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1920’s Palm Springs Loved by Rudolph Valentino

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Palm Springs was known as a weekend getaway for Hollywood’s elite with its scenic views provided the perfect backdrop for relaxation and fun. The exotic trees and foliage was one of the reasons those Hollywood silent film directors would come to Palm Springs to film their movies. Rudolph Valentino made many trips to Palm Springs where he loved the great outdoors especially horseback riding, fishing and camping.
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In 1921, before filming his movie “The Sheik” Rudolph Valentino and fiancée Winifred Hudnut often came down on weekends to enjoy the outdoors which provided a relaxed atmosphere for them both. On 13 May 1922, not quite a full year from divorce of his previous wife, both Rudolph and his fiancée Winifred Hudnut were married in Mexico. The newlyweds honeymoon destination was the Palm Springs Hotel, Palm Springs. There they were hosted by the owners who were friends of the couple sisters Dr. Florilla and Cornelia White. Dr. Florilla White plays a major role at Rudolph Valentino’s bigamy trial. The Valentino’s had a lot of friends who owned villas in Palm Springs. For example, in 1925, the couple were having fighting so to appease Natacha he called Ullman during their stay at the Villa Dar Marroc, Palm Springs the hideaway of Scottish Painter Gordon Coutts. Natacha negotiated with both Rudy and George Ullman for a movie to be called “What Price Beauty?” which would be financed off of her husband’s new movie contract. In Feb 1926, his last movie was The Son of the Sheikh was filmed in Palm Springs as well.

It was rumored that Rudolph Valentino had built a Spanish bungalow in Palm Springs. The bungalows location is in ‘The Mesa’ neighborhood considered one of South Palm Springs oldest and most exclusive areas. The home was later owned by movie actress Esther Williams.

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23 Aug 1928 – Two Years Later

Rudolph Valentino died two years ago and he was the most idolized figure the screen has ever known. His passing was mourned all over the world. Even today, Valentino is a living factor in motion pictures. In offices at 6606 Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood, manager George Ullman still acts as his manager for the estate of his friend. Thousands of photographs are sent out every week to those whose love for him never has wavered. Rudy’s personality has triumphed over death.

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1925 – Who Are?

In 1925, a poll was taken in the United States and Rudolph Valentino was named fourth most popular dancer.

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“Would-be tangoers, should remember that the good dancer gives his exclusive attention to his partner”..Rudolph Valentino 1925

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Sep 2014 – Q & A with noted author Donna Hill

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First off, I want to thank you for this opportunity to interview you for my blog. I enjoyed your first book and I think between that, the yearly calendar, your facebook RV group and your website I am a fan of yours.

Well, thank you! I’m very happy that you enjoy the website and the book, which as I am sure you’ve guessed was a labor of love.

The first question is why Rudolph Valentino?

Oh gosh, that question takes too much time to respond. To answer a questions with a question, I’ll start with “why not?” But you might find an answer to that question here: http://www.altfg.com/blog/actors/rudolph-valentino-donna-hill/ and also in reading the introduction in my book. For the purpose of this questionnaire, I suppose the short answer was I was smitten at an early age by the man’s appeal and his in screen magnetism. Everything else that followed was a natural progression of my interest as my fascination in the real Valentino grew, opposed to the “reel” Valentino.

The second question is as a Valentino collector what is your very favorite item you collected?

I do love the personal items that belonged to Valentino, they are very special. I think, perhaps, one of my favorite items that fell into my hands might be and item which Valentino, himself, seemed very proud. It is a pre-publication proof/copyright exhibit of what later became his book Day Dreams. Valentino sent it to a friend in Palm Springs. It bears a very warm and personal inscription from both Valentino and Rambova. I also have the copy of Day Dreams that Rudy gave to his sister in 1923 in Rome.

I have to say, however, I do not measure the value of any particular item more than another. Honestly, I am a temporary custodian and must take care of the items. That is a responsibility. To that end, all are special. As you might guess, I do love the candid and rare photographs. I love digging out the truth of the photos, where they were taken, when and the story behind them. It’s like being a bit of a detective, it’s fun.

The third question is what was the idea behind your current book?

I vaguely announced on my Facebook page for RV The Silent Idol my next project is a book about Valentino’s film career. I’ve uncovered some interesting material and hope to have an interesting book out of it. This is an area that has not really been covered in depth, so I’m enjoying the research part of things right now a good deal. It will not be as photo heavy as RV The Silent Idol, frankly I don’t think I can top that. That said, I do have some really wonderful rare photos to use, including some very early candid snapshots before he was a star that have recently come to light. I hope to have it finished for publication in 2015.

The fourth question is there is a lot of positive reviews on your book. As an author, that must make you feel that what you published was worth it. Are there any future plans for a new book?

The future book, see above. My other book project is not Valentino-related, though there is a small connection. On the back burner is a biography of Dorothy Gish (who as you know starred in a film in 1919 in which Valentino had an early role).

Regarding RV The Silent Idol, the reviews have been very gratifying. It’s sold far better than I ever imagined it would considering blurb’s pricing structure and I feel a great sense of pride in it. Given the limitations I had in self-publishing, it was a job pretty well done. That it has been embraced so warmly is nice as an ego boost because I worked very hard on it. It’s garnered some really positive reviews and still sells with limited distribution and word of mouth. What’s not to like?

The fifth question is could you tell us your plans for an updated look for your website?

