Monthly Archives: May 2020

30 May 1923 – Screen Heartthrob Rudolph Valentino makes personal appearance in Seattle Mineralava Tour

On May 30, 1923, film star Rudolph Valentino (1895-1926), in the midst of a personal appearance tour that took him to all parts of the country, arrives for his only known visit to Seattle. The actor gives a dance exhibition, thrilling local audiences with a glimpse of his famous Argentine tango, and lends his movie star persona to Children’s Orthopedic Hospital on behalf of their annual fundraising effort. Trouble in Paradise During his 1923 Seattle visit, Rudolph Valentino was in the midst of a dispute with his studio, Lasky-Paramount. Battles over power and control were being waged behind-the-scenes, but publicly the actor claimed to be protesting the cheap program films to which he had been assigned, as well as the practice of block booking. In an era when popular movie stars routinely appeared in three or four new film releases a year, Valentino resisted the studio’s demand that he work. (Block booking was an early distribution practice whereby a studio would tie the releases of major stars to less ambitious efforts. Exhibitors wishing to screen “marquee” pictures had to sign exclusive agreements that forced them to also show the studio’s third-rate potboilers. Exhibitors strongly protested this arrangement.) For failure to work, Lasky-Paramount eventually suspended Rudolph Valentino, and went as far as to obtain a court injunction preventing the actor from appearing onscreen until after his Paramount contract expired on February 7, 1924. The studio felt they had called Valentino’s bluff, since he and second wife, Natacha Rambova (formerly Winifred Kimball Shaughnessy) were heavily in debt. But the pair countered by mounting a personal appearance tour organized by George Ullman (later Valentino’s business manager), and sponsored by Minerlava, a beauty clay company. For 17 weeks, the couple gave dance exhibitions across the United States for a reported $7,000 per week, keeping Rudolph Valentino in the public eye and, based on their commercial pitches for Minerlava, providing the company with valuable exposure. The tour began in the spring of 1923 in Wichita, Kansas, where public schools closed on the day of his appearance. “The Sheik” Comes to Seattle Despite the excitement that Rudolph Valentino brought to almost every stop on his itinerary, the star’s arrival in Seattle was relatively low-key. The Valentinos were expected at 9:40 in the evening on May 30, 1923, traveling from Spokane in the star’s private rail car. From the train station, they were to be whisked to the Hippodrome at 5th Avenue and University Street, where Valentino was slated to help judge a combination dance contest/beauty pageant at 10:00 p.m. According to publicity for the event, the pageant served as a national search to help find the star’s next leading lady (a role which eventually went to veteran Paramount actress Bebe Daniels). Unfortunately, their train arrived much later than expected, and the Valentinos entered the Hippodrome well after the dancing competition. The actor then sat with other judges behind a curtain for the remainder of the beauty pageant, which concealed him from the audience, most of whom had come solely for the opportunity to see the motion picture star in person. When all was said and done, Rudolph Valentino personally selected Katherine Cuddy, a local stenographer, as the beauty contest winner, turning down the half-hearted challenge of Seattle Mayor and fellow judge Edwin J. Brown (1864-1941) on behalf of another contestant. It is hoped that Brown’s candidate did not know that the Mayor was championing her cause, for the next day it was widely reported that Valentino rejected her for having bad teeth. (Ironically, Brown — who was a prominent Seattle dentist as well as a doctor, lawyer, and politician — did not notice this defect.) The Valentinos followed the beauty judging with an electrifying demonstration of their famous Argentine tango, recreating the dance scene from The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Both were dressed for the part; as one account put it: “It is in Rodolph’s [sic] blood to wear black velvet pantaloons and stamp his black patent leather boots and click castanets. His manner was quite Argentine; his hair quite brilliantine” (Dean). Natasha Rambova was also clad in black velvet, offset with a red Carmen-like shawl. “[She] is very brave to put on a ten-dollar pair of black silk stockings so close to her partner’s three-inch silver spurs,” noted Times reporter Dora Dean. The Private Valentino Dean managed to sneak backstage after the exhibition and take a spot in Rudolph Valentino’s dressing room, where she found the actor quite blunt about all the attention his appearances had been garnering. The moment he arrived at the Hippodrome, for instance, a large crowd of girls — “starving for romance,” the actor noted with some disdain — surged toward the stage. Adoration of this sort wore on Valentino, for it overshadowed his attempts to be taken seriously as a performer. “`From persons who saw the Four Horsemen I have received intelligent letters of appreciation,’ [Valentino] said. `I like them better
