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Get social :: Louise Brooks Society on Twitter

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The Louise Brooks Society is on Twitter @LB_Society. As of now, the LBS is followed by more than 1,674 fans. Are you one of them? Why not join the conversation? Be sure and visit the LBS
Twitter profile, and check out the more than 2,643 LBS tweets so far!
You should have seen the large number of fans tweeting birthday wishes to the actress
last week. Louise Brooks was trending in 2013! The LBS
twitter stream can also be found
in the right hand column.

Doctor Who and Louise Brooks

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2009 Doctor Who comic book
The connections between the silent film star Louise Brooks and the contemporary science fiction TV series Doctor Who are unexpected. Nevertheless, the actress has appeared as a character in a Doctor Who comics, and one of her biggest fans is an actor who once the played the Doctor himself!

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who, the Louise Brooks Society looks back to this 2012 interview with actor Paul McGann, who played the eighth Doctor. McGann is as well a BIG fan of Louise Brooks. In 2007, the celebrated actor wrote an article for the Guardian (UK) about silent film star.

Who is Paul McGann? As an actor, he first made a name for himself in 1986 as the lead in a historical BBC drama set during WWI, The Monocled Mutineer (this once-controversial series is out on DVD in the UK). McGann is also known for his role in one of Britain's biggest cult films, the 1987 black comedy, Withnail and I. Other credits include parts in Empire of the Sun, Alien 3, Queen of the Damned, and the BBC's Our Mutual Friend and Hornblower series.

McGann may be best known, at least to science-fiction fans, as the Eighth Doctor, a role he played in the 1996 Doctor Who made-for-television movie. Its story, of the Doctor's regeneration and attempt to save the earth, is set in San Francisco in 1999, on the eve of the millennium.

McGann is, as well, a patron of Bristol Silents, a group formed to raise awareness and knowledge of silent film among the English film going public. He has introduced screenings of films from the silent era and written about them for newspapers including the Guardian in England; his piece on Louise Brooks, with whom he shares a birthday, is well worth checking out.

Recently, McGann answered a few questions about his interest in the silent era and what he is looking forward to seeing at this year’s San Francisco Silent Film Festival.

Actor Paul McGann and LBS Director Thomas Gladysz
Thomas Gladysz: When did you first get interested in silent film?  

Paul McGann: About ten years ago after becoming a patron of Bristol Silents. I'd had a general interest since my student days in London, during which the restored Napoleon was premiered, Kevin Brownlow's Abel Gance and David Robinson's Chaplin were published, and Louise Brooks was being 're-discovered.' 

Thomas Gladysz: Tell me more about your involvement with Bristol Silents. How did that relationship come about?  

Paul McGann: I supported one of their early events, I think it was a screening of The Big Parade, and met Chris Daniels [a founder of the group]. He's kindly involved me in quite a few of their projects since, each bigger and better by the year.  

Thomas Gladysz: Any favorite films? How about favorite directors or stars?  

Paul McGann: The first director I worked with, Bruce Robinson, told me when we met that if I thought Jaws was the perfect movie I plainly hadn't seen The Gold Rush. So I did. He was right. I've been a fan of Louise Brooks since first seeing Pandora's Box on television. I remember thinking they must've had that girl playing Lulu parachuted in from the present.  

Thomas Gladysz: You've written and spoken about Louise Brooks, and introduced her films. What is it about the actress that attracts you?  

Paul McGann: She appeared to find, if only briefly, the perfect working spirit. Matchlessly beautiful, fully intelligent and a total natural; most screen actors would kill to be so blessed.  

Thomas Gladysz: At this year's San Francisco Silent Film festival, you're narrating South, Frank Hurley's documentary of Ernest Shackleton's expedition to Antarctica. What can we expect?  

Paul McGann as Doctor Who

Paul McGann: Musician Stephen Horne and myself will try to recreate at least a flavour of the public screenings Shackelton hosted at London's Philharmonic Hall in 1919 when he read from his memoir while Hurley's film played.  

Thomas Gladysz: Have you narrated the film before?  

Paul McGann: Twice, in Bristol and Pordenone, Italy.  

Thomas Gladysz: Are there any films you're especially excited about at this year's Festival.

Paul McGann: Aside from the thrill of seeing a beautifully restored Pandora's Box, I'm really intrigued about Little Toys from China and Erotikon from Sweden.  

Thomas Gladysz: You played a Time Lord in Doctor Who. Were you to travel back in time and return to the silent era and be cast in a film, which film would that be?  

Paul McGann: That's easy, Murnau's Sunrise. I'd gladly (my wife might say naturally) take over George O'Brien's duties as the man caught between Janet Gaynor and Margaret Livingston.


*****

Happy Thanksgiving, from the Louise Brooks Society

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Happy Thanksgiving, from the Louise Brooks Society.