The website is LONG overdue for a revamp. Once I get going on updating, it will be cleaner, with I hope a lot more content. Sadly, life events, working a day job and trying to research Valentino Book 2.0 have taken their toll on my ability to keep up the website. On top of that, technology is passing by at a rapid pace! I need to put in some time to ramp up to speed with all I need to know for the new website. I’m too much of a control freak to hire someone to do the work for me. With the new book happening right now, I suspect the website will continue to be back-burnered for the rest of 2014, I’m afraid.

No, thank you again for your interest. Always nice to “meet” even virtually other Valentino fans. It is always nice to have a shared interest. Hopefully we can meet in person at the Valentino Memorial in 2015, I hope to be there. You could now answer the questions up above for me! 😉

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1924 – Rudolph Valentino Camera Buff

Rudolph Valentino was a noted collector of many fine and expensive things. He was a car connoisseur, a fashion icon and a keen photographer. Rudolph Valentino owned several cameras: a French Gaumont, German Goerz Tenax Camera, an Eastman Professional Home Portrait Graflex and a 35mm Parvo Debrie Model L Camera. He was photographed several times with his Parvo Debrie Camera with a bayonet lens mount. This camera was considered a very modern camera manually driven with a shutter speed of 240 frames per second. At the time of this camera’s development Andre Debrie was with Pathe Studios when he built his professional camera. The Parvo Debrie was the first camera embodying direct focusing on film. Also, it was considered the only camera in the world that provided three different direct focusing systems. This camera had a removable lens with an aluminum body

In 1924, here he is photographed on the set of his movie “The Sainted Devil using a 35 mm Parvo Debrie Model L Camera.

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Rudolph Valentino’s Parvo Debrie Camera was number 633 in the Estate Catalog with a price tag of $850. This camera is still highly desirable to collectors and rare to find in today’s market with an auction price of $2,000.00 and up.

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23 Sep 1922

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18 Mar 1934 – Alice Lake In Waterfront Film

No so many years ago, she was a full-fledged star and Rudolph Valentino was one of her supporting players. Today, she joins the extra ranks when opportunity comes her way but Alice Lake has no regrets she says. She still lives in her beloved Hollywood and, because of former connections has more than allotment of “calls”.
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12 Jul 1936 – Jean Valentino in Hollywood

When you enter the reception room at the MGM the chap who takes your name is just as likely as not to be Jean Valentino, nephew of the late Rudolph Valentino. He’s been working there quietly, since March of last year, and is, they do say the sole support of his father Alberto and mother. Jean is dark like his uncle but doesn’t resemble him. He’s in his yearly 20’s and has no acting ambitions. He tinkers radios in his spare time and would like to be a sound engineer. One of these days, probably he’ll be sending his own name in.

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17 Oct 1921 – Virginia Rappe

The friends of the late Virginia Rapee, for the manslaughter of whom ‘Fatty’ Arbuckle is to stand his trial, declaree that she had a nine year old daughter living at Chicago. It is said that the father, whose identity has not been ascertained, disappeared before the girl’s birth.

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21 Jul 1951 – Alice Terry

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Dec 1924

apr 1924

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The best way to forget your troubles is to be constantly on the go. Keep on the crest of the wave all the time and never give yourself the time to think when things are bothering you. –Mae Murray, 1926

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24 Aug 1926 – In Memoriam

Stars shining for their hours star we make immortal by our tributary feet. The teeming skies that new knew a god so strangely sweet. As this bright memory that fills our hears and brims our eyes with tears as bright. As the sharp pain that circled round the world that death-like night. Skies filled with stars- one throbbing, empty place. Gold as the love we bear dark as desire. Shriving from tender mists out of our hearts famine and fire.

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Aug 2014 – Valentino’s Hollywood

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So I always wanted to spend time in Los Angeles or Valentino’s Hollywood. In times past, I drove through, I stopped off to see relatives, but I never got to see those tourist places that I always wanted to see.  So, I took the trip of a lifetime and simply went.  I wanted to be a traditional tourist, I wanted to attend the Rudolph Valentino Memorial Service, I wanted to meet several people who I had been corresponding with via Facebook, I wanted to walk where he did, I wanted to see where he lived, and I needed to spend some time researching for a book I intend to write one day. So in five days, I was able to accomplish that and more.  I drove, I walked, I got lost, I picked up souvenirs, and I wrote post cards home. One of the things I did was visit Hollywood Forever Cemetery and had a private tour with Kari Bible who is passionate about what she does and shares her wealth of knowledge about Hollywood and the stars buried there.  I took a tour of Hollywood courtesy of TMZ and I was not impressed. I walked on Hollywood Blvd, Sunset Blvd, Griffith Park, Griffith Observatory, I ate at Musso & Franks Restaurant, I toured the Hollywood Heritage Museum and the people there are truly nice and take time to tell you about what is in the Museum.

