This articleneeds additional citations forverification.(March 2014) |
Jack Pickford(born John Charles Smith, August 18, 1896 – January 3, 1933), was a Canadian-American actor, film director and producer. He was the younger brother of actressesMaryandLottie Pickford.
Jack Pickford | |
---|---|
Born | John Charles Smith August 18, 1896 |
Died | January 3, 1933 Paris, France | (aged 36)
Resting place | Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale |
Occupation(s) | Actor, director, producer |
Years active | 1909–1928 |
Spouses |
|
Parent(s) | Charlotte Hennessy John Charles Smith |
Relatives | Mary Pickford(sister) Lottie Pickford(sister) |
After their father deserted the family, all three Pickford children began working as child actors on the stage. Mary later became a highly popularsilent filmactress, producer andearly Hollywood pioneer.While he appeared in numerous films as the "All American boy next door" and was a fairly popular performer, he was overshadowed by his sister's success. His career declined steadily due to alcohol, drugs and chronic depression.
Early life
editThis sectionneeds additional citations forverification.(March 2024) |
John Charles Smith, known as "Jack", was born in 1896 inToronto,Ontario,to John Charles Smith, an English immigrant odd-job man of Methodist background, andCharlotte Hennessy Smith,who was Irish Catholic.[1]His alcoholic father died in 1898, leaving the family impoverished. The children were dispersed, all living in separate households as their mother was grief-stricken and unable to support the family. However, Jack soon became very ill. The news of his illness revitalized their mother Charlotte and the family was reunited.[2]
Out of desperation, Charlotte allowed Jack and his two sistersGladysandLottieto appear onstage, beginning with Gladys, the eldest. This proved a good source of income and, by 1900, the family had relocated toNew York Cityand the children were acting in plays across the United States. Most notably, young Jack appeared onstage inPeg RobinandThe Three of Us.Jack received his education in public schools and later attended St. Francis Military Academy, New York.[3]
Due to work, the family was constantly separated until 1910 when Gladys signed withBiograph Studios,led by directorD. W. Griffith.By this time, his sister Gladys Smith had been transformed intoMary Pickford.(Marie was her middle name, and Pickford an old family name.) Following suit, the Smiths changed their stage names to "Pickford".
Soon after signing with Biograph, Mary secured jobs for all the family, including the then-14-year-old Jack. In early January 1910, when the Biograph Company headed west toLos Angeles, California,only Mary was meant to go until Jack pleaded to join the company as well. Much to Mary's protest, Charlotte threw him on the train as it left the station. When the company arrived in Hollywood, Jack acted inbit partsand as astunt doublefor young actresses, earning his way and supporting Mary. They both returned to New York months later, in April 1910.[4][5]
The Pickford family briefly signed to theIndependent Motion Picture Company(IMP) and the company moved toHavana, Cuba.However, the family eventually left and returned to the United States, resigning with Biograph. Jack had a leading role in the shortA Dash Through the Clouds(1912), but the Pickford family conclusively left Biograph in late 1912.[4]
In 1912,Adolph ZukorformedFamous Players in Famous Plays,later known asFamous Players–Laskyand thenParamount Pictures,one of the first American feature film companies. Mary signed with Famous Players, and included the family. Mary soon became a well-known star, and by 1919 had signed a contract for $1 million withFirst National Pictures.As part of her contract, Mary saw to it that her family was brought along, giving Jack Pickford a lucrative contract with the company, as well.
Acting career
editThis sectionneeds expansion.You can help byadding to it.(August 2022) |
By the time he signed with First National, Pickford had played bit parts in 95 shorts and full-length feature films. Although Pickford was considered an excellent actor, he is largely viewed as having failed to live up to his potential.
