The Filmgoer's Diary - title page |
It is a curious little publication no bigger than the palm of my hand that led me on a journey exploring three actresses from Lancashire, the post WWII film industry and has given insight into an ordinary nameless someone (probable immigrant) who began their life in the south of England in 1956 and by the end of that year lived and worked at a hotel in St Annes-on-the-Sea.
Next is a map of London’s West-End Cinemas followed by Films I Have Seen. No film titles are written however there are a couple of interesting entries under this heading. The first is the address of United States Lines, an organisation operating cargo and passenger ships. The second is a clothing list in English with the header in another language. Considering the items listed, I am leaning towards the idea that my diary writer is a man, as I believe shirts would be blouses and socks would be stockings if it were women’s clothing. The question of gender will never be answered as the Personal Mems. page remains forever empty.
The Filmgoer's Diary - clothing list |
When January begins, black and white images of film stars start jumping off the bottom righthand corner of each page. All head shots are accompanied by a short biography. Celebrities include Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis and Janet Leigh (later famous for her role in Hitchcock’s Psycho, 1960). Lancashire lasses Thora Hird, Janette Scott and Dora Bryan are also in the spotlight. As Lancashire is my home, curiosity got the better of me and I searched to find out more about these three women.
Dame Thora Hird (back row, far right) Red Rose Collection Image credit: Lancashire Archives |
Janette Scott (born 1938) is found peering out of the 5th-7th January page. She is the daughter of Thora Hird and was also born in Morecambe. Scott made her film debut in 1943 in Went the Day Well?. Later, in 1975 she was referenced in the opening song of the Rocky Horror Picture Show. She is now retired.
Dora Bryan (1923-2014) was born Dora May Broadbent in Southport and brought up in Oldham. She was 12 years old when she made her first professional appearance in Manchester. By the time her face shone underneath 16th June, she had over 30 films under her belt.
The actors and actresses highlighted in this diary were part of the Golden Age of Hollywood (mid 1930s to the early 1960s). However by 1956, the film industry was beginning to see a decline at the box office for several reasons. At the time, themes were censored by the government (although beginning to be challenged) and many creative people were blacklisted including Charlie Chaplin(actor), Orson Welles (director, actor, writer), Leonard Bernstein (composer, conductor) and poet Langston Hughes. According to Allison Perlman the blacklisting
was implemented by the Hollywood studios to promote their patriotic
credentials in the face of public attacks and served to shield the film
industry from the economic harm that would result from an association
of its product with subversives.
Television was also growing in popularity contributing to fewer cinema ticket sales. More and more people began to be intrigued and mesmerised by the smaller screen settling for a more intimate experience.
was implemented by the Hollywood studios to promote their patriotic
credentials in the face of public attacks and served to shield the film
industry from the economic harm that would result from an association
of its product with subversives.
Television was also growing in popularity contributing to fewer cinema ticket sales. More and more people began to be intrigued and mesmerised by the smaller screen settling for a more intimate experience.
Whatever one’s entertainment of choice, back in the mid-twentieth century Joe Public during and post WWII would have been hungry for escapism. The glitz and glamour (fabricated constructs) would have given ordinary folk something to dream about, to buy into and perhaps this is why the unknown writer of my diary chose to keep this particular publication close, whilst also keeping one organised.
Going back to examining the diary itself and trying to make sense of someone’s seemingly ordinary life I notice the first entry on 1st January is written in a language I can’t work out. Other entries in the diary are also written in this language mixed in with entries in English. It is likely English is not the writer’s first language.
The Filmgoer's Diary - 1st and 2nd January, 1956 |
On 2nd and 9th January Days Off is clearly written in English. This person was employed until 12th January when Look for another work is clearly written. The diary owner then travelled between 16th and 20th January to Southam Hotel, 12 Leam Terrace (Leamington Spa), then to Birmingham and finally on to Stratford-Upon-Avon. Was this travel a quest to look for work? 30th January has evidence of success in securing employment as he/she writes Staff Party Old Red Lion.