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Then I went to the Valentino Memorial Service and I got to see Rudolph Valentino’s grave, I spent a little time there, I met some wonderful people at the service, and my final day I spent Valentino sightseeing. My gracious tour guide took me to see where Valentino Productions was located we even went inside the opened door and walked quietly upstairs taking in all of the original features still there. I was shown where Rudy asked Jean Acker to marry him and also seen the church which was the site of the first Valentino Memorial Service.  Then there was Natacha and Rudy’s spot on Sunset Blvd, Pola Negri’s house and George Ullman’s house in Beverly Hills, we even drove through Whitley Heights and I even seen the foundation of Rudy’s former home. The best part was going to see Falcon Lair. How can I describe the place where he called home just to pull up and see that black gate, those white columns and the name Falcon Lair was indescribable in how I felt. I got out and of course took photos and videos and was pointed out what was original and what was torn down. To see that wonderful man’s home torn down like that was simply sad. That is Hollywood history that is gone forever except what is on a photograph or a post card is incomprehensible. My tour guide talked to me and I gained more insight into this person who I never personally knew but in my heart I did. Although it’s only been a few days since I left I look over the videos and the photographs I took and am simply grateful that I went. Because now, I will go back year after year and know there are more memories to create, acquaintances to renew, and more knowledge to gain. I want to acknowledge two people who made me feel right at home. My tour guide Tracy Terhune and the gracious Stella Grace. 

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“Mr Valentino was greatly cheered during his last days by the thousands of messages sent him by his friends and motion picture admirers, and while he was too weak to read all of them, it was a great comfort to him to know that so many friends were interested and sympathetic”.. George Ullman, on the passing of his friend and associate.

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23 Aug 2014 – 87th Annual Rudolph Valentino Memorial Service Review

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This year marks the first time I attended the annual service that celebrates the life of Silent Film Star Rudolph Valentino. I was amazed at the amount of like-minded people whose sole purpose was to visit and pay their respect to a remarkable man whose life was cut short but lives forever on film. The location is always the same which is Hollywood Forever Cemetery in the Cathedral Mausoleum where he is interred and the date and time are always the same 23 Aug at 1210 hours.  Every year there is a different theme. The layout is very respectful and dignified. The year’s program had a moving video of Valentino’s birth place followed by one of the guest speakers sharing his experiences of traveling to Rudy’s birthplace. There was a wonderful reading out of Rudy’s Book Day Dreams, a memorial tribute video and the wonderful Wegter Family who sung two songs that were specially written for this memorial service. There was another moving video of Falcon Lair: A Last look followed by Mr. Christopher Riordan another featured guest speaker who shared his memories and historical facts on Falcon Lair. The service ended with Ms. Stella Grace leading the audience in the 23rd Psalm.

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Afterwards everyone had an opportunity to speak with one another and take pictures of the wonderful display that was set up towards the front of the service. I was honored to of met so many people that I had always wanted to meet the gracious and remarkable Mr. Terhune, Ms. Grace, and of course my personal hero Mr. Riordan. Finally, I slipped away to pay my respect to my other personal hero Rudolph Valentino. This was the experience of a lifetime and one that I will never forget. Of course, I do plan on attending next year. For those that have not gone I encourage you to do so.

 

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“The camera was a magic lantern when Rudolph Valentino walked before it, giving him a double life full of light and terrible shadows.” –Adela Rogers St John

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19 Jul 1923 – Ritz-Carlton Pictures Dinner

In his speech the other night at the dinner given by the Ritz-Carlton Pictures, Inc Rudolph Valentino said that he objected to a particular clause in his contract which set forth that if “his manner or bearing’ was not in accord with the desires of the Famous Players Laskey Corp he could be laid off for 6 months. He declared that it was apparently for the producing concern to determine at any time whether his “manner of bearing” was not according to the clause in the contract. He also said that he had refused to work for the concern even after an offer of $750,000. Although J. D. Williams is optimistic regarding Valentino’s contract with Famous Players the latter firm, from hints dropped by some of the officials, is not disposed to release the actor from his contract, unless he is successful in court.

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Aug 1926 Rudolph Valentino’s Trip Home

The Santa Fe railroad magnanimously had announced from Chicago that officials were ordered to honor the bottom half of a round-trip ticket Valentino had bought when he came to New York, provided burial was in the West.

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“I don’t want to leave you Murray. You and I are in tune. You do things to my heart.” — Rudolph Valentino on Mae Murray

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May 1923 – What’s the Matter with the Movies?

