Bogie.
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+1
It's gotta be Humph for that era!
Bogie.
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I always love this question... probably isn't a bona fide winner since there were so many notable really big stars, the likes of which have never influenced culture again . Today's mega stars are often carefully manufactured by the super-powered media. GE stars like Gable ( whom I held to be a rather over-rated actor as as compared to Tracy for example) were IMHO given star ranking due to their screen presence image more than their merit as talented actors.
Remember too what going to the movies was as a cultural phenomena in the GE.
I really cannot offer a "sabermetric statistic" to this long standing inquiry...like who was bettera: Mickey Mantle or Joe Di Maggio...
However, I really love GE flicks
Astaire did well in the cities, but tanked in the towns -- independent theatre owners, not controlled by chain booking, avoided his pictures in droves. He was one of only two male performers specifically attacked in the famous "Box Office Poison" article in the Hollywood Reporter in 1938 -- the other was Edward Arnold, who was also a long way from Gable-type material: he was that beefy, jowly fellow who played a long string of sinister capitalists in the movies of the thirties. All the other performers named were women -- Katharine Hepburn, Greta Garbo, Joan Crawford, Mae West, Marlene Dietrich, and Kay Francis were all attacked as not being worth the salaries they were earning when it came to box-office returns.
The millenial kids I know don't have any use for the modern celebrity rags, and seem much less interested in "celebrity culture" than the previous generation. If I had to guess, based on their advertising content and who I see buying them, I'd say the audience for these publications was white working-to-lower-middle-class married women in their thirties: not quite "soccer moms," but a notch down on the social scale. Tee-ball moms, maybe.
Well, my sentiment's with the exhibitors on this, especially since the studios had the legal right to shove whatever they produced down their throats thru block-booking contracts whether the exhibitors wanted them or not. Personally, I love Astaire's pictures, but Hepburn is way too la-de-dah for me, Garbo annoys me, Mae West was the world's first female female impersonator, the only Joan Crawford picture I like is the one she made with Harry Langdon, and I can never tell if Marlene Dietrich is putting everybody on or if she really means to be like that. And Kay Fwancis -- ah, the weeper's weeper. Give me a Glenda Farrell or Jean Arthur or Barbara Stanwyck picture any day of the week.
Walter Connolly was always good. His capitalists were generally more sympathetic than Arnold's -- sort of a halfway point between Edward Arnold and Guy Kibbee on the bloated movie plutocrat scale.
I always thought Lombard was better than the movies she was in -- I'd like to have written a picture for her. One of the best comic actresses of her time, in a time when Hollywood didn't think much of funny women.