another picture. By JOSEPH W. LaBINE . not the “piker” way like do it. the super something-or- mind of Darryl F. Zanuck, chief. Today about 60 acres of 20th Century-Fox’ production 1871 Chicago stand in faithful City Hall and scores of other build- ¢ ings have been authentically brought | back to life. An old timer walking down those streets might be tempt- ed to hum a chorus of ‘‘Shoo, Fly, Don't Bother Me' or some other catchy tune of yesterday. “In Qld Chicago,” a story maxed by the lamp-kicking act of | Mrs. O'Leary's cow, cost $1,500,000. | But it wasn't extravagance, even | though Mr. Zanuck did build a | 1,865,000 gallon artificial lake to | simulate Lake Michigan. Nor was it extravagance to use 1,100 extras in one scene. Sure, it cost a lot of money, but Hollywood producers are skinflint as a building contractor when it comes to planning the cost of a production. Research—the First Step. How is it done? Well, let's get started with “In Old Chicago.” When Darryl Zanuck decided to | produce this film he immediately | set the research department at work collecting data on the 1854-1871 pe- riod in Chicago which the picture was scheduled to cover. He decided that the great holocaust which laid waste 18,000 buildings at a loss of $196,000,000 should be reproduced only as a concluding sequence. The picture would really relate an im- portant epoch in the building of America's second city. An impov- erished American family of the frontier type would be chosen, around whom the epic of growth, destruction and rebuilding could be constructed. The O'Learys were chosen be- cause Mrs. O'Leary’s cow with the high-kicking rear legs is supposed to have started this greatest of con- flagrations. It took the research department one year to gather data covering manners, costumes and buildings of the 1854-1871 era. Then Niven Busch set to work with his original screen story, ‘“We the O'Learys.” This was turned over to Lamar Trot- ti and Sonya Levien, crack script team. Costumes, Properties, Masie. The research department fur- nished information for the style di- rector, Royer, who designed cos- tumes for the principals. Art Di- rector William Darling supervised construction of scts and properties from old building prints and maps furnished by the researchers. Since modern films need music, Lew Pollack and Sidney D. Mitchell wrote “I'll Never Let You Cry,” “I've Taken a Fancy to You,” and “Take a Dip in the Sea.” Mack Cordon added “In Old Chicago” as a fourth tune. Among old-time numbers studied by these crack iths were “Aunt Rhody,” “Come Home Father,” “The Dark Girl Dressed in Blue,” “We Never Speak as We Pass By” and “The Captivating Due.” Remember any of them? Actually, two cities were built for the production. First came the Chi- cago of 1854, a sprawling cosmopolis of dirt streets, inhabited by set- cli- | tlers, frontiersmen, ruffians, sharp traders and all the other sturdy and warped souls who drifted through of “In Old Chicago.” Through its morassed streets rum- the covered wagons bearing Alice Brady, the newly widowed “Molly O'Leary,” and her three brave youngsters, Sets Are Rebuilt, When the prologue filmed the 1854 sets were rebuilt to match 1871 Chicago. were paved, cars were laid. tough section of old Chicago occupy- Barbara McLean, one of the few top film editors of the industry, scans some of the several hundred thousand feet of film shot for the new spectacle. Actually, only part of this immense footage is used. the studio’s north lot, was also re- built to conform with the changes of 18 years in Chicago's growth. Costumes presented a problem. Every costume company in the Los Angeles area had to help clothe the 1,100 extras used in one scene, When confronted with the necessity of housing these costumes, the studio erected a four-pole circus tent next to the women’s wardrobe. Another tent, almost as large, was used to house the 500 policemen’s, firemen’s and soldiers’ uniforms. Then came two more tents for dressing rooms. | a real lake front, Zanuck snapped his fingers and ordered an arti- ficial lake built right on the lot! This wasn't extravagance, because | it was cheaper than transporting hundreds of extras, properties, crew and equipment to a loc miles away. Filming the Holocaust. To film the lakeside scenes—most- ly pictures of the fire—the studio built the highest parallels ever con- | structed for a film, towers 165 feet tall. The complete picture of deso- lation and horror could be seen from cameras at such an advan tageous angle. A dolly, 20 by 30 feet, was built to run along tracks laid in the lakebed, holding three more cameras. Altogether, seven outdoor sets | were made for the picture In- terior settings are scattered through five sound stages at Twentieth Cen- tury-Fox. One, illustrating the in- terior of Chicago's old Nineteenth Regimental armory, used as the scene of a free-for-all election fills ation many Fifteen fire engines of 1871 vin- picture after a search that covered most of the nation. Furniture was obtained from second hand shops | and antique dealers, much of it | coming from an old house recently wrecked in Los Angeles. But a num- | ber of pieces had to be built to | riod. Although “In Old Chicago” de- tails the romance of Tyrone Power the great Chicago fire. Everyone wants to know “how it was done” and “how much it cost.” It’s An Expensive Job. 000 was appropriated for “special effects’’—and this mostly means the fire, real Chicago conflagration spread ter square miles, proximately a third of the city’s ing those who would reproduce it. No chances were taken during the filming of the fire sequence. equipment from the Los Angeles fire department was also on the spot. Yes, there was also “Daisy O'Leary,” the famous Jersey cow. “Daisy’’ was discovered on a farm near Stockton, Calif. With her three sisters as ‘‘standins,” the