Showing posts with label magazines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magazines. Show all posts

Monday, December 15, 2008

Forrest J Ackerman is still dead

(Reposted from 'Brief Window')






Dang it.

Legendary science-fiction fan and memorabilia collector Forrest J Ackerman passed away a few weeks back, but I didn't find out about it until now!

I knew that Ackerman had been ill and not expected to recover, but somehow I feel bad that I missed hearing of his death on December 4th, at the age of 92.

Our beloved 'Uncle Forry' was a pioneer in the world of sci-fi fandom.
Among other achievements, he 'discovered' author Ray Bradbury and coined the phrase
'sci-fi'.

The magazine he founded, 'Famous Monsters of Filmland', figured prominently in the 'perfectly maladjusted' upbringing of many happy nerds of my generation, and the tales of his guided tours of the vast collection of cool stuff in his 'Ackermansion' in L.A. totally rocked.

Forrest J Ackerman is gone. He was unique, and he will be missed.

- Follow links to to a couple of obits; at the
Los Angeles Times, and Time magazine.

- Check out a gallery of 'Famous Monsters' magazine covers at Mad-Monsters.Com

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

(link:) R. Crumb's new 'Flesh & Blood Comics' in Point d’ironie #45

Always nice to hear tell of any new sightings of Robert Crumb's work, especially if it's a bit off-the-beaten-path.

Point d’ironie is a nifty, high-falutin' artsy freebie tabloid-newspaper-styled magazine that comes out roughly six times a year and can be found around the world in various bookshops, galleries, museums, etc.

Each issue is given over to a different artist; issue #45 features some recent work by Crumb, some of which you can see here, below.

Follow the Point d’ironie link (specifically to issue #45) to view more.

Elsewhere in recent Crumb sightings, if you saw this year's 'Cartoon Issue' of The New Yorker (November 3, 2008) you probably enjoyed the
4-page comics 'jam' by Robert, Aline and Sophie Crumb.

Over at The Official
R. Crumb Website
there's further background on the tale of their travels to the huge Crumb Family Reunion in Minnesota this past summer that serves as a nice follow-up to the New Yorker piece.

Click on the 'previous post' link of the
'Where's Crumb?' section for details and photos, as well as the 'Family History' link.

Fun stuff!

Meanwhile, Crumb's massive adaptation of the bible's Book of Genesis is said to be near completion, and (after several years in the making) may perhaps finally see print in 2009.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

He's proud of his bird

(click on image to ENLARGE in a new window)

This page from the January, 1965 issue of Better Homes and Gardens magazine caught my eye the other day, as we once again approach full immersion in the holiday gluttony and familial anxiety season.

(Sorry, it appears that this time around it's a 'Bah Humbug' year for me. I'll get over it - - maybe even before January)

This being the internet, I felt obligated to take a stab at fishing for more info on turkey-stuffer Harvey Beffa.

Lo and behold, I was able to find photos of Mr. Beffa at a History of Falstaff Beer web page (and the accompanying 'Galveston Brewery Tour' page).

Seems Harv was a VP at Falstaff in the 1950's.

Learn something new every day...

Monday, October 13, 2008

Ronald Searle: Paris By Proxy (1965 magazine feature)

Ronald Searle has been crafting cartoons, illustrations and other artworks for more than sixty years now.
Regardless of subject matter, his lines are enchanting and unique.

Born in Cambridge, England in 1920, Searle had been living in Paris for roughly four years when the images below ran in the May, 1965 issue of Show Magazine.

The Searle portraits above ▲ come by way of a photograph series posted at the Ronald Searle Tribute blog.

The text of the magazine piece fibs a bit when it suggests that British subject Searle had been 'dispatched' to Paris to report back for them.

A further conceit of 'Paris By Proxy' is the notion that the experience of the places Searle depicted could be reproduced just as easily at home in the U.S., thus boosting the domestic economy.

That was their angle of the day and they stuck with it...

(click on text or images to ENLARGE in a new window)

For more Ronald Searle, see also:
- The Ronald Searle Tribute blog is a labor of love, and a great place to start.

- The Wikipedia entry has a nice selection of links to investigate, including an illustrated bio page at
Been Publishing, I'm Back, and a link to his designs for the British Art Medal Society.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

'What Will She Do With It?' - - James Montgomery Flagg magazine cover illustration, 1920

This image appeared on the cover to the August 7th, 1920 issue of Leslie's Illustrated Weekly Newspaper, just a few days prior to the ratification of Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, allowing women the right to vote.

