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Maid Marian and Robin Hood

Maid Marian and Robin Hood #4

The Adventures of Robin Hood

Episode 2: The Moneylender

Introductory minstrel song: “Trapped by the Sheriff, stands Robin like a mighty rock; and falls heir to the brave Will Scatlock!”

Regular Cast

Sir Robin of Locksley – Richard Greene

The Sheriff of Nottingham – Alan Wheatley

Edgar – Alfie Bass

Guest Stars

Herbert of Doncaster – Leo McKern

Original air date: 2 October 1955

Screenplay: Ian Larkin and Eric Heath (a pseudonym for Ring Lardner Jr.)

Director: Ralph Smart 

Plot: Robin questions the outlaws’ methods and who they choose to rob. He offers suggestions and, as events unfold, is vindicated.

The opening scenes with Leo McKern’s character are played for laughs. Thereafter, the story settles into a solid adventure tale. 

This was Leo McKern’s second appearance. Producer Hannah Weinstein assembled a stock company and the main supporting roles were played by about seven regular actors – full use made of false beards and wigs.

A strong point was made in this episode regarding the redistribution of wealth. The line, “The Sheriff protects those who steal from the poor” still resonates.

A note on the set design – a section of the Bayeux Tapestry can be seen in the Sheriff’s hall.

If you like flames, there’s a spectacular display of arson in this episode.

Alan Wheatley (pictured) was a regular in films, on television, the stage and radio. During the Second World War his voice became familiar to listeners on the Continent as he broadcast to occupied Europe.

In 1951 Wheatley played Sherlock Holmes in a series of six televised dramatisations. This was the first series to feature Conan Doyle’s famous character. He achieved another first in 1964 when his character was the first ever killed by a Dalek on screen.

Alan Wheatley’s most prominent role was the Sheriff of Nottingham. He played the sheriff in fifty-four episodes, offering the character a degree of gravitas, eschewing the cartoon-style approach often seen in Robin Hood films.

Standout scene: Robin breaking a sword at the end, offering respect – a genuinely moving scene.

Sword fights – 0. Bow fights/bow skills – 2.

Running total: Sword fights – 1. Bow fights/bow skills – 3.

Fashion, c1215

Isabelle d’Angoulême (pictured) was the second wife of King John. In her own right, she was Countess of Angoulême and Countess of La Marche.

For noble ladies at that time, the fashion was for open necks and edging with a passement at the wrists and neck. In 1215 the girdle was worn at the waistline with the gown draping over it. As the decades rolled on, it became fashionable to highlight the waistline and fully reveal the girdle.

The common girdle image of the thirteenth century, with the girdle sloping down from the top of the hip bone to a point at the front, didn’t become fashionable until c1250.

The Sheriff of Nottingham – Fact or Fiction?

The Sheriff of Nottingham is one of the main antagonists in the Robin Hood legends. Usually, he is in league with Sir Guy of Gisborne or King John. Three villains trying to capture Robin Hood is viewed as overkill, so these antagonists rarely feature together.

🖼️ The Sheriff of Nottingham by Louis Rhead, 1912

In some stories, the Sheriff swaps places with Sir Guy in regard to a lecherous interest in Maid Marian. He’s often depicted as corrupt and cruel – think modern-day tyrants.

What of the medieval reality? The post of Sheriff of Nottingham came into existence in 1449. However, well before that date, from 1068, a High Sheriff of Nottingham, Derbyshire and the Royal Forests existed. This neatly dovetails with the Robin Hood legends.

Placing Maid Marian and Robin Hood during the reigns of King Richard and King John, we discover two possible contenders for the Sheriff of Nottingham in the Robin Hood legends

Contender number one – William de Wendenal. William was High Sheriff from 

1191 to 1194, during King Richard’s absence. He is mentioned in the book Chronica magistri Rogeri de Hoveden by the twelfth century chronicler Roger of Howden. However, upon King Richard’s return, William de Wendenal simply disappeared from the historical record.

Contender number two – Philip Marc. In 1207, Marc “requested” 100 pounds from “three men of Newark”. The request was accompanied by a threat – pay up, or be burned to the ground. Sound familiar?

Unsurprisingly, Marc was not popular. Indeed, Item 50 in the Magna Carta specifically mentioned Marc. It insisted on Marc and his brothers’ removal, and that in the future they should “have no bailiwick in England”. 

