39 episodi

If the Golden era of Old Hollywood is your thing, our podcast is for you! If you want TYRONE POWER instead of TOM HARDY, JENNIFER JONES instead of JENNIFER LAWRENCE, or ROBERT MITCHUM rather than ROBERT PATTINSON, then FROM BENEATH THE HOLLYWOOD SIGN is the gin joint for you. Each week, writer and producer STEVE CUBINE and actress and writer NAN MCNAMARA explore, discuss, and dissect the magical, mysterious, amusing, and sometimes bizarre tales of Old Hollywood. So sit back and revisit a time when the pictures were still big and everyone was ready for their close-up.

From Beneath the Hollywood Sign Steve Cubine & Nan McNamara

    • Film e TV

If the Golden era of Old Hollywood is your thing, our podcast is for you! If you want TYRONE POWER instead of TOM HARDY, JENNIFER JONES instead of JENNIFER LAWRENCE, or ROBERT MITCHUM rather than ROBERT PATTINSON, then FROM BENEATH THE HOLLYWOOD SIGN is the gin joint for you. Each week, writer and producer STEVE CUBINE and actress and writer NAN MCNAMARA explore, discuss, and dissect the magical, mysterious, amusing, and sometimes bizarre tales of Old Hollywood. So sit back and revisit a time when the pictures were still big and everyone was ready for their close-up.

    “RUTH ROMAN: STAR OF THE MONTH (JUNE)” (038)

    “RUTH ROMAN: STAR OF THE MONTH (JUNE)” (038)

    EPISODE 38 - “Ruth Roman: Star of the Month (June)” - 06/03/2024

    RUTH ROMAN was more than a pretty face; she was a survivor! She survived childhood poverty, the fickle nature of Hollywood, the wrath of Alfred Hitchcock, several marriages, and the sinking of the luxury liner Andrea Doria in 1956. Yes, Roman was a warrior. This week, Roman is our Star of the Month for June. Join us as we take a look at her life and her long and fruitful career, where her versatility kept her working for five decades in great films such as “Good Sam” (1948), “The Window” (1949), “Strangers On A Train” (1951), and “The Far Country” (1954).

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    Femme Noir: Bad Girls of Film (1998), by Karen Burroughs Hannsberry;

    Ruth Roman: A Career Portrait (2022), by Derek Sculthorpe;

    “Stardom Seen for Ruth Roman,” December 11, 1949, by Hedda Hopper, The Los Angeles Times; 

    “The Progress of a Rising Star: Ruth Roman,” May 1, 1950, Life Magazine;

    “Hollywood Hasn’t Changed Her,” May 17, 1950, by Lloyd L. Sloan, The Hollywood Citizen News;

    “Roman Holiday,” August 12, 1950, Look Magazine;

    Bachelor Girl Life Liked by Ruth Roman,” August 29, 1950, by Ruth Roman, The Los Angeles Evening Herald;

    “The Role I Liked Best,” November 4, 1950, by Ruth Roman, The Saturday Evening Post;

    “Ruth Roman Aiming at Film Personality,” November 26, 1950, by John L. Scott, The Los Angeles Times;

    “Film Star and Radio Executive Plan No Honeymoon,” December 18, 1950, by Louella Parsons, The LA Examiner;

    “Hollywood’s ROMAN Candle,” March 17, 1951, by Gladden Hill, Colliers Magazine;

    “6-Pound Boy Born To Ruth Roman,” November 13, 1952, The Hollywood Citizen News;

    “Matrimony, Motherhood Revive’s Ruth’s Career,” February 1, 1953, by Edwin Schallert, The Los Angeles Times; 

    “Ruth Roman Saves Her Son,3, and Loses Dress,” July 27, 1956, by Ruth Roman, The Hollywood Citizen News;

    “Weeping Ruth Roman Reunited With Her Son,” July 28, 1956, The LA Examiner;

    “Hall To Leave Ruth Roman for Diana Lynn,” October 9, 1956, by Louella Parsons, The LA Examiner;

    “Ruth Roman says ‘I Do’ in Panama,” November 9, 1956, The Los Angeles Times; 

    “SeeSaw Star Isn’t Tumbling,” May 13, 1959, by Margaret Harford, The Mirror News;

    “Annulment of Marriage Won by Ruth Roman,” August 11, 1961, The Los Angeles Times;