The caption on the cover asks
"What Will She Do With It?", looking ahead to the presidential election coming that November, the first in which women in every state could exercise that right.










Cover artist James Montgomery Flagg
was one of the most in-demand illustrators in the U.S. by the time this magazine appeared.

The popularity of his World War I 'I Want You' recruitment poster just three years prior
(in which, out of convenience, he'd used his own face as a model for Uncle Sam) had certainly helped.

See also:
- An illustrated James Montgomery Flagg bio page at Bud Plant's 'Been Publishing, I'm Back'.

- A previously posted Leslie's Illustrated Weekly cover from the same election year;
'Columbia has her eye on You'

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Looking at Phyllis Diller: 'The Unlikeliest Star' (1962 magazine article), plus 'Wet Toe In a Hot Socket' (1st LP, circa 1959)

Comedy legend Phyllis Diller has been in showbiz a long time, but her act and persona were just slightly different in her early days of stand-up.

Scroll towards the end of this post to hear tracks from her first LP, one of the few recordings to document some of those subtle differences.

In the magazine article below, Diller spoke about how her material changed, and how she came to performing comedy relatively late in the game.

'The Unlikeliest Star' first appeared in the March 31st, 1962 issue of The Saturday Evening Post.

It was written by Alex Haley
(14 years prior to the success of his book, 'Roots:
The Saga of an American Family'), and included photographs by Jack Fields .


************


In
San Francisco's busy cellar night spot, the hungry i, the dressing-room buzzer signaled stage time for the nation's top nightclub comedienne, Phyllis Diller. Thin, freckled and forty-four, Phyllis answered the buzzer with a vibrant Bronx cheer and gave her hair, peroxided a glaring white, a few last licks with a brush. She pushed a pastel pink cigarette into a long, fake-jeweled holder and then flipped a ratty fur piece over her forearm.
Briefly she held still, grimacing and cawing as if she were being garroted, while her husband Sherwood clasped a glittering, bib-sized rhinestone choker around her neck. In the dressing-table mirror, above the photograph of her five children, she looked like someone's raffish grandmother caricaturing Cinderella.

Phyllis reached the stage with a rubbery lurch, and the packed audience burst into laughter. "A woman hits forty," she drawled, "going ninety miles an hour. It's very embarrassing - - you and your mother approaching the same age from opposite directions." She staggered slightly and curled an arm over her head. "You're looking at a Slenderella reject!" she announced. "Honey, I went from baby fat to middle-age spread so fast I didn't have a good five minutes. If I had, I would have given a party."
For the next twenty-five minutes Phyllis had the women in the audience shrieking, The zany comedienne was their gal, satirizing in herself their own familiar frustrations and harassments as women and housewives.
"Everything I tell you about me has happened, honey," she declared, dangling high her tacky fur piece. "My stole! Isn't that pitiful? How unsuccessful can a girl look? People think I'm wearing anchovies! The worst of it is, I trapped these under my own sink!"
The women howIed as Phyllis lit into the loutish, make-believe husband she calIs 'Old Fangface.'
"This creature - - everything that goes wrong is his fault! Last night he put the car in the garage backwards! That shot the hell out of my map. This morning I drove out of the wrong end, going the wrong way on a one-way street. When I finally got home, you should have seen Fangface! He wanted to know how I had driven into the kitchen. I'd made a left turn from the dining room, of course!"
With her audience warmed up, Phyllis proceeded to murder the notion that women are made of sugar and spice. Smacking her overflow midriff, she cracked : "Middle-age fallout, kid! It's a human blouse."
A beauty-shop receptionist had told her: "Lady, we do repairs, not reclamations!"
"That ugly, insulting broad!" snarled Phyllis.
"She's had so many face-liftings there's nothing left in her shoes."

Eleven years ago Phyllis Diller was a housewife, penniless and demoralized. Today audiences pack nightclubs to hear her, and millions have seen her on television - - on the Jack Paar Show alone over thirty times. Her strongest appeal is to women, but men appreciate her too. Her cult of admirers is swelling steadily. They throng her shows, buy thousands of her LP record album, Phyllis Diller Laughs, and send her fan mail. She now earns as much as $5,000 weekly.
Phyllis plunged into show business in 1955, a thirty-seven-year-old Alameda, California mother of five with no professional experience. She swept to success as a comedienne because early in her career she had the perception to satirize her own domestic experiences as a woman facing middle age, and struck a theme which many modern American women respond to in an extraordinary way. "When I open my mouth, they know I'm one of them," Phyllis says, "and from that second we both can feel that two-way radar going belween us. We girls are compatriots with ten thousand things in common. I'm just the one onstage talking for us."

