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The Earl of Erroll

13 Apr

Dear Flynnstones,

the 1987 movie “White Mischief” based on a true crime story from Kenya in 1940 bears more than one reference to our Hollywood hero.

Not only would Flynn have been perfect for the lead of Josslyn Victor Hay, the 22nd Earl of Erroll, who in the film was portraited by actor Charles Dance, but the antics of the Happy Valley aristocrates can both be seen as mirroring Hollywood royality as well as mimmicking Errol in Northampton.

Flynnmate Trevor Howard picks up (mostly bottles and guns), where he left off in “Roots of Heaven” in one of his last roles-his excessive drinking almost got him fired.

Gorgeous Greta Scacchi, scarcly clad due to the fine weather, in type resembles Pat Wymore.

But it is a real life angle tying the unsolved murder mystery to our Man Flynn.

Matter of fact, in the book of the same title from James Fox, Freddie McEvoy is described as a person of interest in an investigation of the police in South France.

A pearl collier, which plays a special, if not the key role in the whole affair had been stolen from a car.

The heist appears as some sort of a steal and lease back scheme with Suicide Freddie in the midst of things.

In my book this is what really cost Joss his life later on…maybe even Freddie`s.

McEvoy and Errol had planned to take a safari trip together in that area, but the big game hunt was cancelled, because the shooting of “The Adventures of Don Juan” hadn`t finished in time.

“Hail to the Mischief!”,

 

 

 

— shangheinz

 

Private Lives of Elizabeth & Essex!

09 Apr

— David DeWitt

 
 

Remembering Sean Leslie Flynn–5-31-1941–04-06-1970

06 Apr

 

— ILIKEFLYNN

 
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Later Lil‘

29 Mar

Dear Flynnstones,

in later years Lili Damita became a fixture in the social circles of Palm Beach. Always the diva no ray of sun was to alter her skin of porcelain.

Enjoy,

— shangheinz

 

One More Chance to Own Errol Flynn Cufflinks!

28 Mar

Errol Flynn Cufflinks!

Offering for sale from my extensive Hollywood memorabilia collection, a set of unique, precious, outstanding and quite unusual 14 karat gold cufflinks, personally owned and worn by one of the most outrageous, highly talented and famous Hollywood screen legends in the history of film making. Therefore this incredible A-list actor needs no further introduction. Insiders know exactly the importance of this item which is now on offer. This is certainly a great opportunity to acquire this stupendous early vintage item!

As one can clearly see from the photos, apart from the extremely handsome design, the most remarkable feature is the beautifully scrolled  monogram ‘E F’, in the same style as found on other of his personal items. Without a doubt, this set of custom made cufflinks is extremely rare and belongs in a league of its own. It should be a MUST for the serious collector of Hollywood memorabilia and a valuable addition to any collection. Or even as a special gift for a very special person. Certainly these EF cufflinks will be the topic at any occasion!

The cufflinks are “block style” with the front being concave and with a kind of “frosted” etched surface, which makes the monogram really stand out, and makes a good contrast with the other shiny surfaces.

The blocks measure 1.4 cm ( 7/12″). The overall length of the cufflinks is 2,3 cm ( 11/12″) in closed position and 3 cm (1 1/4″) in open position. Each block and stem is hallmarked 14 K.

The condition is excellent for their age, with only the usual slight surface scratches, which look on the close-up pictures more pronounced than they really are. Both lever mechanisms work perfectly

Provenance

The set naturally comes with its accompanying Certificate of Authenticity stating: “This Certificate guarantees the Authenticity of the item described as genuine in its contents and origin. Errol Flynn.  A vintage pair of fourteen karat gold heavy block style cufflinks. Monogrammed.”

As a personal remark regarding this Hollywood memorabilia item which probably is one of few these days belonging in an extremely “hard-to-find” category that stands out on its own!

Many years ago I started to collect searching selectively for unusual items of well known artists, entertainers, actors and actresses who were famous in the days of Hollywood’s Golden Era, only dealing with bonafide and high profile specialists, companies, and agent-dealers. I sincerely hope that the fortunate buyer will find this particular celebrity item now on offer just as special and irresistible as I did after all these years carefully treasuring it.

