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Nameless Faces on the Silver Screen, MS and Mark Twain

Let’s go to the Movies

I grew up watching dozens of nameless faces on that giant silver screen. Saturday at the Bijou or in my case the Princess Theatre in Jackson, Georgia you’d likely see two features a western, Bulldog Drummond, a thriller serial with a cliffhanger ending, a newsreel and a couple of cartoons all for a dime. Wow – what a bargain.
Saturday was the day when we became familiar with many of those nameless faces. There was a lot of typecasting with the expected bad guys almost always playing their regular heavies roles and likewise the good folks that would eventually form a posse and go chasing the heavies.
Many of those nameless faces were among the UNCREDITED cast members that worked on ‘Gone With the Wind.’
Of the 72 players listed on the uncredited roster about two thirds could be called professional extras. Today they’re known as background performers. In 1939 most of those people were proud of their work and it showed on the set, the AD (assistant director) or the director gave them instructions as to what their action would be during the scene and they did their job without question. Some of those players owned extensive wardrobes and came to work dressed in the period the movie was depicting and they got extra pay for those costumes. There is also extra pay for special business or silent bit assignments given out on the set. And once in a while someone will be given a piece of dialogue to perform, which automatically makes that person a day player with a substantial increase in pay.
The other third of that group was made up of one-time feature players in silent films or sound that were simply past their prime while some of the younger players among them were on their way up. These people listed below will give you an idea of how the casting department followed Selznick’s guidelines and put those faces on the screen to compliment an almost perfect main cast.
Ralph Brooks was featured in ‘Smash Up’ an Oscar nominated film with Susan Hayward for best actress and Dorothy Parker for best original story. Brooks was in ‘Tulsa’ another Susan Hayward film that won an Oscar for best effects and special effects.
Eddy Chandler pops up in many films and he is prominent in Charlie Chan ‘In the Secret Service.’
Wallis Clark, Frank Coghlan Jr, Gino Corrado and Lester Dorr all had long bits and extra résumé’s.
Tommy Kelly had a brief but good run as a child actor while Si Jenks padded his long resume playing old men in westerns.
Dirk Wayne Summers had a long resume and did several episodes on ‘Golden Girls.’
Emerson Treacy, Philip Trent, Julie Ann Tuck, Ernest Whitman, Guy Wilkerson and John Ray all had long résumé’s listing small roles in feature films and TV.
George Meeker was featured in a string of movies playing disagreeable characters, the guy you loved to hate.
Charles Middleton was outstanding in the very popular Flash Gordon serial playing Ming the Merciless. Middleton played dozens of feature roles but Ming might have been the highlight of his film career.
Alberto Morin had an amazing career doing features and small parts in both movies and TV. Morin Played General Le Claire in ‘Two Mules for Sister Sara’ starring Clint Eastwood and Shirley MacLaine. Morin worked in Hellfighters with John Wayne and played scores of roles in TV including multiple episodes on ‘Dallas’ and ‘I Love Lucy.’
David Newell had an extensive background in movies and TV. Newell is best known for his role as the postman in ‘Mr. Rogers Neighborhood.’
Marjorie Reynolds came up through the ranks and at the top of her career was cast in a leading role alongside Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire in the film ‘Holiday Inn.’
The three remaining names on my list all went on to have stellar acting careers and deserve TOP BILLING:
Frank Faylen, Tom Tyler and Richard Farnsworth.
Frank Faylen played the average guy in more than 200 movies and TV films. The most memorable might have been the likeable cab driver working with James Stewart in ‘It’s a Wonderful Life.’
Tom Tyler had a long and profitable career beginning in the silent film era. He starred in the ‘Captain Marvel’ serial and played leads in numerous B westerns and scores of feature roles in major films.
Richard Farnsworth: Farnsworth began working in film in 1937 as stuntman and actor. He achieved stardom in the 1982 film ‘The Grey Fox’ for which he won the Genie award. Then in 1999 Richard Farnsworth was nominated for an academy award as best actor for the film ‘The Straight Story.’
David Selznick demanded and got the best talent available for GWTW from stars to the minor roles and the class of those actors’ shows today when you watch the film on TV or your DVD.