Phyllis's yen to entertain began as a girl in Lima, Ohio, where she grew up the only child of an insurance sales manager and his wife. As an adolescent coloratura, she won praise for school and church concerts, balancing any frustrations she had because she was not, as she puts it, "the type that boys had to lash themselves to masts to stay away from." After high school Phyllis attended both Northwestern University and an advanced school of music in Chicago. Secretly she practiced a popular repertoire, hoping to sing for nightclubs. But impresarios never let the plainlooking co-ed even finish asking to audition. Disgusted with singing, Phyllis returned home, intending to go to a business school; but her parents insisted that she get a music-teaching degree at Bluffton College in Bluffton, Ohio.
Late in Phyllis's senior year, a fellow student who lived in Bluffton introduced her to his brother, Sherwood Diller. "I took just one look at Sherry and started planning a large family," Phyllis says frankly. In November, 1939, they eloped, then settled in Bluffton. Phyllis returned to her studies for two more months in order to get her degree.
A son Peter was born three months before Pearl Harbor. The Dillers moved to Alameda, California, and Sherwood became an inspector at the Alameda Naval Air Station. In their small apartment in a jerry-built housing project, Phyllis embarked upon a decade of "working as hard as I think it is possible for a woman to work. I scrubbed, washed, ironed, mended, cooked and had babies. There was never enough money."

When Phyllis's father died, her mother came to Alameda and invested her modest inheritance in a big, old house. The first floor was turned over to the Dillers, the second floor to four retired boarders, and two third-floor rooms to Phyllis's mother. The Dillers' financial pressures were eased, but Phyllis's burdens were quadrupled by the added task of playing cleaning woman and nursemaid to the aged, crochety tenants. "They wanted the kids kept quiet. I'd be scrubbing their halls and toilets and have to dash downstairs to answer our phone for their calls."
When, in March, 1949, Phyllis's mother died, Phyllis inherited the big house and the family's place back in Ohio. A local real-estate woman suggested selling both properties to buy a small house plus a second for rental income. Phyllis and Sherwood trustingly let the agent trick them into signing away everything they owned. In the' ensuing mess, the woman was imprisoned and the Dillers moved into a house with a small down payment and a heavy mortgage.
"It was a nightmare," Phyllis recalls. "Sherwood took a second job as a night watchman and a third job, driving a taxi on weekends." Soon, though, exhaustion caught up with Sherwood. He was found asleep on his night watchman's job and lost it. The mortgage company dunned them for late payments, the grocer finally refused credit, and the utilities companies threatened. "I just hurt worrying about getting enough food and clothes for our five kids," says Phyllis. "But there was something worse. Sherry and I fought constantly. We were giving the kids a negative start in life. I even thought of divorce."

Incongruously, during this bleak time Phyllis created the style of comedy that makes her so successful today. "To hide our awful mess from the neighborhood, I acted as if I didn't have a care. I think I began being funny almost unconsciously." In the corner Laundromat Phyllis began cracking jokes and satirizing the housewife's life for the women waiting for their clothes to wash. They found Phyllis so hilarious that, encouraged, she would burst into the Laundromat with roses taped to her ears, yards of frothy tulle around her neck and battered cooking utensils as props for spontaneous takeoffs on her sad lot.
The tension inside Phyllis exploded early one Sunday evening. Neither she nor Sherwood can remember what trivial incident made her scream at him, slam out of the house and walk, she thinks, for miles. Passing a strange church, she turned back. "Something forced me," she says. As she slid down in the last pew she heard the minister reading: "Whatsoever things are true... whatsoever things are pure... think on these things."
"The words seemed to be addressed directly to me, as if God Himself were giving me a message," Phyllis says. To the dismay of her Laundromat audiences, she did not entertain for the next several weeks.
"I stayed home," she says, "having skull-and-soul sessions with myself and reading self-help books. Before, I had always scoffed at claims that anyone could change his life for the better by positive thinking. But considering the shape we were in, I was willing to try anything.
"I didn't change my life overnight, but at least I glimpsed what I had to do. I had to stop wallowing in negative thoughts about what a hard time we were having. I knew I had to think and work in positive ways with the good things I had my healthy, obedient children and my hardworking husband. As a start, since we so desperately needed money, I had to go out and get a job." Phyllis hired a friendly Negro woman who loved children. "Mabel Bess took right over while I got dressed to see the editor of the San Leandro News-Observer." Phyllis convinced him that the paper needed a shopping column and that she could write it. Soon Phyllis won a better-paying job writing advertising for a department store. Later she became a continuity writer for Oakland radio station KROW, then went on to station KSFO in San Francisco as head of merchandising and press relations.