You will notice, that for these remarkable gold cufflinks I do not provide the possibility to make an offer, because I think that the price I am asking, compared to some recent celebrity auctions, such as items from Tony Curtis, Debbie Reynolds, etc.  is quite justified.

The cufflinks and CoA will be sent by Registered Mail / Signed for Delivery within 1 working day after receipt of cleared payment. Insurance is optional, please enquire for quote.

Please note, that the buyer is fully responsible for any possible import charges, duties, taxes, levies etc. charged in his/her country, because as a seller I have no knowledge of those facts.

Because of the calibre of this item, or any of the other memorabilia items coming up for sale soon, personal pick-up by the buyer is of course possible, near Málaga in the South of Spain.

I will be happy to answer any questions you might have. Thank you for your interest.

I will also be releasing and selling other items soon of: Errol Flynn, Orson Welles, Spencer Tracy, Victor Mature, John Barrymore, etc.

Price: 5.650.00 Euros

 

Please contact:

Jan Vandervliet pasobueno123 at gmail dot com

— David DeWitt

 
 

Don’t Mansion it…

28 Mar

Dear Flynnstones,

socialite Countess Dorothy DiFrasso (here strolling with another millionaire heiress, a fox fur wearing Barbara Hutton) lent her Bel Air estate to Freddie McEvoy. Take a peak at the mansion, where Errol Flynn mingled with Betty Hansen and see the blue room, which caused much gloom.

Then and Now – 345 St. Pierre Road

Enjoy,

 

— shangheinz

 

Errol Flynn Cufflinks for sale via Private Collector!

28 Mar

Errol Flynn Cufflinks!

Offering for sale from my extensive Hollywood memorabilia collection, a set of unique, precious, outstanding and quite unusual 14 karat gold cufflinks, personally owned and worn by one of the most outrageous, highly talented and famous Hollywood screen legends in the history of film making. Therefore this incredible A-list actor needs no further introduction. Insiders know exactly the importance of this item which is now on offer. This is certainly a great opportunity to acquire this stupendous early vintage item!

As one can clearly see from the photos, apart from the extremely handsome design, the most remarkable feature is the beautifully scrolled  monogram ‘E F’, in the same style as found on other of his personal items. Without a doubt, this set of custom made cufflinks is extremely rare and belongs in a league of its own. It should be a MUST for the serious collector of Hollywood memorabilia and a valuable addition to any collection. Or even as a special gift for a very special person. Certainly these EF cufflinks will be the topic at any occasion!

The cufflinks are “block style” with the front being concave and with a kind of “frosted” etched surface, which makes the monogram really stand out, and makes a good contrast with the other shiny surfaces.

The blocks measure 1.4 cm ( 7/12″). The overall length of the cufflinks is 2,3 cm ( 11/12″) in closed position and 3 cm (1 1/4″) in open position. Each block and stem is hallmarked 14 K.

The condition is excellent for their age, with only the usual slight surface scratches, which look on the close-up pictures more pronounced than they really are. Both lever mechanisms work perfectly

Provenance

The set naturally comes with its accompanying Certificate of Authenticity stating: “This Certificate guarantees the Authenticity of the item described as genuine in its contents and origin. Errol Flynn.  A vintage pair of fourteen karat gold heavy block style cufflinks. Monogrammed.”

As a personal remark regarding this Hollywood memorabilia item which probably is one of few these days belonging in an extremely “hard-to-find” category that stands out on its own!

Many years ago I started to collect searching selectively for unusual items of well known artists, entertainers, actors and actresses who were famous in the days of Hollywood’s Golden Era, only dealing with bonafide and high profile specialists, companies, and agent-dealers. I sincerely hope that the fortunate buyer will find this particular celebrity item now on offer just as special and irresistible as I did after all these years carefully treasuring it.

You will notice, that for these remarkable gold cufflinks I do not provide the possibility to make an offer, because I think that the price I am asking, compared to some recent celebrity auctions, such as items from Tony Curtis, Debbie Reynolds, etc.  is quite justified.

