Clara still looked great and her voice was great. It is such a shame that scandal and people who had used her - including Paramount - ended what could and should have been a long career in talkies. Clara Bow was so special and it's a shame that more people don't know about her. I love those old movies.
Andrew Television: I own "Wings" and "Children of Divorce" on BluRay. Children of Divorce is genuinely one of the most saddest movies ever. I love how I can cry to a silent film just by the pure acting... It surprises me how many silent films have made me upset to tears. It's honestly satisfying to have a tear roll down my cheek from one.
Andrew Television: Watch "Kid Boots" if you can find it. It's a very funny movie. Oh and DEFINITELY Mantrap! SUCH JOY! I bought a bundle for it. And a bootleg. And another bootleg! I own a few of the same movies because they're always in different quality.
Andrew Television: It's missing it's middle and a lot of scenes, but there is "Get Your Man" on RUclips. I want a time machine... I really really want to preserve all these movies of the past!
Andrew Television: I'm glad we took over a person's comment, just to fandom the most special actress to touch my heart. I keep her to myself... Sadly though, they're apparently in works of the movie version of "Runnin' Wild". I'll probably be in the theater and be the only person there. If, they don't screw it up.
When talkies came in producers were hypersensitive about voices. Very mild accent, and not even in all words, IMO (spent a lot of time in Brooklyn growing up in the metro area). Mental health issues drove her from acting. Died a recluse at 60 from heart disease.
Clara Bow’s voice was never a problem, she made no secret of the fact she was born in Brooklyn. Her voice suited her personality. Clara just didn’t enjoy the process of making talkies but the talking films she made were successful. She worked extremely hard during the silent era and she was ready for a rest. She probably didn’t initially intend to retire but it gave her more time to spend with her family
I am reading High Noon. It is about the movie. Gary Cooper was in a few of her movies. According to the book she didn't like the sound of her voice. That is why she stopped making movies.
@@billywhizz19 If what I read was correct, she had a very thick Brooklyn accent which didn't jive with her Hollyood image. Nowadays nobody would care but in 1928 when movies went from silent to talking, "The number one movie actres is actually a slumdog from the ghetto of Brooklyn? Well I never!" Both the studio and Clara herself hated her own voice which is why she spiraled into a deep depression. What a shame
She was so cute. Especially at 2:45 when she laughs. She hated doing sound pictures, but she still looked good doing them. Some silent actors and actresses couldn't make it.
for 3 years running Clara Bow was the no. 1 star in the world, a tough act to follow, it was in her third year she made her first talking film The Wild Party, a cleaver college story, she was fantastic but her confidence soon drifted into complete collapse, that fueled all the rumors that over the last 80 years have been blown to mythical proportions, she was one of the Greatest actresses of all time
She's so adorable! Such a beautiful and talented actress, it seems her beauty shines from the inside out. I think she has a lovely voice too, so unfortunate she couldn't of starred in more films because of her overwhelming nerves and insecurities regarding it... she was great.
Agreed. I've seen some photos without the beestung lipstick and she looked great, but this is a nice, organic view of her. She was very charismatic and would be a total babe in any era, I think.
I really think she was too far ahead of her time. Her talent is immediately obvious to a viewer today - she could easily step into a starring role now.
She was very modern looking and there was nothing wrong with her voice - I know very little about her but it seems that her career was a bit like John Gilbert's - undermined by the powers that be in Hollywood and destroyed by the studio system.
They did the same to her lover, Bela Lugosi. Incidentally, Bela starred as a creeper producer who tries to assault an actress, as in initiate her to the casting couch. The year was 1925, The Midnight Girl. So we have proof that this stuff been going on since the beginning of Hollywood. And it wasn't just women that they propositioned. A man turned them down, he was blacklisted!
She seems to have the most natural line delivery out of all the actors. It's really apparent when she's talking to the actor playing her father. His acting feels rather stiff and wooden, while hers is far more free and fluid, and just, yeah, natural. More modern, like what we would expect from an actress today.
Thanks for posting the wonderful IT Girl, Clara Bow, in one of her talkies. Looks like she trying to tame Gilbert Roland there. I agree with some users on this forum that Clara Bow's voice matched her "happy-go-lucky" personality. She didn't sound like the Broadway-trained actors who flocked to Hollywood to make a go at sound films. Totally modern.
