Now, Voyager (1942)
Film-maker Gary Huggins inadvertently snapped up a slice of lost silent film history at an auction in a car park in Omaha, Nebraska, that was selling old stock from a distribution company called Modern Sound Pictures. Hoping to bid on a copy of the 1926 comedy Eve’s Leaves that he had spotted on top of a pile, Huggins was informed that he could only buy the whole pallet of movies, not individual cans. The upside? The lot was his for only $20.
Huggins soon discovered that his new pile of reels included 1923’s The Pill Pounder, a silent comedy that had been thought to be lost for decades. It is a short, two-reel film, shot on Long Island, New York, and directed by Gregory La Cava, best known for later classics such as My Man Godfrey (1936) and Stage Door (1937).
The Ephraim Enterprise, Utah, January 25, 1935
JEAN HARLOW & MARIE DRESSLER in DINNER AT EIGHT — 1933, dir. George Cukor
Norma Shearer (1930s)
Auntie Mame (1958) Costume design by Orry-Kelly
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James Dean photographed by Dennis Stock, Fairmount, IN, 1955
Harold Lloyd’s famous clock scene in Safety Last! (1923)