Hollywood Hist-o-Rama

Summary This syndicated series used still pictures and narration to chronicle the careers of motion picture performers, directors, and producers. View more details

Hollywood Hist-o-Rama

Directed : Unknown

Written : Unknown

Stars : Unknown

5.7

Details

Genres : Biography Documentary

Release date : Nov 23, 2018

Countries of origin : United States

Language : English

Production companies : Jayark Films Corporation Julieart

Summary This syndicated series used still pictures and narration to chronicle the careers of motion picture performers, directors, and producers. View more details

Details

Genres : Biography Documentary

Release date : Nov 23, 2018

Countries of origin : United States

Language : English

Production companies : Jayark Films Corporation Julieart

Dec 31, 1969
Carole Lombard
Born Jane Alice Peters, Carole Lombard learned from an early age that movie success was dependent upon box office. She got her first screen credit at age 12, but began her screen acting career in earnest as one of Mack Sennett's bathing beauties after finishing school four years later. As Carole was making a name for herself in the early 1930's, she was cast opposite some of Hollywood's A-list leading men, which would catapult her into the ranks of an A-lister. One of those leading men was 'Clark Gable'. Although having made only one picture together, Gable and Lombard would extend their relationship into the personal realm. She was known primarily as a light comedienne which started in her Mack Sennett days to the end of her protracted career, which was marked by her death in a plane crash while on a war bond tour in 1942.
Dec 31, 1969
Greer Garson
Born in Ireland, Greer Garson, known for her screen portrayals of beautiful yet extremely kind and humanistic characters, began her acting career on the London stage, where she was noticed by Louis B. Mayer who signed her to a Hollywood contract. Mayer insisted she not appear in any movie, but the right movie, hence the reason she sat idle for the first year of her contract until the movie Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939) came along. A string of successful movies followed, including Blossoms in the Dust (1941), which would team her for the first time with who would become her frequent leading man, Walter Pidgeon. A subsequent collaboration with Pidgeon would become her defining screen role as the title character in Mrs. Miniver (1942), for which she would win an Oscar. She was adored by audiences and critics alike, often being voted the screen's most popular actress and being Oscar nominated a number of times following her Miniver win. She made a late career comeback portraying first lady Eleanor Roosevelt in Sunrise at Campobello (1960).
Dec 31, 1969
James Cagney
James Cagney began his show business career as a dancer. But the movie The Public Enemy (1931) and its famous grapefruit scene with co-star Mae Clarke made Cagney a star as a tough guy women loved and men wanted to emulate. Despite his tough guy screen persona, Cagney was a soft spoken man who prided himself on keeping in good dancing shape. It would come in handy for his second Oscar nominated role as George M. Cohan in Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), a role which was offered to him directly by the Cohan family and for which he did win the Oscar.
Dec 31, 1969
W.C. Fields
Born William Claude Dukenfield, W.C. Fields started his professional career as a juggler, working the vaudeville circuit. But his ad-libbed comments on stage made him change the focus of his act to comedy. He starred on the Ziegfeld Follies on Broadway for nine years before moving onto the silver screen. Despite initially working in D.W. Griffith movies, it was his roles in Mack Sennett comedies that Fields crafted the on-screen persona for which he is now known, which included mastering the art of physical comedy. He transferred his love of comedy from what is seen on the screen to what happened on set. He expressed an intense dislike for children and animals, but worked with both often. His on screen image as the dipsomaniac belied the fact that he enjoyed keeping healthy through physical exercise. His career tapered off at the height of his fame.
Dec 31, 1969
William Powell
This entry in the Hollywood Hist-o-Rama series offers a brief biography of actor William Powell using voice-over narration and photos, including stills from films from throughout his career.
Dec 31, 1969
Basil Rathbone
Although neither his parents were actors, Basil Rathbone followed in the footsteps of some of his relatives by going into the acting profession. He originally started his acting career on the stage, most notably in Shakespearean plays both in London and on Broadway. He made the transition to acting in motion pictures easily. He specialized in playing dark characters, probably because of the piercing nature of his eyes. While in Hollywood, he and his wife were renowned for hosting lavish parties. After playing the heavy for years, he had what is arguably his most famous role, that of the hero Sherlock Holmes in The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939). He played the role for seven years in subsequent films and on radio. The role could also be considered a curse as he became typecast as Holmes, which made him return to New York and acting on the Broadway stage for more variety in the roles he was offered to play.
Dec 31, 1969
Cecil B. DeMille
His father being both a playwright and a deeply religious man would greatly influence the career of Cecil B. DeMille. Growing up in Ethel Lake, New Jersey, Cecil and his brother William would often be told bible stories as they grew up. He is considered a movie making pioneer, creating the Famous Players Corporation, which is better known today as Paramount Pictures and where he made his first motion picture. DeMille helped bridge the gap between the Broadway community and Hollywood, and helped develop what is the star system in Hollywood. Under that star system, DeMille had his stock players. He is probably best known for his religious epics - making both a silent and talkie version of The Ten Commandments (1923) - although he liked to consider himself a dramatist first, and a creator of epics last.
