Saturday, August 1, 2009

Movie - Breezy Jim (1919)

It's recommended to look Breezy Jim movie

Movie Premier in 1919.


Color Info: Black and White
Countries: USA
Genres: Western
Sound Mix: Silent
Tech Info: OFM:35 mm, PCS:Spherical, PFM:35 mm, RAT:1.33 : 1, MET:
Release Dates: USA:22 February 1919

In movie played:

Crane Wilbur (actor)
Nephew of 'Tyrone Power Sr.' (qv)
Death Notes:Toluca Lake, California, USA (following stroke)
Crane Wilbur, the motion visualize chief and screenwriter, be born Erwin Crane Wilbur lying on November 17, 1886 bordered by Athens, New York. The nephew of the concerted incident thespian Tyrone Power, Sr., Wilbur early take to the board in spinal column of an actor, making his Broadway debut as Erwin Crane Wilbur on June 3, 1903 in a trilogy of William Butler Yeats acting in "A Pot of Broth/Kathleen ni Houlihan/The Land of Heart's Desire" fall on through the Irish Literary Society at the Carnegie Lyceum. Wilbur decide stale appear in the films in 1910, but he made his moniker as a demonstrate actor appearing as the mannish front in "The Perils of Pauline" (1914), the terribly uncultured serial starring Pearl White. A household name during the 1910s, Wilbur's profession as a movie actor began petering out after he appear as the eponymous hero of "Breezy Jim" (1919). As the Roaring Twenties made their debut, Wilbur go hindmost to the stage. Between 1920 and 1934, Wilbur carrying in seven plays presented on Broadway: "The Ouija Board" (1920); "The Monster" (1922; revived 1933); "Easy Terms" (1925); "The Song Wtiter" (1928); "Border-Land" (1932); "Halfway to Hell" (1933); and "Are You Decent" (1934). He also staged "Halfway to Hell" and directed Donald Kirkley and Howard Burman's "Happily Ever After" in 1945. Crane also appeared as a entertainer in "The Ouija Board" and "Easy Terms," and he appeared as an actor in nine other Boradway show from 1927 to 1932, in cooperation next to "A Farewell to Arms" (1930) and "Mourning Becomes Electra" (1932). Wilbur had directed several taciturn pictures, but he made his murmur debut as a director with the litigious "Tomorrow's Children" (1934), tout as "The Most Daring, Sensational Drama Ever Filmed!" The movie be an bare of eugenics, with high regard to the attempt inhibited sterilization of a married twosome by the Welfare Bureua. "Tomorrow's Children" publicized the trueness that fulsome ethnic group be sterilized in aversion their will and even short recourse to in the red formula of finding. The movie was expelled in the nation state of New York on the precincts that it was "immoral," that it would "tend to dissipated morals," and that it was an incitement to reprobate act. On a tolerable shun to accept, the stoppage was keep in the courts and on demand as it was found to disseminate gen nearly birth administrate, which was banned. After this controversy, Wilbur went on to a protracted and inexhaustible career, outstandingly in the mystery-thriller genre, as both a director and a screenwriter. He had a paw in the abundance of such genre classic as "The Houe of Wax" (1954), "The Bat" (1959) and "Mysterious Island" (1961). Wilbur Crane die on October 18, 1973 in Toluca Lake, California, due to complications succeeding a finger.
Height:5' 10"
Quotes:"I'm going to give people what they want. Sensation, horror, shock. Send them out into the streets to tell their friends how wonderful it is to be scared to death."
Birth Notes:Athens, New York, USA
