Vintage Movie Resources
Phyllis Haver — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
The very mention of Phyllis Haver’s name is synonymous with comedy
Douglas MacLean — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Douglas MacLean’s first starring vehicle established him firmly among the celebrities
Leatrice Joy — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
One of the Southern beauties who now ornaments the screen is Leatrice Joy
Gareth Hughes — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Norman Kerry — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Norman Kerry came to the cinema without any stage experience whatsoever
Gloria Joy — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Gloria Joy is today the foremost theatrical personality of adolescent age
Jane Novak — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Jane Novak’s marked ability to register refinement in all her acting has been one of the principal reasons for her rapid rise to stardom
Wanda Hawley — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Fontaine La Rue — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Fontaine La Rue has had many thrilling experiences in pictures, having been attacked and bitten by a lion, and once a snake tried to crush her and had to be cut loose from her body
Marguerite De La Motte — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Theodore Kosloff — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Probably no motion picture actor has a more varied record for screen characterizations than Theodore Kosloff
Raymond Hatton — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Raymond Hatton is one of the cleverest character actors in filmland
Bessie Love — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Bessie Love, with her lustrous brown eyes and her golden hair, is known to millions of theater goers
Harold Lloyd — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
When one hears the name of Harold Lloyd one gets a mental picture of achievement and success
Louise Lorraine — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
The absolute ingenuousness of her personality and its charming lack of sophistication brought Louise Lorraine rapidly up the “line” professionally
Hope Hampton — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
The “Lone Star State” has sent several stars to twinkle in motion pictures, Houston having the honor to enter one of the peachblown variety — Hope Hampton
Barbara La Marr — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Barbara La Marr, the vamp, had been vamped
Alice Lake — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
It was when one of the first big motion picture companies opened a studio in Brooklyn that Alice Lake became curious as to the possibilities of the silent drama
Elaine Hammerstein — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Born with a decided theatrical “pull,” Elaine Hammerstein refused to use it, preferring to make her own way up the ladder of fame
David Butler — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
David Butler was showered with offers from motion picture producers, and as a result gave up the speaking stage for film work
Kenneth Harlan — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
“Lessons in Love” served to bring him to the receptive notice of photoplay audiences
Ella Hall — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
Ella Hall’s remarkable beauty is further augmented by a rare histrionic ability to interpret any kind of emotional role called for before the motion picture camera
Corinne Griffith — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
One sunny day, when the film colony of Los Angeles was young but sprightly, Corinne Griffith appeared in that city and attracted the attention of a number of screen folk
J. Warren Kerrigan — Blue Book of the Screen (1923) 🇺🇸
J. Warren Kerrigan is one of the picturesque actors on the screen
