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MissGoddess

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Posts posted by MissGoddess

  1. That's a great shot---from Lives of Bengal Lancer? Swarthy!

     

    I think you were the one who turned me on to photobucket---and I've already uploaded an embarrassing number of GC pix!!!

     

    The ones on your site are heaven---I've been drooling over them for the past 1/2 hour. I just love the one from the magazine article about his trip home---where he's standing next to his first teacher, Miss Davis---soooo cute!!! What a genuine sweetheart to remember her and want to see her. Unbelievable.

     

    :)

     

    Miss G

  2. , "all right, kid, he's not THAT great looking"

    > and they won't take the time to look over the photos!

    > But grrrrr, if only people actually realized how

    > amazing this feller is, the world would be a betty

    > place, lol.

     

    They actually SAY that? (looks astonished) I guess it really is in the eye of the beholder, but maybe they've got something else stuck in their eye that prevents them from seeing too clearly? Ha ha!

     

    >

    > I'm in Gary's hotel room until he kicks me out ;)

     

    In Italy they call it "eating the key". ;)

  3. > You're cracking me up!!! I think he sold

    > encyclopedia's and although the book didn't say it, I

    > can imagine he did pretty well. I mean seriously I

    > can't imagine being a housewife and your in the

    > kitchen cleaning up the breakfast dishes or something

    > fun like that and then you hear a knock at the door.

    > At first you're a little annoyed b/c you're up to

    > you're elbows in dishwater. You open the door and and

    > all the irritation you felt goes away as soon as you

    > see that tall young man with dark hair and piercing

    > blue eyes probably giving you an unsure half smile as

    > he asks in that wonderful western drawl 'would you to

    > buy an encylopedia ma'am?' Now seriously, how could

    > you say no ;)

     

    Lol! I couldn't say no if he was selling some swamp land in Florida! But then you feel like sinking into to the ground when you realize you're dripping dirty dishwater, your hair is up in curlers and you have your mangiest old frock on! Reminds me of that scene in Indiscreet, when Ingrid Bergman first meets Cary Grant and she has a bathrobe on and all that cold-cream on her face---and there he is, Mr. Perfect, in a tuxedo!

  4. Clooney and Gable both have heavy eyebrows, but I honestly don't see any other resemblance. I think Gable was gorgeous, in spite of his imperfections; I can understand why many think Clooney looks perfect, but yet I feel no attraction for him.

     

    That's what makes horse races!

     

    ;)

    Miss G

  5. >>>Then while in LA working as many things including a door to door salesman (I would buy anything he was selling) <<<

     

    Coop-the-salesman: Ma'am, do you need a 40-ton tractor? Cause I'm sellin' one!

     

    Coopsgirl: Whatever you're sellin'---I'm buyin'! Now come on in and let's make a deal!

    ;)

  6. Flynn and Niven: Cirrohsis-by-the-Sea. I can only imagine when those two were at a party together, it must have been uproarious.

     

    That is a mighty disappointment to hear about Rory Flynn's book---because it's been on my "must read" list, too! What a shame and wasted opportunity, too, to bring back some honor to her family's name.

     

    I feel as you about Maria's efforts, which I loudly applaud. She's doing a marvelous job of representing exactly what her father represented, namely discernment and integrity where his name is concerned.

     

    There are scarcely any left, who "remember when..." about the great figures of the last century and care enough to keep their work from being forgotten. If only to bring a little light into this otherwise grim world.

     

    Miss G

  7. Beleive me, I love the poetic license he takes, too---I have a soft spot for witty raconteurs. I gobbled up David Niven's books ("The Moon's A Ballon" and "Bring on the Empty Horses") and half their entertainment value would be lost, if he had stuck to "just the facts, ma'am". ;)

     

    Miss G

  8. The account of those three harrowing nights, as you say, just get to me. And when he tells of being mobbed by people after the trial, describing their behavior to like primitives---only worse, and why? Because he'd been accused and cleared of a rape charge? That such a thing should hang over him for the rest of his life, driving him to become a caricature of himself instead a happy, fulfilled man is the stuff of tragedy.

     

    And people are no better today---the Anna Nicole fiasco, all the sickening absorption in the problems of celebrities (and non-celebs, on the "reality" shows). Yikes!

     

    I can't wait to get to both "Beam Ends" and "Showdown"---I know I'll treasure them. It's too bad he's not here to read what you and I have written, or seen the complimentary documentary TCM produced---it might have surprised him.

