Showing posts with label Pat O'Brien. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pat O'Brien. Show all posts

Hollywood and Beer - Vintage Blatz Beer Ads


In honor of the 16 day German beer celebration known as Oktoberfest, which kicks off today, here is a post combining two of my favorite things: classic Hollywood and beer.

During the 1940s and 1950s the Blatz beer company out of Milwaukee, Wisconsin hired the help of many well known Wisconsinites to market their product, including Hollywood stars, famous athletes and pop culture celebrities. The ads all included a line like "I lived in Milwaukee, I ought to know..." or in some cases, "I've been to Milwaukee..." Here are a few of the those ads featuring some of the Hollywood star power.

Click images to see larger.


Fred MacMurray

Actor Fred MacMurray had a diverse career that started in romantic comedies then moved into noirs, westerns and later family fare like Disney's The Shaggy Dog (1959) and the television show My Three Sons. My personal favorite roles include his parts in the noirs Double Indemnity (1944) and Pushover (1954). MacMurray grew up in the small Wisconsin town of Beaver Dam, a place that always remained dear to his heart. He would return to the town to visit with friends and enjoy the Wisconsin outdoors. He also would mention his hometown frequently any chance he got, including in the one film he produced, Pardon My Past (1945), where the story centered on two GIs returning to Beaver Dam to start a mink farm. MacMurray also attended Carroll College (now Carroll University) in Waukesha, Wisconsin, about 18 miles from Milwaukee (a year after MacMurray, another future film star, Dennis Morgan, enrolled at Carroll). During his college years MacMurray played saxophone in college bands and in nightclubs. He also met a lifelong friend, another musician by the name of Les Paul, who went on to create one of the first electric guitars. MacMurray probably travelled to nearby Milwaukee a few times to play in the clubs there and I wouldn't doubt if he occasionally kicked back a Blatz.

Pat O'Brien

Classic Hollywood's favorite Irishman, Pat O'Brien, is a true Milwaukeean. O'Brien grew up in the same neighborhood as his good friend Spencer Tracy. Both men attended the Marquette Academy. Later when O'Brien made his way to Hollywood, he would often find himself paired with James Cagney. O'Brien and Cagney became good friends and were part of a group that was labeled "Hollywood's Irish Mafia." The two men appeared in nine films together, including Ceiling Zero (1936), Angels With Dirty Faces (1938), Boy Meets Girl (1938). My favorite O'Brien role is the The Great O'Malley (1937), a simple and sentimental story which also features a young Humphrey Bogart and Ann Sheridan. Although O'Brien's drink of choice was Cutty Sark, a Scotch Whisky, I'm sure O'Brien was no stranger to Blatz beer.

Dan Duryea

Dan Duryea is one of my favorite character actors. He made sleazy or horrible characters seem so enjoyable to watch, like Slim Dundee in Criss Cross (1949) or his Johnny Prince in Scarlet Street (1945). Although in the ad Duryea claims to be from Milwaukee, the actor was born in White Plains, New York. I'm not sure at what point in Duryea's life he was from Milwaukee. One thing that is interesting is that Duryea appears in several different Blatz ads.


Pamela Britton

Actress Pamela Britton was born in Milwaukee. She can be seen as Frank Sinatra's girlfriend in Anchors Aweigh (1945), as Paula Gibson in the classic noir D.O.A. (1950) and in the Clark Gable/Loretta Young headliner Key to the City (1950). In one of the scenes in her ad it says that, "Pamela Britton, unknown to many of her fans, is an accomplished equestrienne. But, Pam, as friends call her, is widely known as a gracious hostess. When Pamela entertains she always has plenty of Blatz Beer on hand!"

Bert Lahr

Who doesn't have a soft spot for Bert Lahr? He was so memorable as the Cowardly Lion in the MGM film, The Wizard of Oz (1939). One of Lahr's few starring roles in Hollywood was the film Flying High (1931). Lahr wasn't from Milwaukee and so in this ad it mentions that Lahr has "been to Milwaukee" - probably on one of his early vaudeville tours.


Alfred Lunt

Alfred Lunt was a Broadway star, not really a film star, but so many classic film stars wanted or were his friend, so I've included him here. Along with his wife and acting partner Lynn Fontanne, the two were the toast of Broadway from the 1920s-1950s. Hollywood regularly tried to get them to leave the stage for the screen, but as Fontanne famously said, "We can be bought, but we can't be bored." As stage actors who enjoyed the thrill of a live audience, Lunt and Fontanne found filmmaking boring and tedious. Alfred Lunt grew up in the Milwaukee area and even after he made it big in New York he kept his main home, the estate known as "Ten Chimneys," in the rural community of Genesee Depot, not far from Milwaukee. The Ten Chimneys estate is now open for tours and if you're ever in the Milwaukee area I highly recommend visiting. I went for the first time last year and really enjoyed the experience. 

