Night of 100 Stars features Silent Screen Actresses

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 159

  • @theresaholguin699
    @theresaholguin699 3 года назад +6

    Beautiful graceful elegant and classy ladies. We don't have this in Hollywood today

  • @larrygevirtz30
    @larrygevirtz30 8 лет назад +78

    It's marvelous that they were able to reappear some 60 years after the end of the silent film era.

  • @starbuono3333
    @starbuono3333 8 лет назад +47

    May the all rest in peace !

  • @randyroe5494
    @randyroe5494 2 года назад +9

    Motion Picture/ Silent Film pioneers. Paved the way for todays stars in a new industry. I love them all…..
    They were classy, elegant & beloved by their fans in that era as well as today.

    • @ConnieHeartsValentino
      @ConnieHeartsValentino 5 месяцев назад

      They accomplished so much with very little technology, yet they were enormously inventive and creative. What an inspiring and exhilarating time that was!

  • @msymsed
    @msymsed 14 лет назад +43

    What Bernadette said was THANK YOU FOR HANGING AROUND TILL SOUND CAME ALONG AND HANDING US A FULL BLOWN INDUSTRY...it was a compliment...in other words, those ladies are owed a debt of gratitude for the creation and development of the movies. And none more than Lillian Gish, in my opinion. Now she is, was, and will forever be the epitome of a STAR.

  • @bernardrubin5816
    @bernardrubin5816 2 года назад +3

    How wonderful they were and still
    So glamorous many years later.

  • @Leanashe23
    @Leanashe23 14 лет назад +14

    So happy I discovered this gem of a video! I'm a real admirer of Lillian Gish.

  • @ninianmacmillan-keith7435
    @ninianmacmillan-keith7435 10 лет назад +73

    How GRACIOUS they all were. Grace seems to be lacking in today's so called stars.

    • @ConnieHeartsValentino
      @ConnieHeartsValentino 5 месяцев назад

      I don't even bother with today's Hollywood. They are such a disgrace compared to what their forbearers accomplished.

  • @MontagZoso
    @MontagZoso 7 лет назад +29

    How wonderful seeing these women being paid tribute! They were still beautiful too. I only wish this had been longer than just a couple of minutes. I could have watched hundreds of them coming out...

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  13 лет назад +24

    @astralagosto Did you know that Leatrice Joy passed away only two months after this special aired? It was wonderful that they were able to give her a finally tribute before she passed on.

  • @1JuliusStreicher
    @1JuliusStreicher 4 года назад +16

    Colleen Moore and Vilma Banky were still alive in 1985. It would have been wonderful to have seen them here too.

    • @dennman6
      @dennman6 Год назад +4

      Vilma Banky had very little to do with the show business world after she retired from silent pictures. She remained a very private person except to a small inner circle of close friends for the rest of her life. In fact she had become so reclusive in later years her death wasn't reported by the Los Angeles Times until a year after she died at age 90 in 1991.

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 Год назад +3

      @@dennman6 I heard she was upset at the that no one bothered to meet her in her final years

    • @ConnieHeartsValentino
      @ConnieHeartsValentino 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@dennman6 Yes, she became reclusive because even her friends seemed to have forgotten her. I can't imagine why.

    • @ConnieHeartsValentino
      @ConnieHeartsValentino 5 месяцев назад

      @@raptorfromthe6ix833 I wonder where her "friends" were.

  • @zaktop
    @zaktop 14 лет назад +17

    Bernadette played famed silent movie actress Mabel Norman in the Jerry Herman musical "Mack & Mabel" which I suspect is why they had her do this introduction.

  • @deanadiedrich9304
    @deanadiedrich9304 8 лет назад +51

    These beautiful glamorous dolls don't exist anymore.....Hollywood in its supreme hey day..... now we're stuck with not talent ....grab the money and run trash!

  • @corp1114
    @corp1114 13 лет назад +10

    Those beautiful elderly ladies managed to stay in great shape! This video is wonderful.

  • @gnirolnamlerf593
    @gnirolnamlerf593 5 лет назад +16

    Sadly, Leatrice Joy, who seems so energetic and joyful here, died within two months of the airing of the show. The other wonderful ladies lived another 8 to 12 years, would you believe.

  • @93Vet
    @93Vet 12 лет назад +33

    Clara Bow would have been in there, too, had she not passed away in 1965 at age 60. She is my all time fave silent screen star.

