Steve Hayes' book Googies, Coffee Shop to the Stars was read by a Canadian gentleman named Barry McMahon who sent Steve this rare pic of Flynn at the Vancouver Airport speaking to a reporter...
Tip O' the Hat to both Steve and Barry...
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Friday, January 2
by
David DeWitt
on Fri 02 Jan 2009 10:05 PM PST
Steve Hayes' book Googies, Coffee Shop to the Stars was read by a Canadian gentleman named Barry McMahon who sent Steve this rare pic of Flynn at the Vancouver Airport speaking to a reporter... Tip O' the Hat to both Steve and Barry...
by
Karl
on Fri 02 Jan 2009 06:36 AM PST
Ahoy all, and welcome to this New Year! A few years ago, I purchased an audio collection entitled Too Hot For Radio, and on it was a brief selection that was a so-called "commercial spot" featuring Anthony Quinn and, of all people- Errol Flynn. No other information on it was given. It was an odd sort of offering, and not so clearly audible, nor understandable as to just what it was ... and it intrigued me! I began, sometime later, cataloguing the various extant Flynn audio, remembered this one, and started looking into its possible background. And through listening to it a number of times, it finally "spoke to me" as to a possible context, and lead me to checking out the written record (various books) for further insight. One day, Linc and I were aboard Zaca, at the same time, and I had recently sent him the recording of the Blood Drive Commercial ... the following dialogue ensued, in real time, which I then edited and preserved in this separate form- round or about 6/26/06. It was very exciting to me at the time having "collaborated", if only momentarily, with the GREAT Flynn scholar! "Blood Drive Commercial description: This particular recording, I believe, is the ONLY known TRUE recording of an instance of a Flynn practical joke that has survived. It has been preserved in the collection "Too Hot For Radio". It is, ostensibly, a LIVE radio commercial break during an equally LIVE radio program broadcast. Anthony Quinn and Flynn are doing this spot for a blood drive. Quinn is making the pitch, in earnest, explaining the process of giving blood and highlighting how they give you a glass of milk at the end. Flynn playfully interjects: "Do they give you any brandy in it?" Quinn fumbles a bit in his words, and Flynn adds how they call the drink a "Velvet Cow" in Australia. Quinn tries to recover and pick up where he left off and continues till he reaches his final point: " ... with men giving their lives, the least everyone can do is give a drop of blood." Errol, rather thick tongued in his speech, now takes over commenting on the quality of the preceding entertainment (the radio program) by saying: "As a matter of fact, you know all of this program, you know damn well it’s alot of crap." And then just as suddenly retreats (in silence) leaving "Tony" to pick it up from there. Quinn doesn’t seem to know what to say next. Finally, a third person enters the conversation and is chewing them both out, about expletives being said on the Columbia Network, WITH HIS OWN EXPLETIVES. And that’s where the recording ends abruptly. Once thought about, there can be but one conclusion- the mike wasn’t live, and so this was, in fact, a practical joke played on Quinn, by the third man and Quinn’s partner. What we couldn’t hear, but was no doubt later said ... "Gotcha Tony!" 2 (The following exchange is between Lincoln Hurst and Karl Holmberg about this unusual recording) I will backpedal, and explain. Errol Flynn was a delightful man, and an outstanding friend. I met him first through John Barrymore, whom he greatly admired, but he stood much taller on his own. When he was around Barrymore, Flynn was like a little boy. He wanted so badly to be like Jack that he was almost cartoonish in his emulation. (He even went on to play Barrymore in a 1958 Warner Bros. picture called Too Much Too Soon, based on the memoirs of Jack's daughter Diana.) We were due to appear live on national radio at about eleven o'clock the following morning, and Flynn roused me from my bed in my hotel room at seven. I had just fallen asleep, and now he wanted me to go to work. He said the time of the broadcast had been changed, and we were needed down at the studio earlier than planned. "Up, up, up," he said, bouncing about the room like it was nothing at all. (Even at seven o'clock in the morning, after a drunken evening, he moved like a dancer.) "It's just radio. No one will see you." I went on first. I had a splitting headache, and wanted to be anywhere else but in that studio, but I tried to tough it out. It was for a good cause, and I had given my word. I introduced myself, made a little speech about my friends Gene and Errol, spoke about the importance of the American effort overseas, and turned the microphone over to Gene. She made her appeal, told a few jokes, and sent it back to me. Then I made another pitch, said a few kind words about Errol, and called on him to join me. I was furious. I did not know whether to beat the crap out of Errol or pull him from the microphone to save all of us from any further embarrassment. In my indecision, I did nothing. Errol grabbed the poor bastard by the collar and started wrestling with him on the ground. It was an ugly, offensive scene, and I watched it play out as if in slow motion, all the time thinking of the damage it would do to my already tentative career. "Mr. De Mille," I said, cutting him off. "Let's not blame Errol. We were all out a bit late last night, and I'm afraid some of us had a bit too much to drink. He didn't know what he was saying. " I do not know why, but 1 went out of my way to cover for Flynn. And then came the punch line. The last call I took was from Errol Flynn, sounding sober as the day he was born. His was the last voice I wanted to hear. "Gotcha, Tony! " he said, and then he laughed like a madman. When he calmed down enough to explain himself, my mischievous friend told me he had orchestrated the whole fine mess. He had slipped the studio hands a few bucks to let us in early to a dormant sound room, and asked the director to play along. Then he arranged for De Mille and the gossips to check in with their distress calls. No one outside the studio had heard Errol's rude commentary. The fight, the name calling, the loose talk ... everything was staged. (We went back to the radio station, at eleven, for the real broadcast.) I did not know what to think. I was relieved, of course, but beyond that I was not sure. In the end, what I was left to think was that if icons like Errol Flynn, Gene Tierney, Louella Parsons. and C. B. De Mille would go out of their way to lure me into a practical joke, then maybe things were not as bad as they seemed. Maybe there was a place for me in this business after all." "Colonel Bickerstaff flew us to St. Louis, where Flynn was to appear in another bond show, along with Gene Tierney and Anthony Quinn. Flynn was scheduled to do a Red Cross radio broadcast in the Chase Hotel, and we schemed an elaborate gag, with Tony Quinn as the victim. We had sent a script to Tony and asked if he would kindly participate in the show. The radio personnel were all in on the joke, playing it straight as Flynn and Tony began rehearsing their material. The director gave notice that the live broadcast was about to begin. Once underway, Flynn suddenly blurted out some very foul language, then in a shocked voice, he exclaimed, "Why Tony! Why did you say that?" Karl: Thank you for your heads up in HELPING me to think this one through more thoroughly - it never occurred to me before! And, once again, Orson Welles was REALLY well ahead of the rest of us- me anyway. 4 Buster Wiles with William Donati, My Days With Errol Flynn . Santa Monica, California: Harper and Row, 1988, p. 148.
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