Hollywood Beat: Hammett, By Proxy

Hammett and cigarRemember when I expressed some worries about the LAVA literary salon being able to hang on in Musso & Frank?

I’m not psychic, I was just reading the writing on the wall. And I read it right. (I didn’t have any doubts, by the way — it was adios, M&F, as loud as a gunshot in an empty room.)

Fans of the LAVA talks now get to try out the Los Angeles Athletic Club as the new venue for speakers on the literary LA of yesteryear.

First talk up will be on April 27, on no less than Dashiell Hammett, with none other than Hammett’s granddaughter at the mic. If you’re lucky, Hammett’s daughter Jo also will make the scene. Check it out if you’re in the neighborhood.

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Two-Gun Bob: Norris Chambers RIP

I’m running behind on memorial notices, as pals of mine have been kicking off right and left, it seems. And even though I did a Memorial March theme last year, noting the anniversaries for the deaths of Lovecraft and ERB, as well as Steve Tompkins and of course Charles Willeford, I thought I might skate through this month without any additions to the ranks.

Not to be. Norris Chambers passed away on the 22nd — at least he made it to the age of 95.

I was lucky enough to meet Norris when I was once again in the thick of Robert E. Howard activities a few years ago. On the obit link above you’ll find a small bit I wrote about Norris, involving REH writing a fan inquiry to Edgar Rice Burroughs on how to pronounce the name Tarzan, and there’s also a much longer interview — even if you aren’t interested in Howard or Texas history, check out the little intro I provide, which features one of the most Hammett-like observations I ever chanced across.

The interview with Norris was conducted largely by Leo Grin for his magazine The Cimmerian, though I was on scene to toss in some questions. But that year, 2006, Howard’s centennial, Leo was in the midst of doing an issue each and every month to celebrate — a feat never before done in Howard studies, and one that I imagine will never be repeated. (And it’s not as if the issues contained mindless filler — among other highlights, Steve Tompkins discovered that no less than George Orwell had read Howard. As I always say, if you ever get a chance to add any issues of The Cimmerian to your collection, jump on them.)

Since Leo was buried under that brutal production schedule, he asked me to edit the interview transcripts with Norris, do the intros. Sure, I was glad to help out. And now, in tribute to Norris, you can read the material in the Memorial Section on the Two-Gun Raconteur blog devoted to REH.

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Hammett: And the Oscar Goes To

Arliss as Disrali

As I was moping around the web during Oscar season this year a bit of information attracted my attention. I’d no doubt seen the same stats when I looked over Oscar info the previous season, but no bells rang at that time. This round, though, I thought, Hey, wait a minute. . . .

To cut to the chase, it jumped out at me that George Arliss won the Best Actor Oscar for playing the title role in Disraeli — Arliss in costume (and proto-punk hairdo) pictured above. Only the third time the Oscars had been handed out, covering films from 1929 and 1930. Arliss was nominated not only for Disraeli but also for the movie The Green Goddess — and both Maurice Chevalier and Ronald Colman, of the Jack Benny radio show, also got double nominations during that ceremony.

So what? you may well ask — 1930 is a long time ago, and Arliss, while big in his era, isn’t someone who comes up a lot even when I’m talking about who won an Oscar and who should have won an Oscar.

But 1930 is the year a novel titled The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett saw print, on Valentine’s Day, hot on the heels of the serial appearance in the pulp Black Mask from September 1929 to February 1930. (I’m going to presume that the magazine appeared on the newstands a month or so before the technical publication date, a pretty standard practise, otherwise you could have saved your money to just buy the book, if you were picking up The Mask mostly for Hammett.) And although 1930 is indeed a long time ago, some of us consider The Maltese Falcon as current as current can be.

In Chapter XI The Undersized Shadow you’ll find the line “He looked at a theatre-sign in front of him on which George Arliss was shown costumed as Shylock” — as I mention in the tour book, pages 144-45, a professor named William Godschalk used that bit of information, along with a few other clews, to pinpoint the action in the novel to December 1928, when Arliss was actually in San Francisco playing Shylock.

(Also, some of you know that the version of the novel serialized in Black Mask differs from the Knopf first edition — over 2000 textual changes from one to the other. The ref to Arliss is the same in both texts.)

Still thinking So what?

Yeah, okay, I concede this isn’t earth-shaking revelation stuff.

But I thought it was interesting that by happenstance Hammett name-checked Arliss in a book released on February 14, 1930 and then on November 5 the actor would pick up an Oscar. Today the hype around an Oscar win is enormous — I’m guessing the publicity machine wasn’t wound as tight in 1930. But it would be like, oh, Ace Atkins in a new Spenser novel typing in the name Ben Affleck or Marky Mark and next Oscar season his random name-drop cops top acting honors. Probably doesn’t mean anything, but what are the odds?

