Friday, April 21, 2017

Lillian Gish Interviewed in 1968 St. Louis Globe-Democrat




Photo of Lillian from the article by Mike Schau, Special to the Globe-Democrat. Jim Patterson note: This appears to be an original photo to accompany the article. I have not seen the article before and it seems are appropriate for the date. 


St. Louis Globe-Democrat
May 11-12 1968 page 9B

Miss Gish Recalls –

St. Louis and Sodas at the Busy Bee
By Mike Schau, Special to the Globe-Democrat

New York, I walked into Lillian Gish’s dressing room at the Longacre Theater where she is starring in Robert Anderson’s drama “I Never Sang for My Father.” It is a little corner of cheerfulness in an otherwise dark and gloomy backstage area.

The bulb-encircled make-up mirror, the array of cosmetic jars and the drawing of Snoopy hanging on the wall helped to brighten the small room, but I suspect the real glow came from the charm that Miss Gish radiates – the same charm that has endeared her to film and playgoers since the turn of the century.

At 72 Lillian Gish is still a beautiful woman. If the Gish Girl-loveliness that John Barrymore described as “superlatively exquisite and poignantly enchanting” is somewhat physically faded, the beauty of character and spirit is overwhelmingly present.

She talked of the play, but when I mentioned I was from St. Louis, her thoughts turned back to the days when she toured and later went to school and lived there.

“My sister Dorothy and I loved to play in St. Louis because of the ice cream sodas. We hit St. Louis many times where we were children touring in Belasco’s productions. There was a place near the theater – I can’t remember the name of the play much less the theater – were we got the best ice cream sodas in the world.  Chocolate. Not the sweet chocolate. Bitter chocolate. It was called the Busy Bee Ice Cream Parlor. Mary Pickford toured with us in a few shows (she was known as Gladys Smith then) and the three of us came to know St. Louis for its ice cream.”

But there were less happy days in the city. “Things got rough and my father left us. We had an aunt in St. Louis and my mother, my sister and I moved in with her. We opened a confectionery in the city and Dorothy and I went to school and worked in the store. (The Misses Gish attended Ursuline Academy for a year. [1909-1910]) Somehow though we got back on our feet and back on the stage.”

There was a quiet knock at the dressing room door. Miss Gish opened it and was as surprised as I was to see Dame Edith Evans there. Miss Gish let out a little gasp of surprise and then more than 125 years of show business experience embraced. Dame Edith looked chipper and a little winded from the two-flight climb.

“I’m on my way home to London and I had to stop in to see you,” she explained. She seemed none the worse for having won the Academy Award presentations (she was nominated for her starring role in “The Whisperers”).

By their manner, it was obvious they were old friends. There was great praise for Miss Gish and the play, all of which was accepted with modesty. There was a pause in their delight at seeing one another to remember a mutual friend, Edna Ferber who had recently died. Dame Edith brought news of the passing of Fay Bainter which surprised everyone. There was another thoughtful silence and Miss Gish said something about the bright lights going out one by one. Then, a dinner date having been made, there were more embraces and the grand Dame Edith took her leave.

Miss Gish sat down and gave a sigh of relief. “If I had known she was in the audience tonight I would have been like this.” (She made a gesture describing extreme nervousness.) “I can usually tell who’s there during the show. That is the greatest actress in the theater today.”

She spoke more like an adoring fan than an old friend. “You know, when I was in London at the age of 16 I saw Edith in a bit part. She was unknown and I singled her out even then as a great actress.”

Jim Patterson note: According to Broadway Show Database “I Never Sang for my Father” ran for a total of 124 performances. The last performance was May 11, 1968, also the date of the article in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

Cast of “I Never Sang for My Father” included Hal Holbrook, Teresa Wright, and Laurinda Barrett. Lois Wilson was Miss Gish’s understudy. In the 1970 film starring Gene Hackman had Holbrook’s role, actress Dorothy Stickney (1896-1998) had the role of Margaret Garrison, the role Lillian played in the Broadway production. Melvyn Douglas had the lead senior role in the film. It was Melvyn Douglas who presented Lillian with her honorary Academy Award in 1971.

The author is using an 1896 birthday for Miss Gish to arrive at an age of 72 in 1968. Dorothy Gish died June 4, 1968.