than the adoring notes from little girls who want me for their sheik.’ “`But what are you going to do, when all those darling girls want to see you ride [in] the desert and gnash your teeth?’ he was asked. “`Ah, they should stay at home with their husbands,’ said the slick-haired actor” (Dean). Wanda Von Kettler, writing for the Star, also managed to get herself into Rudolph Valentino’s dressing room at the Hippodrome. It must have been a crowded place: Mayor Brown and Washington’s Lieutenant Governor William Jennings “Wee” Coyle (1888-1977) also fought for space amongst a crowd of reporters and fans. According to Kettler: “Beside Rodolph [sic] sat Mrs. Valentino, his tall and slender brown-eyed wife, in her Argentine dancing costume … “He surveyed his guests. Then told them that he wasn’t a `sheik.’ “`Of course,’ he declared, with a somewhat resigned laugh, `I’ve gotten considerable publicity because of the name. But I don’t know if it’s been the right kind of publicity. The very sentimental girls think I’m all right. They like me. But what about the intelligent women — and the men? Don’t they think I’m a mollycoddle? They do. When I go back in pictures, after the fight with the movie concern is over, I’m going to prove that I’m not the type they think I am …’ “Valentino plans to write a book. He confided so to some of us Wednesday night. “`It’s going to be a book on the tango,’ he declared. `I’m going to teach all America to dance that dance. Everybody seems to like it, so why not help them learn it.’ “‘Dancing,’ he added, `is the greatest stimulant of the day, and is more and more being recognized as such. Since the event of prohibition it has increased 50 per cent.’ “Valentino doesn’t mind’ the letters he receives from admiring ladies. “`I’m very glad to know,’ he explained Wednesday night, `that I’m being appreciated. I like to hear the opinion of the public, whether it’s for or against me. But I know the ladies aren’t `in love’ with me. They’re in love with an `ideal’ and they sometimes write to me as a result.’ “As for Mrs. Valentino – being a sheik’s wife doesn’t bother her at all. When asked about her stand on the matter, she laughed and replied, `I want him to be popular. The more popular he is, the better I like it’” (Kettler). The Pound Party Following the Hippodrome appearance, the Valentinos traveled northward for scheduled engagements in Vancouver, British Columbia. They returned to Seattle on June 1, 1923, for a visit to Children’s Orthopedic Hospital, where they were guests of honor at the institution’s Pound Party. An annual charity event, the benefit took its name directly from its open request: In lieu of donations, the Hospital accepted a pound of anything — food, clothing, etc. — which could be used to help those in need. The Valentinos were the hit of the function, which a spokesman later declared the most successful in the history of Children’s Orthopedic. In total, the event netted a record amount of food and clothing and almost $400 in donations, $10 of which came from the actor himself. Credit for the success was given solely to Rudolph Valentino’s appearance, which garnered much more public interest than past charity drives. It also attracted hundreds of fans to the front lawn of the Hospital, mostly young women hoping to catch a glimpse of the actor as he came and went from the gathering. Thankfully, the throng outside conducted itself in an orderly fashion and the party went off without a hitch. After partaking in an afternoon tea and reception, the Valentinos went from bed to bed throughout the Hospital, visiting nearly every child and showing a sincere concern for their well being. “A few of the sheik’s queries concerning child culture demonstrated a decided lack of knowledge on the subject but a willingness to learn,” the Post-Intelligencer got several nurses to admit afterward. “He was quite exercised over the lack of teeth in the mouth of one baby, age eight days”. After the Pound Party concluded, the Valentinos slipped quietly out of the city, making their way first to Tacoma, then back down the coast toward Hollywood. The last word on Rudolph Valentino’s 1923 Seattle appearance fell to the Star, which produced a column entitled “Letters from Chief Seattle” after the city’s Indian namesake: “Dear Rudy: “I have met many movie stars, and most of them were painfully conceited. I am glad to see that egotism plays but little part in your character. It is more or less evident that you have been grossly caricatured by envious persons. Come back to Seattle soon and stay longer. CHIEF SEATTLE” (“Letters to Chief Seattle”). From Man to Myth Some six weeks after his Seattle visit, the actor came to an agreement with Lasky-Paramount, which allowed him to return for an additional two films at $7,500 per week. More importantly, the agreement gave the Valentinos complete creative control over both projects. But the triumph was short-lived. After finishing his Lasky-Paramount contract, Rudolph Valentino jumped to United Artists, where studio executives were adamant that Natasha Rambova — who exercized tremendous influence on her husband’s career — not interfere with their pictures. Valentino agreed to this stipulation, but it led to conflict within the marriage and helped bring about its demise. Still, the United Artists period was a successful one for the actor professionally. He made two of his better films with the studio, The Eagle (1925) and The Son of the Sheik (1926), a semi-sequel to his 1921 monster hit.