A Girl in Every Port in Madison, Wisconsin on December 7th

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On December 7th, A Girl in Every Port (1928), starring Louise Brooks, will also be shown in Madison, Wisconsin. This Howard Hawks-directed buddy film, in which Brooks plays a gold digger who comes between two friends, is considered one of the legendary director's best silent efforts. It screens at the Cinematheque at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, with live musical accompaniment provided by David Drazin. More information at http://cinema.wisc.edu/series/2013/fall/howard-hawks


Hawks on Hawks reissued

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The University Press of Kentucky has just reissued Hawks on Hawks, by Joseph McBride, as part of its screen classics series.

Howard Hawks (1896-1977) is often credited as being the most versatile of all of the great American directors, having worked with equal ease in screwball comedies, westerns, gangster movies, musicals, and adventure films. He directed an impressive number of Hollywood's greatest stars -- including Louise Brooks, Humphrey Bogart, Cary Grant, John Wayne, Lauren Bacall, Rosalind Russell, and Marilyn Monroe. Some of his most celebrated films include Scarface (1932), Bringing Up Baby (1938), The Big Sleep (1946), Red River (1948), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), and Rio Bravo (1959).

Hawks on Hawks draws on interviews that author and film historian Joseph McBride conducted with the director over the course of seven years, giving rare insight into Hawks' artistic philosophy, his relationships with the stars, and his position in an industry that was then rapidly changing. In its new edition, this classic book is both an account of the film legend's life and work and a guidebook on how to make movies.

"I read Hawks on Hawks with passion. I am very happy that this book exists." -- François Truffaut.

"[D]ifferent from most film books about personalities.... The author really knew Howard Hawks, interviewed the crusty old director; the crust and insight come through in these interviews. There are going to be many biographies of Howard Hawks, but they will all lean heavily on this book; the pioneer so honestly reveals himself and the people with whom he worked." -- Los Angeles Times

More about the author: Joseph McBride is an American film historian, biographer, screenwriter, and professor in the Cinema Department at San Francisco State University. McBride has published seventeen books since 1968, including the acclaimed biographies Frank Capra: The Catastrophe of Success (1992; 2000) and Searching for John Ford (2001). McBride's other books include: Orson Welles (1972; 1996), The Book of Movie Lists: An Offbeat, Provocative Collection of the Best and Worst of Everything in Movies (1999), and What Ever Happened to Orson Welles?: A Portrait of an Independent Career (2006).

McBride's screenwriting credits include the movies Rock 'n' Roll High School and five American Film Institute Life Achievement Award specials dealing with Fred Astaire, Frank Capra, Lillian Gish, John Huston, and James Stewart. McBride plays a film critic, Mr. Pister, in the legendary unfinished Orson Welles feature The Other Side of the Wind (1970-76). McBride is also the coproducer of the documentaries Obsessed with "Vertigo": New Life for Hitchcock's Masterpiece (1997) and John Ford Goes to War (2002).

Examples of Louise Brooks street art, in Paris and Des Moines

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Here are a few examples of Louise Brooks street art. The first three are from Paris, France. They are just a few of a number of examples of street art featuring the actress.



 
 
The next example is from Des Moines, Iowa. Read the story behind this image on gregfallis.com


Must read: The Survival of American Silent Films 1912-1929

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Must read: The Survival of American Silent Films 1912-1929 (pdf), by the great David Pierce.

Here it is, the Library of Congress report that has been getting so much press of late.

Follow this link to download or read on line. There are a lot of statistics here, but ultimately it tells an important story. Louise Brooks is mentioned twice.

Tribute to Louise Brooks ( Music By Editors)


Singin' in the Rain at San Francisco Symphony

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It's one thing for an orchestra to accompany a silent film. It is something else all together for an orchestra to accompany a sound film, let alone a musical.The level of expectation, as well as the technical and performance challenges faced by musicians accompanying a movie whose original score has been stripped from its soundtrack, are considerable to say the least.




That's the challenge the San Francisco Symphony will face on December 6 and 7, when the world renown orchestra accompanies the classic musical, Singin' in the Rain.

The 1952 film, one of most beloved movies of all time, is widely considered the greatest musical ever made. In fact, the film has appeared in numerous top ten lists of the greatest films in history -- all genres aside. In 1989, Singin' in the Rain was among the first 25 films chosen for the then newly established National Film Registry, honoring motion pictures deemed "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" by the Library of Congress.

The San Francisco Symphony faced a similar challenge last month when it accompanied the Alfred Hitchcock masterworks Psycho (1960) and Vertigo (1958). The Bernard Herrmann score for the latter film is considered by some the greatest Hollywood score of all time, and the Symphony accompanied it to near perfection.

Singin' in the Rain was originally conceived by legendary MGM producer Arthur Freed, the head of a unit responsible for many of MGM's lavish musicals. Freed envisioned the film as a vehicle for his catalog of songs written with Nacio Herb Brown, many of them for MGM film musicals dating from 1929-1939.

