the boardwalk parade of beauty contestants at the Atlantic City beauty pageant, the second is of an artistic tableaux, and the last is a fashion revue. 

More about the film can be found on the Louise Brooks Society website's filmography page. Surviving  material from the now mostly lost film can be found on Focus on Louise Brooks, a Blu-ray release from Flicker Alley. It's essential viewing for any fan of the actress.

Louise Brooks and Ford Sterling in The American Venus

The American Venus
proved popular upon release. Rose Pelswick, writing in the New York Evening Journal, stated “Famous Players-Lasky tied up with the recent beauty contest, and the result is a bewildering succession of events that range from artistic tableaux to a Keystone comedy chase.” Though largely eye-candy, many fans and at least a few critics responded favorably to its scantily clad bathing beauties, elaborate tableaux and fashion show, as well as the film’s pioneering use of Technicolor. The critic for the Boston Herald wrote, “The scenes made at Atlantic City and during the prologue are artistically done in Technicolor. Comedy relief in abundance is furnished by a wild automobile chase replete with giggles and thrills. The picture on the whole is entertaining.”

All-in-all, The American Venus proved to be a popular if not a critical success, and it was widely reviewed. However, not all were pleased with this otherwise frothy comedy. Quinn Martin, writing in the New York World, called the film “A glittering piece of dramatic trash, as cheap a thing and still as expensive looking as anything I have seen from the Paramount studio…. It presents a raw and effortful desire to photograph scantily attired women without any sensible or appreciable tendency to tell a reasonably alive or plausible story. Any nervous high school boy might have done the plot and there isn’t a director in captivity who could not have told the cameraman when and where and how to shoot.”   

Harrison’s Reports, an industry trade journal, echoed the comments found in other publications: “The only striking feature about it is the technicolor scenes; they are extremely beautiful. But some of them will, no doubt, prove offensive to church going people, particularly in the small communities, because of the fact that women’s legs, backs, sides and abdomens as low as below the navel, are shown aplenty. Women in tights have been shown in his pictures by Mack Sennett, but he has never been so ‘raw’; at least he had the girls wear brassieres, whereas Jesse Lasky has his girls wear nothing under the bathing suits, with the result that the women’s outlines of their breasts are clearly seen. In places there isn’t even the thin cloth of the bathing suit to cover the flesh.” Likewise, the Washington Herald noted, “Many of the tinted scenes of the fashion review were very daring in their exposure of the Atlantic City bathing girls. Once scene especially drew forth gasps from the audience; whether from shock or admiration, we cannot say.” The New York Daily News put it succinctly, titling its review, “American Venus Has Small Plot — But Also Few Clothes.” 

The American Venus even drew the notice of the future Pulitzer prize winning poet, Carl Sandburg, who was then reviewing films for the Chicago Daily News. Soon-to-be famous poet liked the film, calling it "a smart takeoff on our national custom," meaning beauty contests. Sandburg added, “The tricks of the magician, who produces an amazing array of gowns worn by picked mannequins, employs the motion picture technique at what it can do most skillfully. Esther Ralston and Fay Lanphier are the feminine talent, also Edna Oliver and Louise Brooks.”

The film also found tongue-in-cheek favor with renown playwright Robert E. Sherwood. Writing in Life magazine, Sherwood call the film “The primmest bit of box-office bait ever cast into the sea of commercialism…. The American Venus is to cinematographic art what the tabloid newspaper is to journalism. It is designed to appeal to those charming people who fill out the coupons and enclose their dollars for ‘Twelve Beautiful Photographic Studies of Parisian Models in Nature’s Garb’. Not that it is the least bit immoral. On the contrary, it is flamingly virtuous and teeming with the highest principles of 100 per cent American go-gettery.”


The stars of the film, which was even called a “shape show” by some publications, were Esther Ralston, a renown beauty, and Fay Lanphier, the reigning Miss America. Ford Sterling, one of the original Keystone Kops, and Lawrence Gray, were in support. Louise Brooks, who had a smaller role and was billed fifth, was noticed and made something of a splash. Brooks was featured in the film's promotion, on a lobby card and film poster, as well as in advertisements. She was also mentioned in reviews and singled out by a handful of critics. The female critic for the New York Evening Journal noted Brooks’ “distinct screen personality,” while the male critic for the New York World stated Brooks was “better looking than any of the other brunettes now acting in films.”

