Tough Cow Town

um hi

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From Wikipedia:

Lady in a Cage is a 1964 American psychological thriller film directed by Walter Grauman, written and produced by Luther Davis,and released by Paramount Pictures. It stars Olivia de Havilland and features James Caan in his first substantial film role.

When an electrical power failure occurs, Mrs. Hilyard

kathy

(Olivia de Havilland), a wealthy widow recuperating from a broken hip, becomes trapped between floors in the cage-like elevator she has installed in her mansion. With her son Malcolm (William Swan) away for a summer weekend, she relies on the elevator’s emergency alarm to attract attention, but the only response comes from an alcoholic derelict, George (Jeff Corey), who enters the home, ignores her pleas and steals some small items.

The wino sells the stolen goods to a fence, then visits his prostitute friend, Sade

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(Ann Sothern), and tells her of the treasure trove he has stumbled upon. The expensive goods George fenced attract the attention of three young hoodlums, Randall (James Caan), Elaine (Jennifer Billingsley) and Essie (Rafael Campos). The trio follows George and Sade back to the Hilyard home, where they conduct an orgy of violence, killing George the wino and locking Sade in a closet.

Randall then pulls himself up to the elevator and taunts Mrs. Hilyard with a note left behind by her son Malcolm, in which he threatens suicide because of her domineering manner. Shocked by the revelation, Mrs. Hilyard struggles with Randall, escapes the elevator, and crawls out of the house. Randall follows and, as he is attempting to drag her back inside, Mrs. Hilyard gouges his eyes, but is dragged inside by his accomplices. As she crawls back outside, the blinded assailant stumbles into the street and is run over by a passing automobile, whereupon police arrive to arrest the surviving intruders and comfort the victim.

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Bobby-soxer:

bobby-soxer

&

gmilf

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“Old Jack sat on a bench in the old plaza in the Old Town of Los Angeles. The district thereabouts, Mexicans to the south, Chinese to the east, Italians to the north, immigrant Jews to the West, had escaped those things called improvements. It remained about as it had been since Los Angeles was a tough cow town, down through the era of round cuffs and bustles, the coming of the gasoline buggy and the “settlers” from the East. So remained many of its old-time habitues.”

&

“She

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walked with the rubbery walk that went with her youth, her well-poised body, and her low-heeled waitress shoes.”
(TURN OFF THE SUNSHINE: TALES OF LOS ANGELES ON THE WRONG SIDE OF THE TRACKS by Timothy G. Turner)

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Saddle shoes

saddle-shoes

& Brie prom shoes:

prom-shoes

 Janet Mason waitress:

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Brie as Shirley:

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Saddle shoes

Zelda

um hi

Brie as Peggy Olson from “Mad-men”.

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Zelda

Sheila Kuehl (Sheila James)

working on the Dobie Gillis show, while attending the University. The sorority found some Lesbian love letters of hers. She was confronted and removed her sorority pin, then cried on the way home–this was the sixties. After Dobie Gillis she was in Broadside,

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which only lasted for about a year.
Diminishing work forced her to sell her Malibu home.
Shelia skipped two grades before going to the University. She was the little gal with the big brain just like in Dobie Gillis. So, she went to Harvard Law, and became an attorney back in Los Angeles, then entered politics, going to the California state legislature.
Before Dobie Gillis she was in another television show, which I haven’t seen. She also appeared variously here and there.
Such an interesting life. If I had better writing skills, I would want to write a screen play about her!

(See Wikipedia and IMDB for more information)

Recommended reading: The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis
by Max Shulman

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The great Kathy Jones

kathyjones

wearing saddle shoes with bobby socks!

