I've mentioned The Film Noir Foundation before. The estimable Eddie Muller founded it and continues to present noir in all its aspects around the world--and present it in the most intelligent and compelling ways possible. By sending a contribution to the Foundation you'll receive The Noir City Sentinel when it appears. This magazine is the finest ongoing history of noir I've ever seen. Here's how to contact the Foundation. http://www.filmnoirfoundation.org/  (By the way I want to thank Vince Keenan for introducing me to the Foundation.)
Here's the contents page of this issue:
Noir City Sentinel   Nov / Dec  2009 
IN THIS ISSUE 
SPECIALFEATURES 
The Energizing Enigma of Joseph Losey 
AConversation with Foster Hirsch     4 
Don Malcolm 
Losey on Losey in Hollywood 
Quotes from the Exiled Director 5 
ARemake That Works: 
The Rarity of Losey’sM     7 
Carl Steward 
Before They Made Him Run: 
Joseph Losey’s Hollywood Noirs    8 
The Lawless Don Malcolm 
The Prowler  Anastasia Lin 
The Big Night Robert Ottoson 
At the Center of the Storm: 
He Ran All the Wayand the Blacklist     10 
Jake Hinkson 
“First is First and Second is Nobody”    
The Philip Yordan Story     12 
Alan K. Rode 
Noir in Iran    22 
Ehsan Khoshbakht 
Abraham Polonsky 
“The Most Dangerous Man in America” 24 
Greg De Cuir 
REGULARFEATURES 
Noir ... Or Not?     
King Creole     1     
Will Viharo 
ABook Versus Film Comparison     
The Sound of Fury    16 
Jake Hinkson 
Noir’s Unsung Heroes 
Art Smith    17 
Jake Hinkson 
Noir’s Not-So-Nice Guys     
Luther Adler    18 
Eric Beetner 
Radio Noir, Part 3: 
Silver Tongued Dicks 19 
Anne Hockens 
Sirens of the Sentinel 
Gale Sondergaard    20 
Eddie Muller 
Noir Couples 
Rita Hayworth and Glenn Ford 28 
Vince Keenan 
DEPARTMENTS 
Letter from the Publisher    2 
This Dirty Town 3 
J. J. Hunsecker Jr. 
Noir City 8 Preview     3 
Book Review     
Blanketing the Blacklist    21 
Don Malcolm and Dan Akira Nishimura 
Mr. Modern Noir 
Dark Country      26 
Will “The Thrill” Viharo 
Ed here: There is an excellent Foster Hirsch with the late (and blacklisted) director Joseph Losey. Gail Russell's story has always struck me as particularly sad and obviously Losey had the same impression of her.
"Gail Russell, who didn’t want to be an actress, was 
picked up by a talent scout when she was a clerk in a 
department store in Beverly Hills, came from a lower 
middle-class family. She died of alcoholism because she 
was so deathly frightened of acting, but she had in her the 
makings of a great star. I had a tragic time with her. I think 
she had the most beautiful eyes I have ever seen, the most 
moving eyes. And she was immensely sensitive. 
She didn’t know anything. Paramount had her under 
contract—like a horse. She got a big salary then, and I had 
absolute instructions from them not to let her have a drink. 
The very first time I shot with her I had a long night-track- 
ing shot. It was a half-night, we finished at twelve. 
She couldn’t 
remember a single line 
and it was three or four 
pages of important dia- 
logue. I wasn’t trained 
enough then to say “Well, 
we’ll shoot it another 
way,” and I kept trying to 
get it by coaching her in 
her lines, and finally I 
said “What’s the matter?” 
And she grabbed 
me, her hands were icy 
cold, she was absolutely 
rigid, and she said “Look, 
I don’t want to be an actress. I’m not an actress. I can’t act. 
I never had a director who gave me a scene this long 
before. I can’t do it.” 
And I said “Oh yes you can. I’m sure you can, and 
you are an actress.” 
“No, I’m not, I’ve never kidded myself. I’m not an 
actress. I hate it, I’m frightened of it. Get me a drink and 
I’ll be alright.” 
So I said, “You know, I’ve been told not to get you a 
drink?” She said. “Get me a drink!” 
I got her a drink and she did the scene. 
By this point Macdonald Carey couldn’t remember his 
lines. She had absolutely destroyed him. It was a very bad 
start for me on that quick picture, to spend the whole night 
on one set-up. And I just barely got it..…This started her 
drinking and she was drunk throughout the rest of the pic- 
ture. That isn’t to say she was bad. I think she was very 
good often, but sometimes I had to shoot scenes in 
ways to disguise the fact she was drunk. "
--------------------Steve Mertz
Writer Steve Mertz wrote me a thoughtful letter about my Lester Dent profile. I'm running it here because Steve can;t conect with my blog for some reason.
Ed,
Forgive me but I seem unable to post this on your blog comments, due solely to my lack of smarts.  So since it's to you, well heck, here it is:
 
 
Nice piece on Lester Dent, one of my all-time favorites for all the reasons you cite. 
 
Out of courtesy to the man, I’ve always regarded his work as he did.  The Docs can be fun in their juvenile exuberance (especially so with some of the later ones like “Let’s Kill Ames,” which are adapted from his unsold crime novels), and his contribution with that series, providing a template for high adventure that exists today, is significant.  But posterity should also regard the work he was proudest of and signed his name to, which is his best work and definitely worthy of the current reassessment it’s receiving.  Books like Dead at the Takeoff and Cry at Dusk sparkle with qualities and a voice that is Dent’s alone.
 
Love your image of him sitting at a typewriter in the telegraph office at the start of his career.  Here’s one from the opposite end of that career:
 
It’s 1956 and Dent sits in his den writing Honey in His Mouth at his farm at La Plata.  The pulps have died.  His hardcover career has sputtered out.  Few seem to want his work.  But he’s writing this little masterpiece word-by-word, page-by-page, giving it his best while knowing that it will probably never sell in his lifetime.  He was right, and 50+ years later, here we are talking enthusiastically about the “new Lester Dent novel." 
 
The thing is, he knew.  He knew that someday, somewhere, even if it was long after he was gone, someone—a whole lot of someones--would be reading that book and he owed them the absolute best he had.  I find that inspiring.
 
--Stephen Mertz
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2 comments:
Well said, Steve.
To Ed and the gang: While "Angelfish" has indeed been reprinted several times, the cover - featuring Oscar Sail himself (sort of) - has not. I've just posted it for your viewing pleasure over at Davy Crockett's Almanack.
Love this newsletter. Lester Dent seems to making the rounds this week.
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