I love the old silent screen stars especially Mary pickford.i never knew much about Gloria but ive seen her in inteviews on tv she was so pleasant. Rest in peace to them amen godbless them. 🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🌹🌹🌹🌹💖💖💖💖🕊
Quite the curio, if one can swallow down the interviewer's lack of tact: "You have a legend of being a smart businesswoman!" he informs Mary Pickford, who controlled United Artists for more than 35 years and kept it alive despite the fact that Griffith succumbed to directorial failure by being increasingly old-fashioned, Fairbanks took off early, and Chaplin was never interested in it. I guess when it came to girls, "facts" became "legends". And Swanson was a bit more than a Mack Sennett Bathing Beauty; out of all her silent films, why bring that unimportant moment up? Listening to this, you'd think: Bathing Beauty during the First World War, then, almost 40 years later, boom, "Sunset Blvd." Back to Mary, Wikipedia shows nothing about a movie ABOUT Pickford, but, of course, Swanson had already basically played Pickford in "Sunset Blvd". The aging woman rotting away in a cold Beverly Hills manse, increasingly drunk and dotty, with one man-slave (irl, Buddy Rogers) to keep her company, like von Stroheim does for Swanson in the movie. "Norma Desmond" was Mary, not Gloria.
I love the old silent screen stars especially Mary pickford.i never knew much about Gloria but ive seen her in inteviews on tv she was so pleasant. Rest in peace to them amen godbless them. 🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🌹🌹🌹🌹💖💖💖💖🕊
Mary Pickford was very forward thinking and recognized how viewing/creating entertainment was evolving.
ive had a crush on both these ladies for my whole life! ❤️❤️❤️😍😍😍😍
Now, this is amazing and wonderful! God will do it! I love my nieces! Just beautiful! Love Auntie C. 🙏❤🙏💜🙏🥰
Beautiful Glory💖wow what a star, and Mary of course, America's sweetheart💖
Wonderful interviews! Thanks for posting. I admire both ladies but particularly Ms Swanson who had more charisma and longevity.
Wonderful, thank you so much for sharing this. Two absolute legends of cinema history.
Both are my favorite classic film icons.
Thank you for uploading this gem 😊
This is Just Great, Mary is to the point , Gloria likes to take the round about way...
Meravigliose❤️, grazie!
Mary Pickford the greatest star ever.period.
Gloria Swanson: The Greatest Star Ever. Period.
@@FlintyCobblestone TOUCHE!
@@FlintyCobblestoneMary was bigger. Only Fairbanks and Chaplin could really rival her in her time.
Quite the curio, if one can swallow down the interviewer's lack of tact: "You have a legend of being a smart businesswoman!" he informs Mary Pickford, who controlled United Artists for more than 35 years and kept it alive despite the fact that Griffith succumbed to directorial failure by being increasingly old-fashioned, Fairbanks took off early, and Chaplin was never interested in it. I guess when it came to girls, "facts" became "legends". And Swanson was a bit more than a Mack Sennett Bathing Beauty; out of all her silent films, why bring that unimportant moment up? Listening to this, you'd think: Bathing Beauty during the First World War, then, almost 40 years later, boom, "Sunset Blvd."
Back to Mary, Wikipedia shows nothing about a movie ABOUT Pickford, but, of course, Swanson had already basically played Pickford in "Sunset Blvd". The aging woman rotting away in a cold Beverly Hills manse, increasingly drunk and dotty, with one man-slave (irl, Buddy Rogers) to keep her company, like von Stroheim does for Swanson in the movie. "Norma Desmond" was Mary, not Gloria.