German Advertiseing Leaflet
Above is a very rare German advertiseing leaflet promoting Walt Disney's live-action movie the Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men. The film was first released in West Germany in 1952. As Joan Rice gets top billing (alongside Richard Todd) and an interesting portrait in the top right-hand corner, I supsect that this leaflet was produced about that time.
There are now many various posters and lobby cards on this blog, from all around the world, showing the different images and colourful illustrations used to advertise this Disney masterpiece.
Happy New Year !
Above is the only Robin I saw during my visit to Sherwood Forest last year!
A very Happy New Year to all my readers and thank you for your continued support. This blog has continued to grow beyond my wildest dreams and a lot of it it is due to the amazing input and encouragement of Neil, Albie, Trish, Mike, Geoff and Laurence. Thank you so much for your help and regular comments.
This site is now getting over a hundred visits a day so hopefully we will hear from a few more readers this year!
Joan's Whirlwind Romance
In July 1952, during the filming of His Majesty O’ Keefe, Joan Rice became engaged to Martin Boyce, the manager of an auto parts factory, whom she described as a ‘regular pip of a fellow.’
In a press article she said, “"We went together for a year and three months before he proposed. As I recall it, we held hands after four months, then he kissed me on the sixth month of our meeting each other and things were on a standstill after that, until I got the news I was coming to the States."
But her engagement with Martin Boyce lasted less than 5 months and a recent discovery I have made on the back of a press photograph reveals a little more information on her whirlwind romance with her first husband, David Green.
15th January 1953:
“Miss Joan Rice 22 year old waitress turned film star; photographed last night with her fiancĂ©e; 19 year old Mr. David Green. When she returned from the Fiji Islands two months ago she denied that she had broken her engagement to Martin Boyce – but last night she revealed her engagement to Mr. Green, whom she met at a Christmas party. He was a Public Schools Heavyweight Champion before leaving Harrow, and is now a film salesman travelling for a Hollywood company in England.”
Joan and David were married at Maidenhead Registry Office a month later, on the 16th February 1953.
There are now over 56 pages of pictures and information about Joan Rice, so to find out more about her fascinating life, please click here.
Queues at the Leicester Square Theatre
This article taken from ‘To-Day’s Cinema’ on Thursday March
27th 1952, was kindly sent in by Neil and shows the crowds of people
hoping to see Walt Disney’s live action movie the ‘Story of Robin Hood.’ By the
look of the pictures the film remained a huge success with audiences of the
1950’s in the second week of its release. Unfortunately I am still having
trouble finding out how much it made for the Disney organisation at the box
office. So if anyone can help with this information, I would be very grateful.
The magazine caption reads:
“Walt Disney’s Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men, the
RKO Radio release in Technicolor starring Richard Todd with Joan Rice is keeping
up its second week pressure, as evidenced by these photographs taken outside
the Leicester Square Theatre, where it has been attracting spectacular business
since its World Premiere on March 13th. Part of the second week-end
queues to one side of the house, with a defile waiting patiently across the
other side of the street, facing that along the theatre itself.”
German Film Magazine
This lovely picture of Joan Rice as Maid Marian promoting Disney's live action movie the Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men, appeared in the German film magazine 'Die Filmwoche' in 1952. If my German translator is correct, the title of the magazine means The Film Week.
Geoffrey Rodway
It’s always great to get some feed-back
from my blog posts. Two years ago I posted a picture of Joan Rice (1930-1997)
in the make-up department for her role as Maid Marian during the filming of
Walt Disney’s Story of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men in early 1951.
At the time, I was not sure who the
gentleman was applying the make-up. I went through the names, including
Geoffrey Rodway the Makeup Supervisor on the movie, Trevor Crole-Rees, Stuart
Freeborn, Eddie Knight, A. L Lawrence, Robert Alexander and Wally Schneiderman.
They are all listed in various articles as uncredited makeup artists on Disney’s
live-action movie. At the time I guessed in might have been Geoffrey Rodway.
Well
I was thrilled recently to receive a comment on that post from Alex Rodway who
said:
“Yes that is Geoffrey Rodway, my
grandfather.”
I am hoping Geoff will get back in touch
and perhaps share any anecdotes he may have heard regarding his grandfather’s
career in the film business, particularly on the ‘Story of Robin Hood!’
