Showing posts with label Ginger Rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ginger Rogers. Show all posts

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Save the Classics!

Today I was scrolling through Tumblr, wasting time as usual, when a very important matter popped up: that of which films to add to the National Film Registry to safely preserve.  I've seen clips of Ginger Rogers talking about how many films have been lost and the necessary steps should be taken to ensure that the classics always live on.  I agree and feel strongly about this.  That's why I payed special attention to the following post:
JUST PUT YOUR LIPS TOGETHER AND BLOW: hornbecks: 2012 National Film Registry Nominations Closing...


Attention old Hollywood bloggers and film lovers of all stripes—
The Library of Congress is accepting nominations for the National Film Registry until September 28, 2012. Every year, Librarian of Congress James H. Billington, in collaboration with film experts and the National Film Preservation Board, selects up to 25 films for inclusion in the Registry, which will ensure that the movies will live on in a government archive, maintained by a team committed to ensuring that movies deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” live on.
You can submit up to fifty nominations to the Library staff by sending an email to dross@loc.gov or by mail at:
National Film Registry
Library of Congress
Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation
19053 Mt. Pony Road
Culpeper, VA 22701
Attn: Donna Ross
Include the title and year of release for each of the films you would like to nominate, and be sure to number the list.
You may vote for any movie made in or before 2002, but it’s the oldest fims that are in the most danger. Here is a list of classics that have not yet been archived. These include
  • Gilda
  • The Sheik
  • A Day at the Races
  • Girl Shy
  • The Mummy (1932)
  • To Have and Have Not
  • Design for Living
  • Inherit the Wind
  • The Gay Divorcee
  • Steamboat Bill, Jr.
  • You Can’t Take It with You
  • She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
  • Pride of the Yankees
  • Random Harvest
  • Strangers on a Train
  • The Postman Always Rings Twice
  • The Razor’s Edge
  • Rebecca
as well as iconic animated films like Cinderella, Dumbo, Rabbit of Sevilleand Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2 Century. These movies will, eventually, crumble to ash if serious action is not taken now.
If you want to advocate for these movies, you have to vote. Make sure to send in your nominations by the deadline, and then you’ll know that youstood for a film, even if you stand alone. You’ll have voiced the dire necessity of preserving our history, our heritage, the work of the people we love—and that’s what really matters.

There are tons of movies on this list, ranging from 1890-2002.  I wrote down 8 pages worth of movies I intend to send in an email about.  Movies such as the above, as well as After the Thin Man, Mary Poppins, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Grease, Dirty Dancing, Titanic (97), Little Women, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, The Breakfast Club, Since You Went Away, The Princess Bride, Arsenic and Old Lace, Auntie Mame, The Blob, and tons of others made up the entire list.  It's extremely depressing to me to think that all of these great movies could essentially become destroyed if the proper precautions are not taken.  I know only 50 movies are to be sent in, and I know that I wrote down over 50.  However, I intend to send in as many emails from different addresses as I can to ensure that people in the future can still enjoy what we do today.  These films are classics for a reason, and they need to be preserved.  
So I ask that you please take 30 minutes or so to read the list and send in your votes because our films won't  last forever and it's up to us to make sure that they do.
*REMEBER: You MUST send in your emails by SEPTMEBER 28TH, 2012.
Thanks guys.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

And this is exactly what I'm talking about...

Wow, time flies.  Yupp, this is exactly how every website/blog/whatever that I've created/worked on/whatever became neglected.  It's been nearly 3 weeks: shame on me.  School started Wednesday the 15th, so between that, swimming, homework, Tumblr, Psych, and other things I have neglected something very important.

Onward ho!

