Alan Crosland had a brief but brilliant independent personality. - Dead in 1936, at the age of 41, as a result of an automobile accident on Sunset Boulevard - . He will always be remembered as the first "talkie" director ("The Jazz Singer", 1927, produced by Darryl F. Zanuck). It should be noted that, at that time, talkies were totally experimental (and pretty hard tasks') elaborated works.
This old film is so well preserved that I could imagine myself walking on the streets of New York in1920 nearly one hundred years ago!i can see people dancing,enjoying delicious recipes and their daily routines,what will people looked upon us in 2120 just as we do to the people in this one hundred years old film?
Ever imagine living in the 1920’s, going to parties where everyone is drunk and dancing? Or dressing fancy to go to the store or to parties. And then coming back to 2020 noticing how amazing it was in the 20’s
100 Years old today, that's crazy. The 1920's have become ancient history instead of just the olden times that grandparents talk about, it's scary to think about. Still though, it's great we can still connect with the past through films like this.
@@cathleenmoyle1476 Yeah that’s true, but what I meant was that the 1920s are no longer in the memory of living people, so they’re more like history now since the only way we can learn about them is from books and stuff, which is weird since I’ve always thought of them as a time that elderly people experienced and would talk about. But that’s no longer the case.
@@cathleenmoyle1476darn tootin young lady. its not that far back. i still recollect everything my gran told me, and i grew up on these old films too. in my seventh decade now. 🧓
I recently bought myself a beautiful giclee poster of Memories of Olive, and I had to find out who she was. And so it turns out she was the "original flapper," in a way. What a slice of history. 😍😍
Her first film appearance was in the 1916 series Beatrice Fairfax she was the star of episode #10 "Playball" filmed a month before she married Jack Pickford. It also survives and is available on DVD
It is tragic the way she died . She married Jack Pickford, the younger brother of Mary Pickford in 1916 after eloping (neither side of the family approved of their intent to marry). In 1920 the couple took a second honeymoon to France. One night in September 1920 after an evening out on the town, Olive accidentally ingested the highly toxic mercury bi-chloride used by her husband Jack to treat sores caused by his chronic syphilis, unfortunately the poison destroyed her kidneys, and she died in the American Hospital in Paris on 10 Sept 1920.
don't forget that they were having marital problems and went to france to try to work it out - the accidental ingestion of the poison is HIS story - (we have to believe she deliberately drank from a bottle with a label written in french) - the french police couldn't find anything countering his claim - but the the husband was regarded with suspicion ever afterwards - search the internet of "Olive Thomas death"
It's tragic and a likely sign of some personal disturbance that a beautiful young movie star would want to elope with a man who either had or later would get "chronic syphilis". I doubt her death was an accident.
@John Mamo everyone agreed, she was poisoned. Not everyone agreed if it was accidental or deliberate or even..murder. Jack Pickford was a real piece of work, he married astonishingly accomplished women, I can't see his appeal. Olive Thomas was considered A beauty and had a famous Vargas portrait, which is lovely but risque and hung in Flo Ziegfelds office. Mary Pickford said Olive had the most beautiful violet eyes. I've never seen an entire O. Thomas movie.
@@YooTuba No real escape from syphilis was possible then. The spirochete tends to sequester from immune system in the brain for long periods, dementing and/or killing years later. Antibiotics were not discovered until later, and without researching sulfa- drugs, I doubt that any other treatment, however toxic, could do more than favor that bacterial sequestration.
20:10 Oh, I still remember those old fashioned rocking horses. They might appear outdated now, but its mechanics were quite something for a children's toy at the time. Not cheap either...
Except they can. Olive Thomas came through mediums to tell about herself after she "died", as described in the book "The Realities of Heaven" by Miles Allen, available on Amazon Kindle.
the 1920's film scene was such a dashing, cool trip! So thrilled I'm discovering more of them these days. Thank you much for posting this fun little movie-appreciated ;-).
