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winners of Errol Flynn film house EFFIE awards

23 Jun

In celebration of its second birthday, the Errol Flynn Filmhouse announced the winners of this year’s EFFIE Awards at a special ceremony on Saturday.

The event also marked the 106th anniversary of Errol Flynn’s birth. Audience members enjoyed a glass of fizz and some birthday cake, as the results of the public vote were revealed, before settling down to watch a special pre-release screening of the new Western-thriller, Slow West, starring Michael Fassbender.

The award for the Best of the Biggest Selling Films went to the fascinating Stephen Hawking biopic The Theory of Everything, while the Best Classic Film was bagged by the iconic Ridley Scott sci-fi movie Blade Runner: The Final Cut. Scooping Best Documentary was Dior and I, going behind the scenes at the iconic fashion house. Best Live Event was won by Monty Python Live (Mostly), the reunion performance of the cult comedy group.

Best Film not in the English Language went to the animated adventure from Japan, The Tale of Princess Kaguya, from Studio Ghibli. The award for the best film shown in the cinema’s Under The Radar season was won by the uplifting music film Northern Soul. Finally the Audience Choice category of overall Favourite Film, to be picked from any that had been shown during the year, went to The Theory of Everything, starring Eddie Redmayne, giving it its second EFFIE win of the year.

An 88-seat cinema, the Errol Flynn Filmhouse opened adjacent to Royal & Derngate in June 2013, named after one of the Royal Theatre’s most famous alumni.

The cinema screens the very best in world, independent, British and mainstream film, broadening the range of films available in the town centre and providing a first class cinema-going experience.

The cinema launched to rave reviews and quickly developed a loyal following, with its luxurious reclining leather seats and carefully chosen range of snacks and drinks, and has welcomed 45,000 people to its screenings in the last year.

Errol Flynn Filmhouse Chief Executive, Martin Sutherland, said: “It’s great to see the cinema enjoying such popularity. I am really grateful for the dedication and commitment shown by all involved in making the Errol Flynn Filmhouse such a special place.”

For more information about the cinema and films coming up in near future, visit www.errolflynnfilmhouse.com… or call Box Office on 01604 624811.

Read more: www.northampton-news-hp.co.uk/Errol-Flynn-Filmhouse-announces-winners-EFFIE/story-26743541-detail/story.html#ixzz3dvnvDlte…
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— tassie devil

 
 

Errol love letters to go to auction

23 Jun

www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/errol-flynn-love-letters-malvern-9505502… Love Genene This is very interesting.

— tassie devil

 
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Happy Birthday OUR MAN

20 Jun

Well another Birthday has come along for Errol may he be looking down from Heaven seeing all those that love him . Genene and Steve.

— tassie devil

 
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review of book has some about Errol in the blurb

12 Jun

thecelebritycafe.com…

Love Genene

— tassie devil

 
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Cubas Hotal Nacional

24 Apr

www.palmbeachdailynews.com…

A piece about this Hotel mentions Errol.

— tassie devil

 
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Genene and Steve at Cascade brewery.

22 Apr

Well I got to go to the cascade Brewery and Stand near the pic of Errol. Love GeneneIMG00190

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— tassie devil

 
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A letter

22 Apr

This letter is a real find . A lovely lady named Veronica has just been going through her Grandmothers things after her death, Now she knew she had known Errol. This letter has been translated from German .

Errol Flynn

One morning as Irmhild was flicking through the Hollywood gossip columns she read that one of Warner Bros. up and coming stars, Errol Flynn, had spent time in New Guinea. Ekke became quite excited. He had known Flynn well and had even referred to him indirectly in his book. Flynn came from a good family, his father being a professor of marine biology, but he had been unsettled by moves between Australia and England, the long absences of his parents, his mother’s lack of pedagogical skill, and his own unruly temperament. After expulsion from his Sydney boarding school for womanizing, brawling and refusing to take an interest in his studies, he had lived a wild life on the streets before sailing for New Guinea. There he had started off as a probationary patrol officer, had then pretended to manage a plantation for a while, had bought a share in a schooner and attempted to make a living by ferrying goods and passengers, and then headed for the gold fields of Edie Creek. Unsuccessful there, he had done some illegal bird of paradise shooting, decided to try for gold once more when he won half a lease in a raffle, had recruited the necessary native labour by a fraudulent trick though, according to his unreliable biography , in a slightly different way from Ekke’s ‘Johnny the Recruiter’, and had once more headed for the gold-fields where Ekke had last run into him when he passed through Edie Creek on his prospecting expedition. Later Flynn had started a tobacco farm in the Moresby district. Like Ekke, Flynn was an avid reader of world literature and two years after meeting up with Ekke in Hollywood, Flynn also published a novel, Beam Ends, based on his adventures in the region, in his case a dangerous trip by yacht from Sydney to Moresby. According to Ekke, it was Flynn’s dog that inspired the dog fight in Ekke’s book. He had apparently first met Flynn sitting alone at a bar waiting for a certain man to make good his threat to kill him, apparently because Flynn’s dog had seriously injured the other’s dog in a fight. Ekke and Errol obviously had many experiences in common, plantation work, trading with a schooner, recruiting and gold prospecting, and they seem to have enjoyed each other’s company. While Ekke had generally attempted to behave in a responsible and ethical way, Flynn remained unrepentant about what he termed My Wicked Wicked Ways in the title of his biography. After World War II, Flynn was suspected of having been involved with ‘pro-German activities’ as a result of his friendship with a confessed Nazi spy, Dr Hermann Erben, but nothing was ever proved and his selfish and impulsive nature made this highly unlikely.