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Jim Patterson began correspondence with Lillian Gish after seeing her and Helen Hayes as The Brewster Sisters in a TV production of “Arsenic and Old Lace.” Patterson moved to New York shortly after high school in pursuit of the excitement in highly creative Greenwich Village.  He worked on his writing and other studies amid the cultural backdrop of hippies and freestyle types interested in global affairs and the U.N. Among midnight movies, he especially enjoyed “King of Hearts,” “NOLD,” “Harold and Maude,” “El Topo,” and “Reefer Madness.”


Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Lillian Gish: Awards and Tributes

Film Stars and Their Awards: Who Won What for Movies, Theater, and Television by Roger Leslie, (McFarland, 2008) Page 91

Editor’s Note: Leslie italicized the award if the person won it. Ex. Since Academy, Academy Awards, was not italicized, it meant Lillian was nominated for Best Supporting Actress in Duel in the Sun. Likewise, her Golden Globe nomination in 1967 for The Comedians.


Gish, Lillian

Movie: 1946: Duel in the Sun (Best Supporting Actress) Academy. 1967: The Comedians (Best Supporting Actress) Globe. 1987: The Whales of August (Best Actress) Board (Best Female Lead) Spirit. Tributes: 1970: Special Oscar for superlative artistry and for distinguished contribution to the progress of motion pictures from Academy. 1982: Honor from Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. 1984: Life Achievement Award from American Film Institute. 1987: Lifetime Achievement Award from Board. 1999: Ranked Number 17 on List of 25 Greatest Female Screen Legends of the 20th Century from American Film Institute. Records: Gish, widely considered The First Lady of the Silent Screen, holds the Guinness world record for having the longest career as a leading film actress and a record for having been a film actress the longest before earning a competitive acting award. She made her screen debut in An Unseen Enemy in 1912. 75 years and 86 films later, Gish made her last movie, The Whales of August. At awards time, the National Board of Review gave Gish a lifetime achievement award at the same ceremony where she tied for the Best Actress prize with Holly Hunter in Broadcast News. After that long wait to awards night accolades, Gish was forced by her doctor to stay home after she fell one month before the National Board’s ceremony. Friend and First Lady of the American Theater Helen Hayes accepted the awards on Gish’s behalf. Gish recuperated from injuries sustained in the fall and lived five more years but never made another film and won no more awards until AFI listed her as one of their 25 Screen Legends in an end-of the-century poll six years later.”

Author Leslie omitted a few Gish awards and tributes

Tributes:
Lillian Gish had her Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1720 Vine Street in an Induction Ceremony on February 8, 1960.

Award:
Lillian Gish Inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame 1971

USO Woman of the Year Date to Come

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Jim Patterson, Editor/Writer
LDGish.blogspot.com

Friday, March 24, 2017

Lillian Gish Remembered in Ursuline Academy's 1935 publication Oak Leaves

Lillian, left, and Dorothy Gish around the time of Lillian's stay at Ursuline Academy, St. Louis, Missouri.

Jim Patterson note: The text is as it appears in the 1935 publication. I thank Ursuline's librarians for proving this extremely useful contribution. Lillian detailed very little of her Ursuline experience in her book, The Movies, Mr. Griffith, and Me with Anne Pinchott in 1969. Reviewers criticized Lillian for not detailing much of her own life in the book. She mostly detailed the making of her films, D. W. Griffith, her work after Griffith, and the film industry's lack of praise for the Father of Film.   She did often thank her father, who deserted his family, for giving her the gift and love of work. Some of the details come from "Life and Lillian Gish" by famed author Albert Bigelow Paine in 1932. Here are discussed Lillian's fondness of the early laxative Castoria, her love of ice cream, and her love of baked beans. These are simply not details Lillian later mentioned in writing, lectures, or in published interviews. She managed a slender waist her entire life.  You might also find a few other surprises in this student article. JP

The following pages are from Oak Leaves December 1935, published by Students of Ursuline Academy, Oakland, Missouri.  Pages 15-17 contains this submission by Peggy Williams, Junior:
Childhood of a Famous Actress

"Everyone has heard of Lillian Gish, both in connection with her work on the legitimate stage, and in connection with her later work in the movies. Her pictures “Romola,” “Way Down East,” and “The White Sister,” are still remembered for their perfect technique and the spiritual quality of their character portrayals. She is a unique artist.

Lillian Gish is a very famous star, and as such, she is naturally of great interest to us. In addition, she has an appealing personality that exerts its charm even over the radio, and her beauty is apparent even in newspaper pictures. But she has a stronger appeal than all this to us Ursuline girls, because she was at one time an Ursuline pupil, having been at school about one time with our sisters when the academy was on Twelfth and Russell Boulevard in Saint Louis, Missouri.