Last night I finally finished one of the books I highlighted three weeks ago, Alicia: My Story.  Can we all just take a moment to appreciate people like Alicia Appleman-Jurman?  If you read the post, you might recall that Alicia is a Polish Jew.  The book is about 433 pages long and covers 8 years.  The whole story is so heartbreaking; she goes through so much.  Living through the pain that both Alicia and her mother live through is terrible.  At one point her mother, knowing she is going to die anyway, throws herself in front of the bullet meant to kill Alicia.  This was maybe the saddest part of the book for me.  Sitting in Algebra 2, I had to take a deep breath and quickly close the book before my tears started to fall.  After the war is completely over and Alicia is allowed to return to Buczacz, her hometown, she still does so much more for so many people.  Remember, Ala is only 14 or 15 when the war ends.  She goes on to run an orphanage consisting of roughly 24 children who survived the concentration camps, work for the Brecha, learn 2 more languages, find at least 3 surviving extended family members, and travel to Eretz Israel (Palestine) only to be captured by the British and be imprisoned for 8 months.  You could really say the war doesn't end for Ala until 1947.  But this is a wonderful book, and I recommend it to anyone and everyone.  It's really capturing.

Lately, I've really gotten into (okay, maybe really is an understatement) a show called Psych on USA Network.  Now, I'm not one for modern TV shows or movies or TV in general.  But this is one awesome show.  It's full of culture and I guess that's one of the reasons I respect it.  It's packed full of references mostly to movies from the 1980's.  While not my favorite decade, I still like watching movies from then.  Besides that, you do get the very, very occasional CH reference (Ginger Rogers, Phantom of the Opera 1940's, etc.), and some modern references to awesome book series (Harry Potter, Percy Jackson).  Plus, the random breaking out into song sometimes seen in the show (but mostly in the bloopers.)  While I love the whole cast (have you ever seen a modern-day couple as cute as Maggie Lawson and James Roday?!), I really respect and envy Corbin Bernsen.  That name probably doesn't ring a bell: why do I like him so much?  Well it's really the fact that he was in the movie Radioland Murders, something I really want to see.  Sure, the movie looks pretty good.  But my dear Rosie (Rosemary Clooney) is in the movie, according to her Wikipedia filmography list.  Now, whether she really was in it or her voice/a clip of her was used from the CH days I'm not sure.  But the fact that he was in a movie that I associate with Rosemary Clooney just makes me all happy and warm inside.  If I ever meet or write to him, my first question will be about Radioland Murders.

Schpeal over; have a picture!


...Or two.  :D
Top: Rosie, who seems fakely surprised with her book
Bottom: Jaggie, or James Roday and Maggie Lawson

~Bailey

Monday, August 6, 2012

Leibster Blog Award. Well This is New!

Hello dear two followers and any possible readers!  (Maybe I should start going out and promoting this or something...Things to consider.)
I've heard the Leibster Blog Award is going around.  I've only ever heard of it once or twice but never knew what it was or the point of it.  Ha.  But Natalie over at In the Mood decided to tag me, so it's game time!  The rules (because, according to Natalie, they've changed since this last time around):
  1. The tag-ee must tell eleven things about themself
  2. The tag-ee must then answer the eleven questions given to them from by tagger
  3. The tag-ee tags eleven more blogs (we'll see how this turns out for me...)
  4. And then the tag-ee assigns their eleven blogs eleven new questions
Oh boy what fun!  Moving on.

11 Things About the Fan Girl Behind the Blog

  • I'm going through a Psych craze.  Hiatus sucks.
  • Repeat songs included, I have 160 Rosemary Clooney songs from 6 CDs, plus a yet-to-be-listened-to Rosie record with Harry James.
  • My main reason for being on Tumblr is all the pictures.  I have over 3000 photos in my Classic Stars picture folder on my computer.
  • I was a toe-head as a child.
  • I will be entering my Sophomore year in high school in 11 days.  (How fitting...)
  • Not including my second grade class's production of E-I-E-I Oops, I have acted in 11 productions, starting with Alice in Wonderland, Jr. in 6th grade as the Caterpillar.
  • I really geek out on the Holocaust.  I've read numerous books, fiction and non, and really enjoy learning about it.
  • I don't have a favorite animal.  If I really had to choose, though, I'd pick dolphins.
  • Yes, Wikipedia is reliable, and yes, I use it to look up everything I want to know.
  • I really dislike the color pink.  Purple has been my favorite since 1st grade.
  • I tend to pick at my lip when concentrating.  Because I like having the dry skin to pick at, I'm not very good at having chapstick handy, much less using it.
11 Questions (from Nat)

1. In film do you prefer black&white or color?
Black and white.  Color can be a nice change, but there's really nothing that says Classic Hollywood like black and white.

