CelluloidKid
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*Blacklisted screenwriter Anne Froelick Taylor dies at 96*
Tuesday, Feb. 02, 2010
By DENNIS MCLELLAN - Los Angeles Times
*LOS ANGELES -- Anne Froelick Taylor, a Hollywood screenwriter who co-wrote the 1950 Joan Crawford drama "Harriet Craig" but whose career was cut short when she was blacklisted during the McCarthy era, has died. She was 96.*
Taylor, who received screen credit as Anne Froelick, died of natural causes Jan. 26 in a nursing home in Los Angeles, said her daughter, Priscilla Taylor Stephens.
Koch "soon began giving me dialogue to write and some of the scenes, and he encouraged me to be creative," Taylor said in an interview for the 1997 book "Tender Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Blacklist," an oral history by Patrick McGilligan and Paul Buhle.
Taylor also assisted Koch on his adaptation of H.G. Wells' "The War of the Worlds" for "The Mercury Theatre on the Air," which made radio history when it was broadcast in 1938.
When Koch went to work as a writer at Warner Bros., he wanted the studio to hire Taylor as a writer. But, she recalled, Warner Bros. said she would have to start as Koch's secretary and would be promoted to writer after six months. It took 18 months.
After helping Koch on the psychological themes and rewriting some of the scenes for his screenplay for the 1940 Bette Davis crime drama "The Letter," Warner Bros. signed Taylor to a writing contract.
"So many of the women who were writing at that time didn't get credit on things they worked on," said her daughter. "It was really a big push by women in those days to get credit for the work they did."
Taylor's first screen credit was the 1941 drama "Shining Victory," which she co-wrote with Koch. Four other Froelick writing credits followed: "The Master Race" (1944), "Miss Susie Slagle's" (1946), "Easy Come, Easy Go" (1947) and "Harriet Craig."Taylor's involvement in left-wing causes, such as fighting against fascism and promoting unions and desegregation, had led her to join the Communist Party, her daughter said.
In 1951, Taylor's party membership caused her husband, Philip Taylor, to lose his job as a manufacturing planner at Lockheed.
"He was escorted out of the plant by two guards," Taylor's daughter said. "I think it was to make a public display, which is what they were doing all over to frighten people. Interestingly, my mother hadn't gotten work (as a writer) from 1950 to '53, so she feared she was sort of covertly blacklisted, not blatantly blacklisted."
On the last day of the House Un-American Activities Committee's last visit to Hollywood in 1953, two fellow screenwriters named Taylor as a Communist.
"Then," her daughter said of the blacklist, "it was official."
Taylor continued to try to make a living as a writer using her married name. She wrote four plays that were produced locally, including "Storm in the Sun." And she co-wrote a comic novel, "Press on Regardless," with Fern Mosk, which was published by Simon and Schuster in 1956.
She also did some anonymous editing and writing for a friend who wrote soap operas, Laura Olsher. "But she never was able to fully recover and make a living at it," Taylor's daughter said.
In an interview Monday, Buhle said the blacklisted Taylor "symbolized an era of lost opportunities."
"She was one of those people whose career barely started when it ended," he said.
Born Dec. 8, 1913, in Hinsdale, Mass., she grew up in Princeton, N.J., and briefly attended Smith College before moving to New York City at 19 to try to start an acting career.
Besides her daughter, Priscilla, Taylor is survived by another daughter, Frolic Taylor, and two grandchildren.

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Henry Fonda appeared with Joan Crawford in only (1) one film, 1947's _Daisy Kenyon_, in which he played a troubled WWII vet vying with a cad lawyer (Dana Andrews) for commercial artist Daisy's affections.
*Celebri-links ........ Joan Crawford!*
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*Joan Crawford TCM Febuary 2010!!* *All Times Eastern. Check Local Schedules!*
Fri, Feb 12, 10:30 AM _Our Dancing Daughters_ (1928)

*Fri, Feb 12, 12:00 PM _Mildred Pierce_ (1945)*

*Mon, Feb 15, 2:45 PM _It's a Great Feeling_ (1949)*
*Tue, Feb 16, 2:00 PM _Grand Hotel_ (1932*