In the Robin Hood legends, the Sheriff of Nottingham is rarely mentioned by name, but in Philip Marc, I think we have a serious contender.

Numerous actors have portrayed the Sheriff of Nottingham in films and on television. This list is far from exhaustive – it merely offers my personal highlights.

Peter Finch in The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men, 1952

Alan Wheatley in the television series The Adventures of Robin Hood, 1955-59

Peter Cushing in Sword of Sherwood Forest, 1960

John Arnatt in A Challenge for Robin Hood, 1967

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1963 Maid Marian and Robin Hood

Maid Marian and Robin Hood #3

The Adventures of Robin Hood

Episode 1: The Coming of Robin Hood 

Introductory minstrel song: “Robin of Locksley, a knight bold and good; back from the Holy Wars, becomes Robin Hood!”

📷 Richard Greene as Robin Hood

Regular Cast

Sir Robin of Locksley – Richard Greene

The Sheriff of Nottingham – Alan Wheatley

Edgar – Alfie Bass

Guest Stars

Sir Roger de Lisle – Leo McKern

Original air date: 25 September 1955

Screenplay: Eric Heath on UK prints, Lawrence McClellan on US prints – both pseudonyms of Ring Lardner Jr. From what I’ve seen, the UK prints are far superior to the US prints – no idea why 🤷‍♀️

Director: Ralph Smart 

Plot: After four years in the Holy Land, Sir Robin of Locksley Hall returns home to claim his inheritance. However, Sir Roger de Lisle has other ideas.

There is a serious, sombre tone to this story. The plot establishes Robin’s character as the Royal Forester and the Master of Locksley Hall. Spoiler (or maybe not) he’s destined to become an outlaw.

Leo McKern (pictured – Wikipedia) was an Australian actor who appeared in numerous film, stage and television roles. Among the most noted are A Man For All Seasons, The Prisoner and Rumpole of the Bailey. After a factory accident when aged 15, he was fitted with a glass eye. In 1997, he appeared in a party political broadcast for the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP).

The role of Sir Roger de Lisle was one of Leo McKern’s first on television. He played a villain, a man looking to steal from Robin Hood.

Standout scene: Robin is queuing to meet the Sheriff of Nottingham, to discuss his inheritance. When he’s invited to queue-jump, he protests. Quite rightly too – after all, this is England.

Sword fights – 1. Bow fights/bow skills – 1. (I will be keeping a running score).

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Researching Maid Marian in my library, I went off on a tangent and discovered this image, The Marriage of Guinevere and King Arthur by Lancelot Speed. Don’t look for historical accuracy – in his notes, Lancelot explained that he based this image on the fashions of 1460.

The picture is the frontispiece of Sir James Knowles’ The Legends of King Arthur and his Knights, originally published in 1860. My copy is a ninth edition, published 1912.

Maid Marian – Fact or Fiction?

Maid Marian was not mentioned in the earliest Robin Hood ballads. She appears to have developed through the May Games festivities, commonly held around Whitsun. Some traditions regarded her as a shepherdess, while others gave her a noble background.

Writing c1500, Alexander Barclay referred to “some merry fytte of Maid Marian or else of Robin Hood”. She was also mentioned around this time in association with Friar Tuck.

In Anthony Munday’s 1598 play, The Downfall of Robert, Earl of Huntingdon, Marian appeared as Matilda, Robin’s lawfully-wedded wife – she changed her name to Marian when she joined him in the forest. So, in fiction at least, we have a Marian based on a Matilda. 

The Robin Hood stories are usually set during the reign of King Richard/Prince John or King John. In his play, Anthony Munday identified Maid Marian with the historical Matilda, daughter of Robert Fitzwalter, who had to flee England because of an attempt to assassinate King John in response to his unwanted advances towards Maid Marian.

Did Anthony Munday invent this background for Marian, or did he base his story on historical sources? I haven’t found conclusive evidence one way or the other, but in all these legends there tends to be a grain of truth somewhere.

🖼️ 17th century woodcut of Maid Marian

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Movies ‘48

Movies ‘48 #10

Movie Quiz #8

Charles Bronson’s character is walking towards three gunmen in which 1968 movie?

Quiz answers at the foot of this post.

Movie News – March 4, 1948

A Piece of (Hollywood) Cake

Movie News – March 5, 1948

“Eddie Voight, one of Hollywood’s most famous make-up artists, has decided that the film actress, Eve Arden, has more ‘binaural lure’ than any other actress in the world. This is Eddie’s phrase for ears that have sex appeal!”