Lillian Gish was born in Springfield, Ohio, in 1896. A year later her family removed to Dayton, Ohio, where her almost equally famous sister Dorothy was born. The father was an amiable, good-natured man but intemperate, and while the girls were still quite young, Mrs. Gish was forced to separate the two little girls. This necessity on her part led to the formation of one of America’s leading actresses, for the children soon became members of a traveling troupe of actors and actresses.
Lillian’s life for several years was a very hard one, and necessarily so, for the company she was with was decidedly a second rate one. Life on the road is so hard that it wears down even old and hardened troopers. Lillian Gish was only a little over six when she joined her first company and frail in physique, but she was never heard to complain of the hardships she had to endure.

Poor and insufficient food, disturbed sleep when traveling, snatched lying on a hard seat in a day coach, miserable hotels in the small towns where the troupe played – all these make it seem incredible that the child, who later in her career was so often called “airy, fairy Lillian,” could find the life even endurable. Yet she was to write later she saw something beautiful in the hardships of her childhood, and that was due to the love and care which the troupers lavished on such a child.
It was perhaps her unmurmuring acceptance of the hardships in her life that won for her the following tribute: “Lillian Gish has ever held high the torch of beauty during her entire career as stage and screen star, and with undeviating purpose has been the representative of the finest and best traditions of the theater.” She had been in the theater from early childhood, had borne the stress and strain of the actresses’ life, and had risen above its difficulties. Her reward was the world’s respect and admiration.

Even as a child, Lillian Gish was lovely. She was very fair of complexion with beautiful blonde hair that fell around her face in natural waves and ringlets. Her face was wistful and delicate with a trace of lurking sadness. Thus, she gave observers the impression of a tiny angel, a little sad at having to leave her heavenly home for an existence on this wicked earth.

With all her spirituelle air, she was quite a human little girl with quite a human appetite for certain kinds of food. Ice cream, for instance, she doted on, and her idea of perfect luxury was to be able to indulge in an ice cream cone, or a five-cent dish of pink ice cream. The latter she and her impish sister Dorothy used to make into “mashed potatoes” and spread on cookies or lady fingers, if they were fortunate enough to have either.

Baked beans, surprisingly enough, were one of Lillian’s favorite foods, and, fragile though she looked, she had quite a capacity for disposing of her pet edible. Before her mother had separated from the intemperate Papa Gish, Lillian occasionally used to accompany him on his trips to the corner saloon, the attraction being the baked beans served at the free lunch counter. Once, her grandfather, who had been looking for her somewhat anxiously, found her in her father’s favorite haunt, seated on a high stool at the lunch counter, where the “airy, fairly Lillian” was polishing off quite a good-sized platter of baked beans!

Lillian was also extremely fond of Castoria, and drank it whenever she could get it. Her Aunt Emily, whom the girls visited each summer, kept a bottle of the medicine on the bottom pantry shelf. Lillian dosed herself with it every day until Aunt Emily filled the bottle with cod liver oil. Poor Lillian, suspecting nothing, took her usual big swallow; she did not get over the shock for some time, and naturally she was off Castoria forever.

On the stage, Lillian played in several of the good old melodramas. Her roles were always pathetic ones, suited to her haunting, appealing personality. She was always the poor child whose life was ruined by the villain; or the wistful darling who reformed the bad, bad villain just in the pink of time; or the angel child who brought everyone on the stage in the end to rejoice over a happy marriage. Her wistful face often helped to put some such show over, and probably saved more than one show from ruination.

When Lillian was almost fifteen, she was sent to Massillon, Ohio, for a long visit. She had a very hard year, and was on the verge of a nervous break-down. After a few weeks in Massillon, she learned that her mother had opened a little confectionery in Saint Louis. Lillian insisted on joining her mother, so that she might help her. Her mother, however, soon decided that it would be better all around if Lillian did not help in the confectionery, and that she should be in school. Poor Lillian had had only fragmentary experience of schools so far.

And thus, it came about that Lillian Gish became a border in the Ursuline Academy at Saint Louis. Here she found herself in surroundings altogether novel. At first, she was unwilling to have either nuns or fellow boarders know that she had been on the stage. In fact, she was under the impression that the sisters would consider an actress, even a fifteen-year-old one, a very undesirable boarder and she had had all the labels removed from her trunks before coming to the convent.