    “Ruth Roman Just Unsinkable Star,” October 30, 1963, by Hal Humphrey, The Los Angeles Times;

    “Passing Time Has Left Ruth Roman Untouched,” January 10, 1971, by Jim Meyer, The Miami Herald ;

    “Ruth Roman,” April 1973, by Don Stance, Film Fan Monthly Magazine; 

    “Ruth Roman: The Ride of a New Roman Empire,” January 1986, Los Angeles Magazine;

    “Ruth Roman, 75, Glamorous and Wholesome Star, Dies,” September 11, 1999, by William Honan, The New York Times;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;


    Movies Mentioned: 

    Stage Door Canteen  (1943);

    Ladies Courageous (1944);

    Since You Went Away (1944);

    Song of Nevada (1944);

    Jungle Queen (1945);

    You Came Along (1945);

    Incendiary Blonde (1945);

    Gilda (1946);

    The Big Clock (1948);

    Good Sam (1948);

    Belle Starr's Daughter (1948);

    The Window (1949);

    Champion (1949);

    Beyond The Forest (1949);

    Always Leave Them Laughing (1949);

    Barricade (1950);

    Colt .45 (1950);

    Three Secrets (1950);

    Dallas (1950);

    Lightning Strikes Twice (1951);

    Strangers On A Train (1951);

    Tomorrow Is Another Day (1951);

    Invitation (1952);

    Mara Mara (1952);

    Young Man With Ideas (1952);

    Blowing Wild (1953);

    The Far Country (1954);

    Down Three Dark Streets (1954);

    Great Day In The Morning (1956);

    Rebel In Town (1956);

    5 Steps To Danger (1956);

    Bitter Victory (1957);

    Desert Desperados (1959);

    Love Has Many Faces (1965);

    Go Ask Alice (1973);

    The Baby (1973);

    The Killing Kind (1973);

    Impulse (1974);

    Day Of The Animals (1977);

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecas

    • 36 min
    "MEMORIAL DAY MOVIES" (#037)

    "MEMORIAL DAY MOVIES" (#037)

    EPISODE 37 - “Memorial Day Movies” - 05/27/2024

    War is Hell. As our nation prepares to honor the brave men and women who lost their lives defending our freedom on Memorial Day, Steve and Nan offer up a special episode where they will discuss a few war-themed films that have resonated with them over the years. Their choices cover everything from the Civil War to World War II. 

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    100 Great War Movies: The Real History Behind the Films (2018), by Robert J. Niemi;

    101 War Movies You Must See Before You Die (2009), by Steven Jay Schneider;

    Hollywood War Movies, 1937-1945 (1996), by Michael S. Shull and David Edward Wilt;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;

    Movies Mentioned: 

    Sergeant York (1941), starring Gary Cooper, Walter Brennan, Joan Leslie, Margaret Wycherly, George Tobias, June Lockhart, Dickie Moore, Ward Bond, and ,Noah Beery, Jr;

    Mrs. Miniver (1942), starring Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Teresa Wright, Dame May Witty, Richard Ney, Reginald Owen, and Henry Travers; 

    So Proudly We Hail (1943), starring Claudette Colbert, Paulette Goddard, Veronica, Lake, George Reeves, Sonny Tufts, Barbara Britton, Mary Treen, Cora Witherspoon, and Walter Abel;

    12 O’Clock High (1949), starring Gregory Peck, Dean Jagger, Millard Mitchell, Gary Merrill, Hugh Marlowe, John Kellogg, Richard Anderson, Robert Patten, and Lawrence Dobbin;

    Operation Petticoat (1959), starring Cary Grant, Tony Curtis, Dina Merrill, Joan O’Brien, Arthur O’Connell, Marion Ross, Gavin MacLeod, and Dick Sergeant;

    Shenandoah (1965), starring James Stewart, Patrick Wayne, Glenn Corbett, Phillip Alford, Doug McClure, Rosemary Forsythe, Katharine Ross, Harry Carey, Jr, Strother Martin, and George Kennedy;

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 42 min
    "CLASSIC HOLLYWOOD CLONES: THE REMAKING OF A MOVIE STAR" (#036)

    "CLASSIC HOLLYWOOD CLONES: THE REMAKING OF A MOVIE STAR" (#036)

    EPISODE 36 - “Classic Hollywood Clones: The Remaking of a Movie Star” - 05/20/2024

