Showing posts with label Rita Hayworth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rita Hayworth. Show all posts

May 1, 2021

Glenn Ford ~ A man's man

  ~      
date & photographer unknown


Today is the birthday of film actor, Gwyllyn Samuel Newton Ford, aka Glenn Ford, a Canadian-American actor who often portrayed ordinary men in unusual circumstances. He was born in 1916, in Sainte-Christine-d'Auvergne, Quebec. His father was an engineer with the Canadian Pacific Railway and he was a great-nephew of Canada's first Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, and was also related to U.S. President Martin Van Buren, one of the founders of the Democratic Party.       
          
Ford made dozens of films some great, some good and some bad; typical of most Hollywood careers. My favorite films of his may not have been considered GREAT but I loved them.              
 
In date order, as Johnny Farrell in Gilda (1946) with Rita Hayworth in her first film role, they sizzled. In a nightclub scene she sang one of my favorite songs, Amado Mio, which was actually sung by Anita Ellis. The song was covered by Dick Haymes in 1946, by Grace Jones on her album Bulletproof Heart in 1990 and by Pink Martini on their 1997 album Sympathique.        
 
 
 
 
In 1949 he appeared with Ida Lupino in the film, Lust for Gold, about the legendary Lost Dutchman gold mine, starring Ford as the "Dutchman" and Lupino as the woman he loves. It's a tale of deceit and greed, murder and deception with both characters as swarmy as the other. George Duning wrote the score for the film.           
 
 
 
 
He appeared with Hayworth again in 1952 in the film, Affair in Trinidad. Once again her singing was dubbed; this time by Jo Ann Greer, who later also sang for her in Miss Sadie Thompson and Pal Joey.           

movie poster


In 1953 he starred in The Big Heat, an American film noir crime film directed by Fritz Lang starring Glenn Ford, Gloria Grahame, Lee Marvin and Jocelyn Brando
 
 
 
 
For me the most impact was the scene where Vince Stone (Lee Marvin) throws a boiling pot of coffee into the face of Debby Marsh (Gloria Grahame) irreparably disfiguring her. Not a pleasant scene to watch.    
 
 
movie poster
 
 
Then there is my-top-of-the-list favorite of ALL of his films, the stunning 1955 social drama film, Blackboard Jungle, in which he portrays Richard Dadier, a school teacher in an interracial inner-city school, based on the 1954 novel The Blackboard Jungle by Evan Hunter. His wife is played by Anne Francis who would appear a couple of years later as Altaira "Alta" Morbius in the film Forbidden Planet. I have already written at length about the Blackboard Jungle which introduced me to Bill Haley and Rock and Roll (link below).      


movie poster


          
In 1978 Ford was superb as the stepdad of Superman and Christopher Reeve was perfectly cast as the Man of Iron.          
 
 
 
I've mentioned his serious films but he has proved he can handle comedy as well. In 1956 there was The Teahouse of the August Moon, in 1959 The Gazebo in which John McGiver pronounced it "The Gaze Bo", in 1961 Cry for Happy. Also in 1961, a film I REALLY liked him in, Pocketful of Miracles as Dave "the Dude" Conway, a gangster with a heart of gold inspired by Apple Annie, played by Bette Davis, and her "lucky" apples. It's a totally sweet and heart warming story.     
 


 
 
Pocketful of Miracles - 1961
 movie poster
          
          
          
Viewfinder links:
           
Blackboard Jungle          
Glenn Ford           
Bill Haley            
Rita Hayworth     
Dick Haymes          
Grace Jones           
Fritz Lang        
Pink Martini          
Chuy Reyes ~ Rumba de Cuba @ 10"          
          
Net links:
          
Filmography          
Film Plots ~ 
      Affair in Trinidad           
      The Big Heat      
      Blackboard Jungle     
      Gilda     
      Lust for Gold     
      Pocketful of Miracles      
      Superman     
          
YouTube links:
          
Peter Ford -  
      Glenn Ford A Life - Part 1           
      Glenn Ford A Life - Part 2           
      Glenn Ford A Life - Part 3          
          
          
          
          
         
Styrous® ~ Saturday, May 1, 2021 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Rita Hayworth articles/mentions


 ~       
     
Glenn Ford ~ A man's man           
Chuy Reyes ~ Rumba de Cuba @ 10"     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
Rita Hayworth - 1944
publicity photo
     
     
     
      
     















September 8, 2017

20,000 Vinyl LPs 108: Chuy Reyes ~ Rumba de Cuba @ 10"

 

10" vinyl LP album book cover 
2nd re-issue - date unknown
photo by Styrous®


I was organizing my vinyl LP space with Lon Clark (link below) yesterday and came across this delightful 1949 gem. Chuy Reyes ~ Rumba de Cuba, was a 10" vinyl LP in a book album similar to The Nutcracker and The Pentateuch of the Cosmogony (links below). This format was common in the 40's and early 50's. Unfortunately, the record itself disappeared years before I bought it. All I have is the album but the graphics were too good to pass up.     