Most all of the songs in Singin' in the Rain -- such as "You Were Meant for Me" (from The Broadway Melody, 1929), "Should I?" (from Lord Byron of Broadway, 1930), "Would You?" (from San Francisco, 1936), "Good Morning" (from Babes In Arms, 1939), and notably "Singin' in the Rain" (from Hollywood Revue of 1929), had been featured in earlier films.

Screenwriters Betty Comden and Adolph Green, who contributed lyrics to one new song ("Moses Supposes"), were given the task of stringing these musical numbers together into a story. And they did so brilliantly.


Like the popular Academy Award winning film The Artist (2011), Singin' in the Rain tells a story which takes place during the period when silent film was being replaced by "talkies." The film follows the struggles of the studios and various actors as they attempt to transition to the new medium.

Co-directed by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, Singin' in the Rain stars Kelly, Donald O'Connor and then newcomer Debbie Reynolds. Also in the cast are Jean Hagen (who received an Oscar nomination for best supporting actress for her role as a character based on silent star Norma Talmadge), Cyd Charisse (as a Louise Brooks-like vixen), and Rita Moreno (playing a character not unlike "It Girl" Clara Bow). Watch for visual nods to Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd and Louella Parsons. In uncredited roles were familiar character actor Kathleen Freeman (as a diction coach), Mae Clarke (the grapefruit girl from The Public Enemy), and Judy Landon (as a silent screen vamp inspired by Pola Negri).

Kelly was also responsible for much of the film's choreography, while the hair styles designer was Sydney Guilaroff, the famed hair dresser credited with giving Louise Brooks her distinct bob in the mid-1920's. The director of photography was Harold Rosson, who as Hal Rosson, worked on The Street of Forgotten Men and Evening Clothes.


The San Francisco Symphony, conducted by Sarah Hicks, accompanies the film live in what promises to be a not-to-be-missed holiday event. Visit the San Francisco Symphony website for additional details.

Louise Brooks in A Girl in Every Port, tonight in Madison, Wisconsin

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As part of its mini Howard Hawks retrospective, HOWARD HAWKS: THE EARLY YEARS, the Cinematheque at the University of Wisconsin in Madison will screen A Girl in Every Port. The 1928 Louise Brooks film is set to play tonight at 8:30 pm, with live musical accompaniment provided by David Drazin. [For more on Hawks' career, be sure and check out Joseph McBride's recently reissued Hawks on Hawks, from the University Press of Kentucky.]


Howard Hawks'A Girl in Every Port is a well-crafted and entertaining "buddy film" widely considered the director's best silent. It's also a film with a special legacy.

A Girl in Every Port features a romantic triangle – a reoccurring motif in many of Hawks' later works. It tells the story of two sailors (Victor McLaglen and Robert Armstrong) and their adventures in various ports of call around the world. Louise Brooks plays Marie (Mam'selle Godiva), a high diver and sideshow siren and the love interest of both sailors. Other girls in other ports of call include Myrna Loy, Sally Rand, Leila Hyams, and Maria Casajuana (the future Maria Alba).

Released by Fox in February of 1928, A Girl in Every Port debuted at the 6,000 seat Roxy Theater in New York City. For days on end, the film played to a packed house. Ads placed by the studio in trade publications claimed it set a "New House Record – and a World Record – with Daily Receipts on February 22 of $29,463." Considering ticket prices of the time, that's a lot of money.

Popular as well as critically acclaimed, the film received good reviews in New York's daily newspapers. The New York Times described it "A rollicking comedy," while the New York Telegram called it "a hit picture." The Morning Telegraph pronounced it a "winner."

The Daily News noted, "Director Howard Hawks has injected several devilish touches in the piece, which surprisingly enough, got by the censors. His treatment of the snappy scenario is smooth and at all times interesting. Victor's great, Armstrong's certainly appreciable, and Louise Brooks is at her loveliest."



Reviewing the premiere, TIME magazine stated, "There are two rollicking sailors in this fractious and excellent comedy. . . . A Girl in Every Port is really What Price Glory? translated from arid and terrestrial irony to marine gaiety of the most salty and miscellaneous nature. Nobody could be more charming than Louise Brooks, that clinging and tender little barnacle from the docks of Marseilles. Director Howard Hawks and his entire cast, especially Robert Armstrong, deserve bouquets and kudos."

A number of critics singled out Brooks. The New York American stated, “Then comes THE woman. She is Louise Brooks, pert, fascinating young creature, who does high and fancy diving for a living. . . . Miss Brooks 'takes' our hero in somewhat the manner that Grant took Richmond. . . . Louise Brooks has a way of making a junior vamp and infantile scarlet lady seem most attractive."

A reviewer for the English Kinematograph Weekly echoed American reviews of the film, and picked up on the film's somewhat different bromance. "Louise Brooks made a charmingly heartless vamp. . . . It has the novelty of a love interest that does not materialize, which is replaced by the friendship between two men."