Despite criticisms, The American Venus proved popular, and continued to play in the United States for more than two and a half years — often as part of a double-bill or in second run houses — well into the spring and summer of 1928.

SOME THINGS ABOUT THE FILM YOU MAY NOT KNOW:

– Fay Lanphier enjoyed considerable fame after winning the 1925 Miss America contest; she wrote articles and made personal appearances around the country – many in conjunction with the screening of The American Venus. Her movie career, however, never developed. Lanphier appeared in only one other film, a Laurel and Hardy short titled Flying Elephants (1928). Later, the honey-blond beauty worked as a stenographer in Hollywood. 

– Miss Bayport, the role played by Louise Brooks, was originally assigned to Olive Ann Alcorn, a stage and film actress who had bit parts in Sunnyside (1919) and The Phantom of the Opera (1925).

Townsend Martin, whose story served as the basis for the film, was a college friend of F. Scott Fitzgerald. According to the New Yorker and other publications, famed humorist Robert Benchley wrote the film’s titles.

 Joe Mielziner, who designed the film’s artistic tableaux, was the brother of actor Kenneth MacKenna, who played Horace Niles in The American Venus 

– According to the 1999 book, Russian Writings on Hollywood, author Ayn Rand reported seeing The American Venus in Chicago, Illinois not long after she left the Soviet Union.


More about The American Venus can be found on the newly revamped Louise Brooks Society website on its The American Venus (filmography page).

** See the next Louise Brooks Society blog post on this film's tangled release history.

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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.   

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Louise Brooks images on display at the Museum of Modern Art

Back in June of 2025, I posted a blog about a then just opened photography exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The exhibition, "Face Value: Celebrity Press Photography," runs through June 21, 2026. 

And just a couple of days ago, silent film buff Alain Groenendaal visited the exhibit and sent me this snapshot. (Alain had read my earlier blog, and was at the museum to take in a screening of The Joyless Street, directed by G.W. Pabst.) Wow, its great to see images of Louise Brooks is a museum context. Thank you Alain!

 

"Face Value: Celebrity Press Photography" is the first major exhibition of Hollywood studio portraiture to be drawn from the Museum’s film stills archive since 1993. On view in the Titus and Morita Galleries, the exhibition offers a revisionist look at the Department of Film’s photographic archive, examining the evolution of editorial practice before the digital age, AI technology, and social media reshaped our experience of celebrity. More about the exhibit can be found HERE.

Early Hollywood actors and actresses dominate the show. Included in "Face Value" are Clara Bow, Lon Chaney, Gary Cooper, Joan Crawford, Bebe Daniels, Bette Davis, Marie Dressler, Douglas Fairbanks, Dorothy Gish, Jean Harlow, Katharine Hepburn, Boris Karloff, Hedy Lamarr, Elsa Lanchester, Harold Lloyd, Bela Lugosi, Mae Murray, Nita Naldi, ZaSu Pitts, Basil Rathbone, Norma Shearer, Barbara Stanwyck, Erich von Stroheim, Gloria Stuart, Spencer Tracy, and Alice White.

Additionally, a small number of actors associated with Louise Brooks' career are included in "Face Value," such as Jean Arthur, Wallace Beery, Joan Blondell, Evelyn Brent, W.C. Fields, Laura LaPlante, Carole Lombard, Myrna Loy, Grace Moore, William Powell, and Will Rodgers.

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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

Friday, January 16, 2026

Louise Brooks Motion Picture Star - a copyright curiosity

I was poking around the records of the United States copyright office, as one does, and I came across a handful of interesting contemporary items as well as this vintage copyright curiosity. Dating from November, 1928, it is application for copyright for a print or pictorial illustration published in the United States. The company which applied for the copyright was The Knapp Company, which was based in the state of New York. The copyrighted work, apparently a lithograph, was titled "Motion Picture Star - Louise Brooks Paramount Pictures."


 

I had never seen such a thing! I was also uncertain as to what this application refereed to, as there was no artist named and no illustrative specimen or example attached to the form. Off hand, does anyone know?

