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Douglas Fairbanks last will and testament

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 9th, 2010
2010
Jul 9

CELEBRITY WILLS

Douglas Fairbanks wills million to his widow

 

 

 

 

By Allan R. Ellenberger

 

Douglas Fairbanks died at his Santa Monica beach house on December 12, 1939. When his will was probated less than a month later, it was learned that the actor made no mention of his former wife, Mary Pickford, bequeathing half his estate, up to $1,000,000, to his widow, the former Lady Sylvia Ashley of England. In his will, Fairbanks wrote:

 

“I respectfully request my beloved wife to devise and bequeath by her last will and testament whatever portion of said property that she receives by virtue of this instrument to such of my heirs and next of kin and for such charitable or education or patriotic purposes as she may decide in her discretion.”

 

Fairbanks added, however, he did not mean to place any restrictions upon her final disposition of the legacy.

 

The will was executed on November 2, 1936, shortly after Fairbanks married Lady Ashley. A considerable part of his property was in United Artists, film producing concern in which Mary Pickford was a partner.

 

There was some conjecture as to whether a reference to Pickford might have been made in a sealed envelope left with the will, addressed to the actors son, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Lawyers said it concerned a $50,000 bequest to his son.

 

Regarding the letter, Fairbanks had written by hand in the will a bequest of an additional 1/10 of property to his son requesting him to distribute the money “to the people and in the proportion as I advise him by the letter addressed to him to be found with this will.”

 

The will, which covered 13 typewritten pages, named as executors the Guaranty Trust Co. of New York, which filed the document, and the Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association of Los Angeles.

 

Among his bequests were $10,000 to the Motion Picture Actors’ Relief Fund of Los Angeles, to be known as the “Douglas Fairbanks Fund;” $10,000 to Charles L. Lewis; $37,500 in a trust fund to Kenneth Davenport of Hollywood and $37,500 to a cousin, Mrs. Adelaide Crombie of Los Angeles.

 

After these specific bequests, the will disposed of the actor’s property in part as follows:

 

Twenty-fortieths of the residue to his wife, not to exceed $1,000,000; 12/40 to his son, not to exceed $600,000; 2/40 to his brother, Robert Fairbanks, not to exceed $100,000. Another brother, Norris Wilcox of New York City, also received 1/40 or a sum not to exceed $50,000.

 

Four nieces – Flobelle Burden, Mary Margaret Chappellett, Letitia Fairbanks and Lucille Fairbanks – also shared in the estate. A trust fund of one-fortieth of the residue, not to exceed $50,000, was provided for each.

 

Fairbanks provided finally that after the bequests are made and the residue divided among his wife and the others who receive their shares in 40ths, all other property remaining be equally divided between his wife and son.

 

An affidavit by his lawyer said that Fairbanks owned all the outstanding stock of the Elton Corp., which in turn owned one-fifth of the outstanding capital stock of United Artists Corp. The shares of the United Artists Corp., representing this ownership, are in the possession of the Guaranty Trust Co. which is one of the largest assets of the estate, and is also trustee of a fund of more than $700,000 which, under the will, passes to the estate. The Bankers Trust Co. is also trustee of a fund of about $500,000 which likewise passes to the estate. There were other valuable properties within New York state, including tangible personal properties.

 

Once the will was probated, it was disclosed in a petition that Douglas Fairbanks left a net estate of $2,318,651.10 (gross valuation of $2,742,060.62) and the executor, Guaranty Trust Co., was granted to exempt the estate from taxes in New York on the grounds that the actor was a resident of California.

 

Total California assets were listed as $1,301,879.58, New York assets at $1,247,452.80, and Pennsylvania assets at $192,728.24. Fairbanks California property consisted of bank accounts and funds held by the Escondido Orange Association amounting to $63,475.44; stocks valued at $500,232.95; bonds, $76,221.37 and the balance in realty holdings in Hollywood, Santa Monica, Los Angeles, Santa Fe, Venice, Westwood and Glendale.

 

The will did not mention Fairbanks first wife, the former Beth Sully, the mother of his son, who at the time was married to musical comedy actor, Jack Whiting. Also not mentioned was his second wife, ‘America’s Sweetheart,’ Mary Pickford.

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‘Arsenic and Old Lace’ at Hollywood Forever

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 9th, 2010
2010
Jul 9

SCREENINGS

cinespia – cemetery screenings season 2010 presents

 Arsenic and Old Lace

 

 

 

hollywood forever cemetery:

6000 Santa Monica Boulevard at gower

saturday, july 10th, 2010

arsenic and old lace

directed by frank capra (1944, 118 mins)

gates 7:30 pm movie 9:00 pm
no reservation necessary
$10 donation tickets available at gate
$5 parking available in cemetery
as a courtesy to other moviegoers: NO TALL CHAIRS!!

