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Holiday Book Roundup, Part 1

Classic Movie Guide-TCM         First, to all
of you who have told me that you miss having my annual Movie Guide to use as a stocking-stuffer, thank you from the bottom
of my heart. You helped keep the book alive for many years. I would remind you
that we do have a new 3rd
edition of Leonard Maltin’s Classic Movie
Guide
now available, presented by TCM. It’s a perfect gift for anyone who
loves old movies. And four of my vintage film books—Selected Short Subjects, The Great Movie Comedians, The Real Stars, and Don Miller’s B Movies—are now available
in e-book and print-on-demand form from Amazon. The physical books are
surprisingly good-looking, and the e-books are very reasonably priced at $3.99.

         As for the
flood of other publications, I’ve only had time to read three of them straight
through (so I could provide endorsement quotes). The other listings below are
merely descriptive, based on a quick browse…but they all look worthwhile to me.
I’ll have more for you tomorrow.

 

Douglas Fairbanks-King of Hollywood

DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS: THE FIRST KING OF HOLLYWOOD by Tracey
Goessel (Chicago Review Press)

 

         There have
been other good books written about Douglas Fairbanks, but after devoting
herself to this indelible star for years, Goessel has amassed a cornucopia of
material that makes her biography more personal and thorough than any other to
date. She even acquired Fairbanks’ love letters to Mary Pickford and quotes
from them liberally. In graceful prose she charts Doug’s amazing career and his
enduring influence on our popular culture: I knew that Batman creator Bob Kane
was inspired by The Mark of Zorro, but
didn’t realize that Superman’s emblematic pose, hands astride his hips, also
came from Fairbanks. At the same time, she debunks a number of myths and
legends to reveal Doug as a man with foibles and faults. Even if you know—or
think you know—everything concerning this towering figure of film history,
I highly recommend this book, and I daresay you will come away with a greater
appreciation of his many achievements.

 

Comedians: Drunks, Thieves, Soundrels

THE COMEDIANS: DRUNKS, THIEVES, SCOUNDRELS AND THE HISTORY
OF AMERICAN COMEDY
by Kliph Nesteroff (Atlantic Grove Press)

         This is one of
the best books I’ve ever read about show business. Nesteroff has been
conducting exhaustive interviews with veteran comics—both famous and obscure—for
the past decade, which he posts online at classicshowbiz.blogspot.com/.
From that wealth of first-hand material, and extensive research in trade papers
like Variety, he has amassed a dishy,
informal, and knowledgeable history of comedy in vaudeville, radio, early
television, the post-WWII nightclub era, late-night TV, and podcasts. The
topics of radio and vaudeville are too huge to cover comprehensively, but
Nesteroff is at his best in the nightclub and early-TV chapters, where he
offers straight talk about how people got ahead, dealt with mob connections to
show business, and competed with one another, often in cutthroat terms. This is
straight talk about largely undocumented areas of show business and it is
utterly fascinating. I feasted on this book and look forward to a possible
sequel.

 

Illeana Douglas-Dennis Hopper-325

I BLAME DENNIS HOPPER AND OTHER STORIES FROM A LIFE
LIVED IN AND OUT OF THE MOVIES
by Illeana Douglas (Flatiron Books)

 

         Actress
Illeana Douglas is known for her work in films and television and respected for
her reverence of movie history, instilled in her (to some degree) by her
grandfather, Melvyn Douglas. In this candid memoir she takes us back to her
childhood and spins tales of a free spirit in search of her path in life. She
also shares evocative memories of visiting her grandfather on the set of Being There. Her experiences breaking
into show business are equally insightful, poignant and amusing. In other
words, this is a “good read.”

 

Charlie Chase Archives-680

THE CHARLIE CHAPLIN ARCHIVES edited by Paul Duncan (Taschen)

 

         Imagine being
given free rein to go through Charlie Chaplin’s personal and professional
memorabilia. That’s the gift that Paul Duncan was given in order to assemble
this enormous, expensive, and impressive tome (in the same oversized format
with which Taschen publishers saluted Billy Wilder’s Some Like It Hot and Stanley Kubrick). Aided and abetted by film
historians and vintage sources, Duncan traces the chronology of Chaplin’s
career, beginning on stage and continuing through his final film, A Countess From Hong Kong. You’ll find
daily production reports, art directors’ set designs, rare photos, stills
showing deleted scenes, and an appendix that documents Chaplin’s unrealized
film projects. (One photo of Chaplin and Stan Laurel during a cross-country
trip with the Fred Karno troupe is almost worth the price of this book by
itself.) A gift book if there ever was one, this beautifully designed volume invites repeated visits.