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29 May 1923 – Mrs Rudolph Valentino A Woman in Chains

The “Sheik’s” ex-wife Mrs. Rudolph Valentino will appear at the York Theatre next Saturday in her latest production. The Woman in Chains. This picture is of seven reels co-starring K. Lincoln, Miss Martha Mansfield, and Messrs. W.H. Tookor and Joseph Striker and was produced by the Amalgamated Exchange of America. The tale is of a girl chained in love on the island of Martinique while the artist lover married the demimonde of an Apache dancer. It is the kind of story that grips. The scenes are laid in Martinique and in Paris.
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30 Apr 1923

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29 May 1922 – WILL VALENTINO START MOVIES IN MEXICO?

Amonsgt the furor raised throughout southern California and the whole country by the marriage of Rudolph Valentino, dashing film»star, to Winifred Hudnut in Mexicali last Saturday, comes a new angle and once causing considerable comment —will Valentino establish a motion picture company in Mexico City’? It came to light yesterday that this was one of the main topic of conversation between Valentino and Mexican officials at the wedding dinner served at the home of Mayor Otto Moller in Mexicali. Today it is understood that speculation is rife among Mexican officials regarding a remark alleged to have been made by Valentino at the dinner to the effect that “there was nothing to hinder him from taking such a step.” Also, the rumor that Richard Hudnut, father of Winifred Hudnut Valentino, the bride, is on his way to Los Angeles seems to bear a special significance in the eyes of those familiar with the details in so much it might mean the first step toward capitalizing such a film company in Mexico.  It is understood Valentino was acquainted with the natural scenic beauties of Mexico while here and with the great possibilities of natural facilities for outdoor settings and given some intimation that the Mexican government would welcome him with open arms and give him co-operation in every way toward establishing an industry that would mean much to Mexico. It is thought that if the company is formed Valentino will costar with his bride in motion pictures made especially for Mexico, protraying Mexican Spanish life and thus blazing a trail for an industry so far undeveloped to any extent in that country.

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3 Mar 1929

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1926 – Commentary

It was with boiling indignation that I read the letter of “Disgusted”. It was full of disrespect to the late Rudolph Valentino, yet your correspondent stated, “Far be it from me to say anything disrespectful of one who has passed through the great divide.” We women know what was at the bottom of the letter – pure jealousy. then he states that the flapper must save some excitement. Let me tell him that if his life has been as clean as was that of Valentino then he has something to be proud of.
Marie Crossett, Adelaide.
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1920’s – Gloria Swanson Versus Pola Negri