Brian Donlevy

Brian Donlevy for a few years grew up in the Sheboygan Falls area of Wisconsin although I'm not sure how often he got back to the state. Some of his popular film roles include parts in Destry Rides Again (1939), In Old Chicago (1937) and Kiss of Death (1947). I really like Donlevy's part in the underrated noir, Impact (1949), shot on location in Northern California.

Charles Winninger

Charles Winninger was born into a show business family in the small Wisconsin town of Athens. His family was involved in vaudeville and at an early age Winninger would be pulled into the act. After finding success on the stage Winninger would find work in films, including Nothing Sacred (1937) alongside fellow Wisconsinite Fredric March, The Sun Shines Bright (1953),  and Destry Rides Again (1939) with fellow Wisconsinites Donlevy and Jack Carson .

Don Ameche

Don Ameche grew up in Kenosha, Wisconsin, about 40 miles south of Milwaukee. Kenosha was also the hometown of another famous classic Hollywood star, Orson Welles. Ameche also lived in Madison while attending the University of Wisconsin for law school.  In Madison, Ameche got involved in acting. He performed at the Garrick Theater, the same stage where actor Ralph Bellamy did some early acting. Ameche also acted with the Wisconsin Players in a production where the scenery was created by future Hollywood actor Tom Ewell (The Seven Year Itch (1955)). Ameche would go on to star in such films as Midnight (1939), The Story of Alexander Graham Bell (1939), and Down Argentine Way (1940). Late in life he had a career renaissance, starring in hits like Trading Places (1983) and Cocoon (1985).

Duffy's Tavern

The above ad is for the popular radio show Duffy's Tavern which ran for a decade on various networks at different times during the 1940s and into the 1950s. On the show, Ed Gardner played the lead character, Archie the bartender. Many Hollywood celebrities appeared on the show as guests including Bob Hope, Alan Ladd, Billie Burke, Gene Tierney, Fred Allen, Peter Lorre and Veronica Lake. Blatz Beer was the beer featured on the show. The radio show also spawned a less successful TV series and even a feature film.

George Sanders

George Sanders was always perfect as a villain or cad. His deep voice and sophisticated accent made him a natural for those parts including roles in All About Eve (1950), Witness to Murder (1954), and the voice of Shere Khan in Disney's The Jungle Book (1967). In the above ad Sanders boasts that he has been to Milwaukee.

Groucho Marx

Groucho needs no explanation. What does need an explanation is what the heck Groucho was doing in Milwaukee?

John Payne

John Payne, the star of Kansas City Confidential (1952), Miracle on 34th Street (1947),  and The Restless Gun (1957) was a Blatz man. According to Payne, "Blatz really is Milwaukee's finest beer!" Ok, I wouldn't go that far John.

Liberace

Even razzle dazzle piano player, Liberace, who was born in West Allis, Wisconsin and did live in Milwaukee for a time, adds a bit of sophistication to Blatz Beer. Liberace, in addition to music, appeared in films and on television. Liberace can be seen in the films Sincerely Yours (1955), as a casket salesman in the film The Loved One (1966) and When the Boys Meet the Girls (1965) starring Connie Francis.

Osa Johnson

Osa Johnson along with her husband Martin were adventurers and documentary filmmakers. The pair would go on safaris and visit exotic locations and capture it on film. In 1953, Osa was part of television's first wildlife series, Osa Johnson's The Big Game Hunt. There is no better way to end a day in the bush than with a bottle of Blatz.

Sid Caesar

Funny man Sid Caesar has apparently been to Milwaukee, so he "ought to know...Blatz is Milwaukee's Finest Beer!"

Uta Hagen

Uta Hagen was born in Germany but raised in Madison, Wisconsin. She acted in the Wisconsin Players and then went on to bigger stages in New York, even appearing in a production of The Seagull alongside Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. She won a couple Tony awards, one for her performance in The Country Girl in 1951 and again in 1963 for originating the role of Martha in Edward Albee's Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Hagen did appear in films but her film career was limited as she was part of the Hollywood blacklist. She taught acting to several film stars, including Jack Lemmon, Al Pacino, and Sigourney Weaver. She was even a voice coach to Judy Garland, teaching Garland a German accent for the film Judgement at Nuremberg.