Movie Quiz #9

Can you name this notorious actress?

Movie News – March 6, 1948

“The Lady From Shanghai is a hard to hear, hard to follow murder thriller made by Mr Orson Welles before he and Miss Rita Hayworth parted. Miss Hayworth looks lovely, but does not dance. Mr Welles’ ingenious photographic effects do not compensate for his inaudible and incomprehensible story.”

Movie News – March 7, 1948

“Scotland’s single attempt to introduce “no smoking” in cinemas has ended in failure. Six months ago, Mr R J Pennycook began the experiment at the Tonic Cinema, Queen’s Park, Glasgow. Mr Pennycook had visited American cinemas and been impressed by the pure atmosphere and clean-cut presentation on the screen.”

“Before long,” Mr Pennycook said, “young people stopped coming. Most of the grumbling came from girls. Folk who come now can smoke if they want to. After all, I suppose it is a part of their relaxation.”

Movie News – March 8, 1948

“Howard Hughes, multi-millionaire, plane designer, tool manufacturer and pilot, is trying to buy control of RKO, one of Hollywood’s most powerful film companies. There is no evidence that as a producer he has any special talent.”

Historian Betty Lasky described Howard Hughes’s relationship with RKO as a “systematic seven-year rape.”

Howard Hughes as depicted by Ernest Hamlin Baker for the July 19, 1948 cover of Time.

Movie Quiz #10

Can you name the actor and the movie?

Movie News – March 9, 1948

A promotion for Duel in the Sun, aka Lust in the Dust, “A Picture of A Thousand Memorable Moments.”

Note the telephone number – not seven or ten digits, simply 94.

Movie News – March 10, 1948

“Undercover Girl is the latest in the ever-popular Maisie series, and brings Ann Sothern to the screen once again in her incomparable role of the soft-hearted, hard-boiled Brooklyn girl who meets all difficulties with incurable optimism.”

Quiz #8 answer: Once Upon a Time in the West

Quiz #9 answer: Mae West. “When she is portraying a bad woman, she’s sumptuously, voluptuously, riotously bad, and she revels in complete vulgarity.” – Alma Whitaker on Mae West, in the Los Angeles Times.

Quiz #10 answer: Edward G Robinson in Little Caesar

As ever, thank you for your interest and support.

Hannah xxx

For Authors

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Categories
Movies ‘48

Movies ‘48 #9

Movie Quiz #5

From 1944, can you name the actress, actors and movie?

Quiz answers at the foot of this post.

Movie News – February 26, 1948

Movie Debut at 101

Movie News – February 27, 1948

Mr Harold Wilson, President of the Board of Trade (and future Prime Minister) said, “There are some who think that the renaissance in British film production has occurred because of a period of stagnation in Hollywood films. Many people in Britain think that Hollywood has got a little stale in its plots.”

Movie News – February 28, 1948

“Mrs Miniver is an outstanding example of how the British people took the blitz years, and did a lot to bring home to Americans what we in this country were going through.”

Movie Quiz #6

In 1949 this ending was considered daring because instead of taking the “hero’s” hand, the “heroine” walked past him. Can you name the movie?

Movie News – February 29, 1948

Marlene Dietrich Top Five “Most Fascinating Men”

Erich Maria Remarque, novelist 

Alexander Kirk, US Ambassador

Igor Stravinsky, composer

Earnest Hemingway, novelist 

Roberto Rossellini, film director 

Movie News – March 1, 1948

“Producer Ronald Neame doesn’t encourage visitors on The Passionate Friends set just now. Ann Todd and Trevor Howard are busy on love scenes. They prefer to have as few onlookers as possible.”

Movie News – March 2, 1948

Movies on release this week: Two Thousand Women, Tropic Fury, The Lone Wolf in Mexico, Cigarette Girl, Cheers for Miss Bishop, I Wonder Who’s Kissing Her Now, Duel in the Sun, The Rich Full Life, Gone With the Wind, Fame is the Spur, Baxter’s Millions, Keeper of the Bees.

In 1951, an edited version of Two Thousand Women was released in America, under the title House of One Thousand Women.

Movie Quiz #7

The introduction of CinemasScope in 1953 increased the average shot length from eleven to thirteen seconds. It also encouraged “washing line” compositions, like this one from How to Marry a Millionaire. Can you name any of the actors or actresses featured?

