Not gone, not forgotten

Image-Jennifer JonesThe passing of Jennifer Jones, whose work I have enjoyed often over the years, left me feeling a bit blue (though she led a good, long life, hanging in there till the age of 90). It sometimes feels as though there’s no one left from the Golden Age of Hollywood. But it cheers me a bit to realize that there are more fondly remembered performers from the era still with us than one might expect.

Here’s an incomplete list (with their current ages in parentheses):

Dolores Hope (100)
Luise Rainer (99)
Gloria Stuart (99)
Mitch Miller (98)
Art Linkletter (97)
Tony Martin (95)
Kevin McCarthy (95)
Norman Lloyd (95)
Harry Morgan (94)
Barbara Billingsley (93)
Bruce Gordon (93)
Olivia de Havilland (93)
June Havoc (93)
Kirk Douglas (92)
Ernest Borgnine (92)
Vera Lynn (92)
Marsha Hunt (92)
Celeste Holm (92)
Lena Horne (92)
Herbert Lom (92)
June Foray (92)
Joan Fontaine (92)
Patty Andrews (91)
Marjorie Lord (91)
Baby Peggy (91)
Audrey Totter (92)
Betty Garrett (90)
Louis Jourdan (90)
Maureen O’Hara (89)
Mickey Rooney (89)
Jayne Meadows (89)
Ann Rutherford (89)
Barbara Hale (88)
Jane Russell (88)
Nancy Reagan (88)
Esther Williams (88)
Deanna Durbin (88)
Kathryn Grayson (87)
Eleanor Parker (87)
Kay Starr (87)
Jackie Cooper (87)
Janis Paige (87)
Lizabeth Scott (87)
Rhonda Fleming (86)
Rose Marie (86)
Doris Day (85)
Stanley Donen (85)
Eva Marie Saint (85)
Margaret Whiting (85)
Arlene Dahl (85)
Lauren Bacall (85)

Long may they all wave!

Oh, fiddley dee…

It was 70 years ago today that Gone with the Wind debuted in a star-studded premiere at the Loew’s Grand Theater in Atlanta, Georgia.

Image-Still from GWTWThe picture’s most famous line has long left us scratching our heads. The legend is that Clark Gable (in the guise of Rhett Butler) intoning the words, “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn” set off a firestorm of controversy.

And maybe it did; we’re in no place to deny it (we weren’t around at the time).

But as any self-respecting cineaste can tell you, there were dozens of pre-code movies that featured imagery, plotting, dialogue, and attitudes far more shocking than Gable’s mildly profane utterance. And given that Gone with the Wind was released in 1939, just five short years after the Production Code clampdown, surely the press and the movie-going public hadn’t so soon forgotten the saltier offerings of the early Thirties.

We don’t have the answer to this conundrum, but as we said, we’ve been scratching our heads over it for some time.

In any case, here’s wishing that venerable old tale of Tara a happy 70th. It’s a spectacular, if undeniably flawed, piece of work that still entertains, engages, and frustrates all these decades later.

Harpo, Hepburn and happy soldiers

image-Stage Door Canteen posterThis week’s Cladrite Clip is taken from Stage Door Canteen, an enjoyable piece propagandistic fluff from 1943 that features the slimmest of plots and literally dozens of cameos from stars of film and Broadway.

To be honest, we prefer its follow-up, Hollywood Canteen, which came out a year later — the celebrity cameos in that picture appealed to us more — but both are entertaining in their way.

To give credit where it’s due, Stage Door Canteen does boast a nice lineup of Cladrite Radio-worthy orchestras. Count Basie, Xavier Cugat, Benny Goodman, Kay Kyser, Guy Lombardo, and Freddy Martin are all on hand to contribute their considerable talents.

In Stage Door Canteen, we follow the adventures of a quartet of soliders (nicknamed, from west to east, California, Texas, Dakota, and Jersey). Though our fighting young men are given a brief furlough in NYC before they ship off to fight in World War II, they spend the majority of their time not taking in the sights of the Big Apple, but trying, each in his own way, to make time with the cute gals volunteering at the titular canteen.

Tex (Sunset Carson) quickly pairs up with Ella Sue (Margaret Early), an Alabama gal whose interactions with Yankee soldiers have left her pining for a Southern gentleman. Jersey’s engaged and manages to get married mid-movie, and California, the callowest of youth, is awarded his first kiss by his canteen hostess, Jean (Marjorie Riordan) — which is expressly against canteen rules, but what the heck — just before he heads off to fight for his country.

It’s around Dakota (William Terry) and his rocky romance with haughty actress/canteen hostess Eileen (Cheryl Walker) that the wispy plot mostly revolves, and it will surprise no one that, in the end, Eileen is fully reformed. She not only falls in love with Dakota, but she gets her big break on Broadway when she’s cast in a play opposite Paul Muni.

But one doesn’t watch either of the Canteen movies for the plot. It’s the musical performances, the patriotism (though it can be heavy-handed at times), and the star cameos that appeal.

image-Hollywood Canteen posterWhich picture one might wish to start with will depend on one’s tastes in entertainment. Each has its share of movie stars, but if the names Katharine Cornell, Lynn Fontanne, and Helen Hayes make your heart go pitty-pat — if, in short, you’re something of a Broadway baby — Stage Door Canteen is probably the movie for you.

If you’re a movie buff, you’ll want to see both (after all, even Stage Door Canteen boasts cameos by such Hollywood luminaries as Harpo Marx, Ray Bolger, and Katherine Hepburn), but I would suggest seeing Hollywood Canteen first. Its cameos pack a bigger cinematic wallop.

Free shipping — at this late date??

With the days for holiday shopping dwindling to a precious few, Cladrite listeners will be pleased to know that they can enjoy free UPS shipping and guaranteed Christmas delivery on all Cladrite Radio gear (and the T-shirts, hoodies, and so much more found at our sponsor’s site, Cladrite.com) by using the coupon code “SHIP12” at checkout.

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Easy access to Cladrite Radio

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