2. In photographs do you prefer black&white or color?
Toughie.  Black and white photos are nice because you can color them in Photoshop.  Color photographs are always nice, especially for stars who you are accustomed to seeing in black and white films.  I'll have to pick color, though, because right now my desktop background is a snazzy colored picture of Myrna Loy.

3. Your favorite era in music?
1950s baby!  Rosemary Clooney all the way!

4. Do you have a tumblr?
Yes.  Yes I do.  Tumblr  Please don't be alarmed by the Psych spam.

5. Your second favorite actress?
Uh...Who on EARTH am I suppose to choose for that?  Um...well, seeing as I've seen the most Ginger Rogers movies (behind Minnie, of course) let's go with her.

6. Your favorite movie starring your second favorite actress?
I think picking Ginger was a mistake...Yeah, I'm going to go with 1940's Primrose Path.

7. Your second favorite actor?
Jimmy Stewart, yo!

8. Your favorite movie starring your second favorite actor?
Ooh...This is the part where I wonder if I should choose It's a Wonderful Life, The Stratton Story, or Rear Window...In honor of Yin, let's go with Rear Window.  Pure suspense perfection.  Mmm!

9. Favorite foreign film?
This is the part where I have to go back through all my films and find a foreign one...This is a real problem here!  Found one!  That Hamilton Woman.  It's the first foreign film I came upon...

10. Ice cream or french fries?
ICE CREAM!

11. If you could see your favorite actress in any movie role (real or imagined) what would it be?
Ooh.  You know, I'm still feelin' like The Proposal should be remade to star Minnie and Bill Powell, so let's go with that!

Tag.  You're it.
  • Film-Classics
  • The Shades of Black and White
  • The New Andrews Sisters
  • and anyone else who would like to play along!  I'm still new to the blog world here.
Question time!

  1. What was your first classic?
  2. Favorite classic TV show?
  3. If you could spend a day with any one classic star, who would it be?
  4. Least favorite classic actor?
  5. Least favorite classic actress?
  6. Musical remakes from the '50s: yes or no?
  7. Hayes Code: yes or no?  Why?
  8. Silent or Talkies?
  9. What do you think of movies like The Artist?
  10. What role did your favorite actor deserve an Oscar for?
  11. What role did your favorite actress deserve an Oscar for?


Thanks for taggin' me, Nat, and have at it everyone else!