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According to Irwin Zeltner (1971), “Hollywood has had many famous feuds, but cannot compare with the feud between two 1920’s silent film stars Gloria Swanson and Pola Negri.  At the time, both were two of the most exotic women this town had known and experienced.  The battleground was Paramount Studio in which their movies were made.  When I first met Gloria Swanson, I was a bit startled by her voice. It was anything but musical.  She was charming, but I quickly noted she spoke with an unmistakable midwestern accent.  My first impression of her was she appeared tiny.  Reared in Chicago by her U.S. Army officer father, in her early teens she was employed as ribbon clerk in a store not far from the stockyards.  Somehow, like so many other famous discoveries, she landed a job with Mack Sennett Studios. She was standing in the doorway of a shack on the Sennett lot one day, when the great star maker Cecil B. Demille chanced by. DeMille, as he told me later, did a double-take and his intuitive perception told him this young lady had personality, charm, and appearance wholly distinctive.  In a short while Miss Swanson was before the DeMille camera clothed in costumes that then were a shock to Hollywood. Her hair was done up in bizarre styles, and in a few lessons, she was taught to gesture with an elongated cigarette holder. The soon-to become famous Miss Swanson was thus prepared for the roles she was assigned to, and these were mostly females of questionable morals.  With everything against her, she somehow remembered her public-school motto “Perseverance Wins”. How well I remember how exciting my duties were in behalf of two of her productions “Feet of Clay” and “Madame Sans Gene” released a couple of years later. These activities brought me in close contact with Miss Swanson and during one of our frequent meetings I was astonished when she spoke out most critically of Pola Negri who had appeared on the Hollywood scene to challenge Gloria’s pre-eminence as “Queen of the Movies”.  “Mr. Zeltner”, she said I am the topmost female star of our industry and I cannot seem to get our Paramount Studio to subdue that Pola Negri woman, that foreigner, that gypsy. I listened carefully, as Gloria after a moments rest continued her tirade. Her eyes glinted, and she was relentless and more sharply demanding than ever. It was not long in coming a showdown with Paramount Studio officials and Adolph Zukor a kingly little man who was President. In his effort to calm the tempestuous Miss Swanson, Zukor offered her a contract in which Paramount was to pay her upwards of one million dollars annually.  But she would not give an inch.  About this time, I had luncheon with Miss Swanson, and no sooner had sat down when I ventured to inquire about her latest Paramount offer.  Her reply was quick “Mr. Zeltner I am forming my own production company. I am the reigning female star of the movie world and determined to remain as such”. I will make arrangements to release my pictures through an affiliation with United Artists. She would be joining Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplain, Harold Lloyd, Rudolph Valentino.  It was not long, after Gloria now complete master of her fate, realized her star was glowing less brilliantly.  Gloria carried her head high, persevered as was her wont and never for a moment allowed her battle with Pola Negri to lapse. Miss Negri kept up the challenge. However, it was now Hollywood History that Miss Swanson won that war, and for along time sustained her exalted position.  It was producer Ernest Lubitsch, who brought the gifted Pola Negri to America and to the Paramount Studio.  Here she immediately clashed with Gloria Swanson. I had the pleasure of meeting Miss Negri on the day of her arrival. This very exotic female was a genuine gypsy. Her father died in exile in Siberia after he had become involved in Poland’s fight for independence from Russia.  Miss Negri in my opinion was a beautiful and talented woman.  She achieved considerable success on the Warsaw stage. In Berlin, impresario Max Herinhardt directed her to state and screen stardom. Miss Negri was well-known on the European Continent as a dancer, having graduated from the Russian Imperial Ballet School. Her combined abilities were now being praised in movie and stage circles in America and juicy contracts were being offered to her. Somewhere in between Miss Negri married and then shelved a real count. The one thing, I keenly remember of Miss Negri on the day of her arrival was that she kept reminding all and sundry that she was a countess.  It was only natural for Lubitsch, to star her in his epic “Gypsy Blood”. This of course, was produced by Paramount Studio. Her role was that of a sultry vamp, and the picture was a box-office success. Soon as the cameras started to grind on this picture, and all through production her famous clash with Gloria Swanson on the same lot flared and it forthwith, grew in intensity.  The battle between them both was so bad Paramount officially shifted Gloria to the East Coast Studio. Later when they sent her to Paris, one of her first achievements was to acquire a titled husband a marquis. Now her fight with Miss Negri was really joined. While this was all going on, Miss Negri was succeeding in turning everyone in Hollywood against her. She held everyone and everything in contempt. She avoided all social contacts, remaining in solitude and her music and literature and an occasional visit from a European friend.  Miss Negri found herself completely rejected and she took great comfort in the romance and love that quietly existed between her and Rudolph Valentino. Incidentally, I was one of only a few close friends of Rudy’s to know of this romance.  When word came to Miss Negri in Hollywood the Latin Lover was on his deathbed, she made a transcontinental dash to be at his bedside. It is true among Valentino’s last words were “If she does not get here in time, tell her I love her”. This message which she received in Hollywood, gave her license to display great grief and some have said was laying it on too thick.  About this time, her popularity started to rapidly decline, and Paramount Studios found it hard to sell her films.  Heroic efforts were made to remold the temptress image, but everything fizzled.  Abruptly she went back to Germany, where she was understood and admired. Again, she married to a fake Prince and I was not surprised by the news at all. I received a cable invitation to come to Germany. This and a later letter detailed her desire for American promotional campaigns for her pictures. She was frank enough to state our methods applied to her German Films would rebound in her favor in the U.S. and this she wanted more than anything else.  Even though she was offering me an amount more than what I was currently earning I respectfully declined. My regard for Pola as an actress never wavered and nor my respect until one day, I received authentic information from a remarkably close friend in American news that Miss Negri was linked with Adolf Hitler. My friend queried her on this, and she never denied the association with the Fuhrer. Her only comment was that there had been many prominent men in her life, with Valentino heading the list”.

Reference:

Zeltner, I. (1971). What the stars told me: Hollywood in its Heyday.  Exposition Press.

 

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25 May 1922 – Valentino Bride Tenders UA Studio Resignation?

Reports in circulation here today that Winifred Hudnut, bride of Rudolph Valentino had sent in her permanent resignation as art director for Nazimova were denied here today by the United Studios. “Wo have received no official word from Miss Rambova since she lofts here,” it was declared. “It is possible the resignation may have been sent to Mme. Nazimova, who is away, but we have heard nothing about. Mme. Nazimova will not return until June 1. and there is no way for ns to check up on the rumor.”, Miss Hudnut, under the name of Natcha Rambova, was employed as art director by Mine. Nazimova at the United Studios up to the time of her separation from Valentino, now under a charge of bigamy. Miss Hudnut took her vacation at the time of the wedding and has made no formal communication [since. Her leave of absence has ‘not yet expired, it was. stated. Preparations to bring to a final the California statute prohibiting marriage within a year from the granting of interlocutory decrees of divorce were being made by counsel for Rudolph Valentino today. The ultimate decision is expecting-to be brought to the ‘supreme court in an effort to defend the marriage of Valentino in Mexicali and similar marriages of at least twenty other picture stars and persons said to be under investigation. The strongest efforts will be made to quash the case against Valentino in’ the justice court, was learned today, but both state and defense are preparing for a long series of appeals.  The attorney in charge of Valentino’s defense dared that hundreds of marriages in the State of California believed themselves to be united will depend on the outcome of this court.  The district attorney’s office continued its efforts to piece meal its case against Valentino will be arraigned before Justice Vincent Bowser.

