Do you think that this car traveled by train with the cat in a seperate wagon from spot to spot? Wishing you Barbera and your whole family a wonderful Christmas. Thanks for the Blog... Lee Stevens
Good Morning Lee, I really don't know what this was built for. My day had two good friends that worked for MGM, Frank Whitbeck and George Emerson who sent him things like this over the years.
Buckles, I'm not your best year-make-and-model man, but this great truck shot will date from at least Leo's debut, on July 31, 1928, for the silent film WHITE SHADOWS OF THE SOUTH SEAS. His roar was provided by a phonograph record on an old Victrola. The whole idea came from Columbia University's fight song, "Roar, Lion, Roar". Goldwyn's ad exec, Howard Dietz, drew up the lion logo in 1916. When Metro and old Louie B. Mayer merged with Goldwyn, in 1924, Leo bounced the world as their trademark. At the Compound, I heard all the stories--every lion man nationwide claimed his cats were the Leos. They came from Goebel's Lion Farm. My favorite remains Frank Phillips's big black-maned Pascha. Others were Slats, the three Jackie lions of Mel Koontz, and the dangerous, tough old Tanner. The lions were often free-worked in the dense jungle sets of MGM Backlot #3. Uncle Ben, Mel, Louis Roth, and Phillips could go in and work them to their call boxes at the end of the shot. Trying that with Tanner was certain death. Meat-baiting didn't work with him, either. Tanner had to left alone until he came home when he felt like it.
To Buckles and Barbara and your family, and all my fellow readers, Merry Christmas, Happy Whatever You Celebrate, and a Red One for '06.
About 4 years ago I picked up a truck That looked a lot like this one in Demont Indiana.The farmer said it had been in his barn since he was about 7 years old. He also had 2 small cage wagons , the type you would load side ways on a flat car. The cage wagons were white and gold lettered for the Cole Bros Circus. they had wood spoke wheels with hard rubber tires. The truck had wood spoke wheels with nenuematic tires. It was red with gold wood carvings. It did not run and the rupper tires were rotting off. It was lettered for Sells-Floto Circus. Both the cage wagons and the truck were loaded onto a drop deck semi trailer and I took them to a privite collector just out side Delavan Wisconsin. The farmer stated he got $2500.00 for all 3 pieces. Merry Christmas to everybody and a Happy New Year from truckerdonp.
7 comments:
Do you think that this car traveled by train with the cat in a seperate wagon from spot to spot? Wishing you Barbera and your whole family a wonderful Christmas. Thanks for the Blog... Lee Stevens
Good Morning Lee,
I really don't know what this was built for. My day had two good friends that worked for MGM, Frank Whitbeck and George Emerson who sent him things like this over the years.
That car is the COOLEST!
Thank you , Buckles, for all the great photos and stories and may you and your blogfans have a Merry Christmas and a very happy New Year!
~Patrick
For Pat Cashin...please contact us at ydcircus@aol.com. Thanks, Mike Naughton, Yankee Doodle Circus.
From Eric:
Hi Buckles,
Happy holidays and many thanks for all the photos and historical information you've been sharing with us on your Blog.
Eric
Buckles, I'm not your best year-make-and-model man, but this great truck shot will date from at least Leo's debut, on July 31, 1928, for the silent film WHITE SHADOWS OF THE SOUTH SEAS. His roar was provided by a phonograph record on an old Victrola. The whole idea came from Columbia University's fight song, "Roar, Lion, Roar". Goldwyn's ad exec, Howard Dietz, drew up the lion logo in 1916. When Metro and old Louie B. Mayer merged with Goldwyn, in 1924, Leo bounced the world as their trademark. At the Compound, I heard all the stories--every lion man nationwide claimed his cats were the Leos. They came from Goebel's Lion Farm. My favorite remains Frank Phillips's big black-maned Pascha. Others were Slats, the three Jackie lions of Mel Koontz, and the dangerous, tough old Tanner. The lions were often free-worked in the dense jungle sets of MGM Backlot #3. Uncle Ben, Mel, Louis Roth, and Phillips could go in and work them to their call boxes at the end of the shot. Trying that with Tanner was certain death. Meat-baiting didn't work with him, either. Tanner had to left alone until he came home when he felt like it.
To Buckles and Barbara and your family, and all my fellow readers, Merry Christmas, Happy Whatever You Celebrate, and a Red One for '06.
About 4 years ago I picked up a truck That looked a lot like this one in Demont Indiana.The farmer said it had been in his barn since he was about 7 years old. He also had 2 small cage wagons , the type you would load side ways on a flat car. The cage wagons were white and gold lettered for the Cole Bros Circus. they had wood spoke wheels with hard rubber tires. The truck had wood spoke wheels with nenuematic tires. It was red with gold wood carvings. It did not run and the rupper tires were rotting off. It was lettered for Sells-Floto Circus. Both the cage wagons and the truck were loaded onto a drop deck semi trailer and I took them to a privite collector just out side Delavan Wisconsin. The farmer stated he got $2500.00 for all 3 pieces. Merry Christmas to everybody and a Happy New Year from truckerdonp.
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