Other Works:Stage: Wrote and appear bordered by (as "Barney McCare") "The Ouija Board" lying on Broadway (1920). Drama. Directed via W.H. Gilmore. Bijou Theatre; 29 Mar 1920-May 1920 (closing date unknown/64 performances). Cast: George Dannenborg, 'Edward Ellis (I)' (qv), George Gaul, Ruth Hammond, 'William Ingersoll' (qv), Howard Lang, Regina Wallace, Stewart E. Wilson, 'John Griffith Wray' (qv). Produced by 'A.H. Woods' (qv)., The Monster (1922). Drama. Written by 'Crane Wilbur' (qv). Directed by 'Lawrence Marston' (qv). 39th Street Theatre: 9 Aug 1922- Nov 1922 (closing date unknown/101 performances). Cast: Walter James, 'Wilton Lackaye' (qv), Frank McCormack, McKay Morris, Marguerite Risser, Charles Wray Wallace. Produced by Joseph M. Gaites. Filmed as _The Monster (1925)_ (qv)., Stage: Wrote and appeared in (as "Dr. Alexander G. Torrance") "Easy Terms", produced on Broadway in 1925. Comedy. Directed by Frank McCormack. National Theatre, 21 Sep 1925-Oct 1925 (closing date unknown/15 performances). Cast: Homer Barton, Suzanne Caubet, 'Walter Davis (I)' (qv), 'Frank Fanning' (qv), Ellsworth Jones, 'Jeffrys Lewis' (qv), Eleanor Marshall, 'Donald Meek' (qv), 'Mabel Montgomery' (qv), 'William Postance' (qv), Antoinette Rochte, Worthington L. Romaine, Arthur E. Seger, Esther Somers., Stage: Appeared (as "Diego Menendez") in "The Fountain" on Broadway (1925). Written by 'Eugene O'Neill (I)' (qv). Directed by Robert Edmond Jones. Greenwich Village Theatre: 10 Dec 1925-Jan 1926 (closing date unknown/28 performances). Cast: 'Morris Ankrum' (qv), Ralph Benzies, Stanley Berry, 'Egon Brecher' (qv), Curtis Cooksey, Ray Corning, Liza Dallett, Rosalinde Fuller, 'Walter Huston' (qv), Perry Ivins, Philip Jones, 'Pauline Moore' (qv), 'Henry O'Neill (I)' (qv), William Stahl, 'Edgar Stehli' (qv), John Taylor. Produced by 'Kenneth MacGowan', Robert Edmond Jones and Eugene O'Neill., Stage: Appeared (as "Dr. Alonzo Weed") in "Nirvana" on Broadway (1926). Written by 'John Howard Lawson' (qv). Directed by Robert Peel Noble. Greenwich Village Theatre: 3 Mar 1926-Mar 1926 (closing date unknown/6 performances). As "Dr. Alonzo Weed." Cast: Julie Barnard, Elise Bartlett, Murray Bennett, Marcia Byron, Juliette Crosby, Doris Ferguson, Earle Larimore, John McGovern, L'Estrange Millman, Herbert Ransom, Francis Sadtler, Edith Shayne, H. Ben Smith, Ludmilla Toretzka, Lilllian Wilck. Produced by Noble-Ryan-Livy, Inc., Stage: Appeared (as "Rev. Albaugh") in "Bride of the Lamb" (1926). Written by 'William Hurlbut (I)' (qv). Directed by 'Robert Milton (I)' (qv). Greenwich Village Theatre: 30 Mar 1926-Jul 1926 (closing date unknown/109 performances). Cast: Arline Blackburn, 'Alice Brady' (qv) (also producer), Gerald Cornell, Lorna Elliott, Edmund Elton, Harold Hartsell, Ralph MacBane, Mabel Montgomery, Julia Ralph, James Francis Robertson. Produced in association with Robert Milton., Stage: Directed and appeared in (as "Father Rochambeau") "The Woman Disputed" on Broadway (1926). Melodrama. Written by 'Denison Clift' (qv). Forrest Theatre: 28 Sep 1926-Mar 1927 (closing date unknown/87 performances). Cast: John Anthony, Richard Bradshaw, Joseph Burton, 'Louis Calhern' (qv), Andrew Corday, 'Robert Cummings (I)' (qv), Jackie Grattan, Charles Hammond, 'Ann Harding' (qv), B.J. McOwen, J.K. Newman, Louise Quinn, 'Viola Roache' (qv), 'Lowell Sherman' (qv), Hall Synonds, Royal Thayer, Henry Von Rhau, W. Bradley Ward. Produced by 'A.H. Woods' (qv)., Stage: Appeared (as "Circus