Vintage Movie Resources
David Belasco on Motion Pictures (1914) 🇺🇸
In an exclusive interview with the Moving Picture World the great master of visualization tells of his impressions and expectations
Robert J. Connelly — The Screen Children’s Gallery (1914) 🇺🇸
Helen E. Connelly — The Screen Children’s Gallery (1914) 🇺🇸
Miss Helen E. Connelly, aged six, is a most bewitching little lady with soft brown eyes and an air of artistic languor
Edna Hamel — The Screen Children’s Gallery (1914) 🇺🇸
Edna, who still has two years to travel before entering her ‘teens, is, in spite of her tender youth, a theatrical veteran, having begun her artistic career as the “Baby” in Francis Wilson’s popular success, “The Bachelor’s Baby.”
“Andy” Clarke — The Screen Children’s Gallery (1914) 🇺🇸
“Andy”, who made the “Andy” series famous, was called to his first interview straight from the camera and in full costume, the latter consisting of a grandfather’s high hat, a pair of long pants and a black mustache.
Adelaide Lawrence — The Screen Children’s Gallery (1914) 🇺🇸
Interviewed Adelaide Lawrence, aged seven, in the Kalem studio. Adelaide was chaperoned but not coached by both her father and mother, indeed, much of the biographical data were gathered from Adelaide while she was seated on her mother’s knee.
Matthew Roubert — The Screen Children’s Gallery (1914) 🇺🇸
Moving Picture World wishes to pay a well-deserved tribute to the clever and gifted little boys and girls who have helped with such skill and sincerity to make the motion picture true to life.
Rex E. Beach — The Spoilers (1914) 🇺🇸
Author of “The Spoilers” sees filmed story passed by Chicago censors, and gives an interesting interview to world representative.
Stuart Erwin — Not the Handsome Hero Type (1931) 🇺🇸
Charles Farrell — Charlie’s Impression of the Right Kind and Wrong Kind of Girl (1931) 🇺🇸
Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle — Roscoe the Great (1916) 🇺🇸
Gertrude Thanhouser and Edwin Thanhouser — The Thanhousers are Back on the Job (1915) 🇺🇸
Naomi Childers — Future Tense (1921) 🇺🇸
The Early Years of Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle (1971) 🇺🇸
Ethel Clayton — Sans Grease Paint and Wig (1913) 🇺🇸
Ethel Clayton is trying to keep from thinking about small-pox. For whatever awful thing she thinks about long enough, she gets.
Arthur V. Johnson — Sans Grease Paint and Wig (1913) 🇺🇸
We were in the midst of a fragile repast of cornbeef and cabbage, green corn and iced tea in the Lubin studio’s dining room, when Arthur V. Johnson found us.
Rubye de Remer — The “Once-Upon-a-Time” Girl (1919) 🇺🇸
Once upon a time there lived a poet whose heart was a song and whose mind was a well of wisdom and whose soul had been tried thru the Lethean waters of many experiences.