The film made a bigger splash in France. Writing in 1930 in his "Paris Cinema Chatter" column in the New York Times, Morris Gilbert noted ". . . there are a number of others – mostly American – which have their place as 'classics' in the opinion of the French. . . . They love A Girl in Every Port, which has the added distinction of being practically the only American film which keeps its own English title here." The film enjoyed an extended run in the French capitol, and lingered for decades in the French consciousness.

Writing in Cahiers du Cinéma in 1963, French film archivist Henri Langlois stated, "It seems that A Girl in Every Port was the revelation of the Hawks season at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. For New York audiences of 1962, Louise Brooks suddenly acquired that 'Face of the century' aura she had had, many years ago, for spectators at the Cinema des Ursulines. . . . That is why Blaise Cendrars confided a few years ago that he thought A Girl in Every Port definitely marked the first appearance of contemporary cinema. To the Paris of 1928, which was rejecting expressionism, A Girl in Every Port was a film conceived in the present, achieving an identity of its own by repudiating the past."

Brooks, under contract to Paramount, was loaned to Fox for her role in A Girl in Every Port. Anticipating the female types cast by Hawks in later works, the bobbed-hair actress stands as what might well be the first "Hawksian woman." Years later, the director stated, "I wanted a different type of girl. I hired Louise because she's very sure of herself, she's very analytical, she's very feminine, but she's damn good and sure she's going to do what she wants to do."

Film histories note that A Girl in Every Port ranks as the most significant of Hawks' silent films; additionally, historians claim, it seemingly persuaded G.W. Pabst to cast Louise Brooks in Pandora's Box. The claim was likely first made by James Card of the George Eastman House in his 1956 article, "Out of Pandora's Box: Louise Brooks on G. W. Pabst." It was repeated by others, including Brooks herself, in filmed interviews in the 1970's.

In Germany, Pabst cast Brooks as Lulu after a well publicized nationwide search which concluded months after A Girl in Every Port premiered in New York City. Not quite content with a German actress (including, legend has it, Marlene Dietrich), Pabst wrote to Paramount asking after Brooks, then an American starlet. The German director was also in search of a "different type."

Chronologically, the assumption that Pabst saw his Lulu in Hawks' Marie makes sense – Brooks plays a temptress in both films. Historical records show, however, that Blaue jungens, blonde Madchen (the German title for Hawk's film) was not shown in Germany until December, after production on Pandora's Box was finished.

Could Pabst have seen A Girl in Every Port well prior to its release in Germany? Or, might Pabst have noticed Brooks in one of her earlier American films, like Die Braut am Scheidewege (Just Another Blonde) or Ein Frack Ein Claque Ein Madel (Evening Clothes)? Each were shown in Berlin while Pabst was looking for Lulu, and each received press which highlighted Brooks.



Whatever the answer to this small mystery, A Girl in Every Port remains an entertaining film worthy of greater recognition – not only because it stars Louise Brooks, and not only because it may or may not have led Pabst to cast the actress as Lulu in Pandora's Box. It's deserving because it is an early work by great director which introduces the themes and characters Hawks would continue to explore throughout his long and distinguished career.

Louise Brooks :: “Musei in Musica”: riprende l’attività della Casa del Jazz con un triplo concerto

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Yesterday, Louise Brooks was celebrated in jazz in Italy. . . 
 
Il 7 dicembre, ore 21, alla Casa del Jazz, Roma 

SIMONE GRAZIANO QUINTET
“Frontal”
David Binney sax alto
Dan Kinzelman sax tenore
Simone Graziano pianoforte
Gabriele Evangelista contrabbasso
Stefano Tamborrino batteria
 
CRISTIANO ARCELLI QUARTET
“Brooks”
Cristiano Arcellisax alto
Federico Casagrandechitarra elettrica
Marcello Gianninichitarra elettrica
Zeno de Rossibatteria

CRISTIANO ARCELLI /SIMONE GRAZIANO ENSEMBLE
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In collaborazione con l’Assessorato alla Cultura, Creatività e Promozione Artistica di Roma Capitale e Zètema Progetto Cultura

Riprende l’attività della Casa del Jazz, sabato 7 dicembre nell’ambito di “Musei in Musica” in collaborazione con l’Assessorato alla Cultura, Creatività e Promozione Artistica di Roma Capitale e Zètema Progetto Cultura, con un triplo concerto: alle ore 21.00, il pianista  Simone Graziano presenta  il suo cd “Frontal” acclamato dalla critica musicale come una delle migliori produzioni del 2013, con lui sul palco, un quintetto d’eccezione composto dall’icona del sassofonismo americano David  Binney (sax alto), dal giovane talento americano ma naturalizzato in Italia, Dan Kinzelman al sax tenore, da contrabbassista Gabriele Evangelista e dal batterista Stefano Tamborrino.Alle ore 22,00 ,Cristiano Arcelli con il suo quartetto  presenterà il suo ultimo progetto discografico “Brooks”, un tributo alla diva dark del cinema muto Louise Brooks, realizzato per l’etichetta Auand.Sul palco, accanto a Cristiano Arcelli (sax contralto), alcuni dei più interessanti musicisti del jazz italiano: Federico Casagrande e Marcello Giannini (chitarre elettriche) e Zeno de Rossi (batteria).Infine alle 23,00,Cristiano Arcelli / Simone Graziano Ensemble con i musicisti dei due gruppi che si uniranno sul palco.