During the workday Phyllis entertained her coworkers with the old Laundromat routines and new ones she had developed, "It was fun for me now that I wasn't hiding something, I was really just being myself."
Phyllis clowned often for her family as well. "When I quit nagging at life, our home burst with real living." Time and again, after a spontaneous performance, Sherwood would say, "You ought to turn pro, Phyllis."
Phyllis insisted that a chasm lay between her homemade acts and professional comedy. "But Sherwood was kindling my old dreams far more than he ever suspected. I kept thinking how positive thinking had helped me succeed in jobs I'd never have dared try previously, and I began asking myself why it couldn't work in show business." One lunch hour, while window-shopping, she astonished herself by making a down payment on a silver-sequined sheath. "It just struck me as the kind of dress I'd wear in show business."
Phyllis argued with herself for weeks before making up her mind. Then one evening she said, "Sherry, I've been thinking - - we've got to talk." After sixteen years of marriage, he knew her pattern.
"You're ready," Sherwood said.

A drama coach helped Phyllis develop skits. He concentrated on her own natural delivery and style. Each night she locked herself in her room with a full-length mirror and a tape recorder. After nearly a year Phyllis gave KSFO her notice. She requested an audition at The Purple Onion, a small, popular
San Francisco basement club noted for hearing new talent. Luckily her audition came just before the club's comedian went to New York for a TV show. She was hired as a substitute.

The evening of March 7, 1955, fighting fright with prayers for strength, Phyllis walked out under her first nightclub spotlight. Slithering around a piano, she spoofed Eartha Kitt's song 'Monotonous' with her own version, called 'Ridiculous'. She lampooned soprano
Yma Sumac, clowned with a zither and cracked topical jokes based on newspaper items. The Purple Onion audiences applauded politely, but offstage, in the sour glances of bartenders and waiters, Phyllis saw the real verdict, which she knew she deserved. "I'm just not good enough, Sherry," she said. "I've got a thousand things to learn."
But she had only two weeks in which to learn them - - until the regular comedian returned. Each night she tested new bits of patter, new gestures and preposterous rubbery expressions, to see which made audiences laugh most. When the regular comedian came back, the Purple Onion's manager, Barry Drew, said, "Phyllis, you've got something. We're going to recall you soon."
Appreciative audiences soon moved Phyllis to top billing. The Purple Onion loved her, and newspapers, calling her "San Francisco's own Phyllis Diller," began to quote her cracks. "You know what keeps me humble? Mirrors! I considered changing my name when I entered show business-but with a face like this, who cares?"

During this time, I dropped by the Onion and met Phyllis between shows. It was astonishing to hear the outlandish funny woman credit "positive thinking" and her family's cooperation for making her a comedienne. I asked what she predicted for herself, and she looked at me levelly. "In five years, I'll headline for the i."
The hungry i was named for the original "hungry intellectual" clientele from which colorful
Enrico Banducci built his famous cellar club. Only a block from the Purple Onion, it was miles away in terms of its comic headliners, such as Mort Sahl, Bob Newhart and Jonathan Winters.
But Phyllis erred in her prediction. She played the i less than three years later.
After a record eighty-nine weeks at the Purple Onion, Phyllis signed with a booking agent who seasoned her in small bistros across the United States. She rapidly grew more poised and polished. Dropping the songs and impersonations from her act - - "they sagged the pace" - - she replaced them with new, slicker versions of her onetime Laundromat humor.
Beaming toothy greetings, for example, she would open an imaginary door. "Honey, talk about an upset Fuller Brush man! He didn't even come back for his car!"