    • @maureenmcdonough7018
      @maureenmcdonough7018 4 года назад +4

      93Vet Mine too I think she was very talented and beautiful. She went through a lot in her short life but gave a lot of joy back. I hope she found peace. God bless her soul

    • @theresaholguin699
      @theresaholguin699 3 года назад

      93Vet mine too l just love Clara

    • @josephharnett5075
      @josephharnett5075 3 года назад

      They were all great but Clara Bow was best of all IT!!!

    • @ahyan6681
      @ahyan6681 2 года назад +1

      My favourite is Mary Pickford but Clara Bow is my second and Garbo is third, Swanson fourth

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 Год назад

      I’m surprised Colleen Moore didn’t make it there but she was still involved with holly wood

  • @tousamis
    @tousamis 13 лет назад +7

    incredible tribute, so happy to see them in their old days !

  • @NkotbJoeyJordanFan
    @NkotbJoeyJordanFan 14 лет назад +11

    Wow Leatrice Joy looked really happy, and so energetic for a woman of 92 years of age.

  • @troybirch
    @troybirch 13 лет назад +5

    What a fantastic video! One of the great things about the internet is that we are able to share things like this that would be lost or hidden away. I only hope more and more interviews with greats like these are posted for all of us!

  • @archangele1
    @archangele1 11 лет назад +34

    These ladies, whether they were young or at the age they were when this was broadcast, had class. There is a certain elegance and class that just sets these actresses of the silent film era apart. I love watching them in the classic films made prior to the 'talkies'.

    • @TakersMissy
      @TakersMissy 6 лет назад +7

      I agree 100%! It's just like Norma Desmond said: "We had FACES then", and the silent stars didn't need words to tell their stories! Bring 'em all back - oh, if only we could.

    • @secondsightcinema3957
      @secondsightcinema3957 3 года назад +2

      @@TakersMissy You may already know this book, but if not, it’s worth seeking out a used copy, like I found on Amazon. Four Fabulous Faces, a coffee table book. The four: Swanson, Garbo, Crawford, Dietrich. Came out in the early ‘70s, I think, during the “nostalgiacraze.” Gorgeous photography.

  • @Glimpses2024
    @Glimpses2024 5 лет назад +10

    Thank you for posting this! I grew up watching silent films, and I loved watching the development of their careers, as trailblazers of early film. Lillian Gish is one of my heroines!

    • @flaky9999
      @flaky9999 10 месяцев назад

      Isnt Lillian Gish racist? She was in one of the most racist films so I’m just concerned.

  • @fran_1978
    @fran_1978 12 лет назад +12

    This is truly a magical Hollywood moment. Thank you so much for sharing.

  • @jettrink7510
    @jettrink7510 5 лет назад +14

    When they say Billie Dove was the prettiest lady in the world... it was true.

    • @tlc6756
      @tlc6756 3 года назад +3

      I knew one of her grandsons and he had that same unique gorgeous complexion, and dark brown eyes. Of course, Billie married an extremely handsome man with the same qualities so the looks just kept flowing in that family. If you watch any of Billie's interviews in her later years, its easy to see what a gracious, classy and beautiful lady she was on the inside too.

    • @akrenwinkle
      @akrenwinkle 3 месяца назад +2

      @@tlc6756 Billie Dove was stunning, and brown eyes photographed best in the earliest days of film. Stan Laurel, I read, had eyes so light blue that they disappeared.

    • @tlc6756
      @tlc6756 3 месяца назад

      @@akrenwinkle that's interesting, I never knew that about the blues eyes. Thanks for the fun fact.

    • @akrenwinkle
      @akrenwinkle 3 месяца назад

      @@tlc6756 You're welcome. This from IMDB's page about Stan Laurel:
      His light blue eyes almost ended his movie career before it began. Until the early 1920s, filmmakers used black-and-white Orthochromatic film stock, which was "blue blind". Hal Roach cameraman George Stevens (who later become an acclaimed producer/director) knew of panchromatic film and was able to get a supply of it from Chicago. This new film was sensitive to blue and recorded Laurel's pale blue eyes in a more natural way. Stevens became Laurel's cameraman on his short films at Roach Studios.

  • @TaraMoriah
    @TaraMoriah 15 лет назад +2

    That was beautiful.Film gives us a chance to relive life together.