Movie News – March 3, 1948

“Maureen O’Sullivan has played in thirty-eight films. Between the thirty-eighth and thirty-ninth, however, there was a gap of nearly five years while Maureen nursed her husband through an illness, which he contracted during the war, and presented him with three children. The Irish girl is living proof that two careers in Hollywood can be carried on simultaneously with great success.”

Production of the audiobook version of Sunshine, book two in my Golden Age of Hollywood series, is now well underway. Kayla is adding sound effects to her narration, and they are greatly enhancing the story.

My latest Golden Age of Hollywood article for the Seaside News appears on page 43 of the magazine.

Quiz #5 answer: Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray and Edward G Robinson in Double Indemnity

Quiz #6 answer: The Third Man

Quiz #7 answer: Betty Grable, Rory Calhoun, Lauren Bacall, Cameron Mitchell and Marilyn Monroe

As ever, thank you for your interest and support.

Hannah xxx

For Authors

#1 for value with 565,000 readers, The Fussy Librarian has helped my books to reach #1 on 32 occasions.

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Categories
Movies ‘48

Movies ‘48 #8

Movie Quiz #2

A still from a movie released in August 1938. Can you name the film, the actor and the actress making her Hollywood debut?

Quiz answers at the foot of this post.

Movie News – February 19, 1948

A Prediction

Movie News – February 20, 1948

“In MGM’s The Rich Full Life, Spring Byington (pictured) appears in her 75th major characterisation in thirteen years. Having averaged nearly six pictures a year since she left the stage in 1933, Miss Byington’s reputation as Hollywood’s busiest actress is undisputed.”

Movie News – February 21, 1948

Joan Crawford Denies Charges

“Joan Crawford denied that she visited a sanatorium to watch a patient receiving electric treatment with a view to assisting her in her performance in the film Possessed. 

Miss Crawford is being sued by the patient’s husband Mr Charles McKay. Miss Crawford admitted that she visited the sanitarium, but was so upset by what she saw that she left before the treatment was given. Mrs McKay has since disappeared and has not been found despite a police search.”

Movie Quiz #3

Can you name the actor, actress, dog and movie?

Movie News – February 22, 1948

The top man and woman earners in the United States between 1944 and 1946 were film producer Louis B Mayer and actress Deanna Durbin. Mayer earned $502,571 and Durbin $262,875. Mayer earned more money than any other American in eight of the past nine years.

Movie News – February 23, 1948

Despite the crisis in the film industry, Gainsborough Pictures is doubling its production this year, producing seventeen films compared with nine last year. Gainsborough has a reputation for working quickly, with an average shooting time of ten weeks. Using a specially built honeycomb set and four cameras, they expect to shoot Flowers for the Living in ten days.

Movie Quiz #4

An iconic image from 1932 featuring Clark Gable and Jean Harlow, but can you name the movie?

Movie News – February 24, 1948

Shiela Sim, actress wife of Richard Attenborough was at home when her phone rang.

“Is that Mr Attenborough’s home?” asked a deep voice.

“Er…yes,” said Shiela Sim.

“Is it Mr Richard Attenborough the film star, or Mr Richard Attenborough the pawnbroker?”

“Yes, this is Mr Richard Attenborough the film star’s house.”

“Blast!” said the caller. “I wanted the pawnbroker.”

Movie News – February 25, 1948

“There’s plenty of comedy in Living in a Big Way, which has Gene Kelly starring in some novel dance routines. Marie MacDonald, known in Hollywood as The Body, has thirty-eight fashions to enhance her figure.”

Marie MacDonald married seven times, twice to the same man. Three of her marriages only lasted a year. A fourth lasted two years. Her first marriage was annulled after three weeks. She was also the victim of an alleged kidnapping, which was never proved.

Some book news. Dana, book three in my Golden Age of Hollywood series, is a Hot New Release in Canada. This is exciting because the book isn’t scheduled for release until late autumn/early winter.

Quiz #2 answer: Algiers, Charles Boyer, Hedy Lamarr

Quiz #3 answer: William Powell, Myrna Loy, Asta, The Thin Man

Quiz #4 answer: Red Dust

As ever, thank you for your interest and support.

Hannah xxx

For Authors

#1 for value with 565,000 readers, The Fussy Librarian has helped my books to reach #1 on 32 occasions.

A special offer from my publisher and the Fussy Librarian. https://authors.thefussylibrarian.com/?ref=goylake

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