“Frontal”, il nuovo disco del pianista fiorentino Simone Graziano pubblicato a maggio da Auand Records e realizzato insieme a Chris Speed, David Binney, Gabriele Evangelista e Stefano Tamborrino, è un concept album che nasce dall’improvvisazione, si cristallizza nella scrittura e si semplifica nella canzone, suggerendo una forma che è data dall’insieme di tre cerchi concentrici. Con il cerchio esterno, il più grande, a rappresentare l’improvvisazione; il cerchio intermedio, la composizione; e quello più piccolo le song. Nessuno di questi elementi viene mai disatteso, perché nella composizione, anche laddove la scrittura appare molto compressa, la musica continua a mantenere una singolare cantabilità e l’improvvisazione è sempre presente.
Il primo cerchio dell’album passa attraverso tre momenti improvvisativi: Frontal, la title track che apre il disco, No Words At All, brano centrale e Carolina, l’unica in piano solo, che chiude il disco. Il momento compositivo si sublima nei quattro brani articolati su forme inusuali e complesse Tre Spirali, As a First Point, Away From Here, Takehiko, tutti caratterizzati da una densa scrittura. Ci sono infine brani come Rock Song #1, Rock Song #2, Nocturnal Fly, e Lucyne, dove predomina la semplicità formale e melodica.

Sono molti, in “Frontal”, di Simone Graziano, i riferimenti alla formazione e alla personalità del leader. C’è il desiderio di dare suono a una forma geometrica, come nel caso della song minimale Lucyne, che sfuma nel brano Tre Spirali, prendendo un andamento vorticoso e complesso proprio come le spire; o come in Takehiko, dedicato all’incontro presso il Bauhaus Archiv di Berlino con un’affascinante scultura dell’artista Takehiko Mizutan: una lastra di bronzo fusa che dà vita a tre coni concentrici poggianti su un asse obliquo. C’è la passione per la musica rock, quella con cui il pianista fiorentino è cresciuto, espressa nelle due Rock Song. Ci sono le improvvisazioni collettive come in No Words At All dove la suggestione è un suono senza alcuna evoluzione, statico, asettico e distante. Ci sono i grooves di As a First Point; le sovrapposizioni armoniche inusuali di Away From Here; la rappresentazione in musica del sogno di volare di Nocturnal Fly; l’inno al mistero della vita di Carolina.Quella che ha accompagnato Simone Graziano nella realizzazione di “Frontal” è una formazione d’eccezione che avvicina in maniera esclusiva due realtà musicali distanti solo geograficamente, ovvero la sempre più vivace scena jazzistica italiana e l’effervescente mondo dell’improvvisazione newyorkese.  Due assi della scena contemporanea statunitense incontrano tre giovani ma già affermati musicisti italiani in una combinazione di originalità e talento.

L’eccezionalità dell’incontro è accresciuta dal fatto che Chris Speed e David Binney, pur avendo all’attivo più di 160 pubblicazioni discografiche, non si erano mai proposti prima d’ora in uno stesso gruppo. La carica innovatrice della band sta nella scelta di eseguire solo musiche originali, composte e arrangiate ad hoc dal leader Simone Graziano; tutte le composizioni mirano a valorizzare il virtuosismo dei singoli esecutori in una musica che non lascia mai da parte la melodicità dei temi e la ricchezza armonica, frutto dello studio dei più grandi maestri della tradizione classica e jazzistica. Tutto ciò contribuisce a determinare un suono d’insieme unico e moderno.

A un anno dalla sua fondazione, il gruppo guidato da Simone Graziano ha già raccolto un pregevole successo di pubblico ed entusiasmanti consensi dalla critica specializzata, che hanno consentito al pianista di essere nominato nel Top Jazz 2012, indetto dalla rivista Musica Jazz, nella categoria Migliori Nuovi Talenti.

“Brooks” è il nuovo lavoro di Cristiano Arcelli, un tributo alla diva dark del cinema muto Louise Brooks, realizzato per l’etichetta Auand.