by RUDOLPH VALENTINO

There is nothing the matter with the movies that cannot be
remedied. This is indeed fortunate–for the movie has earned
an important place in the life of the American public. No one
will deny that motion pictures have been helpful, instructive
and entertaining. No one doubts that they can be a great
influence for good–or evil. And everyone knows they are too
big to be ignored. They have assumed such importance as to
incur a proportionate responsibility. And yet those entrusted
with their development choose to close their eyes to the writing
on the wall. The principal trouble with the motion picture today is that
it is an industry, not an art. It has been too highly
commercialized for its own good. Of course, the business man
is necessary to the motion picture, but not to the exclusion of
the artist.
It is right and good that Fords and locomotives and adding
machines and safety razors and lead pencils shall be
standardized and turned out according to hard and fast
specifications–and that quantity production shall cut down
overhead. It is also good business that the distributing
station be standardized and handle the usual full line of
equipment at standard prices.
But those methods are bad medicine for motion pictures.
The film made to the dollar-ruled specification, turned out on
a quantity production basis, added to the cut-and-dried program
and then released throughout the trust-controlled theatres is,
without doubt, a specimen of efficient industrial production–
but as an artistic entertainment it is a sad failure.
No one doubts that pictures can be produced under this
highly efficient business method much cheaper and faster than
by the old “hit-or-miss” artistic way–and that these pictures
can net their producers and distributors a much larger return
per dollar invested than those handicapped by artistic
requirements.
But, after all, what are you spending your money in your
local moving-picture theatre for? To see artistic, fascinating
pictures or to build fortunes for those in control of the
industry? There the heart of the problem is exposed–the
average motion picture is made to fatten purses, not to
entertain the public.
Commercial motion pictures have their rightful usage, as
have also less artistic films of entertainment, just the same
as commercial art has its proper place, and commercial music
and jazz, and advertising and cheap vaudeville and burlesque.
But how would you like to discover the powers that be
insisting that you must take your art and your music and your
literature “according to our program.” Suppose you went to the
Grand Opera and heard a little factory-produced opera, then a
little jazz and then a half hour of song “plugging” flavored
with ten minutes of Galli-Curci or Chaliapin singing a nursery
rhyme. Or suppose when you purchased a set of Shakespeare you
found every other page devoted to advertising or publicity
writing or that your evening to Ethel Barrymore was four-fifths
taken up by an act of cheap melodrama, a little burlesque, a bit
from the minstral and an acrobatic squad. Suppose that when you
attempted to buy pictures for your home you discovered they
could only be shown in connection with commercial drawings.
Yet you get just about such a hodgepodge when you attend a
motion picture theatre running trust-controlled programs. And
with the trust growing stronger every day the independant
exhibitor is being driven farther and farther into the corner.
All of which is very fine for efficiency and profit, but very
bad for art and entertainment.
In my opinion 75 per cent of the pictures shown today are a
brazen insult to the public’s intelligence. The other 25 per
cent are produced by such masters as D. W. Griffith, Douglas
Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin, the Talmadge
interests–and a few other independent stars and producers who
realize that the making of pictures is an art, not an industry.
Such splendid features as “Broken Blossoms,” “Way Down East,”
“Tolerable [sic] David,” “Little Lord Fauntleroy,” “Robin Hood,”
“The Kid,” “When Knighthood was in Flower,” along with a few
other productions which rank among these, have invariably been
received in such a way as to prove that the American public
wants and appreciates artistic productions. The next thing to
do is demand them. The public always gets what it _demands_.
All of these pictures were produced by independent companies
who loathe to follow the factory cut-and-dried methods perfected
by the picture trusts.
The various stars and directors who have fought and dared
to produce films of real merit are keeping faith with you in
spite of the handicaps they face. They are courageously
battling the interests that are monopolizing not only the
production but the exhibition of motion pictures. They deserve
your unqualified support. The only hope for the future of the
moving picture lies with them. Support them and you will enjoy
pictures made by conscientious producers, from real stories,
pictures in which the artists have an opportunity to give you
the best they have.
Under the present system the actor is treated like a factory
hand–is driven helter-skelter through a picture by a director
who is afraid of the slave-driving studio manager who, in turn
is spurred to increased production by producers. And these
producers have but a single motive–profit.
Such producers established themselves by imitating, in a
superficial and insincere way, the artistic productions of D. W.
Griffith, Mary Pickford and others by cashing in on their
creative genius.
Then they were merely parasites. Now they are infinitely
worse. Instead of merely imitating, they are attempting to
crush the conscientious producer. And their method of crushing
is efficient–as is every other business scheme they have
worked out.
The blade with which they are trying to knife the producer
of aritistic pictures cuts two ways. First it hamstrings him
and then it cuts off his lines of distribution. Process No. 1
is to discredit the stars that work with him and at the same
time reduce to a minimum the value of the production on which
he is working.
The most efficient way to discredit stars is to make them
common–to belittle their work; to prevent them from expressing
their own interpretation of art; to compel them to perform
poorly.
Name over to yourself a dozen of your favorite stars. When
you think of moving picture stars you think of them. Now
suppose that eight of that dozen were hired by powerful
syndicates and put to work on cheap pictures. Suppose that the
pictures they made were weak and their work was unconvincing.
Suppose each of them made four pictures, or even six or ten
pictures, to every picture one of the other four made. In other
words, suppose that of every ten pictures featuring your
favorite stars nine were weak and and the stars’ work most
disappointing. Wouldn’t you begin to feel that, after all, it
was not the star but the picture that counted?
And the method of discrediting real artistic feature
pictures is as simple. D. W. Griffith produces a marvelous
spectacle–the work of countless months of time and the genius