True, but back then theatres hired live pianists (like my late grandmother) to provide music for a film. So musical accompaniment at first was not part of the celluloid.
Wonderful film that seems very current in its execution and art titles that have a life of their own. Olive Thomas is legendary because of the untimely and awful way she died. But here she lives--giving a terrific performance. Her beauty is strangely very modern as well as being breathtaking.
Watching these movies I try to visualise watching it back then. And then to imagine how the world in 1920 was just our world, existence itself at a different time, every bit as real with countless people having hopes and dreams. And the world we now live in some future long-off fantasy. Along with that lots of normal and ordinary experiences like waking up from a weird dream to yawning while reading a book to having a headache and feeling irritable as a result. Putting yourself in that time is fascinating to contemplate and, at least I find, can give you a different perspective when watching old movies, i.e. by trying to imagine this when it was new and cutting-edge.
It is so strange to see a silent film, I keep trying to turn up the volume to hear the sound even though I know it doesn't have a lol. would be is fantastic to hear her voice and her beautiful eyes in a film, it is strange to think of everything that happened in those 100 years of her death. I hope she has found peace
Olive is simply gorgeous. Even Mabel Normand adored her, plastering her dressing room walls with her pictures and compiling a bound photo album of her. Both were accused of being foul-mouthed.
Great old wooden boats. I've seen pix of my great-grandmother in similar. Just looked up Olive Thomas. Poor thing died of nephritis the year this movie came out; she accidentally drank her husband's syphilis medicine (a mercury-based concoction--external use only), and it shut down her kidneys.
*Olive Thomas/'Ginger King'* and *Theodore Westman, Jr./'Bill Forbes'* both died tragically young -- she at age 25 in September 1920 (four months after this film was released); he at age 24 in November 1927 (one month after the advent of talkies).
This is PERFECT! The origins of Nancy Drew and all the other "adventure girls" of schoolgirl age---though to be fair this was ALL an outgrowth of the Gibson Girl era (at least in America) I love how this world straddled both the strict victorian values but also showed that girls were kids too and they wanted adventure and fun. It always ends with a marriage ( the downfall of most girls' series books of the pre Nancy Drew era, as aging the characters into marriage effectively killed their appeal as how much adventure is involved in cooking?) but before you get to the marriage...what fun it is! And OH the gorgeous middy (sailor) dresses and shirts.
Olive Thomas era muito linda! Tão jovem quando morreu em Paris ao beber veneno acidentalmente. Muito triste. Esse filme é maravilhoso e muito conservado. Faltava uma música de fundo. Perfeito.
"Pandora's Box" is not like this film - it is european & grim & decadent - but american Louise Brooks is a must see - very naturalistic back when many silent actors were mugging - beautiful - search youtube for her and you'll come across biographies of her - and short clips - and an occasional movie - silent and sound Olive is a lot like Mary Pickford - i'd recommend you start with Mary - and move outwards from her for myself - i prefer Greta Garbo - but her movies were more tragic - but she was incomparably beautiful in those silent film days - and a potent actress
She filmed this only a few months before her UNTIMELY, and suspicious death, in Paris. Jack Pickford at 1st said it was suicide, then found out that his $$$ insane Life Insurance policy he took out on Olive wouldn't pay if it was suicide. It was quickly changed to accidental ingestion of his Syphilis medication. He had to fight the insurance co. when he came back to the US, which he ultimately won, but given his sister was Mary Pickford, not surprising. RIP to this beautiful Flapper.
Came here for Norma Shearer and her sister Athole but I’ve read about Olive Thomas in Kenneth Anger’s Hollywood Babylon. She is good and they dressed her differently than the other school girls to stand out, it’s sad that she died so young.
Fin fact, if you ever go to the exact place Olive performed and see her spirit, it's always kind to say, "Good night Olive" to her each time. To know it's Olive she'll be wearing the green dress she wore on stage, and hold a bottle. I believe it's the same bottle she drank, that sadly took her life.