    SHOW NOTES: 
    They say that imitation is the highest form of flattery. That may not be the case when it came to the star system of old Hollywood. When an actor like CLARK GABLE or GRETA GARBO or ROCK HUDSON emerged as a star, every studio in town tried to capitalize and create their own version. For every MARILYN MONROE, there’s a dozen CLEO MOOREs. Often studios would groom an actor with similar looks and skills to be a “threat” to bigger stars who become difficult to work with, or get older and less appealing, or refuse to appear in assigned films. Most of the stars groomed as a threat to a bigger star usually faded into obscurity, but others learned to get out of the looming shadow of the big star and carve out a career of their own. So this week, we pay tribute to the stars who got their starts by being groomed to replace another star.

    Sources:

    Jayne Mansfield: A Biography (1973), by May Mann;

    Clark Gable: A Biography (2005), by Warren G. Harris;

    Marilyn Monroe: The Private Life of a Public Icon (2018), by Charles Casillo;

    Ingrid Bergman: My Story (1980), by Ingrid Bergman;

    High Society: The Life of Grace Kelly (2017), by Jay Jorgensen and Manoah Bowman;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 41 min
    "THE MYSTERY BEHIND THE COLUMBIA PICTURES’ TORCH LADY AND MGM’s LEO, THE LION" (#035)

    "THE MYSTERY BEHIND THE COLUMBIA PICTURES’ TORCH LADY AND MGM’s LEO, THE LION" (#035)

    EPISODE 35 - “The Mystery Behind the Columbia Pictures’ Torch Lady and MGM’s Leo, the Lion” - 05/13/2024

    Every major Hollywood studio has its recognizable logo. Paramount has its “mountain of stars,” 20th Century Fox has its roving klieg lights, and RKO has its radio towers. But two of the most famous studio logos have to be MGM’s “Leo, the lion” and Columbia’s regal “torch lady.” In this week’s episode, Steve and Nan dive into the history of these two iconic symbols of Hollywood excellence. From the image design to the models used to the roaring lions, we will tell you how these two ever-evolving images came to represent two of Hollywood’s finest movie studios.

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    “The Story Behind Columbia Pictures’ Iconic Logo: How Photographer Found Model for 1992 Shoot,” One 8, 2023, by Tommy McArdle, People magazine;

    “The Complete History of the Columbia Pictures Logo,” by Rachel Smith, Hatchwise.com;

    “The Story of the Most Famous Lion,” April 17, 2107, by Kat Escher, Smithsonian Magazine;

    “The Brief History of the MGM Lion,” June 25, 2022, www.silvescreenings.org;

    “The MGM Lion,” April 15. 2020, The Vernacular;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 37 min
    "MOTHER KNOWS BEST: CLASSIC CINEMA'S BEST (AND WORST!) MOMS" (034)

    "MOTHER KNOWS BEST: CLASSIC CINEMA'S BEST (AND WORST!) MOMS" (034)

    In “It’s A Wonderful Life,” BEULAH BONDI played the most loving mother to JAMES STEWART. Ma Bailey is the epitome of sweetness, kindness, and supportiveness so it’s quite shocking when we meet the Ma Bailey who would have existed had George Bailey not been born. She’s cold, bitter, and unkind. It gives Bondi the wonderful opportunity to play two versions of the same character, which she does flawlessly. So to celebrate Mother’s Day, Nan and Steve are taking a page from Bondi’s playbook as they discuss the good and bad mothers of classic cinema. 

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    Moms in the Movies (2014), by Richard Corliss;

    Actresses of a Certain Character (2007), by Axel Nissen;

    Irene Dunne: First Lady of Hollywood (2006), by Wes D. Gehring;

    Shelley: Also Known as Shirley (1981), by Shelley Winters;

    Gene Tierney: Self Portrait (1979), by Gene Tierney and Mickey Herkowitz;

    “Mrs. Miniver: The film that Goebbels Feared,” February 9, 2015, by Fiona Macdonald, February 9, 2015, BBC.com; 

    "Greer Garson, 92, Actress, Dies; Won Oscar for 'Mrs. Miniver’,” April 7, 1996, by Peter B. Flint, New York Times;

    “Stella Dallas,” August 6, 1937, New York Times Film Review;