of true artists. It impresses you mightily. You must see the
next spectacle of that kind when it is released.
So the “industrial” producers figure. Before D. W. Griffith
can produce another masterpiece they flood the theatres with
dozens of cheap imitations, each heralded as the peer of
Griffith’s best work. So grossly are they misrepresented, so
flagrantly are they mis-advertised and so miserably do they
fall below your expectations that you naturally “swear off”
spectacles for the rest of your life.
“Who suffers?” The conscientious producer. No matter how
good it may be, his next production is almost guaranteed a
failure, now.
Meanwhile the imitator flits to the next artistic production
and proceeds to copy it, cheaply. In doing so he shackles a
star to a weak part and then rushes him through the picture,
thus killing two birds with one stone. For the public feels it
has been hoodwinked by stars and features.
As real stars and real productions are all the independent
producer with the conscience has to offer, he suffers once again.
Do you wonder then, that a moving-picture actor whose hope
for the future lies in his work of today repudiates an unfair
contract rather than be a party to the ruination of good
pictures?
That is why I have refused to work for picture butchers at
$7,000 a week on cut-and-dried program features, and have
offered to return to work for twelve hundred and fifty dollars
a week if a competent, conscientious director directs my work
in worth-while features.
The trusts method of curtailing the independent producer’s
distribution is also very efficient. This is accomplished
through its distributing mediums. Again we find its methods
twofold. They sell complete programs, a trick by which the
small exhibitor must show a whole year of their pictures in
order to get any at all–and then he must take the whole program,
just as it is turned out of the mills. The other method is to
secure interest or ownership in theatres and permit them to show
only trust pictures.
So it is not always the fault of the exhibitor who runs the
theatre you patronize if the ordinary program pictures you see
day in and day out are not up to your expectations. He is not
to blame any more than is the artist who appears in the picture
you take exception to. The poor exhibitor, in order to secure
a few good pictures with real box-office value, is forced to
sign the trust’s entire output for the year. And so he must
contract to rent eighty-two or more pictures, though he knows
full well that some will be so impossible he will have to
refrain from showing them and simply pocket his loss.
That is what is the matter with the movies–and that is why
the American public spent only one half as much on pictures last
year as they did the year before. And that is why they will
spend even less next year, if something is not done to remedy
the situation.
The American public wants good pictures and is entitled to
them. The conscientious producers want to produce good pictures
and should be supported in doing it. The real artist-actor
wants to give you the best there is in him. In order to do this
he must be allowed to act in high-grade pictures and take
sufficient time to make them.
Art is the only weapon with which the conscientious producer
and the artist, or star, can fight the commercialism of the
trust producers. Naturally the trust wants to discredit art and
lower the public’s idea of what the standard of pictures should
be. The lower the standards, the cheaper the pictures can be
made; the lower the overhead, the more the profit.
Now you can understand why Rudolph Valentino is not making
pictures. The merciless cutting of “Blood and Sand” threw me
into grave doubts. My experience in “The Young Rajah” verified
my fears. I realized that I was not going to be permitted to
act in real pictures or give the necessary time and study to my
work.
Art? What did that mean to the commercial producers. They
wanted film–thousands of feet of film. And they wanted it
quickly. The quicker the film was made the less the overhead,
and the sooner the release.
So we hurried through. Night after night we worked–
sometimes until daylight. We actually finished the picture
August 10, at three in the morning. Apparently those producers
were convinced that midnight oil is conducive to genius.
I’m not going to hurry through any more pictures, and I’m
not going to be cast to parts that are unworthy of a novice or
a worn-out ham. Other movie actors have taken this stand. Some
have fallen by the way. Some have emerged victorious–Mary
Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin, the Talmadge girls,
and now comes Harold Lloyd.
Forget Valentino and his little squabble–but keep your eyes
on the independent producers and on these stars. Compare their
productions with those of trust-controlled producers. Remember
that your money is the deciding vote whether the independent
producer prospers and gives you real pictures or whether the
trust monopolizes the whole industry and feeds you what profits
it best. You are to be the judge. I know what your verdict
will be.
I have been asked why the producers so mercilessly hacked
“Blood and Sand.” When the film was completed it went to the
business office. It was measured. It was too long–the most
heinous offense known to the trust–a full six hundred feet too
long. Its extra length meant a little less profit. So to the
butchering rooms it went.
Of course certain parts of it could be re-acted and
condensed and thus keep the continuity clear. But that meant
more time, more money and less profit.
So clip, clip, clip. And the very heart of the film was
cut out. How much that saved, I do not know, but it saved money.
What if the public was a little confused and disappointed here
and there? The picture would get by. Everybody knew it was
good. Why quibble about a scene or two? As a matter of fact
the picture was a lot stronger than it needed to be. And making
pictures too good was simply piling up trouble for the future.
It was spoiling the public. The better you give them the better
they want. The thing to do was to standardize picture quality.
Then they wouldn’t always be demanding the world and all for
the price of one admission.
With that philosophy in mind they made “The Young Rajah”–
and I quit.
Maybe I’m temperamental because I refuse to caper through
rot on the strength of what reputaion I may have earned. But
this I know–the “Rajah” picture was the first step down. After
that the descent would have been steady–and not so slow, either.
Maybe it is unbusinesslike to repudiate a contract that
involves you in producing films in which you cannot possibly
give the public what it is paying for, and in a process of
cheapening that would mark one as a puppet rather than as an
actor. If it is, then I’m unbusinesslike.
It just happens that I have ideals–and hopes. I am sorry
I ever acted in “The Young Rajah.” I will never act in another
picture like it.
The public wants art in pictures and I believe I can put it
there. Doug and Mary and Charlie and D. W. have done it and
I’m going to try.