Lillian was not long in coming to love the convent and all it stood for. She reveled in the solitude, the shut-in-ness of the place. She became utterly devoted to the nuns, and was heard to say more than once that they were the most truly refined women she had ever met. Naturally spiritual, she was attracted by the convent routine, and more than once was heard to say she would like to be a nun. Her teachers say she was always gracious and pleasant to her companions, but her natural reserve kept her from being “a good mixer.” She once asked her favorite sister to point out any faults she might be guilty of, saying: “I want to eradicate any fault in me that might be an annoyance to others.” The sister declares that, after watching Lillian carefully for weeks, she was unable to find any fault in her. She was a perfect boarder.

Years later, when Lillian Gish played “The White Sister,” it was remarked by the critics that she must at some time have been intimately connected with nuns to be able to depict a religious [person] so perfectly. She was very desirous of dedicating this play to her old teachers, but the management objected.


Lillian Gish stepped from the convent into young womanhood. When the end of the term came she returned to her mother, and it was not long after she returned to her career as an actress on the screen, where her beauty has been written about, talked about and almost wept over. Albert Bigelow Paine compares her beauty to a strain of Debussy music; to the beauty of Keats’ “Eve of St. Agnes.” In his biography of her he says: “To say that her beauty is spiritual only partly tells the story. It is that, but it is something more. It has a haunting, eerie quality that has to do with Elfland (sic), and lonely moors—the face that seen by homing lad at evening leaves him forever undone. Scores of men, and women too, have tried to write about it lightly, but underneath you feel the magic working. They have glimpsed ‘Diana’s silver horn’ and are forever changed.'”  

Peggy Williams, Junior 
Ursuline Academy, December 1935


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Jim Patterson
JEPWriter@gmail.com
Posted March 24, 2017 



Saturday, February 18, 2017

Lillian Gish and the Movies, Library of Congress, October 20, 1969.

Actress/author Lillian Gish speaking on Lillian Gish and the Movies at the Coolidge Auditorium, Thomas Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, October 20, 1969 [Photo courtesy Library of Congress.] 


Library of Congress Information Bulletin, Vol. 28, No. 40, October 2, 1969
Events in the Offing

Lillian Gish will present a lecture entitled “Lillian Gish and the Movies,” illustrated with three reels of motion picture film, at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, October 20, in the Coolidge Auditorium, under the joint sponsorship of the Gertrude Clarke Whittall Poetry and Literature Fund and the Motion Picture Section of the Prints and Photographs Division of the Library of Congress.

Attendance at this program will be by invitation only.

A child actress, billed as Baby Lillian, Miss Gish made her stage debut at age six in Rising Sun, Ohio, with a professional touring company playing “In Convict Stripes.” For years after, she traveled and appeared on the stage in child parts; then at age 15, she began her film career under the direction of D. W. Griffith. Some of her early motion pictures include “The Birth of a Nation” (1915) in which she appeared as the heroine, Elsie Stoneman; “Broken Blossoms” (1919); “Way Down East” (1920); and “Orphans of the Storm” (1922), a film screened at the White House while Miss Gish was the guest of President Harding. Others of her early films include “The White Sister” (1923); “the Scarlet Letter” (1926); and “The Wind” (1928), an MGM production and one of the last of the outstanding silent films. In May 1930, at the Rivoli Theater, New York City, Miss Gish played her first talking role in the film “One Romantic Night.” In hat same year, she returned to the theater with her Broadway performance in Chekov’s play “Uncle Vanya,” directed by Jed Harris. Other of her plays in the years that followed include Guthrie McClintic’s production of “Hamlet” (1936) with John Gielgud; “Life with Father” (1941); and Robert Anderson’s “I Never Sang for My Father” (1967). Also in 1967, she appeared in “The Comedians,” an MGM motion picture starring Elizabeth Taylor and, Richard Burton, and Alec Guinness, in 1968 with Helen Hayes in the ABC-TV production, “Arsenic and Old Lace;” and in the stage production “All the Way Home,” a drama by Ted Mosel, based on James Agee’s A Death in the Family, which won both the Pulitzer Prize and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award in 1961.

Within the last few years, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass., and Rollins College, Winter Park, Fla., have awarded Miss Gish honorary degrees. This year, her autobiography Lillian Gish: The Movies, Mr. Griffith and Me, by Lillian Gish and Ann Pinchot, was published by Prentice-Hall, Inc. In addition, she has recently given performances of “Lillian Gish and the Movies” in Moscow, Paris, London, and the Edinburgh Festival.