     

    And, as odd as it might seem, I think he and Gary would have been splendid together in a film.

     

    Again, thanks for turning me on to My Wicked, Wicked Ways!

     

    ErrolFlynn8.jpg

  9. Love his sneery, sarcastic face and look out when he got mad! He's an original.

     

    My favorites:

     

    The Garden of Evil (the final scenes are really his)

    Don't Bother to Knock (he's rough in the beginning and then mellows toward Monroe's disturbed young woman)

    Panic in the Streets

    Cheyenne Autumn & Two Rode Together

    The Alamo

     

    Miss G

  10. It took viewing TCM's 2005 documentary, The Adventures of Errol Flynn, to open my eyes to what an extraordinary actor and man he was. Before that, I just thought of him as most do, somewhat dismissively, as a great movie swashbuckler and all around playboy.

     

    Of course, he was a playboy and a great swashie but so much more, too. The film clips revealed what I couldn't see before---he was a heck of an actor! And when I learned about the astonishing life he led before ever reaching Hollywood, then I was hooked.

     

    He was an astute, witty, cynical, poetic and deeply introspective man who was--here is the kicker---far too sensitive for the public life he led. As contradictory as it sounds, that is what he was, a man of extreme contradictions and all of which he was fully aware by the way. It's one thing to be like that, quite another and quite unusual to know it and to question "why".

     

    His autobio may be inflated in parts for effect but the introspective chapters are fascinating and painfully honest.

     

    Whew, ok, enough "All About Errol"....

     

    ;)

  11. I just have to tell you, Pktrekgirl, I'm absolutely enthralled with the Errol Flynn autobiography! It's taking me so long to finish only because I have so little time but I become like one possessed once I delve into it---and I find myself just heart broken over his struggles and questionings about who he was and where he belonged. I just finished the chapter about his near suicide attempts. It sent cold chills down my spine. It's tragic a man with so much potential felt so worthless.

     

    This is without a doubt the best autobiography I've ever read.

     

    Miss G

  12. I would include:

     

    And So Ends Our Night - Directed by John Cromwell

    Algiers - also by John Cromwell

    A Scandal in Paris - directed by Douglas Sirk

    Mademoiselle Fifi - directed by Robert Wise

    The Tamarind Seed - directed by Blake Edwards

    The Proud Rebel - directed by Michael Curtiz

    The Real Glory - directed by Henry Hathaway

    Clash by Night - directed by Fritz Lang

    Don't Bother to Knock - directed by Roy Ward Baker

    The Secret of Convict Lake - directed by Michael Gordon

    Summertime - Directed by David Lean

    The General Died at Dawn - Directed by Lewis Milestone

  13. Hi!

     

    I remember liking this movie so much as a teenager (I was really into "brooding, Byronic" types. lol!) and it was a pleasure to revisit it. I did notice the resemblance of Ann Todd to Garbo, which made it particularly hard to believe her as a 14 year old with those features.

     

    James Mason looked very attractive but his personality would have sent me packing today. On a young girl, it might have it's effect, though, and that is what they whole story is about.

     

    What I thought was amusing was here was this poor little orphan girl who has only one friend growing up and then suddenly, after she's grown, she has FOUR men at her feet! And she picks the crankiest one. The psychological implications of that choice make for a whole new movie!

     

    Miss G

  14. I'm so happy they've restored "Snows...". If only for that one, magical scene in which Peck and Ava get started. It's in the cafe, and at one point Ava leans in to ask for a light of her cigarette. It's one of Ava's (or any actress') most spectacular "beauty moments." The lighting and her red dress, white shoulders and black hair combine to knock your socks off.

     

    The whole film is beautifully shot but that scene in the cafe is the one I always remember with such vividness. To see it as it was originally intended will be a thrill.

     

    :x

  15. So far, Cooper, Garbo and Chaplin are my favorite silent performers. I'd love to see Clara Bow's movies too. Here in New York at The Film Forum a few years ago they had a retrospective of her films. Alas, I did not go and I've regretted it ever since. She was hugely popular in her day, putting "The 'It' Girl" into the vernacular.

     

    I also like the few German expressionist silents I've seen, too, like F.W. Murnau's SUNRISE. What a marvelous work of art that is.

     

    One plus about silents is that they are universal---because there is no dialogue any country could import them and simply translate the titles. No wonder the cinema became such an instantaneous, world-wide phenomenon.

     

    Miss G

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