Monday, April 20, 2009

The Boston Marathon

Today is the Boston Marathon. I can have a lot of different emotions on this day. The Marathon is always a sign that the weather is going to just about stay nice. We have had a few odd storms after the Marathon, but very few. I always look forward to the Marathon for that reason.
The other thoughts the Marathon brings is my dear sweet mom. She was so looking forward to the 2201 Marathon, she talked for weeks of the marathon. Unfortunately, Easter Sunday before the Marathon Mom passed away. I know on this day she is looking down on those runners.

I watch a little of the Marathon this morning, and I just don't know how they can run in this cold weather half naked. I was cold just watching them. I wish them the best. Here is a picture of Mom with her three girls.

Hugs,
Ellen


Thursday, April 9, 2009

In my Easter Bonnet....


Here I am all dressed up for Easter. I am the little blond in the front on the left. Clutching onto my new Easter purse. I can so remember getting ready for Easter. Mom always made sure everything was new from the tops of our heads to the soles of our shoes.
It was a wonderful time to be a kid. We knew everyone in our neighborhood.
Happy Easter,
Ellen

Beaded ornaments

My 50th Birthday banner my sister made for my surprise party


Hedda Hopper


Birth:

May 2, 1890
Death:

Feb. 1, 1966
Actress, Journalist. Despite a 23 year career that encompassed over 120 motion picture appearances and chorus girl roles on Broadway to motion pictures, she is best remembered for her newspaper column and radio show that focused exclusively on Hollywood gossip, a subject she was able to tell more about to her audience due to her Hollywood insider status. Born Elda Furry in Holidaysburg, Pennsylvania, she left school to act on Broadway. In 1913 she married marquee star William DeWolfe, a man who was 32 years her senior. They had one son, and divorced in 1922, but she kept his name for the rest of her life (and changed her name to Hedda on the advice of a numerologist). In 1931 she began “The Hedda Hopper Show”, which initially ran as a 15 minute gossip show mostly devoted to Hollywood marriages and divorces. Enormously popular, it ran until 1951, and on the strength of its popularity she started the “Hedda Hopper’s Hollywood” column in the Los Angeles Times in 1938. She steadily gained a reputation for exposing tidbits about the lives of Hollywood figures, and created a character of herself in her own right, especially in regard to her vast collection of sometimes outrageous hats, and a long standing feud with rival gossip columnist Louella Parsons. With the advent of television’s popularity in the late 1940s and early 1950s, he radio show waned, but she herself became a staple of television programs and game shows, being a frequent panelist on “What’s My Line?’, and appear on shows like “I Love Lucy”, “The Colgate Variety Hour” and “The Beverly Hillbillies”. In 1960 she received the Journalistic Merit award, and published her autobiography “The Whole Truth and Nothing But!”, which recapped her over 20 years or being an Hollywood insider. She died in Los Angeles of double pneumonia in 1966, working right up until her passing. As a Hollywood icon, she created a number of friends and enemies; she gave harsh advice to actress Ida Lupino, which helped her gain recognizable part, but was despised by actress Joan Bennett, who once sent her a skunk. In 1985 a movie about the feud between her and Parsons was released as “Malice in Wonderland”, which Jane Alexander as Hedda Hopper and Elizabeth Taylor as Louella Parsons