On Thursday 2nd February all that is entered is Big Frost. The weather clearly had made a big impression. I Googled this date discovering February was particularly cold that year in England and Wales with the average temperature for the month just below freezing.
The Filmgoer's Diary - 6th to 8th May, 1956 |
The next few pages list two addresses, 76 Warley Road Blackpool, N. and one for the Blackpool Ministry of Labour placed above Kim Novak, then several entries in the language that I do hope someone can eventually identify. On Thursday 19th July employment is finally secured as evidenced in the statement I had start work at night in Glendower Hotel, St. Annes-on-Sea. In August, across from Jacques Francois is an address for the St Annes-on-Sea of Labour. Then on 30th August Day Off. Intermittently Day Off is entered throughout the remainder of the year.
The 1956 Filmgoer's Diary
has bound within its pages
sixty six photos of those
classified in their time
as the most beautiful
most talented creatures
with perfect white teeth
and unblemished skin
manufactured to promote
a business entertaining
the dreamers writing
and performing their own
extraordinary scripts.
has bound within its pages
sixty six photos of those
classified in their time
as the most beautiful
most talented creatures
with perfect white teeth
and unblemished skin
manufactured to promote
a business entertaining
the dreamers writing
and performing their own
extraordinary scripts.
Thank you for reading. J
Sources
Anon. (1956) The Filmgoer’s Diary 1956 (Leap Year). London, D. Harper & Co. Ltd. London.
Barker, D. (2014) Dora Bryan obituary. https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2014/jul/23/dora-bryan+accessed+19+October+2023 accessed 19 October 2023.
Heckmann. C. (2021) When was the Golden Age of Hollywood-and why did it end?. https://www.studiobinder.com/blog/when-was-the-golden-age-of-hollywood/ accessed 20 October 2023
IMDB (2023). Thora Hird Biography. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0386331/bio/ accessed 9 October.
Pak, E (2020) Charlie Chaplin and 6 Other Artists Who Were Blacklisted in Hollywood During the Red Scare.https://www.biography.com/artists/artists-blacklisted-hollywood-red-scare accessed 21 October 2023.
Whether Idle (2018). 1956 February. https://www.theweatheroutlook.com/twocommunity/default.aspx?g=posts&t=18507 accessed 20 October 2023.
Sources
Anon. (1956) The Filmgoer’s Diary 1956 (Leap Year). London, D. Harper & Co. Ltd. London.
Barker, D. (2014) Dora Bryan obituary. https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2014/jul/23/dora-bryan+accessed+19+October+2023 accessed 19 October 2023.
Heckmann. C. (2021) When was the Golden Age of Hollywood-and why did it end?. https://www.studiobinder.com/blog/when-was-the-golden-age-of-hollywood/ accessed 20 October 2023
IMDB (2023). Thora Hird Biography. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0386331/bio/ accessed 9 October.
Pak, E (2020) Charlie Chaplin and 6 Other Artists Who Were Blacklisted in Hollywood During the Red Scare.https://www.biography.com/artists/artists-blacklisted-hollywood-red-scare accessed 21 October 2023.
Whether Idle (2018). 1956 February. https://www.theweatheroutlook.com/twocommunity/default.aspx?g=posts&t=18507 accessed 20 October 2023.
5 comments:
I remember Thora Hird from when she used to present Songs Of Praise on tv. My mum and dad always watched it.
What an intriguing artefact. Maybe one of your readers will recognise themselves?
A fascinating read and an intriguing mystery.
It's a beautifully put together blog, and what an intriguing story it tells. I like the suggestion from another comment that maybe the owner of The Filmgoer's Diary will read your blog and recognise him/herself. Unlikely, given they'd be in their late eighties at least by now. Still, you never know! Maybe share your blog on one of the local interest FB sites (Blackpool Past and Present, or Blackpool's Entertaining Past or some such). I enjoyed your poem, especially the direction it took in the last three lines.
I do wish I hadn't read this article. I do wish to know who the person was. I know my mom and dad took in a Hungarian refugee in 1956. That was in 1956.
Well put together poem. I enjoyed it.
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