 

Charley Chase Scrapbook-300

THE CHARLEY CHASE SCRAPBOOK compiled by Brian Anthony and
Bill Walker (Walker and Anthony Publications)

 

         A growing
number of aficionados have come to appreciate Charley Chase as one of the
unsung heroes of silent and early-sound comedy. Author Anthony got to know
Chase’s daughter and grandson and is now sharing never-before-seen photos and
clippings from his scrapbooks in this handsome volume, light on text but heavy
on beautifully-reproduced pictures. (I wish more of them were fully captioned,
but that’s my only quibble.) If you care about Charley Chase, consider this a
must.

 

 
HOLLYWOOD CELEBRATES THE HOLIDAYS 1920-1970 by Karie Bible
and Mary Mallory (Schiffer)
Hollywood Celebrates-350

 

         If you’ve
followed this website for any length of time you know I’m a sucker for
publicity stills showing starlets of the 1920s, ’30s, ’40s, and ’50s promoting
every holiday on the calendar, from New Year’s Eve to July 4th and
beyond. This handsome, well-designed book gathers scores of such stills, many
of which I’ve never seen before. The authors also provide the original promotional
copy that accompanied them when the studios sent them out to newspapers and
magazines. In these pages you’ll find everyone from Clara Bow to Buster Keaton,
from the Our Gang kids to Ann-Margret….mostly
in black & white but also in color. I find all of this irresistible.

 

Toons in Toyland Book-357

TOONS IN TOYLAND: THE STORY OF CARTOON CHARACTER MERCHANDISE
by Tim Hollis (University Press of Mississippi)

 

         Here’s a tantalizing
nostalgia trip for readers of a certain age. Hollis conjures up vivid memories
of comic books, picture puzzles, records, books, drinking glasses, board games,
and toys of all sorts that were produced for baby boomers (like me) who grew up
hooked on cartoons. Most books of this kind focus on Disneyana of the 1930s,
but Hollis documents the television era when he and I grew up. TV gave new life
to animated shorts from the 1930s and ’40s (Popeye, Mighty Mouse, Woody
Woodpecker, Bugs Bunny, etc.) before launching stars of its own (Huckleberry
Hound, Yogi Bear, The Flintstones). The one thing they had in common was
licensing and merchandising. The text traces the history of this phenomenon,
while the color photos bring back memories of toys I, for one, wish I’d held
onto.

 

Before Ever After-375

BEFORE EVER AFTER: THE LOST LECTURES OF WALT DISNEY’S
ANIMATION STUDIO
by Don Hahn and Tracey Miller-Zarneke (Disney Editions)

 

         Every student
of Disney history knows that Walt hired an art teacher named Don Graham away
from the prestigious Chouinard Art Institute in the 1930s to help coach and
train his staff for the production of Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs
. But how many of us have had the opportunity to
read transcripts of those lectures and others delivered by the studio’s leading
artists, as well as guest speakers like architect Frank Lloyd Wright? You’ll
find all of that and more in this generous, oversized, well-illustrated volume
which reproduces the lectures as they were handed out to staff members in the
1930s, on hole-punched animation paper. Bravo to longtime Disney producer Hahn
and Miller-Zarneke for making all of this available.

 

Stuntwomen Untold Story-350

STUNTWOMEN: THE UNTOLD HOLLYWOOD STORY by Mollie Gregory
(University Press of Kentucky)

 

         Gregory has
conducted more than sixty interviews in order to compile this history of the
most underrated women in the movie business…from the era of silent-screen heroines
like Helen Gibson and Helen Holmes right up to the present day. Along the way,
these athletes and daredevils faced sexual discrimination, condescension, harassment,
and other barriers to building legitimate careers alongside their male
counterparts. This chronicle is long overdue and Gregory seems to have found
the right people to help tell the tale. Endorsements from Kevin Brownlow and
Anthony Slide certainly point in that direction.

 

More books tomorrow…and don’t forget my e-books and print-on-demand reissues of
these titles:
Leonard Maltin Books Combo-1Leonard Maltin Books Combo-2

 

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