3/27/10

Barney's Whore

Noel Francis
BARNEY (to Linda): This is Jim Allen, a pal of mine from the chain gang. He's just escaped.

JIM (to Barney): Listen, never mind the advertising.


BARNEY (to Jim): It's all right with Linda. (To Linda) Take good care of him, babe. He's my personal guest. (To Jim) So long, Jim. Hope you make it. (Barney leaves the room.)

LINDA (to Jim): You've got plenty of what it takes to pull an escape from that place.

JIM: I'm not safe yet, not until I'm out of the state.

LINDA: If there's anything I can do to help you, just say the word.

JIM: Thanks...there's nothing you can do.


LINDA: How 'bout a drink?

JIM: No.

LINDA: Don't mind if I take one, do you?

JIM: No, go right ahead.

(Linda crosses the room and pours a drink. Jim looks her over from head to toe.)

LINDA (raising her glass): Here's to you. A guy with your nerves has got the breaks coming to him.


(Jim gazes at her with a look she seems to recognize. She crosses the room to him. She sits on the arm of his chair.)

LINDA: I know what you're thinking. (She pauses.) I understand. (Linda touches his shirt, whispering now.) You're among friends
.
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932) with Allen Jenkins (Barney), Noel Francis (Linda), and Paul Muni (Jim). Here is a very nice piece about Noel from Allure.
Noel Francis
Noel Francis
Furthermore, she's a Texas girl. Go figure.
More photos here.
(Boy, I love pre-Code movies.)

3/26/10

Good God


Been looking for this for YEARS!
Good God
extremely rare Philly one-shot band
1972 jazz fusion
Zeno Sparkles aka Larry Cardarelli/guitar
Cotton Kent/keyboards,saxophone,vocals
Greg Scott/saxophone
John Ransome/bass
Hank Ransome/drums,vocals
also see Mahavishnu Orchestra
John McLaughlin, Frank Zappa
King Crimson, Yes, ELP
jazz-rock fusion


A Murder of Crows

Dragon Song

Fish Eye

YesterDoll

Vintage Vixen
It's always nice to check back with the Vintage Vixen.
Vintage Vixen
Vintage Vixen

3/25/10

Dancing Days

Mary Ellen Terry
Mary Ellen Terry danced on television in the 1950s. She was also in one episode of Sea Hunt. These, of course, are pictures from Life magazine. (They have a lot more of her, too.)
Mary Ellen Terry
Mary Ellen Terry
Dancing days are here again as the summer evening grows
You are my flower, you are my power
You are my woman who knows
- L.Z.

3/24/10

Even Cowgirls Get The Blues

Candy Barr
I've been bouncing back and forth between reading history and biography recently. I finished Inventing Wyatt Earp: His Life and Many Legends by Allen Barra. And, continuing on sort of a Great Plains theme, I read Timothy Egan's excellent book about the dustbowl, The Worst Hard Time. And since I was in an Oklahoma Panhandle and Texas sort of mood, I read the relentlessly grim Candy Barr: The Small-Town Texas Runaway Who Became a Darling of the Mob and the Queen of Las Vegas Burlesque by Ted Schwartz and Mardi Rustam. (That's NSFW Candy in the cowboy hat above.) Brushing all that dust off my jeans, I decided to read something completely different with Just One More Thing by Peter Falk, a fast and funny book which should entertain both the fans of John Cassavetes and the fans of the television show Columbo. I was hoping for more about Natalie Wood, who starred in both The Great Race (1965) and Penelope (1966) with Peter Falk, but that was not to be. Falk's book has a lot of photos, including one of Peter with Inger Stevens in an episode of The Dick Powell Show called "The Price of Tomatoes." Anyway, I raced through those 281 pages in three and a half hours, and got started on Gus Russo's The Outfit: The Role of Chicago's Underworld on the Shaping of Modern America, which is much, much thicker and might take me three and a half weeks. We'll see.
Jan Sterling
So what are you reading?
Go ahead, tell me.
I'd like to know.

3/23/10

Prime Cut (1972)

Prime Cut
Directed by Michael Ritchie.
Lee Marvin, Gene Hackman, Sissy Spacek, Angel Tompkins, Janit Baldwin, Gregory Walcott, Eddie Egan.
Cinema Center Films: 88 minutes.


We might wonder why Gene Hackman's character is named "Mary Ann" and why his brother, played by Gregory Walcott, is called "Weenie." We could try to analyze why one of the gangster characters is being played by retired NYPD detective Eddie Egan, who himself was the model for Gene Hackman's character Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle in The French Connection (1971). We could compare and contrast Lee Marvin's killer character Nick Devlin ("Old Nick" Devil?) with his Point Blank character Walker, both of whom live by the words, "I want my money." And is Sissy Spacek's character "Poppy" somehow addictive? And whatever became of Janit Baldwin, the girl with all the nickels?

Forgetaboutit!

Let's just look at the friggin' pictures.
sissy spacek
Angel Tompkins
Prime Cut
Lee Marvin
Sissy Spacek
Gene Hackman
Prime Cut
Prime Cut
Sissy Spacek
Prime Cut
Prime Cut
Prime Cut
Prime Cut
Lee Marvin
(My Dell desktop is back!)

3/22/10

Joan...Jean...Whatever...

Jean Peters
Jean Peters, AKA Mrs. Howard Hughes, is listed in the Life magazine photo archives as Joan, but she's still a peach.
Jean Peters
Jean Peters
Jean Peters
Jean Peters

3/21/10

Marie Wilson & the Giant Plaster Leg

Marie Wilson
Marie Wilson promotes a new sign in 1949.
Life magazine was such fun.

Marie Wilson
Ya just couldn't make this sh!t up if you tried.

Lady Di

Diana Lynn
Diana Lynn
Diana Lynn
Diana Lynn

Luana Anders, Juvenile Delinquent

Luana Anders
Luana Anders visits M Squad (1959).
Lee Marvin
Luana Anders

3/20/10

Saturday Night Hard Bop


Hard Bop trumpeter Lee Morgan.

Since I Fell for You - Lee Morgan

You Go to My Head - Lee Morgan

The Lion and the Wolf - Lee Morgan

Speedball - Lee Morgan

The Sidewinder - Lee Morgan

The Gigolo - Lee Morgan
Lee Morgan

Water Polo Gals


Sexy Girls Water Polo was apparently some kind of "sport" in 1947. Those clever dudes at Life magazine never missed a game.


Love the hair pulling.