Victor McLaglen

Apparently British born actor Victor McLaglen even lived in Milwaukee at one time. In the ad, McLaglen is quoted as saying, "When I lived in Milwaukee, old-timers told me that Blatz was Milwaukee's finest beer. I tried it, and agreed." In the next caption he says, "Out here, in California, Blatz is still my favorite beer. And I always see that there's plenty in the refrigerator." Mclaglen won an Academy Award for his performance in The Informer (1935) and was nominated for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in the The Quiet Man (1952).

William Gargan

William Gargan was a character actor who was regularly cast as priests detectives, policemen and reporters. Some of his credits include The Bells of St. Mary's (1945),  Cheers for Miss Bishop (1941 and You Only Live Once (1937). In the ad it says, "The 'private eye' in private life, is an avid fisherman. Here in the Milwaukee home of Dick Geeiner, he discusses the best equipment for fishing Wisconsin's fine lakes. Both agree, Blatz Beer is a prime essential for real fishing pleasure." I won't argue with that.

Happy Oktoberfest! Now excuse me while I go drink some beer.

Pat O'Brien's Midsummer "Eye-Opener"

Quaker Brand Puffed Rice Ad

When I first came across the above advertisment from 1936 for Quaker Brand Puffed Rice featuring Hollywood actor, Pat O'Brien, and his "Midsummer 'Eye-Opener'" breakfast, I thought this hearty morning meal actually sounds pretty tasty. What I didn't expect was how hard it would be to find the Quaker Puffed Rice! I visited a few Los Angeles area grocery stores and none carried the product. There were many other kinds of Quaker products, but no puffed rice. I remembered seeing the boxes when I was younger, so I knew it existed during my lifetime and wasn't just some bygone breakfast treat from my grandparents generation. After a quick search online I found that I could buy 10 boxes for $40 on Amazon, but I wasn't ready to make that kind of commitment to the puffed rice. 

I then came across a piece on the Mr. Breakfast website explaining the background of the Quaker Puffed Rice which also had a comments section with many contributors asking where the puffed rice cereal went? According to commenters, there is no Quaker Puffed Rice in New Jersey, Indiana, and Southern California. Have you recently seen this cereal anywhere? An interesting tidbit: according to the website Quaker Puffed Rice was introduced in 1909, but was first seen by the public "at the St. Louis World's Fair of 1904, when eight bronze cannons exploded rice over the heads of a huge crowd. When rice kernels are heated under high pressure and exposed to steam, the kernels expand rapidly. You might even say they explode. The result is puffed rice."

My version of the "Midsummer Eye-Opener" breakfast.

Not to be defeated, I made my own version of the Midsummer Eye-Opener breakfast. Rather than using puffed rice, I substituted another Quaker product, "Corn Bran Crunch" toasted cereal. Here's how the advertisment describes the meal:

"THESE torrid days when appetites need coaxing you'll give three cheers for Pat O'Brien's favorite breakfast. For an appetite-arousing starter, honeydew melon, right off the ice. Then comes a happy combination - crisp, crunchy Quaker Puffed Rice [I used Quaker Corn Bran Crunch] with juicy fresh peaches. And bacon on toasted English muffin is as quick and easy to serve as the coffee. Your grocer features this Hollywood breakfast. Serve it to your family tomorrow."

O'Brien and Bogart in the film China Clipper.

The advertisement came out in 1936, the same year O'Brien was starring in the Warner Bros. action film China Clipper. O'Brien plays a former WWI ace pilot who, inspired by Charles Lindbergh's crossing of the Atlantic, attempts to create a trans-Pacific airline. A young Humphrey Bogart who was still working his way up to stardom co-stars as O'Brien's partner. This is one film that I'm hoping the Warner Archive will release on DVD. You can watch some clips from the film on TCM.com.


Robby enjoying the Midsummer Eye-Opener.

One of the things I find funny about the advertisment is its emphasis on digestibility as one of the selling points. "Quaker Puffed Rice [is] readily digestible" it says in one part and in another, "speedy digestibility is important to busy people in these high-tension times." Was digestibility a food marketing buzz word at the time like the way "fat-free" or "gluten-free" is used today? I own another advertisment for doughnuts from 1938 that has a slogan that goes, "Different, Delicious, Digestible, Doughnuts." I've seen some other food ads from the 1930s that also highlight how the food is digestible.