Snyder") in "Celebrity" (1927). Comedy. Written by Willard Keefe. Directed by Edward Goodman. Lyceum Theatre: 26 Dec 1927-Jan 1928 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast: Margaret Armstrong, Harry M. Cooke, Claude Cooper, Maurice Freeman, 'Gavin Gordon (II)' (qv), Irene Hubbard, Rose Keane, Constance McKay, Mabel Montgomery, Hale Norcross, Nancy Sheridan, Philip Wood. Produced by 'Herman Shumlin' (qv) and Paul Streger., Stage: Appeared (as "Henry Ditmas") in "Rope" on Broadway (1928). Drama. Written by David Wallace and 'Thomas Sigismund Stribling' (qv). Based upon "Teeftallow" by Stribling. Directed by 'Frank Merlin' (qv). Biltmore Theatre: 22 Feb 1928-Mar 1928 (closing date unknown/31 performances). Cast: James K. Applebee, Anthony Blair, Mary Carroll, Ralph Cummings, Kenneth Dana, James H. Dunmore, Alan Goode, Herbert Heywood, Leslie Hunt, Betty Lee Morton, Caroline Newcomb, Elizabeth Patterson, 'Willard Robertson' (qv), Clifton Self, Bryant Sells, Ben Smith. Produced by James W. Elliott., Stage: Write "The Song Writer", produced on Broadway in 1928. Musical. Music by 'Georgie Price' (qv). Lyrics by 'Abner Silver (I)' (qv), Sid Silvers, 'Phil Baker (I)' (qv) and 'Herb Magidson' (q). Directed by 'Alexander Leftwich' (qv). 48th Street Theatre: 13 Aug 1928-29 Sep 1928 (56 performances). Cast: Beatrice Blinn, Irving Hirsch, Hugh Huntley, 'Mayo Methot' (qv), Jennie Moscowitz, Neil Pratt, 'Georgie Price' (qv), 'Robert B. Sinclair' (q), Bea Thrift, F.A. Walton, Ethel Wilson, Marian Winston. Produced by Alexander Yokel., Stage: Appeared (as "Bradford Palmer") in "Fast Life" on Broadway (1928). Melodrama. Written by 'Samuel Shipman (I)' (qv) and 'John B. Hymer' (qv). Directed by 'A.H. Van Buren' (qv). Ambassador Theatre: 26 Sep 1928-Oct 1928 (closing date unknown/21 performances). Cast: C. Edwin Brandt, John Burch, 'Irene Cattell' (qv) (as "Christina Johnson"), Goo Chong, Jean Clarendon, 'Claudette Colbert' (qv) (as "Patricia Mason"), Donald Dillaway, Frederick Earle, Frank Graham, Vincent Gulliver, 'Frank Howson (I)' (qv) (as "Clyde Turner"), Thomas Irwin, Donald McClelland, Frank B. Miller, Adrian Morris, 'Chester Morris (I)' (qv) (as "Chester Palmer"), William Morris, Dorothy Payne, Frank Reyman, Wells Richardson, Muriel Robinson, Anne Tarnoff, Robert Toms, Walter Tyrrell, Mabel Williams, Paul Wilson. Produced by 'A.H. Woods' (qv)., Stage: Appeared (as "Rinaldi") in "A Farewell to Arms" (1930). Drama. Written by 'Laurence Stallings' (qv). Based on the novel by 'Ernest Hemingway' (qv). Directed by 'Rouben Mamoulian' (qv). National Theatre: 22 Sep 1930-Oct 1930 (closing date unknown/24 performances). Cast included: 'Glenn Anders' (qv), Ricardo Bengali, Antonio Berri, Alberto Calvo, Ricardo Calvo, Frank Coletti, Armand Cortes, Paul Cremonesi, C. Sager Czaja, Jules David, Hendryk De Paule, Ralph Desmond, Vati Don, Joseph Downing, Florence Earle, Frank Farrara, Albert Ferro, 'Albert Froom' (qv), John Genaro, 'Harold Huber' (qv), Joseph Kashioff, Helen Kim, 'Jack La Rue' (qv), 'Elissa Landi' (q), Carrie Lowe, Jane McKenzie, Dorothy Paule, Rene Roberti, Joseph Scotti, Fritz Ulm, Tino Valenti, Louis Veda, Juan Villasana, Katherine Warren, Mortimer Weldon. Produced by 'A.H. Woods' (qv)., On the Spot (1930). Melodrama. Written by 'Edgar Wallace' (qv). Directed by Lee Ephraim and Carol Reed. Forrest Theatre: 29 Oct 1930- Mar 1931 (closing date unknown/167 performances). Cast: 'John Adair (I)' (qv) (as "Interne"), 