Tuesday, July 14, 2015

On FANDOR tonight: FRANCES DAY & OLAF OLSEN in "Tread Softly" (1952)

      

A mild little British backstage mystery about nefarious goings-on in an abandoned theater, Tread Softly featured American singer-actress Frances Day (1907-1984) and Olaf Olsen (1919-2000), here conspiring to take over a failing but potentially lucrative show. A busy performer in what can only be termed experimental British television productions in the 1930, Olsen, from Heidelberg, Germany, left the United Kingdom when his career floundered in the 1960s in favor of Connecticut. Miss Day, who hailed from New Jersey, meanwhile, remained in England but in increasing obscurity. British reporter Michael Thornton, of the Mail Online, takes up her story in a March 28, 2008 column entitled "Uncovering the mystery of Britain's first sex symbol [sic]":

The scene was an unpretentious red-brick house in Maidenhead, Berkshire, on a hot August afternoon in 1981.

Apart from the top-floor flat, the building was divided into offices. The owner of the property, Samta Young Johnson, stood on the stairs, passing the time of day with a young solicitor, Howard McBrien, whose legal firm rented one of the floors in the building.

Mrs Johnson was a woman in her 70s, and a figure of absolute mystery, the subject of intense and feverish local gossip. Yet she blithely ignored every question about her past

Dressed carelessly and somewhat drably - "like the proverbial OAP", according to one of her neighbours - she nevertheless had an indefinable quality that compelled attention. 

McBrien, who regarded her as "a great character", knew her to be fond of a glass or two of bubbly, a flutter on the gee-gees and the finest haute cuisine. 

What he did not know was that this reclusive figure had once been one of the most legendary and celebrated stars of her age and the idol of millions of film fans and theatregoers. 

American-born and flagrantly bisexual, in an era that scarcely accommodated such things, she had attracted men and women equally, becoming the mistress of four royal princes, and also of a future British Prime Minister. 

She also inspired the passionate admiration of America's bisexual First Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, as well as that of the world's most famous dramatist, George Bernard Shaw, who wrote one of his last plays for her. 

On that August afternoon in the early Eighties, this tantalising figure, guarding her secrets, walked on up the stairs. Then suddenly she turned back to the young solicitor. 

"By the way, Howard, you have children, don't you?" 

"Yes, I have two boys," replied the puzzled McBrien. 

"I thought so," she said, and continued her ascent to her flat. 

McBrien was not to know that that day she would make her last will, one of the shortest and strangest documents on record, which she wrote out in her own handwriting, summoning a local draughtsman and a factory storeman to witness her signature. 

When, three years later, Samta Young Johnson died from leukaemia at the age of 75, Howard McBrien was dumbfounded to discover that she had left him her house and her entire estate, valued at £162,000. 

He was even more amazed to learn that his benefactress had been the fabulous Frances Day, Britain's original blonde bombshell and this country's first stage and screen sex symbol. 

But she herself had lived in denial of that for almost 20 years. 

What was it that caused a wealthy, famous and beautiful star to turn her back completely on her own past, abandoning even close friends such as the actor Sir John Mills and the ballet dancer Sir Frederick Ashton, and to deny her identity to the point of claiming that Frances Day had been her own mother? 

This extraordinary enigma is resurrected by the release of a new double-CD to mark the centenary of her birth in December. 

It features 49 of her money-spinning hit records - made between 1931 and 1958 - and reveals that she was a dazzlingly talented performer, oozing sex appeal that seems at least two decades ahead of its time, coming across as a forerunner of Marilyn Monroe. 

Her story begins in the U.S. city of East Orange, New Jersey, where Frances Victoria Schenk, the daughter of an artist, Frank Schenk, of German-Jewish descent, was allegedly born on December 16, 1908.

Allegedly, because there is no birth certificate. Like almost everything in her life, even her parentage is shrouded in mystery, and rumours persisted for years that she was really the illegitimate daughter of Horace Dodge, the wildly eccentric millionaire American automobile pioneer. 

At the age of 16, Frances was to be found dancing the Charleston in the notorious New York speakeasy of nightclub queen Texas Guinan, whose invariable greeting to her patrons was "Hello suckers!" 