& Kandi Barbour wearing saddle shoes:

kandibarbour

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Girls! This is how you dress for your black lover:

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&

usa freedom kid

& Brie

patsy

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“She [Doreen]

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touched his knees with hers — she was wearing a plaid cotton shirtwaist dress” (Trailerpark” by Russell Banks)

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Brie as Patty:

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Precious Time

um hi

cheer_socks

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 Wikipedia:

“Donna Reed 

more_donna

was born Donna Belle Mullenger on a farm near Denison, Iowa,  the eldest of five children.  After graduating from Denison High School, Reed planned to become a teacher, but was unable to pay for college. She decided to move to California to attend Los Angeles City College on the advice of her aunt. While attending college, she performed in various stage productions but had no plans to become an actress. After receiving several offers to screen test for studios, Reed eventually signed with MGM, but insisted on finishing her education first. Her career spanned more than 40 years, with performances in more than 40 films.  In 1953, she received the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance as Lorene Burke in the war drama From Here to Eternity.

Reed is probably most widely known for her work in television, notably as Donna Stone, a middle-class American mother and housewife in the sitcom The Donna Reed Show (1958–66), in which her character was more assertive than most other television mothers of the era. She received numerous Emmy Award nominations for this role and the Golden Globe Award for Best TV Star in 1963.

In 1941 after signing with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Reed made her film debut in The Get-Away opposite Robert Sterling; she was billed as Donna Adams. MGM soon changed her name to Donna Reed, as there was anti-German feeling during World War II. She starred in The Courtship of Andy Hardy and had a supporting role with Edward Arnold in Eyes in the Night (1942). In 1943, she appeared in The Human Comedy with Mickey Rooney, and in They Were Expendable in 1945.

Her “girl-next-door” good looks and warm onstage personality made her a popular pin-up for many GIs during World War II. She personally answered letters from many GIs serving overseas.

In 1945, Reed struggled with an English accent and with a passive, underwritten role as Gladys Hallward in the first cinema adaptation of the Oscar Wilde novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray.

Following the release of It’s a Wonderful Life, Reed appeared in Green Dolphin Street (1947) with Lana Turner and Van Heflin. In 1949 she expressed a desire for better roles.[7] Several years later, she performed in Scandal Sheet (1952).

In 1953, Reed played the role of Alma “Lorene” Burke, girlfriend of Montgomery Clift’s character, in the World War II drama From Here to Eternity. The role earned Reed an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for 1953.[8]

From 1958 to 1966, Reed starred in The Donna Reed Show, a television series produced by her then-husband, Tony Owen. The show featured her as Donna Stone, the wife of pediatrician Alex Stone (Carl Betz) and mother of Jeff (Paul Petersen) and Mary Stone (Shelley Fabares). The show ran for eight seasons on ABC. Reed won a Golden Globe Award and earned four Emmy Award nominations for her work on the series.”

Also,

“She [Donna Reed] was brought in and she wore a little tan skirt and white blouse and had a tie on and white socks and brownish brogues”

(“In Search of Donna Reed by Jay Fultz)

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Red nylons:

pink nylons1

and

red_nylons_green_skirt

 

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Brie:

Years ago living somewhere along highway 101 in California between Frisco and LA, there was a drive-in movie which occasionally showed adult films, which were mostly soft core, though one time they showed some hard core with the penetration smudged out. Almost forgot to mention that the screen could be seen from the highway!
Usually, before the movie they would play such tunes on the speaker as “Mind Games” by John Lennon, while I was in my Vega listening, then during the movie a trip to  the snack bar. Sometime during the movie, I might sneak my hand on my private parts during the sex scenes– never got caught unlike Pee Wee Herman, who got busted in a Florida theater. You could get away with more in your own car as opposed to a public theater . Saw “Flesh Gordon” starring Hillary Summers

brie_prom_shoes

acting under another name.The house I was renting was next to an oil well, which looked like a giant grasshopper as someone put antenna on it. Also, the house was within easy walking distance to a Kmart–bigger than Walmart back then!
I do believe that Patty Hearst was driven down that highway on their way to the S.L.A. shootout in Los Angeles– though Patty missed the actual shootout.

Almost forgot to mention that there was a Pussycat movie theater showing X-rated movies in a nearby hick town, though I never went in there back then.