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1922 Lila Lee – Blood & Sand Co-star to Rudolph Valentino

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Born on 25 Jul 1901, Union Hill, New Jersey, Augusta Appel who changed her name to Lila Lee was a famous silent film actress who made a score of films but to those fans of Rudolph Valentino she was his co-star in the 1922 movie “Blood & Sand”.

Lila Lee was discovered at the age of 5 when she appeared with Gus Edwards School Days Review. At the age of 12, she was signed by Paramount Studios and from there a star was born. Lila Lee had a lot of career ups and downs she was finally forced to retire due to ill health. Lila had appeared on radio, television and Broadway her career spanned more than 50 years. She was married a total of three times. She died on 13 Nov 1973.

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After 35 Years Rudolph Valentino Remains a Legend

His full name was Rodolpho Alfonso Raffaelo Pierre Filberti Guglielmi de Valentina D’Antonguolia and his most secret ambition in life was to be a farmer. But sighing women in the 20’s knew him as Rudolph Valentino, the greatest lover the screen ever had. Even Clark Gable was a runner up for the title admitted that. Valentino died just 35 years ago on 23 Aug 1926. A veteran NY police officer still recalls the orgy of adulation stated by 100,000 mourners at Campbells Funeral Home. Needless to say, 9 out of 10 mourners at that funeral were all female. Thirty five women claimed he had fathered their children but all claims came in after his death. There was no Valentino heir from the two marriages he had. Some actresses like Mae Murray spotted the Valentino sex appeal even before he became famous. Mae was a top star of the silent era, was a Ziegfeld star on Broadway before coming to Hollywood. In the WW1 era some of the NY fancy night clubs had paid dancers and Valentino was one of them at Maxims. “I saw him before I danced with him” Mae recalls. He was like a sensual animal stalking the jazz jungle. Mae said that Valentino who almost starved in NY took the job to keep faith and bone together. “How this young man danced”, Mae remembers “It was the real tango” they way I had seen it danced on the streets of Paris. From this meeting a romance developed and Valentino later appeared in two Mae Murray Pictures. “I always remember Rudy being as open as a child” says Mae. but the women of the 20’s who never missed a Valentino movie say him as anything but a child. But there was more than mere virility to the Valentino appeal. He was an actor of great emotional force but a rarity was he had brains and class. Old timers say that famous nostril quivering in love scenes was invented by Valentino but directors and producers made him do it. It used to make grandma feel funny all over even though it looks corny today. Valentino landed in NY in 1913 an Italian boy of 18. Some accounts say he came here penniliness. Miss Murray says he had 800 GBP on him which he spent on good living until it ran out within a year. Within that time he was ballroom dancing in places where Clifton Webb as Bonnie Glasses former dance partner danced. But as he often confided in friends he still wanted to become a farmer on a large scale. He joined a company that traveled to San Francisco and Valentino tried to sell bonds and he failed. A chance meeting with an actor decided his fate. He went to Hollywood but he could not get work. Finally after 3 months he got a extra job at $5.00 a day. Then Miss Murray seen him and chose him to be her leading man. In 1921, Famous Players-Lasky foreruner of Paramount Pictures signed Valentino. In 1926, a life cut short has been forever mourned. The Lady In Black is missing the woman who was Valentinos best known mourner. In black shoes, black hat, and a heavy black veil she would visit his crypt and sit there. Often appearing with one white rose and a dozen red ones. Her visits were daily for the first three years and annually on the anniversary of his death in 1926.

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5 Aug 1977 – Valentino Revival

It seems possible since the “dream lover” of the roaring twenties Rudolph Valentino is being revived in books, movies, magazine articles and exhibits. Even a few Valentino products have appeared in the marketplace. Women adored Valentino, but men were not too fond of him as he became a legendary star of the silent movies, and one of the first to endorse products, which almost all stars do today. The Valentino craze not only filled movie houses with adoring women but also stocked store shelves with brand-named products such as olive oil, cigars, candy and beauty supply tins. After he made his most famous film, “The Sheik” it became his nickname and it also became a part of the language. A “sheik” was a woman’s man. Several major magazines are reported planning articles on Valentino. The revival of the movie lover contains the staff for setting trends, styles, and fashions. Already a few products have appeared. Some major department stores have sold large beach towels showing Valentino in one of his love scenes. The love scenes from the romantic movies appear ready made for the manufacturers of bed linens and covers. There might have been more Valentino Pictures today if it wasn’t for a fight the actor had with Adolph Zukor, then president of Paramount Pictures. Valentino wanted a raise from his $350 a week. Many stars were making thousands of dollars a week. As a result, Zukor prevented Valentino, at the height of his career, from making films for two years. Meanwhile, Valentino endorsed products and made dancing tours with his second wife. His second wife was cosmetic heiress Winifred Hudnut whose stage name was Natacha Rambova. She became rather demanding of him in public. And she gave him a “slave bracelet” which men didn’t wear in those days. But he was still wearing it when he died, months after their divorce. Despite Valentino’s domestic problems his work as an actor is just as effective today. In the Valentino Era, men wore pegged pants. Spats, stick-pins, four-in-hand ties, collar clasps and suits of several cuts all of which would be a bit of a contrast to the looser more casual clothes of today. The slicked down hair look, though, could be another thing and a great contrast to the long hair of recent years. If it becomes fashionable it could cause a barber boom.

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natacha rambova1926 pic

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“The molehill of petty ‘henpecking’ jibes soon grew to the proportions of a formidable mountain.” Natacha Rambova responding to accusations her husband was henpecked.

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17 Dec 1926 – Will not Auction Rudolph Clothes off

The lavish wardrobe of Rudolph Valentino will not go on the auction block with the remainder of his personal effects now being sold here. George Ullman executor of the film star’s estate, ruled Thursday. The announcement was made as Ullman opened Valentinos trunks preparatory to placing their contents on sale. “I can’t do it,” he said. “Those clothes nearly talked to me. Rather than let anyone else have them, I’ll buy them myself if necessary.” Mrs Teresa Werner an aunt of Natacha Rambova, divorced wife of Rudolph Valentino and a share holder in the estate, with the actor’s brother and sister, was among the purchasers at today’s auction. She paid $70.00 for two sterling silver picture frames. Adolphe Menjou and Ernest Torrance, screen actors were also successful bidders, Menjou paying $56.00 for a small brass incense burner and Torrance $170 for an antique painting on a wooden panel.

