Read Tinseltown: Murder, Morphine, and Madness at the Dawn of Hollywood Online
Authors: William J. Mann
theater’s official premiere
: The opening of the Paramount Theatre was described in the
New York Times
, November 14 and November 20, 1926.
“All I can say now”
:
New York Times
, September 6, 1927.
“a heritage of reputation”
:
Film Daily
, September 6, 1927.
“like a beacon”
:
Photoplay
, November 1927.
“A man is great”
:
Film Daily
, September 6, 1927.
“I can’t find words”
:
Film Daily,
September 6, 1927.
“My God, the next thing”
: J. M. Berger, statement, March 11, 1926.
T
AYLOR
M
YSTERY
:
Hartford Times
, March 11, 1926.
“We are making real progress”
:
Los Angeles Express
, March 23, 1926.
“Mr. Taylor was the most”
: Charlotte Shelby, statement, April 9, 1926.
“prominent Los Angeles society woman”
:
Los Angeles Herald
, March 27, 1926.
“I know that he loved me”
: Minter, statement, March 4, 1926.
“willful and corrupt”
:
Los Angeles Times
, November 1, 1928; February 9, 1929.
Margaret did reveal how afraid
: The 1937 testimony of Margaret Shelby, Charlotte Whitney, and Chauncey Eaton was described by Leroy Sanderson in his overview of the Taylor case, reproduced in Long,
Taylor: A Dossier
.
They handed down
:
Los Angeles Examiner
, May 7, 1937.
“I demand a complete”
:
Los Angeles Examiner
, May 11, 1937.
At a little past four
: Ray Long wrote about Mrs. Lewis for Taylorology. He slightly amended his recollections in personal correspondence with me.
she died at 5:20
: Death certificate, Ella Margaret Arce, aka Palmer, aka Lewis, October 24, 1964, Los Angeles County Archives.
named Mrs. Long as her executor
: Ella Margaret Lewis, Last Will and Testament, March 12, 1964, courtesy Ray Long.
“She was frightened”
:
Los Angeles News
, September 13, 1937.
“The image was too cinematic”
: Fussell,
Mabel
.
Other facts debunk the theory
: I am indebted here to Bruce Long’s essay “Did Charlotte Shelby Kill Taylor?” in his
William Desmond Taylor: A Dossier
.
“one pistol in thousands”
:
Los Angeles Examiner
, February 18, 1922.
Madsen fit perfectly
: That is, he fit her original description, of the rough-looking man with the prominent nose who reminded her of a movie burglar. In her original description she did not give an age. That came only later, after detectives prodded her to admit things she didn’t really see.
Elbert E. Lewis
: Born in Michigan, Lewis was living in Los Angeles in both 1920 and 1930, though he traveled a great deal, marrying his first wife in Ohio. Biographical detail from the US Census and World War I registration. His devotion to her is revealed in his letters to her, provided courtesy of Ray Long.
marrying Elbert Lewis
: Consular Reports of Marriage, Singapore, Straits Settlements, February 9, 1935.
sailed back to the United States
: Ella Margaret Lewis arrived on the SS
Chichibu Maru
from Shanghai into Los Angeles on February 28, 1937. Elbert Edgar Lewis arrived on the SS
President Jackson
from Hong Kong into Seattle on October 14, 1937. His death record was located in Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad, April 18, 1942. He did not die in a bombing raid, as has been reported. Lewis referred to himself as “Daddy” in a very sentimental letter to Gibby dated February 8, 1942, courtesy of Ray Long.
Don Osborn served out his sentence
: US Census; Leo Maloney file, NYPL; Los Angeles telephone directories; death certificate, May 16, 1950, Los Angeles County Archive.
Rose Putnam moved back
: US Census; index to California death records.
Blackie Madsen got out of the clink
: Washington marriage records, 1865–2004;
El Paso Herald-Post
, December 3, 1935; Ross Garnet Sheridan, death certificate, March 19, 1938, Los Angeles County Archives.
Minter never made another movie
:
Los Angeles Times
, March 23, 1957, August 24, 1965, June 11, 1981;
Hartford Courant
, January 9, 1981; Higham manuscript; Brownlow interview; Don Bachardy, interview with author.
“an apostle of progress”
: For Hays’s legacy, I am indebted to Stephen Vaughn’s perceptive article “The Devil’s Advocate: Will H. Hays and the Campaign to Make Movies Respectable,”
Indiana Magazine of History
101 (June 2005).
“would change only”
: Gomery,
The Hollywood Studio System
.