Alla mostra del Cinema di Parigi del 1950, il famoso storico del cinema Henri Langlois, curatore della mostra, proclamava senza mezzi termini: “Non esistono Garbo e Dietrich, esiste solo Louise Brooks!”. Fu l’inizio della riscoperta e riabilitazione dell’attrice che durerà fino ad oggi. La sua straordinaria e conturbante bellezza, che ne fecero subito il prototipo della donna seduttrice e l’incarnazione del sesso, irruppero nel perbenismo di quegli anni. Divenne l’oggetto del desiderio d’intere generazioni.Guido Crepax dichiarò di essersi ispirato a una foto dell’attrice e alla sua malizia conturbante quando creò l’eterea e peccaminosa Valentina e iniziò un fitto rapporto epistolare con lei per presentarle i suoi lavori e scambiarsi idee, pensieri e intima amicizia. La musica del disco nasce dalla penna di Cristiano Arcelli, il quale fonde il jazz con l’hardcore e il punk e raccoglie tutte le sue esperienze artistiche maturate in questi anni, traendo ispirazione dal personaggio di Louise Brooks.

Ogni brano ha un riferimento preciso:
“Solid Gray”
il titolo è ispirato alla luce dei film dell’epoca del muto. Louise Brooks, alla quale è dedicato il cd, è stata una diva indiscussa di quel mondo.
“Boogeyman and Me”
il lato oscuro della personalità di Louise Brooks (e della nostra), quello che traspare dal suo sguardo, quello che si percepisce leggendo la sua biografia e guardando la sua immagine.
“Elison Parade”
una canzone, firmata assieme a Cristina Zavalloni, che racconta di lontananza, di distacco. Un testo ispirato ai tanti cambiamenti repentini che Louise Brooks ha avuto come donna e come artista nel corso della sua vita
“Pandora”
ispirato al film di Pabst “Il Vaso di Pandora”. Louise Brooks diventerà Lulu, una vera icona del ‘900. La forma del brano “bipartita” e frammentata ritmicamente, descrive la pericolosità dell’essere doppi.
“Verse for Brooks”
come un “verse”, l’introduzione delle canzoni americane di jazz, ritmicamente largo e cantabile, nel mio immaginario descrive la vita di Louise precedente alla carriera cinematografica.
“The City Gone Wild”
il titolo è preso in prestito dall‘omonimo gangster – film del ‘27. Il brano è rabbioso, corrosivo e accelera la percezione come in un film scomodo e di movimento.
“Around Lulu”
un brano dedicato alla Lulu del “Vaso di Pandora”, volendo guardare l’altra faccia della luna. Un brano diviso in due, prima tranquillo e lirico, poi di colpo ritmico e distorto.
“Corale for Brooks”
un’introduzione elettronica prepara il campo ad un corale. Si percepisce la calma del cammino compiuto con tutta la solenne pacatezza di un brano che non ha bisogno di sviluppo ma solo di essere cantato.
“I’ll remember Louise”
il voler tenere a mente la luce dello sguardo di Louise Brooks, un’artista che ha fatto del vivere la contemporaneità una missione e che ha avuto nel suo destino la persecuzione delle sfide dell’arte e della vita.
“Elison Parade” (reprise)
in conclusione un “ritorno”.

In “Brooks”, accanto a Cristiano Arcelli (sax contralto), alcuni dei più interessanti musicisti del jazz italiano: Federico Casagrande e Marcello Giannini (chitarre elettriche), Zeno de Rossi (batteria) e, ospite d’eccezione, la voce di Cristina Zavalloni.

Cristiano Arcelli in questi anni si è affermato come sassofonista e compositore. Ha collaborato con artisti quali: Enrico Rava, Joe Chambers, Paolo Damiani, Cristina Zavalloni, Dafins Prieto, Paul McCandless, Cyro Baptista, Danilo Rea, Gabriele Mirabassi, Nguyen Le, Stefano Battaglia. Si è esibito in molti festival tra i quali: Umbria Jazz, Roccella Jazz, Jazz at Lincoln Center (NY), Casa del Jazz (Roma), European Jazz Expo (Cagliari), Maison de la Culture de Grenoble, New Morning (Parigi), Jazz Festival Saalfelden, Barga Jazz, Beijing Internationl Jazz Festival, Amiens, Teatro Regio (Torino), Auditorium Parco della Musica (Roma). La sua attenzione per la composizione e l’arrangiamento l’hanno portato a cimentarsi con organici di ogni tipo, dal trio all’orchestra sinfonica, travalicando gli ambiti del jazz verso le stagioni concertistiche classiche, le colonne sonore, il teatro e la danza.

Casa del Jazz
Viale di Porta Ardeatina, 55 – Roma
Info: 06/704731
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Relazioni con la stampa: Maurizio Quattrini 338/8485333

Louise Brooks on a ladder in Hollywood

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A picture of Louise Brooks (on a ladder) alongside actor Adolph Menjou and Evening Clothes director Luther Reed is included in this months Los Angeles Magazine. The three are pictured outside of "The Barn" in Hollywood, the site of Cecil B. DeMille's production of The Squaw Man, said to be the first feature film shot in the greater Los Angeles area. Production of Evening Clothes took place in January of 1927. The historic snapshot was likely taken around that time. (Thank you to film historian Mary Mallory for tipping us off to this clipping.)