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Bobby-soxer:

dog socks

and Tonya:

tonya

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“Ruthie was putting on her stockings, fastening the tops to a garter belt. When he glanced at her she was stepping into her skirt, zipping it closed at the side.”
Also
“She’d be something all right, in a black dress and high heels and stockings, instead of those green ankle socks and crepe-soled shoes.”

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(“A Room in Paris” by Peggy Mann)

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Michele flag girl!

michele_flag_girl

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Brie as Patty:

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Sybil

um hi

um-hi

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From Wikipedia:

“Sybil Jason

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(born Sybil Jacobson; 23 November 1927 – 23 August 2011) was a South African-born American motion-picture child actress who, in the late 1930s, was presented as a rival to Shirley Temple.

Born in Cape Town, South Africa, she began playing the piano at age two and, a year later, began making public appearances doing impersonations.  She was introduced to the theatre-going public of London by way of her uncle, Harry Jacobson, a then-popular London orchestra leader and also pianist. The apex of her career came with a concert performance with Frances Day at London’s Palace Theatre. Jason’s theatre work led to appearances on radio and phonograph records, and a supporting role in the film Barnacle Bill (1935).

Irving Asher, the head of Warner Bros.’ London studio, saw Jason’s performance in Barnacle Bill and subsequently arranged for her to make a screen test for the studio. The test was a success, resulting in Warner Bros. signing her to a contract. Her American film debut came as the lead in Little Big Shot (1935), directed by Michael Curtiz and co-starring Glenda Farrell, Robert Armstrong, and Edward Everett Horton. Jason followed this with supporting roles opposite some of Warner Bros. most popular stars, including Kay Francis in I Found Stella Parish (1935), Al Jolson in The Singing Kid (1936), Pat O’Brien and Humphrey Bogart in The Great O’Malley (1937), and again with Kay Francis in Comet Over Broadway (1938). Warners also starred her in The Captain’s Kid (1937), and four Vitaphone two-reelers filmed in Technicolor: Changing of the Guard, A Day at Santa Anita, Little Pioneer, and The Littlest Diplomat.

Jason, however, never became the major rival to Shirley Temple that Warner Bros. had hoped for and, her film career ended after playing two supporting roles at 20th-Century Fox. These films — The Little Princess (1939) and The Blue Bird (1940) — were in support of Temple, who became her lifelong friend.

Sybil Jason became a naturalized United States citizen in 1952.
Died     23 August 2011 (aged 83)
Northridge, California, U.S.”

“However, there are some perceptible directors, producers, and casting agents who have the ability to look at a young girl dressed in a sweater and saddle shoes

sweater_saddle_shoes

and be able to envision a potentially glamourous box office winner.” (“MY FIFTEEN MINUTES” by Sybil Jason)

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Jamie:

jamie

 & Julia:

Julia_Sleazy_Secretary

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Molly Rome bobby-soxing:

mollysocks4

& a super mommy:

super mommy

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“the severely tailored white blouse unbuttoned to the bottom button and half-draped over her firm upper arms.”
Her brief pale green skirt was pulled upward against the strain of her body, exposing an eyeful of nylon-sheathed thigh.”

susan

(“Naked Came the Stranger” by Penelope Ashe)

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Not Patty:

not patty

 Brie as Shirley:

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INCREDIBLY STRANGE

um hi

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“Earl Stanley Gardner’s Perry Mason, starring film noir veteran Raymond Burr as the titular trial lawyer, had been airing in black and white since its inception 1957, but CBS decided to take a chance by opening its September 1966 season with a color episode called “The Case of the Twice-Told Twist.” The scene: Burr and his secretary (Barbara Hale)

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park on the northwest corner of Third and Olive (formerly the Angels Flight Cafe) and take the funicular down to see a client. By the time they return fifteen minutes later, juvenile delinquents have stripped their car.”
“The Outsider [I loved that show!] ran for only a season, in 1968-1969, on NBC, but in many ways, Darren McGavin’s down-on-his-luck loner detective, David Ross, served as pulp novelist and screenwriter Roy Huggins’s prototype for James Garner’s more successful Jim Rockford a couple of years later. One early episode called “Through a Stained Glass Window” took advantage of the last two vestiges of old Bunker Hill: Angels Flight and the Castle, which by then had been sawed into three pieces and moved to Highland Park.”
“The next time we see Bunker Hill, it’s playing itself: a post-apocalyptic wasteland in The Omega Man (1971), a Charlton Heston movie about earth’s last living human fighting an army of vampires. A hundred years of Los Angeles history — of beautiful old homes, tourist hotels and working-class apartments, each an integral part of the growth and survival of the city as a great urban center –has been trampled in the dust.”