Now let’s go from make-believe to one mans story -- living with Multiple Sclerosis.
The Gang’s All Here
By Chris Tatevosian

“The Monster and His Friends"
My marriage of ten years began dissolving when the “Monster” invited his friends to live in my house. If you have MS, you’ve probably met the gang. There was the kingpin, Stress, his best friend Anger and his twin, Misdirected. Of course a feeling of worthlessness was always there along with inadequacy, low self-esteem and depression. You can also add worry, anxiety and lack of communications to the mix. And all of those characters hung around and never left -- but my wife did.
Sounds like the cast of a real nightmare. At that point of my life it literally was a nightmare, and I couldn’t see myself ever waking up. MS can destroy relationships between spouses, family members and friends. Eventually I turned on a more positive attitude and wrote the book, “Life Interrupted, It’s Not All About Me,” a self-help memoir, my real life story of marriage interrupted by multiple sclerosis. It could have been any chronic illness or disability and it could have been anyone’s relationship. Still, this book is intended to help others going through a similar situation deal with the stress and hardship put on one’s relationships as a result of a chronic illness or disability.
My story is not always pretty, but it’s real. I have written this book to help others in similar situations avoid making the same mistakes that I did. You’re not alone, and there is hope when facing and dealing with the stress put on a relationship as a result of life being interrupted, as in my case by -- MS.
I got remarried last April. My new bride, Jane, is fantastic. And even though my disease is worse than during my first marriage I could not ask for more. So what’s changed? We truly have a wonderful relationship. Why is my marriage working so well now, even though my MS has continued to progress over the past eight years? I can attribute this to two factors. First, Jane is truly a special person, and second. I have written this book, which has afforded me the opportunity to slow down and examine my life. The obvious fact is, we have the choice to go through life dealing with whatever trials and tribulations we must, and deal with either a smile or a frown. Yes, we have an affliction, but that doesn’t mean we have to go through the rest of our lives ticked off at everything and everyone, and as a consequence live life in complete misery.
My wife Jane and I laugh and laugh together and at one another all the time. Sure, I have slip ups, get frustrated and angry. It happened just the other night. I became so frustrated with Jane during the middle of the morning. Actually it was 3:17 am; I have one of those giant digital alarm clocks for the legally blind. When I can’t sleep, believe me I know what time it is. You see, Jane suffers from restless leg syndrome and the other night she was kicking me in the shin, and other places all night long. BAD! Of course I have to deal with nocturnia, which means every time I wake up I have to empty my bladder. I take prescription Flomax so normally I can sleep through the night without having to get up to visit the bathroom. Needless to say, it was a long night and I was ready to yell at my wife, which I would have done in my previous marriage. So what’s the difference, what’s changed? The difference is that I have written, re-written, read and re-read my book so many times that when I do begin to slip-up it’s so obvious that I usually catch myself. Of course Jane has read the book too, so when I slip up she’s quick to point out, “Chris, I think you need to revisit page 76 “and we have a good chuckle. I never thought I would get married again. After all, who would marry damaged goods? At one point prior to my marriage I said to my wife to be, why would you marry someone with MS it’s like buying a vase with a hole in the bottom. Her response was, maybe I want it to hold dried flowers. So these dried flowers are happily married and loving every minute of it.
If you’d like to learn more about the dissolving of my first marriage and strengthen your own, please visit my web site www.lifeInterrupted-nolonger.com

Writers Notebook:
Samuel Langhorne Clemons
Mark Twain worked with words most of his life. At the age of twelve he took a job in a print shop as an apprentice. His storytelling jargon came from newspaper headlines and stories, not from the editorial pages. Twain wrote for the masses and he wrote in their vernacular, and always inserting a healthy dose of his unique sense of humor.
Mark Twain has shared a special writing tip with us, his approach to writing an autobiography. ‘Start it at no particular time in your life; talk only about the things which interest you for the moment; drop it the moment its interest threatens to pale; and turn your talk upon the new and more interesting theme that has intruded itself into your mind.’
Tom Barnes -- Actor, Writer and Hurricane Hunter.
Check out my website for books, blogs, western legends, a literary icon, reviews and interviews. Also my novels The Goring Collection and Doc Holliday’s Road to Tombstone along with a non fiction remembrance of The Hurricane Hunters and Lost in the Bermuda Triangle.
www.tombarnes39.com
www.RocktheTower.com
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Published on April 08, 2009 13:09 Tags: doc, gone, holliday, mark, ms, multiple, sclerosis, tombstone, twain, wind, with

Tom's 'RocktheTower' Blog

Tom Barnes
I do a variety blog and post every Wednesday. I am an actor, writer and hurricane hunter and my subjects are generally written about those fields. During Hurricane Season I do at least one story every ...more
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