I did a Google search on "Knapp company new york 1928" and the results turned up including a few promising leads. Here's a breakdown of different "Knapp" entities in that era:

  • The Knapp Company (American Lithographic Co.): A large printing conglomerate founded by Joseph Palmer Knapp, it was a dominant force in lithography (like cigar labels) and was bought by United States Printing & Lithographic Co. around 1928, making it a significant player in the industry.
  • Knapp & Co.: A long-standing lithographic printer, established earlier by Joseph Fairchild Knapp (father of Joseph Palmer Knapp), with roots going back to the 1850s, known for its established presence in NYC.
  • John Augustus Knapp: An artist who, in 1928, was creating illustrations for books, including a poetry collection, connecting the name to the thriving arts scene in New York, notes Wikipedia. 

The latter did illustrations for movie studios... my search will go on... using a lantern, I will look through magazine and newspaper archives dating to November, 1928 -- the given date of publication. Besides a depiction of the actress, all there is to go on is a rather generic title, "Motion Picture Star - Louise Brooks Paramount Pictures."

If I were to guess, I might speculate that this copyright application ties in with Beggars of Life, which was released in October of 1928. Also, I would guess that the printed image in question might not have been printed in a magazine or newspaper, but might have been a promotional give away. But who knows? I will conclude with a rare promotional image from the film.


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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Focus on Louise Brooks Blu-ray release delayed

FIRST THE BAD NEWS: Due to an unforeseen slow-down in the production process (including disc replication and quality control), the release of Focus on Louise Brooks has been delayed by two weeks. Flicker Alley had initially announced the Blu-ray disc would be released on January 13th, but that date has now been set back to January 27th.

AND NOW THE GOOD NEWS: The two week delay in the release of Focus on Louise Brooks means fans of the actress have a little more time to pre-order this must-have new disc. And what's more, those who pre-order can save $5.00 on either the standard or limited edition releases. More information can be found HERE.

Focus on Louise Brooks is a must-have disc. Why? Because this is Louise Brooks like you haven't seen her before... this is Louise Brooks as she hasn't been seen in nearly 100 years! 


Focus on Louise Brooks, a single-disc Blu-ray compilation of the iconic star’s early performances, including her film debut in Herbert Brenon's The Street of Forgotten Men. This exceptional 1925 melodrama has been fully restored and is being made available for the very first time, joined by extant materials from three additional Brooks features, The American Venus (1926), Just Another Blonde (1926), and Now We’re in the Air (1927). More information on this new release can be found HERE.

The Louise Brooks Society has long been intimately involved with this project, which was ten years in the making. This multi-region Blu-ray contains a treasure trove of early & rare Brooks performances with extant material from her earliest films brought together in one place, newly restored, and presented in a deluxe edition. Fore more about each title, see the LBS pages about each film.

  • The Street of Forgotten Men /1925 / Directed by Herbert Brenon / 75 minutes / U.S. / Famous Players-Lasky Corporation (LBS pages on the film)

  • The American Venus (Extant Materials) / 1926 / Directed by Frank Tuttle / 8 minutes / Famous Players–Lasky (LBS pages on the film)

  • Just Another Blonde (Fragment) / 1926 / Directed by Alfred Santell / 32 minutes / First National (LBS pages on the film)

  • Now We’re in the Air (Fragment) / 1927 / Directed by Frank R. Strayer / 23 minutes / Paramount Pictures (LBS pages on the film)


But wait, there's more.... 

Besides the above mentioned films and the rarely seen trailer of Just Another Blonde (which contains footage not seen in the surviving fragment), Focus on Louise Brooks also contains a generous selection of bonus materials. 
  • Restoration Demo - A look at the painstaking process that went into preserving the films included in this set

  • Audio Commentaries - Informative audio tracks are included with film scholar Pamela Hutchinson on The Street of Forgotten Men, with author and film historians Thomas Gladysz and Kathy Rose O’Regan on Just Another Blonde, and with Gladysz and Robert Byrne on The American Venus and Now We’re in the Air.

  • Looking at Lulu - Explore the fascinating behind the scenes life of Louise Brooks with an extended featurette hosted by historian Pamela Hutchinson 

  • Image Galleries - Featuring production stills and promotional material

  • Booklet Insert - With an essay by film historian Thomas Gladysz and restoration notes by Rob Byrne

  • English closed captioning for the deaf and hard of hearing, as well as subtitle tracks in English, Spanish, French, and German

  • Blu-ray Authoring by David Mackenzie of Fidelity In Motion

  • All Region Encoding (A,B,C)
And if that isn't enough to tempt you... There is a gorgeous limited edition spot gloss slipcover only available at the Flicker Alley website and select indie retailers. No major retailers will be stocking this item. Pre-order your copy today!