Also

“INCREDIBLY STRANGE PEOPLE WHO STOPPED LIVING AND BECAME MIXED-UP ZOMBIES!!?(1964)

Ray Debbis Steckler directed and starred in (under the name Cash Flagg) this nutty movie about a Long Beach carnival [The Long Beach Pike or Nu-Pike?] where a fortune-telling Gypsy hypnotizes a guy (Flagg) and makes him murder strippers.”

(“Los Angeles’s Bunker Hill” by Jim Dawson)

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Bobby socks with glasses:

bobby socks with glasses

& Brie from the video:

cheer brie

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“took his eyes away from Miss Hattie, turning the pages of the catalogue.He stared down at the model figures in brassieres,corsets and undergarments.”

petticoats

(“Dunbar’s Cove” by Borden Deal)

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Janet Mason PTA soccer mom sex bomb:

jm

Sarah Young:

sarah young

 & Shawn:

shawn

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dandy133:     “Nice stockings – I’m a real stocking lover and you have nice legs”

P3050034

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Brie as Patty:

school_girl_patty

 

 

Virginia and Chasey

um hi

petticoat_bobby_socks

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Wikipedia:

“Virginia  Weidler

the_girl

(March 21, 1927 – July 1, 1968) was an American child actress, popular in Hollywood films during the 1930s and 1940s.

Weidler made her first film appearance in 1933. Over the next few years, she was cast in minor roles for RKO and Paramount Pictures. Neither studio made more extensive use of her, and when Paramount did not extend her contract, she was signed by MGM in 1938. Her first film for MGM was with their leading male star Mickey Rooney in Love Is a Headache (1938). The film was a success and Weidler was later cast in larger roles. She was one of the all-female cast of the 1939 film The Women, as Norma Shearer’s character’s daughter.

Her next major success was The Philadelphia Story (1940) in which she played Dinah Lord, the witty younger sister of Tracy Lord (Katharine Hepburn). As a teenager she was less popular with audiences.

After a string of box-office disappointments, her film career ended with the 1943 film Best Foot Forward. At her retirement from the screen at age 16, she had appeared in more than forty films, and had acted with some of the biggest stars of the day, including Clark Gable and Myrna Loy in Too Hot to Handle, Bette Davis in All This and Heaven Too and Judy Garland in Babes on Broadway.

Her older brother, saxophonist George Weidler, (1926–1989) was married to Doris Day from March 1946 to May 1949. Prior to her birth, Weidler’s German-born father, Alfred Weidler, (1886–1966) had been an architect in Hamburg, Germany, but moved the family to Los Angeles in 1923 and went on to become a model builder with 20th Century Fox. Her mother, Margaret (née Meyer), had been an opera singer in Germany.

On March 27, 1947, aged 20, Weidler married Lionel Krisel.

Weidler refused to be interviewed for the remainder of her life, living in private. She remained married to Krisel until her death on July 1, 1968, when she suffered a heart attack in Los Angeles at age 41.”

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Chasey Lain demonstrates the poodle skirt!

chaseylanepoodle

and Brie too!

poodle-skirt

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“Barbara came out of the bathroom naked and got dressed, first a bra and panties and a half-slip and a garter belt and stockings

barbara

(no girdle, not even after two kids), and then making up her face and doing her hair, and last, her jewelry: a watch, and her wedding ring.”
(W.E.B. Griffin)

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Bobby socks:

bobbysocks

& Debbie:

debbie1

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dandy133: “Love those stockings – look much better on you than women”

nylons

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Rebecca Starr!

rebecca starr

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Brie as Shirley:

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Before Shirley

um hi

cheer_pom_poms ******************************************************

Before Shirley Temple there was Baby Peggy!