 

One of the most beloved and wickedly funny screwball comedies, this is Cary Grant at his best. Two seemingly harmless old ladies are poisoning gentleman callers, as Grant tries to cover up their crimes. Hilarious dark fun from master Frank Capra (It Happened One Night), with a great supporting cast including the incomparable Peter Lorre. Join us for this special screening below (and above) the stars!!.

 

dj carlos nino spins before and after the movie

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Michael Jackson death anniversary

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 8th, 2010
2010
Jul 8

CELEBRITY GRAVES

Recent outpouring of affection at Michael Jackson’s grave

 

 

 

Offerings from Michael Jackson fans left at the entrance of the Great Mausoleum at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California on the first anniversary of his death. (Photos courtesy of Gary L. Hill)

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Gloria Stuart’s first notice!

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 7th, 2010
2010
Jul 7

HOLLYWOOD BEGINNINGS

Gloria Stuart’s first newspaper notice

 

 

 

The following blurb is the first mention of Gloria Stuart in print taken from the Los Angeles Times dated

February 19, 1932 – 78 years ago!

 

“That motion-picture producers are ‘scouting’ amateur theatricals was indicated yesterday when two players recently with Gilmor Brown’s Play Box Theater in Pasadena were given contracts by the films. The players are Gloria Stuart, who received a long-term contract, and Onslow B. Stevenson, who was given an optional contract with Universal productions.

 

“Miss Stuart, a resident of Santa Monica, attended University of California and appeared in several college plays.”

 

And the rest is history!

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Gloria Stuart’s 100th!

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 6th, 2010
2010
Jul 6

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

Gloria Stuart celebrates her 100th birthday!

 

 

 

 James Cameron, left, Gloria Stuart, Suzy Amis and Francis Fisher blow out the new centenarian’s birthday candles in Beverly Hills on July 4. Credit: The Stuart family.

 

By Irene Lacher
Los Angeles Times

 

In the 1997 movie “Titanic,” Gloria Stuart‘s elderly character, Rose, looked back on her doomed romance aboard the legendary ship decades earlier. Rose may not have had much luck with that affair, but behind the scenes, Stuart was cooking up another love story of her own when she played Cupid between the film’s director, James Cameron, and cast member Suzy Amis, now husband and wife for 10 years.

 

“Gloria brought Jim and me together,” Amis told the crowd at Stuart’s private birthday party Sunday. “She saw our whole love happen, and it blossomed in front of her eyes. And on Jim’s birthday, she called me and said, ‘Suzy, it’s somebody’s birthday, and you need to call him.’ She guided and held my hand through the whole thing. She’s my dear, dear friend. And Gloria, when I grow up, I want to be just like you.”

 

A beaming Stuart celebrated her 100th birthday in front of more than 100 family members and friends, including “Titanic’s” Frances Fisher, Shirley MacLaine and Tom Arnold, at the Ace Gallery in Beverly Hills, at a party hosted by Cameron and Amis. Stuart was born July 4, 1910, in Santa Monica into one of California’s early families, which can trace its roots to the gold rush town of Angels Camp.

 

“My grandmother comes from a very tenacious family,” media entrepreneur Benjamin Stuart Thompson said later. “I think what has driven her is her joie de vivre. If a person is excited about life, they find joy and opportunities at every turn.”

 

Indeed, for one day, the gallery was filled with examples of Stuart’s creativity – decades of her fanciful oil paintings and bonsai trees she donated to the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens. Family members read aloud her current work in progress — an illustrated book titled “Flight of Butterfly.”

 

And, as Cameron noted in hailing “a century of Gloria Stuart,” her prolific-ness doesn’t stop there.

 

“Gloria’s so alive, and her creativity, her artistry and the sparkle in her eyes is a challenge to all of us to live as fully and richly as she has and will continue to do as she heads into her 101st year,” said the director, who’s converting the blockbuster into 3-D for re-release in April 2012, the 100th anniversary of the ship’s sinking. “We all love you, Gloria, and not just because about half of the people in this room are the direct or indirect product of your loins.”

 

Cake, anyone?  

