Ray Bourbon on working at Paramount in the 20s
Posted: Fri Dec 16, 2011 10:08 am
I'd like to get the opinions of some experts here on something I've been working on the past few years.
I've been researching the life and work of film, vaudeville and nightclub drag performer Ray Bourbon.
http://www.coolcatdaddy.com/bourbon.html
Ray led a pretty outrageous life, starting out in silent movies in the 20s. By the end of his career, he was arrested for murder in Texas and given a life sentence when he was in his seventies.
During this period, Ray spent his time in jail working on his memiors, banging them out on a typewriter that someone gave him. I was lucky enough to obtain the original manuscript of the work from someone who, in the 1980s, tried to get a film project going based on Ray's life.
There are many things we just don't know about Ray - even his real name - and his stories about his life would change and be embellished through the years.
So, I'm wondering what you folks would think of his stories about working in silent movies. How much of what Ray's telling is real, could be real, or is just a good story here?
Here's a link to a pdf of the relevant chapter from Ray's book:
https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B8jfpc ... NjMWQzNTc1
I've edited the manuscript and added an introduction about Ray's life, along with a discography and other related material. I've been thinking about selling it as an ebook, but it is presently unpublished.
In the chapter, Ray reminisces about his time at Paramount Studios, recalling working with Valentino and Swanson on "Beyond the Rocks", doubling for Estelle Taylor and doing stunt riding for Valentino in "Blood and Sand", and working on Demille's "Ten Commandments" and "Manslaughter". He also relates a story about Pola Negri feuding with Gloria Swanson.
In the original typewritten manuscript of Ray's memoirs, this is actually written as two chapters - I've combined them into one. I've only corrected typos and a bit of the grammar, but it's otherwise as Ray wrote it.
I've been researching the life and work of film, vaudeville and nightclub drag performer Ray Bourbon.
http://www.coolcatdaddy.com/bourbon.html
Ray led a pretty outrageous life, starting out in silent movies in the 20s. By the end of his career, he was arrested for murder in Texas and given a life sentence when he was in his seventies.
During this period, Ray spent his time in jail working on his memiors, banging them out on a typewriter that someone gave him. I was lucky enough to obtain the original manuscript of the work from someone who, in the 1980s, tried to get a film project going based on Ray's life.
There are many things we just don't know about Ray - even his real name - and his stories about his life would change and be embellished through the years.
So, I'm wondering what you folks would think of his stories about working in silent movies. How much of what Ray's telling is real, could be real, or is just a good story here?
Here's a link to a pdf of the relevant chapter from Ray's book:
https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B8jfpc ... NjMWQzNTc1
I've edited the manuscript and added an introduction about Ray's life, along with a discography and other related material. I've been thinking about selling it as an ebook, but it is presently unpublished.
In the chapter, Ray reminisces about his time at Paramount Studios, recalling working with Valentino and Swanson on "Beyond the Rocks", doubling for Estelle Taylor and doing stunt riding for Valentino in "Blood and Sand", and working on Demille's "Ten Commandments" and "Manslaughter". He also relates a story about Pola Negri feuding with Gloria Swanson.
In the original typewritten manuscript of Ray's memoirs, this is actually written as two chapters - I've combined them into one. I've only corrected typos and a bit of the grammar, but it's otherwise as Ray wrote it.