Monthly Archives: March 2009

cover art

years after the event (john and yoko february 1970)

february photos

Through many lenses, many pauses, dreaming of one another.
The last performance of Yoko before meeting John.
The last performance of John before meeting Yoko.

february 1970

john and yoko 2-70

luck on every finger

crooked

Here we have the cover of Pavement’s 1994 LP, Crooked Rain Crooked Rain. And below we have a page from the March 1978 issue of National Geographic. What a find!

f for orson

Ladies and gentleman, by way of introduction, New feature. I have amassed so many pictures of Orson Welles that I have to get rid of them somehow.

catching up with the chaplins

chas, chas jr and syd

The Third Born: Sydney

limelight

This, the second installment in this series, comes as a result of the death on Tuesday of Sydney Chaplin, the second of two sons Chas had with his second teen-aged bride, Lita Grey.

lita vamps

Following the over-the-top messy divorce (dubbed “The Second Gold Rush” by the press) of their parents in 1927, Sydney, named after his uncle, and Charles Jr. were the source of the occasional lawsuit between the former couple. In 1932, Chas sued Lita over her having signed their boys to a contract with Fox studios. Needless to say, Chas won the suit. Syd was educated at various boarding schools (he claimed to have been thrown out of three of them) and at Black-Foxe Military Institute in Hollywood, service in World War Two followed. Between stints in boarding school, when visiting his father, he would find himself doing the things that all boys do when growing up, like playing tennis with Garbo and turning sheet music pages while Einstein played his violin.

Syd (at left) with Verdoux and Chas jr

In 1952, Sydney made his screen acting debut in his old man’s Limelight. During this time, he briefly dated his costar, Claire Bloom (he also found time to romance Judy Holliday and Joan Collins). More screen roles followed, he appeared in around thirty films, but Sydney was more interested in stage work. He had founded The Circle Theater, a theater in the round, as the name suggests, in 1946 with several of his L.A. cronies. Some of the productions at the Circle were anonymously directed by Chas. Of working with his father, Syd said, “He was generous with other people but he was tough on me. He’d expect me to get it right away. And there was a lot of pressure from him. With me, it was always, ‘Come on Syd, what the hell is the matter with you?!’ Which does not make it easier. We had a strange relationship. It used to blow hot and cold. I don’t know why.”

chas, sophia, syd

Sydney worked with his father again in 1967 on Chas’s last film, the color, widescreen disaster, A Countess From Hong Kong (“It’s a hell of a good picture” said Syd). By this time, Syd had become a successful Broadway actor performing in productions of Bells Are Ringing, for which he won a Best Featured Actor Tony; Subways Are for Sleeping and Funny Girl, for which he was again nominated for a Tony. Obviously, Chas never saw his son in any of these plays because, you know, he was persona non grata in the States at the time.

Sydney’s career cooled sometime in the late sixties but he took it in stride, “I never had the burning desire for recognition and respect that had driven my father.” He also, more awesomely, said “I think anyone who feels his life has been scarred because of the fame of his father is a bore.”

various Chaplins, Sophia, Syd, Tippi and Melanie Griffith

In recent years, Sydney gave interviews to many of his father’s biographers and for various documentaries. In Jeffrey Vance’s excellent Chaplin: Genius of the Cinema, Sydney recalled going to see a revival of his father’s Mutual-era films with a friend in the 1940s. He and his friend liked the films but not nearly as much as the man sitting several rows behind them. When the house lights went up, Syd saw the source of the laughter, needless to say, it was Chas himself. “It was my father who laughed the loudest! Tears were rolling down his cheeks from laughing so hard and he had to wipe his eyes with his handkerchief. He was sitting with Oona. He had brought her to Silent Movie [Theater in Hollywood] because she had not seen any of them before.”

syd more recently

Sydney Chaplin married three times, had one son, Stephan, and died on Tuesday at age eighty-two.

syd

brand new cadillac

Cadillac advertisement. 1973.

strausfeld designs

tristana

Yesterday, I found out that BFI has finally come to their senses and has begun to offer for sale prints of the wood/lino cuts made for Academy Cinema by Peter Strausfeld. According to this shyster (he sells backissues of Sight and Sound, the same ones that can regularly be found on ebay for only a few dollars, for as much as £35.00 a piece and he occasionally lists his magazines on ebay without a picture for equally absurd prices), Strausford (b. 1910) designed posters for Academy from some time after the second World War until his death in 1980.

faces

A few years ago, I bought an original Strausford Academy print on ebay as a gift for a friend who I owed a major favor to. This print, listed on ebay as a poster, cost me something like $300, which, because of the vaguely-worded item description, I thought was a major rip off until the item (eventually) arrived in the mail. As I opened the shipping tube, I smelled the printer’s ink and realized that this wasn’t just some old poster that I had sunk far too much money in to. I seriously considered keeping this thing for myself but surprisingly I did the right thing and gave it to the person who I bought it for. The print, for Barbara Loden’s Wanda (see below), that I bought was originally one of one hundred but now is one of the first of thirty that BFI is offering on items ranging from a virtual index card to a jig saw puzzle.

wanda loden

Here are some of the other Strausfeld prints that BFI is offering. Obviously the site branded them with the BFI logo to prevent folks like me from reproducing them. Ignore that.

deep end

badlands

pills ‘n’ thrills and bellyaches

facd320

When the Happy Mondays’ third LP was released in November of 1990, one UK music magazine reviewed it under the headline “Shambolic Mancunians In Really Good Album Shock.” The two prior Mondays LPs were at best sporadically decent with perhaps at least one brilliant moment, but Pills ‘n’ Thrills and Bellyaches was, and remains, fantastic. It comfortably blended the dance and rock genres; (perhaps unfortunately) gave U2 the musical blueprint for their first comeback and proved for the Mondays (but not Shaun Ryder) an impossible act to follow.

It also has an impossibly fantastic cover. The sleeve, with its dozens of copyright violations, must have worried someone at Electra, the band’s U.S label, because the cover that appeared in the States is considerably different. While the U.S cover is not entirely awful–it is still garishly colored and overly busy–it certainly pales in comparison to the one with the candy on it. The “censored” cover has seemingly crossed the Atlantic and was for a while the only one that was available in the U.K. as well.

There appear to be at least two different versions of the candy cover. In the one above, the image of Minnie Mouse in the A and P of Happy is conspicuous in its absence. Below is the sleeve as I believe nature intended. The cover was designed by Central Station Design, who often contributed artwork to Factory and Mondays releases.

pills n thrills 6

This label was affixed to some initial copies of the LP.

pills n thrills label

pills n thrills record label

The front and back of the U.S. edition.

pills n thrills seven

pills n thrills 8

The cover of one of the many (but none authoritative) Mondays best-of comps out there. Hideous.

loads

The next five images were, I believe, created for the 2007 U.K. only reissue, which restored the cover to the candy original.

pills n thrills 5

pills n thrills 4

pills n thrills 3

pills n thrills 2

pills n thrills 1

truffaut predicts

For some reason, in 1963, Films and Filming magazine asked “a representative selection of British, American and Continental producers, directors and actors what, in their opinion, has been the most significant trend of the past eight years and what they hope will be the most significant trend in the years ahead.” Here are how some of them replied:

eight-years

claudia cardinale

pasolini

hope

accident

Accident. Joseph Losey. 1967