Olive Thomas. Lost far too soon (at 25) and far too tragically. What might have been had she been able to stay in the business and continued on. Colleen Moore, Clara Bow, Louise Brooks; all of them and more, at least owe some inspiration for their roles to Olive Thomas. And she was a keeper.
its funny these people making this movie had no idea people be watching this movie at 2 am near their faces in the comfort of their own bed lol
So true.
wow THANKS its 2:13 am lmfao
Ahhhhhhh, okey.......
you discover me...(2:05)!haauhauhauahu
Facts 👌👌
This is the first movie I've watched in 2020.
Same
😂
And I’d say the best too.
Sammeeeeee!!
That’s totally bad ass ... when I realize them chicks is grandma ... for me . Stupid 21st century ...
Alan Crosland had a brief but brilliant independent personality. - Dead in 1936, at the age of 41, as a result of an automobile accident on Sunset Boulevard - . He will always be remembered as the first "talkie" director ("The Jazz Singer", 1927, produced by Darryl F. Zanuck). It should be noted that, at that time, talkies were totally experimental (and pretty hard tasks') elaborated works.
This old film is so well preserved that I could imagine myself walking on the streets of New York in1920 nearly one hundred years ago!i can see people dancing,enjoying delicious recipes and their daily routines,what will people looked upon us in 2120 just as we do to the people in this one hundred years old film?
i believe the film was found in the vaults of George Eastman (of Eastman Kodak) - which accounts for the pristine quality
I do see that as well. What our world will be like a century from now.
@@emilymalden3310
If we even make it that far.
Ever imagine living in the 1920’s, going to parties where everyone is drunk and dancing? Or dressing fancy to go to the store or to parties. And then coming back to 2020 noticing how amazing it was in the 20’s
Preach!!! 👏
Life is much better comparatively. Hygiene wasn't an important part of their life. Think about it.
Not so amazing for some.
@@witchsistah Maybe in Salem, witch.
I imagine getting to meet all the silent film stars. It would be so cool to have a nice convo with them about their life.
Beautiful move.I was born 13 years later.
Holy shit you were born in 1933
Omg wow your the oldest you tuber I have met it’s a pleasure to meet you sir
Wow!
Wow! You're an OLD FART!
U still alive?
100 Years old today, that's crazy. The 1920's have become ancient history instead of just the olden times that grandparents talk about, it's scary to think about. Still though, it's great we can still connect with the past through films like this.
They're still olden times because it was only 100 years ago, and it was in the modern era.
@@cathleenmoyle1476 Yeah that’s true, but what I meant was that the 1920s are no longer in the memory of living people, so they’re more like history now since the only way we can learn about them is from books and stuff, which is weird since I’ve always thought of them as a time that elderly people experienced and would talk about. But that’s no longer the case.
@@SEB1991SEB oh...
@@cathleenmoyle1476darn tootin young lady. its not that far back. i still recollect everything my gran told me, and i grew up on these old films too. in my seventh decade now. 🧓
Olive Thomas, a love lost somewhere in time...
Olive Thomas was almost to beautiful for this world. She was one of the most beautiful actress's ever.. Rip Olive.
I recently bought myself a beautiful giclee poster of Memories of Olive, and I had to find out who she was. And so it turns out she was the "original flapper," in a way. What a slice of history. 😍😍
RIP beautiful talented Olive Thomas 🙏💗💗
Her first film appearance was in the 1916 series Beatrice Fairfax she was the star of episode #10 "Playball" filmed a month before she married Jack Pickford. It also survives and is available on DVD
Wow this movie is officially 100 years old !
101 now!!! That's crazy!
102 now( LoL)!
104 lol!!
To think,so many people from the 1800's in this movie!!🤯
To think, some people watching this are from the 1900s!
Charming! Olive Thomas was so sweet. :-)
Lovable witty and clean with innocence. How time flies but still we get the humour after 100 years just the way they did 100 years ago.