Phyllis's fervent housewife following had swelled her drawing power; in late 1958 her agent brought her to the Bon Soir in New York. With eye-rolling shrugs, scowls, staggers and a roostercrow laugh, Phyllis worked full time, poking fun at the trials she and her compatriots encountered: "Nowadays, if your kids dynamite the house, they're insecure! It's all muzzie's and dadsie's fault. Honey, let me tell you about a childhood shakeup. When I was three, my folks sent me out for bubble gum, and while I was out, they moved!"
Nightclubs across the nation were offering Phyllis top fees when in the summer of 1961 she received her bid from the hungry i.

I visited her just after she returned to the West Coast for her hungry i debut, We sat by the pool of the house she had rented near San Francisco, and she looked on happily as her youngsters swam and played. Though every day she had called them long-distance from wherever she was, she had not actually seen them for months.
"They're fantastic 'kids," she once said to me suddenly. "God's been good. You know, on the road different women will say to me, 'What a pity you can't spend more time with your children.' You know what I tell them? I say that with my kids it hasn't been how much time, it's how much love! People who see me clowning never would believe I breast-fed all five of my babies, You can't find a more old-fashioned modern mother than I am! We worried when I had to have Sherry with me as manager, and the kids went to live with his sister in St. Louis. Those kids helped make my career, and it's proved just great for them too,"

Phyllis continues to write all her own material, jotting down whatever she sees, hears or thinks her audiences might find "pleasantly hysterical." In a limousine, whizzing past a roadside sign, NO LITTERING - $50 FINE, she scribbled the words on a card, adding "How much can a poor, pregnant cat make?"
On stage Phyllis ad-libs easily. Once when a loose underarm shield slid down inside her sleeve, she blithely extracted it and tossed it on the piano, crowing, "I'm stripping from the inside!"
Women in the audience, fully aware how undependable underwear can be, were convulsed.

Phyllis has had her share of failures. "Honey, I've been smashed!" After one night, the Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami fired her. She flubbed a Hollywood screen test and once, after three rehearsals, the Steve Allen Show dropped her. But Phyllis never once considered giving up, "I've had fear thoughts - - I'm only human. But every fear thought and I battled it out eyeball to eyeball, and I won." In Phyllis's next try at Hollywood, she got the bit part of Texas Guinan in Elia Kazan's 'Splendor in the Grass'.

To laugh at Phyllis is really to admire the courage of all "we girls" who cope every day with the problems of being a woman and raising a family.
During her triumphant San Francisco homecoming, the Purple Onion astonishingly displayed large signs, PHYLLIS DILLER ACROSS STREET AT HUNGRY I.
The Purple Onion's manager, Barry Drew, shrugged when asked to explain.
"It's just the Onion's attitude about Phyllis. If you know her, she's therapeutic."

THE END

************

- A couple of notes: Phyllis and Sherwood Diller divorced in 1965, and, as seen in the Diller Family swimming pool photograph, 15-year-old Suzy Diller (contrary to popular myth) did not grow up to be actress Susan Lucci.

- Regarding this article and Alex Haley's visits with Diller at SF's Purple Onion and The hungry i comes an entry in the book 'Frommer's Memorable Walks in San Francisco':

"...(Diller) was still struggling when she played a 2-week engagement (at the Purple Onion) in the late
1950s.
"Alex Haley tried to intervlew her during that engagement and she told him 'No, not yet, baby. I'm not big enough for you to be able to sell it and you're not big enough to get it sold in the right place.'
"Six years later, while working as a reporter for the Saturday Evening Post, Haley saw that Diller was playing at the hungry i, so he went in and knocked on her dressing room door.
"She jumped out of her chair and hugged him saying 'Baby we've made it!' (She also was one of the first people to contact Haley after his success with 'Roots'.)"

- And of all things, from 1979, view a copy of a hand-written note to Diller from Haley.

As promised, here's some audio for you from that first
Phyllis Diller album, featuring much more of a 'classy' (?) cabaret feel to it...

From the Phyllis Diller LP
'Wet Toe In a Hot Socket'
(recorded live at The Bon Soir, with The Three Flames and an introduction by Jimmy Daniels)
(Mirrosonic Records, circa 1959),
Listen to:

Cesspool of Culture / I'd Rather Cha Cha Than Eat
Cornflakes On The Rocks / Guess Who I Saw Today
I Hate Cheap Beauty Parlors! / Today Will Be Yesterday Tomorrow
Thrift Flight / To Keep My Love Alive
Wet Toe In a Hot Socket / Just Like A Man

- - OR download all 5 tracks in one 31.1 Mb zipfile.