And as with all Oscar info, it’s an excuse to ruminate on fame, fleeting or otherwise. I can see the day when Arliss might be best known for being mentioned in The Maltese Falcon — which isn’t a bad way to be remembered.

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Tour: The Last Cheap Walk

Atop Stockton tunnel with tour book

A guy hauling in from England just gave me a month’s advance notice, so if you want to join him, the next walk open to anyone who wants to show up is set for Sunday April 7, noon start at the n.w. corner of the library, four hours, the usual.

After that, what has been the usual for a few years will change. I’m jumping the price per person from $10, the rate that’s held since 1992, up to $20 per person.

As many of you know, the Hammett Tour isn’t really intended for general tourist types. I don’t do it several times a day, every day. Never have. And if only one or two people happen to show up on a given walk, cool. Big groups, little groups, whatever. (I do require a minimum of at least one person, though, I don’t do the walk just by myself.)

But unfortunately the city of San Francisco just did away with free parking on Sundays. Too greedy, in my opinion, but this means I’ll have to pay for a garage during the walk, plus I have to recognise that gas will never go down in price, only up — so only one or two people at $10 just won’t cover basic expenses.

If I don’t plan to get rich with the tour, and I haven’t been thinking about it the last 35 years, I’m not eager to start losing money with it, either.

Now, for people who don’t want to shell out $20 each, my advice is to grab a copy of the tour book — you can even find it used — and use it to track down all the sites. In the photo above shot on top of the Stockton tunnel during a walk, you can see me using it as a visual aide. Maybe not as much sheer fun as having me lead the way, but nonetheless it is effective.

And in addition to the tour book alternative, I’m going to talk to a guy about doing an App version, which is vaguely appealing in a here-and-now Tech Frisco sense. (Actually, if I like the Hammett Tour App, I was thinking, hmmmm, maybe the next version of The Literary World of San Francisco should be an App, not a book.)

You can still get a group of your pals together for a Tour by Appointment for a set price. If I happen to be coming into town on a specific day anyway, I’m willing to negotiate lower rates if you only have a few people. And I’ll offer some tours here and there at the new rate — a few in May, some more in September and October, others if people are rolling in and ask to do it with at least a month’s advance notice.

Whatever is open to the public will be on the Current Walks page, and my basic idea at this point is to shoot for 40 years on the mean streets. I think I can make that. 50 years, while a better milestone, just might be too much to ask of my feet.

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Hammett: And Machen

Around Xmas, as I was in the midst of that big reread of H. P. Lovecraft I alluded to a couple of times, I got the urge to do yet another reread on the Dyson stories by Arthur Machen — for me, for some reason, Machen is evocative of Xmas, with that whole London vibe he conjured up. And who knows, maybe there abides some ghost of a memory from my copy of The Three Impostors, which I’ve had since the mid-1970s, inscribed on the half title, “To Vee from Carlito/Christmas 1924/Venice, California” — a Knopf yellowback Machen, second printing dated August 1923.

Dyson is the Machen equivalent of Sherlock Holmes, more or less, and is featured in the novel The Three Impostors — the version in the novel a bit more a parody of the idle London bookman in search of esoteric adventure than the Dyson of the stories “The Red Hand” and “The Shining Pyramid.” It always seems as if there are more Dyson adventures than these, but like all Machen they blend in the mind with his other stories, with his autobiography. If you get into Machen, then you want the whole works. If you don’t get into Machen, well, it’s your loss, but then he’s not for every taste.

I only had time to reread the Dyson exploits this time, and was struck by a bit in the novel. There is a missing object, “a curious coin” — a gold Tiberius:

“I know about it. It is one of the comparatively few historical objects in existence; it is all storied like those jewels we have read of. A whole cycle of legend has gathered round the thing; the tales goes that it formed part of an issue struck by Tiberius to commemorate an infamous excess. You see the legend on the reverse: ‘Victoria.’ It is said that by an extraordinary accident the whole issue was thrown into the melting-pot, and that only this one coin escaped. It glints through history and legend, appearing and disappearing, with intervals of a hundred years in time, and continents in place. It was ‘discovered’ by an Italian humanist, and lost and rediscovered. It has not been heard of since 1727, when Sir Joshua Byrde, a Turkey merchant, brought it home from Aleppo, and vanished with it a month after he had shown it to the virtuosi, no man knew or knows where. And here it is!”

