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"If you dig Classic Hollywood, The Midnight Palace is the cyber venue."
-Alan K. Rode
Author: Charles McGraw, Bio of a Film Noir Tough Guy
Director, The Film Noir Foundation

 

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King Vidor:
The Leading Light

Articles PDF Print E-mail
Written by Gary Sweeney   

It's always interesting to read a new angle on a story or a fresh perspective on a subject. Below are those that we've written, along with a few that have been reprinted with permission from the individual authors. Remember to keep checking back as we continue to add more!

Article: Rudolph Valentino & The Mineralava Tour of 1923

Article: John Gilbert and the Talkies

Article: The Duncan Sisters

Article: The Goat Gland Film

Article: Femme Fatale - The Black Widow of Film Noir

Article: To Restore or Not To Restore?

Article: The Shadows of Film Noir  

Article: An Introduction To Silent Films  

Article: Following In Her Footsteps

Article: Uncovering the Truth - Bing Crosby

Article: The Other Harrison Ford

Article: Flaming Youth and the First Flapper

Article: Constance Talmadge: Film's First Heroine

Article: The Drama of Tillie's Punctured Romance

Article: Betty Compson - The Comeback Kid

Article: Sweethearts of the Silent Cinema

Article: Florence Lawrence - The First Movie Star

Article: Douglas Fairbanks - The First Film Idol

Article: Love, Bessie Love

Article: Louise Brooks - The American Garbo

Article: Ben Lyon - Actor, War Hero, and Talent Scout

Article: Alice White - The Boop-A-Doop Kewpie

Article: The Children of Screwballs

Article: Johnny Mack Brown - Football Hero and Movie Star

Article: F.W. Murnau, The Silent Innovator

Article: Taylor & Stanwyck: A Legendary Meeting

Article: Helen Keller, Movie Star

Article: Maude Adams, The Movie Star Who Never Was

Article: King Vidor, The Leading Light

 

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 Warren William: Magnificent Scoundrel of Pre-Code Hollywood

On the motion picture screen, Hollywood star Warren William (1894-1948) was a magnificent rogue, often deliciously immoral and utterly callous, yet remarkably likable in his wickedness. Off-screen, the actor was as humble and retiring as his film characters were mean and heartless. This biography examines William’s life and career in detail, from his rural Minnesota roots through his service in World War I, his Broadway stage success, and his meteoric rise and gradual fall from Hollywood fame in the 1930s and 1940s. Also analyzed are his film persona and the curious mechanisms by which our culture "selects" certain film personalities to remember and others to forget. Featured is a wealth of biographical material never before available, including rare candid photos of William’s early years. Interviews with his surviving nieces provide intimate family details and personal remembrances. John Stangeland has been a free-lance comic book artist for Marvel, DC, Image, Comico, Malibu and Now Comics. He owns and operates Atlas Comics, a comic book store in Norridge, Illinois. Click HERE to order!

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