'Glenda Farrell' (qv) (as "Marie Pouliski"), John Gallaudet, George Drury Hart, John M. Kline, Mike Sullivan, Suezo Tckero, Arthur R. Vinton, Alan Ward, John Wheeler, 'Crane Wilbur' (qv) (as "Tony Perrelli), Jeanne Winters, 'Anna May Wong (I)' (qv) (as "Minn Lee"), 'Stanley Wood' (qv) (as "Capt. Harrigan"). Produced by Lee Shubert and J.J. Shubert. Produced in association with Edgar Wallace and Lee Ephraim., Border-Land (1932). Comedy-drama. Written by 'Crane Wilbur' (qv). Directed by Frank McCormack. Biltmore Theatre: 29 Mar 1932- Apr 1932 (closing date unknown/23 performances). Cast: 'Edgar Barrier' (qv), Alan Campbell, Peter Goo Chong, 'Catherine Doucet' (qv), Lenita Lane, Howard Lang, Robert Lowing, 'Fuller Mellish' (qv), 'Lester Vail (I)' (qv). Produced by Philip Gerton., Stage: Appeared (as "Capt. Adam Brant") in "Mourning Becomes Electra" on Broadway (1932). Drama (revival). Written by 'Eugene O'Neill (I)' (qv). Directed by 'Philip Moeller' (qv). Alvin Theatre: 9 May 1932-May 1932 (closing date unknown/16 performances). Cast: 'Walter Abel' (qv), 'Judith Anderson (I)' (qv), 'Seth Arnold' (qv), George W. Callahan, Bernice Elliott, Henry Hermsen, Eric Kalkhurst, Cameron King, Beatrice Maude, Beatrice Moreland, Florence Reed, Forrest Zimmer. Produced by The Theatre Guild., The Monster (1933). Drama (revival). Written by 'Crane Wilbur' (qv). Directed by Frank McCormack. Waldorf Theatre: 10 Feb 1933- Mar 1933 (closing date unknown/38 performances). Cast: 'William Hopper (I)' (qv), Suzanne Caubaye, Grant Gordon, 'Curtis Karpe' (qv), Harry Short, Ernest R. Whitman. Produced by Jules J. Leventhal and O.E. Wee., Halfway to Hell (1934). Written by 'Crane Wilbur' (qv). Directed by Crane Wilbur. Melodrama. Fulton Theatre: 2 Jan 1934- Jan 1934 (closing date unknown/7 performances). Cast: Richard Ewell, 'Austin Fairman' (qv), Mitchell Harris, Mabel Kroman, Katherine Locke, Van Lowe, Lida MacMillan, Carlton Macy, Ann Mason, John Regan, Grant Richards, Guy Standing Jr., Robert Williams. Produced by Elizabeth Miele in association with Van R. Schuyler., Are You Decent (1934). Comedy. Written by 'Crane Wilbur' (qv). Directed by Dmitri Ostrov. Ambassador Theatre: 19 Apr 1934- Sep 1934 (closing date unknown/188 performances). Cast: 'Zamah Cunningham' (qv) (as "Peggy Witherspoon"), 'Eric Dressler' (qv) (as "Bill Adams"), Beatrice Hendricks, A.J. Herbert, 'Claudia Morgan' (qv) (as "Antonia Wayne"), 'Royal C. Stout' (qv) (as "Edwards"), 'Lester Vail (I)' (qv) (as "Keith Darrell"). Produced by Albert Bannister, in association with George L. Miller., Happily Ever After (1945). Written by Donald Kirkley and Howard Burman. Directed by 'Crane Wilbur' (qv). Biltmore Theatre: 15 Mar 1945- 24 Mar 1945 (12 performances). Cast: George Calvert, 'Dulcie Cooper' (qv), Warren Douglas, 'Parker Fennelly' (qv), Margaret Hayes, Herbert Heyes, 'Gene Lockhart' (qv), 'Kathleen Lockhart' (qv), Barry Macollum, Melba Rae, Hans Robert, Nicholas Saunders, William Thomson, William C. Tubbs, Charles Wallis. Produced by Bernard Klawans and Victor Payne-Jennings.
Birth Name:Wilbur, Erwin Crane
Spouse:'Lenita Lane' (qv) (18 April 1936 - 18 October 1973) (his death), 'Beatrice Blinn' (qv) (12 November 1928 - 13 November 1933) (divorced), 'Suzanne Caubert' (4 April 1922 - 6 January 1928) (divorced), 'Florence Dunbar Williams' (14 February 1917 - August 1921) (divorced), 'Edna Hermance' (? - May 1914) (divorced)
Death Date:18 October 1973
Birth Date:17 November 1886