Pickford appeared in a large number of short films, prior to the mid-1910s, when his sister Mary was at the pinnacle of her fame. The two siblings feature together inA Girl of Yesterday(1915) andPoor Little Peppina(1916) under Famous Players.[4]However,Fanchon, the Cricket(1915) was one of the only films in which all three Pickford siblings appear. It was thoughtlostuntil rediscovered in the 20th century at the British Film Institute.[6]
Famous Players–Lasky president Adolph Zukor gave Pickford his first lead performance debut in the filmSeventeen(1916), an adaptation ofBooth Tarkington's novel.[7]It was described as "screamingly funny".[8]In 1917, he starred in one of his first major roles as Pip in the adaptation ofCharles Dickens'Great Expectations.After gaining critical success from these two productions, Pickford was then cast as the lead inThe Dummy(1917), adapted from the 1914 play byHarriet FordandHarvey J. O'Higgins,which proved extremely popular.[9][10]It was a critical success and Pickford's first breakthrough performance.[11]
Later in 1917, Pickford secured the title role inMark Twain'sTom Sawyerand the follow-upHuck and Tom(1918).Tom Sawyer(1917) was considered one of Pickford's most successful film roles, as the title character resembled Pickford's on and off-screen persona. In a letter, on the completion of the production, he wrote: "I've always been fond of Mark Twain's writings and Tom has long been a favorite of mine—somehow we seem to have a great deal in common. He performed so many of the very stunts that I remember in my own boyhood."[3]In the early years of his career, Pickford became known for his clever portrayal of various boy parts in American novels.[12]
Pickford was regularly teamed up with onscreen partnerLouise Huff.They both appeared inSeventeen(1916),Great Expectations(1917),Freckles(1917),What Money Can't Buy(1917),The Varmint(1917),The Ghost House(1917),Jack and Jill(1917),His Majesty, Bunker Bean(1918),Mile-a-Minute Kendall(1918), andSandy(1918) underParamount Pictures.[9]
In early 1918, after the United States enteredWorld War I,Pickford voluntary joined theU.S. Navyas an enlisted sailor and was stationed at theThird Naval Districtin Manhattan, New York. Despite nearly being dishonorably discharged, Pickford was granted an honourable discharge in May 1919.[13]In August 1920, he officially became a citizen of the United States and legally changed his surname from Smith to Pickford.[14]
After the war in 1919, Pickford formed his own production company named the Jack Pickford Film Company, in partnership withFirst National Pictures.[15]For a brief period, he produced and starred in his own films such asBill Apperson's Boy(1919),Burglar by Proxy(1919), andIn Wrong(1919).[16]James Kirkwooddirected Pickford during this time, in hope of boosting the actor's career.[17]
In 1920, he signed withGoldwyn Picturesand starred inThe Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come(1920), an adaptation ofJohn Fox Jr.'s novel.[18]Pickford became "bitterly disappointed" in the writing quality and directorial style of the film. He was determined to buy back the rights, with the intention for a future remake.[19]A Double-Eyed Deceiver(1920),The Man Who Had Everything(1920), andJust Out of College(1920) followed and were all directed byAlfred E. Green,starring Pickford as the lead.[20]However, Goldwyn and Pickford had creative differences and parted ways.[19]
Pickford also dabbled in screenwriting and directing. In 1921, he co-directedLittle Lord Faunteroy(1921) andThrough the Back Door(1921) with Alfred E. Green, underUnited Artists,both films starring his sister Mary. Pickford was hired as the director in an attempt to rid him of his depression after the passing of his wifeOlive Thomasa year prior. This was seen as an opportunity to give his career a new direction.[4]In 1921, there were plans afoot forA Tailor-Made Man(1922) to be directed by Alfred E. Green and starring Pickford, under United Artists. But for reasons unknown, changes were made and Mary sold the film toCharles Ray.[21][22][23]