Louise Brooks may well be the only actress in the history of film who's uncredited bit part in her film debut nevertheless got her a review, in the Los Angeles Times, no less. As another newspaper stated following the release of Just Another Blonde, “Louise Brooks, who is said to be Clara Bow’s only rival as cinema’s most ravishing flapper, is a convincing argument in favor of modernism.” Amen.

Focus on Louise Brooks presents Louise Brooks as she hasn't been seen in nearly 100 years. She is lively, coy, flirty, drop-dead gorgeous and a joy to behold. She is, indeed, something else. This new release is a disc silent film and Louise Brooks fans will want to own. Pre-order your copy today!

Focus on Louise Brooks represents the first entry in a new Flicker Fusion series that will explore newly restored films, some lost and/or fragmentary, ripe for rediscovery, and featuring some of early cinema’s biggest names. I'll end this post with a few screen grabs which may tempt you further.



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If this disc succeeds, who knows what else might be released. 

Do your part, and Pre-order your copy today! 

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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

Saturday, January 10, 2026

An earlier Louise Brooks

Louise Brooks is not the only Louise Brooks. There have been others. Many people have been named Louise Brooks, though few have gained a reputation as an artist. 

The American trading card depicted below dates to the 1890s. It is part of the Kinney Actors & Actresses series. I was curious to find out more, and looked around a newspaper database in which I came across an opera singer and a touring stage actress who shared the name of Louise Brooks. Based on this image, I am going to guess this card depicts the mezzo-soprano.


 

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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Louise Brooks and a lost technicolor tableau from The American Venus

Back in 2018, a three second fragment of technicolor film featuring Louise Brooks was discovered at the BFI (British Film Institute) National Archive. The all-to-brief piece is from The American Venus (1926),  Brooks' second film though her first credited role. 

The American Venus was one of the earlier examples of the use of Technicolor. In fact, the use of Technicolor in the Frank Tuttle-directed film was considerable, as there are at least three scenes -- according to reportage from the time -- which utilize the process. One is the boardwalk parade of beauty contestants at the Atlantic City beauty pageant, the second is of a series of artistic tableaux, and the last is of a fashion revue. 

In all likelihood, the three second fragment comes from one of the tableau, which does not survive. Here is a screen grab from that three-second fragment.


In The American Venus, Brooks plays Miss Bayport, a beauty contestant and "mannequin" (then a term for a fashion model). The film includes at least one tableau, which were a kind of still-life staging of a scene.  The three second fragment is certainly from a staged scene in which models held their pose --  notice the dark pole at Brooks' feet, which was used to position and steady the actress.

That tableau was pictured in the June, 1926 issue of Film Fun magazine. The window grate seen in the clipping below matches the grate seen in the video fragment. I wonder if the faint figure behind the left window grate shown below might be Louise Brooks? As in the video fragment, this figure is also standing on a raised platform.

Film Fun was a humor-focused movie magazine, and the caption to the image below read "Lady in the left window: I wonder why Helen of troy had such a reputation for beauty. Lady in the right window: Why, that's easy to see. She got all her clothes from Paris."

At the time of the film's release, both newspapers and local censorship boards noted the skimpy outfits worn by many of the women in the film. To our eyes today, this is pretty tame stuff. But back then, such skimpy outfits -- like the one Brooks is seen wearing in the video fragment, amounted to nudity. (The term "nudity" was in fact used in a few critiques of the film.) As is evident in the above clip, Brooks' belly button and midriff are clearly visible. At the time, such exposure pushed the boundaries of decorum.

The American Venus was a big success, and was widely reviewed. Rose Pelswick, writing in the New York Evening Journal, stated “Famous Players-Lasky tied up with the recent beauty contest, and the result is a bewildering succession of events that range from artistic tableaux to a Keystone comedy chase.” However, Quinn Martin, writing in the New York World, called the film “A glittering piece of dramatic trash, as cheap a thing and still as expensive looking as anything I have seen from the Paramount studio…. It presents a raw and effortful desire to photograph scantily attired women without any sensible or appreciable tendency to tell a reasonably alive or plausible story. Any nervous high school boy might have done the plot and there isn’t a director in captivity who could not have told the cameraman when and where and how to shoot.”  