bovine Thespian was moved to Hollywood and taught the proper technique of kicking over a lamp. But the important part of this and most other Hollywood productions is that behind-the-scenes workmen seldom get the credit they deserve. The stars glitter before the cam- eras, but their glittering would be in vain without the prods amount of research, construction and planning which lies behind ev- ery film. Costumes, scenery, sound, photography, makeup, research and are but a few of the fields in which Hollywood workers occupy themselves. Think that over when you take in HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELF! “When Two Spies Meet” By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter | ELLO EVERYBODY: You know, boys and girls, when you stop to think of it, venture, great adventure of marriage and fatherhood, Leo says, the greatest Let's go back over the years with Leo. The World war was on and was playing soldier with little John Ferara and other Italian- American youngsters of the neighborhood. These boys’ forefathers were of a race that once conquered the world, and playing soldier came nat- ural to them. When it was suggested that Leo play the part of a Ger- man spy and hide, he agreed. The shades of night had just fallen and it would soon be time for the boys to go home, but there was time for one last game. Leo, as the spy, slipped away to hide, He knew a swell hiding place behind the black- smith shop, which backs on the right of way of the Pennsylvania rail- There were lots of wagons standing in the yard, between the rail- road embankment and the building, and Leo slipped in between them like a real German spy and lay, quiet as a mouse, on the ground. Play Spy Met Up With a Real One. Leo could picture the other boys looking for him—everywhere but here. The spot was the sort of place that people would avoid— unless, of course, they were determined German spies like Leo. Out in the street traffic went by now and then and once a train roared by on the tracks over his head, but otherwise the spot was as quiet as the grave. Suddenly, however, Leo became aware that he was not the only per- son hiding out that night. The tall figure of a man rose quietly—only about ten feet away from him-—and furtively arranged some sort of He Handled the Box Very Carefully. box he carried in his hands. he actions of the man frightened Leo. “Perhaps he is really a German spy,” Leo thought, Frightened but de- termined, the boy lay still and watched. He could not see the features of the man, but he could see his outline and hear him tinkering with the box. Once-—{rightened apparently by someone passing in the street—the He hid himself so well that even Leo could not see him. Leo was glad of that because it meant that the man in turn could not see him. There Was a Ticking in the Box. Minutes went by during which Leo shivered with excitement. Here he was out playing that he was a spy and suddenly the tables were turned and a real spy was before him. He hoped the other boys wouldn't come hunting for him here and spoil it all. Leo wasn't very old to be a detective, but he knew from the man's actions that he was doing something he shouldn't be doing and Leo wanted a chance to get the police. What a feather in his cap if the man did turn out to be a spy! As he was thinking these thoughts and listening to his own heart thump, the man’s tall figure rose suddenly again right beside him! He was closer, if anything, and Leo was scared stiff that he would be dis- covered. The boy got ready to make a break for it at the slightest sign of suspicion. But the man—whoever he was—seemed unaware of Leo's presence. He was intent on the box before him. He handled that box very care- fully, Leo noticed, and once when a passing car threw a light in the yard, Leo saw a tense, cruel face under a mop of gray hair. He hugged the ground and waited. Finally Leo, listening, heard a strange sound from the box. It sound- ed like a clock ticking. The man seemed satisfied with the sound and moved with the box in the direction of the railroad embankment. Leo saw him bend over and place it under a culvert beneath the tracks. And just then the other boys nearly spoiled the whole game. They started calling for Leo to give himself up. Well sir, Leo says he'd seen enough anyway and was pretty glad of a chance to sneak away, if he could do it without being seen. He crawled along on his stomach and then made a run for it. The other boys were scared when they saw Leo's pale face, but when tions for a policeman. A policeman was found and he brought with him two other men who didn’t laugh when Leo told them his story. went on the other. spy chasing game. Yes, It Was a Big Time Bomb. The policeman went along noisily flashing his light to the spot where Leo had seen the man. Some of the boys thought Leo had just been “seeing things” and started to laugh, but the next minute the laughs He didn’t get far though, Leo says, before he had run right into the Leo says he didn't look like a spy at all when they had him in the light. But a good spy never does look like one. The man never said a word, Leo says, while the policeman called the Leo even began to feel sorry for him and to think he had made a mistake, but in a few minutes he knew differently. He led the policeman back to where he had seen the man place the box. They picked the box up gingerly. And what do you suppose it was? A time bomb! With enough explosives in it to blow up the entire neighborhood! The clock was set for midnight when a train would be passing and, according to experts, the explosion would also have killed Leo and his whole family who lived a few doors away! And that, boys and girls, is the story of how Leo caught the German spy. Luck? Perhaps. But luck and adventure are companions. 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