Photoplay, August, 1924 |
I always enjoy Hoot Gibson movies. He added a lot of comedy to his films. Here we see him standing in front of his Beverly Hills mansion in his "specially built eight-cylinder roadster." And look at those shoes.
Exhibitors Herald, 23-August-1924 |
Old Hoot played a cowboy baseball player in Hit and Run. Eddie Sedgwick directed.
Seattle Star, 11-August-1924 |
Here we see the same photo of Hoot with his mansion and his roadster. "Hoot's New ''Pont.'"
Seattle Star, 11-August-1924 |
Exhibitors Herald, 02-August-1924 |
Fred Thomson (no relation) had a diverse career. While attending the Princeton Theological Seminary, he earned the Amateur Athletic Union's All-Around Champion trophy in 1910, 1911 and 1913. After being ordained as a Presbyterian minister, he joined the Army and served as a chaplain during World War One. He went into the movie business after he married director and screenwriter Frances Marion. In time, he became a major western star. Sadly, he died of Tetanus in 1928.
I have never heard of Cuba Coolidge
Exhibitors Herald, 02-August-1924
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