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And, of course, Doug Sr. was married to another early superstar Mary Pickford.
Yes, I agree "Our Modern Maidens" is delightful - I have a video of it at home and watch it often, and she is great in it - electric I'd say. A companion silent to this film is "Our Dancing Daughters" which I also have. I can't recall now which one D.F.Jr. is in with her, but it is one of them - and of course he is devastatingly handsome in it as he always was.Lily Powers said:It's my understanding however, that Lassie was quite a discreet dog.
A book I read some time back brought up the suggestion that MGM arranged for Doug Fairbanks Jr. to marry Joan because it would clean up Joan's image.
Even though Fairbanks Jr., while married to Joan, was named in the alienation of affection suit drawn up Jorgen Dietz, Joan had been named in two such suits before their 1929 marriage.
Joan in the early days is just so much fun to watch on screen - softer and freer than the thick-browed, iconic Joan of later years . "Our Modern Maidens," a silent, is one of my favorites - sometimes you can catch it on TCM now and then.
klind65 said:Yes, I agree "Our Modern Maidens" is delightful - I have a video of it at home and watch it often, and she is great in it - electric I'd say. A companion silent to this film is "Our Dancing Daughters" which I also have.
Sr. and Mary Pickford made "Taming of the Shrew" in 1929 which was all talking. Anyone have any ideas if this is available to buy or rent anywhere??dhermann1 said:Just getting back to Senior, if you haven't seen him as the original Zorro, or the Thief of Baghdad, or many others, you're in for a real treat. He did about three talkies before he died, but the best one is called Reaching for the Moon, from 1930, also featuring a very young Bing Crosby. He was just a fabulous presence on the screen, which was why he was one of the very first real super stars.
Thanks for the tip. I looked it up on IMDB and it sounds good. The synopsis reminds me a little of "Three on a Match".skyvue said:Don't forget the third picture in the unofficial trilogy -- OUR BLUSHING BRIDES (1930).
TCM airs all of them with some regularity, often one after the other.
klind65 said:Sr. and Mary Pickford made "Taming of the Shrew" in 1929 which was all talking. Anyone have any ideas if this is available to buy or rent anywhere??
Thanks for the tip!LizzieMaine said:Came out on DVD a couple years ago -- you should be able to find it at Amazon or any other online seller. The print is the 1966 re-release, which included a re-dubbed musical score, so it isn't exactly as shown in 1929, but this was historic in itself in that it was the only re-release Pickford ever allowed for any of her films after her retirement.
And contrary to legend, it doesn't include the credit "By William Shakespeare -- Additional Dialogue by Sam Taylor"
Naphtali said:We have a perfect venue to identify how good an actor Mr. Fairbanks, Jr., is. "The Prisoner of Zenda" (1937; Ronald Colman, Madeleine Carroll) had Fairbanks portraying Rupert of Hentzau. He was perfect, stealing every scene he was in. The motion picture was remade, scene-for-scene, in 1952 (Stewart Granger, Debora Kerr). The fine actor, James Mason, portrayed Hentzau. The difference is astonishing, Fairbanks being so far superior in his portrayal it is embarrassing for Mason. I have no idea why he was not among the dominant action stars of his era.