By 1923, his roles had gone from several a year to one. After dedicating the last two years to directorial work, Pickford returned to acting inGarrison's Finish(1923).[24]While Pickford’s career did slow down after Thomas' death, the roles he played showed a new maturity and were some of the best of his career. These includedThe Hill Billy(1924),The Goose Woman(1925),Brown of Harvard(1926), andExit Smiling(1926).[25]In 1926, he played Brooks Bailey inThe Bat(1926), directed byRoland West.[26][27]Years later, West made asound versiontitledThe Bat Whispers(1930).[28]
In 1928, he finished his last film, acting as Clyde Baxter inGang War(1928) – a confirmed part-talkie.[29]It was best known for being the main feature attached toSteamboat Willie,the debut ofMickey Mousein sound.[30]
Most of his films, especially those in the late 1910s, were both commercial and critical successes, making a highly regarded name for himself. Pickford's image was that of the All-American boy, with his sister being "America's Sweetheart". In all, Pickford appeared in more than 130 films between 1908 and 1928. The majority of these silent films remain lost, unknown by the general public. However, a few of his films have been made available on DVD.[31]
Personal life
editPickford was good friends withJames KirkwoodandBobby Harron,originating from their Biograph days.[32][33][34]They all appeared inHome, Sweet Home(1914).[35]
Pickford had an interest in automobiles.[36]His sister Mary's first major extravagance was a car, aStanley StreamerEMF, and Jack nicknamed it the "Even Mama Fell" and "Every Morning Fix it".[2]He was filmed once driving aCitroënin Hollywood, a rival ofHenry Ford.[37]
Marriages
editPickford met actress andZiegfeld girlOlive Thomasat a beach cafe on the Santa Monica Pier. Screenwriter and directorFrances Marionlater commented on the couple's lifestyle:
...I had seen her [Thomas] often at the Pickford home, for she was engaged to Mary's brother, Jack. Two innocent-looking children, they were the gayest, wildest brats who ever stirred the stardust on Broadway. Both were talented, but they were much more interested in playing the roulette of life than in concentrating on their careers.[38]
Pickford and Thomas eloped on October 25, 1916, in New Jersey. None of their family was present and their only witness wasThomas Meighan.The couple had no children of their own, though in 1920, they adopted Olive's then-six-year-old nephew when his mother died.[39]Although by most accounts Olive was the love of Pickford's life, the marriage was stormy and filled with highly charged conflict, followed by lavish making up through the exchange of expensive gifts.[40]For many years the Pickfords had intended to vacation together and with their marriage on the rocks, the couple decided to take a second honeymoon.[39]
In August 1920, the pair travelled to Paris, hoping to combine a vacation with some film preparations. On the night of September 5, 1920, the couple went out for a night of entertainment and partying at the famous bistros in theMontparnassequarter of Paris. They returned to their room in theHôtel Ritzaround 3:00 a.m. It was rumored Thomas may have taken cocaine that night, though it was never proven. She was intoxicated and tired, and took a large dose ofmercury bichloride,a common item for bathroom cleaning.[41]She was taken to the American Hospital in the Paris suburb of Neuilly, where Pickford, together with his former brother-in-lawOwen Moore,remained at her side until she died from the poison a few days later. Rumors arose that she had either tried to die by suicide or had been murdered. A police investigation followed, as well as an autopsy, and Thomas's death was ruled accidental.[39]
Pickford married two more times. On July 31, 1922, he marriedMarilyn Miller(1898–1936), a celebrated Broadway dancer and former Ziegfeld girl, at his sister and brother-in-law's famed homePickfair.[42][43]By most accounts it was an abusive marriage due to Pickford's drug abuse and alcoholism.[44]They separated in 1926 and Miller was granted aFrenchdivorce in November 1927.[43][45]