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23 May 1926 – How Valentino Celebrated His Birthday

Rudolph Valentino birthday was on Mother’s Day and a dinner at the home of Pola Negri celebrated his special day.  On being questioned as to what birthday it would be Rudy safely remarked he would be just one year older than he was last year, and it was not a matter to be laughed about. Pola has not yet left for that love test separation, her last reason being that the rate of exchange abroad or her health, or the health of her mother had suddenly determined the silent film actress to cancel her sailing arrangements a week ago. Rudy meanwhile is staying up nights reading stories to find one for his next picture.

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22 May 1922 Valentino’s Bride Declared Former Dancer Who Disappeared in 1916

On reaching Chicago, from escaping the madness she was forced to leave behind when she married Rudolph Valentino in Mexico.  It was revealed by her friends that until her marriage she was Winifred de Wolfe daughter of Mrs. Edgar de Wolfe and niece of Elsie de Wolfe, well known interior decorator.  This discovery recalled the fact a world-wide search was being made for her in 1916, when she suddenly disappeared from New York.  Two Senators and a Russian Ambassador participated in the search. She refused to discuss this disappearance when asked about it tonight. Neither would she say anything about her relationship with a married Theodore Kosloff, Russian dancer with whom she was found as a dancer going by another name of Vera Fredov.  In 1916, she left her home and told her mother the married Kosloff was the only person in the world who could develop her talents. After months of searching she was found with his troupe in Chicago. Later on, Kosloff declared “Miss De Wolfe came to my studio in New York. She wanted to dance the Russian dance. She was not like those other girls who would come to be thinking I could help them. “Altogether she is the same as a blue diamond. Her family did not want her to go on the stage, but it is her life not theirs.  Some girls dance and sing but never have I seen such a clever girl as she to get what she wanted.   I prepared to give her a chance on the stage.  She designed and sewed costumes and did whatever I asked she was dedicated.

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15 May 1922 – Valentino Wed on Boedee to Music of Mexican Band

With a Mexican band blaring In the town plaza, Rudolph Valentino, movie star, and Natacha Rambova, were married at Mexicali, Mexico, last Saturday, according to unconfirmed reports reaching here today.

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31 Aug 1921 – BEAUTY BANS WAVES FOR “FOUR HORSEMEN”

From the waves to the field of dramatic acting. Virginia Warwick, one of the famous Mack Sennett Bathing Beauties, deserted the lure of the swimming tank and the sandy beach and appears in one of the stellar roles in “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse,” a Rex Ingram production for Metro, coming Saturday matinee for limited engagement at Loew’s State, with presentations at 2:15 and 8:15 o’clock thereafter. Miss Warwick in her portrayal of Chichi, the sister of the hero in this screen version by June Mathis, of the novel of Vicente Blasco Ibanez, gives to the Spanish-American beauty of the story that wealth of impulsive girlishness which one imagines such a character should possess. This former water nymph is from Missouri and came to California from St. Louis some two years ago. She was still attending high’school, being only slightly more than 15 years old —when in company with a theatrical friend she paid a visit to the Mack Sennett school of bathing beauties. Mack Sennett met her and for eighteen months her charm and beauty formed one of that galaxy of reasons why the beach of California is so popular with the motion picture fans. It was no accident or lucky chance that landed Virginia Warwick in “The Four Horsemen.” “Mr. Ingram didn’t happen to see me wandering about the hotel corridors or behold me dancing in a Los Angeles theater,” Miss Warwick explained. “I knew Mr. Ingram and had been looking for an opportunity to break into dramatic work. Director Ingram is a stickler for types and as I happened to fit his conception of Chichi, the sister of the hero in ’The Four Horsemen,’ I got the job.”

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20 May 1922 – All Will Be Well

Winifred “Shaughnessy” Hudnut, bride of Rudolph Valentino, passed through here this morning bound for New York. In a long letter to her new husband, she stated “everything will come out all right and I will be with you shortly.”

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31 Jan 1924 – Writer Leaves for Europe

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8 Mar 1926 – What If?

What if Rudy Valentino married Pola Negri, Winifred Hudnut hopes he will buy the bride pretty things. Lawyers’ bills prevented Winifred from having real jewels when she was Mrs. Rudy, she says, and he never mentioned his passion for a family. Pola loves Rudy, she has said at Los Angeles, but is waiting to see if her affections are the same when she returns from Europe four months hence.

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17 May 1937

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16 May 1919 – Theater Notes

A Russian star, a French director, an American scenario writer and Italian camera man and a Chinese story are the chief factors in the colossal Nazimova production, “The Red Lantern,” starring Nazimova herself, which was produced in this city at a cost of over a quarter of a million dollars and which will be shown at the California. Nazimova is a daughter of Russia; her director, M, Albert Capellani, is French —for a number of years the most noted of all cinema directors in Paris, with Pathe; June Mathis, gifted American woman writer, prepared the scenario; camera man, Eugene Gaudio, is Italian, and the story, from the novel by Edith Wherry, is laid in an Oriental setting.