Friday, July 6, 2012

"The Major and the Minor" 1942: Reviewed

“The Major and the Minor” is my third Ginger Rogers film; I’m really starting to like her!  This movie, released in 1942, stars Ginger Rogers and Ray Milland, along with Diana Lynn, Rita Johnson, Lela Rogers, and Robert Benchley.  It was remade in 1955 as “You’re Never Too Young” starring Jerry Lewis and Diana Lynn, only the positions are reversed.  Also, this film was nominated for AFI’S 100 Years…100 Laughs, AFI’s 100 Years…100 Passions, and AFI’s 100 Years…100 Movie Quotes ("Why don't you get out of that wet coat and into a dry martini?").  It was also produced by Arthur Hornblow Jr. (Myrna Loy’s then-husband) and was a breakthrough for director Billy Wilder.  This is a really entertaining movie and a great choice, especially for Ginger fans!
Susan Applegate (Ginger Rogers) lives in New York City, New York.  She has recently (that morning in fact) started a job for a scalp treatment company.  One of her first clients is Mr. Albert Osborne (Benchley).  He, along with the elevator boy, finds Susan very attractive.  When she gets to Mr. Osborne’s apartment, he insists on getting cozy with Susan instead of doing his treatment because he’s lonely on Wednesdays nights when his wife goes to drill classes.  He offers her a martini ("Why don't you get out of that wet coat and into a dry martini?"), but she refuses and insists on getting down to business.   She makes sure to brush his head extra hard (she doesn’t like that he’s hitting on her) and gives him an egg shampoo, slathering it down his face when he makes her angrier.  He threatens to call and have her fired, obviously not enjoying have egg smothered across his head.  Susan quite likes the sound of that; she hates her job and wants to go back home.  She thought she wanted to get out of the small, ordinary town with nothing to do (and trust me, you do!  I live in one myself, and it gets REAL boring after a while.) and give the big city a try.  Well, she did!  She’s had 25 jobs in the last year and she’s done!  She’s going back to Stevenson, Iowa, with the $27.50 Will Duffy gave her for a train ticket when she left.  Only one small problem: when she gets to the station, she learns they’ve raised the price of tickets.  For anyone over twelve, a ticket costs $32.50 to get from NYC to Stevenson, Iowa.  However, she notices the lady behind her has children under twelve riding for half price.  And one of those children is a little girl of nine.  Susan gets a ‘brain blast’ (Jimmy Neutron anyone? :D) and heads to the woman’s room.  There she transforms herself from a young adult of maybe twenty-four to a young girl of eleven, going on twelve.  
“Stevenson, Iowa.  One half fare please.  It’s for the kid.”
She hires a man to act as her ‘Daddy’ and buy her a train ticket to visit her grandma.  However, he pockets the extra change ($16.25), giving her only a quarter to spend.  She says good-bye to ‘Papa’ and boards the train.  Susan is definitely playing her part; she’s singing “A Tisket, a Taskit” and playing with a balloon.  Only until the conductors come by does she run into trouble.  Not believing she’s really eleven, they start bombarding her with questions.  Susan starts spewing out nonsense and creating reasons for why she looks much older than her ‘real’ age.  She tells the men her family is from Swedish stock, and that she once heard of a five-year-old boy who grew a beard (among other things).  Although they aren’t completely satisfied, the conductors leave Susan alone and move on.  But they later catch her smoking out on the back of the train.  Not realizing they had seen her, Susan puts her cigarette inside her mouth when the conductors come.  She does pretty well at hiding the cigarette until they ask if she inhales when she smokes, at which points she spits the cigarette out into her handkerchief and runs through the train car, knocking down everything in her path.  At one point she and the conductors run into an attendant.  The first time Susan tries to slip into a room, she quickly exits because someone had occupied it.  However, she soon finds one she thinks is empty.  It isn’t until she’s inside and the conductors have passed that she learns someone does occupy the car.  This someone is Major Philip Kirby (Milland), who believes Susan is actually eleven.  Susan tells him he can call her Su-Su (Su-Su will represent her being eleven here, Susan will represent her as her normal age).  He keeps trying to call the conductor to help her find her car and get back to where she’s staying, but she claims she is afraid of the conductor, causing him to decide she should just stay in his car.  Su-Su refuses, knowing it would be wrong (even though he doesn’t know it).  Major insists and Su-Su finally relents.  There’s a storm in the middle of the night and lightning strikes, awakening her and causing her to bump her head on the bed above her’s.  This awakes Philip and he thinks Su-Su is afraid of the storm.  So he pulls her close to him and does his best to calm her down and put her back to sleep.  This freaks Su-Su out even more because, again, it’s not appropriate.  She finally pretends to fall asleep so he will go back up to his bunk.  The next morning, Su-Su is all set to tell Philip that she’s not really eleven because she’s fallen in love with him.  