Actually, according to what I've read, even with the advent of sound, most of Clara's talkie pictures were actually quite successful at the box office. In fact she remained one of the top five box office draws through 1930, a year after her first talkie, the 1929 film "The Wild Party". And another thing, this was her second to last film, and her last two were actually produced by Fox instead of Paramount, because the former offered her a 2-film contract after the latter dropped her in 1931.
She's great! And the sound recording is so BAD. I love these transitional films. Such a tragedy that Bow was given TWO WEEKS to learn how to act in talkies and get rid of her Brooklyn accent -- Garbo got two years and didn't have to shed her accent -- Clara Bow was abused and exploited in films from the beginning to the end of her career. Shameful Hollywood history.
I've read that those Hollywood studios had elocution coaches who wanted their actresses to talk like someone like Katherine Hepburn or a NY stage actress. I doubt the studios would ever have gotten Clara. Bow, a wild girl from a poor background, to adopt such an affectation.
Wow! What an actress! The only thing I ever had the chance to see her in was "It". I got it right away. She was a spit fire. I can totally see why Bela Lugosi was drawn to her. Pity she was too wild for him. And that there's no pix or video of them together. Bela gave her a photo of himself grabbing Hortense's breast in Arabesque. Hilarious! He signed it to her name, and was sold a year ago by her son. I rarely like "trendy" actresses but I look fwd to watching more of her films. She seems so modern. And lovely.
Yes - Life magazine did a piece -as well as newsweek,and all the major publications, LA Times had a large headline..She was not as forgotten as many would leave you to believe
I can’t believe j haven’t seen her in talkies that k remember. Love her raciness, she’s adorable especially when she says, “I was practicing in case I ever get married”!😂😂
(cont) Finally, she just walked out on Hollywood. Rex Bell, a cowboy-actor of the silent screen and she married, raised two sons, and lived peacefully in the Nevada desert. Clara had a long-standing heart problem which took her away from us all too soon. David Stenn's "Clara Bow: Runnin' Wild" is required reading for anyone wanting the factual story of Clara's life and career.
"...that he hasn't blamed me FAW." That Brooklyn accent that reminds me of Streisand in Funny Girl. But Clara was beautiful and had a pleasing voice for talkies. Sad that her later life was plagued with psychological issues.
Yeah there's all sorts of pre-code stuff in this film. She has a baby out of wedlock, the baby is killed in a fire, she becomes a prostitute to make ends meet, and visits a gay bar while touring New York.
Overnight, movie sets went from noisy, free-wheeling places where stagehands hammered, bands played, directors spoke, and actors could improvise, to a place of tomb-like silence in which everyone was a slave to a stationery mic. Her nerves couldn't handle it. Her voice recorded well and her accent fit the parts she played (shopgirls, not princesses.)
I live in Northern NY, And when I think of a strong Brooklyn accent, it's not what Clara Bow sounds like in this clip. The studios were just ready for a new IT girl and decided to blame it on talkies.
Nah, Clara Bowe just hated doing talkies: "I hate talkies. They're stiff and limiting. You lose a lot of your cuteness, because there's no chance for action, and action is the most important thing to me. But I can't buck progress. I have to do the best I can."
Many still believe Clara's career in talkies was a failure, but it was actually very successful. She retired after completing a lucrative 2-picture deal with Fox because she simply didn't enjoy making films anymore.
Her hairstyle sort of look like those loose early to mid 1960s hairstyles. She had a classic face but she also had a modern appeal to her and I love her voice
@TinaTwice It was also due to the fact that she was uneducated. If you read interviews with her, it's a lot of improper grammar and whatnot. Of course, I think most people (including myself) thought it added to her charm. It was almost like a foreign accent which most of us find very peculiar in a brilliant manner. The tonal quality of her voice was so unique and rich...She was so beautiful and inspiring to people like me (and obviously yourself) who appreciate such raw talent.
She’s fantastic in these talkies, especially considering she was only doing them for money to retire to a ranch with her husband & raise a family. She wanted out of Hollyweird. For a while she found peace away from the limelight until her husband’s political ambitions started putting her back in a spotlight she didn’t want & led to her mental break. “I have learned that pictures take away more than they give. It not only doesn’t bring you happiness, but you find it has robbed you of all the other things that might have given you happiness.” - Clara Bow
Life is so unfair. I was a Gary Cooper fan as soon as I saw him in cowboy movies when I was little boy back in eh 50's. High Noon cemented him as my Favorited. I later thought Ingrid Bergman and Grace Kelley were two of the most gorgeous women I ever saw. I now find out he also had an affair with Clara, another woman I consider one of the loveliest of all. It is just not right for him to have had ALL of those women I lusted after and I had none. It's jsut too wrong.
