Wednesday, April 23, 2014

The Famous Prints

Grauman's Chinese Theater, now known as the TCL Chinese Theater, is a beautiful structure both inside and out. Built in 1926 on Hollywood Boulevard, the Chinese Theater was the last movie palace built by Sid Grauman, as an investment with Douglas Fairbanks, Howard Schenck, and Mary Pickford. Grauman is also known for LA's Million Dollar Theater (built 1918) and the Egyptian Theater (built 1922). The silent movie The King of Kings (1927)  was the first movie to show at the Chinese Theater, on its opening in May of 1927. Also, from 1944 to 1946 the Oscars were awarded in this theater.

In addition to the intricate Chinese paintings inside the theater, the actual Ming Dynasty Heaven Dogs at the theater's entrance, and the unique pagoda exterior architecture, one of the main attractions of the theater is the Forecourt of the Stars. Every day visitors and tourists walk by Grauman's Chinese Theater to look at the hand and footprints of their favorite stars, with estimates putting this number at about 4 million visitors a year!

Video from the Grauman's Chinese in the 1940's:



Here are some pictures and prints from just outside Grauman's Chinese Theater on Hollywood Boulevard:

John Wayne
 
"Sid There are not enough words"
John Wayne (January 25th 1950)
 
Jimmy Stewart
 
"Thank You Sid" - Jimmy Stewart (February 13th 1948)
 
Clark Gable
 
"To Sid Who Is A Great Guy" - Clark Gable (January 20th 1937)


"You Made My Day" - Clint Eastwood (August 21st 1984)


Rex Harrison with Irene Dunne and Sid Grauman

"To Sid Grauman Sincere Thanks" - Rex Harrison  (July 8th 1946)

Gregory Peck
 
"To My Friend Sid 'Mr. Hollywood' "
Gregory Peck (December 15th 1949)



Humphrey Bogart
 
"Sid May You Never Die Till I Kill You" - Humphrey Bogart (August 21st 1946)


Sid Grauman

 
 
"I am grateful to all who have made these hand and foot-prints possible"
Sid Grauman (January 24th 1946)

Stay tuned because a recap of the TCM Film Festival is still to come! It was an amazing four days!

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Touring Old Hollywood

The TCM Film Festival starts tomorrow and I am beyond excited for the coming four days of classic movie immersion! On top of it being my first year attending the festival, it is the 20th Anniversary of Turner Classic Movies and the 5th Annual Festival. Moreover, it is the 75th Anniversary of a handful of great films from 1939, like The Wizard of Oz, The Women, and Gone with the Wind, all of which will be playing at the festival this year.


To kick off the festivities, my friend and I took a visit to Hollywood for a free TCM Movie Locations Tour with Starline Tours last week. Posters for the film festival were already on display at the Hollywood and Highland Center near the Dolby Theater. And Hollywood Boulevard was bustling with tourists. After checking in for the tour, there was some down time to take in the sights and sounds...but particularly the sights. Looking at the stars and handprints/footprints outside the Chinese Theater was really an experience! It was fun to read the messages to Sid (Sid Grauman) from Clark Gable, John Wayne, Abbott and Costello, Jimmy Durante and others written out on the concrete and imagine them making those prints so many decades ago. These physical prints are no doubt metaphorical representations of the huge prints these artists made on film, as an art and an industry.

Bud Abbot and Lou Costello write "To our pal Sid" with their prints made on December 8th 1941
Roy Rogers writes "To Sid" and "Many-Happy-Trails"
Roy's prints and Trigger's horseshoe prints + his handgun print made on April 21st 1949

October 31st 1945: "Sid-Dis is my Schnozzle" and "Wish I had a million of em"
One handprint and a nose-print? (I can't make it out) compliments of Jimmy Durante

After snapping a few more pictures of the famous prints, we started on the tour... Almost 3 hours long, the tour took us all over Los Angeles and featured numerous clips from different films, as well as video of Ben Mankiewicz talking about the different parts of L.A. and their connections to movie history. During the first half of the tour, we saw the old RKO studio (which was bought by Paramount, and is now part of their lot), Paramount Studios and the entrance filmed for a famous Sunset Boulevard scene, Charlie Chaplin's old studio (now Jim Henson's studio), and "The Lot". Formerly the Pickford-Fairbanks Studio, "The Lot" would become the Samuel Goldwyn Studios and later, the Warner Hollywood Studio. More about its interesting history here: The Lot (this will take you to another site).


Later, the tour took us through downtown's Bunker Hill, where many film noir movies were made. The area has changed dramatically, as most of the Victorian style residences have been replaced by monumental buildings and hotels. I particularly enjoyed seeing all the old downtown theaters, like the Orpheum. Some are still running (booking stage productions or music shows), and others are reminders of the past. The old Warner Brothers Downtown Theater Building, for instance, is now a diamond wholesale retail center.

Before
Today

During the tour of downtown, we also had the chance to get off the bus and visit the Bradbury building, where a few scenes of The Artist were filmed. The building was absolutely beautiful, with brick walls, ornate elevators, marble steps leading up multiple flights of stairs, and well-kept wood and cast-iron railings. It really is something to see!

From the second floor of the Bradbury Building, Downtown

Our second hop-off site was at Union Station. My friend and I opted to walk around the nearby Olvera Street instead. It is a California historical site with an authentic Hispanic feel, which stems from its early history as a Spanish settlement. Some of the scenes from Charlie Chaplin's film The Kid, from 1921, were filmed there.

It is impossible to recap all the locations that this tour took us to, but I've tried to mention whichever ones I thought were the highlights. There were so many more that I could have mentioned, but I would recommend taking the tour yourself if you can get tickets! *I strongly recommend the tour if you are a fan of the film L.A. Confidential! (The tour takes you to see a lot of the on-location spots seen in that film specifically.)