Showing posts sorted by relevance for query taylor. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query taylor. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2020

Born Today September 28: Stanner E. V. Taylor


1877-1948

Stanner Edward Varley Taylor may be better remembered as the husband of silent Biograph starlet Marion Leonard, but he was a director and screenwriter in his own right.  Taylor was born on this date in St. Louis in 1877.  Taylor started out as a newspaper man, writing news stories and editing copy. He apparently worked on shifts for the morning edition publication and therefore had time to write his own material in the afternoons.  In this capacity, he began as a playwright until he went to work at American Mutoscope and Biograph as a screen or scenario writer. He would become, basically, their head writer in time.  His first scenario gig with them consisted of adapting a play for the screen: he worked out the adaptation of a western play--The Kentuckian--written by Augustus Marvin, for a short form film directed by the elder Wallace McCutcheon in 1908 (the film, incidentally, sported an appearance the younger McCutcheon Jr., who would go on to make rather a big fool of himself at the company as a "director"). Without a doubt, his most famous enduring work from the time period is the screenplay for The Adventures of Dollie, today famous for it's (co)direction by D. W. Griffith released in July of 1908.  Taylor also made his directorial debut that same year on the short Biograph melodrama Over the Hill to the Poorhouse, which was interestingly based on a poem by Will Carleton and not his own original work.  He would not direct again until 1911 (with The Left Hook), and that was the only film he directed that year.  It was not until 1912 that this part of his career really took off, when he and Leonard went to work for Rex Motion Picture Co/Universal.  Throughout the rest of his career, both in writing and direction, he is seen as a western specialist; and despite directing his wife in many non-westerns like Carmen in 1913, it for westerns that he is best remembered today.  Many of the his earliest "frontier" scenarios were worked up in partnership with Griffith and he in fact has the writing credit on In Old California in 1910, which was the very first film ever made in Hollywood (the film was thought lost, but was discovered--at least in par--in the early part of this century). Despite being associated with westerns/Native American scenarios, Taylor directed a large number of melodramas in the years 1912 and 1913--and he in fact continued to write for Griffith at Biograph during this time (see, for example, The Yaqui Cur--1913). Marion Leonard was a very big movie star in the teens (her engagement to Taylor was big news in 1911), and she was able to found--with Taylor--her very own production house, which bore her name. The two worked in this capacity until she decided to retire from film acting in 1915.  While the company was in operation, Taylor wrote and directed exclusively for the house; and many of their films featured respected stage actor Henry B. Walthall. [It was during this period of his career that he is credited as Stanley E. V. Taylor or S. E. V. Taylor.]  Their last production together under the auspices of the studio appears to be The Vow, released in the spring of 1915.  His very next film was for Balboa, with whom he worked for a very short time; his 1915 Balboa directed film was the Noah Beery drama The Purple Night.  The film that he wrote while with the company--The Dragon's Claw--was also his wife's last acting job in the business. After her exit from film acting, he would stay in the business both as a director and writer for a further 13 years. His first production after his career collaboration with his wife ended was Her Great Hour starring the Scottish born Molly McIntyre. He next directed Clara Kimball Young in the Hal Young produced melodrama The Rise of Susan, released in December 1916; that film also featured Warner Oland.  It was at this time that his directing career slowed and he saw a resurgence of his writing career. He wound up writing under a pen-name for Griffith again in 1918, when Griffith was directing for Paramount (that would be the war drama The Great Love under the name Captain Victor Marier--which by the way, Griffith, who co-wrote the film with Taylor, also used). From this time forward he penned 15 screenplays, and directed four features. Of those, only The Mohican's Daughter  and The Lone Wolf  has him adapting short stories and directing as well.  His last time in the director's chair was on the self produced project The Miracle of Life in 1926.  He wrote four more films after this--all produced in 1928 and 1929--all of which were westerns or adventure scenarios of some sort. The last of these was the Robert Vignola film The Red Sword, a fully silent picture released on the 17th of February of 1929.  He then joined his wife in retirement from the business, but not much is recorded about their life after this, except they stayed in the Los Angeles area. He passed away on the 23rd of February there at the age of 71. There is NO information on his interment, but when Marion joined him in death some eight years later, she was cremated at the Chapel of the Pines and her ashes interred at the Memory Hall there. 