It is tragic the way she died . She married Jack Pickford, the younger brother of Mary Pickford in 1916 after eloping (neither side of the family approved of their intent to marry). In 1920 the couple took a second honeymoon to France. One night in September 1920 after an evening out on the town, Olive accidentally ingested the highly toxic mercury bi-chloride used by her husband Jack to treat sores caused by his chronic syphilis, unfortunately the poison destroyed her kidneys, and she died in the American Hospital in Paris on 10 Sept 1920.
don't forget that they were having marital problems and went to france to try to work it out - the accidental ingestion of the poison is HIS story - (we have to believe she deliberately drank from a bottle with a label written in french) - the french police couldn't find anything countering his claim - but the the husband was regarded with suspicion ever afterwards - search the internet of "Olive Thomas death"
It's tragic and a likely sign of some personal disturbance that a beautiful young movie star would want to elope with a man who either had or later would get "chronic syphilis". I doubt her death was an accident.
@John Mamo everyone agreed, she was poisoned. Not everyone agreed if it was accidental or deliberate or even..murder. Jack Pickford was a real piece of work, he married astonishingly accomplished women, I can't see his appeal. Olive Thomas was considered
A beauty and had a famous Vargas portrait, which is lovely but risque and hung in Flo Ziegfelds office. Mary Pickford said Olive had the most beautiful violet eyes.
I've never seen an entire O. Thomas movie.
Very tragic. I see Theodore Westman, who plays BIll Forbes, died 7 years later at 24 years old. Anyone know the cause?
@@YooTuba No real escape from syphilis was possible then.
The spirochete tends to sequester from immune system in the brain for long periods, dementing and/or killing years later.
Antibiotics were not discovered until later, and without researching sulfa- drugs, I doubt that any other treatment, however toxic, could do more than favor that bacterial sequestration.
20:10 Oh, I still remember those old fashioned rocking horses. They might appear outdated now, but its mechanics were quite something for a children's toy at the time. Not cheap either...
Imagine everybody in that movie is dead. If they could see from beyond their graves, I wonder what they think of this century.
Except they can. Olive Thomas came through mediums to tell about herself after she "died", as described in the book "The Realities of Heaven" by Miles Allen, available on Amazon Kindle.
@@Phoenix_cataclysm_in_2040 Olive's ghost still haunts the New Amsterdam Theatre in NYC
@@applejellypucci
She may well indeed. Can't help herself, I guess.
They would think that we have all become extreme prostitutes for showing our knees and more
🙋🏼♂️ sorry to break it to you man but you need to get in touch with reality, mediums are scams, and this woman, is long gone
I love film history! How special!
Very good quality if restored they did a great job!🎥🎥🎥
This 🎞 is lovely. It’s nice to not need to put on your headphones and just read the words that’s on the 📺
the 1920's film scene was such a dashing, cool trip! So thrilled I'm discovering more of them these days. Thank you much for posting this fun little movie-appreciated ;-).
needs music...silent films weren't meant to be completely silent :-)
Douglas Fairbanks You could pick your own -- while watching this, I had the Stones going there for a while (Goats Head Soup). Multitasking.
maybe I'll just hum along with it...
True, but back then theatres hired live pianists (like my late grandmother) to provide music for a film. So musical accompaniment at first was not part of the celluloid.
+3000EJS Goat's Head Soup--an interesting choice; not everyone's first.
Great idea.
Loved the movie. Thank you for sharing it with all of us.
I enjoy watching this old movies. Love the clothes 😍
Olive Thomas was among the greatest Flapper of the time. It is really a shame there Is not much of its well preserved movies left.
She looks more like a Gibson Girl than a Flapper in this film to me.
This was the era sandwiched between the Gibson Girl and The Flapper
Thank you for sharing. I have worked in film, small screen & radio. But I adore the magic of the Silen Film era!
Wonderful film that seems very current in its execution and art titles that have a life of their own. Olive Thomas is legendary because of the untimely and awful way she died. But here she lives--giving a terrific performance. Her beauty is strangely very modern as well as being breathtaking.