Pat O'Brien shares his favorite breakfast. Do you know what your favorite classic Hollywood actor/actress enjoys for breakfast?

College Coach (1933) - Film Locations

College Coach (1933)

What is college football without a few scandals? It seems like every football season a few more scandals pop up. Just this year eight players for the University of Miami are in trouble for accepting illegal gifts. But this is nothing new. Illegal gifts, phony entrance exams, dirty money and other illegal affairs have long been a part of college sports and this was even the premise for the 1933 film, College Coach.

In College Coach, Pat O'Brien plays the title character, a shady coach willing to do anything to win, even if it means buying players for his team and getting them into classes they can pass. This is a far stretch from the real life coach, Knute Rockne, that O'Brien would play a few years later. As coach Gore, O'Brien is hired by Calvert University,  a school looking to turn their football team into a winning team in order to attract more money for their school. 

The film doesn't mention where the story takes place, but the film was made in and around Los Angeles. Here are a few of the filming locations from College Coach.

For the fictional Calvert University, filming was done at Millspaugh Hall which was once located at 855 N. Vermont Ave. Millspaugh Hall was built in 1914 and was the main administration building for the University of California, Southern Branch which would eventually come to be known as University of California, Los Angeles or UCLA. By 1929, UCLA moved to their new campus in Westwood. Millspaugh Hall has since been demolished.

Calvert University as seen in College Coach (1933)

Millspaugh Hall, 855 N. Vermont Ave
Photo Credit: Los Angeles Public Library

855 N. Vermont Ave. Now the site of Los Angeles City College.

In one scene, after Pat O'Brien has accepted the job at Calvert University, he goes to meet his wife at the train station. O'Brien's wife, played by the attractive Ann Dvorak, is coming to join her husband in the new town where he will be coaching. The train station that was used in the film was the former Santa Fe Depot in South Pasadena. In the film we get a glimpse of the depot as well as the Graham and Mohr Opera House, another historic building that has since been demolished.


O'Brien standing across from the Graham and Mohr Opera House
El Centro Street, South Pasadena

The Graham and Mohr Opera House (demolished)
Photo Credit: South Pasadena Library

Santa Fe Depot on Left. Opera House on Right
El Centro Street, South Pasadena
Photo Credit: "South Pasadena" by Rick Thomas

El Centro Street, South Pasadena as it appears today.

In another scene we see the Calvert University football team arriving in town for a game. Signs welcome the arrival of the Calvert players. The street that we see the team driving down is Broadway and we get a glimpse of the historic United Artists movie palace on the left hand side. The United Artists theatre was built in 1927, just six years prior to the filming of College Coach.

Broadway, Los Angeles as seen in College Coach

933 S. Broadway, United Artists Theatre on left.

Revised December 12, 2013 - I previously posted that the football scenes were filmed at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, but thanks to a tip from silent locations expert John Bengtson, I've learned that the Rose Bowl in Pasadena was also used for the football scenes. In the screenshot below of fans entering the football stadium, that is the entrance to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The screenshots showing the inside of a football stadium are actually of the Rose Bowl stadium.

Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as seen in College Coach.

Bing Bird's Eye view of Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum entrance.

Calvert University plays at the Rose Bowl.

An inside look of the Rose Bowl from the January 1, 2013 Rose Bowl game. Source.

Lyle Talbot, Dick Powell race on to the field to see O'Brien.

 
Another view inside the Rose Bowl looking towards the gate that Talbot and Powell would have run out from. Undated image from the Los Angeles Public Library photo collection.

A closeup aerial view of the Rose Bowl's South East gate from 1930. The yellow rectangle marks the shrubbery seen along the wall which is also visible in the screenshot with O'Brien and his team.

Hugh Herbert, Ann Dvorak, Pat O'Brien

College Coach also stars Lyle Talbot, Dick Powell and Nat Pendleton as three of the football players for Calvert University. And if you watch closely, you get a glimpse of a very young John Wayne, as one of the Calvert students.

College Coach is available on home video through the Warner Archive Collection.

All screenshots (c) Warner Bros. Entertainment. Aerial Views: Hall Pictometry Bird's Eye, 2010 (c), 2010 Pictometry International Corp (c) 2011 Microsoft Corporation (c) and (c) 2010 NAVTEQ 

The Fireball (1950) - Film Locations

The Fireball (1950)

Whenever I think of the Roller Derby I usually picture tough Derby Girls and a theatricality similar to WWF wrestling. I've never really thought of it as a true sport or one that men play for that matter, until I saw the Mickey Rooney film, The Fireball. Like the recent Ellen Page film, Whip It (2009), where Page plays an awkward teenager who puts on skates and learns she could be a great Roller Derby girl, The Fireball is a similar coming-of-age type story.