I agree with you. They were so handsome. Gilbert Roland, John Gibert, Conrad Nagel, Robert Montgomery, Chester Morris, John Barrymore, Lionel Barrymore, Rudolph Valentino, Wallace Reid, Charles Farrell, Douglas Fairbanks and Jr., Gary Cooper, Clark Gable, Fredric March, Herbert Marshall and so many others. They're the man that i dream of. But unfortunately, there aren't like them in these days 😞.
@@plutoshearer3650 Yes, they took all the idols and smashed them. The Fairbanks. The Gilberts. The Valentinos. They trampled on what was divine. And they threw away the gold of silence.
Wow -- that's Gilbert Rowland! And he's wearing a pair of real vintage Levis! Mr Rowland was still a creditable action hero fifty years after this. But why did beautiful Clara leave us?
She was perfect in this.
"Why were you whipping him?"
"I was practicing in case I ever get married"
There was nothing wrong with her voice! She was such a talented actress! It seemed to just be so natural to her. She was beautiful.
Clara still looked great and her voice was great. It is such a shame that scandal and people who had used her - including Paramount - ended what could and should have been a long career in talkies. Clara Bow was so special and it's a shame that more people don't know about her. I love those old movies.
I got a fair collection of them. Wish I was rich enough to own a lot more rarities and a second Autograph of hers...
Andrew Television: I own "Wings" and "Children of Divorce" on BluRay. Children of Divorce is genuinely one of the most saddest movies ever. I love how I can cry to a silent film just by the pure acting... It surprises me how many silent films have made me upset to tears. It's honestly satisfying to have a tear roll down my cheek from one.
Andrew Television: Watch "Kid Boots" if you can find it. It's a very funny movie. Oh and DEFINITELY Mantrap! SUCH JOY! I bought a bundle for it. And a bootleg. And another bootleg! I own a few of the same movies because they're always in different quality.
Andrew Television: It's missing it's middle and a lot of scenes, but there is "Get Your Man" on RUclips. I want a time machine... I really really want to preserve all these movies of the past!
Andrew Television: I'm glad we took over a person's comment, just to fandom the most special actress to touch my heart. I keep her to myself... Sadly though, they're apparently in works of the movie version of "Runnin' Wild". I'll probably be in the theater and be the only person there. If, they don't screw it up.
Her acting and personality was way ahead of the times. Incredible.
Her voice wasn't bad at all and her acting style is more like todays. I didn't really hear a Brooklyn accent either.
Her thick new york accent is clear even to me, a foreigner. Great natural realistic acting style tho.
Do you know what a Brooklyn accent sounds like?
When talkies came in producers were hypersensitive about voices. Very mild accent, and not even in all words, IMO (spent a lot of time in Brooklyn growing up in the metro area). Mental health issues drove her from acting. Died a recluse at 60 from heart disease.
@@rexrabbiteer Obviously not.
What a revelation. She's so modern here--everything about her is fresh and natural. Ironically, the silent It Girl was made for talkies.
Clara Bow’s voice was never a problem, she made no secret of the fact she was born in Brooklyn. Her voice suited her personality. Clara just didn’t enjoy the process of making talkies but the talking films she made were successful. She worked extremely hard during the silent era and she was ready for a rest. She probably didn’t initially intend to retire but it gave her more time to spend with her family
She HATED her Brooklyn accent and dreaded having to do talkies.
I didn't realize how good her acting was. It puts to shame quite a few modern day actors.
On my list of people to meet, when I get my time machine fixed. 😀
I'm working on getting mine fixed. Let's go together: you take care of her, while I snatch her lover.
@@irened. Don't forget about me guys! I'd like to go too.
@@brennocalderan2201 Ok, hop along! Who do you want?
I'm also in for the ride.
Those who made her feel ashamed and told her she needed voice lessons were ignorant. Her voice is just fine.
She was really cute in that era.
She had a great voice. :)
Nievs Gatcha I read her voice killed her career. She was a superstar in silent films.
I am reading High Noon. It is about the movie. Gary Cooper was in a few of her movies. According to the book she didn't like the sound of her voice. That is why she stopped making movies.