Ridiculous
100 years ago and the West Point cadet uniform hasn't changed!
I have really enjoyed all the movies thank you for letting me watch them
Watching these movies I try to visualise watching it back then. And then to imagine how the world in 1920 was just our world, existence itself at a different time, every bit as real with countless people having hopes and dreams. And the world we now live in some future long-off fantasy. Along with that lots of normal and ordinary experiences like waking up from a weird dream to yawning while reading a book to having a headache and feeling irritable as a result. Putting yourself in that time is fascinating to contemplate and, at least I find, can give you a different perspective when watching old movies, i.e. by trying to imagine this when it was new and cutting-edge.
Happy 100th anniversary for this movie !
Olive Thomas is lovely, in any era.
Very creative graphics in the dialog frames -
The fact that this is over a hundred years old blows my mind
Love this movie!
48:34 "If life offered so many adventures, why die?
Poor Olive Thomas died that same year. :-(
She died doing 2 more films after that one.
@@electric7508 Yes, all In 1920.
This is awesome. Thanks so much for sharing this with us.
oh thank you so much no bad music just good vids
It is so strange to see a silent film, I keep trying to turn up the volume to hear the sound even though I know it doesn't have a lol. would be is fantastic to hear her voice and her beautiful eyes in a film, it is strange to think of everything that happened in those 100 years of her death. I hope she has found peace
Great movie I love the story.
this film is 95 years old, and olive thomas had been dead since the year it was released.
Now 98 ... .
@@JudgeJulieLit now 99
@@ediwijanarko6460 Now 99 and seven hours ... .
The Grim Reaper hath by now reaped the whole cast.
Now 100
"Aw gee but, you look swell!! (I think I was born 50 years too late!!!!)
Aw gee, your comment is swell!
Your comment is swell, no fooling
thank you for sharing this.
Amazing to think that Olive died in the same year this film was made: 103 years ago in 192O
Worth watching just to see the great Arthur Houseman sober & playing a heel. Miss Thomas's death after this film was tragic.
What a gem! Thank you!
I second this!
Olive is simply gorgeous. Even Mabel Normand adored her, plastering her dressing room walls with her pictures and compiling a bound photo album of her. Both were accused of being foul-mouthed.
1920s women were so so natural and beautiful .. More so that anyone in my humble opinion
Agreed, they truly were!-Not a pointless tat or hair extension in sight for any of them. They had serious class. Sexiness but class.
I love her eyes and expressive face and her luxurious hair...(swooning)
@@maggiewood4332 But for kohl eyeliner and shadow, and rouged lips.
Baby Mammoth34 Lots of booze and drugs tho
I still remember watching this movie with my girlfriend in theatre. Those were good days.
Great old wooden boats. I've seen pix of my great-grandmother in similar. Just looked up Olive Thomas. Poor thing died of nephritis the year this movie came out; she accidentally drank her husband's syphilis medicine (a mercury-based concoction--external use only), and it shut down her kidneys.
Olive right up there with Clara Bow 🥰❤️❤️❤️❤️
*Olive Thomas/'Ginger King'* and *Theodore Westman, Jr./'Bill Forbes'* both died tragically young -- she at age 25 in September 1920 (four months after this film was released); he at age 24 in November 1927 (one month after the advent of talkies).
When you’re writing a book about the 1920’s
Great picture quality ! A darling film !
This is PERFECT! The origins of Nancy Drew and all the other "adventure girls" of schoolgirl age---though to be fair this was ALL an outgrowth of the Gibson Girl era (at least in America) I love how this world straddled both the strict victorian values but also showed that girls were kids too and they wanted adventure and fun. It always ends with a marriage ( the downfall of most girls' series books of the pre Nancy Drew era, as aging the characters into marriage effectively killed their appeal as how much adventure is involved in cooking?) but before you get to the marriage...what fun it is! And OH the gorgeous middy (sailor) dresses and shirts.
😅😊
Great film, one of the best.
It was 100 years ago...