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“Fame is like a giant x-ray. Once you are exposed beneath it, the very beatings of your heart are shown to a gaping world.” — Natacha Rambova, December 1922.

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14 May 1927 – Pola Negri Marries Her “Greatest Love”

France, Pola Negri became Princess Mdlvani this afternoon at 5 o’clock in the little city hall of this small french town when she was married to Prince Serge Mdivani, a brother-in-law of Mae Murray.  Pola’s husband, she announced several days ago on arriving, is her ‘‘greatest love,” greater even than Rudolph Valentino. Charlie Chaplin or her first husband, who was a Count. Pola and Serge were childhood sweethearts, she said, and the Prince was urging his love upon the film beauty even before Valentino.  We are sure that Rudy if he was still alive would wish her well.

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25 Feb 1923 – Lolling Luxuriously at The Blackstone Hotel, Chicago Valentino Announces He’s Financially Broke

According to the standards that prevail among the stars of movie-land Rodolph Valentino is broke. He admitted it to the writer while reclining on a divan in his luxurious suite at the Blackstone Hotel which suggested anything but flatness of the pocketbook. He had just finished a “turn” at the Marigold Dance Hall, where he and his new wife have been working to keep the wolf from the door. “I may be broke” where his exact words, “but I will go back to polishing golf sticks if that is what I did before I became a movie actor before I will work again for the people who want me to grind out movie pictures like sausages”. “What if you lose your suit” I asked. “I will stay out of pictures for two years until my contract expires and then come back in bigger ones than ever”.  Looking back upon an hour spent with Valentino over a cigar and some delightful prohibition beverage that suggested the flavor of old Scotch it dawns on me that most of the talk as about the star’s lawsuit against his former employers Famous Players-Lasky. How he made millions of dollars for them and how they paid him a paltry $1200 a week when Mary Miles Minter, the “synthetic Mary Pickford” was drawing down $8000 in her weekly pay envelope and Dorothy Dalton was depositing $5000 to her bank account 52 times a year.  ” I was the biggest drawing card they had and they paid me less”, he complained with that modesty so characteristic of the actor and yet it didn’t sound immodest coming from Valentino because it was the simple truth. “Why did they treat you like that”? Rodolph admitted that he had been seduced to signing a three year contract that gave the producers all the best of it but the reason he did it because they told him it was “just like Thomas Meighans contract”. So he won’t work for them and they won’t let him make pictures for anybody else. They won’t let him appear on the stage either.  The astute contract-makers, however seemed to have overlooked dance halls and the guiles Rodolph, having been stung once, hired himself a lawyer who pointed out the way for him to make a living for himself and his young bridge Winifred Hudnut Valentino until the suit was settled. So he has been appearing here this week at the biggest and newest dance hall on the south side and turning them away although the hall accommodates 8000 people.  “They were packed in so tight last night” said Valentino with enthusiasm “that they couldn’t move then hands to applaud when my wife and I finished our dance”. That sounds like a new alibi but again it was only the truth. The act may have been a divver in Detroit but it went big here.  Valentino shies at all women these days.  The lady reporter send to interview him came back with a report Valentino said over the telephone he did not have time for an interview.  He was profuse in his apologies to me later and said he did not recall having refused an interview to a newspaper person “it must have been my manager who answered the telephone but usually it was no one he knew.  Once I heard him say “Mrs. Vernon Castle? But my dear lady I happen to know she is playing in Los Angeles? They use all kinds of names that think will attract my attention” said Valentino.  “It’s any wonder if sometimes I should refuse to see a real newspaper woman by mistake?.  George Melford, the director dropped by to say hello to Valentino on his way to the coast. It so happened we both reached for the door at the same time.  “Here is the man who directed me in “The Sheik” Valentino explained to me by way of introduction. “But I have forgiven him for it and it was a great money maker thee million dollars but oh, what a picture”.  Valentino made it plain that the kind of character his portrayal of “The Sheik” fastened on him was another source of his grudge against Famous Players. I It created the impression that I was an oriental sort of person who smoked perfumed cigarettes and reveled in the society of women, where as a matter of fact I smoke any kind of cigarette I can get and I like the society of men.  While Valentino was lambasting “The Sheik” so vociferously the man who directed him only grinned.  “You are looking fine Rudy”, George interrupted at last.  “Feeling pretty fit”? “Never felt better”, Rudy with his most charming smile, and weigh 135.  “He gives the impression in pictures of being larger”.  “What is my ambition? To make better and better pictures giving a different characterization to each. Next, I would like to play Don Ceaser de Bazen. There is a part that has been played on the stage by all the great actors in recent times, Booth, Barrett, Salvini, Mansfield actors I know couldn’t touch by a hundred miles but I would like to do my best.”
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11 May 1957 – Valentino Memorial North Hollywood Church

A church dedicated to the memory of the late Silent Film superstar Rudolph Valentino has been opened here.  The opening service of the “Valentino Memorial Church of Psychic Fellowship” was conducted on a recent Sunday evening.  The program ncluded piano selections from music used in Valetnino’s last movie “The Son of the Sheik”.