    “Barbara Stanwyck, Actress, Dead at 82,” Jan. 22, 1990, by Peter B. Flint, New York Times;

    “1989 Kennedy Center Honors, Claudette Colbert,” Kennedy-Center.org;

    “Moving Story of War Against Japan: ‘Three Came Home’,” by Bosley Crowther, Feb. 21, 1950, New York Times Film Review;

    “Queen of Diamonds: Angela Lansbury on ‘The Manchurian Candidate’,” 2004;

    “Manchurian Candidate: Old Failure, Is Now A Hit,” by Aljean Harmetz, February 24, 1988, New York Times;

    “Jo Van Fleet,” by Dan Callahan, May 10, 2017, Film Comment; 

    “Pacific’s largely forgotten Oscar winner made impact on screen,” March 3, 2024, 
    University of the Pacific;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com

    Movies Mentioned: 
    The Grapes of Wrath (1940), starring Henry Fonda, Jane Darwell, John Carradine, and Charley Grapewin;
    The Ox-Bow Incident (1943), starring Henry Fonda, Dana Andrews, Mary Beth Hughes, Henry Morgan, Jane Darwell, Anthony Quinn, and William Eythe;
    Mrs. Miniver (1942), starring Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Teresa Wright, Henry Travers, and Richard Ney;
    Leave Her To Heaven (1945), starring Gene Tierney, Cornel Wilde, Jeanne Crain, Vincent Price, Mary Phillips, and Darryl Hickman;
    The Manchurian Candidate (1962), starring Lawrence Harvey, Frank Sinatra, Janet Leigh, and Angela Lansbury;
    The Manchurian Candidate (2004), starring Denzel Washington, Meryl Streep, Live Schreiber, and Jeffrey Wight;
    Gaslight (1944), starring Ingrid Bergman, Charles Boyer, Joseph Cotten, and Angela Lansbury;
    I Remember Mama (1948), starring Irene Dunne, Philip Dorn, Barbara Bel Geddes, Oscar Homolka, Ellen Corby, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, and Barbara O’Neil;
    Stella Dallas (1937), starring Barbara Stanwyck, Anne Shirley, John Boles, Barbara O’Neil, and Alan Hale;
    Stella (1990), starring Bette Midler, Trini Alvarado, John Goodman, Stephen Collins, Marsha Mason, and Eileen Brennan;
    White Heat (1949), starring James Cagney, Virginia Mayo, Edmond O’Brien, Steve Cochran, Margaret Wycherly, Fred Clark, and John Archer;
    The Little Foxes (1941), starring Bette Davis, Herbert Marshall, Teresa Wright, Patricia Collinge, Dan Duryea, and Richard Carlson;
    The Ten Commandments (1956), starring Charlton Heston, Anne Baxter, Yul Brynner, Edward G. Robinson, Yvonne DeCarlo, Martha Scott, John Derek, Debra Paget, Vincent Price, and John Carradine;
    Three Came Home (1950), starring Claudette Colbert. Sessue Hayakawa, and Patric Knowles; 
    A Patch of Blue (1965), starring Sidney Poitier, Elizabeth Hartman, Shelley Winters, Wallace Ford, Ivan Dixon, and Elizabeth Fraser;
    East of Eden (1955), starring James Dean, Julie Harris, Raymond Massey, and Jo Van Fleet
    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com
    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to

    • 47 min
    “ZACHARY SCOTT: STAR OF THE MONTH (MAY)” (033)

    “ZACHARY SCOTT: STAR OF THE MONTH (MAY)” (033)

    EPISODE 33 - “Zachary Scott: Star of the Month (May)” - 04/29/2024

    Suave, debonaire, and effortlessly charming, ZACHARY SCOTT is best known for his role in MICHAEL CURTIZ's film noir classic Mildred Pierce (1945). As the duplicitous, silver-tongued charmer Monte Beragon, he romances Mildred, played by JOAN CRAWFORD (in her Oscar-winning role), and Mildred's daughter, Veda (ANN BLYTH). This became Scott's signature role: the sexy cad who was usually at his best swindling, seducing, or being a general scoundrel. It was always fun watching Scott's dastardly ways unfold. He could rock a tux, looked naked without a martini in his hand, and always had a cigarette close by. He was so magnetic that he could even make film-goers feel sorry for him. While he seldom got to play the good guy, when he did, as in what is perhaps one of his best roles in JEAN RENOIR's The Southerner (1945), you realize the versatility that he seldom had the opportunity to display. With a career that included over 40 films and dozens of television roles, ZACHARY SCOTT is our Star of the Month.