 

Click here to read story online

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James Waller Somers at Hollywood Forever

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 6th, 2010
2010
Jul 6

HOLLYWOOD FOREVER CEMETERY

James Waller Somers: “He Knew Lincoln”

 

 

 

By Allan R. Ellenberger

 

It’s surprising the number of Hollywood Forever Cemetery residents that have a unique connection to Abraham Lincoln. There is Senator Cornelius Cole, a close friend who visited Lincoln on the day of his assassination. And Joseph Hazelton, who as a boy, was present at Ford’s Theatre on that night. Now we profile James Waller Somers, who knew Lincoln in his boyhood in Urbana, Illinois and continued that friendship into adulthood.

 

James Waller Somers, the son of Dr. Winston and Mary (Haines) Somers, was born at Mt. Airy, North Carolina on January 18, 1833. His father was a physician, and in 1843, moved his family to Urbana, Illinois. Somers became friends with Abraham Lincoln while in Urbana, one of the towns of the Eighth Judicial Circuit where Lincoln once practiced law.

 

“My recollections of Lincoln,” Somers said, “date back to 1843 or 1844, when as a boy ten years old, I arrived in Urbana, Champaign County, Illinois, with my father’s family from North Carolina. Urbana was then a mere village, containing a population of perhaps 150 persons. The Courthouse was a double, one-story frame structure, unpainted, and of primitive architecture. It was in the center of the village, surrounded by about an acre of ground enclosed. It was in this court yard I remember first seeing Mr. Lincoln. He was tall and ungainly but of very striking appearance.

 

“It was court week, and he was striding across the yard toward the Courthouse, in that peculiar manner characteristic of him, a sort of meditative shambling gait, head drooped forward and his hands behind him. He was lank and angular, with a massive head, covered with a short, stubby, dark-brown hair, brushed up in front, without any pretense of parting in the middle or anywhere else. He had a high forehead, thick lips, cheek bones of an Indian-like prominence, and a wart on the side of his face near his large nose, which was eliminated from his later photographs by the retoucher’s brush. His face was smooth shaven. His ears, hands and feet were abnormally large and his arms unusually long.”

 

At the age of 21, Somers studied law in the office of his uncle, William D. Somers, with whom he became a law partner after being admitted to the bar in 1856.

 

“When I was studying law with my uncle, Judge Somers, Mr. Lincoln frequently came into our little one-story office, near the hotel, to swap stories with ‘Uncle William,’ who was himself a good story-teller, though Lincoln far surpassed him as he did everyone one else. He used to sit on a rush bottomed chair with his feet on the rung, telling stories, hour after hour. He frequently laughed more heartily than anyone else, but the laughter was neither boisterous nor vulgar. His whole body swayed with merriment, wholesome and infectious, and his eyes would sparkle with amusement, while he ran his fingers through his close cropped hair, always standing on end.”

 

Originally a Whig, Somers helped to organize the state Republican Party and actively campaigned for Lincoln in 1858 and 1860. Henry Clay Whitney called Somers “the promising orator of our Circuit of the young men.”

 

By 1860 Somers had developed serious hearing problems which made the practice of law difficult. He wrote to Lincoln seeking advice on his future career. Lincoln responded on March 17, 1860 recommending that he resettle in Chicago where Whitney had offered him a partnership. Lincoln closed saying that his advice was given, “with the deepest interest for your welfare.” A week later Lincoln wrote a recommendation:

 

“My young friend James W. Somers I have known from boyhood and I can truly say that in my opinion he’s entirely faithful and fully competent to the performance of any business he will undertake.”

 

In 1861, President Lincoln appointed Somers to a position in the Department of the Interior, which led to a distinguished career of 25 years of public service in Washington

 

During the Civil War, Somers received news that two of his nephews, both minors, had been forced to join the Confederate Army in North Carolina and were then captured as prisoners of war in Elmira, New York. Somers asked Lincoln to have them released and sent to Urbana, with the assurance that they would not take an active part in the war.

 

“I was cordially received at the White House,” Somers said, “in his old familiar way. After talking a few moments on home affairs I stated my errand and he at once wrote an order to Adjt.-Gen. Fry of the War Department, directing the release of the young men and upon their taking the oath of allegiance to send them to their uncle in Urbana. In a few days my cousins were on their way West and did not again take up arms against the North.”

 

When Somers retired from the Department of the Interior in 1895, he moved to San Diego where his brother resided. In 1903 he moved to Hollywood to live with his niece, Mrs. H. G. (May) Condee at her home on what is now Cherokee Avenue. There the library was adorned with some of Somers valuable collection, which included various portraits, busts and autographed letters from Lincoln.

 

On June 6, 1904, at 7:25 pm, Somers was returning from the post office and was crossing Hollywood Boulevard at Whitley Avenue when he was struck and killed by an electric cable car. At that intersection there was a strong arc light and it was supposed that Somers confused it with the headlight of the electric car and, not being able to hear the warning bell, crossed the track just as the car came upon him.