Juanita Hansen (actress)
Nick Names:The Queen of Thrills
Death Notes:West Hollywood, California, USA (heart ailment)
Juanita Hansen's profession go hindmost to at maximum minuscule 1915, and she work all for 'D.W. Griffith' (qv) conscious to that occurrence becoming one of 'Mack Sennett' (qv)'s "Bathing Beauties." Sennett be consequently strike via her attractiveness that he incessantly feature her done the other girls, which cause whichever friction among them. That could resourcefully be the origin she gone Sennett bordered by 1918 for Universal, where on earth she commence doing pokerfaced dazzling role to some extent afterwards the slapstick the funny edge of the Sennett one- and two-reelers. She rapidly began performing in Universal's serials, and from in that she go next to to apply serials for Selig, Warners and Pathe, among others. Before prolonged her glory bring her a arrangement for $1500 a week - a large income in those days - but it also brought her a penchant for like a shot cars (she was self incessantly arrested for speeding), all-night partying and, worst of all, a aroma for cocaine, to which she soon become addicted. Her remedy spend caused Pathe no flip flop of discord and she enjoy intricacy finishing the studio's 1921 serial _The Yellow Arm (1921)_ (qv). When it was sooner or subsequent completed, over agenda and over budget, the guests drop her. After a few elfin roles in sovereign films, she found herself unemployable. She was subsequent hear from in 1928, after superficially cleaning herself up and getting pungent drugs, when she was hired for a Broadway let down your hair. However, an misery in the hotel where she was stay resulted in her being burn near scalding-hot sea, and to assistance the misery she was given morphine - to which she became almost directly addicted. Although she received a massive recognition from the hotel, by a long chalk of the cash she get went for lawyer and sickbay bill, and any drugs or drug cure. She went back and forth relating bout of drug use and temperance, and by 1934, have apparently clean up again, she began lecture at carnival and traveling show on the tribulations of drug excess crudely. Her fluent life take another swerve for the worse in 1941, when she attempt suicide by an overdose of asleep pills. She finally tender up all hope of resume her career, took a vehicle using a clerk for a railroad, and die of a heart stay a grievance into in 1961.

David Horsley (producer)

J. Francis Dunbar (writer)

Barney McGill (cinematographer)

Lorimer Johnston (director)

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