Soon-to-be famous poet Carl Sandburg liked it, calling the film a "a smart takeoff on our national custom," meaning beauty contests. The film also found favor with playwright Robert E. Sherwood. Writing in Life magazine, Sherwood call the film “The primmest bit of box-office bait ever cast into the sea of commercialism…. The American Venus is to cinematographic art what the tabloid newspaper is to journalism. It is designed to appeal to those charming people who fill out the coupons and enclose their dollars for ‘Twelve Beautiful Photographic Studies of Parisian Models in Nature’s Garb’. Not that it is the least bit immoral. On the contrary, it is flamingly virtuous and teeming with the highest principles of 100 per cent American go-gettery.”

The still below from The American Venus, another posed scene with very little movement, features a small group of models wearing what appear to flesh-colored body stockings. (Louise Brooks is not among them.) On first glance, they appear "nude" -- which suggest why some called the film a "shape show". There were also reports from the time of audiences gasping at what they perceived to be nudity, or near nudity. Consequently, there were calls for censorship from Chicago to Canada and India and beyond. The film was banned in the province of Quebec due to “nudities.” While Bengali censorship records from 1927 called for the elimination of close-ups of women in the film’s tableaux, noting “The figures are too naked for public exhibition.”


Another tableau in The American Venus (and which likewise does not survive) was made into a still and later featured on a German postcard. In Germany, the film was titled Die Schönste Frau der Staaten. And, BTW, that is Louise Brooks seated front and center.


One other tableau-like fashion show can be seen in the surviving footage from The American Venus on the soon-to-be-released Blu-ray, Focus on Louise Brooks, from Flicker Alley. This same staged scene is also pictured on one of the film's jumbo lobby cards, which is shown below. (My apologies about the poor quality, but this is the best I have.) Louise Brooks makes an appearance in this scene, slapping the MC.

More about The American Venus can be found on the newly revamped Louise Brooks Society website on its The American Venus (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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

Friday, January 2, 2026

Louise Brooks - Looking back at 2025

This past year has been a heck of a year, to say the least. Admittedly, it has been a year of both highs and lows (I won't talk about the latter, for now), as well as accomplishment and even a few disappointments.

The Louise Brooks Society marked a significant milestone in 2025. The LBS was launched in 1995, and this past year the website celebrated its 30th anniversary. To describe the Louise Brooks Society as "pioneering" is not a stretch, as few websites on any subject can claim to have been around as long. The Louise Brooks Society is a  labor of love, and I hope to keep going as long as I can.


The mission of the Louise Brooks Society is to honor the actress by stimulating interest in her life, films and legacy. To that end, the LBS has been involved in a couple of long-term projects which were first announced in late 2025, and which will see release within just a few weeks!

The most exciting of these long-term projects in the forthcoming Blu-ray, Focus on Louise Brooks, due out from Flicker Alley. I first pitched the idea of just such a disc 10 years ago, and thanks to the efforts of the person who made it happen, film preservationist Robert Byrne -- that disc is finally seeing release. Byrne was the person to whom I first pitched my idea of "The Lost Louise Brooks" -- which was to gather all of Brooks' unreleased / surviving / fragmentary / once "considered lost" films. There is more than you might think. I first had the idea around the time the surviving material from Now We're in the Air (1927) was found in Prague and later preserved by Byrne. I had a hand in its preservation (and am acknowledged in the credits). 

Focus on Louise Brooks also includes another film with whose preservation I also provided assistance (and am also acknowledged in the credits). That film is The Street of Forgotten Men (1925), which marked Brooks' screen debut. It is a terrific film from director Herbert Brenon, who directed Peter Pan (1924) the year before and Beau Geste (1926) the year after. The latter has been receiving a good deal of attention lately as it has also been restored and released on Blu-ray. Focus on Louise Brooks also includes surviving material from The American Venus (1926) -- which was Brooks' first credited screen role, and Just Another Blonde (1926), an enjoyable Jazz Age romance shot, in part, on location at Luna Park on Coney Island. Fans of the actress will adore the surviving footage of the actress. I do.

