Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchromatic

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Mike Gebert

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Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchromatic

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 7:56 am

Image

The recent hit and Oscar winner The Artist calls attention to one of Hollywood's great upheavals— the switch from silence to sound, and the impact that the change in cinematic technology visited upon the careers of stars whose voices didn't match their images. But there was another technological upheaval less than a decade earlier which wreaked similar havoc on the ranks of stardom— yet is all but forgotten today.

The switch from orthochromatic to panchromatic film, more sensitive to a full range of colors, changed the look of movies— white skies gained shades of gray, the overall look of films went from high contrast to subtle tonal variation. But it also shattered audience expectations, in an instant changing how they viewed their favorite stars. Some would benefit from the change— blondes like Mary Pickford or Alice Terry would no longer appear to have white hair. But other performers would, tragically, find their careers cut short when fans were shocked to discover that on the new film stock, they no longer looked like the stars they had idolized.

Perhaps no star better illustrates the perils of panchromatic film better than Edmund Chatoye. A ruggedly handsome man with blue eyes who might have walked out of an Arrow shirt ad, Chatoye was being trained for a career in the family bank in Pittsburgh when he decided to go on the stage. He enjoyed a few years of modest success in juvenile roles before a talent agent suggested he try out for pictures and brought him to the attention of Lewis Selznick. The effect of his first screen test was as unexpected as it was electrifying: on film, his blue eyes seemed almost white, suggesting a powerful empathy to female viewers— as Adela Rogers St. John later said, capable "of looking right into your goddamned soul." The elder Selznick nevertheless was uncertain about Chatoye's vaguely unsettling look, but he was urged to sign Chatoye by his son Myron, and the 26-year-old was given a supporting role as a mystic in "Vera, the Medium" opposite Kitty Gordon and Lowell Sherman.

Audience response was sensational, and Chatoye was quickly signed to a series of films exploiting his look— "The Distant Horizon," "Telescope Trumbull," "The Light of Reason," "The Whites of Their Eyes," and others. Following Selznick from the east coast to Hollywood, he was soon earning $10,000 a week. Edmund Chatoye Clubs were founded all over the country, and a novelty song, "Careful What You're Wearing Under That Gingham, Mary, Edmund Chatoye Can See Right Through You" was a hit. The handsome young star was a much-admired member of Hollywood's polo and seal-training set along with the likes of Wallace Beery, William Farnum and Anna Q. Nilsson.

But trouble would soon darken his bright skies with unanticipated shades of gray. Panchromatic film, more receptive to the full color spectrum, had been invented early in the century but remained unfeasible for motion picture production until the early 1920s. The impact of the first all-spectrum film, 1922's "The Rainbow Painter," was as powerful as that of "The Jazz Singer" seven years later, and one by one the studios made the conversion to panchromatic film, repainting backdrops and dyeing hair. But Chatoye would be one of the few holdouts, with Selznick Pictures running trade ads to remind exhibitors and audiences of the attraction that Chatoye's clear eyes held for (especially female) moviegoers.

Image

It would be of little avail. Chatoye soon made the leap to panchromatic film in "The Darkened Cellar," a shadowy suspense yarn intended to hide the effect of his newly darkened eyes, but audience response was lukewarm. "He just doesn't look at me the same way," a female moviegoer said to Screen Stories, summing up the feelings of many fans. Chatoye invested his own money into an epic called "Smouldering Volcanoes," but it was a disaster, entire reels consisting of clouds of smoke in which Chatoye and co-star Betty Bardon could only be seen in silhouette.

Since none of his panchromatic work survives, it's difficult to judge the difference. But reviewers found that the actor who once seemed so empathetic now seemed cold and arrogant with dark eyes set in his handsome face. Mordaunt Hall's September 6, 1924 New York Times review of "Smouldering Volcanoes" said "The impression is that Mr. Chatoye has signally failed to learn the acting lessons of the new panchromatic age, which call for a more expressive use of the entire physiognomy, not merely the eyes. They have faces now, he ought to have been reminded."