Pickford's final marriage was to Mary Mulhern, aged 22 and a former Ziegfeld girl, whom he married on August 12, 1930.[46]Within three months Pickford grew increasingly volatile towards Mulhern.[47]After two years Mulhern left Pickford, claiming he had mistreated her throughout the marriage.[48]She was granted aninterlocutory divorcein February 1932 which had yet to be finalized at the time of Pickford's death.[49]
Death and legacy
editIn 1932, Pickford visited his sister Mary at Pickfair. According to Mary, he looked ill and emaciated; his clothes were hanging on him as if he were a clothes hanger. Mary Pickford recalled in her autobiography that she felt a wave of premonition when watching her brother leave. As they started down the stairs to the automobile entrance, Jack called back to her "Don't come down with me, Mary dear, I can go alone." Mary later wrote that as she stood at the top of the staircase, an inner voice said "That's the last time you'll see Jack".[5]
Jack Pickford, at age 36, died at theAmerican Hospital of Parison January 3, 1933. The cause for his death was listed as "progressive multipleneuritiswhich attacked all the nerve centers ". This was believed due to his alcoholism." I have lived more than most men, and I am tired — so tired! "These were the last words whispered by Jack on his death bed.[50]Mary Pickford arranged for his body to be returned to Los Angeles, where he was interred in the private Pickford plot atForest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale.[51]
For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Jack Pickford has a star on theHollywood Walk of Fameat 1523 Vine Street.[52]
Pickford siblings
editPickford and his sister Lottie were both silent film actors in their own right, but of course, were often overshadowed by their older sister, Mary. Living in her shadow, the two younger siblings embraced the happy-go-lucky times and fast living of the 1920s. Oddly enough, they both starred inMile-a-Minute Kendall(1918) as lovers.[3]Lottie was left heartbroken after Pickford's untimely death in early 1933. According to Mary: "She [Lottie] was never the same after Jack's going. They were so very close in temperament and even in looks. It was as though with my brother's passing the better part of her had died too".[4]
Selected filmography
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1909 | His Duty | One of the Children on the Street | Lostfilm |
1909 | The Message | In Crowd | Lostfilm |
1909 | Pranks | One of the Boys | Lostfilm |
1909 | Wanted, a Child | A Child | Lostfilm |
1909 | In a Hempen Bag | In Crowd | Lostfilm |
1909 | To Save Her Soul | A Stagehand | Lostfilm |
1910 | All on Account of the Milk | At Construction Site | |
1910 | The Call | At Show | |
1910 | The Newlyweds | At Station Reception | |
1910 | The Smoker | The Boy | |
1910 | The Kid | Walter Holden's Son | |
1910 | The Tenderfoot's Triumph | The Boy | |
1910 | An Affair of Hearts | A Boy | |
1910 | Ramona | A Boy | |
1910 | The Modern Prodigal | The Sheriff's Son | |
1910 | Muggsy Becomes a Hero | Mabel's Brother | |
1910 | In Life's Cycle | ||
1910 | The Oath and the Man | The Messenger | |
1910 | Rose o' Salem Town | Indian | |
1910 | Examination Day at School | Student | |
1910 | The Iconoclast | In Office | |
1910 | The Broken Doll | Indian | |
1910 | Two Little Waifs | Boy on Road | |
1911 | His Trust Fulfilled | Black messenger | |
1911 | Sweet Memories | Young Earl Jackson | |
1911 | The Stuff Heroes are Made Of | ||
1912 | A Temporary Truce | An Indian | |
1912 | A Dash Through the Clouds | Mexican boy who warns Chubby | |
1912 | Man's Lust for Gold | Among the Indians | Lostfilm |
1912 | The Inner Circle | The Messenger | |
1912 | A Feud in the Kentucky Hills | A Brother | |
1912 | The Painted Lady | Beau at Ice Cream Festival | |
1912 | The Musketeers of Pig Alley | Rival Gang Member/At Dance | |
1912 | Heredity | Son of White Renegade Father and Indian Mother | Lostfilm |
1912 | My Baby | Wedding Guest | |
1912 | The Informer | Black Boy | |
1912 | Brutality | At Theatre | Incompletefilm |
1912 | The New York Hat | Youth outside church | |