10" vinyl LP album book cover  interior
2nd re-issue - date unknown
photo by Styrous®
 


It was a mono recording, of course, and my version is a re-issue (date unknown). There was also a 45 rpm version of the album issued.    


original issue - 1949

1st re-issue - date unknown




10" vinyl LP album cover interior 
photo by Styrous®

Chuy Reyes was born in Mexico but I could not find the date. He and his Hollywood Mocambo Orchestra was the club band at the Mocambo Night Club from the time it opened on January 3, 1941. 

The mocambos (from mocambo, literally Huts) were village-sized communities mainly of runaway slaves in colonial Brazil, during the Portuguese rule. They were also called, ladeiras, magotes, or quilombos.     

Mocambos were exile communities established by fugitive Brazilian slaves between the 18th and 19th century. The purpose of these settlements was to protect the slaves from the Portuguese opposition, thanks to their hidden location, which was difficult to find for the punitive military expeditions. Mocambos were a threat to the economy and the social fabric of the slave regime, because the parasitic economy of these communities was mostly composed of theft, extortion and raiding. Though the minority of communities lived off agriculture and arms trade. Mocambos were not controlled by the government and because of the high percentage of Brazilian slaves, which incorporated one third of the total population, the number and the importance of Mocambos was continually increasing. For this reason Mocambos inhabitants were executed by punitive military expeditions and the children born in the Mocambos became property of the leaders of the exterminating expeditions.         
 
       
 The Mocambo

The Mocambo - 1941 


The Mocambo was located in West Hollywood, California, at 8588 Sunset Boulevard on the Sunset Strip and was owned by Charlie Morrison and Felix Young.      

The Mocambo - 1957 


Among the celebrities who frequented the Mocambo were Clark Gable and Carole Lombard, Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, Errol Flynn, Charlie Chaplin, Elizabeth Taylor, Judy Garland, Henry Fonda, Lana Turner, Ava Gardner, Bob Hope, James Cagney, Sophia Loren, Janet Leigh and Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood and Robert Wagner, Grace Kelly, Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fisher, Howard Hughes, Kay Francis, Marlene Dietrich, Theda Bara, Tyrone Power, Jayne Mansfield, John Wayne, Ben Blue, Ann Sothern, and Louis B. Mayer. Myrna Loy and Arthur Hornblow, Jr. celebrated their divorce there.        


The Mocambo - 1947
photographer unknown


photographer unknown


Mocambo, 1951
 photographer unknown




Mocambo - 1955 
photographer unknown 





Mocambo nightclub - 1948
photographer unknown 


The Mocambo wouldn’t allow Ella Fitzgerald to sing there, because of the color of her skin. One day Marilyn Monroe, by then a superstar, paid a visit to Charlie Morrison, the owner of the club. She made Charlie an offer: if he booked Ella, she promised she would be there, front and center, every single night of Ella’s show. Morrison agreed, because there was no star bigger than Monroe at the time (imagine the publicity!), and Ella suddenly found herself on that stage.       

photographer unknown



The club's main stage was replicated on the TV series I Love Lucy as the "Tropicana" Club. Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz were frequent guests at the Mocambo and were close friends of Morrison.


Lobby ~ Mocambo nightclub
photographer unknown


Chuy Reyes And His Hollywood Mocambo Orchestra ‎– 
Rumba De Cuba


Tracklist:

Side 1:

A1 = Baracoa, Vocals – Tony Martinez (9), written by Traditional
   
A2 = Almendra, Vocals – Tony Gari, written by Abelardo Valdes*
   
A3 = Boteando, Vocals – Tony Martinez (9), written by King-Martinez
   
A4 = La Yuca, Vocals – Tony Martinez (9), written by Traditional
   
Side 2:

B1 = La Ultima Noche, Vocals – Tony Martinez (9), written by Bobby Collazo
   
B2  Blen! Blen! Blen!, Vocals – Tony Gari, written by Pozot-Cugat
   
B3 = Negra Leono, Vocals – Tony Gari, written by Antonio Fernandez
   
B4 = Hokey Joe, Vocals – Tony Martinez (9), written by Swan-Ricardo

   
Chuy Reyes And His Hollywood Mocambo Orchestra* ‎– Rumba De Cuba
Label: Capitol Records ‎– H152, Capitol Records ‎– H-152
Format: Vinyl, 10", 33 ⅓ RPM, Mono
Country: US
Original release: 1949
Re-issue: unknown
Genre: Latin
Style: Rumba
   
 
  
Viewfinder links:               
    
“Just the cover, ma’am!”            
Lon Clark          
Dave Greenslade ~ The Pentateuch of the Cosmogony      
        
Net links:              
             
Martin Turnbull ~ Mocambo: The Nightclub’s Nightclub                        
Night at the Mocambo ~ Marilyn Monroe & Ella Fitzgerald  
              
YouTube links:              
             
Baracoa              
Almendra           
Boteando             
La Yuca              
La Ultima Noche             
Blen! Blen! Blen!
Negra Leono       
Hokey Joe       
              




    
Styrous® ~ Friday, September 8, 2017