The cufflinks and CoA will be sent by Registered Mail / Signed for Delivery within 1 working day after receipt of cleared payment. Insurance is optional, please enquire for quote.

Please note, that the buyer is fully responsible for any possible import charges, duties, taxes, levies etc. charged in his/her country, because as a seller I have no knowledge of those facts.

Because of the calibre of this item, or any of the other memorabilia items coming up for sale soon, personal pick-up by the buyer is of course possible, near Málaga in the South of Spain.

I will be happy to answer any questions you might have. Thank you for your interest.

I will also be releasing and selling other items soon of: Errol Flynn, Orson Welles, Spencer Tracy, Victor Mature, John Barrymore, etc.

Price: 5.650.00 Euros

 

Please contact:

Jan Vandervliet pasobueno123 at gmail dot com 08bc7e6a002480a14e4f96157679f4c9

— David DeWitt

 
 

A passing worth noting…

27 Mar

Mel Brooks:

“It’s a sad day when Norman Steinberg leaves us. From BLAZING SADDLES to MY FAVORITE YEAR, he was one of the best writers I ever worked with. I’m so glad I rescued him from a dull stable legal career, because he always permeated the writers room with his infectious comic spirit.”

Here’s a little more of the story behind one of of my favorites:

www.hollywoodreporter.com…

— Karl

 
5 Comments

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Mail Bag! Autographed Errol Flynn Photo!

20 Mar

We got an interesting email from Gary who has an autographed photo of Errol Flynn from DIVE BOMBER he acquired years ago. He writes:

Hello,

Please forgive this unsolicited email, but I am looking to sell a signed Errol pic I have had since the early 1990’s.

I’d rather it go to a fan-& not a dealer (if you know what  I mean ?).  It was purchased from Fraser’s Autographs in the UK, and was prominent in their catalogue of that year.

Signed 8×10 b&w studio portrait in US Naval uniform for the film Divebomber.

If you could let your avid Flynn fans know it’s available to purchase I’d appreciate it-I’m open to offers around $1,000.

Thanks David.
Regards,
Gary
Contact Gary for more info:
$1500 – reasonable offers considered.
More detail:
Thanks, Gary …

— David DeWitt

 
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Posted in Mail Bag

 

Full text of article on Flynn’s NY Museum of Modern Art Retrospective

19 Mar

Errol Flynn, Hollywood Hero

With derring-do and impertinent wit, the Australian actor became an American screen idol

Errol Flynn in ‘The Adventures of Robin Hood’ (1938).PHOTO: EVERETT COLLECTION

March 16, 2023 2:53 pm ET

In ye olden days of Hollywood, Errol Flynn epitomized adventure. He thrust and parried his way into movie history with three definitive swashbucklers, “Captain Blood” (1935), “The Adventures of Robin Hood” (1938) and “The Sea Hawk” (1940). He proved equally persuasive—and popular—in a slew of hit Westerns and war films and pseudo-historical epics like “The Charge of the Light Brigade” (1936) and “They Died with Their Boots On” (1941). He played nimble-witted men who calibrated derring-do while dangling from turrets, treetops, horses or biplanes. The 14-film Flynn retrospective now running at New York’s Museum of Modern Art, closing May 3, showcases the understated audacity and irrepressible élan that enabled him to bridge snob appeal and slob appeal.

Flynn’s acting combined paradoxical ingredients: a casual approach to lofty rhetoric and heroic postures; romance leavened with irreverence or melancholy; a natural, unstressed sophistication; and split-second flashes of ambivalence and uncertainty, embedded in bravado. No one has matched his Robin Hood for righteous, witty—and physically beautiful—swagger. Few could resist the stirring sight of him striding into Guy of Gisbourne’s castle with forbidden game atop his shoulders—an impressively antlered buck—or the defiant sound of him espousing Saxon rebellion.