For Focus on Louise Brooks, I wrote the booklet essay, and provided audio commentaries for three of the disc's four films. I also provided images for the bonus material, and even helped with copy editing some of the bonus and promotional materials. I am pleased with the way this disc turned out, and hope Brooks' fans will be as well. If you want to see more Brooks material released in the future, then please help support this project and purchase a copy of Focus on Louise Brooks. It comes in two different editions.  The regular edition is pictured below on the left, while the limited edition is pictured on the right. 

The limited edition features a spot gloss slipcover only available at the Flicker Alley website and select indie retailers. No major retailers will be stocking this item. For more on this disc, including a breakdown of the various must-have bonus materials (which includes the little seen trailer for Just Another Blonde, which itself includes footage not seen in the surviving fragment), check out the Flicker Alley website. Focus on Louise Brooks is scheduled for release on January 13. The regular edition will also be available on amazon.com at a later date.


Another project which the Louise Brooks Society has been involved is the forthcoming re-release of Lulu in Hollywood, Brooks' 1982 volume of autobiographical essays. The book is being re-released in print with a new cover (shown below) on February 3, AND it is being released for the first time ever as an e-book. I have been working behind-the scenes with Penguin Random House and the University of Minnesota Press for at least a year to make this happen -- especially in regards to the e-book release -- and now, at last, it is! The new edition(s) of Lulu in Hollywood will be available on amazon.com


I had hoped to get the book's publisher interested in an expanded edition, which would include Brooks' uncollected writings on film, but I couldn't get that to happen. That was disappointing. So, that side-project will have to wait until later, perhaps when and if I am able to entice a publisher into issuing an annotated Lulu in Hollywood, perhaps in time for the book's 50th anniversary in 2032. I have already started gathering materials scattered in archives far and wide in order to make that happen.

Speaking of anniversaries, did you know that the Louise Brooks Society has been blogging since 2002. And next year, this blog will mark its 25th anniversary! This year, I posted more than 120 times.... which brings the overall total for the LBS blog to more than 3840 posts, many of them substantive. Earlier this year, back on March 23rd to be exact, the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle in New York mentioned the LBS blog in an article on Louise Brooks, “'Never has a more beautiful, intelligent, quirky, sexy, uniquely commanding character graced the screen,' Anthony Bourdain said in a column by Thomas Gladysz, the founder and longtime champion of the Louise Brooks Society.” Its nice to be noticed.

The Louise Brooks Society website, its blog, and its group of pages focused on Pandora's Box also got noticed by a terrific site which everyone should check out, WeirmarCinema.org. In fact, there are multiple references and citations to the Louise Brooks Society on its Die Büchse der Pandora film dossier. If you haven't already checked it out, do so ... and don't be scared of this superb site's academic leaning. 

On a related note, I am more than 4,100 words into a long article tentatively titled "How Louise Brooks came to play Lulu". It is a topic I have been looking into for some time, years actually. I won't say much about it until it is done and published (certainly in 2026), but I will say it dismantles the notion that it was A Girl in Every Port that inspired G.W. Pabst to give the role of Lulu to Brooks.

BTW: it was little more than a year ago that I launched the Louise Brooks Society SubStack, which can be found at https://substack.com/@louisebrookssociety  I have spent this past year developing it. There, you will find a bunch of free and subscriber only long-form posts... everything from Louise Brooks trivia to groundbreaking pieces on "Louise Brooks and Early Radio" to "Louise Brooks in Japan". Please check it out, and please subscribe. My resolution for 2026 is to post at least once a month. Fingers crossed.

I have given over a lot of time in 2025 to reworking and expanding the Louise Brooks Society website. I have added dozens of new pages to the films section, as well as to the archive and homage sections. As of now, the site stands at nearly 300 pages. 

To the pages on the 24 films in Brooks' filmography, I have added links to press books, thematic cue sheets and available issues of Mensajero Paramount, censorship information and censorship documents, adjunct pages on film source material, coming attraction slides, location shooting, and physical media, etc.... And to the archive section, I have added dozens of pages on all manner of material, from vintage magazine covers from all around the world to vintage postcards from all around the world to photoplay editions and product advertisements and ephemera, such as match boxes and calendar blotters. There are pages on related 78 rpm records and another on piano rolls which feature a video of one of the rolls being played. (Thank the heavens for YouTube and the Internet Archive.)

Please do take a moment or two to explore my 30 year labor-of-love, the Louise Brooks Society. 

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 © 2026. Further unauthorized use prohibited. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.  

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