Vintage Movie Resources
Motion Picture News Blue Book (1930) — Erle C. Kenton 🇺🇸
Vintage Advertisement — Movie Director Erle C. Kenton
Motion Picture News Blue Book (1930) — Edward H. Griffith 🇺🇸
Vintage Advertisement — Movie Director Edward H. Griffith
Motion Picture News Blue Book (1930) — William A. Seiter 🇺🇸
Vintage Advertisement — Movie Director William A. Seiter
Motion Picture News Blue Book (1930) — Leo McCarey 🇺🇸
Vintage Advertisement — Movie Director Leo McCarey
Motion Picture News Blue Book (1930) — Victor Heerman 🇺🇸
Vintage Advertisement — Movie Director Victor Heerman
Motion Picture News Blue Book (1930) — Richard Wallace 🇺🇸
Vintage Advertisement — Movie Director Richard Wallace
Motion Picture News Blue Book (1930) — Irving Cummings 🇺🇸
Advertisement — Movie Director Irving Cummings
Motion Picture News Blue Book (1930) — Delmer Daves 🇺🇸
Advertisement — Movie Director Delmer Daves
George Raft — Answers Twenty Pointed Questions (1933) 🇺🇸
George Raft is the fourth star to cooperate with Movie Classic to give you a “cross-examination” interview.
Gary Cooper — Answers Twenty Frank Questions (1933) 🇺🇸
Movie Classic asks the Big Silent Man from Montana twenty “impertinent”, and he fires back twenty “pertinent” answers — about everything from his “romances” to his health.
Walter Connolly — Home’s Where His Art Is! (1934) 🇺🇸
Hollywood or Broadway, it’s all the same to Walter Connolly if his roles are good.
Walter Connolly — Average, But Wonderful (1935) 🇺🇸
Walter Connolly, the man who makes bad pictures good and good ones better.
Will Rogers Talks About Pigs, Politics and Movies (1933) 🇺🇸
Nowadays, writers simply don’t interview Will Rogers. It’s so much better to catch him unawares.
Joan Crawford — Answers Twenty Pointed Questions (1933) 🇺🇸
Joan Crawford is the third star to cooperate with Movie Classic to give you a “cross-examination” interview.
Myrna Loy — Beautiful and Sinister (1932) 🇺🇸
Hollywood has coined a new word — “Loytering.” It means “looking beautiful and sinister at the same time.”
Anna Sten — Learning English (1932) 🇺🇸
Anna gave up her career as Soviet Russia’s most famous screen actress to start her screen life anew.
Sylvia Sidney — Busy Denying Rumors (1932) 🇺🇸
Sylvia can’t understand how people misunderstand her so — or how they have the heart to keep her so busy denying rumors.
Constance Bennett — Always Knitting (1932) 🇺🇸
Connie, the tease, is all but asking, “What do you THINK I’m going to do next?”
Genevieve Tobin — Vamping Maurice (1932) 🇺🇸
It’s funny how Genevieve Tobin fooled Hollywood. The folks always thought she was just a bit cool — and then she vamped Maurice Chevalier in One Hour with You.
Joan Marsh — Temporarily Idle (1932) 🇺🇸
Maybe to give the good old executives a scare, Joan is announcing that she’s on the fence between marriage and career.
Madge Evans — (Not) Dangerous, Sombre and Sirenish (1932) 🇺🇸
If she really did have the love-life that the gossip writers claim she does, says Madge, she would look like this — dangerous and sombre and sirenish.
Karen Morley — Aloof and Dreamy-Eyed (1932) 🇺🇸
Karen Morley’s poise isn’t a pose; she has always had it.
Cecelia Parker — The New Serial Queen (1932) 🇺🇸
Cecelia Parker took the hurdles for stardom so neatly in “The Jungle Mystery,” that the next serial on her active program, was just as easy as eating a piece of apple pie
Tala Birell — Hollywood’s Latest Viennese Sensation (1932) 🇺🇸
Tala Birell has poise and bearing and an exotic appeal — qualities which have placed her right in the front-line trenches of stardom.