Flynn’s career would be difficult to replicate in contemporary Hollywood. As an action hero he was larger-than-life, yet not artificial in the ruling Marvel/DC mode. Unlike most of today’s action moviemakers, his best directors at Warner Bros.—Michael Curtiz and Raoul Walsh—aimed for heights of gusto and grace. They understood the literary beauty of heroism, which wouldn’t fit into “Top Gun’s” agenda. At the magnificent climax of “The Charge of the Light Brigade,” Curtiz superimposes Tennyson’s verse over Flynn’s suicidal gallantry: “When can their glory fade? / O the wild charge they made! / All the world wondered.”

Flynn gave melting-pot moviegoers high-style heroes to love and admire. They could be raffish self-made men, notably Irish-American champ James J. Corbett in Walsh’s go-getter boxing film “Gentleman Jim” (1942), or risk-taking servants of the Crown, such as the Francis Drake-like privateer in Curtiz’s “The Sea Hawk,” whose verbal jousts with Queen Elizabeth are as memorable as the movie’s “Ben Hur”-scale sea battles.

Hollywood’s glamour-industrial complex cannily packaged and promoted Flynn, but he wasn’t a product of the dream factory. Born in Tasmania, Australia, in 1909, to a marine-biologist father and a mother who claimed to be descended from an HMS Bounty mutineer, he was a wild colonial boy—with all the biases and braggadocio that implies. In 1927 he set sail for New Guinea, where he spent five years working as a prospector, trader, hunter, skipper, plantation manager, Cadet Patrol Officer and recruiter of indentured labor.

In 1933, Flynn played Fletcher Christian in a primitive Australian film mostly about the Bounty mutineers’ haven, Pitcairn Island. Flynn decided that movies could be his art and his meal ticket. He went to England to seek film roles and landed in a small-city rep company that served as his seat-of-the-pants acting school. The manager of Warner Bros.’ London studio gave Flynn his break, casting him in a quickie mystery and touting him to production chief Jack Warner. On the Burbank lot Flynn conquered the world.

Laurence Olivier remarked, “When you are young, you are too bashful to play a hero; you debunk it. It isn’t until you are older that you can understand the pictorial beauty of heroism.” Bashfulness was never Flynn’s problem. His daredevil youth had prepared him for the title role in “Captain Blood,” a cynical but virtuous Irish doctor who turns rebel after King James II sentences him to Caribbean slavery. (Curtiz directed.) When Olivia de Havilland, as the niece of a colonial planter, tells Blood, “I believe you’re talking treason,” he replies, “I hope I’m not obscure.” Deadpan impudence became one of Flynn’s trademarks.

In 1942 Flynn was accused of statutory rape by two 17-year-old women. He was tried and acquitted, and his popularity emerged unscathed, but the scandal gradually altered his image and self-image. His humorous self-awareness evolved first into self-parody, then self-revelation. At career’s end he drew on his own alcohol and drug addiction to convey the dissolution and self-loathing of world-weary drunks. Flynn’s early roles fleshed out abstract words—“glory” and “honor”—that Ernest Hemingway had hated. But to Hemingway, Flynn’s performance as Lost Generation lush Mike Campbell in the 1957 adaptation of his 1926 novel, “The Sun Also Rises,” was “the best thing about the film.”

Flynn died two years later, at 50. In his posthumous, playfully titled memoir, “My Wicked, Wicked Ways” (1959), he depicted himself as a hedonist bordering on libertine. Living high—and low—had killed him.

His anarchic sensibility, though, helped fuel his on-screen spontaneity, even in semi-idiotic blockbusters like “They Died with Their Boots On.” In Walsh’s romantic biopic, Flynn’s panache merges with George Armstrong Custer’s: They both leap from comic grandeur to boldness incarnate. The writer Ian Frazier observed, “Custer’s life demonstrates the power of a person having fun.” Frazier theorized that Custer’s superiors “secretly looked up to him”—as perhaps Jack Warner did to his studio’s leading man. Frazier described Custer’s fame as “the victory of fun and myth over complicated history.” Add artistry to the mix, and so is Errol Flynn’s.

Mr. Sragow is the author of “Victor Fleming: An American Movie Master” (2008) and co-wrote the documentary “Fiddler’s Journey to the Big Screen” (2022).

Appeared in the March 18, 2023, print edition as ‘Errol Flynn, Hollywood Hero’.

— barb

 
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