Wikipedia:

 “Baby Peggy

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(Diana Serra Cary), is an American former child actress, author and historian. She is considered to be the last living film star of the silent era.

She was born on October 29, 1918, in San Diego, California, as Peggy-Jean Montgomery, the second daughter of Marian (née Baxter) and Jack Montgomery. Her older sister, called Louise or, occasionally, Jackie, was legally named Jack-Louise.

Baby Peggy was “discovered” at the age of 19 months, when she visited Century Studios on Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood with her mother and a film-extra friend. The Montgomery family was already somewhat involved in the motion picture industry: Her father, Jack, a former cowboy and park ranger, had done work as a stuntman and stand-in for Tom Mix in a number of his cowboy movies. Impressed by Peggy’s well-behaved demeanor and willingness to follow directions from her father, director Fred Fishbach hired her to appear in a series of short films with Century’s canine star, Brownie the Wonder Dog. The first film, Playmates in 1921, was a success, and Peggy was signed to a long-term contract with Century.

Between 1921 and 1924, Peggy made close to 150 short comedy films for Century.

In 1923, Peggy began working for Universal Studios, appearing in full-length dramatic films. Among her works from this era were The Darling of New York, directed by King Baggot, and the first screen adaptation of Captain January.

The success of the Baby Peggy films brought her into prominence. When she was not filming, she embarked on extensive “In-Person” personal appearance tours across the country to promote her movies. She was also featured in several short skits on major stages in Los Angeles and New York, including Grauman’s Million Dollar Theatre and the Hippodrome. Her likeness appeared on magazine covers and was used in advertisements for various businesses and charitable campaigns. She was also named the mascot of the 1924 Democratic Convention in New York, and stood onstage waving a U.S. flag next to Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

By the age of 5, she had her own line of various endorsed items, including dolls in her likeness, sheet music, jewelry, and even milk. As a child, Frances Gumm (later Judy Garland), owned at least one Baby Peggy doll. Cary would later befriend Garland, and wrote in her autobiography that she believed Garland’s mother had pursued fame for her children based on Baby Peggy’s success.

While under contract with Century and Universal, Peggy commanded an impressive salary. By 1923 she was signed to a $1.5 million a year contract at Universal (equivalent to $20.6 million in 2014 dollars); on her vaudeville tours she made $300 per day. Her parents handled all of the finances; money was spent on expensive cars, homes, and clothing. Nothing was set aside for the welfare or education of Peggy or her sister. Peggy herself was paid one nickel for every vaudeville performance. Through reckless spending and corrupt business partners of her father, her entire fortune was gone before she hit puberty. When fellow child star Jackie Coogan sued his parents in 1938, Peggy’s parents asked her if she was going to do the same. Believing it would do no good, Peggy did not pursue legal action. Coogan’s case, and cases like Baby Peggy’s, eventually inspired the Coogan Act to protect child actors’ earnings. Working conditions

Schooling for both Peggy and her sister, Louise, was sporadic at best. Neither attended school until the end of the vaudeville era;[Fairfax High in Hollywood didn’t work for her because she needed to work mostly as an extra to support her family during the Great Depression!} for their secondary education, they worked to pay for their tuition at Lawlor Professional School, which offered flexible schedules and allowed them to continue performing in films.

Baby Peggy’s film career abruptly ended in 1925 when her father had a falling out with producer Sol Lesser over her salary and cancelled her contract. She found herself essentially blacklisted and was able to land only one more part in silent films, a minor role in the 1926 picture April Fool.

From 1925 to 1929, Peggy had a successful career as a vaudeville performer. Although her routine, which included a comedy sketch, singing and a dramatic monologue, was initially met with skepticism, it soon became a popular and respected act. Although she was prohibited from “playing the Palace” because of her young age, she appeared onstage there as a special guest. Peggy and her family toured the United States and Canada, performing in major venues, until the family tired of touring.

