Showing posts with label Hope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hope. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Vintage Ads

 Bob goes all out for the holiday gifts.

 Ann Blyth is all for Lustre-Creme and looking like an alien.

 Burt goes Blatz!

 Allyson and Powell give themselves a break.

 Lucille Ball is a size queen.

Daniels for shoes no one wants to look at. Not the parrot, not Bebe, not the waiter, not even the dog.

Joan shills PBR. Respect.



Tonight on TCM!
I Know Where I'm Going (1945) A determined young Englishwoman sets out to accomplish her goals even at the risk of her heart. Dir: Michael Powell Cast: Wendy Hiller, Roger Livesey, George Carney.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Vintage Ads

Fredric March gets tight with Jim.



Virginia Bruce prefers a Woodbury nightcap.


Natalie Wood purifies with Lux.


John Wayne can't risk thoat irritation, so he smokes Camels. Poor sap.

Sure it's a good color, but that style Joan. That style!


Bob Hope for Paravox hearing aids.


June Allyson cremes her hair with Lustre-Creme.





Tonight on TCM!

Scandal Sheet (1952) A tabloid editor assigns a young reporter to solve a murder the editor committed himself. Cast: Broderick Crawford, Donna Reed, John Derek, Rosemary DeCamp Dir: Phil Karlson

Monday, June 29, 2009

Vintage Ads

Bing Crosby for Chesterfields

Bette Davis for Lustre-Creme
Henry Fonda for Camels
Joan Blondell for Reich- Ash

Douglas Fairbanks Sr. for Lucky Strike

Jane Wyman for Lux


Bob Hope for Kaycrest

Tonight on TCM!
Cecil B. DeMille!

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Betty Hutton remembered:


Last night I watched Robert Osborne interview Betty Hutton. The interview was done in 2000 and she hadn't been in the public eye for over twenty years. I actually don't know a lot about Betty Hutton because she mostly did musical work and I personally do not like musicals or a lot of singing in movies. I'm actually more familiar with her sister Marion Hutton because I am a fan of The Glenn Miller Orchestra. By the end of the interview however, I had a new favorite. What a wonderful star Betty Hutton is!


From watching the clips they showed during the interview, it's obvious that Hutton was an extremely talented woman. So talented in fact, that I am going to get Annie Get Your Gun and watch it. If you knew my thoughts about musicals, you would know that this is an amazing statement. I was not able to find a clip of it online but Betty Hutton singing You Can't Get a man with a Gun is hilarious! Her facial expressions, her imperfect singing, her quirky dance moves, her timing, and her sheer energy proved her to be a very talented actress and commedienne. Prime example: The Miracle of Morgan's Creek. Made in 1944, in order for the storyline-- a woman wakes up married and pregnant but doesn't remember who the father is-- to make it through the sensors it had to be funny, so funny that one could overlook what was considered immoral behavior at that time. It was extremely racy and Betty Hutton, with the help of funnyman Eddie Bracken, pulled it off. That took serious talent.

Articles on Betty Hutton:

NY Times

NNDB

Solid!


Videos!

Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief:



Murder, He Says



Anything You Can Do




TCM remembers Betty Hutton





Tonight on TCM!

Seven Brides For Seven Brothers (1954)
When their older brother marries, six lumberjacks decide it's time to go courting for themselves. Cast: Howard Keel, Jeff Richards, Russ Tamblyn, Tommy Rall Dir: Stanley Donen.

Man Who Knew Too Much, The (1956)
International spies kidnap a doctor's son when he stumbles on their assassination plot.
Cast: James Stewart, Doris Day, Brenda de Banzie, Bernard Miles Dir: Alfred Hitchcock