This has given rise to rumors that Selznick deliberately sabotaged his expensive star's career with dark lighting and shadowy subject matter to get out of his contract and sign new, less expensive panchromatic performers. Whatever the actual truth, Selznick dropped Chatoye's contract in 1924. He searched for work unsuccessfully in the years to follow, but a new panchromatic Hollywood had little use for the orthochromatic stars of a few years earlier.

Had he hung on into the early 1930s, the successful three-strip Technicolor process could have given his blue eyes a new shot at fame, perhaps as Daddy Warbucks in a Little Orphan Annie film. But on November 19, 1926, a weary Chatoye aimed those once-world-famous baby blues one last time at the town of his rise and fall, and returned to his family's bank in Pittsburgh. He would live only 37 more years as vice-president and later chairman of the board before dying at the Newport yacht races in the company of his 22-year-old mistress... a poignant end to the career of the original "ol' blue eyes."
We should respect the other fellow's religion, but only to the extent that we respect his theory that his wife is attractive and his children intelligent. —H.L. Mencken
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Ann Harding

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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 8:27 am

Sounds like a very nice (and very elaborate) April's fool joke. Congratulations, I nearly fell for it. 8)
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 9:24 am

It was so brilliantly conceived & written that I DID fall for it! (Never turn my calendar page till the 2nd wk of the next month anyway.) But assure me, at least, that the part about the 22-yr old mistress was not a fantasy!
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 9:53 am

Very clever, I enjoyed that tremendously! The Mordaunt Hall quote, however, should have been the tip-off that this was a gag. Old Mordaunt never wrote anything as insightful as that!
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 11:06 am

.....naturally blue eyes - certified by the Opthalmic Society of Vienna.........
I was a believer until this line. Sounds like something Groucho Marx
would say.
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 11:59 am

Very nice, Mike. I was preparing a sarcastic enquiry into exactly what the "seal-training set" was a typo for.

Bob
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 12:05 pm

Mike,

:o Of course you could have said that this guy was the Selznick equivalent of Wallace Reid. Also that they were tinting even the day sequences blue, so that Edmund's eyes looked all the more impressive. This was a hilarious piece. I'm still cracking up! :lol: Great spoof! Very creative and witty.
Last edited by Gagman 66 on Sun Apr 01, 2012 8:32 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 1:29 pm

It was so brilliantly conceived & written that I DID fall for it! (Never turn my calendar page till the 2nd wk of the next month anyway.) But assure me, at least, that the part about the 22-yr old mistress was not a fantasy!


After reading so many of Laura Wagner's Facebook accounts of stars' tragic ends, we needed one with an, er, happy ending...
We should respect the other fellow's religion, but only to the extent that we respect his theory that his wife is attractive and his children intelligent. —H.L. Mencken
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 1:44 pm

I thought it interesting that Chatoye was French for "cat eye" -- and then it hit me about the fourth paragraph that it was a put-on. Very clever. Mike . . .
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 5:02 pm

Well played, well played indeed sir! :lol:
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostSun Apr 01, 2012 6:10 pm

I wasn't sure at first, but Laugh Out Loud funny. Thanks Mike.
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 4:22 am

This was great! And every word true!

But you forgot the even earlier tragic tale of Belle Voix, a young actress plucked from the French stage by Gaumont studios to feature in their sound-on-disc films in 1906. She spoke, she sang, she even whispered to amorous costars, and audiences flocked to the cinemas to listen to her celebrated voice. "Why Hear Her In Life When You Can Hear Her In The Movies?" the ads proclaimed. She became one of the renowned stars of French cinema, with numerous records released of her popular film songs such as "Ecoutez-moi" and "Je chante pour vous."
Yet within a few short years, problems arose. De-synchronization between film and disc frequently occurred, confusing audiences as they could no longer tell who onscreen was speaking. Even worse, besotted young fans would often steal the projectionist's sound discs for their own collections, leaving the films with no sound. As a final blow, critics sniffed that these "talking pictures" were but a crude fad, compared to the true artistry of all-silent films.
As her former audience abandoned her in favor of new movie stars who didn't utter a peep onscreen, and gramophone horns in the cinemas were replaced by noisy musicians, Belle Voix became a forgotten has-been, and retreated to the obscurity of the stage.
Sometimes former admirers would find her in a theater and beg her to return to the screen, but she refused. "We had voices then!" she would say.
Her only known appearance in later films was a brief cameo as the nursing mother at the end of Dreyer's JOAN OF ARC. She had planned to sing a song for her triumphant return to the movies - but when Dreyer gently informed her that JOAN would after all be a silent movie, not sound, and her voice could not be used, she bitterly announced that she would never again appear in the movies.
So far as is known, she kept her word. Her later whereabouts are unknown, and indeed none of her films survive today. The original nitrates are believed to have been used to fuel the flames at the end of JOAN OF ARC, though this has not been confirmed...
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 8:26 am