Miss Gish’s narrated program, to be presented at the Library, October 20, traces the history of silent movies. It was created and produced by Nathan Kroll. [Miss Gish was being managed by the Kroll Agency at that time.] Ed. Note: No images accompanied this announcement.

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Miss Gish and the Movies by Gary Arnold, Washington Post October 21, 1969

Lillian Gish, perhaps the greatest actress ever to grace the American screen, brought her nostalgic one-woman show, “Lillian Gish and the Movies,” to the Library of Congress last evening. An invited audience in [the] Coolidge Auditorium responded enthusiastically to the performer and her material – a discursive illustrated lecture, combining film clips with ardent personal memories and humorous anecdotes.

Miss Gish looked trim and radiant in a long white evening gown, and although she had been supplied with a microphone, her voice seemed to ring through the hall in such a confident, professionally trained way that she didn’t need the amplification.

At one point Miss Gish described an argument with D. W. Griffith, the famed director, over the fade-out sequence of “Way Down East.” The heroine has just been dragged in from the snow after narrowly and quite literally escaping death; when Griffith insisted that she comb her hair and paint her lips for the final clinch, Miss Gish protested. “Do you think I should look like that after everything I’ve been through?”

Griffith, so much a realist in some things, proved to be an opportunist on this point. “Comb your hair! We want to make money in this picture, and that’s what the audience wants.”

Miss Gish later came to believe he was right, commercially speaking, but she apparently capitulated believing he was dead wrong. As far as a viewer can tell, her playing of the scene is quite straightforward –she slowly regains consciousness, sees the hero (Richard Barthelmess), and they embrace. But while we were watching this scene, Miss Gish said, “You can see how mad I am,” and suddenly those tightly closed lips did begin to suggest an emotion somewhat stronger than unconsciousness. Not that it matters, of course—this is just one piece of stylistic equipment of the repertoire of a consummate actress.

The excerpts began with a 1901 nickelodeon item in which motion itself is a novelty—the “action” consists of a smiling girl in a swirling dress. From there Miss Gish took us to Melies (“A Trip to the Moon”) and “Baron Munchausen’s Dream”) Edwin S. Porter (“Rescued from an Eagle’s Nest,” the little melodrama that introduced a young actor named David Wark Griffith to the screen) and the triumphant experiments of Griffith the director (“A Girl and Her Trust,” “The Musketeers of Pig Alley,” “The Birth of a Nation”).

Interwoven with Griffith’s work were examples of the other major innovators and personalities of the period-Mack Sennett, [Charlie] Chaplin, [Buster] Keaton, [Douglas] Fairbanks, [Rudolph] Valentino (a very amusing clip from “Blood and sand” in which Valentino, looking surprisingly like Elvis Presley, succumbs with some effort to the allure of Nita Naldi). The program closed with excerpts from later Gish-Griffith collaborations (the rescue scenes from “Orphans of the Storm,” and “Way Down East,” as well as Miss Gish’s startling “mad” scene in the latter, when she learns of the death of her child)  and three films from her MGM period—“La Boheme” with John Gilbert, “The White Sister” with Ronald Colman, and “The Wind,” with Lars Hanson.    

The lecture was presented here under the auspices of the Gertrude Clarke Whittall Poetry and Literature Fund and the Motion Picture Department of the Library’s Prints and Photographs Division. Miss Gish plans a national tour.  

Miss Gish was introduced by Librarian of Congress Quincy Mumford. A champagne reception in the Great Hall followed the lecture.

© Washington Post

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LC Information Bulletin, Vol 28, No. 44, October 30, 1969

Lillian Gish presented “Lillian Gish and the Movies” to an invited audience in the Coolidge Auditorium on Monday, October 20. The program sponsored by the Gertrude Clarke Whittall Poetry and Literature Fund, was designed by Miss Gish and her producer, Nathan Kroll, to show her career and the history of the silent films. Miss Gish became an international star when she was very young and this art form was in its infancy, but some of the films shown antedated even her debut. Many of the film makers whose work she chose are also represented in the Library of Congress Film Archive.
The film program revealed the development of camera, acting, and editing, techniques in this medium, envisioned by David Wark Griffith as a universal art form, capable of transcending all boundaries. Miss Gish’s commentary was in large part a tribute to Griffith, about whom she wrote in her book, Lillian Gish: The Movies, Mr. Griffith and Me, and she asked her audience, “Shouldn’t this man have a postage stamp?”