In The Fireball, Rooney plays the orphan Johnny Casar, a rebellious teen living at the St. Luke's Home For Boys. Johnny has no outlet for his frustrations and is regularly getting into trouble. When Johnny is confronted by Father O'Hara, played by the priest when you need one, Pat O'Brien, Johnny decides to run away from the orphanage. 

While roaming the streets, Johnny stumbles across a pair of roller skates. He tries the skates on, finds that they fit, and then the next minute Johnny is rolling wildly down a hill, nearly knocking over anyone standing in the sidewalk. Johnny isn't a great skater at first, but he visits a local skating rink where he meets Mary Reeves (Beverly Tyler), who offers him free skating lessons. After a few lessons and a lot of practice Johnny becomes a superb skater, eventually joining a men's roller derby team. Johnny gains many fans with his outspoken personality and his athleticism. All the attention poured on Johnny from his fans only boosts his ego. At the same time Johnny's cocksure attitude is alienating him from his teammates.

During the international championship, Johnny, who will do anything to win, injures a few other players when he intentionally knocks over a teammate, forcing a pile-up of all the other skaters. The crowd and even Father O'Hara who is watching in the audience, are disgusted by Johnny's unsportsmanlike conduct. Although, disgust turns to concern when Johnny later collapses. 

Doctors discover that Johnny has polio. Upset by his condition, Johnny attempts suicide but Father O'Hara and Mary give Johnny the encouragement he needs for recovery. After a few years of therapy and training, Johnny finds himself back in the rink. When Johnny hears the crowd roar his cocky attitude returns too. But, after a conversation with Father O'Hara, Johnny realizes he should help out others just as people helped him when he needed it most. Instead of trying to be the star on the team, Johnny helps out one of the new younger players on the team.

Raquelle at the blog Out of the Past, who reviewed this film a few months ago, sums up this film pretty well. "Fireball is pure novelty! From the campy plot, to Marilyn Monroe's supporting role, to Mickey Rooney on roller skates. " These really are enough reasons to give this silly and fun film a view, but if I would add one more, it is to see a few Los Angeles locations. Here are a few of those locations.

St. Luke's Home For Boys

The film opens with scenes of St. Luke's Home For Boys, the orphanage where Mickey Rooney lives. See the screenshots above and below. I wasn't familiar with this building so I looked through a few historical photos of Los Angeles area orphanages and even Catholic schools. Eventually I came across a photo of the St. John's Military Academy in Los Angeles and it was very clear that this was the location used for the film.

St. Luke's Home For Boys, really St. John's Military Academy

The photo below, from the Los Angeles Library photo collection, shows the entrance to St. John's Military Academy. The palm trees are a lot taller in the film and the building looks to have been expanded. According to "Patterson's American Education, Volume 60," under their listing of military schools, they have the address for St. John's Military Academy listed at 1927 10th Avenue, Los Angeles.   It appears that this building has been demolished.

St. John's Military Academy, 1927 10th Ave, Los Angeles
Photo Credit: Los Angeles Library Photo Collection

Mickey Rooney runs from the orphanage.

Above Mickey Rooney is seen running from the backside of the orphanage. Below is another photo of St. John's Military Academy showing how this view once looked. From this view, things don't look that much different. The basketball courts are even there in the older photo.

St. John's Military Academy. 
Photo Credit: Los Angeles Library Photo Collection

Rooney climbs the fence at the orphanage.

The next few images are from the scene where Rooney tries on the roller skates and rolls wildly down the hill. That hill is Temple Street in Los Angeles, beginning near the intersection of Belmont Avenue. What seems like a really long hill in the film, is really only a few blocks long.

1648 Temple Street, Los Angeles

1648 Temple Street, Los Angeles

1644 & 1648 W. Temple Street

1644 W. Temple Street

1644 W. Temple Street

1642 W. Temple Street

1642 W. Temple Street

1638 W. Temple Street

1638 & 1642 W. Temple Street

Looking west on Temple Street.

Looking west on Temple Street.

1632 W. Temple Street

1632 W. Temple Street

1630 W. Temple Street

1630 & 1634 West Temple Street

If you would like to check out The Fireball it is currently for sale through the Warner Archive Collection.

Your thoughts?