There, little Frankie Schenk was spotted by an ambitious Australian impresario, Beaumont Alexander, who thought she was "the ultimate in sex appeal". 

He brought her to London, changed her name to Frances Day, transformed her into a platinum blonde, which was not her natural colour, and sent her to elocution lessons to eradicate all trace of her New Jersey accent. 

Soon, he had masterminded her career as one of London's first exotic - and erotic - cabaret stars, dancing in West End nightclubs, where she created a sensation by performing in a G-string with only an ostrich fan for cover. 

When she was 19, she married Beaumont Alexander, who was 18 years her senior, at London's Marylebone register office, but within three years they had separated, and she divorced him in 1938. There would be a legion of lovers - of both sexes - but she would never remarry. 

In 1929, she first partnered the 21-year-old John Mills on stage. 

"She was what in those days one called 'a knock-out'," Sir John recalled. "She was small with blonde hair and so well-endowed up front that, frankly, to put it in Army terms, she sported the largest pair of 'Bristols' it had ever been my pleasure to set eyes upon. 

"She was devastatingly attractive, and I discovered later on, when I was in a show with her, that the men in the audience simply couldn't take their eyes off her." 

Frances Day exploded into fully fledged stardom in the West End musical Out Of The Bottle, in 1932, aged 23. The following year, her extremely sexual performance as the notorious nightclub singer La MÙme ("The Shrimp") in Alexander Korda's movie The Girl From Maxim's rocketed her to the top of the film world, too. 

Then, in 1934, came her biggest West End hit, Jill Darling!, in which her dancing partner was ballet legend Frederick (later Sir Frederick) Ashton. He would remember Day as "absolutely incandescent.

"The word 'star' in the theatrical sense might have been invented to describe her". 

Frances Day was the 1930s equivalent of Marilyn Monroe: blonde, well-endowed, outrageously sexy and infinitely suggestive. 

Her risquÈ songs were provocatively delivered with a breathy, squeaky gurgle, as in one of her most celebrated hits, Me And My Dog: "I'm just a little girl lost in a fog, Me and my dog, We're lost in a fog, Me and the dog are just wandering in a fog, Won't some kind gentleman see us home?" 

The "little girl" in question is, of course, a prostitute, but Day delivered the number with so much charm and humour that not even the crustiest old dowager could have objected. 

When she returned to the London stage in Beverley Nichols's 1937 revue, Floodlight, her co-star was John Mills, who observed: "Men adored her, but women disliked her. She became a permanent threat to their happy marriages from the moment the curtain went up." 

More successful films followed, and further West End hits, including The Fleet's Lit Up in 1938, in which she stopped the show nightly with Cole Porter's song "It's De-Lovely", which became her signature tune. 

Diana Morgan, who wrote much of the material for Day's 1939 revue, Black And Blue, remembered her wearing diamond and ruby bracelets from wrist to elbow. 

Her lovers had included the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII and Duke of Windsor), his brother Prince George, their cousin, Lord Louis Mountbatten, Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, Prince Bertil of Sweden, and Britain's Foreign Secretary and future Prime Minister, Anthony Eden. 

It was not only men who fell under Day's androgynous, quicksilver spell. 

After Frances's visit to the White House, America's bisexual First Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, 23 years her senior, wrote to her: "I find I am quite unable to resist your extraordinary and tempestuous magnetism." 

But as her fame grew, the more outlandish Day's behaviour became. Choreographer Wendy Toye once saw her arrive just as the curtain was going up. 

"She simply threw off her white mink coat and went on stage in a pink and white lacy nightdress," she said. 

"But her name above the title filled theatres, so managements were afraid to reprimand her in case she walked out of the show." 

Although she was one of the first truly liberated showbusiness lesbians - Tallulah Bankhead and Marlene Dietrich were also involved in sexual interludes with her - Day's primary reputation was as a man-eater. 

In 1941, she co-starred with the comedians Flanagan and Allen in the revue Black Vanities. When Frances arrived at one rehearsal looking decidedly crumpled, Bud Flanagan quipped: "Little Day, you've had a busy man." 

It was in that production that she introduced the song A Pair Of Silver Wings as her personal tribute to the Royal Air Force. 