It also included, however, her reminiscences of Mary Pickford, Ronald Colman, John Gilbert, Rudolph Valentino, and other stars of the silent era, as well as glimpses of studio and on location conditions in early days, and an explanation of her own interpretation of her roles.

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“A Trip to the Moon” can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5x_M_vcNVY

“Baron Munchausen’s Dream” is at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0hN83ykX644

Edwin S. Porter’s “Rescued from an Eagle’s Nest” at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ehFrT2cE5JI

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Jim Patterson enjoyed a long friendship with actress Lillian Gish. He is a Life Member of the Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum, Fremont, California, a long-time member of the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, and a long serving Board member of the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Theater, Bowling Green State University. He has published more than 200 articles on the Silent era and his work has appeared in Christian Science Monitor, San Francisco Chronicle, Classic Images, Auburn Magazine, San Francisco Examiner, (Raliegh, North Carolina) News and ObserverFremont Bulletin, and many others. For speaking availability, contact JEPWriter@gmail.com


February 18 in Film History

1929 First Academy Awards Presented
Best Film: Wings Best Actress Janet Gaynor Best Actor Emil Jannings
All Results https://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1929

Deaths: 

·         1963 Monte Blue, American silent film actor (Apache), dies of heart attack at 73
·         Monte Blue worked as a stuntman for Griffith and an extra in The Birth of a Nation (1915), which was his first film. Griffith took him in and made him an assistant on his classic epic Intolerance: Love's Struggle Throughout the Ages (1916), where he earned another small part. Gradually moving to support roles for both Griffith and Cecil B. DeMille, Blue earned his breakthrough role as "Danton" in Griffith's Orphans of the Storm (1921) with sisters Lillian Gish and Dorothy Gish. He rose to stardom as a rugged romantic lead opposite Hollywood's top silent stars, among them Gloria Swanson, Clara Bow and Norma Shearer. He made a relatively easy transition into talkies as he had a fine, cultivated voice, but, at the same time, lost most of his investments when the stock market crashed in 1929. By the 1930s the aging star had moved back into small, often unbilled parts, continuously employed, however, by his old friend DeMille and Warner Bros. At the end of his life he was working as an advance man for the Hamid-Morton Circus in Milwaukee. He died of a coronary attack complicated by influenza in 1963.
·         - IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net
·          
·         1976 Joseph Henabery, actor/director (Cobra), dies at 88
Joseph E. Henabery, veteran motion picture director and silent‐film actor, who played the role of Abraham Lincoln in D. W. Griffith's “The Birth of a Nation.” died Wednesday at the Motion Picture Country House in Woodland Hills, Calif. He was 88 years old and lived in Tarzana, Calif.

During his 43‐year film career, Mr. Henabery directed such stars as Douglas Fairbanks, Rudolph Valentino, Roscoe (Fattyl Arbuckle and Jack Holt. He learned his craft under the tutelage of Mr. Griffith and was his assistant during the making of the epic “Intolarance.”
Born in Omaha, Mr. Henabery grew up in Los Angeles. after a career in railroading, he entered the burgeoning movie industry in 1913 and within two years became a director of feature‐length films.

After first playing bit parts for Universal Studios, he went to work for Mr. Griffith at the Reliance Majestic Company in East Hollywood.

Later with Mr. Griffith and the Fine Arts Company, he did the research for “Intolerance” and played one of the three Pharisees in the Babylonian sequence and the role of Admiral Coligny in the Massacre of St. Bartholomew sequence. He also served as Mr. Griffith's production assistant and directed the two Babylonian orgy scenes that appeared in the film after its premiere showing.

Mr. Griffith then gave Mr. Henabery his first directing assignment in "The Children of the Fend.” which starred Dorothy Gish. Mr. Henabery next joined Famous Players‐Lasky and directed Douglas Fairbanks in several pictures.

After a short stint in the Coast Artillery in World War I. Mr. Henahery in 1919 made his, last picture with Mr. Fairbanks, “His Majesty the American,” for the new United Artists Corporation.

Later he directed for First National Pictures and Ince Studios, and then returned to Famous Players‐Lasky. There he made pictures with Arbuckle, Mary Miles Minter and Jack Holt.