@@billywhizz19 If what I read was correct, she had a very thick Brooklyn accent which didn't jive with her Hollyood image. Nowadays nobody would care but in 1928 when movies went from silent to talking, "The number one movie actres is actually a slumdog from the ghetto of Brooklyn? Well I never!" Both the studio and Clara herself hated her own voice which is why she spiraled into a deep depression. What a shame
and body
Her appearance and style is remarkably modern, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with her voice. In fact, it's damn good.
You expect her to scream at the sight of the snake---instead, she fends it off. Cool! And she's a good looking lady.
She was so cute. Especially at 2:45 when she laughs. She hated doing sound pictures, but she still looked good doing them. Some silent actors and actresses couldn't make it.
I like her all American girl attitude and her voice is perfect for her face...
Clara Bow was my mother's fav. Mum was born in 1914. I can now see why. I love her hair too! timeless!!
for 3 years running Clara Bow was the no. 1 star in the world, a tough act to follow, it was in her third year she made her first talking film The Wild Party, a cleaver college story, she was fantastic but her confidence soon drifted into complete collapse, that fueled all the rumors that over the last 80 years have been blown to mythical proportions, she was one of the Greatest actresses of all time
She's so adorable! Such a beautiful and talented actress, it seems her beauty shines from the inside out. I think she has a lovely voice too, so unfortunate she couldn't of starred in more films because of her overwhelming nerves and insecurities regarding it... she was great.
She still kept her Brooklyn accent! awww the lovely tom boy girl.
Clara was gorgeous beyond measure.
What a fantastic actress! She is so natural and easy. Fantastic.
“What are you doing down there?”
“Visiting some worms I know.”
Lol
So ahead of her time!!!
Clara Bow and Gilbert Roland - what a great looking and great sounding couple. Should have made more movies together.
she’s so beautiful
My word, she was lovely!
Clara was surprisingly pretty post-the beestung lips and heavy 20s studio make-up.
Agreed. I've seen some photos without the beestung lipstick and she looked great, but this is a nice, organic view of her. She was very charismatic and would be a total babe in any era, I think.
I always hated the beesting lipstick look. Clara, in particular, was very gorgeous without it. So were a lot of the female silent era stars.
she was very beautiful
Omg shes frigging Adorable 😂❤❤❤ her acting was just darling.
OMG, She was wonderful in talkies as well..Hard to believe this was one of her last films. :(
I like her voice. It's cute. For some reason, this is exactly how I pictured her sounding.
"Why where you whipping him?"
"I was practising in case I get married."
I dont think her voice was that bad. I think Clara was a great actress and she could have done well in talkies.
It wasn't bad. It was just scandals killed the career of hers. Paramount Studios can go feck 'emselves.
she DID. it's a myth that she didn't. She quit because she hated Hollywood.
my mom found a copy of silver screen magazine from 1932 in the garage today and a still of clara from this movie was in it.
I really think she was too far ahead of her time. Her talent is immediately obvious to a viewer today - she could easily step into a starring role now.
You're right. When I watched her in It, my initial thought was wondering if Julia Roberts copied her.
Well said and well put ! Thanks for an insightful comment !
Very natural for her time.
Wow, she was really amazing!
She was very modern looking and there was nothing wrong with her voice - I know very little about her but it seems that her career was a bit like John Gilbert's - undermined by the powers that be in Hollywood and destroyed by the studio system.
They did the same to her lover, Bela Lugosi. Incidentally, Bela starred as a creeper producer who tries to assault an actress, as in initiate her to the casting couch. The year was 1925, The Midnight Girl. So we have proof that this stuff been going on since the beginning of Hollywood. And it wasn't just women that they propositioned. A man turned them down, he was blacklisted!
She seems to have the most natural line delivery out of all the actors. It's really apparent when she's talking to the actor playing her father. His acting feels rather stiff and wooden, while hers is far more free and fluid, and just, yeah, natural. More modern, like what we would expect from an actress today.
Nothing wrong with that voice, for sure. A beautiful talented actress.
her voice is perfect...she sounds 100 times better then the trash bags we have today...thank god pple like u post the real legends...xoxoxo
Thanks for posting the wonderful IT Girl, Clara Bow, in one of her talkies. Looks like she trying to tame Gilbert Roland there. I agree with some users on this forum that Clara Bow's voice matched her "happy-go-lucky" personality. She didn't sound like the Broadway-trained actors who flocked to Hollywood to make a go at sound films. Totally modern.