And here is a snapshot of Christy Pascoe and Thomas Gladysz (Director of the Louise Brooks Society) outside The Barn many years later. This historic building is located just across the road from the Hollywood Bowl. Should you ever visit Tinsel Town, be sure and pay a visit.


Allan Dwan and the Rise and Decline of the Hollywood Studios

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Among the books the LBS highly recommends is Allan Dwan and the Rise and Decline of the Hollywood Studios, by Frederic Lombardi. The book was published by McFarland in March, 2013.


Dwan is a legendary director. His credits include Robin Hood (1922), Stage Struck (1925), and The Iron Mask (1929), as well as Louise Brooks' screen test, which was shot in 1925.

Publisher description: "It could be said that the career of Canadian-born film director Allan Dwan (1885-1981) began at the dawn of the American motion picture industry. Originally a scriptwriter, Dwan became a director purely by accident. Even so, his creativity and problem-solving skills propelled him to the top of his profession. He achieved success with numerous silent film performers, most spectacularly with Douglas Fairbanks Sr. and Gloria Swanson, and later with such legendary stars as Shirley Temple and John Wayne. Though his star waned in the sound era, Dwan managed to survive through pluck and ingenuity. Considering himself better off without the fame he enjoyed during the silent era, he went on to do some of his best work for second-echelon studios (notably Republic Pictures'Sands of Iwo Jima) and such independent producers as Edward Small. Along the way, Dwan also found personal happiness in an unconventional manner. Rich in detail with two columns of text in each of its nearly 400 pages, and with more than 150 photographs, this book presents a thorough examination of Allan Dwan and separates myth from truth in his life and films."

"No wonder it took seven years, and we should be grateful to Fred Lombardi. This is a thoroughly researched book which no film aficionado can afford to be without." -- Kevin Brownlow, 2010 Honorary Academy Award winner

"Exhaustively researched." -- Dave Kehr, The New York Times

"Totally remarkable book on Allan Dwan...so wonderfully dense with information, insights, judicious speculation, etc, etc.--in short it is an instant classic, one of the three or four finest books on film that I have ever read." -- Kevin Thomas, film critic

"Lombardi has done his homework. His Allan Dwan is a revelation, a testament to the fruits of untiring and solid research. Every page reveals the always reliable Dwan as a prolific and versatile filmmaker, whose work touched upon every genre and aspect of the evolving studio system in Hollywood’s Golden Age. He was the architect behind Douglas Fairbanks’s best pictures, from the early comedies to the swashbuckling costume epic, Robin Hood. Gloria Swanson, John Wayne, and Shirley Temple, among so many others, all benefited from his sure touch. We can only wonder why it has taken so long to restore this master director to his rightful place in the Hollywood firmament. We are profoundly grateful to Mr. Lombardi." --John C. Tibbetts, University of Kansas.

Check out the Louise Brooks Society store on Amazon.com. It's stocked with other related Louise Brooks movies, books, music and more.

The little story a postcard tells

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This particular postcard is currently for sale on eBay. I have seen examples of this Louise Brooks card come up for sale in the past. However, what makes it stand out is that it tells a little story.



The card, serial #4360/1, was printed in the late 1920's by Ross Verlag, a German company. The front features an attractive portrait of Louise Brooks issued by Paramount, her American studio. Their studio stamp is in the lower right hand corner. What is especially telling is the back of the card. The stamp on the back is from Latvia (prior to WWII a Baltic nation sandwiched between Lithuania and Estonia). The person who sent the card dated it June 28, 1931.

Interestingly, the postage suggests that these German cards were circulated around Europe. And, that  person who bought the card was in all likelihood familiar with the subject of the card; that suggests that at least some of Louise Brooks' films were show in the Baltic states, and that she was at least something of a known personality. Perhaps Brooks was featured in a movie magazine, or in a newspaper article? I would be willing to bet she was "known" because of her three European films, Pandora's Box (Germany, 1929), Diary of a Lost Girl (Germany, 1929), and Prix de Beaute (France, 1930).

Also interesting is the date. By 1931, Brooks' career was beginning to falter. In the United States, she appeared in three lesser films, one of them a short. In the European arena, she hadn't appeared in a film in a year. And yet, a fan in Latvia sent a postcard with her image. Can anyone translate the inscription on the back?


Speaking of Louise Brooks and Latvia . . .

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Yesterday's post got me thinking about Louise Brooks and Latvia. I searched on "Latvian newspaper archive" and found that the National Library of Latvia has a number of Latvian newspapers scanned and available online. One of the newspapers, Latvijas Kareivis, from the capital Riga, covered the 1920's and 1930's.