1912 | My Hero | Indian | Unconfirmed Lostfilm |
1913 | A Misappropriated Turkey | On Street | Lostfilm |
1913 | Love in an Apartment Hotel | A Bellhop | Lostfilm |
1913 | The Unwelcome Guest | One of the Children | Alternative title:An Unwelcome Guest |
1914 | The Gangsters of New York | Spot, the spy | Alternative title:The Gangsters |
1914 | Home, Sweet Home | The Mother's Son | |
1914 | His Last Dollar | Jockey Jones | Lostfilm |
1914 | Wildflower | Bud Haskins | Lostfilm |
1915 | The Love Route | Billy Ball | Lostfilm |
1915 | Fanchon, the Cricket | The unnamed bully | |
1915 | The Pretty Sister of Jose | Jose | Lostfilm |
1915 | A Girl of Yesterday | John Stuart | Lostfilm |
1916 | Poor Little Peppina | Beppo | Alternative title:Little Peppina |
1916 | Seventeen | William Sylvanus Baxter | Lostfilm |
1917 | Great Expectations | Pip | Lostfilm |
1917 | Cupid's Touchdown | Henry Blondy Burton | Lostfilm |
1917 | The Dummy | Barney Cook | Lostfilm |
1917 | The Girl at Home | Jimmie Dexter | |
1917 | Freckles | Freckles | Lostfilm |
1917 | What Money Can't Buy | Dick Hale | Lostfilm |
1917 | The Varmint | John Humperdink Stover | Lostfilm |
1917 | The Ghost House | Ted Rawson | Lostfilm |
1917 | Jack and Jill | Jack Ranney | Lostfilm |
1917 | Tom Sawyer | Tom Sawyer | |
1918 | The Spirit of '17 | Davy Glidden | Lostfilm |
1918 | Huck and Tom | Tom Sawyer | |
1918 | His Majesty, Bunker Bean | Bunker Bean | Lostfilm |
1918 | Mile-a-Minute Kendall | Kendall | Lostfilm |
1918 | Sandy | Sandy Kilday | Lostfilm |
1919 | Bill Apperson's Boy | Buddy Apperson | |
1919 | Burglar by Proxy | Jack Robin | |
1919 | In Wrong | Johnny Spivins | |
1920 | The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come | Chad | Lostfilm |
1920 | A Double-Dyed Deceiver | the Llano Kid | Lostfilm |
1920 | The Man Who Had Everything | Harry Bullway | |
1920 | Just Out of College | Ed Swinger | Lostfilm |
1923 | Garrison's Finish | Billy Garrison | |
1923 | Hollywood | Himself | Cameo appearance Lostfilm |
1924 | The Hill Billy | Jed McCoy | Alternative title:The Hillbilly Lostfilm |
1925 | Waking Up the Town | Jack Joyce | |
1925 | My Son | Tony | Lostfilm |
1925 | The Goose Woman | Gerald Holmes | |
1926 | The Bat | Brooks Bailey | |
1926 | Brown of Harvard | Jim Doolittle | |
1926 | Exit Smiling | Jimmy Marsh | |
1928 | Gang War | Clyde Baxter | Alternative title:All Square,Lostfilm |
Bibliography
edit- Arvidson, Linda.When the Movies Were Young.New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1969.
- Menefee, David W.The First Male Stars: Men of the Silent Era.Albany: Bear Manor Media, 2007.
- Talmadge, Margaret L.The Talmadge Sisters.Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1924.
- Paris Authorities Investigate Death of Olive Thomas.The New York Times,September 11, 1920.[53]
- POLICE DEMAND FURTHER PROBE OF OLIVE THOMAS' DEATH,The Washington times. (Washington D.C.) 1902-1939,September 12, 1920.
- Holmstrom, John.The Moving Picture Boy: An International Encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995,Norwich: Michael Russell, 1996, pp. 10–11.ISBN9780859551786
- Mary Pickford: America's Sweetheartby Scott EymanISBN978-1-55611-243-0
- Pickford: The Woman Who Made Hollywoodby Eileen Whitfield
- The First King of Hollywood: The Life of Douglas Fairbanksby Tracey GoesselISBN1613734077[54]
- Michelle Vogel.Olive Thomas: The Life and Death of a Silent Film BeautyISBN9780786429080
- Steve Vaught. "You Don't Know Jack – A Second Take on Jack Pickford"[55][56][57]
- "Cleanup of Paris Cafes May Follow Movie Stars Death" Daily News, September 14, 1920[58]
- Amy Marie. "The Final Years of Jack Pickford"[59]
- Gordon Thomas. "Beautiful Dead Girl: On Early Hollywood Casualty Olive Thomas"[60]
- Shane Brown. "The Man Who Had Everything: The Curious Case of Jack Pickford and the New York Times"[61]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^Foster, Charles (2000).Stardust and Shadows: Canadians in Early Hollywood.Dundurn Press Ltd. pp.945.ISBN1-55002-348-9.
- ^ab"Audio Recordings & Transcripts Archives".Mary Pickford Foundation.RetrievedApril 22,2024.