That second image is actually Eugene O'Brien too.
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 8:46 am

Good catch! I had to find someone whose looks were sort of Arrow Shirt-generic enough that people wouldn't recognize him (and I could pass off different images as plausibly being the same guy).

Here are the originals; the lobby card is here, and that's Pete Morrison (whoever he was), while the O'Brien ad is here.
We should respect the other fellow's religion, but only to the extent that we respect his theory that his wife is attractive and his children intelligent. —H.L. Mencken
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 9:38 am

I thought that the Latin had too many "ests", though I had Latin 3.5 decades ago.
Is it trying to say"True light is truth"? As said, my Centurian-speak is a tad rusty. But the latin gave an air of authority, though a motto in Latin for a film style was a stretch, but not for back then. Before the Catholic Church(thankfully) discontinudetheir use of the dead language, it was interjectedto give class & authority in odd places.

What I saw as odd was that blue eyes going ghostly with the ortho film was a plus.
In the teens, I thoughtbrown eyes showed up better on the ortho film & blue eyes looked like blank sockets (& not too atractive).
It was the pan film that made blue eyes human-looking.

Well, great gag, and the ad sheets looked so real they had me going!
Agnes McFadden

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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 10:59 am

Who knows about the Latin, I think Google did that.

It was not easy thinking of a plausible reason why orthochromatic film would be preferable for anybody, believe me.
We should respect the other fellow's religion, but only to the extent that we respect his theory that his wife is attractive and his children intelligent. —H.L. Mencken
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 11:17 am

Mike Gebert wrote:
It was not easy thinking of a plausible reason why orthochromatic film would be preferable for anybody, believe me.


Well from a production standpoint, it would be much easier to develop and print in a room with red light instead of having to handle it in total darkness. I don't know why the actors or public would prefer it, however.

Although "orthos" is the Greek word for "straight" with metaphoric connotations of "right, safe, true, exact," whereas "pan" means "all," so maybe you could assume that "panchromatic" (all-colors) could have been considered a touchy issue in the southern states (!?) or some other such linguistic stretch.
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 1:04 pm

Seriously, the switch from orthochromatic to panchromatic film stock may have save Stan Laurel’s career, whose light blue eyes all but disappeared with the former. It was George Stevens, his cameraman at the time, who suggested the switch.
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 1:30 pm

If you ever watch the movie "It" with Clara Bow, especially in a mediocre print (as they all used to be at the beginning of VHS), notice the eyes of William Austin. They're so blue and light that they actually bug the bejesus out of me. I can't imagine any really liquid blue eyes from that period actually pleasing any camera or anybody, for that matter.
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostMon Apr 02, 2012 2:59 pm

"Smouldering Volcanoes." LOVE.
Fred
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostTue Apr 03, 2012 9:36 pm

Excellent, good Sir.

Damn those "Alien photographic trusts"!
:mrgreen:
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Re: Stars Hurt By the Switch From Orthochromatic to Panchrom

PostTue Apr 10, 2012 4:20 pm

R Michael Pyle wrote:If you ever watch the movie "It" with Clara Bow, especially in a mediocre print (as they all used to be at the beginning of VHS), notice the eyes of William Austin. They're so blue and light that they actually bug the bejesus out of me. I can't imagine any really liquid blue eyes from that period actually pleasing any camera or anybody, for that matter.


My father's eyes were so light his early photos on ortho appeared icily frightening. They were very light blue IRL. I notice that some actors whose eyes were darker blue often photographed appearing as if brown after the changeover to panchro, especially with certain cinematographers.

The April fool joke was well-played, it's an interesting subject.

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