  • @willlbeheresam1119
    @willlbeheresam1119 2 года назад +1

    This video is a treasure, most of them had vanished for decades before this night.

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  15 лет назад +17

    For a woman who was about 92 at the time, I think she looked quite good. You're not implying that she should look like she did in the 20s are you? Billie Dove doesn't look the same either but I think all the ladies looked lovely that night. This was a once in a lifetime event and it was fabulous to see them all. :o)

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  16 лет назад +6

    The 1985 version of Night of 100 Stars premiered on television on March 10, 1985 so I would think that it would've been taped a few weeks to a month or so prior to that.
    Leatrice Joy died May 13, 1985. The special may have been one of her last public appearances.

  • @austinpink9018
    @austinpink9018 2 года назад +1

    Beautiful, beautiful ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @mnilsson2704
    @mnilsson2704 3 года назад +1

    Grand old ladies from the silent movies. I love them

  • @redstone51
    @redstone51 Год назад +1

    What a shame Louise Brooks was not available to attend!!!🙏💝😥

  • @ms.sonshine8878
    @ms.sonshine8878 7 лет назад +8

    Beautiful ladies.

  • @fran_1978
    @fran_1978 13 лет назад +5

    This is extremely moving. I loved it!

  • @peterrice7739
    @peterrice7739 2 года назад +3

    These women were the original Golden Girls of the 1920s.

    • @alexsander6107
      @alexsander6107 Год назад

      where was dorothy gish,??

    • @dennman6
      @dennman6 Год назад +1

      @@alexsander6107 She died in 1968 at age 70.

  • @mmbr01rrf
    @mmbr01rrf 13 лет назад +6

    @ladyvee7110 These "Nights of100 Stars Plus" were a new creation in 1982. Money was usually raised every year for the Actor's Fund with each show on the Street doing/donating one performance's profits to the Fund. Alexander Cohen came up with the idea of celebrating the 100th Anniv. of the Fund on TV/Hildy writing the show. Started out asking less than 100 people to donate time, got such a HUGE response- they called it 100Stars Plus-I'm REALLY old, I was there. That's what I meant.

  • @astralagosto
    @astralagosto 13 лет назад +5

    Hi ladyvee7110,
    Thank you for putting this Night of 100 Stars special featuring these silent film actresses. it's great to see Leatrice Joy since she's hardly mentioned when silent films are brought up.
    A fact: Leatrice Joy influenced Katharine Hepburn and Bette Davis to become actresses. They were fans of Leatrice when they were teenagers.
    Leatrice Joy, one of the best actresses of the silent era and one of the most beautiful.
    RIP 1893 - 1985

  • @swagatron9477
    @swagatron9477 3 года назад +2

    They all dressed so nice. They remind me of a older lady I know. No matter the day or the weather she’s always dressed so nice with her hair done.

  • @astralagosto
    @astralagosto 13 лет назад +4

    @ladyvee7110 Hi ladyvee, You're welcome. I found out this info about Leatrice in a book about silent stars by William M. Drew. It has profiles of 10 silent film stars that they public does not know about as much, like Leatrice. It was published in 1989 and it a valuable historical record of the silent era. In it, it reveals Leatrice knew Katharine Hepburn because they live in Hartford, Connecticut. How like comes back in a full circle: Katharine living in the same town as her idol Leatrice.

  • @TakersMissy
    @TakersMissy 11 лет назад +10

    I downloaded this film right after I first saw it, and it STILL gives me goosebumps and tears seeing this classic grande dames of the silent screen!
    The great 13-part documentary series by David Gill & Kevin Brownlow, "Hollywood: A Celebration of the Silent Screen" (1980) is where I first "met" Leatrice Joy and Billie Dove, plus many other silent actors, directors, stunt men, etc., in their twilight years. It's PRICELESS; most of those interviewed died just a few years after its 1980 release.

  • @allysonkho2017
    @allysonkho2017 Год назад

    They all looked great.

  • @popland1977
    @popland1977 3 года назад +1

    Brilliant that Bernadette introduced them as she played Mabel Norman on stage

  • @bubbadon7540
    @bubbadon7540 3 года назад +2

    Back when actors could ACT!

  • @flix2view
    @flix2view 13 лет назад +2

    Good clip! thanks for sharing this

  • @ericmaine
    @ericmaine 10 лет назад +25

    Gish was 92 here, not 100. She was born in 1893 (though she lied about here age for many years)

  • @rayito2005
    @rayito2005 11 лет назад +6

    Esto es de 1985 y ellas ya estaban veteranas de eso ya pasaron 28 años.
    mi favoritas actrices del Cine mudo son Clara Bow, Louise Brooks y Dolores del Rio.