He goes off to get breakfast for her, so she uses this time to look more grown up.  However, the train had been stopped (because of a flooded bridge) and Philip’s fiancĂ©e, Pamela Hill (Johnson), and commander, Pamela’s father, had come to retrieve him from the train.  They don’t know of Su-Su, and so when Pamela walks in on Su-Su preparing herself, she assumes the worst and thinks Philip is cheating on her, spilling his tray and giving him a bloody nose when he meets her in the hallway.  Philip decides he wants to clear everything up and takes Su-Su with him back to Wallace Military School, where Philip is in training.  After everything is clear, Su-Su is taken to Pamela’s house to stay.  There she meets Lucy Hill, Pamela’s wise sister who sees right through Su-Su right away.  Lucy’s all in for keeping Susan’s secret if she helps her get Philip a position.  Lucy explains that Pamela makes sure Philip never leaves the school to go to battle, and Lucy doesn’t like it.  Susan agrees and the two become fast friends.  Others who also take a fast liking to Su-Su are the young commanders-in-training at the school.  They each have shifts to chaperone Su-Su.  The first boy, Cadet Clifford Osborne, is the first to make a move on Su-Su.  He starts explaining what seems to be a battle plan, but is actually a move and he kisses Su-Su.  All the other boys attempt it as well.  Philip had caught Clifford and Susan kissing and hadn’t felt comfortable, suggesting Pamela give her a talk about boys.  Of course, Pamela doesn’t and leaves Philip to do it.  So Philip sits Su-Su down for that talk.  He tells her she’s like a light bulb and the boys are moths.  The moths are attracted to the light bulb, or the boys are attracted to her.  So she needs to put screens up or go inside to keep the moths away.  Su-Su asks when she’ll be a grown woman and Philip tells her it’ll still be a while.  However, he makes note that when he squints, he can almost see her as a grown woman (he doesn’t catch on very fast, does he?  :D), making the situation very awkward after commenting on how good looking she is.  That night, Lucy is helping Su-Su gussy up for the dance that night.  A group of boys come singing to their window “Sweet Sue Just You” (familiar if you’ve watched ILL), and Lucy tells them they shouldn’t strain their vocal chords when their voices are changing.  After arriving at the dance, Su-Su’s dance card is quickly filled up, but she manages to save one spot for Major Philip to sign.  When she finishes dancing with Cadet Clifford, he insists on having her meet her family.  There she runs into Albert Clifford, her scalp treatment client!  He can’t quite place who she is and racks and racks his brain.  His wife insists he doesn’t know her and tells him to forget about it.  Su-Su finally gets to dance with Philip after Clifford and they agree to meet at the punch table at 10:45, after the dance.  Su-Su is set on telling him who she really is.  But with each other’s help, Pamela and Albert found out who Su-Su was.  And Pamela has no intention of letting Susan come clean (she doesn’t want Philip to be deported, and wasn’t happy that Susan had pretended to be her to get him the job).  So she tells Philip that Su-Su has a stomach ache and can’t make it, going there herself instead.  She threatens to make sure Philip loses his job is Susan doesn’t keep out of Philip’s life.  She is to go on the 11:40 train for Stevenson without saying any good-byes.  And she is not to keep in touch with Philip.  Susan relents, knowing she doesn’t want to be the cause for Philip losing his job.  So she leaves, only saying good-bye to Lucy.  A few days later, Susan is sitting in a hammock in Stevenson, Iowa, staring at moths around a light bulb (you just know she’s thinking of Philip).  Will Duffy, whom she had promised to marry once she got back, gets agitated at her for ignoring him and throws a rock at the light bulb before storming off.  The phone rings soon after and Susan’s mother (Lela Rogers, her real mother) predicts it to be Will calling from the phone on the corner.  But it’s not; it’s Philip.  He’s on his way to the west coast and wanted to stop by to give Susan a gift from Lucy.  Susan, pretending to be Su-Su’s mother, makes up a quick lie.  She shoos her mother off to the attic, deeming her the grandmother.    Then she goes out to sit on the porch and take care of the fruit (because they make jam, among other things).  After talking with Philip, she learns Pamela ended up marrying another man.  Susan is delighted, but Philip has no intention of marrying; he thinks Pamela was right and doesn’t want to make a widow out of a wife.  He leaves shortly after.  Three minutes before his train pulls out at the station, he sees a woman out of the corner of her eye.  He then figures out the truth, and the two board the train together.
I’m sorry this is really long!  I don’t know why it is; maysbe because it’s such a good movie.  Or maysbe I’m just elaborating too much.  I tend to do that…  Anyway!  This is a really good movie.  It’s my favorite of Ginger’s (even though I’ve only seen three).  It’s on YouTube at the following address: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyl9USrVk2I&feature=related