All them previous legend actors from a along long long time ago. God rest the souls.
Olive Thomas era muito linda! Tão jovem quando morreu em Paris ao beber veneno acidentalmente. Muito triste. Esse filme é maravilhoso e muito conservado. Faltava uma música de fundo. Perfeito.
Thank you for your efforts.
Tinny sounding piano music would be nice.
Thanks you so so much.
loved this! can anyone suggest any other films like this one? (preferably ones available on youtube)
Emily Raynes pandoras box with louise brooks on youtube
"IT" with Clara Bow
"Pandora's Box" is not like this film - it is european & grim & decadent - but american Louise Brooks is a must see - very naturalistic back when many silent actors were mugging - beautiful - search youtube for her and you'll come across biographies of her - and short clips - and an occasional movie - silent and sound
Olive is a lot like Mary Pickford - i'd recommend you start with Mary - and move outwards from her
for myself - i prefer Greta Garbo - but her movies were more tragic - but she was incomparably beautiful in those silent film days - and a potent actress
omg A!
Good old movie. Young children these days do not know good movies anymore.
Excellent film. 😊
What a wonderful movie.
100 years ago from now? Wow wow wow.....❤
It’s so weird that they recorded that nearly a 100 years ago
She filmed this only a few months before her UNTIMELY, and suspicious death, in Paris. Jack Pickford at 1st said it was suicide, then found out that his $$$ insane Life Insurance policy he took out on Olive wouldn't pay if it was suicide. It was quickly changed to accidental ingestion of his Syphilis medication. He had to fight the insurance co. when he came back to the US, which he ultimately won, but given his sister was Mary Pickford, not surprising. RIP to this beautiful Flapper.
Wow I didn't hear the whole backstory - that is definitely suspicious!
Disgusting
He never killed her.He tried to kill himself on the boat back to USA
This story is pure fiction. Yes, she took an overdose, but it was accidental. The directions were in French, and she misread them
this is my movie collection
Wow. 100 years ago.
You are very welcome. Please visit our website for star bios, slide shows and much more. Thanks.
id never heard of Olive Thomas until a radio programme today
She died around the same time robert harron died they were almost the same age to
this is the first movie I've watched in 2020
Olive Thomas! ❤
❤❤❤
iTunes: "The 1920s Radio Network" ~ there's your soundtrack ~
Now if we had the musical accompaniment as well, we'd really have something.
Just learned of this pretty lady. Had to find one of her movies
I'm fine with the lack of music. Better no music than inappropriate music. It's the film that matters, and this one is a gem.
I listen to relaxing music while watching silent movies.
Came here for Norma Shearer and her sister Athole but I’ve read about Olive Thomas in Kenneth Anger’s Hollywood Babylon. She is good and they dressed her differently than the other school girls to stand out, it’s sad that she died so young.
They really gave you time to read the credits in those days..........
they didn't list everyone
Imagine in 1920 when people were watching this in complete silence and just read this
Platypus with a Phone there would be music playing along with the movie!
I have an ex who looks so much like Olive Thomas that it’s honestly disturbing
I wish I could see!
I look quite a bit like her honestly
100 years,its not so long.nothing really changesjust technology
My headphones broke so time to watch silent movies 😌
Was really a sad ending for her how she died 😢
At 51:07 its a bit too loud
"That's a paddln'." --Mrs. Paddles
Fin fact, if you ever go to the exact place Olive performed and see her spirit, it's always kind to say, "Good night Olive" to her each time. To know it's Olive she'll be wearing the green dress she wore on stage, and hold a bottle. I believe it's the same bottle she drank, that sadly took her life.
100 years ago
100 years ago ..
Poor baby!
Amazing!
The smokey eye
Olive Thomas. Lost far too soon (at 25) and far too tragically. What might have been had she been able to stay in the business and continued on. Colleen Moore, Clara Bow, Louise Brooks; all of them and more, at least owe some inspiration for their roles to Olive Thomas. And she was a keeper.