
THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON FRIGHTENS A MOTHER & CHILD ON THE BEACH Ricou Browning, the stuntman who provided the underwater shots of the creature, once had to make an emergency bathroom visit while he was filming a scene. Browning had been underwater for several minutes and breached the water, in full costume, next to an unsuspecting mother and her young daughter on the nearby shore. Browning said that they fled in terror once they saw him. He recalled, "they took off, and that's the last I saw of 'em!" Idmb Trivia. The Creature From the Black Lagoon ** BASEBALL STAR TED WILLIAMS & HIS GIRLFRIEND NELVA MORE GO TO THE MOVIES TO SEE THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON “In 1954 they went to see a horror movie called Creature from the Black Lagoon, starring Richard Carlson and Julie Adams. Ted emerged from the theater a bit too enthused about Adams for Nelva’s liking. ‘What a body!’ he said. ‘How pretty!’ Ted promptly asked Fred Corcoran to arrange a meeting with Adams , the sort of request from Williams that Corcoran was accustomed to receiving. Ted and the actress went out, and the news hit the gossip columns. ‘Ted Williams is the kind of man that makes you glad you’re a woman!’ Julie told the New York Daily News on July 12, 1954. ‘I’ve really only had one date with him, but it was one date I’ll never forget if I live to be a million.’” Footnote in The Kid:: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams By Ben Bradlee, Jr. (New York; Little , Brown and Company, 2013) ** JULIE ADAMS & PERRY MASON “One noteworthy appearance in television history was as the only client of the defense lawyer Perry Mason ever to be convicted in the 60s series. More recently, Adams had a role in Murder, She Wrote, as an estate agent, Eve Simpson, and sometime-helper of amateur sleuth Jessica Fletcher, played by Angela Lansbury (1987-93).” From the Julie Adams' obituary in The Guardian ** ** LAWRENCE BEESLEY, AN ACTUAL SURVIVOR OF THE SINKING OF THE TITANIC, NOT WANTED IN A FILM ABOUT THE EVENT “…about the shooting of the film A NIGHT TO REMEMBER, dealing with the tragedy of the Titanic, and he relates an anecdote. Apparently Beesley wanted to be among the extras on board the replica of the Titanic even though he was not allowed to, and when the director spotted Beesley he told him to disembark. BARNES: Yes, the first time you go down with the Titanic, it’s for real and the second time you go down, you are ordered off it before it sinks in the film… from Conversations With Julian Barnes, edited by Vanessa Guignery and Ryan Roberts (University Press of Mississippi, 2009) ** ACCORDING TO IMDB TRIVIA, WHAT FILM DID INGMAR BERGMAN WATCH EVERY YEAR ON HIS BIRTHDAY? (answer below) ** SUSAN HAYWARD'S SELF PORTRAIT My life is fair game for anybody. I spent an unhappy, penniless childhood in Brooklyn. I had to slug my way up in a town called Hollywood where people love to trample you to death .I don’t relax because I don’t know how. I don’t want to know how. Life is too short to relax.. Susan Hayworth, quoted in Susan Hayworth: Portrait of a Survivor by Beverly Linet (New York: Atheneum,1980) ** SUSAN HAYWORTH Hayworth, Susan Called out: “Is that you, son?” “No,” I said. “It’s your friend Lou.” “Shit. That means another fucking Clerihew?” **

The Home of Robert Taylor.Northridge Estates, California ** CONSIDERING THE DEATH OF JOHN WAYNE He drove to Harvard in a tank Which is one way to get there, But a tank ain’t no horse, I don’t have to tell you. I swear Death’s horse is a gelding, Mouth-sore with bad breath, A runny-eyed roan, sway-backed. What kind of horse is death? It’s bob-tailed with bad breeding, Whopped with an ugly stick & fat. Hey, Duke, why do you go ride On a terrible old nag like that? Louis Phillips
Good morning LP! The clerihew made me laugh; thank you! I read that Susan Hayworth self described herself (in the 3rd person yet!) as “the hardest role of her life was her life!” Oi.
I wonder what Bergman would have thought of the film The Shape of Water given his penchant for Creature from the Black Lagoon.
Thank you for another pithy Bits & Pieces, LP!
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You didn’t give the answer, but I bet Bergman’s annual viewing was of Fanny and Alexander. Yes?
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This is my absolute favorite of your film offerings. Now, here’s a personal memory triggered by the Creature from the Black Lagoon story: From 1976-81, I worked at Third World Cinema Productions, a minority-owned & operated production company (Claudine, Greased Lightning, the B’way show, Bubbling Brown Sugar); I was the sole white employee. In 1979, we were in discussions with United Artists about a low-budget horror film & were asked to watch a horror film produced by a guy UA thought would complete financing our project. So Richard Bell, Third World’s president, & I were watching this flick which was basically about a creature emerging from the surf near a California beach popular w/white teenaged canoodlers, killing the young lads & shtupping the lasses. After about the 5th such episode, Richard turns to me and asks, “Breen, how come it’s ok to show monsters having sex with white women but you can’t show a black man doing it?” One of the few times in my life I had no answer.
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