In 1924, Mr. Henahery made one of the earliest all‐star pictures, “The Stranger,” adapted from John Galsworthy's “The First and Last,” starring Betty Compson, Richard Dix and Lewis Stone, among others. He then directed Rudolph Valentino's last film for Famous Players, “A Sainted Devil,” released in 1924, and “Tongues of Flame,” with Thomas Meighan.

After a long illness, Mr. Henabery resumed his career in 1926 and as a freelance made more than 15 major pictures for various studios. Among the stars he directed were Joseph Schildkraut, Glenn Hunter, Constance Bennett, Noah Beery, Ben Lyon, Mary Astor, Lloyd Hughes and Lionel Barrymore.

In the early 1930's Mr. Henabery moved East and joined Vitaphone Studios in Brooklyn. directing Judy Canova and Jack Haley Sr., the Easy Aces comedy shorts and the S. S. Van Dine murder mysteries.

Before, during and after World War II, he worked for the Army Signal Corps, making training films and documentaries, including “Shades of Gray,” about emotional problems of battle‐fatigue. He retired in 1957.

Surviving are his wife, Lilian; a son, Robert of New York; a daughter, Mary Figueroa of Tarzana; three grandchildren, and four great‐grandchildren.

© New York Times
·         1977 Ralph Graves, actor (Extra Girl), dies at 77
Ralph Graves was born on January 23, 1900 in Cleveland, Ohio, USA as Ralph Horsburgh. He was an actor and writer, known for The Extra Girl (1923), Ladies of Leisure (1930) and Speed Limited (1935). He was married to Betty Flournoy, Marjorie Seaman and Virginia Goodwin. He died on February 18, 1977 in Santa Barbara, California, USA.

Silent screen comedian at Essanay and, later, Sennett studios. Starred in his own series of 22 two-reel comedies made between 1924 and 1926.
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Jim Patterson enjoyed a long friendship with actress Lillian Gish. He is a Life Member of the Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum, Fremont, California, a long-time member of the San Francisco Silent Film Festival, and a long serving Board member of the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Theater, Bowling Green State University. He has published more than 200 articles on the Silent era and his work has appeared in Christian Science MonitorSan Francisco ChronicleClassic ImagesAuburn MagazineSan Francisco Examiner, (Raleigh, North Carolina) News and ObserverFremont Bulletin, and many others. For speaking availability, contact JEPWriter@gmail.com

Monday, February 6, 2017

Launch of United Artists A Film History Moment by Jim Patterson

Lillian Gish Knew Silent Film Era was No Place for Sissies!
(c) Pioneer Press Service
Film History Moment by Jim Patterson 
On February 5, 1919, Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks and D.W. Griffith launched United Artists.
Griffith’s first UA film was 1920’s “Way Down East” with Lillian Gish. It was the film that established the legendary dedication of Miss Gish, who risked her life on an ice floe, to director and film. “Way Down East” is not on the National Film Registry, a U.S. film preservation program managed through the Library of Congress.  To nominate “Way Down East” to the National Film Registry via an online form see https://www.loc.gov/programs/national-film-preservation-board/film-registry/nominate/. If you would prefer send a letter of nomination to National Film Registry Library of Congress Packard Campus for Audio Visual Conservation 19053 Mt. Pony Road Culpeper, VA 22701. There is no fee to nominate a film. 
United Artists co-founder Charlie Chaplin, who directed, produced, scored and starred in most of his own films, re-shot one scene in 1931’s "City Lights," featuring his famous "Little Tramp" character, 342 times.
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Jim Patterson is a silent film historian whose work has appeared in Christian Science Monitor, San Francisco Chronicle, Classic Images, San Francisco Examiner, Financial Times, Auburn Magazine and others. He is available to speak at silent film festivals and travels from Washington DC. He served on the Board of the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Theater at Bowling Green State University for more than 10 years.

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Lillian Gish in Time/Life's The Roaring '20s


                                                     Time/Life's The Roaring '20s (Clara Bow, upper left, and Babe Ruth,                                                       upper right.)

                                                                   Lillian Gish



Lillian Gish
Gish’s deal with MGM was so lucrative that she asked for a cut to pay supporting actors more

Widely considered the finest actress of the silent era, Lillian Gish did more than any other performer to define the techniques that worked on film. Her trademark wistful gestures and contemplative looks offered viewers a portal into her characters’ souls. Fragile and vulnerable, Gish presented the perfect persona for the delicate damsels in distress she often played.
Like so many of the stars of the 1920s, Gish entered show business as a child. When she was 19, her lifelong friend and New York City neighbor Mary Pickford introduced her to director D. W. Griffith. Soon she was appearing in various Griffith productions, including feature-length films like the controversial Birth of a Nation in 1915.  