“Put it in your pocket, Dyson,” he said, after a pause. . . .

Reading that capsule summary of the history of the mysterious coin, I couldn’t help but wonder if Hammett had read it at some point and been inspired, even sub-consciously, to come up with something similar of his own, and landed on the idea of a jewel-crusted gold statue of a falcon from Malta.

Certainly Hammett was familiar with Machen, and gives him the nod for the idea behind the church cult in The Dain Curse, Chapter XII The Unholy Grail:

“They . . . rigged up a cult that pretended to be the revival of an old Gaelic church, dating from King Arthur’s time, or words to that effect.”

“Yes,” said Fitzstephan; “Arthur Machen’s. But go on.”

Machen was bigger on the Holy Grail than Chandler was on sleep.

While today Machen may not be on the radar of most readers, in the 1920s he himself became a cult of sorts, the many Knopf yellowback editions making him something of a bestseller, and a writer known to other writers. I once did a small piece for the fanzine Crypt of Cthulhu where I pointed out how Anaïs Nin wrote about how she and Henry Miller discussed the Machen novel The Hill of Dreams in bed, after sex. Trust me, in the years before Hammett began writing his own novels, Machen was generally well-known, and I’d bet that Hammett read more than just one or two of his books. And of course also ended up with Alfred A. Knopf when his own novels went to hard covers.

My own collection of Machen’s work is somewhat ragtag, acquired to have reading copies on hand. I have thirteen of the small hardbacks Knopf published in yellow boards. None have dustjackets. On some the blue pastedown title label on the spine is still blue, on most it is sun-faded to a brownish grey, on one it is scraped off entirely. Some are first edition Knopfs, but if I landed a fourth or sixth printing, that served.

As mentioned above, the novel The Three Imposters, which also includes “The Red Hand” to fill out the volume, is marked as a second printing. But my Knopf of The Shining Pyramid is a 1925 first (I also have the 1923 Covici-McGee The Shining Pyramid edited by Vincent Starrett, on my Starrett shelf).

It had slipped my mind that the Knopf of Pyramid once belonged to a circulating library in the Mark Hopkins Hotel, which made it that much more interesting an item when I bought it — personally, I enjoy stamps and bookplates in used books. No question that at least this one copy, among no doubt hundreds more, was floating around San Francisco when Hammett was living here:

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Two-Gun Bob: Contemplating the Ivory Tower

As I was suggesting a few weeks ago, I was pretty sure Brian Leno wouldn’t be able to resist buying Conan Meets the Academy, the new collection of essays, all by academics, on Robert E. Howard’s most popular creation. If ever a guy was in the grip of the Completist Impulse, it’s Brian.

Of course, buying the book and then actually reading it are proving to be two very different things. . . .

I was talking to Brian on the horn when he first got the copy in and was glancing over it. He landed on the “essay” about stylometrics (you don’t even want to know), filled with graphs, charts, word counts. Brian sighed, and muttered under his breath: “My god. You’d have to be one dusty son-of-a-bitch sitting in a study somewhere to want to read something like this. . . .”

The plan now is to skip the stylometrics piece entirely, but Brian is attempting to read some of the other contents. He’s grumbling, but promises that if he can slug his way through, he’ll do some kind of review.

Meanwhile, he noticed a review by another Brian — Brian Murphy, one of the former bloggers on The Cimmerian website, who dove into Academy on his personal blog.

This Brian once gave my two critical books on REH some nice words. He doesn’t seem as impressed with the new collection, but while you’re waiting for the other Brian to come through with some opinions, you can see what New Brian thinks about the essays flung screaming from the ramparts of the fabled Ivory Tower.

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Hollywood Beat: Lorre Noir

Peter Lorre woodcut

If you dig noir (and who doesn’t?) and appreciate the art of woodcuts, check out Loren Cantor’s blog Woodcuttingfool straight from Hollywood — the image above is of the great Peter Lorre in Fritz Lang’s M, and the blurb on Lorre is must reading. While I try to stay reasonably conversant with serial killers, I don’t believe I had ever heard that the Hillside Strangler almost kidnapped Lorre’s daughter, but let her go when he found out she was Pete’s offspring. Cool.

Even if that is complete urban myth, I’d believe it.

Loren also has a nice bit on Jack Palance. Plus there’s Karloff. And Bacall. And many more. Surf over and knock yourself out.

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Sinister Cinema: Morgan. . . Morrrgggaaannnnnnnn. . . .