Dec 31, 1969
Claudette Colbert
Born in Paris, actress Claudette Colbert initially wanted to be a fashion designer. But after a move to the United States and a chance part in a Broadway play, her career path changed. She was cast as the female lead in Paramount Pictures' first ever talkie The Hole in the Wall (1929), which was only her second movie. Despite being cast alongside some of the most sought after leading men of the early 1930's, Claudette's roles were primarily overshadowed by her co-stars. Upon deciding to return to Broadway due to her lack of screen success, the studio began to reinvent her persona as the siren, which paid dividends to her screen popularity. Her title role in Cleopatra (1934) marked the true turning point to her becoming a movie star. Despite many considering Imitation of Life (1934) the crowning glory in her film career, she instead took home the Oscar for Best Actress that year for her comic turn in It Happened One Night (1934), which led to her being known as a versatile actress who could do both dramas and comedies.
Dec 31, 1969
Janet Gaynor
Born Laura Gaynor, Janet Gaynor believed since she was a young child that riches and fame were to come her way. Her predetermination seemed to be true as she landed a job as an extra within a week of arriving in Hollywood. She was quickly noticed on the studio lot, which led to a short interview, a short screen test, and the second leading part in a movie. Her rise to stardom was quick, most notably with the presentation of the Academy Awards, being awarded the first ever Best Actress Oscar for a trio of film roles, and her frequent on-screen pairing with Charles Farrell, which the public adored. With Farrell often at her screen side, she made the transition to talkies, including in what was to be the first musical written for the screen, Sunnyside Up (1929). Her pairings with Farrell would abruptly come to an end in the mid 1930's with the merger of Fox and 20th Century Studios, when her contract would not being renewed. However, her second rise to fame as a freelance player would soon come in the starring role in A Star Is Born (1937). She gave up acting shortly thereafter to become the wife of famed Hollywood fashion designer Adrian.
Dec 31, 1969
Jean Harlow
Born Harlean Carpentier, Jean Harlow's unglamorous early life did not telegraph what was to come. She was a superstitious woman, who among other things, always sported a trademark lucky ankle bracelet. Her early movie work, which she did as a lark, was in Hal Roach comedies. A chance meeting with Howard Hughes marked a change in her movie career as he cast her in her first credited role in Hell's Angels (1930). Her screen stardom quickly rose, being cast in a quick succession of popular movies, including Platinum Blonde (1931), to which she would be forever tied in the eyes of the movie going public for her striking hair. Many consider her role in Saratoga (1937) her most important. That movie would also be her last due to her untimely death.
Dec 31, 1969
Jeanette MacDonald
Jeanette MacDonald's film career is probably best known for her lyrical singing voice. She seemed destined for stardom, even at an early age, as the camera loved her. She started her professional career on Broadway in musical theater. In such productions, she was known primarily as a dancer. She was quickly lured to Hollywood in the early talkie era to star in movie musicals. Her role in The Lottery Bride (1930) would lead to a meeting with opera star Lily Pons, the two would would become friends with and admirers of each other. MGM was the studio which cast her with the person with who she would be forever linked: Nelson Eddy. They were always cast as singing sweethearts. Following her professional association with Eddy, she would instead focus on making public appearances, she being one of the first Hollywood stars to perform for the troops during WWII. Following her permanent retirement from acting in movies, she led a busy life as Mrs. Gene Raymond.
Dec 31, 1969
Joan Crawford
The glamorous face that the public now knows of Joan Crawford took quite the evolution from her movie career beginnings, where she played a variety of roles, both glamorous and non-glamorous. Before starting her movie career, she worked on Broadway, where she was noticed by movie producers and offered the part of Rose-Marie (1928). In the mid-1930's when her career had already taken off, she co-starred in a number of movies with Franchot Tone, with who she would enter into a brief marriage. The glamorous Joan Crawford would eventually emerge in the movie Susan and God (1940). That movie would lead to her Oscar winning performance in the title role of Mildred Pierce (1945). Her movie roles dwindled by the late 1950's, her time taken up by being an executive with a national soft drink corporation instead.
Dec 31, 1969
Lionel Barrymore
The eldest of three famous acting siblings, Lionel Barrymore started his professional career in the theater, but began acting in movies through a connection with director D.W. Griffith. He made the permanent move from New York to Hollywood when he realized he was more dedicated to film acting. He appeared on screen with his siblings John Barrymore and Ethel Barrymore only twice, with John in _Grand Hotel (1932)_ and with both in Rasputin and the Empress (1932). Although most noted as an actor, he also made movie contributions in the areas of writing and directing. Another noted role was on radio where he recreated the role of Ebeneezer Scrooge for twenty-four years. A hip injury sustained in the late 1930's confined him to a wheelchair, but that did not slow down his acting career, as he starred in among other things the Dr. Kildare series of movies as Dr. Leonard Gillespie.
Dec 31, 1969
Marlene Dietrich