Close friends knew, however, that she sang it for one man only: her fiancÈ, Squadron Leader Sam Johnson DFC: "Although they say he's just a crazy sort of guy, To me he means a million other things, For he's the one who taught this happy heart of mine to fly, He wears a pair of silver wings." 

But during Day's run in the wartime West End musical Du Barry Was A Lady, Johnson was killed on active service. 

She received the news with outward stoicism, but some said that she was never quite the same person again. 

Her career went on. In 1944, she starred in another film, Fiddlers Three, and played the title role in Peter Pan on the London stage. But Diana Morgan felt that "the light that had made her a star was flickering and going out". 

Yet her natural outrageousness remained. At an ENSA performance in Brussels, she sang "Thanks For All You've Done" directly to Field Marshal Montgomery of Alamein, and brought a blush to the bisexual hero's cheek when she "roguishly presented him with a pair of her drawers". 

Noel Coward, who witnessed the incident, recorded that Monty "received both the sentiment and the drawers with dignified restraint". 

After the war, there was a dramatic downswing in Day's popularity. In 1946, the West End musical Evangeline, of which she was both star and co-director, was booed by the gallery and closed after only 32 performances. 

Her next London appearance, with Bonar Colleano in the comedy Separate Rooms, also flopped. By 1949, when she starred in the West End revue Latin Quarter, she was showing signs of increasingly erratic behaviour, causing the show to over-run by insisting on performing encores that the management had vetoed. 

It was then, at the age of 41, that she began to pursue the legendary playwright George Bernard Shaw, who was 92. 

"The ficklenesss of the women I love," wrote Shaw, "is only equalled by the infernal constancy of the women who love me." 

To Day, he wrote: "You want to come down to flirt with me." 

What she actually wanted was to get him to write a play for her, and in the end she succeeded. "She seduced him into it," says Diana Morgan. 

But once the resulting play, Buoyant Billions, opened in London, Day transferred her attention from the aged author to a handsome 27-year-old actor in the cast, the bisexual Denholm Elliott, who married twice but ultimately died from Aids. 

"Denholm was a bachelor and more interested in men at that time," says a friend. "Frankie didn't let that deter her in the slightest. She had the pants off him in no time." 

With the West End closed to her on account of her prima donna-like antics, Day turned to television, appearing in the Fifties as a panellist on What's My Line?, in which she irritated the chairman, Eamonn Andrews, by her insistence on "special lighting". 

In another Fifties radio game show, The Name's The Same, Frank Muir would never forget his first meeting with Day. 

"From behind me," he recalled, "a hand came between my legs and grabbed my vitals. I turned round, considerably shocked, to find Frances Day looking up at me with her cute little pixie smile. 'Hello!' she said." 

Day's behaviour gradually became stranger and stranger. In 1956, she elected to make a number of rock records, under the pseudonym Gale Warning. One of them, a version of Elvis Presley's Heartbreak Hotel, is included on the new CD, and is a disastrous error of judgment. 

In 1957, Day's last lesbian lover, Moie Charles, the 46-year-old author of the film The Gentle Sex, was found gassed in her Chelsea flat. Her death was judged to be accidental, but it provided the final knock-out blow to Day's stability. 

Her last television play, The Witching Hour, with Dennis Price and Thora Hird in 1958, showed that she was ageing rapidly. 

Her final film was Michael Winner's Climb Up The Wall in 1960. 

In 1965, she starred in one final West End play, The Gulls, opposite Bob Monkhouse. 

Arriving for rehearsals on the back of a motorbike, in skin-tight black leather, sprayed with gold paint, she insisted on being billed as Frankie Day, and claimed that Frances had been her mother. 

Monkhouse commented: "I think she must have had some sort of emotional experience. She has just entirely thrown out the past.