See also:
- You can preview the chapter on Phyllis Diller from Gerald Nachman's
'Seriously Funny: The Rebel Comedians of the 1950s and 1960s' at Google Books.
(Looks like the Post article may have been among Nachman's reference material)

- For a smattering of info and images regarding the Bon Soir in NYC's Greenwich Village, emcee
Jimmy Daniels and musical trio The Three Flames, follow links to the Barbra Streisand Archives, Philosopedia.org, and some 'Stateside Gossip' reminiscences by Warren Allen Smith of the Gay and Lesbian Humanist.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Four Gay Kitchens (1956)

This one-page photo-article appeared originally in the March, 1956 issue of Family Circle magazine.

(Click on image to ENLARGE in a new window)

The kitchens shown remind me of my mother.

Not just because I think she probably would have found them a bit ghastly, but because she loved the word 'gay'.

My mom was born in 1925 in San Francisco, and lived in the bay area all of her life.

I never knew her to be homophobic, but I do recall how she would occasionally voice her slight resentment at how popular usage changed the the common meaning of 'gay'.

So she continued to use it, convention be damned!

She enjoyed many things that were brightly colored, showy, festive, cheerful in nature, or pleasant in disposition (though again, she may have felt differently about these kitchens), so I can see where she'd have missed losing such a perfectly succint word.

I guess she felt it still had good mileage left on it...

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Print Ads for NYC fine dining, 1962

It's 1962, you're in NYC, and the question is;
Where to eat before attending that big Broadway show?

- - Or perhaps where to grab a drink after...?

These ads appeared in the same issue of Theatre Arts magazine as last week's Zero Mostel photo spread...







Wednesday, September 10, 2008

'Making The Most of a Maxim': Joanna Pettet and Severn Darden photo spread, 1963

Below, ▼ four black & white shots by award-winning photographer Dan Wynn put an off-kilter spin on four musty old adages in a 'Screen Test' feature that ran originally in the January, 1963 issue of
Show magazine.

The featured players were (then) up-and-coming actors Severn Darden and Joanna Pettet.

(Click on images to ENLARGE in a new window, and to make the most of those maxims)







































(Click on images ▲ to ENLARGE in a new window, and to make the most of those maxims)

Here's the text that accompanied those images in 1963:

Miss Pettet was born in London 19 years ago and started taking acting lessons at the age of 14 to overcome shyness. That the treatment was a success is obvious now, five years later, in the spirit and insouciance she has brought before the camera.
More recently she studied acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York, and her credits include theater and TV stints in Canada and a summer at the White Barn Theater in Irwin, Pennsylvania. She is currently playing the ingenue lead in the road company of 'Take Her, She's Mine.'

Mr. Darden hails from Chicago, where he attended the university of the same name and soon became distracted by the provocative activities of the local cabaret theater. He started with the 'Second City' troupe in 1959. He quickly became it's mainstay as well as a rising acting and writing talent in his own right: he is one of the few modern entertainers to do a record on pre-Socratic philosophers-and make it funny.
Lately he has been trying his hand in off-Broadway theater with The Writer's Stage, his most recent appearance as the star of 'P.S.193.'

To furnish the scenario for this month's screen test, Joanna and Severn have uncovered two rare manuscripts from the 1820's entitled 'The American Chesterfield, or 'Way to Wealth, Honour and Distinction' and 'Parlor Amusements and Social Etiquette.'
On these pages we see their own wry 20th Century comments.

Following this magazine appearance, Joanna Pettet would be seen on Broadway in a production of 'Poor Richard', playing opposite Alan Bates and Gene Hackman.
Pettet and Bates were close friends from then on.

Soon after that stage run she was 'discovered' by film director Sidney Lumet, who brought Ms. Pettet into the ensemble cast of 'The Group' in 1966, launching her film career.

Probably it's Joanna Pettet's appearance as Mata Bond in 1967's epic comedy romp/train wreck
'Casino Royale' for which she is most often remembered today, though for some it could be for the several horror films she made during the '70's and '80's, or perhaps her work as a television actress, especially in made-for-TV movies.

IMDb lists 115 film and TV appearances for Severn Darden, running from 1961 to 1989, though it would not be surprising to learn that there were more.

It might be true that Darden (1929 - 1995) is familiar to most people only as 'That Guy'.
- - As in "...Oh, it's that guy. I've seen him lots of times. Like in... oh, what was that thing...?"