    • @ferzach8687
      @ferzach8687 4 года назад +1

      A mí clara Bow, coleen Moore, Joan Crawford y Mary pickford

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  13 лет назад +5

    @Messylin Well, you're correct but Garbo had always been a recluse. She would've been honored countless times but she didn't care for stuff like that. But then again, her reclusion and mysteriousness added to her mystique as well.

  • @fakerating
    @fakerating 2 года назад

    Fantastic clip!

  • @staclynn72
    @staclynn72 13 лет назад +5

    This is great! Thanks for putting this online.

  • @ardiffley-zipkin9539
    @ardiffley-zipkin9539 2 года назад

    Well done ladies !

  • @ivancervi1825
    @ivancervi1825 5 лет назад

    Quando lo guardo mi viene la pelle d'oca....

  • @Whartonfarmboy59
    @Whartonfarmboy59 13 лет назад +7

    The numbers by all the actresses name were not there age. That was their number on the list of 100 Plus Stars.

  • @chezamoonangelaiemma497
    @chezamoonangelaiemma497 Год назад

    Wow this is awesome 🌹

  • @tlyoung88
    @tlyoung88 14 лет назад +1

    We didn't need words. We had FACES!!
    We are big. It's the movies that became small. (and I'm typing this while watching it on a small little screen on my computer.) Billy Wilder must have been psychic.

  • @RadioLaPrincess
    @RadioLaPrincess 7 лет назад +35

    Hard to believe that the one who looked sick, Laura LaPlante lived until 1996 and Leatrice Joy died not long after. Both Billie Dove and Lillian Gish also lived into the 1990's.

    • @drsunshine1959
      @drsunshine1959 7 лет назад +21

      Laura wasn't ill. In fact, she'd had an accident just prior to this broadcast which necessitated her use of a wheelchair. She lived not very far from me, and she did not spend the rest of her life in that chair.

    • @Themanwhocameback2
      @Themanwhocameback2 5 лет назад +8

      @@drsunshine1959 Glad to hear. She looked great, and sported the same attractive hair do she had in the 20's.

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 Год назад

      @@drsunshine1959 can you tell us any story about her

    • @akrenwinkle
      @akrenwinkle Год назад +1

      ​@@raptorfromthe6ix833 Laura LaPlante was a contestant on Groucho Marx's "You Bet Your Life" quiz show. It's probably still up on RUclips.

    • @raptorfromthe6ix833
      @raptorfromthe6ix833 Год назад

      @@akrenwinklewas there any more recent footage/interview like from the 70s and the 80s

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  15 лет назад +2

    @PlaceForAnEcho Who's to say Bernadette Peters didn't? She may have not been the best presenter ever but I think she did a good job but we're all entitled to our own opinion. But I'm glad that you appreciate this segment of the show for what it was which was a means to honor these mostly forgotten actresses. I'm glad that Hollywood gave them that time to shine again.
    Did you know that, for example, Leatrice Joy passed away only a few months after she appeared in this special?

  • @agornath1
    @agornath1 Год назад +2

    I wish they would've included Louise Brooks.

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  13 лет назад +2

    @mmbr01rrf You were there? Wow. :)
    Thanks for the fantastic info about this show. I really appreciate it ;).
    This was an awesome special. Literally a once in a lifetime event.

  • @salcarusomusic
    @salcarusomusic 13 лет назад +4

    WUNDERBAR ... Real class .

  • @mmbr01rrf
    @mmbr01rrf 13 лет назад +1

    @ladyvee7110 This wasn't an awards show- it was a benefit for the Actor's Fund. It had started in 1982, with the 100th Anniversary of th Actor's Fund and the benefit show done then. Stage actors have ALWAYS done yearly benefit peformances of current shows for the Fund. They almost fought to be included in these.

  • @flaky9999
    @flaky9999 11 месяцев назад

    I wish this show existed 40 years before so we could see more of Theda bara’s face even tho she was quite private during the after the end of her career.

  • @Irishmodel78
    @Irishmodel78 13 лет назад +8

    Gloria Swanson passed away two years earlier.

