Greenbriar Won't Let Errol Go!
Errol and Patrice on Errol's Yacht After Their Wedding |
Flynn Greets Acting Colleague Paul Henried During Euro Stop |
Errol Relaxes at Cannes Film Festival |
Oh, Yeah? Sez You! Flynn Confronts Customs Staff at Rome Airport |
Then, briefly meeting his daughter Rory, a rather glamorous lady, on a very low budget film she was working on as a still photographer back in 1988 or so. Finally, years earlier in 1976, meeting a couple of sound men (mixer and boom man) on one of the earliest movies I ever worked on, also VERY low budget, who---the sound guys---both knew Flynn and both agreed he was a great guy. When people volunteer opinions like this, I always think they must have some basis in fact! (The same two guys had worked at Paramount and had less than complimentary things to say about some other big names of that era...so I didn't get the impression they were the sort to hand out encomiums with indifference.)
Fashion Plate Flynn Makes Selection at Favored Haberdashery |
Errol and Patrice Greet Fans on the Banks of the Seine |
Professor Theodore Thomson-Flynn Flanked By Bad Boy Son and Even Worse John Decker, Whose Own Exploits Made Errol Look Like Lord Fauntleroy By Comparison |
A Jaunty Flynn Receives the Press on Eve of British Start on The Master Of Ballantrae |
Another of Those Screwy Star Benefits, This Time Joined by George Jessel, Betty Hutton, Van Johnson, and Harpo Marx |
He once put out a personal tribute to Flynn on an lp record, which I think he entitled "Tribute to a Cavalier." It consisted of a spoken docu-biography of Flynn (by Thomas), highlighted by a brief interview he himself conducted with Flynn ca. 1959 when the actor briefly portrayed Rochester in a stage production of "Jane Eyre" in Hollywood, almost at the end of his life. Flynn's remarks seemed philosophical and true, and I remember him saying, "I've had a great life, and I've had a hell of a good time." It's nice to think he felt that way on the eve of eternity. The lp was rounded out with a delightful old radio production/promotion for the contemporary '38 "Adventures of Robin Hood," which features a suite of themes from the score, which I believe were conducted live by the composer Korngold, and narration spoken by Basil Rathbone.
One-Time Close Friend Bruce Cabot --- They Fell Out In The Wake of William Tell |
Even Robin Hood Sometimes Needed His Reading Glasses |
Everyone knows that Errol Flynn is playing an American soldier on the beach in WW2. Beards, to anyone who has ever served in the armed forces, are strictly non-regulation. A battle-weary soldier (with no time to shave in combat) might be sporting a rough stubble across his entire face but never a neatly-trimmed goatee beard!
I am convinced the photo is from the making of "Kim". In fact the two other people in the photo look decidedly British in appearance to me.
Is Murder At Monte Carlo Really Gone Forever? Ralph Schiller Thinks So |
Errol Welcomed Back to Hollywood for Istanbul by John Bentley and Jane Russell |
Sherry Jackson said she had a B&W still taken on the set of "Hello God" somewhere in her vast collection. I gave her my E-Mail address and phone number and promised to purchase the still if she could locate it. A few months later I received an E-Mail from her manager asking me for the exorbitant price of $150.00 for the still because of its rarity. I agreed to the price and still heard nothing for several months. I again contacted her manager and a few weeks later Sherry Jackson left a voicemail on my phone saying she was still searching for the still through several storage bins. I have heard nothing since, so I am assuming she was unable to locate the still with her and Errol Flynn.
Last year a very intelligent and resourceful young lady in
Another Still From Long-Lost Murder At Monte Carlo |
Penny For Your Thoughts, Errol --- Meeting French Sensation Brigitte Bardot |
Inga Klein, ever the detective, located Joseph Fegerel in
Ashfield Color Labs changed owners many times over the years and eventually went out of business completely in the age of video and later digital film. I was able to locate their successor and spoke to the manager at the current firm. She informed me that when they took over Ashfield, they inherited no film stock at all in storage. In fact she warned "That movie is gone and was probably destroyed and discarded."
If William Marshall failed to pay the fee, then sooner or later Ashfield Color Labs would clean house.
"Hello God" is gone forever, along with "Murder At Monte Carlo." Thanks to Inga Klein in
Ralph Schiller
7/26/12 --- 8:55 A.M. --- Robert Matzen answers Ralph Schiller's comment and speculates further as to the mystery of the Hello God still:
The questionable still is highly intriguing, so much so that even the experts disagree on what they're looking at. I do not buy Ralph's assertion that this is a still related to the production of dust-bound Kim. It doesn't ring true for me, especially if they're all posing with a process screen depicting an ocean. It could be a publicity photo taken at the kickoff of HG production, for all we know. I also thought about what Ralph said regarding EF portraying a soldier and hence not having whiskers, and I wondered if perhaps in addition he played God or a representative of heaven, a la Mr.
At any rate, these posts have been a blast, and I love your choice of Flynn candids, some of which I've never seen before. The Flynn-Wymore-Cabot shot looks like it must be from right around the time of the falling out over paychecks Cabot was owed from William Tell.
7/26/12 --- 10:06 A.M. --- Mike Mazzone takes up the Hello God topic again and wonders if Flynn may have played a bigger role than we imagined:
Looking closely at the Hello God still, Errol's goatee looks to be applied makeup. It's thicker and darker than Errol's natural goatee as seen with Princess Irene or even in the Kimstills. It also has two pronounced points on the beard part. Could Errol have played God? In The Films Of Errol Flynn, the cast listing refers to him as "the man on the beach," not as a soldier.
7/27/12 --- 1:20 P.M. --- And Ralph Schiller has more ...
Robert Matzen is certainly right in that the still in question with Errol Flynn was taken in front of a studio process screen.
Mike Mazzone also has a valid point in that Flynn's beard is a make-up job.
Flynn appears to be noticeably older in the photo. My guess is that this photo still was taken inside a soundstage at
Bray Studios, near