This is Adolph Zukor, one of the 3 founders of Paramount Pictures. Zukor established the major studio practice of requiring movie theatres to show large blocks of films, including bad ones, in order to obtain the right to show the good ones. This system was called blind booking.
When senators got their feelings hurt over their portrayal in Mr. Smith Goes To Washington, they passed legislation aimed at eliminating the blind booking arrangement in retaliation against Hollywood.
It is hard for many of us to grasp it now, but in 1939, some people were concerned that Frank Capra's classic film (and Jimmy Stewart's stunning performance) posed a threat to American democracy.
When the Supreme Court sided against Hollywood in 1948, B-movie actors were thrown out of work.
They turned to something new: television.
we take a look at all of this in our next newsletter
PS: Adolph Zukor is the embodiment of the American story.
An orphaned Jewish immigrant from Hungary.
Came to the US at age 16 and got a job in a NYC upholstery shop.
Ended up living to age 103 and, in the process, gave thousands of other people a chance at success. #America
It was a full house at Washington's Constitution Hall on Oct 17, 1939. It was the premiere of Mr. Smith Goes To Washington. Director Frank Capra says that some senators in the audience yelled back at the screen. Others walked out in anger.
next newsletter look.substack.com
'peace in our time'
September 1938
no one looks happy
next newsletter look.substack.com
Director Frank Capra had hoped to cast Gary Cooper as Jefferson Smith in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Cooper wasnt available so Jimmy Stewart got the job. Capra soon recognized the Lincoln-like qualities Stewart brought to his character.
next newsletter look.substack.com
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Lots of comparisons to Saigon this morning.
Here are some data points regarding the two-day evacuation there, on April 29-30, 1975, extracted from a CIA report.
North Vietnamese began their main attack on Saigon on April 27, hitting Saigon for the first time since 1973.
South Vietnam's president's call for a cease-fire/peace talks were rejected. South Vietnamese military leadership left their commands. Many committed suicide.
A group of defecting South Vietnamese Air Force pilots dropped six bombs on the Air Base intended as the major evacuation point. Several U.S. aircraft were destroyed and the runway received heavy damage.
This is Pogue's department store in downtown Cincinnati, in 1916.
The store was started in 1863 by the Pogue brothers and was a fixture of Cincinnati life for more than 100 years.
Vaudeville star Trixie Friganza once sold handkerchiefs there for $4.50/week.
next newsletter
Vaudeville star Trixie Friganza's big hit song was "No Wedding Bells For Me."
next newsletter look.substack.com
Perhaps this is one of those tweets that only appeals to the tweeter, me, in this instance, but this 2 minute film of Trixie Friganza is the perfect tonic for today's bad news overload. We look at Trixie and the demise of vaudeville in our next newsletter
.
lunch at a Muskogee, Okla. restaurant. For fifteen cents, diners got some meat, sliced tomatoes, beans, corn on the cob, potatoes, dumplings, corn bread and butter, tea and coffee, various jellies and preserves and onions. All you wanted of everything except the meat.
July 1939
No successful son likes to hear that their achievements were made possible by acts of their father.
" The inflated ego that comes from massive wealth and power makes such a self-acknowledgment difficult for even the best of men.
"It surely must have been a difficult truth for William Randolph Hearst; yet his publishing empire and even his ‘Hearst Castle’ all began with acquisitions made by his father, a wealthy miner and Cali. Senator, who had started life as a Missouri farm boy with no formal education.