Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Silent On TCM--May 2019





May 3 7:30AM Full Film


May 3 8AM Mary Astor Clip


May 7 4AM (this is an Oscar Micheaux film!) Clip


May 7 7:45AM Clara Bow!


May 13 12:30AM TCM Clip


May 20 12:30 TCM Presents a series of Bobby Bumps  animated shorts (14 shorts)



May 21 2:45AM Trailer

On the 27the of May, starting at midnight, TCM will be airing a series of short silent comedies until 2AM. All of the films are from the year 1915. The films are as follows:









May 27 11:45PM Trailer

Other Recommendations:


May 7 6:45AM 


May 18 8PM (Kicks off a celebration of Orson Welles in Primetime) Trailer


May 26 4AM Trailer


Saturday, April 6, 2019

Born Today April 6: Lorrin A. Cooke


1831-1902

Lorrin Alanson Cooke, future 57th Governor of Connecticut, was born on this day in New Marlborough, MA. He was educated in Connecticut and was a teacher in Norfolk before becoming a politician.  He was also, from the age of nineteen, a gentleman farmer and a member of the local agricultural society. It is within the society that he got his first taste of running for office, when he was elected president of the society at a relatively young age.  He served in a number of community jobs and elected positions, including state senator and Lt. Governor before becoming governor in 1897. He was in office only two years, leaving on the 4th of January in 1899. During this time, he was the subject of one Edison film (in the form of an early newsreel): Governor Cook and Staff, Connecticut in 1897 (note the Edison Co's misspelling of his last name). The film was made/directed by James H. White, who was head of the Edison production department from 1896 through 1902.  Cooke lived just 3 1/2 years after he left the governor's mansion, dying at the age of 71 in Winstead, Conn. on the 12th of August 1902. He is buried, with his two wives, at the Colebrook Center Cemetery in the Connecticut town of the same name. As with all historical figures, please follow the links posted below if you are interested in learning more about their lives, accomplishments, and why they were of interest as subjects of early film.