scottman1932
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Everything posted by scottman1932
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I feel lucky that I got to see Earl perform at UCLA in November, 2011. He still sounded great. More of Earl: "Down The Road" "McKinley's Gone"
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> casablancalover said: No time.. Wasn't that a Guess Who hit? It is indeed! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBIGzXcRxdI
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Mmmmm...potato salad, and frim fram sauce! Another food song for ya... Larry Groce: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJ--JIh8zTY
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I figure it was a bit of both. Yes, he was a kind of father figure, when she was making him money for his independent films and then later at Paramount, however, Schulberg was not there for her when she was having her dificulties on screen and off.
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Yep, true enough! While we're on the food subject....Jim Jackson:
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Grand Funk Railroard:
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That is one of my favorite Frank Stokes sides! Frank played in medicine shows in the early 1900s, and along with blues, his repitoire included ragtime and pop tunes as well. "I Got Mine" is a raggy tune from the early 1900s. Another favorite song is "Chicken", by the Utica Jubilee Singers: Edited by: Scottman on Mar 27, 2012 12:00 PM to correct the song title
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Locations from Harry Langdon's The Strong Man (1926)
scottman1932 replied to SilentEchoes's topic in Silent
That is really cool! Thanks for posting the link! B-) -
Robert Wilkins:
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That's another great one, thanks! I really like this band. Born To Wander:
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Rare Earth: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZsppOw2Mxk
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Jeffrey, I'm pretty sure that Clara was a couple of inches shorter than Esther (not thet Esther was all that tall either!). I think Clara was around 5 foot 3 inches, or so and Esther was around 5 foot 5 inches (give or take an inch).
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> johnbabe said:can't anyone out there take a joke, I know that TCM does not have the unlimited resources to spend on finding the whole film, just trying to give all of us a light moment! You might want to use the emoticon feature, so that others might not misinterpret your intentions. (i) Just a thought...
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Still, it's great news! It gives me hope that more bits of other films may turn up. I would love to see more of THE CASE OF LENA SMITH (1929) turn up. I saw the fragment (most of the first reel) last summer and it looked like it might have been quite a good film.
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I should have posted this last weekend... In honor of St. Paddy's Day, I watched John Ford's HANGMAN'S HOUSE (1928).
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As I understand it, the negative and other film elements for THE DIVINE WOMAN were lost in the same vault fire that destroyed LONDON AFTER MIDNIGHT and several other titles in the 1960s. Sadly, vault fires have responsible for the loss of many silent films. The most noteable being the fire at the Fox stoarage facility in New Jersey in 1937, which destroyed most (if not all) of their negatives to both silent and sound films. A vault fire in France destroyed the last known print of Erich von Stroheim's THE HONEYMOON (1928), the second part of THE WEDDING MARCH. To my knowledge, nothing else has surfaced so far on THE DIVINE WOMAN.
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Donovan: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4aNaqUm26hY
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In honor of the first day od Spring: Grieg: and Hugh Harmon & Rudy Ising :
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> casablancalover wrote:Guess what I am watching tonight?? > Yep, that movie is lots O' fun!
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D'oh! Duplicate post! X-(
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Irene Taylor with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra (1932): "Willow Weep For Me"
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In keeping with the current Irish theme... The Tossers:
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Jean Sibelius, The Swan of Tuonela: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUAmi6WIfuU
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Paul Leni's THE MAN WHO LAUGHS (1928) has not made it to TCM as yet.
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The Jam: The Cars: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAach_0jwAc