While on the vaudeville circuit, Peggy was frequently ill with tonsillitis and other ailments; however, she continued working.

Peggy’s father planned to buy a ranch and convert it into a high-end getaway [dude ranch]. However, the stock market crash of 1929 put an immediate halt to the plans. Having made a $75,000 deposit on the land and existing property, the Montgomerys were forced to move to rural Wyoming where they lived near the Jelm Mountains. Peggy found the change in pace refreshing and hoped her stage days were over. However, the family struggled to make a living, and as a last-ditch effort returned to Hollywood in the early 1930s, much to the teen-aged Peggy’s chagrin.

Peggy posed for publicity photos with Douglas Fairbanks Sr. and signed George Ullman as her manager. Hopes of a comeback were mostly dashed by false rumors of a bad screen test that had never taken place. The entire family was forced to take extra work. She loathed screen work and retired soon after appearing in Having Wonderful Time in 1938.

Peggy married Gordon Ayres in 1938 and a few years later adopted the name Diana Ayres in an effort to distance herself from the Baby Peggy image. Working at the time as a writer for radio shows, she found that people who figured out who she was were more interested in her Baby Peggy persona than in her writing abilities.

Eventually, after years of emotional struggle and open derision from Hollywood insiders and the media, Cary made peace with her Baby Peggy past. She has had successful careers as a publisher, historian, and author on Hollywood subjects, writing, among other works, an autobiography of her life as a child star, What Ever Happened to Baby Peggy: The Autobiography of Hollywood’s Pioneer Child Star, and a biography of her contemporary and rival, Jackie Coogan: The World’s Boy King: A Biography of Hollywood’s Legendary Child Star.

As an adult, Cary has worked on numerous books about the early film industry, Hollywood cowboys, and harsh working conditions for child stars in Hollywood. At the end of her own autobiography, she recounts the fates of numerous child stars, including Judy Garland and Shirley Temple. She has also advocated for reforms in child performer protection laws, most recently as a member of the organization A Minor Consideration.

She has appeared in numerous television documentaries and interviews about her work, and she has made guest appearances at silent film festivals.

At the age of seventeen, trying to escape the film industry and her parents’ plans for her life, Cary ran away from home and rented an apartment with her sister Louise. She married actor Gordon Ayres, whom she met on the set of Ah, Wilderness!, in 1938. They divorced in 1948.

In 1954, she married artist Robert “Bob” Cary (sometimes listed as Bob Carey). They had one son, Mark. They remained married until Bob Cary’s death in 2001.

On December 3, 2012, Turner Classic Movies presented the 2011 documentary Baby Peggy: The Elephant in the Room.

The vast majority of Cary’s Baby Peggy films have not survived and records related to their production have been lost. Century Studios burned down in 1926.”

& from “What ever happened to Baby Peggy” by Diana Serra Cary:

“Okay,” Gould interrupted, “so you can sing. Now let’s see your gam!” He pointed his cigar at my hemline.    I’d played this game before with casting directors. Sometimes it led to a lively chase around the office and, if you were lucky, out the door. Other times it got you the job without a struggle. I lifted my skirts. “Higher!” he ordered.

prom_shoes_with_petticoat

“Yeah!” he breathed, fixing me with a lecherous gaze. Then his mood changed sharply. “You eighteen?” I nodded, visions of seventy-five dollars a week dancing before my eyes. “Of course I am!” I said in a throaty, Kay Francis voice. His eyes bored right through me. Quick as a cat he threw his cigar to the floor. “Like hell you are. You’re San Quentin quail. I don’t waste my time on jail bait. Beat it!”

Also elsewhere in the book:

“When I objected, he slipped his hand under my skirt

hand under my skirt

and said, “You told me you wanted to be a writer. Well, you can’t write about life if you don’t experience it!”