Friday, May 19, 2017

Born Today May 20: Estelle Taylor


1894-1958

Born Ida Estelle Taylor on this date in 1894 in Wilmington, Delaware, into a Jewish family.  Her mother, for whom she was named, had worked as a freelance make up artist.  In 1903, her parents divorced, and her mother remarried Harry J. Boylan, a vaudevillian.  Little Estelle, as she was known because of her mother, was raised by her maternal grandparents.  Her childhood dream was to become and actress, and at the age of ten, she sang on stage for the first time in an amateur performance of H.M.S. Penifore in the part of "Buttercup" in Wilmington.  While in high school she got a job as a typist; at 17 she married a bank cashier (some sources cite her age as 14, was is wrong and ridiculous).  The marriage didn't last long; and she soon set out for New York with acting aspirations.  She made her official stage debut in the musical Come On, Charlie.  She then relocated to Hollywood, and was able to start film work playing extras.  The first film that she is credited in comes in 1919 with the comedy The Broadway Saint; at 50 minutes, this was considered a very early feature length film.  She found some early success in an early crime melodrama anthologies While New York Sleeps; playing the female leads in each of it's segments (one including a Vamp role).  What is remarkable about this film is that I am happy to write that it is a formerly lost film.  A nitrate copy was discovered and was restored enough to screen at an L.A. film festival (the original nitrate copy is in the vaults of the film school at UCLA).  Her fame only strengthened when she appeared in the critically acclaimed Monte Cristo, across John Gilbert in 1922.  Around this time, she started having trouble with an arthritic condition.  Despite this, she kept working and appeared in the role of Miriam in Cecile D. DeMille's first version of The Ten Commandments in 1923.  In ever increasing pain, she fought for and got the supporting role of Mary, Queen of Scots in Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall in 1924 starring Mary Pickford. She was the consummate silent actor and her fame and popularity with players only increased as time went by.  In 1926 she was cast in one of the earliest sound films that was a major production; Don Juan, as Lucrezia Borgia. This was a major breakthrough in sound effects in movies, and was touted as so by Warner Brothers, that unbeknownst to theater organists who played music live in film theaters to projected silents, their days were numbered.  This was so early in this phase, in fact, that the sound was provided by Vitaphone, a company that had been pioneering sound tracking--they were quickly rewarded for their efforts be being copied and improved on, because, in large part they had not been able to patent much of their earliest sound technology because of the Edison corporate giant.  It would be over two years later that she would appear in a film of the same sort; in Show People (1928).  In between this time, she had been cast to star opposite Rudolph Valentino, but he died before production ever started and the film was never made.  The first full sound film that she made was in 1929, Pusher-in-the-Face, a short drama penned by F. Scott Fitzgerald.  Ironically enough, she ended the 1920's going back to starring in a partial silent, with the soundtrack and sound effects being the only tracked recordings in the film and the dialog completely silent, quite unusual for the day for someone who had achieved such success in the height of the 1920's feature length cinematic spectacle.  The film was Where East Is East, a title not without merit; it was directed by Tod Browning and starred Lon Chaney Sr. During the twenties, she had appeared in several films featuring New York, a kind of type casting--one of the earliest that can be easily recognized--despite that she from Delaware (her nickname was "The Delaware Delilah").  Taylor did make a transition to sound film, but it was not to last.  In 1925 she had married famous boxer Jack Dempsey, this in part added to her celebrity; the marriage was over by 1931 and her star began to wane.  Though she is touted as having been a serious star of the silent era who made the transition the talking era, that was not completely the case.  After 1932, she only made more 4 more films in her life; and unfortunately she was 40 years of age in 1934 and the studios still give women of that age a hard time even today; back then one can only imagine the pressure!  Combine that with her health issues from the mid 1920's, one can hardly blame her for retiring from film.  Between Call Her Savage in 1932 and her last film The Southerner in 1945 she only appeared in roles that could barely be considered "bit parts" by actors starting out in the film business.  One notable, and sad, event happened to her in 1944, when she was reportedly the last person to see Lupe Valez before she committed suicide.  In her retirement, she became the founder and president of the California Pet Owner's Protective League and in 1953 served on the Los Angeles City Animal Regulation Commission.  Taylor died in her home on the 15th of April in 1958 at the age of 63 after battling cancer.  She is interred in Hollywood Forever Cemetery.  



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Saturday, January 13, 2018

Born Today January 13: Herbert Brenon


1880-1958

Irish born silent actor turned director Herbert Brenon was born Alexander Herbert Reginald St. John Brenon on this day in Dublin; his father Edward was a writer and politician.  His family moved to London just two years later, where he grew up and was educated through college.  He also began to act in vaudeville there and created an act with his wife.  Brenon worked in New York in theaters doing various stage jobs and vaudevillian acts.  This is how he came to film first as an actor.  He appeared in a very small part in the 1912 King Baggot film Shamus O'Brien, produced by Carl Laemmle and his company IMP and directed by Otis Turner.  Before being cast as a film actor, however, he entered the film industry as a writer (taking up the profession of his father).  He is thought to have penned the scenario for The Dream in 1911; also produced by IMP and reportedly directed by Thomas H. Ince--the film starred Mary Pickford and her first husband Owen Moore.  Brenon received full credit for his adaptation of a Hawthorne's novel on The Scarlet Letter (1911), also starring Baggot and Lucille Young.  Though Brenon is most often referred to as a director, he never quit writing for films during his entire time in the business--he has more than 60 writing credits.  Just two months after Shamus O'Brien came out, Brenon's directorial debut was released.  All For Her was released on the 2nd of May in 1912, it was a film that he also wrote from scratch and starred in.  He was now a team player in the Independent Moving Pictures Co. of America.  Taylor left IMP in the summer of 1912, and it appears that Brenon was retained in his place.  His best known film from his time at the studio is most certainly his 1913 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde; which he adapted from the Stevenson novella.  Brenon would become a go-to director of films made from literature; one reason was his ability to adapt the original material himself (see, for example, the well known King Baggot historical drama Ivanhoe (1913)). In 1915, himself left IMP for Fox in 1915.  The first film that he directed there with William Fox serving directly as producer was Kreutzer Sonata, featuring both Nance O'Neil and Theda Bara (Brenon would return to direct a few films at IMP in the late teens).  Brenon would go on to direct Bara in several of Fox's films from the teens, including, and especially, her infamously lost vamp film Sin (this is for sure one of the crown jewels of lost films!).  What is amazing here, is that Brenon wrote the screenplay for the film from one of his own stories.  Fox promoted the film in such a way that it was banned in several states in the U.S.  He would also direct "vamp" Valeska Surratt at Fox.  By 1916, he had started his own production company, Herbert Brenon Film Corp.; the company produced War Brides starring Alla Nazimova that year utilizing Ideal's physical studio in Hudson Heights, New Jersey.  The film saw the introduction of an up and coming Richard Barthelmess and had a production agreement with Lewis J. Selznick's brand new Selznick Distribution.  By the time that he directed the ripped from the headlines The Fall Of The Romanoffs  (featuring the odd character of Iliodor--who provided the "source material" in form of his book on "the mad monk" himself, Rasputin), Brenon had taken over the Ideal location and renamed for his production company.  Brenon then went back to the U.K. after the end of the first world war, he made number of films while there that were small and not well known.  The first of them apparently being Victory and Peace (1918); it was a war film produced by a national film trust that seemed endowed to make propaganda films.  He then spent time making films in Italy; the first of these was Beatrice in 1919 and based on a story by Dante.  He returned to making films in the U.S. in 1921 adapting and directing Passion Flower for Norma Talmadge's production company and starring the lady herself.  He stayed with Talmadge's company for most of the remainder of the year, before returning to Fox in late 1921 (the Fox produced Any Wife, starring Pearl White, came out January of 1922).  He then landed at Paramount (one of his early Paramount films survives, and is available on disc--The Spanish Dancer with Pola Negri).  His Peter Pan from 1924 launched the career of Mary Brian, who he is credited with discovering.  Probably his most famous film of all is the now lost 1926 production of The Great Gatsby. The film, based on the wildly popular Fitzgerald novel, starred Warner Baxter and the mysterious as strange Gatsby and Neil Hamilton in the Carraway role (William Powell was also in the film). The production was expensive and was based on the successful Broadway production directed by one George Cukor.  The film was also the first that he made under a new arrangement with Famous Players--Lasky, with Paramount as a the distributor.  His work in the late 1920's is a big budget as studio films of a later time would be.  In fact, Brenon would direct some of the largest film productions of the late silent era, amongst them: the Roland Colman action adventure Beau Geste (1926),  Sorrell and Son (1927)--for which he was nominated for one of the very first Oscars for Best Director, Laugh, Clown, Laugh (1928) with Lon Chaney Sr., and  The Rescue (1929) his last film of the decade and, which was also his first talkie--also starring Ronald Colman.  Brenon continued to direct into the talking era--heading up 15 films during the 1930's, returning to direct in the U.K. in 1935.  He directed his last film in 1940, The Flying Squad, a Scotland Yard crime drama set in London.  Brenon then retired back to California.  He passed away in Los Angeles on the 21st of June at the age of 78; he is interred in a large ornate private mausoleum at Woodlawn cemetery in The Bronx.  

I noticed that the "clock" above his name is set at 4 o'clock...um teatime! [Source: Wikipedia]


Note: the links below don't give much information for such an important director of the silent era, but do have filmographies of interest.



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Tuesday, June 27, 2017

LIST


Graves Of Silent Stars


*sorted by Cemetery


Allegheny Cemetery Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 


Lillian Russell

Alter St.-Matthäus-Kirchhof Berlin, German

Jacob Grimm (on right--The Brothers Grimm)

Jeanne Eagels under her birth name of "Eagles"

Former resting place of John Barrymore, now empty

Dolores Costello


Elaine Hammerstein

Lola Lane

Ramon Navarro

Calvary Cemetery Queens, New York City, New York

Una O'Connor (listed under birth name first)



June Marlowe


Corsier Cemetery Corsier-sur-Vevey, Switzerland 

Charlie Chaplin

Deansgrange Cemetery Dublin, Ireland

Grave of Barry Fitzgerald (under his birth name)


Duck River Cemetery Old Lyme, Connecticut


Elsie Ferguson

The Evergreens Cemetery Brooklyn, New York

Guy Coombs

Etna Town Cemetery Etna, California

John Emerson

Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York

Richard Barthelmess

Joan Crawford

Judy Garland

Basil Rathbone


Wally Albright


George Archainbaud

Clara Blandick


William Boyd


Clarence Brown

Johnny Mack Brown
Frances X. Bushman
David Butler


Lon Chaney Sr.


Julia Dean

Marie Dressler


Romaine Fielding

W. C. Fields

Clark Gable

John Gilbert

Alan Hale Sr.


Alice Hollister

Rex Ingram (Director)


Doris Kenyon


E. K. Lincoln


Carole Lombard


Anita Louise

Rouben Mamoulian

Victor McLaglen


Merle Oberon


Charles Ogle

Nance O'Neil



Ruth Roland


Lewis J. Selznick

Lowell Sherman

Irving Thalberg

Ben Turpin

Grant Withers

Ed Wynn

Forest Lawn Memorial Park Hollywood Hills, CA

Lloyd Bacon

Mary Brian

Reginald Denny

Robert Florey


Buster Keaton

Kenneth MacDonald


Guinn "Big Boy" Williams

Forest Home Cemetery Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Charles King


Flushing Cemetery Queens, New York


Muriel Ostriche
Golders Green Crematorium Golders, Greater London, England, UK


Frederick Kerr


Graceland Cemetery Chicago, Illinois

William Pinkerton


Grand View Memorial Park Glendale, California


Edna Purviance

Green-Wood Cemetery Brooklyn, New York

Frank Morgan

Ralph Morgan

George Francis Train


Erville Alderson



Leah Baird

John W. Boyle

Émile Chautard



Harry Cohn


Bebe Daniels



Douglas Fairbanks Sr.

Douglas Fairbanks Jr.

Janet Gaynor


Roscoe Karns


Benjamin H. Kline



Edgar Lewis

Tyrone Power

Mickey Rooney


Phil Rosen

Elijah Tahamont aka Dark Cloud

Estelle Taylor

George Loane Tucker

Rudolph Valentino

Clifton Webb


Fay Wray

Holy Cross Cemetery Culver City, California

Frank Albertson

Mary Astor

Ray Bolger

Gary Cooper, former tomb, is now empty, he was reburied in Southampton, New York


Bing Crosby

Wallace Ford

Henry King


Rudolph Maté

Winfield Sheehan


Home Of Peace Memorial Park  Los Angeles, California


Harry Rapf


Ivy Lawn Memorial Park Ventura, California


Ethel Clayton

Kensico Cemetery Valhalla New York



Lee Beggs

Billie Burke


May Irwin

Ikegami Honmoji Temple Tokyo, Japan

Kenji Mizoguchi


Maryrest Cemetery Mahwah, New Jersey


Grave of Alice Guy

Mount Hebron Cemetery Queens, New York

Bertha Kalich

Panteón de Dolores Mexico City, Mexico

Lupe Velez

Private Burials Or Singular Burials

Will Rogers Will Rogers Memorial Museum Claremore, Oklahoma

Leland Stanford Campus of Stanford University, Stanford, CA

Rockland Cemetery Sparkill, New York

Henry Hull

Rosehill Cemetery Chicago, Illinois

Milton Sills



San Fernanado Mission Cemetery Los Angeles, California

Alice Joyce

Sleepy Hollow Cemetery Sleepy Hollow, New York

William A. Brady


St. Agnes Cemetery Mennads (greater Albany), New York

Robert G. Vignola

St. Leonard's Church Hove, Sussex, England

C. Aubrey Smith


Valhalla Memorial Park North Hollywood, CA

Yakima Canutt

Cliff Edwards

Oliver Hardy

Dell Henderson

Kermit Maynard

Sam McDaniel
Mabel Paige

William Tracy

Woodlawn Cemetery
 The Bronx, New York

Herbert Brenon


Harry Carey

George M. Cohan, family Mausoleum 

Ricardo Cortez

Roi Cooper Megrue

Woodlawn Cemetery Santa Monica, California

Paul Fix

Florence Lake