 

 

 

Above is the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Whitley Avenue where J. W. Somers was killed by an electric cable car.

 

J. W. Somers funeral was held at the home of his niece and internment was at Hollywood Cemetery.

 

 

  

Above is the grave of James Waller Somers at Hollywood Forever Cemtery. It is located in Chandler Gardens (Section 12), just a short distance behind the J. Ross Clark family mausoleum.

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Gloria Stuart’s 100th Birthday

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 4th, 2010
2010
Jul 4

100th BIRTHDAY

Gloria Stuart

 

 

  

AMERICAN ACTRESS

 

BORN: July 4, 1910, Santa Monica, California

 

 Click below to watch Gloria Stuart in…

 

The Old Dark House (1932)

 

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‘Easy Rider’ at Hollywood Forever

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 2nd, 2010
2010
Jul 2

SCREENINGS

cinespia – cemetery screenings season 2010 presents

 Easy Rider

 

  

hollywood forever cemetery:

6000 Santa Monica Boulevard at gower

saturday, july 3rd, 2010

easy rider–a tribute to dennis hopper

directed by dennis hopper (1969, 109 mins)

gates 7:30 pm movie 9:00 pm
no reservation necessary
$10 donation tickets available at gate
$5 parking available in cemetery
as a courtesy to other moviegoers: NO TALL CHAIRS!!

 

Easy Rider was Hopper’s directorial debut, and its meteoric success single handedly changed the film industry forever. Filled with sun-drenched psychedelic photography, elegant, energetic editing and a colorful cast of hippies, call girls, bikers and rednecks. It is one of the most authentic portrayals of the era.

 

Maverick, outlaw, photographer, director, actor: Dennis Hopper’s life was as colorful and wild as his film career. Whether raving like a madman, or lucid, cold and calculating, Hopper always handled his roles with aplomb. Join us under the stars in a tribute to this remarkable man.

 

dj dante carfagna spins before and after the movie

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‘Eclipse’ ahead of ‘New Moon’

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 1st, 2010
2010
Jul 1

ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

‘Eclipse’ opens ahead of ‘New Moon’ in major foreign countries

 

 

 

Ben Fritz
Los Angeles Times
July 1, 2010

 

Foreshadowing a potentially huge overseas box-office performance for the latest installment in the fan favorite vampire romance series, “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” had a bigger opening day Thursday than its predecessor “New Moon” had last November in 13 major and mid-sized foreign markets.

 

The most successful opening was in Russia, where “Eclipse” sold $3.9 million worth of tickets on its first day. Other strong showings for the third “Twilight” movie included Italy, where it collected $3.2 million, Brazil with $2.4 million, and Spain with $2 million.

 

In Belgium, “Eclipse” beat ”Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” to record the biggest opening day of all time with $735,000.

 

“Eclipse” grossed an estimated $16.2 million in total from 21 international markets on its first day, according to distributor Summit Entertainment. By this weekend, it will be playing in a total of 42 foreign countries.

 

“New Moon” grossed a total of $413 million overseas, $117 million more than in the U.S. and Canada.

 

Click here to read at Los Angeles Times site

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King Kong Returns!

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Jul 1st, 2010
2010
Jul 1

HOLLYWOOD ATTRACTIONS

King Kong roars back to life at Universal Studios Hollywood — in 3-D

 

 

 

The giant gorilla will save studio tour tram riders from an attacking pack of T. Rex in a new attraction created by Peter Jackson.

 

By Noelene Clark
Los Angeles Times
June 30, 2010

 

For more than 45 years, the defining experience for Universal Studios Hollywood has been the venerable tram tour through the production facilities and backlot. Now the ride is being brought to the 21st century by filmmaker Peter Jackson and the world’s most famous gorilla.

 

Beginning Thursday, the tram will take a detour that transports guests to Jackson’s version of Skull Island, where they will be attacked by dinosaurs and rescued by the three-story-tall silverback gorilla.

 

The new attraction, “King Kong 360 3-D,” replaces the original, which burned in a June 2008 fire that also destroyed several famous backlot sets.

 

Instead of reviving the 1986 attraction, which brought visitors to 1970s New York to face off with a 30-foot animatronic ape, Universal decided to revamp it based on Jackson’s 2005 remake of “King Kong.” The Academy Award-winning director of “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” jumped at the chance to resurrect a character whose tragic end doesn’t lend itself to a sequel.

 

Click here to continue reading the Los Angeles Times article

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