“Still, a child-star mania of the magnitude and intensity that had surrounded me in the twenties did not occur again until 1934, when Shirley Temple burst upon the screen. With her arrival public adoration of child stars once again became a worldwide phenomenon, and every major studio had to have one.”      “MGM had Judy. Fox had Shirley Temple and Jane Withers, Paramount boasted Virginia Weidler, Edith Fellows starred at Columbia, and Deanna Durbin’s box-office magic was bringing Universal back from the brink of bankruptcy.” 

[Baby Peggy currently resides in Merced County California. Also, She is the oldest living silent movie star.]

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Someone’s mom bobby-soxer:

middle aged

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Red ballerina flats!

red shoes

Just like mine from Walmart:

bobby_socks_ballerina_flats

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& Brie as Shirley:

shirley_with_dolls

Bunker Hills

um hi

um hi

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Bobby-soxing nurses:

nurse

&

nurse_bobby_socks

******************”************************************

“There is a Bunker Hill in Boston which symbolizes America: 1776. When you think of it you think of brave young hearts looking up to behold a vision worth all they’ve got to give. You think of strength and hope and defiance <snip>
But there is another Bunker Hill, and it symbolized a portion of America: 1941. This other Bunker Hill is not in Boston; it is in Los Angeles. When you think of it your heart aches, for it is the antithesis of the Boston Bunker Hill. It stands for weakness and hopelessness and cynicism and surrender. It is covered with houses for men. Grotesque, misshapen houses, with eight stories in the back and three stories in the front, clinging to the steep hillside.”
(from “Mud on the Stars” by William Bradford Huie)

Elsewhere in this book: “They wore their saddle shoes with plaid skirts.”

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Bobby-soxers:

milfdog

bobby-soxing:

bobby socks

 & mommy Elaine:

elaine

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Brie as Shirley:

shirley_dress_with_doll

 

 

Dairy Queen & Female Impersonators

um hi

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LATimes:

It’s 1957, and a line of kids — the boys on bikes, the girls in bobby socks and saddle shoes — stretches around a newly opened North Hollywood Dairy Queen.

north_hollywood

This was just one snapshot of a moment captured by photographers from the Valley Times, a mid-century newspaper that in small-town style managed to chronicle the birth of the San Fernando Valley and its postwar suburban boom.

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Bobby-soxers :

Connie_Veronica

bobby-soxing:

bobby-soxing

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Wonder Woman nabs the female impersonator!

Charles Pierce

More about this next month!

Amateur female impersonator Brie:

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Brie as Shirley:

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Fantastic 26

um hi

 

 

um hi

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Joan Collins

joan

made her Hollywood debut in Howard Hawks‘s box office disaster, Land of the Pharaohs (1955)

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Bobby-soxing with bowling shoes!

bowling shoes

&

bowling shoes1

&

Bimbo bowler brie:

bowling

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Los Angeles television back in the day:

2 CBS
4 NBC
5 KTLA Gene Autry’s station
7 ABC
9 KHJ million dollar movie! Talk shows Don Mcguire, Michael Blodgett — don’t confuse with porn actor Mike Ranger!?!?!?
11 KTTV Metromedia –Joe Pyne, Mort Sahl!!!!!!!!!!
13 KCOP Jeepers Creepers

UHF: Fantastic 26!!!!!!!!!!!
This station showed the serials I used to read about in Screen Thrills Illustrated.
Ray “Crash” Corrigan in “Undersea Kingdom, and “King of the Rocket Men, for instance. I especially liked the Republic studio robots:

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Los Angeles had kid TV shows such as Sheriff (“put another candle on my birthday cake”) John, who was a sheriff, and Engineer Bill (“red light green light”), who was a railroad engineer, but there was also Soupy Sales, who was a sleazy dude living in a shack with a mean dog, and a nice dog –really low budget creativity like Earnie Kovacs, a radio in his shack even though he was on television, and his girlfriend Peaches,

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who was Soupy in drag!

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Mandy Tyler bobby-soxer:

mandy tyler

bobby-soxing:

mandy socks1

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Brie as Shirley:

shirley_nylons