When Irmhild discovered the reference to Errol Flynn in the newspaper, Ekke wrote him a letter in Pidgin English. After a while Flynn rang, invited him to the studio where he was working and introduced him to actors and directors. He then took him home to meet his wife, Lili Damita. Lili had been a well-known actress in silent films, was once engaged to the Prussian Prince Louis Ferdinand, grandson of Emperor William II, then to a British millionaire whom she abandoned for Errol. To Irmhild’s amusement, it turned out that this millionaire had later married one of her former school mates. Lili did not put in an appearance on that first occasion because she feared coming face to face with her husband’s disreputable past. But when Errol invited both Ekke and Irmhild, she eventually mustered the courage to take a peek at them and from then on they were frequently invited and became very good friends. Irmhild writes of their first visit:
Lili was in bed resting. The house was built in the most beautiful position imaginable, up in the mountains with a view over the entire city right to the sea. They have a veritable zoo, three dogs and innumerable cages full of birds. We sat on the veranda with the wonderful view in front of us. Flynn is a typical Englishman, of the best sort and not in the least conceited or affected. He is really amazingly good looking, very masculine and of a type that hasn’t been seen in Hollywood films yet. Lili hadn’t turned up, she had a headache. She also imagined Ekke to be something frightful, a cross between a kanaka and a bandit and didn’t want to meet him; she hated everything that had anything to do with New Guinea. At length when we were about to leave he managed to coax her down. She is small and delicate and has a delightful figure. Her face is pretty but it is hard to know what is hidden under the heavy makeup. Her manner was nice, perhaps a little mercurial and nervous. She invited us to stay for dinner which she announced would be very poor and modest whereas it was excellent, superbly cooked. She herself is Hungarian and has a fat Hungarian cook who definitely knows what she is doing. We sat by candlelight and afterwards a battery of select liqueurs was brought in. We stayed on the veranda till eleven and even out there it was still warm. Next week the Flynns are going to visit us, look at photos of New Guinea and then we’ll go to a nightclub. I am also to play tennis and go swimming with Lili in her exclusive club…. We will have to wait and see what will come of all this. I would like to keep in contact with them. After his time in New Guinea, Flynn worked on the stage in London for three years and was discovered by an agent from Warner Bros. He was brought out here and paid $150 weekly which is apparently a ridiculously low wage. He didn’t get a part because he thought he could manage himself. When he took a manager who gave him some publicity people remembered him very quickly and the various companies began to compete for him. Now he is earning $800 a week and as soon as the film on which he is presently working is completed he will receive twice the amount, that is $6400 a month. On 5 August the production of this film will begin and it is expected to be a great hit. Flynn promised that we could come out and watch the filming, something I have always wanted to do, and have lunch afterwards.
A week or so later Ekke and Irmhild were on the set, watching the production of Captain Blood. Irmhild described the filming in great detail in her letters home. Ekke, in particular, spent quite a bit of time in the studio in the hope of learning more about the craft and making useful contacts. They also watched Lili acting in her film. Through the Flynns they met some of the crazier Hollywood hangers-on; among other things they were invited to a ‘divorce party’. They also witnessed one of Lili’s fits of jealousy when she threw a shoe at Errol because she thought he was flirting with Irmhild. Errol caught it without even looking; he was apparently used to the tactic. Flynn gave Ekke an introduction to the manager of the biggest agency in Hollywood, Al Kauffmann of Joyce Selznik, which was by far the most useful he received. He was there taken on by a Danish lady, Mrs von Koczian. Agnes happened to know her ex-husband as a rakish Austrian, a former officer, and a great lady’s man.

Another well-known identity Ekke and Irmhild met through Hollywood circles was the brother of Sven Hedin, the famous Swedish explorer of Tibet and the Chinese Silk Road, who had just completed a planning mission for the Chinese Government. Towards the very end of their stay in Los Angeles they also visited the German mountaineer, actor and director Louis Trencker on set in St Juan Capistrano where he was filming Der Kaiser von Californien (The Emperor of California),.

— tassie devil

 
 

Kentish Hotel

22 Apr

Hi all Steve took a group up to Oatlands which is in the middle of the state and this lady has her hotel decked out with Errol picks here are some and a pic of the lady. One picture has Errol eating a meat pie. See if you can spot it. Love Genene IMG00184IMG00178IMG00177IMG00176IMG00175IMG00174IMG00186IMG00173<a

— tassie devil

 
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For sale one of Errol’s old homes

16 Apr

Here is the link.
www.propertyobserver.com… Love Genene.

— tassie devil

 
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Richard Erdman in obj Burma

08 Apr

www.mywebtimes.com…

This article is about Richard Erman . But it does have a piece about Errol and him in Obj Burma and the way he treated him. hope you like it.

— tassie devil

 
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