- ^abc"Paramount and Artcraft Press Books (Dec 1917-Jan 1918) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 9,2024.
- ^abcdeWindeler, Robert (1975).Mary Pickford: sweetheart of the world.London: Star Books.ISBN978-0-352-30046-1.
- ^abPickford, Mary (1955).Sunshine and Shadow.Doubleday.
- ^"Lost Films".www.silentsaregolden.com.RetrievedApril 17,2024.
- ^Chicago, Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company (1917).Photoplay (Oct 1917 - Mar 1918).New York The Museum of Modern Art Library. Chicago, Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company.
- ^"Jack Pickford at Grand".The Evening Independent.October 2, 1919. p. 1.
- ^abFamous Players-Lasky (1917).Paramount Press Books (Aug 1917-Aug 1918) Pennington Petrova Jack Pickford.Media History Digital Library.
- ^Chalmers Publishing Company (1917).Moving Picture World (Mar 1917).New York The Museum of Modern Art Library. New York, Chalmers Publishing Company.
- ^"Paramount Theatre".Evening Post.Wellington, New Zealand. August 20, 1917. p. 3.RetrievedApril 28,2024.
- ^"Everybody's Theatre".Evening Post.Wellington, New Zealand. March 2, 1920. p. 3.RetrievedApril 28,2024.
- ^"Motion Picture News (Apr-Jun 1919) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 9,2024.
- ^"Moving Picture World (Aug 1920) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 17,2024.
- ^Chicago, Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company (1919).Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1919).New York The Museum of Modern Art Library. Chicago, Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company.
- ^"Variety (July 1919) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 9,2024.
- ^M.P. Publishing Co. (1919).Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1919).MBRS Library of Congress. The Motion Picture Publishing Co.
- ^Motion Picture Classic (Jan-Dec 1920).PFA Library and Film Study Center UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Brooklyn, N.Y.: M.P. Pub. Co. 1920.
{{cite book}}
:CS1 maint: others (link) - ^abBlenton, Billie (October 8, 1921). "Jack Pickford Skips from Directing to Starring".Movie Weekly.
- ^"Motion picture news (Dec 1920-Feb 1921) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 20,2024.
- ^"New York Clipper 1 June 1921 — Illinois Digital Newspaper Collections".idnc.library.illinois.edu.RetrievedApril 21,2024.
- ^"Exhibitors Herald (Jul-Sep 1921) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 23,2024.
- ^Physical Culture Corporation; Physical Culture Corporation (1922).Movie Weekly (1922).New York The Museum of Modern Art Library. New York, Physical Culture Corporation.
- ^"Exhibitor's Trade Review (Dec 1922-Feb 1923) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 21,2024.
- ^"Jack Pickford".OLIVE & JACK.RetrievedApril 8,2024.
- ^"Exhibitors Herald (Mar-Jun 1926) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 25,2024.
- ^Winchester, Clarence (1933).The world film encyclopedia (1933).Media History Digital Library. London: The Amalgamated Press Ltd. p. 332.
- ^"Exhibitors herald world - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 25,2024.
- ^"Variety (September 1928) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 17,2024.
- ^Hall, Mordaunt (November 19, 1928)."THE SCREEN; More Gang Fights".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.RetrievedApril 17,2024.
- ^"The Man Who Had Everything: The Curious Case of Jack Pickford and the New York Times".Bright Lights Film Journal.January 28, 2014.RetrievedApril 4,2024.
- ^Chicago, Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company (1916).Photoplay (Jul - Dec 1916).New York The Museum of Modern Art Library. Chicago, Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company.
- ^"Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1919) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 23,2024.
- ^"Article clipped from The Cincinnati Enquirer".The Cincinnati Enquirer.January 17, 1932. p. 56.RetrievedApril 23,2024.
- ^"A pictorial history of the silent screen".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 23,2024.
- ^"Film Fun (1919) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 23,2024.
- ^Huntley Film Archives (March 14, 2017)."Early Cinema, 1920s - Film 31479".YouTube.RetrievedApril 25,2024.
- ^Marion, Frances (1972).Off With Their Heads: A Serio-comic Tale of Hollywood.Macmillan. p. 65.