I know that at least one of my regular blog readers waits to watch The Walking Dead until after the season wraps and the DVD/Blu Ray sets appear — which is the way I watch Dexter — so let me do a SPOILER alert:

If you didn’t see last Sunday’s episode titled “Clear” (Season3Ep12), skip this post till later, or just skip this post:

(And — to put a little more SPOILER space in between the opening and the main text — no, I’m not thinking about doing regular commentary on specific episodes of TV shows.  Sure, it’s tempting, but I’ve got a long queue of posts that I’ve been meaning to do for almost a year — even some Walking Dead posts. . . .)

“Clear” is of interest here because it features the return of Lennie James as Morgan, which ties into some of the commentary done for Cheese Theatre’s showing of The Last Man on Earth, starring Vincent Price as another, earlier guy named Morgan.  I don’t know if the use of the name Morgan in the original comic book series was meant as a nod or in-joke to that Ur Zombie movie, but I’m sure that’s the way the TV crew has been using it.

I mentioned on Cheese that the title credits for Season One of Walking Dead feature the turning doorknob as Morgan’s zombie wife tries to get into the house, which had happened previously in the Vincent version with his dead wife and his doorknob. “Clear” references this by having the word “doorknob” prominently placed among the graffitti on the apartment wall. (Shaun of the Dead does a quick nod to the Vincent doorknob scene, too.)

(And by the way, I figure the use of the graffitti “Edgar turned” atop “Wallace turned” on a fence probably is a ref to Edgar Wallace, the original writer of King Kong, but have no idea if it is anything more than a throwaway. . . . However, if a giant ape shows up later in Walking Dead, remember you heard about it here first.)

If you caught that broadcast of Cheese, you’ll recall that host Bill Arney specifically talked about how Vincent Price roamed around picking up dead zombies (or vampires, or mutants, whatever they were exactly), throwing them into a big pile and burning them. Hey, guess what Lennie James is doing in “Clear”?

Yep, to “Clear” means he kills off some zombies, picks them up, takes them to a big pile of previously burnt zombies and immolates them, too. Like Vincent, he has big cannisters of gasoline to feed the flames.

Got to love it, and thought I’d better mention it, since it didn’t come up in The Talking Dead afterwards — who would have thought that Cheese Theatre would be more on top of zombie trivia? But it was.

(Meanwhile, my quest continues to get my pal Morgan “The Morgman” Holmes to pull a ring tone from The Last Man on Earth, maybe the part where the lead zombie is wailing, “Morgannnnn. We’re goinggggg to killll you, Morrrgggaannnnn. . . .” If my name was Morgan, I wouldn’t pass that up.)

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Sinister Cinema: Oscar Nominees

Oscar winnersCan’t let the Oscars slip past without some sort of mention, here on one of the Homes on the Web for Oscar Nominee Dashiell Hammett. . . .

Per my track record of recent years, I have not yet seen a single nominee for Best Picture on the big screen or even the little screen, and most of the list I’ll probably never catch. Out of the current pack, I guess Argo is the one that interests me most.

(It was only in recent weeks that I finally Netflixed both versions of True Grit, the one with The Duke because I happened to wander into Ridgway, Colorado on a trip last year, where the early scenes with the courthouse and hangings were shot — then the remake out of idle curiosity.

(The Jeff Bridges version had good moments, but if you weren’t familiar with the original film you wouldn’t know what the hell was supposed to be going on. And let’s face it, there was only one Strother Martin.

(Talk about an actor who deserved an Oscar, or at least a nomination, I’d put Strother at the top of the list. But then, I suppose his body of work puts him above Oscar and into Icon stature. Better to be an Icon than just an Oscar statistic.)

I’ll be watching the ceremony anyway, to see Jean Dejardin (one hopes abetted by Uggie, both pictured above after last year’s win) as a presenter, plus the tribute to James Bond is the sort of thing I enjoy (these days, I’d rather sit through a Bond documentary, such as the excellent Everything or Nothing, than go to the latest reboot — no Skyfall, thank you, no Quantum of Solace, though I’m pretty sure I’ve seen every other Bond movie in a theatre, and not to say that they were all good. . .).

Plus there’s always a chance of the great rogue moment, such as Mickey Rooney heckling Steve Martin from where they stuck him way up in a balconey. Mickey is as close to a one-man history of Hollywood as you can get anymore, so more power to him.

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Hammett: Valentine Again

Eighty-three years ago today Alfred A. Knopf officially released a novel by Dashiell Hammett titled The Maltese Falcon. As I noted last year, the sickest Valentine’s Day romance ever — but that makes it all the better, if you like your love stories shaded in the blacks and grays of noir. . . .

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