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2 Aug 1925 – Valentino is Heard by High School Students

Recent dispatches from Los Angeles tell of Rudolph Valentino having addressed 5000 Hollywood High School students at a gathering in Memorial Auditorium where he talked to them on the ethics of scholastic sports. The address was loudly applauded by the boys as well as the girls. The celebrated screen star also introduced to the students Federico Beltram-Masses noted Spanish painter who declared the greeting of the students had touched him more deeply than any other he had received in this country. Valentino translated the words of Beltram-Masses as the great artist English is not fluent. Beltram-Masses appeared with a deep gash on his forehead revealing him and Rudolph had been in an automobile accident which might have been serious as they were returning from San Francisco. The car struck a gulley and careened. The star was shaken severely but little hurt.

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28 Dec 1924 – Mineralava Tour Stop Chicago Contest Winner Escapes Paupers Grave

On 27 Dec 1924, Angelita Cuccinello recently picked by Rudolph Valentino from among 10,000 contestants as Chicago’s Prettiest Girl was killed by a skidding truck. Her body laid unclaimed in the morgue for three days. She was saved from burial in Potters Field last night when Mrs. McGarity, blind wife of a lake captain paid a debit of gratitude by providing a fine coffin.

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“I will say that the love made me do what I have done was prompted by the noblest intention that a man could have. I loved deeply. But in loving I have erred.”..Rudolph Valentino on marrying Natacha Rambova early.

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18 July 1925 – Hollywood is Talking

All Hollywood is talking over the fact that Natacha Rambova has decided to stop running her husband’s affairs and produce pictures of her own. Mr. Rudolph Valentino from now on will be his own manager. Miss Rambova has hired Alan Hale as her director and her first picture will be called “What Price Beauty” staring Nita Naldi and Pierre Gendron, a newcomer. Miss Rambova will design the sets and costumes.

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“The best way t…

“The best way to forget your troubles is to be constantly on the go. Keep on the crest of the wave all the time and never give yourself the time to think when things are bothering you.” Mae Murray, 1926, Former co-star of Rudolph Valentino

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13 MAY 1922- Purchase of one of the handsomest homes in Hollywood by Rudolph Valentino

Rudolph Valentino, confirms the Impression that his engagement to Miss Natacha Rambova, which has just been announced, is to result in their early marriage. They will, however, defer their honeymoon until summer when they will enjoy a motor tour of Europe and pay a visit to the War’s family in Italy, whom he has not seen for a number of years.  The bride-to-be. who is a daughter of Richard Hudnut. New York manufacturing chemist got her professional name when she became a premiere dancer with Theodore Kostloff

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30 Jul 1922 – Interesting Facts

Dear Movie Man,

I think Rudolph Valentino is lovely. I saw in “The Sheik”. Where was he born? How old is he? Is he married and to whom? Will you please give me his address? Do you think he will send me his picture? From Bright Eyes, Jamestown, RI

Rudolph Valentino is 27, born in Italy, married to Winifred Hudnut, he is with Lasky Studio, 1520 Vine Street, Los Angeles, CA. I say that at least 10 times every night in my sleep, I know it so well.

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Lady Diane “Why…

Lady Diane “Why–why have you brought me here?” Ahmed “Mon Dieu, are you not woman enough to know?” From the movie The Sheik

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mae murry

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My Friendship with Rudolph Valentino

I had met many well-known personalities during those weeks in New York City and among them was Rudolph Valentino. He was a magnificently built man and his disposition was as delightful as his physique. Just to see his expressive hand lying on the back of a chair was art. Valentino and I happened to be in the same group one afternoon. He came over and sat by me and we seemed to be friends immediately. No wonder women were crazy about him. They were when I first met him, although he had not became famous as an actor then. But he had already done his chores and worked for recognition the hard way. I knew all this, somehow, without being told. Rudy and I had a unique understanding. We were attracted to each other from that first afternoon. Call it sex if you will, but more correctly call it a dancing friendship, which is why our bond lasted, lived long and strong. Rudy was drawn to me that first meeting and he was waiting for me after a Ziegfeld Folly Rehearsal that night. We went dancing – danced hours and hours. I’ll never forget that night another night of dancing rhythm. I was in all white and Rudy, tall and dark was in black we provided a striking contrast. When we walked onto the dance floor it seemed that everyone stopped to look at us. How Rudy loved to tango! He had a sense of timing quite unlike any other man I’ve ever danced with. It was late when we started home that night, and in the cab he put his arm around me. There was something sweet and tender, almost child-like about Valentino. I responded to this. I felt that he wanted to make love to me. I hoped he would have the intelligent grace to wish me luck and just be my friend. I wanted to keep his dancing friendship. Rudy was sought after. Women adored him became fools over him. I didn’t go that far. I have never been the clinging kind; Valentino seemed to find this attractive because he said that I did things to his heart. He became my shadow. I found him sitting in the theater during rehearsals watching and waiting for me. One evening he walked with me in the park. It might have looked strange to many of our friends had they seen us walking in Central Park at two in the morning holding hands, saying nothing, happy together. Now I was about to make “Delicious Little Devil” and word came to me that Rudolph was in serious trouble and needed help. Jack de Saulles had learned that Rudy would be his wife’s witness in her divorce from him. So, Jack to discredit Rudy’s testimony and through his influence, position and money, had been able to have Rudy held on a false charge. But Rudy was able to prove within a few days he was innocent of that charge and was freed. I knew the anguish in Rudy’s heart. I knew that he realized that he could do nothing to help the woman he loved, and that Jack was determined not to let her have her way in the divorce which meant taking the child with her to Chile. Rudy was now unable to get work in Cabarets. Jack had seen to that. In my picture Rudy took the part of the playboy son of an Irish contractor. The part brought him to the attention of the entire movie industry. He was very good. So good in fact that he was soon as we all know, launched on the brilliant career that began with his part in the Four Horsemen.