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  13 лет назад +1

    @astralagosto ...You're quite welcome and thanks for the great info!

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  15 лет назад +2

    @myrnaloysboy I had no idea that at some point Fay Wray had lost her marbles. And why her out of all people? LOL. Since she was somewhat of a contemporary of the actresses featured, I doubt she would've been a good choice. The goal of this segment was for new Hollywood to honor actresses of the silent era and to reintroduce them to present day audiences. Possibly a current Hollywood actress of the time(consider this special was done in 1985) would've been a good choice.

    • @bambinoandmore46
      @bambinoandmore46 3 года назад

      Sad to read about Fay Wray..she gave some great interviews in the Silent Film. Series on British tv

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  16 лет назад +1

    Glad you enjoyed it.

  • @albanybeardguy
    @albanybeardguy 15 лет назад +3

    Laura LaPlante and Lilian Gish hardly changed. Leatrice Joy, on the other hand, is glammed up beyond recognition.

  • @kathyh4804
    @kathyh4804 3 года назад +1

    When actresses had class

  • @rhyfeddu
    @rhyfeddu 3 года назад +1

    Word was that a singer named Eleanora Fagen renamed herself Billie Holiday after her favorite actress Billie Dove.

  • @fastfootedone
    @fastfootedone 12 лет назад +5

    and Mary Pickford

    • @mustakim7876
      @mustakim7876 6 лет назад

      @@francoismarcil8182 mary pickford vs lillian gish

  • @kenlee1416
    @kenlee1416 5 лет назад +1

    When is the studio going to release on Blu-ray or DVD, a properly remastered/restored ''The Wind'', in which Lilian Gish stars?
    Warner Archives has 3 or so Billie Dove early talkies movies on DVD-R. Her silent films released are quite scant, best known is prob ''Black Pirate''.

  • @PlaceForAnEcho
    @PlaceForAnEcho 15 лет назад

    Very understandable, I agree.

  • @dolcevitausa
    @dolcevitausa 12 лет назад +4

    they should bring a program like this back to television in place of some of the reality programs...

  • @coffeehigh420
    @coffeehigh420 11 лет назад +1

    I think she did! ROFLOL ( i actually did roll on the floor but only cause i was on fire temporarily.... then i laughed out loud but only because i was able to save my life)

  • @KpopLAX
    @KpopLAX 3 года назад

    Hubba hubba! 🤠

  • @alexsander6107
    @alexsander6107 Год назад

    i wish barbara la marr were alive to be there
    along with lone bright and dorothy gish 💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜

  • @nerd_in_norway
    @nerd_in_norway 3 года назад

    Godesses!

  • @PlaceForAnEcho
    @PlaceForAnEcho 15 лет назад

    They are the main focus, I think they're stunning and regal women, though most have passed now, but they did so much that cinema is indebted to them. I would have suggested a presenter who appreciates film film preservation and film history. A historian or even Martin Scorsese would have been a good pick. I feel a disconnect with the woman. I'm not bent out of shape by it, but I have a BA in cinema and I adore the silent era. Lillian Gish has a space in my heart.

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  14 лет назад

    @mimzy84 Actually, she was 92 at the time.

  • @albanybeardguy
    @albanybeardguy 15 лет назад

    Oh, I never said she looked bad, but she was quite done up. In her Kevin Brownlow interview she's more recognizable. Now on the other hand, as I said I don't think Laura LaPlante's features altered a bit- they ages but she looks remarkably the same. It was great to see them, and I doubt that Hollywood would bother doing the same to (for example) the remaining 1930's actresses.

  • @stanko1071
    @stanko1071 5 лет назад

    Laura La Plante is from Croatia🇭🇷🇺🇸

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  15 лет назад +1

    It would be nice if they did but Hollywood's standards of entertainment have changed drastically unfortunately. Getting legends of the silver screen while they are alive and paying homage is not important beside the occasion Kennedy Center Honor or Memoriam in the middle of an Oscar telecast.
    Check out(if you haven't already) "Happy Birthday Hollywood Part 1 1987", there is also Part 2 and Part 3. These are the kinds of programs I miss.