Scores of sitcoms and TV dramas of all flavors. A wide variety of films, from most any genre you care to choose.
Often he was cast as a doctor, an academic, or some sort of intellectual, though overall his range of roles was surprisingly varied.

The text from the magazine article mentions Mr. Darden's affiliation with Second City, Chicago's groundbreaking improvisational theater group.

In fact, Darden had also been a member of The Compass Players, the original University of Chicago cabaret revue that ran from
1955 - 1958 and would 'morph' into
Second City in '59.

To read more about Severn Darden's career, click over to a 2007 posting at
Arbogast on Film: 'Too smart for the room'.
It's a glowing remembrance and biographical sketch about a wonderful but
under-appreciated performer.
The piece warranted a nice little follow-up, too.

For a bit more on Severn Darden, see also:

- A 1956 photo of The Compass Players, posted at Shelley Berman's web site. A young and clean shaven Severn sits among fellow cast members including Berman, Barbara Harris, and Mike Nichols and Elaine May.

- You can preview Janet Coleman's book, 'The Compass: The Improvisational Theatre that Revolutionized American Comedy' at Google Book Search

- A transcript of Darden's 1961 'Metaphysics Lecture' from his LP 'The Sound of My Own Voice
(and Other Noises)'.
(When I successfully manage to rescue my record collection from storage, maybe I'll remember to post some audio. Feel free to remind me.)

- A 'famous University of Chicago grads' Severn Darden page (still under construction as of this writing) collects together several other biographical bits & pieces.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Cover Gallery: 1950s and '60s Men's Magazines (flickr link)

- Please follow this link to my flickr set:
A 'Cover Gallery' of 1950s and '60s Men's Magazines
!
(50 images)

The images there may be considered Not Safe For Work, but they're so very tame as compared with today's standards.

What's not tame are the garish colors, the bold graphic design, the saucy & silly titles and lurid cover blurbs of another era.

- - The cover girls are of another era, too.

Dating from 1957 - 1969, with the bulk of them falling around 1967, the mags in this batch are seldom classy, sometimes seedy, but always an eyeful.
Check 'em out!





































- Please follow this link to my flickr set: A 'Cover Gallery' of 1950s and '60s Men's Magazines!
(50 images)

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Maureen McCormick: "Come Spend The Day With Me!" (1971 magazine photo-article)

The article below appeared in the August, 1971 issue of Teen World magazine - - One of dozens of fan-mag articles focused on then-teen
'Brady Bunch' star Maureen McCormick during the original run of the TV series.

Of interest is the common fashion of using only her first name in the article.
Was that merely a device for the readers, to suggest a casual familiarity with their teen idols?

Or did it somehow serve to distance the 'character' of 'Maureen' from the real actress, who perhaps would not invite you to 'spend the day' with her?

Note that co-star Susan 'Cindy' Olsen was not granted the same first-name basis status...

(click on images to ENLARGE text in a new window)






For years now we've had plenty of examples of how bizarre the effects of a childhood on TV can be for the 'habitual' celebrity.

I personally have not witnessed our friend Mo McCormick's current incarnation as a staple of reality TV, though I have friends who are eager to tell me all about it.

From what I've gathered, Mo has acquitted herself relatively well - - at the very least in comparison to some of her peers from the ranks of former child stars.

But certainly celebrity can make for a slightly strange mindset...

I recall back around 1994 when Mo was involved in a seminar that traveled around U.S. college campuses.

On tour with 'Birth Control Matters', she would speak out to college students about various methods of birth control and the importance of practicing safe sex.

During a visit to the U.C. Berkeley campus, she made time to stop by the studios of KALX radio for an interview.

Amid questions about her showbiz career, she spoke earnestly about birth control education, and mentioned that she and her husband had tried different methods while planning their family, and after the birth of their daughter.

When asked what method they settled on, she declined to answer, stating in essence that it's up to the individual to choose the method that will work best for them, and that she didn't want to use her celebrity status to influence anyone into using 'the same birth control that Marcia Brady uses'.

- - Which of course is good advice, but, even giving Mo the benefit of the doubt to say that it wasn't ego talking, it's a little odd to consider having to think that way...

See also: The Official Maureen McCormick Fan Club Home Page.
Once there, you can navigate to more Mo-centric vintage 'Brady Bunch'-era teen magazine articles at the 'Information' section.

Freshly-stirred links