"Frances Day, as far a she is concerned, seems to have ceased to exist." When the run ended, she gave up her Mayfair home, retreated to Maidenhead and changed her name by deed poll to Samta Young Johnson. Local residents who recognized her as Day found that any reference to her past was ignored. In 1981, one of her Thirties recordings was reissued after featuring in the Donald Sutherland movie Eye Of The Needle, but EMI Records had no address to which to send the royaltie. When she died at the age of 75 in April of 1984  from chronic myeloid leukaemia, her brief will — leaving everything to Howard McBrien, who had known nothing of her glory days — proved to be an extraordinarily poignant document. It directed that "there be no notice or information of any kind of my death, except for and if a death certifica is obligatory. "Any persons, private or Press, you shall simply say that I am no longer at this address. "'Gone away. Destination unknown', and that is the truth". It was a sad and bewildering final curtain tothe dazzling career of one of the most glamorous show business legends of the 20th century.



Monday, July 13, 2015

The home of JESSALYN VAN TRUMP

4764 Elmwood Ave. Hollywood, CA
The leading lady of the pioneering American Film Mfg. Company of Santa Barbara, CA, in 1912, Jessalyn Van Trump does perhaps not look like a blushing prairie flower by today's standard. But there the Ohio-born stage ingenue was, being menaced in hundreds of one-reel westerns by Jack Richardson and rescued by the strapping J. Warren Kerrigan , off screen a mother's boy who didn't care for girls, but that was acting for you. All under the direction of Allan Dwan, whose directorial career lasted until 1961. Miss Van Trump, in contrast, found stardom much more fleeting and was by the 1920s reduced to mainly extra work. She shared this Hollywood home with her sister and brother-in-law until at least 1930, dying in Los Angeles in May of 1939. The former Western heroine was 52.


                                     
 

Monday, July 6, 2015

DEE TATUM in "Mask of the Dragon" (1951)

Another minor Robert Lippert production geared toward neighborhood and, especially, rural theaters, Mask of the Dragon comes complete with an old fashioned organ score that suggests early television soap operas. Which was probably on purpose since part of the plot actually takes place in a TV studio during a live broadcast emceed by none other than legendary honorary "Hollywood Mayor" Johnny Grant, who proudly announces that the evening's entertainment includes several dull-sounding lectures and, as a sort of curtain act, an episode of The Perils of Pauline from 1914. Undoubtedly Lippert's sly way of suggesting that television was hardly a threat to motion pictures. Even motion pictures as cheaply made as Dragon. The leading lady here is a rather matronly Sheila Ryan, a former 20th Century-Fox starlet destined to marry hayseed performer Pat "Mr. Haney" Buttram. Lippert contract player Richard Travis essays the handsome, wavy haired hero, and Dee Tatum, another Lippert regular, is a TV songstress who meets her maker courtesy of a knife in the back right there on live television. The camera quickly swivels away from the corpse to a sign apologizing for the slight, technical, interruption of programming. 

Miss Tatum, meanwhile, became the wife of commercial pilot Carson Shade, whom she ditched in 1959 to marry another flyboy, marine corps ace turned author Gregory (Pappy) Boyington. To make sure the nuptials were legal in all 50 states, the couple wed a total of three times! In Denver, in Las Vegas and, finally, in Norfolk, CT. The new Mrs. Boyington, 34, was listed as a "television actress" in the wedding announcement.

Veteran B-movie actor Lyle Talbot and Dee Tatum in Mask of the Dragon (1951)

   
 
As it turns out, there is much more to the story of "Dee Tatum" and "Pappy" Boyington. The latter, Gregory Boyington, was actually a very well connected aviator whose life story, "Baa Baa Black Sheep," became a successful television series starring Robert Conrad. There were other TV shows on offer for the famed WWII Medal of Honor recipient, including a proposed series, "Danger Zone," to be hosted by him. It is therefore not surprising that he caught the eye of a failed television and movie starlet named Delores Tatum, "Tatum" apparently courtesy of an earlier Union, who claimed to have starred in movies in Europe and elsewhere. Well, the elsewhere was clearly her four or so bit parts for Robert Lippert and, that, as they say, was that. Wedded bliss with Boyington, which certainly had its ups and downs, ended in 1978, when she married for the fourth time, reportedly to a Hungarian immigrant. All of which is described in at least one book, 


and on several aviator websites. 

Pappy Boyington and wife Dee I. 1964, reconciled after an estrangement due to Mrs. Boyington"s previous marriage never having been legally terminated.