- ^abcThe Life and Death of Olive Thomas.Taylorology. Arizona State University.
- ^Memories of OliveArchivedDecember 14, 2012, atarchive.today,Assumption College.
- ^Foster 2000,p. 257
- ^Slide, Anthony (2005).Silent topics: Essays on Undocumented Areas of Silent Film.Scarecrow Press. p. 34.ISBN0-8108-5016-8.
- ^ab"Report: Marilyn Miller and Jack Pickford Separated".The Lewiston Daily Sun.January 6, 1926. p. 11.RetrievedJune 27,2014.
- ^Epting, Charles L. (2016).Bebe Daniels: Hollywood's Good Little Bad Girl.McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 102.ISBN9781476663746.
- ^"Paris Decree Won By Marilyn Miller".The Milwaukee Sentinel.November 3, 1927. p. 5.RetrievedJune 27,2014.[permanent dead link ]
- ^"Pickford Wedding Is Unmarred".San Jose Evening News.August 13, 1930. p. 4.RetrievedJune 27,2014.
- ^Whitfield, Eileen (2007).Pickford: The Woman Who Made Hollywood.University Press of Kentucky. p. 208.ISBN9780813191799.
- ^"Jack Pickford Divorced".The Pittsburgh Press.February 27, 1932. p. 1.RetrievedJune 27,2014.
- ^"Jack Pickford, Famous Film Star's Brother Who Also Won Fame in Motion Pictures, Dies".Berkeley Daily Gazette.January 4, 1933. p. 18.RetrievedJune 27,2014.
- ^"Photoplay (Jan - Jun 1933) - Lantern".lantern.mediahist.org.RetrievedApril 24,2024.
- ^Foster, Charles (2000).Stardust and Shadows: Canadians in Early Hollywood.Dundurn Press Ltd. pp.963.ISBN1-55002-348-9.
- ^"Hollywood Star Walk: Jack Pickford".Los Angeles Times.RetrievedJune 27,2014.
- ^"PARIS AUTHORITIES INVESTIGATE DEATH OF OLIVE THOMAS; Police Seek Evidence on Rumors of Drug and Champagne Orgies. REFUSE TO RELEASE BODY Former American Officer, Sentenced for Selling Cocaine, One of Those Questioned. PICKFORD IN DOCTOR'S CARE Police Have Not Yet Obtained His Story of How the Actress Drank Poison".The New York Times.September 11, 1920.RetrievedAugust 24,2018.
- ^"isbn:1613734077 - Google Search".books.google.com.RetrievedAugust 24,2018.
- ^Steve Vaught (August 19, 2011)."You Don't Know Jack – A Second Take on Jack Pickford – Part I".Paradise Leased.RetrievedAugust 24,2018.
- ^Steve Vaught (August 26, 2011)."You Don't Know Jack – A Second Take on Jack Pickford – Part II".Paradise Leased.RetrievedAugust 24,2018.
- ^Steve Vaught (August 29, 2011)."You Don't Know Jack – A Second Take on Jack Pickford – Part III".Paradise Leased.RetrievedAugust 24,2018.
- ^"page 22".Daily News.September 14, 1920.RetrievedAugust 24,2018– via newspapers.com.
- ^Amy Marie (September 20, 2016)."The Final Years of Jack Pickford".Stories of the Silent.RetrievedAugust 24,2018.
- ^Gordon Thomas (September 10, 2015)."Beautiful Dead Girl: On Early Hollywood Casualty Olive Thomas (Oct. 20, 1894-Sept. 10, 1920)".Bright Lights Film Journal.RetrievedAugust 24,2018.
- ^Shane Brown (January 28, 2014)."The Man Who Had Everything: The Curious Case of Jack Pickford and the New York Times".Bright Lights Film Journal.Archivedfrom the original on August 24, 2018.RetrievedAugust 24,2018.
External links
edit- Jack PickfordatIMDb
- Jack Pickfordat theInternet Broadway Database
- Family Photos- The Mary Pickford Foundation
- Jack Pickford- Virtual History
- In Mary's Shadow: The Story of Jack Pickford(2001) Documentary