Though the paper is not keyword searchable, I did a quick visual search and noticed that many American films were shown in the Latvia capital. While I spotted a number of Clara Bow images, I unfortunately didn't come across any images or references to Louise Brooks. Here is a typical example of what I found. I am not certain, but the image in the upper right hand corner featuring Adolphe Menjou  may be from the lost 1927 Louise Brooks film, Evening Clothes. (To see a better and complete image of this August 24, 1929 newspaper, visit this page.)


Louise Brooks in Winter

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It is chilly across the nation. Here is a screen capture of Louise Brooks looking rather stylish in a winter coat.


Louise Brooks in Winter II

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A few more portraits of the silent film star all-bundled up in a winter coat and cloche hat, circa the late 1920s.


The little story a postcard tells II

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A follow up to an earlier blog, about the story a vintage German postcard told.... Another postcard currently for sale on eBay tells a similar story. The previous post drew a connection between Louise Brooks and Latvia. The vintage card pictured below, printed in France, was postmarked in what was Yugoslovia. Louise Brooks sure did get around.




Making Personas: Transnational Film Stardom in Modern Japan (starring Clara Bow and Louise Brooks)

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There is a new book out which should appeal to anyone interested in Louise Brooks, Clara Bow and silent film. The book is Making Personas: Transnational Film Stardom in Modern Japan, by Hideaki Fujiki, a professor of Cinema and Japanese Studies at Nagoya University. The book was published by the Harvard University Asia Center, and is distributed by Harvard University Press.

Fujiki's book is a detailed and fascinating look at how film stars are "made." According to the publisher, "The film star is not simply an actor but a historical phenomenon that derives from the production of an actor's attractiveness, the circulation of his or her name and likeness, and the support of media consumers. This book analyzes the establishment and transformation of the transnational film star system and the formations of historically important film stars--Japanese and non-Japanese--and casts new light on Japanese modernity as it unfolded between the 1910s and 1930s."

One chapter, "Modern Girls and Clara Bow," stronly suggests that the It girl was the subject of an intense following in Japan. And not far behind was Louise Brooks. In Japan in the late 1920s, the two actresses were compared and contrasted. Both were considered "modern girls," another term for flappers, and each influenced the way young Japanese women dressed and acted. (Colleen Moore was also considered a modern, though less so than Bow and Brooks, in opposition to Mary Pickford and Lillian Gish, who were considered "old fashioned.")

Bow and Brooks were each the subject of articles, which the author cites, in the Japanese press. Fujiki also notes that Akira Iwasaki, a prominent left-wing film critic, historian, and producer who helped introduce German experimental film in Japan, once penned a story called "Clara Louise."

In Making Personas, Fujiki "illustrates how film stardom and the star system emerged and evolved, touching on such facets as the production, representation, circulation, and reception of performers' images in films and other media." I've only begun looking through this book, but have found much of interest in it. The images of American movie stars on the cover of Japanese film magazines is fascinating. This book is recommended to anyone interested in the world wide phenomenon that was silent film.

Sirens & Sinners: A Visual History of Weimar Film 1918-1933 stars

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Here is another newly published book that every silent film and Louise Brooks fan will want to own, Sirens & Sinners: A Visual History of Weimar Film 1918-1933, by Hans Helmut Prinzler, the former director of the Deutsche Kinemathek in Berlin.

Sirens & Sinners: A Visual History of Weimar Film 1918-1933 celebrates the height of Weimar cinema through images and commentaries on more than seventy of its finest films including the two Louise Brooks made in Germany, Pandora's Box (1929) and Diary of a Lost Girl (1929). Other G.W. Pabst films are also featured in this heavily illustrated book.

According to the publisher, "Between the First and Second World Wars, Germany under the Weimar Republic was the scene of one of the most creative periods in film history. Through the silent era to the early years of sound, the visual flair and technical innovation of its filmmakers set an international standard for the powerful possibilities of cinema as an art form, with movies such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Nosferatu, Metropolis, and M building a legacy that shaped the world of film.

Here is a showcase of more than seventy films, selected to give a wide-ranging overview of Weimar cinema at its finest. Every genre is represented, from escapist comedies and musicals to gritty depictions of contemporary city life, from period dramas to fantastical visions of the future, with themes such as sexuality and social issues tackled by iconic stars like Marlene Dietrich and Louise Brooks. A wealth of film stills captures the bold vision of great directors like Fritz Lang and Ernst Lubitsch, while the text sets the historical scene and gives intriguing insights into what the films meant to the society that created them."

Each of the 70 films featured in Sirens & Sinners is given a two page spread. The glory of this book is in its 443 illustrations, 335 of which are in duotone. Many are little seen. Also useful is the bibliography in the back of the book, which lists many works. I am pleased to report that among the reference works listed in Sirens & Sinners is my Louise Brooks' edition of The Diary of a Lost Girl.
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