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27 Apr 1930 – Life Secrets of Valentino Revealed

Valentino was never given credit for the real art he had. His unusual abilities were neglected to emphasize the grosser side – sex appeal, women, night life, flirtations – anything that would create a wider shop girl public and a few thousand more fans.  This forced him into a role he hated to play, a role in which he was unhappy.  But Hollywood gossip accomplished its aim.  Rudy was too young to realize how stupid public criticism is. He was too young for the fame that came to him. In his forties or fifties, perhaps, he might have stood up against that tidal wave of adulation and flattery, but in his twenties it wasn’t human not to be broken by it. The accumulation of it all warped his entire personality until, eventually it made him ashamed of the that finer side of his nature, not seen or understood.  This is the essence of his tragedy, as I shall try to make clear. People who knew him on the screen were invariable surprised when they met him in private life to discover what the real man was like.  If they expected to find the sheik they were disappointed. Recently, I met in London a well-born Englishwoman whose hero he had been for years. She said, she had dreamed of him; she was crazy over him. This woman said to me “when I met Valentino himself, I was amazed to find not my romantic hero, but just a boy quite frank sincere. Why, he is only a child. At first, I was disillusioned, but in another way I liked him the more”.  There were two distinct Valentinos the artist and the man. The one was swashbuckling cavalier who flashed across the screen into the hearts of millions. The other was a simple boy with a childish sensitiveness often mistaken for weakness by the undiscerning and the prejudiced American men, particular, had no use for him. They looked down on him and criticized which hurt terribly, for he was pitifully anxious to be liked and respected. Had they taken the pains to know him, they would have given both; he couldn’t talk business, politics or the stock exchange.  He had no mentality for such things. They lay beyond his grasp because he had utterly no interest in them. If I, myself tried to talk business I couldn’t get his attention. He would be thinking how handsome his horse would look in his new silver trappings from Mexico, or how much speed he could get from his new motor car.  He had a mania for motors.  He would rather lie under an automobile in a pair of greasy overalls, tinkering with the engine, than go dancing at a night club with the most attractive woman in the world.  Cultured, cosmopolitan men liked his finer side and the self-styled hundred percent American with his lack of culture and his one-track mind wrote him down as a weakling and looked to find nothing good in him.  All the romance and attraction association with his name, and which men of this type so resented, lay only in his acting.  In reality they resented it because it was a charm they so sadly lacked.  The trouble with Rudy was, he lived a few hundred years too late.  He should have been born in the middle ages, where men wore armor and fought duels and won their spurs by riding a horse into battle to fight for a principle. There was nothing in the coward in the physical sense of the word.  Yes, there were two sides but he had a sense of fun, but no humor. He couldn’t stand flippant criticism of his acting.  He welcomed the serious constructive kind, but the mash notes how he despised them. I have seen him pitch them all into the fire swearing vociferously the while. Later, when they came in tons, his secretaries took charge of them and showed only the intelligent ones which he answered personally. When he was making a picture nothing else existed.  He didn’t act the part he lived it.  The character he was portraying was a personality with which he identified himself, until he became its living entity. It was as though he made that character a shell into which he stepped, with all its mental workings and physical habits. This transfiguration began when he started studying the script and continued until the last camera shot was finished.  Then he discarded the shell and became Rudolph Valentino again.  When in “Blood and Sand” he was playing the role of Gallardo the toreador of the peasant class, he discarded all his fine manners to assume those of a peasant. He ate like a peasant and walked like none.  While doing the early part of the picture where Gallardo is a young boy Rudy was impish and prankish about the house.  He laughed and mental reactions were those of a boy of 13. He was not a great actor in the sense of Sara Bernhardt or Edwin Booth.  Sarah Bernhardt intelligently studied a role until her brain dictated the emotions.  Rudy couldn’t get anything in his brain until he had first felt it emotionally.  He had no initiative quality but startling dramatic ability that absorbed everything about a role to the most detailed mannerisms.  In his movie “Monsieur Beaucaire” he would take a pinch of snuff he intuitively knew these things. I felt Rudy was psychic as we both discovered and his extreme sensitiveness enabled him to tune in on a personality of phase of life and so interpret it faultlessly. Herein lay his genius.
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Pola Negri Receipe

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Pola Negri was not a gourmet chef nor did she know her way around the kitchen like her mother.  She was more interested in acting and her name in lights than a husband or family of her own.

