Found an interesting article. I’m I guess what you call a late generation x guy, born in 1978. I know some of you are millennials and some of you are older than me, but I’d be interested if you guys read this article and pitched in your opinions. I will also pitch in mine in a bit.
https://www.oregonlive.com/entertainment/2019/09/no-kids-today-have-never-heard-of-charlie-chaplin-other-hollywood-golden-age-icons-marking-cultural-shift.html“I find it obvious yet fascinating how earlier 20th century American megastars like Shirley Temple, Charlie Chaplin, W.C. Fields, etc., who were still present on the periphery of my Gen X childhood imagination, don’t exist on my kids’ radar at all.”
This musing came via Twitter last week from Mat Johnson, lauded novelist and comic-book writer as well as University of Oregon English professor.
The observation, as Johnson himself pointed out, isn’t surprising. And yet it comes with a jolt for anyone who grew up flipping past old Shirley Temple movies and guffawing at The Three Stooges on Saturday morning -- using the dial on the television’s face, of course.
More names unknown to kids today surfaced in the thread that followed Johnson’s tweet: Bob Hope and Charlie McCarthy (that is, ventriloquist Edgar Bergen’s doll), Edward G. Robinson and Buster Keaton.
It’s no surprise that Gen Xers are quite familiar with these long-ago “megastars.” Many of the stars of the 1920s, ’30s and ’40s were still around decades after their heydays, showing up now and again in TV commercials and on late-night talk shows. Looney Tunes was a staple of every Baby Boomer and Gen X childhood, and the cartoons frequently offered nods to and even cameo appearances by early Hollywood Golden Age stars ranging from Fields and Keaton to Laurel and Hardy.
There are various reasons these old-time icons have now tumbled down the cultural memory hole: changing tastes, the explosion of new TV content, the personalization of media that blocks out serendipity.
Most of all, however, it was just W.C. Fields and his contemporaries’ time to go. It’s been nearly a century since they hit their primes. One day, no doubt, this will even happen to the Beatles -- and “Friends.”
So when did this great fade-out happen? We opened up the archives of a handful of major newspapers, including The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, to search out the publications’ last cultural reference to half a dozen (plus a bonus entry) of the entertainment world’s biggest names from the early 20th century. We looked for organic newsy mentions, meaning we discounted history articles, roundups of film retrospectives, and critics simply trying to sound learned.
What we discovered is that these Golden Age stars, reflexively alluded to for decades, have been effectively gone for a while already. (We could have expanded our search, but as Fields once said: “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. Then quit. No use being a damn fool about it.”) Check out a few of the more recent published mentions of these great stars:
1940 Press Photo Charlie Chaplin English Comedian impersonate Adolf Hitler
Charlie Chaplin in "The Great Dictator." (Advance Local archive)
CHARLIE CHAPLIN
The New York Times
Date: July 19, 2015
Article: Profile of English model and actress Cara Delevingne
Reference: “Her rise couldn’t have been more swift or seemingly exuberant, with Karl Lagerfeld calling Ms. Delevingne -- known for making facing and sticking her tongue out -- the ‘Charlie Chaplin of the fashion world.’ ”
W.C. Fields
Patriot-News library
Mae West and W.C. Fields. (Patriot-News library)
W.C. FIELDS
The New York Times
Date: Dec. 19, 2008
Article: A travel story about Oklahoma.
Reference: “W.C. Fields, whose position on water was that he never touched the stuff, would feel supremely left out at Grand Lake o’ the Cherokees, which covers 46,500 acres north, south and west of Grove, Okla.”
Buster Keaton
File Photo
Buster Keaton (MLive.com file photo)
BUSTER KEATON
The New York Times
Date: May 26, 2019
Article: Choreographer Twyla Tharp in conversation with her “Deuce Coupe” dancers
Reference: “I will always be a clown,” Tharp says. “Clowns are very close to God. They know how to get down.” Responds Isabella Boylston: “Oh my God. Is that why you picked me to do your part?” Answers Tharp: “Partially, yes! I knew you had it in you. But I’m still waiting. I’m still waiting for the [Buster] Keaton to get out, but I know that you can do it.”
1971 Press Photo Edward G. Robinson in Little Caesar
Edward G. Robinson in "Little Caesar" (Advance Local archive)
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
The New York Times
Date: July 24, 2016
Article: Letter to the editor about “fathers as caregivers”
Reference: “Having been raised by a mother and grandmother in the 1940s, I based my knowledge of fathers on the ones I saw in the movies. My favorite was Edward G. Robinson in ‘Our Vines Have Tender Grapes’ (1945), who provided his daughter with the three C’s that every child needs: care, concern and compassion. Men incapable of providing these necessities should leave fatherhood to those who can.”
SHIRLEY TEMPLE
Chicago Tribune
Date: August 18, 2019
Article: A Mary Schmich essay about her inheriting her mother’s antique four-poster bed
Reference: “It was the kind of bed I associated with fairy tales and Shirley Temple movies, with medieval princesses and romance. In a bed like that, with those towering posts standing like sentinels at the corners, a girl would have room to dream.”
THE THREE STOOGES
The Wall Street Journal
Date: Sept. 9, 2019
Article: A news story about President Donald Trump’s 2020 primary challengers
Reference: “President Trump dismissed a Republican primary challenge from former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, describing him and two other long-shot GOP opponents as ‘The Three Stooges’ and suggesting he wouldn’t debate them.”
MAE WEST
The Wall Street Journal
Date: July 8, 2019
Article: A news story about the record-breaking pace of home runs in Major League Baseball this season
Reference: " 'Mae West said too much of a good thing is wonderful,’ Thorn said. ‘She wasn’t referring to baseball.’”
-- Douglas Perry
@douglasmperry
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