If you know anything at all about me
through this blog, you know that I'm a Warner Brothers girl. One look at that
distinctive shield and I'm instantly happy. I don't exactly know why. Maybe it
has something to do with all of those Saturday afternoon films shown on
television during my adolescence. Or maybe it has something to do with that
suave, naked bunny lounging confidently atop it. Munching a carrot.
Anywho, that's how it is and always has been with me. And I'm so grateful that in this world that continually changes at an ever faster pace that symbol still endures. I'm sure its founders wouldn't recognize the entertainment business today, but still, 100 years is pretty impressive.
By the way, anyone catch that recent
Jeopardy final answer about the name of the brothers who missed the premier of
"The Jazz Singer" because one of them was ill? Were you, like me,
screaming "WARNER!" at the television screen? Did you feel pretty
darn smart when each one of the contestants didn't know the answer? Of course,
I kind of doubt my score would have been on the plus side leading up to Final
Jeopardy, but that's another story.
So now to the giveaway. In honor of
hanging in there for 100 years, A Person in the Dark is conducting a giveaway
of the newly published "Warner Bros. 100 Years of Storytelling. The
Official Centennial History by Mark Vieira" with a forward by Ben
Mankiewicz.
From the Preface by Mark A. Vieira:
Four
brothers from Ohio started a film company. Their first star was a dog. Their
next star was Broadway’s greatest actor. They climbed to the top of the
industry with the technology of sound, but they lost a brother in the process.
They not only survived the Great Depression but also thrived by making musicals
such as Footlight Parade. Their studio was the home of unique stars: Joan
Blondell, James Cagney, Kay Francis, Edward G. Robinson, Bette Davis, Humphrey
Bogart, Paul Muni. Theirs was the only studio to blow the whistle on fascism.
They boosted morale during World War II with films such as Casablanca. In the
1950s, after adapting to 3-D, widescreen, and stereo, Warner Bros. was one of
the first Hollywood studios to enter television production.
Warner
Bros. started as a family business. This book could be the family album…. It’s
a record of extraordinary entertainment history, a panoply of the greatest
names, faces, and talents in Hollywood lore.
Interested? Okay, here are the rules:
1. One entry per person
2. Email your name and email address
to me at flickchick1953@aol.com. Please write "Giveaway" in the
subject line.
3. The drawing will be held on
Thursday, June 15th.
That's it! Good luck. And, as always,
here's looking at you kid.