
Monday Glamour Starter --- Linda Darnell



You might notice from these pics that Linda went right off the launching pad into adult roles. Fox didn’t need another Shirley (they were ready by now to get rid of the one they had), and so it was co-starring parts with heartthrob Ty Power right from the get-go. Here they are as a married couple in 1939’s Day-Time Wife, and get this, Linda was fifteen when they started shooting the thing! The movie isn’t much. Like so many others from that period, it’s hobbled by the Code, but was the Breen Office aware that this kid was playing at four-way marital hijinks with Tyrone Power and roguish Warren William? It’s a cinch they’d not get by with such casting today. The only time Linda was cast age-appropriate in these early ventures would be Star Dust, and that charming Hollywood story (which turns up occasionally on Fox Movie Channel) was released in 1940. Here she is, age sixteen, sitting behind the slate marked January of that year.


One of the first 16mm features I ever owned was a dupe of The Mark Of Zorro. During college years, I used to crawl through half-open windows at night and watch it on classroom projectors, hoping the custodians wouldn't detect my presence even though I liked playing that Alfred Newman score at a booming volume. Well, it’s not as though you could get the DVD for five dollars at Wal-Mart in those days. Anyway, this shot of Linda with Tyrone Power came from a "killed" negative, meaning Fox elected not to use it for publicity. How it came into the possession of my source would make an interesting story, I’m sure, as this negative should have been destroyed over sixty-five years ago. The color image shows a maturing Linda headed for the siren phase of her career, via things like Summer Storm, Hangover Square, and Fallen Angel (just out on DVD). Among the really good ones Linda did (and there were lots) was John Ford’s My Darling Clementine, and here she is with Vic Mature in that one. I remember seeing a TV interview ten or so years where Burt Reynolds was talking with Carol Burnett. She was describing the thrill of meeting Linda Darnell once when she was a teenager at a premiere. Burt listened politely, then casually mentioned the fact that he had worked with Linda on the stage back when he was starting out in the fifties --- "I did Tea and Sympathy with her once …" Just as Carol reacted to that, a commercial interrupted them both, and we never heard the story. If ever I meet Burt Reynolds, this will be the first question he gets from me.