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7 May 1922 -Valentino’s Hair Dressed Every Day for New Picture

It’s a tough life they lead—these men motion picture stars. But up until now they haven’t had to worry over the feminine problem of elaborate coiffures—and hairdressers. Rudolph Valentino, however, is having even this added to his list of troubles. For in ‘‘Blood and Sand,” his next Paramount picture, he plays the part of a Spanish full-fighter and all bull-fighters wear a “pigtail” that is at once the pride and bane of their existence. So every morning at the Lasky studio finds Valentino submitting to the ministrations of Hattie, the hairdresser who has been responsible for the coiffures of such noted screen beauties as Gloria Swanson, Betty Compson, Bebe Daniels, Agnes Ayres, et. al. Of course, the star had to let his hair grow very long in order to make the braid possible. Also, bullfighters have long, luxuriant sideburns and more proving that it’s a great life —this being a motion picture star.

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7 May 1970

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06 May 1923 – Dorothy Dalton Has Her Troubles

It’s tough luck to be a motion picture actress and to have a “public”  “Hello, glad to see you again. Let’s have a little talk over in this nice dark corner”. It was at the Famous Players Studio in Long Island.  The girl who greeted me was dressed in a short and rather shabby blue serge skirt and blouse.  On her head was a saucy little black tam.  Tortoise rimmed spectacles shaded her eyes against the Klieg lights.  I looked at her searchingly. Had I ever seen her before?  Then gasped, “Good Heavens, its Dorothy Dalton”  In real life, Dorothy Dalton is the most gorgeous person you can imagine, the sort of girl who buys all the beautiful clothes the rest of us only look at through the store windows.  When a mere man sees Dorothy in her home or at parties he calls for a pair of blinders to protect himself against her charms.  But in the studio one generally sees another Dorothy. “The tragedy of clothes” she sighted, as she drew up a studio chair and light a cigarette and adjusted her anti0kleig spectacles.  I adore clothes always have. The lovelier and more feminine they are the better I like them.  My idea of a perfect picture is one in which I can show off all the new clothes in the shops and do plenty of acting, too.  But will the public stand for it? Hardly, they want to see me in ‘rough and readies’ garbed as a man and being a real roughneck. I decide after every new picture the next one will be just the kind I want.  I lie awake nights planning what I will wear.  And then I begin to read scenarios. Invariably the ones with the punch, the stories from which real box office success can be made, cast me as a gypsy or an apache or a girl masquerading as a man.  Now, while I love clothes, I will forego them to really act.  And I have to take out my love for pretty things in my few social hours”.  Do you have to read many scenarios I asked Miss Dalton? “I do, and it wouldn’t be so bad if all my friends didn’t write so many scenarios and expect me to get them accepted.  I have a cousin, who recently wrote an interesting and really good scenario that is, it would have been, if we were still doing one-reelers”.  There is something refreshing about this lady she is unique and in one respect is willing to admit once upon a time, her popularity was on the wane.  It was about two years ago, and then she did something which, up to now, no other motion picture star accomplished she “came back” in the face of a public that was losing interest.  “Yes, I suppose no other actress has done it” said Miss Dalton, “some actresses have left the screen and returned to find themselves more popular than ever.  I happened to have several bad stories. That is the reason, I’m so careful now to make sure I have the right story before I begin work.  Miss Dalton works like a Trojan, and this in spite the fact she had a naturally lazy temperament before she became an actress.  She comes of a fine Chicago family; was the spoiled young daughter of a well-to-do and prosperous real estate dealer.  No one ever expected the willful Dorothy to work for her living.  Her father was only too happy to gratify her every whim “as long as I didn’t ask for pearls and diamonds”. Dorothy’s mother was of the old-school and believe a woman’s place was in the home, and that she shouldn’t know too much about business life because it unfitted the girl for matrimony. May be it was just because Dorothy’s mother knew so little about business and was so helpless when it came to knowing about stocks and bonds and other investments that her father determined she was going to become a lawyer.  “He wanted me to be able to look after the legal side of his business” said Miss Dalton “he thought if anything happened to him I would be able to look over his affairs and keep people from cheating mother”  “My early ambition was to become a surgeon. I adored cutting things up.  But finally, I decided I wanted to act. I would act, whether my family would let me or not.  Nothing was going to stop me and it didn’t as you can see.

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2 Apr 1922 – F. C. Parker to Invite Gloria Swanson and R. Valentino to Come Here

In a bid to advertise his movie theater and the latest movie starring Rudolph Valentino and Gloria Swanson F.C. Parker will visit the Lasky Studios in Hollywood, where he will conduct an interview with Rudolph Valentino and Gloria Swanson in an endeavor to have them visit Stockton personally while the film in which they costar, ‘‘Beyond the Rocks,” is playing at the Lyric theater, Frank C. Parker, manager of the house, departed for the south yesterday. Mr. Parker plans to he in the vicinity of Los Angeles for a week at least. During his absence Mark Hatch will manage the Lyric Theater.

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