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    Zachary Scott: Hollywood’s Sophisticated Cad (2009), by Ronald L. Davis;

    “Actor Zachary Scott, Leading Man for 3 Decades, Dies of Brain Tumor,” October 4, 1965, Akron Bacon Journal

    “Who Was Zachary Scott?” www.zachtheatre.org;

    “Zachary Scott’s Guilded Cage,” Spring 2020, by Farren Smith Nehme, www.filmnoirfoundation.org;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;


    Movies Mentioned: 

    Mildred Pierce (1945), starring Joan Crawford, Ann Blyth, Zachary Scott, Jack Carson, Eve Arden, Bruce Bennett, Lee Patrick, and Butterfly McQueen;

    The Southerner (1945), starring Zachary Scott, Betty Field, Beulah Bondi, Norman Lloyd, J. Carroll Naish, Jay Gilpin, Jean Vanderwilt, Blanche Yurka, and Percy Kilbride;

    The Mask of Dimitrios (1944), starring Zachary Scott, Faye Emerson, Peter Lorre, and Sydney Greenstreet;

    Hollywood Canteen (1944), starring Bette Davis, John Garfield, Joan Crawford, Joan Leslie, Dane Clark, Joe E, Brown, Barbara Stanwyck, Id Lupino, Sydney Greenstreet, and Jack Benny;

    Danger Signal (1945), starring Zachary Scott, Faye Emerson, Mona Freeman, Richard Erdman, Rosemary DeCamp, and Joyce Compton;

    Her Kind Of Man (1946), starring Zachary Scott, Dane Clark, Janis Page, and Faye Emerson;

    The Unfaithful (1947), starring Ann Sheridan, Lew Ayres, Zachary Scott, and Eve Arden;

    Stallion Road (1947), starring Ronald Reagan, Alexis Smith, and Zachary Scott;

    Cass Timberlane (1947), starring Spencer Tracy, Lana Turner, Zachary Scott, Tom Drake, Mary Astor, Margaret Lindsay, and Albert Dekker;

    Ruthless (1948), starring Zachary Scott, Louis Hayward, Diana Lynn, Sydney Greenstreet, Lucille Bremer, and Martha Vickers;

    Whiplash (1948), staring Dane Clark, Alexis Smith, Zachary Scott, Eve Arden, S.Z. Sakall, Jefferey Lynn, and Alan Hale Jr;

    Flamingo Road (1949), starring Joan Crawford, Zachary Scott, Sydney Greenstreet, David Brian, Virginia Huston, Gladys George, and Fred Clark;

    Shadow On The Wall (1950), starring Ann Sothern, Zachary Scott, John McIntire, Gigi Perreau, Kristine Miller, and Nancy Davis;

    Born To Be Bad (1950), starring Joan Fontaine, Zachary Scott, Joan Leslie, Robert Ryan, and Mel Ferrer;

    Stronghold (1951), starring Veronica Lake, Zachary Scott, and Rita Meceda;

    The Secret of Convict Lake (1951), starring Glenn Ford, Gene Tierney, Zachary Scott, Ethel Barrymore, Ann Dvorak, Barbara Bates, and Janette Nolan;

    Dead On Course (1953), starring Zachary Scott and Kay Kendall;

    Flame of the Islands (1955), staring Yvonne DeCarlo, Howard Duff, and Zachary Scott;

    Violent Stranger (1957), starring Zachary Scott, and Faith Domergue;

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 29 min

Top podcast nella categoria Film e TV

Fratelli di Crozza
Warner Bros. Discovery Podcast
TRAME STRANE - Cinema
Davide Zagnoli
Pretty Little Liars: True Crime
PodCo
CineFacts
CineFacts.it
Awards Chatter
The Hollywood Reporter
I podcast di BadTaste.it
BadTaste.it

Potrebbero piacerti anche…

The Shallow End
Schnebly and Toth
The Box of Oddities
Kat & Jethro Gilligan Toth
The Secret History Of Hollywood
Adam Roche
You Must Remember This
Karina Longworth
Talking Pictures
TCM and Max
Most Notorious! A True Crime History Podcast
Blue Ewe Media