“Rather than lose the public”
:
New York Times
, June 11, 1976.
“never had such a time”
: Gabler,
Empire of Their Own
.
The pagination of this electronic edition does not match the edition from which it was made. To locate a specific passage, please use the search feature on your e-book reader.
Abrams, Hiram, 16, 17, 65, 66, 131, 252
firing, 17
Across the Border
, 162–63
Adams, Capt. David, 231, 238
Adorée, Renée, 179
Affairs of Anatol
,
The
, 104–5, 106
Alexandria Hotel, 29
Alias Jimmy Valentine
, 176
Allen, J. Weston, 122
Alvarado Court, 6, 30, 47, 86, 108, 182, 187, 207, 217, 238, 405
Alvarado Street, 82
Ambassador Hotel, 109, 181, 334
American Federation of Labor, 295
American Humane Society, 85
American Legion, 295
Anderson, Maxwell, 387
Anne of Green Gables
, 60
Antitrust regulation, 40, 147–48
Apollo Theater, 154
SS
Aquitania
, 107, 220
Arbuckle, Minta, 297
Arbuckle, Roscoe “Fatty,” 23, 104, 132, 158–59, 294
and Adolph Zukor, 155–57
arrest, 149
banning of films, 156, 279–82
comeback, 276–79
comeback backlash, 333–39
compromise, 338–39
“Fatty and Mabel” comedy shorts, 151
FTC charges, impact on, 158
Gasoline Gus
, 276–79
hearing, 159
marriage, 150
reaction to murder, 206
scandal, blamed on Jews, 169
trial, 166, 221
vaudeville, 296
verdict, 275
verdict reception, 275–76
Zukor letter, 160
Associated Producers, 65, 94
Astor, John Jacob, 12
Astor Hotel, 261
Auntie Mame
, 421
Automatic Vaudeville, 35, 65
Bachardy, Don, 422
Balaban, Barney, 393, 424
Balaban & Katz, 392, 424
Balestier, Beatty, 311
Banksia Place Sanitarium, 331
Barnes, Eleanor, 201
Barnes, Julius, 337
Bartholomew, Frank, 200
Beach, Rex, 121
Beaverbrook, Lord, 39
Benson, Betty, 50
Berger, Marjorie, 268, 396
Berkey, Arista “Writ,” 319–20
Berlin, Irving, 393
Bernhardt, Sarah, 37
Beverly Hilton, 426
Biograph Company, 45
Block-booking, 132, 135, 389
Blue, Monte, 82
Bluhdorn, Charles, 426
Blythe, Betty, 261
Bone, Leon, 356, 409
Boole, Ella, 105
Brady, Alice, 54
Brady, Matthew, 151, 333
Brady, William A., 101, 105, 120, 137, 157, 159
Brew, Julia, 72–73, 267, 386, 401
Brisbane, Arthur, 261
Broun, Heywood, 386
Brown, Frank, 62
Brownlow, Kevin, 423
Brunton Studios, 29, 30, 31
Longacre stage, 31
Bryson, James, 163–64, 184, 283
bad check, 164–65
Buccaneer
,
The
, 387
Bunker Hill neighborhood, 24
Burke, Billie, 54
Burke, Joe, 372, 373
Burns, Edith, 267–68, 360
Busch, Mae, 46
Bushnell, Asa S., 321
Bushnell, John L., 311–12, 317–26, 344, 352–54, 365, 377
family, 322
letters, 366
Cabanne, Christy, 144
Cabanne, Vivien, 144, 257
Cadillac Hotel, 164, 341
Cahill, William, 142
Calnay, James, 270–71, 288
Camille
, 146, 147, 148
Capone, Al, 260
Captain Alvarez
, 130
Carson, Frank, 257–60
Cartier, Mr. and Mrs. Jacques, 107
Casablanca
, 421
Casa Margarita, 307, 400
Cast of Killers
,
A
, 408
Cato, E. R., 142
censorship, xiii, 14–15, 30, 33, 85, 100, 251, 253–54
and antitrust regulation, 40
and Arbuckle, 276–79, 279–82
Ellen O’Grady testimony, 120–22
fight against, 18
the Formula, 392
and Hollywood parties, 327–28
law, 121
power of women on boards and clubs, 68–70
production code, 102
Production Code Administration, 424
unsuccessful, 369
Chamber of Commerce, 295
Chambers, Joseph, 5
Chandler, Harry, 358
Chaplin, Charlie, 6
Chaplin, Sydney, 90
Chapman, Woodlawn, 336
