Tuesday, September 29, 2009

James Leavelle, Dallas Police Detective


November 22, 1963 was the day President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas. His (supposed) killer, Lee Harvey Oswald, was soon captured. Two days later, November 24th, Oswald was being led from the jail to be transferred to the County facility. Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby had posed as a reporter and was lurking in the hallway with members of the press. On live television, Ruby jumped out and shot Oswald, who later died.
Dallas Police Detective James Leavelle was hand-cuffed to Oswald on Oswald's right, and is very noticeable in the footage of the event as he is wearing a light colored suit and hat (everyone else is dressed in dark suits). He is the last man alive who was in the group escorting Oswald.
I drew this picture on the exact 33rd anniversary of Oswald's shooting.
Leavelle just happened to be present at another historical event, having been stationed on the U.S.S. Whitney in Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941.

Roy Rogers, King of the Cowboys


Roy Rogers was an icon for millions of children all over America. His image was plastered on all sorts of toys and clothing all throughout the 1940's and 50's. He and his wife Dale Evans inspired every kid to be a cowboy when he/ she grew up. Before starring in hundreds of Western films, he was an accomplished singer in "The Sons of the Pioneers," one of the best known groups singing songs of the Old West.
Roy and Dale dressed in western attire for the remainder of their lives, living up to the image they portrayed on the screen decades earlier. This was one of the first pictures I ever sent out, and is a little rough as far as quality, but I was thrilled to get an autograph from the King of the Cowboys!

Frank Perdue, Chicken Man


Perdue Fams was founded in 1920, the same year Frank Perdue was born. He quit college to work for his father's company, over the ensuing decades turning into the first well-known brand of chicken in America. He appeared in many commercials for Perdue Chickens, saying "It takes a tough man to make a tender chicken."
I never actually met him, but years ago in the grocery store I worked at, Frank Perdue came in with several other "high ups" to check out the Perdue section in the meat dept. This was after he retired from leading his company, and I was surprised how frail he looked compared to the man I had seen on TV. Still it was a neat experience to actually see this American business visionary in person.

The Osborne Brothers


Bobby and Sonny Osborne had been performing together for over 50 years until Sonny retired a few years ago. Bobby, the older of the two, continues to perform to this day. They had their biggest hit in 1967 with "Rocky Top," a song which the University of Tennessee has been playing at sporting events since the 1970's.
They were criticized in the 60's for adding electric instruments to their act, but by the 1990's they had returned to their roots. At that time they had one of the few traditional sounding groups still performing regularly on the Grand Ole Opry.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Leni Riefenstahl- German Film-Maker


Leni Riefenstahl has been called the greatest female filmmaker of the 20th Century. Her most famous film, however, is "Triumph of the Will" -a documentary of the 1934 Nuremburg Congress of the Nazi Party. She was personal friends with Adolf Hitler and Josef Goebbels, but she always denied that she deliberately attempted to make pro-Nazi propaganda- despite the fact that her films were used as such. She was arrested after the War but was never convicted of any crimes. Her later photography work won much acclaim, and she was active in photography and filmmaking right up to her death in 2003 at the age of 101.

Ricou Browning- The Creature From the Black Lagoon


Ricou Browning's most famous role is that of the creature in the 1950's Sci-Fi classic film "The Creature From the Black Lagoon." Browning played the creature in the under water sequences, while Ben Chapman did the land ones. He wrote me a letter as well and also sent a signed photo of himself out of the costume (I had asked what he actually looked like). He wrote that he's a bit older now than in the photo but "I'm still a handsome devil!"

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Byron Nelson, Golfer

Byron Nelson has been labeled by Golf Magazine as the 5th Greatest Golfer of all time. In 1945 he won 18 professional tournaments, 11 of those in a row- These two records still stand to this day. Those who knew him always said he had such a positive energy about him, which extended off the green as well. He retired at age 34, but remained active in Golf untill his passing at age 94 in 2006.

Sheldon Leonard "Nick the Bartender"



Sheldon Leonard's thick Brooklyn accent and tough guy looks earned him many roles playing bad guys in films and television over several decades. He was also involved in television production (The Andy Griffith Show for one).


The role of his I always loved though was that of Nick the Bartender in "It's a Wonderful Life." In the first part of the film he was a jovial nice-guy bartender. When George sees how things are if he had never lived, he finds that Nick no longer has love for his fellow man, and runs a rowdy flop-house of a bar. The end of that scene shows him laughing and opening the cash register again and again to make the bell ring "Get me- I'm givin' out wings!"


I sent this to him not long after I found out he was still alive, and was thrilled to get it back. Unfortunately passed away about a year later at age 89.