*The film won the Academy Award for Best Picture, the sole category in which it was nominated.*
*In 2007, Grand Hotel was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." The line "I want to be let alone," famously delivered by Greta Garbo, placed #30 in AFI's 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes.*
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*Aldrich, Robert* - Director of Joan Crawfords' 1956 film _Autumn Leaves_ and 1962's _What Ever Happened to Baby Jane_. He later directed _Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte_ (which Joan dropped out of) and is also best known for his films _Kiss Me Deadly_ ('55), _The Dirty Dozen_ ('67), and _The Killing of Sister George_ ('68).
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*Ward, Fred* - He began his career in 1979 alongside Clint Eastwood in _Escape from Alcatraz_.
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Jack Nicholson was in the neo-noir film _Chinatown_ (1974), directed by Roman Polanski!
*NEW DIRECTOR: Roman Polanski!*
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_Daisy Kenyon_ 20th Century-Fox, 1947.
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_All About Steve_ with Sandra Bullock was "Not" that bad ... I rented it ...and it funny at times ...but a very strange story with a strange character from Bullock ...worth a look .... be open-minded !!
My final rating: C-
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*Criterion Holds Sale for (Almost) Out-of-Print Classics!*
by Monika Bartyzel Feb 3rd 2010
Cinematical
The woes of rights have made a lot of fandom particularly challenging, whether it's seeing your beloved television shows never make DVD due to music rights, ultimate editions never getting released due split studio rights (Fire Walk with Me!), or Criterion titles disappear from the shelves.
_Criterion has announced that they're about to lose the rights to 23 excellent titles from StudioCanal at the end of March_. "The titles are going to Lionsgate, and we don't know when they may be rereleased. As ever, we will continue to try to relicense the films so that they can rejoin the collection sometime in the future." The titles are: Alphaville, Carlos Saura's Flamenco Trilogy, Le corbeau, Coup de torchon, Diary of a Country Priest, The Fallen Idol, Forbidden Games, Gervaise, Grand Illusion, Le jour se leve, Last Holiday, Mayerling, The Orphic Trilogy, Peeping Tom, Pierrot le fou, Port of Shadows, Quai des Orfevres, The Small Back Room, The Tales of Hoffmann, Trafic, Le trou, Variety Lights, and The White Sheik.
Until they're out of stock, each of these films will be an additional $5 off. So, for a title like Jean Luc Godard's Alphaville, that's $13.96 -- not too shabby at all for a Criterion release of a classic. My top pick would be Last Holiday. Henry Cass' black comedy stars Alec Guinness (the Obi-Wan Kenobi) as a man learning he only has a few months to live. He withdraws all of his money, and heads to a resort to live up his final moments, only to be showered with the most biting luck -- job offers and cash he'll never be able to use.
Don't be discouraged by back-ordered films, Criterion is getting more and states: "We should be back in stock by the middle of next week, and we'll honor all orders placed through the end of March." So, get shopping!

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*Marilyn Monroe*
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*Kubrick, Stanley* - An American director, writer, producer, and photographer of films, who lived in England during most of the last 40 years of his career.
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*_Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa_ (2008)*
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In 1976, Fred Astaire played a supporting role as a dog owner in the cult movie _The Amazing Dobermans_, co-starring Barbara Eden and James Franciscus.
*Celebri-links .... director Byron Chudnow!*
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Marlon Brando was in: _The Night of the Following Day_ (1968) directed by Hubert Cornfield!
*NEW DIRECTOR: Hubert Cornfield!*
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*_Kalifornia_ (1993)*
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Joseph L. Mankiewicz did the screenplay _Forsaking All Others_ (1934) which starred Joan Crawford!
*Celebri-links: Joan Crawford!*
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*_Iceland_ (1942)*
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The rebirth of Sinatra's career began with the eve-of-Pearl Harbor drama _From Here to Eternity_ (1953), for which he won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor directed by Fred Zinnemann!
*NEW DIRECTOR: Fred Zinnemann!*
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*_Georgia Rule_ (2007)*
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John Garfield was in: _Juarez_ (1939) directed by William Dieterle!
*NEW DIRECTOR: William Dieterle!*
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Tony Curtis earned an Oscar-nominated performance as a bigoted escaped convict chained to Sidney Poitier in _The Defiant Ones_.
*Celebri-links .....Sidney Poitier!*
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*_Elizabethtown_ (2005)*
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*_Paper Clips_ (2006)*
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Milton Berle appeared in numerous films, including: _Always Leave Them Laughing_ with Virginia Mayo and Bert Lahr, _Let's Make Love_ with Marilyn Monroe and Yves Montand!!
*Celebri-links .... Marilyn Monroe!*