Chase, William Sheafe, 121, 331, 348–49
Cheseboro, Ray L., 52
Chopin, Frédéric, 33
Christian, George B., 134
Christie, Al, 26, 52, 126, 183, 387
Church, Mrs. Norman, 385
Clapham, Leonard, 184, 185, 288, 354, 365, 387
aka Tom London, 387
later life, 420
Cline, Herman, 234
Clune’s Broadway Theater, 84
Coates, Edward, 106
Coconut Grove, 179, 181
Cody, Lew, 387
Cohen, Sydney S., 38, 41, 70, 134, 135, 223, 261, 300
and Ellen O’Grady, 70
FTC testimony, 347, 350
Collins, Dapper Don, 243
Committee on Moving Pictures of the City Federation of Women’s Clubs, 105
Compson, Betty, 32
Connelley, Earl J., 355, 364, 366, 371, 372–74
Connette, Honore, 283–85, 417
extra for Taylor, 284
gun, 284, 285
Connick, H. D. H., 349
Coolidge, Calvin, 368
Cooney, Patrick J., 372
Corona Typewriter Company, 144
Courtell, Juliet, 267
Covarrubias, Miguel, 386
Covered Wagon
,
The
, 370
Coward
,
The
, 26
Cowboy and the Lady
,
The
, 286
Cox, James, 64
Crafts, Wilbur F., 99–101, 120, 160
death, 336
and Fatty Arbuckle, 151–52, 154
production code, 105–6
Crawford-Ivers, Julia, 111, 114, 172, 197, 200, 225, 240
Crowninshield, Frank, 393
Cruise of the Kawa
,
The
(Traprock), 205
Cruze, James, 370
Dallas, Jim, 342, 372
Daniel, Viora, 183, 288
Daniels, Bebe, 32
Daughters of the American Revolution, 295
Davenport, Alice, 327–28
Davis, James, 261
Davis, William, 186, 187, 190
Deane-Tanner, Ada, 111, 221
Deane-Tanner, Denis, 221
Deane-Tanner, Ethel Daisy, 213, 241
Dearborn Independent
, 169
Dedham, Massachusetts, 60
Deed of Death
,
A
, 408
Dell, Ethel M., 187
Dell, Floyd, 196
Delmonico’s restaurant, 36, 65, 101, 236
DeMille, Cecil B., 32, 79, 91, 102, 106, 250
and production code, 104
reaction to murder, 220–21
Desmond, William, 359
Dines, Courtland, 383–84
Dix, Richard, 32
Dixon, Thomas, 173, 222, 235
Dodd, Rev. Neal, 33
Dodge, Pauline, 133, 135
Doherty, Edward, 223, 242, 245, 249–50, 384
Dominguez, Frank, 52, 151, 157–59, 372–74, 418
Dominick & Dominick, 118
Doran, William, 246
Douglas, James C., 51
Duffus, R. L., 20
Dumas, Verne, 195, 197
Durfee, Minta “Mintrattie,” 150
Dwan, Allan, 43, 387
Dyer, Elmer, 309, 354
Eagels, Jeanne, 386
Eangler, Caroline W., 253
East of Eden
, 421
Eaton, Chauncey, 62–63, 82, 400
Eggert, Mrs. Thomas H., 68
Eiseman, Rabbi Aaron, 395
Ellicott, Milton, 31
Emerson, John, 261
Evening Telegraph
, 276
Eyton, Charles, 91–92, 199, 200, 223, 225, 226, 238, 240, 250
handkerchief, 247
release of Minter letters, 245
statement about murder, 206
and Taylor papers, 238–39, 250
Fairbanks, Douglas, 32, 34, 64, 79, 91, 94, 154, 177–78, 262
Famous Players–Lasky, 11, 13, 14, 26, 27
alliance against, 135
antitrust laws, 147–48
and death of Taylor, 199–200, 222–23
drugs, 91–92
and FTC, 134, 147, 149
and Graumann Theaters, 390
papers from Taylor, 225
production code, 102
production move to California, 225
reaction to murder, 206–7
release of Minter letters, 245
stock issue, 39
stock market value, 14, 148, 225, 276, 348
success of, 13
trustification of industry, 133
upswing, 299
Fatty and Mabel Adrift
, 152
Feagan’s jewelry store, 174, 180
Federal Council of Churches of Christ, 295
Federal Trade Commission (FTC), 40, 147–48
action against Famous Players, 134
hearings on Famous Players-Lansky, 347–48, 349–51
hearings on movie industry, 332