  • @imgonewiththewindfab
    @imgonewiththewindfab Год назад

    Florence Lawrence never got the recognition as the America's "first movie star"

  • @COMMUNISTPHILOSOPHY
    @COMMUNISTPHILOSOPHY 11 лет назад +3

    'All the glory in the world fits in a kernel of corn.'
    José Martí

  • @93Vet
    @93Vet 12 лет назад

    "industries" lol

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  15 лет назад

    @PlaceForAnEcho Like I said, I don't think she was. But that's neither here nor there. Maybe the fact that I cared more about who was being presented than who was doing the presenting made me not get all offended by what she was saying. If there was anything to even take offense of. All I cared about were these great actresses on the stage. But I guess some people care more about other things. I was just thrilled to see them.

  • @Bambi_Harris_Author
    @Bambi_Harris_Author 11 лет назад

    hehe, it would have been interesting had she said that

  • @Phoenix85006
    @Phoenix85006 Год назад

    What were the numbers after the actresses names representing?

  • @starbuono825
    @starbuono825 Год назад +1

    Do the numbers that appear on the screen of each actress represent their age ? 😂😂😂 JK !!!!

  • @jeffpagan7735
    @jeffpagan7735 3 года назад +1

    They were too late for louise brooks

  • @ferzach8687
    @ferzach8687 4 года назад

    I would love to see Louise Brooks, Eleonor boardman or coleen Moore, they we're very famous too

  • @janborrowitz
    @janborrowitz 10 лет назад +9

    Leatrice Joy died only one month after this show :-/

    • @fran_1978
      @fran_1978 10 лет назад +7

      That's so sad to learn :-( She looked so full of life here, so radiant and happy. It makes me so glad, though, that she was given a last and well deserved recognition to her amazing talent and bravery on screen before it was too late. I'm a brand new fan of Ms. Joy, and I think she was certainly one of a kind, always exciting to look at on screen. May she and all the legendary ladies of the silent screen, who were the TRUE pioneers, rest in peace.

    • @TTatitalks
      @TTatitalks 7 лет назад +1

      janborrowitz super sad

    • @drsunshine1959
      @drsunshine1959 7 лет назад +4

      In an interview around the same time, Leatrice said, "when you come from the south, you're born with a little something extra!"

    • @pa3997
      @pa3997 6 лет назад +4

      Well at least she was Happy and healthy until her death at an advanced age. I rather want to die that way, not suffering a long and devastating illness...

  • @Magnetron33
    @Magnetron33 5 лет назад

    Just watched a clip of Laura LaPlante on Groucho Marx Very sweet and charming

  • @SrAJones-ns7sx
    @SrAJones-ns7sx 2 года назад +1

    Where's Gloria?

    • @dennman6
      @dennman6 Год назад +2

      This show is from 1985 and Gloria Swanson had died in 1984.

  • @shawnwest6341
    @shawnwest6341 5 лет назад

    What are those 158 etc numbers appearing next to their legendary names?

    • @ss-iq5zy
      @ss-iq5zy 5 лет назад +2

      They're counting the stars as they appear. Billie Dove is the 158th star to appear. Laura LaPlante, the 159th.

  • @January.
    @January. Год назад

    Unfortunately, Bernadette Peters didn't enunciate better and speak louder. I couldn't understand what she said about Leatrice Joy.

  • @eggbertinkabod1121
    @eggbertinkabod1121 5 лет назад

    BIKE LIFE IN PHILLY

  • @ladyvee7110
    @ladyvee7110  13 лет назад +4

    @Messylin Are you serious? Garbo never ever attended stuff like this...lol.

    • @mustakim7876
      @mustakim7876 6 лет назад

      Why No Mary Freakin Pickford . SHE THE AMERICA SWEET HEART GIVE HER A CAMERA IN HER GRAVE AND GIVE THE SPEECH TO HER .

  • @AH72S
    @AH72S 4 года назад +1

    Pena que faltou Greta Garbo A Divina

  • @stphncrmr
    @stphncrmr 16 лет назад

    I noticed that Leatrice Joy died in May 1985 and this special was shot in 1985. When in 1985 was this shot?

  • @DeepScreenAnalysis
    @DeepScreenAnalysis 13 лет назад

    @ladyvee7110 - therein lies the tragedy of it. She was the greatest star of them all.

  • @chucksellers8422
    @chucksellers8422 3 года назад

    Why is this so short?

  • @spencerfrankclayton4348
    @spencerfrankclayton4348 Год назад

    Where was Mary Pickford?

    • @dennman6
      @dennman6 Год назад +2

      Mary Pickford had been in her grave for 6 years at the time of this show. Pickford died at age 87 in 1979.