Actually, according to what I've read, even with the advent of sound, most of Clara's talkie pictures were actually quite successful at the box office. In fact she remained one of the top five box office draws through 1930, a year after her first talkie, the 1929 film "The Wild Party". And another thing, this was her second to last film, and her last two were actually produced by Fox instead of Paramount, because the former offered her a 2-film contract after the latter dropped her in 1931.
Those eyes !!
Now THAT is star quality!
just so damn good. what a trip she was!
I think Clara had a most attractive speaking voice!
Applause for Clara Bow!!!!
Clara Bow is da crazy-girl BOMB!
She's great! And the sound recording is so BAD. I love these transitional films. Such a tragedy that Bow was given TWO WEEKS to learn how to act in talkies and get rid of her Brooklyn accent -- Garbo got two years and didn't have to shed her accent -- Clara Bow was abused and exploited in films from the beginning to the end of her career. Shameful Hollywood history.
at least she didn't adopt that awful mid atlantic accent all actors used in the 40s and 50s. she sounds way more natural that way
I've read that those Hollywood studios had elocution coaches who wanted their actresses to talk like someone like Katherine Hepburn or a NY stage actress. I doubt the studios would ever have gotten Clara. Bow, a wild girl from a poor background, to adopt such an affectation.
Sounds recording was rudimentary at the beginning. There were no boom mics. They had to speak into a mic hidden in the set in a static position.
@@fordhamdonnington2738 exactly ...it is weird to watch early studio movies where the actors move to the center of the stage then start speaking..
Is there any other type of Hollywood history?
she uses that whip like no other!
I don’t hear any trace of her alleged Brooklyn accent
The wonderful clara a great talent
She did a good job masking her Brooklyn accent here. Good looking lady to boot. The "It" Girl.
Excellent voice for the talkies .. IMO
Clara Bow has the Same Cuteness as Betty Boop.
😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
I love her voice
I love her accent.... It's very fitting.
Take notes, Indiana Jones. That's how you get rid of a snake!
She could have played Scarlett O'Hara!
Wow! What an actress! The only thing I ever had the chance to see her in was "It". I got it right away. She was a spit fire. I can totally see why Bela Lugosi was drawn to her. Pity she was too wild for him. And that there's no pix or video of them together. Bela gave her a photo of himself grabbing Hortense's breast in Arabesque. Hilarious! He signed it to her name, and was sold a year ago by her son. I rarely like "trendy" actresses but I look fwd to watching more of her films. She seems so modern. And lovely.
Yes - Life magazine did a piece -as well as newsweek,and all the major publications, LA Times had a large headline..She was not as forgotten as many would leave you to believe
She reminds me of Natasha Lyonne sometimes
Anyone think Natasha Lyonne could play a gritty, life hardened middle aged Clara bow perfectly?
You’re right. I can see it!
I can’t believe j haven’t seen her in talkies that k remember. Love her raciness, she’s adorable especially when she says, “I was practicing in case I ever get married”!😂😂
YOU HALF BREED!!!!
man, I love this movie...
She's still a fantastic actress!
shes perfect :')
I was told she had a terrible Brooklyn accent. I didn't hear it at all. And her hair is great.
She has a nice voice!
(cont) Finally, she just walked out on Hollywood. Rex Bell, a cowboy-actor of the silent screen and she married, raised two sons, and lived peacefully in the Nevada desert. Clara had a long-standing heart problem which took her away from us all too soon.
David Stenn's "Clara Bow: Runnin' Wild" is required reading for anyone wanting the factual story of Clara's life and career.
"...that he hasn't blamed me FAW." That Brooklyn accent that reminds me of Streisand in Funny Girl. But Clara was beautiful and had a pleasing voice for talkies. Sad that her later life was plagued with psychological issues.
Definitely a Pre-Code!! no bra in broad day light.
Yeah there's all sorts of pre-code stuff in this film. She has a baby out of wedlock, the baby is killed in a fire, she becomes a prostitute to make ends meet, and visits a gay bar while touring New York.
Overnight, movie sets went from noisy, free-wheeling places where stagehands hammered, bands played, directors spoke, and actors could improvise, to a place of tomb-like silence in which everyone was a slave to a stationery mic.
Her nerves couldn't handle it. Her voice recorded well and her accent fit the parts she played (shopgirls, not princesses.)
"I was practicing in case I ever get married" I love her! Too bad they didn't make more sound movies with her.
Very beautiful woman - and tough too! She's not afraid of rattlers.
