Tuesday, August 18, 2020
Temple Tuesday: Shirley Returns to Fox
In November 1948, Darryl F. Zanuck and 20th Century Fox had a little “Welcome Home, Shirley” party at the Commissary, in honor of Shirley returning to the lot after an eight-year absence. She was about to begin filming “Mr. Belvedere Goes to College.” Here, Zanuck pins an orchid on Shirley, and then welcomes her co-star Clifton Webb:
Jane Withers, who played Shirley’s bratty nemesis in “Bright Eyes” showed up with husband William Moss:
...and how the two girls looked fourteen years earlier. My how they have grown!
In her autobiography Child Star, Shirley wrote that her mother elected to skip the party for a visit to the doctor, but as you can see from this photo, both her parents attended, despite the differences they had with Zanuck towards the end of Shirley’s contract at Fox.
No idea who these folks are, and from the look on Shirley’s face, she probably ducked away soon after this photo was shot.
Shirley examines a box of roses with former co-star George Murphy; not sure who the other young lady is, but it doesn’t appear to be the woman he was married to at the time.
George and Shirley a decade beforehand (note Claude Gillingwater, who played the judge) in “Little Miss Broadway”:
Former costars Charlotte Greenwood and C. Aubrey Smith gave Shirley a warm welcome:
Jack Oakie, Shirley, and Charlotte Greenwood from eight years before in “Young People”:
Shirley and Smith in 1937’s “Wee Willie Winkie”:
Shirley and her stand-in, Mary Lou Isleib, surround their former schoolteacher, Frances Klamt:
Shirley and Mary Lou back in 1938 on the set of “Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm”:
The uncomfortable shot of the evening goes to…Richard Widmark and Shirley!
See more Shirley Temple photos at my main website.
That last photo reminds me of a couple of candid photos of my wife and various family members during our wedding reception. The moments the photographer captured convey emotions and suggest scenarios that just didn't happen, but they're fun to make up stories about.
ReplyDeleteAnd that set from Little Miss Broadway is simply spectacular!
Thanks Chuck - can you imagine a courtroom looking like that?!?
ReplyDeleteSure, I can imagine it! Isn't that what the movies are all about? :-)
ReplyDeleteThe passages in her autobiography "Child Star" about this reunion, and the whole Zanuck situation are 👀👀😳😬
ReplyDeleteEvidently Shirley experienced quite a bit of #metoo at the hands of zanuck though account is a vague. Certainly explains her strained expression in these photos.
Emile - it was so much as a #metoo issue as strained relations between Zanuck and her parents. The parents wanted to give way more input into Shirley’s films than Zanuck cared to accept. They also went over his head, which backfired on them made the relationship even more strained. Now MGM...that was an actual account of Mayer and Arthur Freed attempting to put the moves on Shirley AND her mother!
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