let's get something to eat. I'm thirsty.

tracylord:

“Credit you give yourself is not worth having.”

Irving Thalberg refused to take screen credit for himself, but always wanted the focus on the film. The only movie where he got screen credit was for “The Good Earth”, but this was posthumously. He also was one of the first who wanted to preserve movies for later generations and who combined art and commercialism.

tracylord:

Rest in peace Irving Thalberg!
↳ May 30, 1899 – September 14, 1936

“The movie medium will eventually take its place as art because there is no other medium of interest to so many people.”

“He had a flair for telling movie stories, and he knew about the medium - more than most writers knew. He was like a man who hadn´t learned to write, because he hadn´t the faintest idea what was going on anywhere in the world except in his office. But he had a flair for telling stories like comedians have for telling jokes. He had an Arabian Nights story-telling flair. It was a fantasy-ridden head he had, and it was good.”

Ben Hecht

tracylord:

“Irving was a realist. He knew what lay behind man’s weakness. He was fascinated by the unusual, the colorful - even the decadent and evil. He loved the impact of horror, but not merely for the sake of horror. These elements had to possess a reality, a logic, a meaning. There had to be sound ideas behind these ugly images to lend a story reason, to give the audience hope, and to impart some beauty - even if it was a sad beauty - to these visions of life. In spite of sophistication, his detachment, and his ironic humor, Irving was also an idealist, and luckily for me, a romantic.”

Norma Shearer

“Okay…smile.”

tracylord:

“With the itinerary planned by the globe-trotting Douglas Fairbanks, Mr. and Mrs. Irving G. Thalberg departed Los Angeles on February 15, 1928, bound for Gibraltar , Algiers, the French Riviera , Naples, Rome, Pompeii , Berlin, Heidelberg, Paris and London. The most important aspect for both Irving Thalberg and Shearer was that they had never seen each other outside Hollywood. It was enlightening for Shearer to wander the streets of a foreign city with Thalberg and to see how he reacted to surprises. in Algiers, for example, a wily guide ushered the well-dressed young couple into a brothel. “We were greeted by a very fat lady, who clasped us to her ample bosom,” recalled Shearer. “Inside there were girls wearing nothing but black silk stockings, red satin garters, and gaucho hats. The girls were evidently proud of what they were exposing between their extremities. A couple of them came over and sat down beside us as though they were completely dressed and started chattering in French. I don´t think it mattered to them what sex we were because the one beside me kept saying very sweetly: ‘Nize ladee. Nize ladee’. I found them charming  but Irving did manage to get me out of there before anything took place.”

Irving Thalberg: Boy Wonder to Producer Prince, Mark A. Vieira

tracylord:

30/50 • {Norma Shearer}

tracylord:

Norma and fashion pt. 2
Norma used a variety of styles to convey her twin images of movie star and wife of a Hollywood mogul. She dazzled at premieres with gorgeous gowns, furs and jewels. Yet for casual publicity shots with Thalberg, she dressed like an understated aristocrat, in sailor pants, sweaters and scarves or berets.

tracylord:

Happy Birthday Irving Grant Thalberg!
↳ (* 30 May 1899 - † 14. September 1936)

“No one can possibly write the history of motion pictures without devoting the largest individual share of it to Irving G. Thalberg, who incidentally was my intimate friend until the day he died. In my opinion, he was the most creative producer in the history of films during the period when he was Production Head of MGM, and the guiding light of that operation.”

Darryl F. Zanuck

oldfilmsflicker:

Happy Birthday Irving Grant Thalberg (May 30, 1899 – September 14, 1936)

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