Friday 20 December 2013

...Alan Perl?

The person that really got me started on this blog was Alan Perl.

Who?
Exactly.

As a Luise Rainer obsessive I recently tried to find out if any of her MGM co-stars were still living, or had she outlived them all. Whilst there's a chance that there may be some of the Ziegfeld girls from The Great Ziegfeld still (high) kicking, the likelihood of tracking them down, especially as most were not credited for the film, was zero to very little. There was, however, one person who made a film at MGM with Luise that may still be alive: Alan Perl.

Alan played Luise's son Georgie in The Toy Wife (1938), MGM's jump onto the Gone With The Wind bandwagon, with Luise as a European-Southern belle stealing the hearts of two beaus and getting herself into hot water with her steadfast sister (played by Barbara O'Neil). The film is charming, but doesn't have the quality of Luise's previous Oscar winners. 

This is Alan Perl's only credit. He was only four years old at the time so he would be in his late 70s today. I have been unable to find any further information about him, so....

Whatever happened to Alan Perl?


Whatever happened to....?

I've always been fascinated by the transience of fame and, in this age of information overload, with every factoid seemingly at your fingertips, I'm especially keen on the curious disappearances of those who were once seen by millions (or at least thousands) on cinema and television screens. These actors and actresses who had a fleeting brush with fame but have since slipped between the dusty pages of reference books and the all-encompassing reach of the internet search engine.


My first such curiosity was Luise Rainer, the two-time Oscar winner whom I discovered as late as 1998 when she appeared at the Academy Awards. I was, at that time, unaware of her career and her astonishing life so I went online... and discovered nothing. My life changed that day. I started to research and 15 years later I now run www.luiserainer.net and have a collection of material related to her life and work that cannot be found anywhere else online. Luise is no longer an obscurity, but there are thousands of others who have vanished from the public eye, whose contribution to the history of film amounts to nothing more than a credit or two on the IMDb. I want to find these people.

There are only a handful of 'rules' I have set myself, a small set of criteria for each person I include here. Firstly, they must have at least one film credit. Secondly, they must have really disappeared. I don't have time to be asking 'where are they now?' of 1980s child stars who are still working in straight-to-DVD terrors, or ex-actors who have their own website, or those with diaries full of appearances at conventions. I'm talking about those who have no trace, whose results from a cursory Google search is just an ever decreasing list of websites feeding off their IMDb page. Secondly, there must be a chance they are still alive. I don't want to waste our time chasing ghosts. I may, from time to time, add a celebratory post for those who still merit a Tweet or a blogpost from admiring film fans despite not having worked in decades, the Mary Carlisles and Carla Laemmles of the world, but, in the main I shall be concentrating on those who have really gone off the radar

I would be honestly and genuinely grateful for any advice, insight and news about those whom I choose to pursue. Please do leave comments if you have any information to add to any post (the contents of which, by the very nature of the subjects, may be scant, to say the least).

And so the trail begins....