                        
                             


Pappy Boyington shortly before his death in 1988


Sunday, July 5, 2015

JEANNE COOPER in "Plunder Road"

Allow me to recommend this nifty little heist thriller from low budget producer Robert Lippert, Plunder Road (1957), one of his Regal Films released by 20th Century-Fox in glorious "Regalscope." Plunder Road, alas, seems to have survived in "pan and scan" only, but is is really not a story that lends itself to widescreen anyway and little is lost. A veteran cast that includes Gene Raymond, Wayne Morris and ElIsha Cook keep the wheels turning, literally, and one of my favorite actresses, Jeanne Cooper (of The Young and the Restless fame) appears as Raymond's girl and makes her few scenes count. As she always did.


The home of JOAN VOHS

5153 Donna Ave., Tarzana, CA
This sprawling cul-de-sac home in the upscale San Fernando Valley community of Tarzana (yes, named after the fictional jungle hero whose creator, Edgar Rice Burroughs, resided here) was the last home of movie starlet Joan Vohs (1927-2001) and her TV production manager husband John G. Stephens (My Three Sons, Simon and Simon).


                              
   

Saturday, July 4, 2015

DIANE GARRETT in "Stop That Cab" (1951)

The first wife of singer Bobby Van, Diane Garrett was another Hollywood chorus girl who once in a blue moon earned a speaking bit. As she has in Stop That Cap (1951), a so-called comedy that was actually two episodes of an unsold TV series bought by poverty row producer Robert Lippert, who glued them together and released the whole shebang on a double bill. Miss Garrett plays a movie star left on the sidewalk by her producer.

                            

The Terrace
1245 N. Laurel Ave, Los Angeles, CA
Bobby Van and his then wife, Diane Garrett, lived in this well known West Hollywood apartment building in 1954.



Friday, July 3, 2015

The home of MARI ALDON

3443 Hollydale Dr., Los Angeles, CA
This modest bungalow just south of Glendale Blvd. belonged in the 1990s to Mari Aldon (1925-2004), the Lithuanian-born Canadian who co-starred with Gary Cooper in the 1951 western Distant Drums. She married veteran director Tay Garnett (The Postman Always Rings Twice, 1946) in 1953 and was widowed in 1977. 


                                  
 

WENDY LEE in "I Shot Billy the Kid"

I just love my friend Les Adams' description of this low budget oater, one of several produced by and starring Don "Red" Barry for Robert L. Lippert Prod. Writes Les on IMDb:

"This William Berke Productions version of Billy the Kid's saga mixes much fiction, even to the names of all of the New Mexico towns other than one, with few facts but does give non-Producer star Don Barry a chance to show how lovable he can be even when playing a cold-blooded killer. He misses on that point, despite more grinning close-ups than the law should allow, but he is better than Jack Buetel. The film, based on just being a low-budget quickie version of Billy the Kid, aimed at grind-house Saturday matinées, hits that target dead on even if does use endless inserts of Billy or Sheriff Pat Garrett, on horseback, loping along hither and yon to pad the running time.

The real highlight of this one is possibly the single-worse performance ever seen in a B-western in Claude Stroud's portrayal of New Mexico Governor General Lew Wallace. Filled from front-to-back with B-western veterans such as Frank Ellis, Ray Henderson, Jack Perrin (playing a Garret deputy named Mack), and Merrill McCormick (playing a Garrett deputy not-named Mac), and even (brief) archive footage, featuring Bob Cason and Tom Tyler from Ron Ormond's Jimmy Ellison/Russell Hayden series, and excellent camera work by Ernest Miller and Archie Dalzell (one of the few instance of a camera operator actually receiving a screen credit in this period of film history), and editing by Carl Pierson in making the archive footage fit seamlessly, except the one instance of using really-archive footage from a silent film.

Actor/writer Dean Reisner, credited on the film as Dialogue Coach (a job he often performed) must have been out to lunch when the Stroud scenes were filmed."


The girl in the film, little more than a bit really, is one Wendy Lee, who may or may not be the Wendie Lee, who turned up in a few other films at the time, unbilled as "manicurist" or "telephone operator." This Miss Lee sadly died age 45 in 1968.

Wendy Lee with her leading men, Don Barry (r) and Lippert regular Tom Neal.