Joan Crawford
in Your Favorites
Posted
*Blacklisted screenwriter Anne Froelick Taylor dies at 96*
Tuesday, Feb. 02, 2010
By DENNIS MCLELLAN - Los Angeles Times
*LOS ANGELES -- Anne Froelick Taylor, a Hollywood screenwriter who co-wrote the 1950 Joan Crawford drama "Harriet Craig" but whose career was cut short when she was blacklisted during the McCarthy era, has died. She was 96.*
Taylor, who received screen credit as Anne Froelick, died of natural causes Jan. 26 in a nursing home in Los Angeles, said her daughter, Priscilla Taylor Stephens.
Koch "soon began giving me dialogue to write and some of the scenes, and he encouraged me to be creative," Taylor said in an interview for the 1997 book "Tender Comrades: A Backstory of the Hollywood Blacklist," an oral history by Patrick McGilligan and Paul Buhle.
Taylor also assisted Koch on his adaptation of H.G. Wells' "The War of the Worlds" for "The Mercury Theatre on the Air," which made radio history when it was broadcast in 1938.
When Koch went to work as a writer at Warner Bros., he wanted the studio to hire Taylor as a writer. But, she recalled, Warner Bros. said she would have to start as Koch's secretary and would be promoted to writer after six months. It took 18 months.
After helping Koch on the psychological themes and rewriting some of the scenes for his screenplay for the 1940 Bette Davis crime drama "The Letter," Warner Bros. signed Taylor to a writing contract.
"So many of the women who were writing at that time didn't get credit on things they worked on," said her daughter. "It was really a big push by women in those days to get credit for the work they did."
Taylor's first screen credit was the 1941 drama "Shining Victory," which she co-wrote with Koch. Four other Froelick writing credits followed: "The Master Race" (1944), "Miss Susie Slagle's" (1946), "Easy Come, Easy Go" (1947) and "Harriet Craig."Taylor's involvement in left-wing causes, such as fighting against fascism and promoting unions and desegregation, had led her to join the Communist Party, her daughter said.
In 1951, Taylor's party membership caused her husband, Philip Taylor, to lose his job as a manufacturing planner at Lockheed.
"He was escorted out of the plant by two guards," Taylor's daughter said. "I think it was to make a public display, which is what they were doing all over to frighten people. Interestingly, my mother hadn't gotten work (as a writer) from 1950 to '53, so she feared she was sort of covertly blacklisted, not blatantly blacklisted."
On the last day of the House Un-American Activities Committee's last visit to Hollywood in 1953, two fellow screenwriters named Taylor as a Communist.
"Then," her daughter said of the blacklist, "it was official."
Taylor continued to try to make a living as a writer using her married name. She wrote four plays that were produced locally, including "Storm in the Sun." And she co-wrote a comic novel, "Press on Regardless," with Fern Mosk, which was published by Simon and Schuster in 1956.
She also did some anonymous editing and writing for a friend who wrote soap operas, Laura Olsher. "But she never was able to fully recover and make a living at it," Taylor's daughter said.
In an interview Monday, Buhle said the blacklisted Taylor "symbolized an era of lost opportunities."
"She was one of those people whose career barely started when it ended," he said.
Born Dec. 8, 1913, in Hinsdale, Mass., she grew up in Princeton, N.J., and briefly attended Smith College before moving to New York City at 19 to try to start an acting career.
Besides her daughter, Priscilla, Taylor is survived by another daughter, Frolic Taylor, and two grandchildren.