Gish left Griffith in 1925 for a deal with MGM that was so lucrative that she negotiated her contract down so her supporting actors and crew could get paid more. Gish shifted her focus to the theater in the 1930s and ‘40s, then returned to movies and the new medium of television in the 1950s. Her final film was the 1987 drama Whales of August, about two elderly and incompatible sisters played by Gish and another screen legend, Bette Davis.

Text from Time/Life's special on The Roaring '20s
Released January 2017.

Jim Patterson note: Lillian Gish’s last film with D. W. Griffith was Orphans of the Storm in 1922. She went abroad to film White Sister 1923 and Romola 1924 and Griffith had no role in either film. Her MGM career began in 1925.

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Monday, January 9, 2017

2016 Highlights in The Year of Lillian Gish






                   "It's Not Only Long - It's Read!" Lillian brushing her hair. She never cut it. circa late                              1940s.




2016 – Highlights of The Year in Gish

December 30, 1925 The 90th anniversary of “Ben-Hur” with Ramon Navarro. The film was released December 30 1925 and many fans did not see it until 1926. Lillian is among the many MGM stars who saw and thus appeared in the crowd during the chariot scene.

February 46th anniversary of Lillian Gish's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (For film work).

March 2016 100th birthday of playwright Albert Horton Foote, Jr. (March 14, 1916 – March 4, 2009) perhaps best known for his screenplays for the 1962 film To Kill a Mockingbird and the 1983 film Tender Mercies, and his notable live television dramas during the Golden Age of Television, including The Trip to Bountiful starring Lillian Gish as Carrie Watts. (Lillian Gish also played this role in the first Broadway production of "The Trip to Bountiful.") He received the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1995 for his play The Young Man From Atlanta and two Academy Awards, one for an original screenplay, Tender Mercies, and one for adapted screenplay, To Kill a Mockingbird. In 1995, In describing his three-play work, The Orphans' Home Cycle, the drama critic for the Wall Street Journal said: "Foote, who died last March, left behind a masterpiece, one that will rank high among the signal achievements of American theater in the 20th century." In 2000, he was awarded the National Medal of Arts.

May 8, 1947 The 70th anniversary of premiere of “Duel in the Sun” Lillian received an Academy Award nomination for Supporting Actress

August 9, 1926 The 90th anniversary of “The Scarlett Letter” starring Lillian Gish and Lars Hansen

September 5 100th anniversary of “Intolerance,” premiered September 5, 1916. Two of the most famous images in silent cinema are from “Intolerance.” (1) The Babylon Gate and (2) Lillian Gish rocking the cradle of time.

October 14 Lillian Gish’s birthday!

December 1, 1966 the 50th anniversary of “Follow Me Boys” a Walt Disney production with Lillian in a supporting role.

The fourth Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize recipient Bob Dylan (1997) awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. He did not attend the awards ceremony.  

November 2016 The 23rd Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize to Elizabeth LeCompte. Ceremony at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Manhattan.  

October 2016 25th anniversary of Lillian Gish's induction into the Theater Hall of Fame in New York!

August/October 1986 30th anniversary of filming “The Whales of August” on Cliff Island, Maine. 
The film premiere was August 19, 1987. This was Lillian’s last film.

December 2016 “Whales of August” playwright David Barry dies.

December 2016 Death of Fritz Weaver, 90, Lillian’s Broadway costar in Eugene O‘Neill’s “The Family Reunion.” (1958)

November 2016 Death of Tammy Grimes, 82, Lillian’s Broadway costar in “A Musical Jubilee” (November 13, 1975-February 1, 1976)

December 16, 2016 Library of Congress, National Film Registry, selects “The Musketeers of Pig Alley,” cinema’s first gangster film, starring Robert Harron and Lillian Gish and directed by D. W. Griffith in 1912. The film premiered October 31, 1912

2017 Events:
30th anniversary of Lillian’s book “An Actor’s Life for Me!”
30th anniversary of “The Whales of August” released August 1987.
October 14 Lillian’s birthday!
30th anniversary of The D. W. Griffith Prize to Lillian Gish.
24th Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize