Sunday, July 30, 2017
Patricia Wheeler
This is Patricia D. Wheeler, the only child of Bert Wheeler of "Wheeler And Woolsey".
She appeared in home movie with her famous father that was shot at the Brown Derby around the time that Thelma Todd and Patsy Kelly were teamed by Roach: Thelma Todd and Patsy Kelly appear on the same reel. This film may be seen on you tube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SIG7m0IlDY&feature=youtu.be
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Saturday, July 29, 2017
Birthday Of Clara Bow
July 29 was also Clara Bow's birthday, although she was actually born the year before, not on the same day as publicity claimed.
Here is a picture of Clara Bow with Frank Tuttle and Ralph Forbes that was taken during the production of HER WEDDING NIGHT.
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Here is a picture of Clara Bow with Frank Tuttle and Ralph Forbes that was taken during the production of HER WEDDING NIGHT.
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Birthday Of Thelma Todd
Thelma Todd was born on July 29, 1906 in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Today would have been her 111th birthday if she were she still with us.
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Friday, July 28, 2017
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
HURDY GURDY Poster
HURDY GURDY was the first talking picture made at the Hal Roach studio.
Eddie Dunn:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddie_Dunn_(actor)
HURDY GURDY:
http://www.picking.com/hurdygurdy.html
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HURDY GURDY Photo
From the Thelma Todd Fan Group on facebook.
Thelma with Edgar Kennedy in "Hurdy Gurdy" (1929), the first sound short from the Hal Roach studio.
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Tuesday, July 25, 2017
Monday, July 24, 2017
FILM FUN Oct. 1932
Fan magazine features movie star photos with gag captions. There are a couple of pictures of Thelma Todd in there.
Caption appears to be "The girl who shortened her dress just to please her boy friend, narrates Thelma, was certainly the type who'd go to any length to please the one she loved."
Paulette Goddard on the right.
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Sunday, July 23, 2017
Thelma Todd's Birthday To Be Celebrated In Lawrence
The pictures that go with the article.
Reblogged from http://www.eagletribune.com/news/lifestyles/remembering-lawrence-s-starlet-matinee-fest-celebrates-s-s-hollywood/article_a9845ddc-a63c-56a1-907a-b1f407477f3f.html
By Terry Date tdate@northofboston.com
Tragedy plagued native actress Thelma Todd, but she left ‘em laughing and made the Immigrant City proud.
She still does both, 111 years after her birth, July 29, 1906.
A week from Saturday, the local starlet’s biggest fan, Joseph Bella, will throw her a birthday party and matinee film fest at Lawrence Heritage State Park.
The line-up: a three-minute Thelma Todd bio from Bella; five or six of her slapstick film shorts, called two-reelers; and cake at intermission.
Bella has hung 42 Thelma Todd movie posters upstairs at the Jackson Street state park and will display two books of publicity and movie shots.
Todd, nicknamed the “Ice Cream Blond,” had a knack for playing the comedic straight woman.
She performed opposite tough-talking klutzes Patsy Kelly and ZaSu Pitts, the duos stumbling through scenes ruled by Murphy’s Law, dusting themselves off after slips, pratfalls and disasters.
The July 29 birthday party screening includes some of these selections.
Does her comedy withstand the passage of time?
“Oh, definitely,” Bella said. “She’s still funny.”
Her comedy credits includes roles in classic Marx Brothers’ films.
In “Horse Feathers,” Groucho Marx lounges under an umbrella at the bow of a canoe playing Professor Wagstaff.
Todd paddles at the stern. A fawning student, she’s the butt of Groucho’s retorts.
“Oh, professor, you are full of whimsy,” she says.
“Can you notice it from there?” he asks. “I’m always that way after I eat relishes.”
Lawrence Heritage State Park is a mile or two from houses where Todd lived. Her family always rented, and moved a lot.
The park is a couple miles from Todd’s grave, a family plot in Bellevue Cemetery.
She died Dec. 16, 1935 of carbon monoxide poisoning in a southern California garage behind the wheel of her running car, apparently trying to stay warm after being locked out of a house at night.
She was just 29, but had been in 119 movies.
Todd was one of two children. Her father’s family came from Ireland; her mother’s from Canada, of French-Canadian roots, Bella said.
Her brother William was killed in a farm accident while the Todds visited relatives in Vermont. The 7-year-old fell in a hay thresher. Thelma witnessed it.
She went to the Saunders School, the Packard School and Lawrence High, class of 1923. She wrote a gossip column for the high school newspaper, the “Lawrence Bulletin.”
A group photo of the staff shows the other girls in plain solid dresses. Todd stands out, wearing gingham.
“I think she was kind of a quiet person, but could come up with things, with (witty) surprising remarks,” Bella said.
She modeled, attended a teacher college in Lowell, performed in movies by Lawrence-area filmmakers Rosario and Peter Contarino, and entered beauty contests, winning the Miss Massachusetts title in 1925.
A Paramount film representative invited her to a film school on Long Island, New York.
In 1926, the students released “Fascinating Youth,” a silent film.
Todd and her family were chauffeured to the premier in Lawrence at the Palace Theater on Broadway.
She married Pat DiCicco in 1932 and divorced in ’34. He later married Gloria Vanderbilt.
Todd transitioned nicely from silents to talkies, as the new films with soundtracks were dubbed.
She played serious and comedic roles.
Todd, Kelly and Pitts were the female version of Laurel and Hardy.
Todd’s last film was a Laurel & Hardy comedy, “The Bohemian Girl.”
The July 29 birthday celebration at the heritage state park will include a sheet cake at intermission with Todd’s picture on it.
“To me, she was Lawrence’s most famous citizen,” Bella said. “She worked with the greats. She really did.”
IF YOU GO
What: Thelma Todd’s 111th Birthday Party Film Fest
When: Saturday, July 29, 1:30 p.m.
Where: Lawrence Heritage State Park, 1 Jackson St.
How much: Free; courtesy of Friends of Lawrence Heritage State Park and Joseph Bella
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Reblogged from http://www.eagletribune.com/news/lifestyles/remembering-lawrence-s-starlet-matinee-fest-celebrates-s-s-hollywood/article_a9845ddc-a63c-56a1-907a-b1f407477f3f.html
She still does both, 111 years after her birth, July 29, 1906.
A week from Saturday, the local starlet’s biggest fan, Joseph Bella, will throw her a birthday party and matinee film fest at Lawrence Heritage State Park.
Bella has hung 42 Thelma Todd movie posters upstairs at the Jackson Street state park and will display two books of publicity and movie shots.
Todd, nicknamed the “Ice Cream Blond,” had a knack for playing the comedic straight woman.
She performed opposite tough-talking klutzes Patsy Kelly and ZaSu Pitts, the duos stumbling through scenes ruled by Murphy’s Law, dusting themselves off after slips, pratfalls and disasters.
The July 29 birthday party screening includes some of these selections.
Does her comedy withstand the passage of time?
“Oh, definitely,” Bella said. “She’s still funny.”
Her comedy credits includes roles in classic Marx Brothers’ films.
In “Horse Feathers,” Groucho Marx lounges under an umbrella at the bow of a canoe playing Professor Wagstaff.
Todd paddles at the stern. A fawning student, she’s the butt of Groucho’s retorts.
“Oh, professor, you are full of whimsy,” she says.
“Can you notice it from there?” he asks. “I’m always that way after I eat relishes.”
Lawrence Heritage State Park is a mile or two from houses where Todd lived. Her family always rented, and moved a lot.
The park is a couple miles from Todd’s grave, a family plot in Bellevue Cemetery.
She died Dec. 16, 1935 of carbon monoxide poisoning in a southern California garage behind the wheel of her running car, apparently trying to stay warm after being locked out of a house at night.
She was just 29, but had been in 119 movies.
Todd was one of two children. Her father’s family came from Ireland; her mother’s from Canada, of French-Canadian roots, Bella said.
Her brother William was killed in a farm accident while the Todds visited relatives in Vermont. The 7-year-old fell in a hay thresher. Thelma witnessed it.
She went to the Saunders School, the Packard School and Lawrence High, class of 1923. She wrote a gossip column for the high school newspaper, the “Lawrence Bulletin.”
A group photo of the staff shows the other girls in plain solid dresses. Todd stands out, wearing gingham.
“I think she was kind of a quiet person, but could come up with things, with (witty) surprising remarks,” Bella said.
She modeled, attended a teacher college in Lowell, performed in movies by Lawrence-area filmmakers Rosario and Peter Contarino, and entered beauty contests, winning the Miss Massachusetts title in 1925.
A Paramount film representative invited her to a film school on Long Island, New York.
In 1926, the students released “Fascinating Youth,” a silent film.
Todd and her family were chauffeured to the premier in Lawrence at the Palace Theater on Broadway.
Todd transitioned nicely from silents to talkies, as the new films with soundtracks were dubbed.
She played serious and comedic roles.
Todd, Kelly and Pitts were the female version of Laurel and Hardy.
Todd’s last film was a Laurel & Hardy comedy, “The Bohemian Girl.”
The July 29 birthday celebration at the heritage state park will include a sheet cake at intermission with Todd’s picture on it.
“To me, she was Lawrence’s most famous citizen,” Bella said. “She worked with the greats. She really did.”
IF YOU GO
What: Thelma Todd’s 111th Birthday Party Film Fest
When: Saturday, July 29, 1:30 p.m.
Where: Lawrence Heritage State Park, 1 Jackson St.
How much: Free; courtesy of Friends of Lawrence Heritage State Park and Joseph Bella
A
Thelma Todd's Birthday To Be Celebrated In Lawrence
Reblogged from http://www.eagletribune.com/news/lifestyles/remembering-lawrence-s-starlet-matinee-fest-celebrates-s-s-hollywood/article_a9845ddc-a63c-56a1-907a-b1f407477f3f.html
Tragedy plagued native actress Thelma Todd, but she left ‘em laughing and made the Immigrant City proud.
She still does both, 111 years after her birth, July 29, 1906.
A week from Saturday, the local starlet’s biggest fan, Joseph Bella, will throw her a birthday party and matinee film fest at Lawrence Heritage State Park.
Bella has hung 42 Thelma Todd movie posters upstairs at the Jackson Street state park and will display two books of publicity and movie shots.
Todd, nicknamed the “Ice Cream Blond,” had a knack for playing the comedic straight woman.
She performed opposite tough-talking klutzes Patsy Kelly and ZaSu Pitts, the duos stumbling through scenes ruled by Murphy’s Law, dusting themselves off after slips, pratfalls and disasters.
The July 29 birthday party screening includes some of these selections.
Does her comedy withstand the passage of time?
“Oh, definitely,” Bella said. “She’s still funny.”
Her comedy credits includes roles in classic Marx Brothers’ films.
In “Horse Feathers,” Groucho Marx lounges under an umbrella at the bow of a canoe playing Professor Wagstaff.
Todd paddles at the stern. A fawning student, she’s the butt of Groucho’s retorts.
“Oh, professor, you are full of whimsy,” she says.
“Can you notice it from there?” he asks. “I’m always that way after I eat relishes.”
Lawrence Heritage State Park is a mile or two from houses where Todd lived. Her family always rented, and moved a lot.
The park is a couple miles from Todd’s grave, a family plot in Bellevue Cemetery.
She died Dec. 16, 1935 of carbon monoxide poisoning in a southern California garage behind the wheel of her running car, apparently trying to stay warm after being locked out of a house at night.
She was just 29, but had been in 119 movies.
Todd was one of two children. Her father’s family came from Ireland; her mother’s from Canada, of French-Canadian roots, Bella said.
Her brother William was killed in a farm accident while the Todds visited relatives in Vermont. The 7-year-old fell in a hay thresher. Thelma witnessed it.
She went to the Saunders School, the Packard School and Lawrence High, class of 1923. She wrote a gossip column for the high school newspaper, the “Lawrence Bulletin.”
A group photo of the staff shows the other girls in plain solid dresses. Todd stands out, wearing gingham.
“I think she was kind of a quiet person, but could come up with things, with (witty) surprising remarks,” Bella said.
She modeled, attended a teacher college in Lowell, performed in movies by Lawrence-area filmmakers Rosario and Peter Contarino, and entered beauty contests, winning the Miss Massachusetts title in 1925.
A Paramount film representative invited her to a film school on Long Island, New York.
In 1926, the students released “Fascinating Youth,” a silent film.
Todd and her family were chauffeured to the premier in Lawrence at the Palace Theater on Broadway.
Todd transitioned nicely from silents to talkies, as the new films with soundtracks were dubbed.
She played serious and comedic roles.
Todd, Kelly and Pitts were the female version of Laurel and Hardy.
Todd’s last film was a Laurel & Hardy comedy, “The Bohemian Girl.”
The July 29 birthday celebration at the heritage state park will include a sheet cake at intermission with Todd’s picture on it.
“To me, she was Lawrence’s most famous citizen,” Bella said. “She worked with the greats. She really did.”
IF YOU GO
What: Thelma Todd’s 111th Birthday Party Film Fest
When: Saturday, July 29, 1:30 p.m.
Where: Lawrence Heritage State Park, 1 Jackson St.
How much: Free; courtesy of Friends of Lawrence Heritage State Park and Joseph Bella
More information: Contact Lawrence Heritage State Park at 978-794-1655.
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Friday, July 21, 2017
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
CATCH AS CATCH CAN Call Sheet
A Hal Roach Studio daily production sheet for CATCH AS CATCH CAN, dated May 21, 1931, lists people who worked on the film that day. 200 extras were used, which was a lot of people for a two-reel comedy.
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CATCH AS CATCH CAN Photo
Here is a publicity photo for CATCH AS CATCH CAN ( 1931 ) with Zasu Pitts and Thelma Todd, with the original caption.
Someone scribbled out a caption for an Our Gang comedy which seems to have been put on this by mistake.
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Thelma Todd Photo
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Thelma Todd With Long Hair
Thelma Todd originally wore her hair long. They cut it short for the movies. Here is a picture of her as she used to look before Hollywood decided to give her a haircut.
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Saturday, July 15, 2017
Wednesday, July 12, 2017
Thelma Todd And Deer
This 1928 publicity photo of Thelma Todd with deer has the background whited out for publication. Only the right side has been done. That must have been the part they were intending to use.
From Dusty Sage via "Thelma Todd Fans" on facebook.
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Tuesday, July 11, 2017
Thelma Todd And Her Dog
Here we see Thelma Todd with her dog, which Rudy Schafer said was named Nibs. Thelma is dressed in a waitress costume she wore in her last film, ALL AMERICAN TOOTHACHE ( 1935 ).
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Friday, July 7, 2017
Holly Of Hollywood - FAMOUS FUNNIES #50
Holly was a thirties blonde in a comic strip by Pop Momand. This episode makes reference to a Balloon dance ( or bubble dance ), a dance that was made famous by Sally Rand.
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Wednesday, July 5, 2017
Thelma Todd With Dennis King And Hal Roach
Thelma Todd, Dennis King and Hal Roach in a candid shot taken during the production of THE DEVIL'S BROTHER ( 1933 ).
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Tuesday, July 4, 2017
Happy 4th Of July!
Thelma Todd defends the "Fort Of July" in a publicity photo for the 1928 First National production THE HAUNTED HOUSE.
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