“The Purple People Eater” / Sheb Wooley / 1958
Reached number one on the Billboardpop charts in 1958
Dear People,
Let me be blunt:
Without YOU, there is no point in having this Blog.
My friend Ray and I have been working for over a week
to get things (The Blog) back online again.
For a while it looked like we had completely lost
our Subscribers and Followers list.
I don’t have that many of you, but believe me,
you are valuable to me and the only reason I do this.
To this very moment, I am uncertain we have succeeded
in recovering everything?
All I can say is that we believe I can Post stuff now
and you MIGHT get it?
So it’s been agonizing.
So much so, that I’ve considered folding everything up.
There would be no joy in working in the dark.
There might be some creative merit to it, but …
If you are still here … ?
THANK YOU.
When you attend Art College, the first thing they do is take your colors away and lock ’em up. Then they hand you a black crayon and a piece of white paper and say: “Shut up and Draw, pardner.”
And draw you do.
In 1917 John Ford was handed a black crayon and a camera – and between 1917 and 1927 he drew 62 black and white ‘moving pictures’. ‘Silent films’ they called ’em.
Some 40 of these ‘pictures’ were lost – basically thrown away. But in the process Ford learned the Mastery of composition, framing and direction.
Then, about 1928, somebody said: “Hey … maybe this guy can help us figure out how to use this thing called ‘Sound’.”
Wikipedia: “Stagecoach (1939) was Ford’s first western since 3 Bad Men in 1926, and it was his first with sound. Reputedly Orson Welles watched Stagecoachforty times in preparation for making Citizen Kane. It remains one of the most admired and imitated of all Hollywood movies, not least for its climactic stagecoach chase and the hair-raising horse-jumping scene, performed by the stuntman Yakima Canutt.”
Ultimately, in 1939, Ford finally got his colors:
Wikipedia: “Drums along the Mohawk (1939) was a lavish frontier drama co-starring Henry Fonda and Claudette Colbert it was also Ford’s first movie in colorand included uncredited script contributions by William Faulkner. It was a big box-office success, grossing $1.25 million in its first year in the US and earning Edna May Oliver a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for her performance.”
But Ford had learned something about Black and White – it could say things in dramatic ways that color often distracted from. So on occasion he went back to his black crayon and white slate, as in“The Man who shot Liberty Valence”.
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