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1926 – In Memoriam Rudolph Valentino

He is not dead for whom the thousands weep. The strong young body only lies at rest, The dark eyes closed in lovely ancient sleep, The warm heart stilled within the quiet breast, Where trees and flowers fragrant vigil keep. Above the couch of their beloved guest. As gently as Loves tender hands, earth lies on his dark head and leaves his spirit free. To win the greater goals of Paradise, and know the triumphs of that mystery which, veiled beyond our mute, horizoned skies, grants youths brief flame immortality.

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1926 – Marion Benda

Marion Benda 1926

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27 Oct 1923 Rudolph Valentino may come to Australia

Rudolph Valentino may come to Australia. It is Rudolph Valentino’s ambition to start a company of his own, and it is his intention to have Mr. J.D. Williams in with him. He says that after he has selected a play, he may go to any place in the world to produce it, for he believes that a motion picture should be taken in real surroundings, not in a faked setting. “so my next film,” he states, “maybe produced anywhere in the world – maybe in Australia, which country, I admit, fascinates me,” I has long been his wish to go to Australia.

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30 Jan 1926 Who was at the MET

Rudolph Valentino was a guest in Box 41, Metropolitan Opera House last evening. The film star was the object of general attention during intermissions, as he walked with his nephew a small boy in a sailor suit, on the grand tier promenade.

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“Gossip – never…

“Gossip – never related in the same way. When you eat hash you do not always recognize the different kinds of meat in it, do you? So it is with Twice Told Tales”..Rudolph Valentino

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20 Jul 1929 – Valentino Nephew wants to be a star

The name of Valentino may flash again across the silver screen Jean Guglielmi Valentino, 14 year old nephew of the late Rudolph Valentino has arrived in New York from Italy in quest of film laurels. He announced his hopes to take sheik roles in Hollywood pictures.

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9 June 1919

jun 1919

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3 Oct 1926 – Valentino’s Victories

Rudolph Valentino’s death has created a remarkable demand for all films in which he was featured, and in this respect he is unique. Old pictures of his have been revived later productions are having a new popularity. Virtually “discovered” as regards the prominent part of his success in 1920 by June Mathis and featured in the celebrated Rex Ingram/Mathis picture of the war, Valentino’s career as regards its major portion was only six years in duration. During that time he spent nearly two years away from the screen. His romantic appeal and fame have been world-wide and apparently are even despite his death.

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8 Jul 1926 – Pola and Rudy Vie on Screen

Pola Negri and Rudolph Valentino maybe subjects for cupids attention
and they may be married in Europe next year, as Pola’s mother recently
announced. But box-office rivalry goes on just the same! This fact is
strikingly borne out by the appearance of Rudy and Pola on the screen
this week at different theaters. Valentino opens today in a special
premiere showing the “The Son of the Sheik” at the Million Dollar
Theater. This film is a sequel to “The Sheik” and marks his return to
the burning sands and equally burning love scenes that proved so
successful in the earlier picture. Valentino will have as his guests at
the second performance this evening a large party of motion picture
stars. “Good And Naughty” is the new alluring title of Miss Negri’s new
vehicle, which will be seen at the Metropolitan beginning tomorrow. The
polish star plays a role wherein love is the inspiration that leads the
heroine to throw off her dowdiness and reveal her true loveliness.

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$_57

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30 Nov 1924 – Valentino and Close-Ups

No one of the stars want to be stars anymore. They all want to be producers and it doesn’t seem to bother them in the least whether they submerge their personalities to some extent, so long as the resulting feature is enticing to the public. Now it appears that Rudolph Valentino is also wanting to become a producer through his independent efforts. Valentino said that his purpose above all, under his new contract, would be to make pictures that will be outstanding as pictures. All the details of actual production will come under the supervision of his wife Natacha Rambova and he is making the choice of the members of the cast and is going to get the very best talent available. Furthermore, he plans to develop new talent, or at the least new phase of the personalities of established favorites. Notably he is using Nita Naldi heretofore the vamp as a heroine. Valentino’s experience with “Monsieur Beaucaire” is a case in point. “When they first showed my wife this picture at the studio, it was overburdened with close-ups of myself,” he said. “My wife insisted on the removal of dozens of them. “Somebody concerned in the cutting and directing, remarked to her that he hardly thought this course would be satisfactory to me, but she quickly informed him that despite any beliefs to the contrary, unnecessary close-ups were not my idea of starring.” Which should settle for a time at least, these rumors that Valentino is intent on acquiring as much footage as possible when he is appearing in a picture

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