Known for her beautiful legs, Marlene Dietrich did not choose acting as a first choice of career, but rather concert violinist. Over-practicing resulted in a wrist injury which would deny that first choice. She instead turned to musical theater. Her first international movie hit was Der blaue Engel (1930), the costumes for which showed off those famous legs. She and her Blue Angel director Josef von Sternberg moved to Hollywood to collaborate on their next movie, Morocco (1930), which continued her meteoric rise in popularity in America. The studio capitalized on this popularity by casting her in a quick succession of movies, which proved to be a good move for her career. She took a brief hiatus from movie acting in the early 1940's to assist in the war effort, but came back to movie acting as popular as ever.
Dec 31, 1969
Norma Shearer
Born in Montréal, Québec, Canada, Norma Shearer was known as an actress with a determined will, common sense and beauty, who easily spanned both the silent and talkie eras. She left the comforts of her middle class upbringing to endure the struggles of an often unemployed actress in her early career, taking jobs as extras or in silly bit roles solely to make a living. Although he had noticed her years earlier, Irving Thalberg, when he became production head at M-G-M, took Norma on the road to becoming a star with her first long term studio contract. Perhaps her most well known role occurred in 1927 when she became Mrs. Irving Thalberg. Her husband was the guiding force in her acting career. When she started in talkies, her low pitched voice became an asset. She won an Oscar for her role in The Divorcee (1930). She announced her retirement from acting when Thalberg suddenly died in 1936, although she would make a few more movies after that period.
Dec 31, 1969
Paul Muni
Paul Muni is an actor most known for being able to embody his characters physically as he is almost unrecognizable from role to role. His characters also spanned the ages from young men to old men. Warner Bros. signed him to a contract after the success of his first big role in Scarface (1932). To capitalize on that success, most of Muni's early roles were as tough guys. His portrayals of characters who aged from young to old men are most widely known in The Story of Louis Pasteur (1936) and The Life of Emile Zola (1937), the former which would earn him a Best Actor Oscar. His diverse roles would have him play an East Asian (The Good Earth (1937)) and a Mexican president (Juarez (1939)). In his later professional life, he would divide his time between the silver screen and the Broadway stage.
Dec 31, 1969
Rita Hayworth
Born Rita Cansino in New York, Irish-Latin Rita Hayworth came from show business roots with an actor mother and dancer father. She studied both acting and dancing in her younger years, favoring dancing which provided more opportunity. It was her dancing that got her initially noticed by movie studios. Being cast as nothing more than the eye catching dancer in bit roles, Rita started her rise to stardom by adopting her mother's family name, changing studios and focusing on being a dramatic actress. Once becoming a star, she was able to combine her acting with singing and dancing in movies. Arguably her most famous on-screen moment was as her most iconic role as Gilda (1946) performing the musical number "Put the Blame on Mame". She gave up her acting career to become one of the most famous real life princesses in the world, but returned to acting a few years later.
Dec 31, 1969
Robert Taylor
Robert Taylor is known as an actor for his consistency. His global persona belies the fact of being a mid-westerner, born Spangler Arlington Brugh in Nebraska. He got his entertainment start singing in a small ensemble - a trio - in college in Nebraska, they who performed on the local radio. Taylor disbanded the trio to follow his music teacher to California, where he was spotted by a studio representative which led to his start in movies. His starring role in Camille (1936) opposite Greta Garbo shot him quickly to stardom. He starred in one success after another with other A list movie stars. The onset of WWII placed him in one war related movie after another. The war itself would be the cause of a brief hiatus to movies as he went into active duty. He resumed his career as popular as ever, with perhaps his most lauded role as Marcus Vinicius in Quo Vadis (1951).
Dec 31, 1969
Tyrone Power
Tyrone Power is best remembered as a handsome leading man of Hollywood movies, that good looks which he possessed since childhood. He came by his acting naturally as the son of British stage legend Tyrone Power Sr., with who he acted on stage as early as age seven. He worked as a theater usher in Cincinnati growing up, but the acting bug brought him back to Hollywood. The Power name initially got him through casting doors, which closed upon his father's passing in 1931. Those casting doors were reopened specifically by Darryl F. Zanuck, which led to a long term contract with 20th Century Fox, and movie stardom. His stardom went international with the movie Blood and Sand (1941). He enlisted as a Marine Corps pilot during WWII, following which his wanderlust led to travels through South America. He would return to Hollywood and movie stardom, which had an abrupt end with his sudden death in 1958 at age forty-four while he was filming what would be his last movie, Solomon and Sheba (1959), in Spain.
Dec 31, 1969
Victor McLaglen
Born in England the son of a clergyman, Victor McLaglen traveled the world as a young man, serving in the military, sailing the south seas, boxing, and serving as a physical instructor to a rajah. When he returned to England following WWI a twice decorated soldier, he was noticed by a director who cast him in the lead of The Call of the Road (1920). Within a few short years, he was a top box office draw in his homeland. Working on an American produced British movie was his stepping stone to Hollywood. His ruggedness was different than the typical Hollywood leading man, which made him stand out and had him cast usually as the tough guy. This on-screen persona was in contrast to his true warm nature with his commitment to family, and his love of rose horticulture. The movie What Price Glory (1926) began his long time on-screen pairing with actor Edmund Lowe. Arguably his greatest role was his Oscar winning one in The Informer (1935). His was a long career which spanned into the television era until his death in 1959.
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