Love her hair in this - and I don't hear any Brooklyn accent either.
I live in Northern NY, And when I think of a strong Brooklyn accent, it's not what Clara Bow sounds like in this clip. The studios were just ready for a new IT girl and decided to blame it on talkies.
She was adorable. Some indefinable quality. Hmmm.
Me gusta la voz de Clara. En Paz Descanse.
Appearance reminds me of Natash Lyonne from film Slums of Beverly Hills! Poor Clara, early victim of MeToo in Hollywood.
I've always heard her career ended when talkies came in because of her voice but there's nothing wrong with her voice in this picture.
that is a myth. she was popular in the talkies.
Nah, Clara Bowe just hated doing talkies: "I hate talkies. They're stiff and limiting. You lose a lot of your cuteness, because there's no chance for action, and action is the most important thing to me. But I can't buck progress. I have to do the best I can."
... y pensar que no le gustaba su voz... que hermosa que era!
Eterna "it girl"!
=)
Many still believe Clara's career in talkies was a failure, but it was actually very successful. She retired after completing a lucrative 2-picture deal with Fox because she simply didn't enjoy making films anymore.
Her hairstyle sort of look like those loose early to mid 1960s hairstyles. She had a classic face but she also had a modern appeal to her and I love her voice
@Rouben19 -wow! interesting, thanks for sharing that and have a great day.
@TinaTwice It was also due to the fact that she was uneducated. If you read interviews with her, it's a lot of improper grammar and whatnot. Of course, I think most people (including myself) thought it added to her charm. It was almost like a foreign accent which most of us find very peculiar in a brilliant manner. The tonal quality of her voice was so unique and rich...She was so beautiful and inspiring to people like me (and obviously yourself) who appreciate such raw talent.
omg! YOU GO GRRRL!
She’s fantastic in these talkies, especially considering she was only doing them for money to retire to a ranch with her husband & raise a family. She wanted out of Hollyweird. For a while she found peace away from the limelight until her husband’s political ambitions started putting her back in a spotlight she didn’t want & led to her mental break.
“I have learned that pictures take away more than they give. It not only doesn’t bring you happiness, but you find it has robbed you of all the other things that might have given you happiness.” - Clara Bow
How sad she felt that way.
Life is so unfair. I was a Gary Cooper fan as soon as I saw him in cowboy movies when I was little boy back in eh 50's. High Noon cemented him as my Favorited. I later thought Ingrid Bergman and Grace Kelley were two of the most gorgeous women I ever saw. I now find out he also had an affair with Clara, another woman I consider one of the loveliest of all. It is just not right for him to have had ALL of those women I lusted after and I had none. It's jsut too wrong.
You were ripped off, dude.
Rumour has it Cooper ' swung both ways '...
@Rouben19 was her death publicized when she died?
The leading men were the best-looking during this time (e.g.10's-30's). Especially nowadays, hardly any are this dashing, manly & handsome.
I agree with you. They were so handsome. Gilbert Roland, John Gibert, Conrad Nagel, Robert Montgomery, Chester Morris, John Barrymore, Lionel Barrymore, Rudolph Valentino, Wallace Reid, Charles Farrell, Douglas Fairbanks and Jr., Gary Cooper, Clark Gable, Fredric March, Herbert Marshall and so many others. They're the man that i dream of. But unfortunately, there aren't like them in these days 😞.
@@plutoshearer3650 Today, ugliness is in. Both male and female.
Clooney is handsome though looking more wrinklier now ( 2023)
@@plutoshearer3650 Yes, they took all the idols and smashed them. The Fairbanks. The Gilberts. The Valentinos. They trampled on what was divine. And they threw away the gold of silence.
Wow -- that's Gilbert Rowland! And he's wearing a pair of real vintage Levis! Mr Rowland was still a creditable action hero fifty years after this. But why did beautiful Clara leave us?
What a spirit! And she had a lovely voice. I don't hear her Brooklyn accent. She sounds east-coast though, with a bit of a high-toned lilt:)
clara's voice is good contrast with her looks
Feisty!
She had such a strong Brooklyness accent naturally. it is amazing that she got past it so well.
Maddie Cadiz -- "opted" if you mean having her confidence undermined to the point that filming was torture and she couldn't take it any more.
that is odd , this film is everywhere they even show it on fox movie channel the only channel to show any of her films in the last couple years
Her accent isn’t even that heavy.