Cavan Malone the Mysterious Page Boy
Cavan Malone as Giles the Page Boy with Joan Rice as Maid Marian
Four years ago I thought I had found the page
boy that appeared, but was uncredited, in Walt Disney’s Story of Robin Hood and
his Merrie Men (1952). At the time, I thought the young actor was the stage and
screen star Brian Smith (b.1932). His film career started in 1950 and he
appeared as Taplow in the classic, The Browning Version (1951) alongside
Michael Redgrave. Smith went on to appear in TV’s Billy Bunter in 1954, the colourful
swashbuckler, Quentin Durward (1955) with Robert Taylor and the 1957 version of
The Barretts of Wimpole Street. But Neil, one of my regular readers wasn’t sure
and I must admit I later began to have doubts.
Now, after a lot of trawling the web, I can
hopefully reveal, the person who played Giles, that mysterious page boy!
Cavan Malone (born 25th November 1939) was
the son of the Irish tenor Danny Malone. His mother Hazel Malone ran the famous
Corona Stage School in Chiswick, London, during WWII. As a former child actor he had appeared with
Alec Guinness in the movie classic Kind Hearts and Coronets in 1949 and also on
television as far back as 1947. On the
small screen he starred in episodes of No Hiding Place, Dixon of Dock Green and
also played Gordon Davies, husband to Joan Walker, in Coronation Street in
1961. But after appearing in the classic
war film 633 Squadron during the mid sixties he seems to have quit acting.
He sadly passed away in 1982, aged 42.
Below is Cavan Malone’s TV and Film Career:
1964: 633: Squadron ... Ericson
1964: Downfall
... Driving Instructor
1964: The
Edgar Wallace Mystery Theatre (TV series)
– Downfall (1964) … Driving Instructor
1962: Outbreak
of Murder (TV series) ... PC Wright
1962: Suspense
(TV series)
– Killer in the Band (1962) … Charlie
1962: Dixon
of Dock Green (TV series)
– A Special Kind of Jones (1962) … Arthur
Flint, as a Young Man
1961: Highway
to Battle ...Hoffman
1961: The
Cheaters (TV series)
– Fire! (1961) … Detective
1961: Coronation
Street (TV series)
– Episode #1.18 (1961) … Gordon Davies
– Episode #1.17 (1961) … Gordon Davies
1961 Return
of a Stranger ... Detective
1960:
Linda...Chief
1960: Emergency-Ward
10 (TV series)
– Episode #1.310 (1960) … Tony Aight
1959: No
Hiding Place (TV series)
– The Sharp Knife (1959) … Eddie
1959: Julius
Caesar (TV movie) ... Servant to Julius Caesar
1958: Further
Up the Creek ... Signalman
1957: The
Adventures of Peter Simple (TV
series)
– The Plot Against Peter (1957) …
Midshipman Thompson
1956: Over
to William (TV series)
– The Begging Letter (1956) … Robert Brown
– Cats and White Elephants (1956) … Robert
Brown
– William and the Three-Forty (1956) …
Robert Brown
– The Browncheck Sports Coat (1956) …
Robert Brown
– William and the Ebony Hairbrush (1956) …
Robert Brown
Richard Todd (Robin Hood), Cavan Malone (Giles) and Martitia Hunt (Queen Eleanor)
1952: Story
of Robin Hood and his Merrie Men... Giles the Page Boy (uncredited)
1952: Billy
Bunter of Greyfriars School (TV series)
– The Siege (1952) … Lord Mauleverer
1951-1952
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (TV series)
Earl of Warwick's page / Prince Henry
– The Life and Death of King John (1952) …
Prince Henry
– Festival Drama: Saint Joan (1951) … Earl
of Warwick's page
1949:
Kind Hearts and Coronets ... Young
Graham (uncredited)
1949: Macbeth
(TV movie)...Macduff's son
1948: It's
Hard to Be Good ...Tommy Beckett (uncredited)
1948: Mr.
Perrin and Mr. Traill ... Benson
Bill Owen and Cavan Malone in When the Bough Breaks (1947)
1947:
When the Bough Breaks ... Jimmy
1947: Captain
Boycott ... Billy Killain
Anthony Eustrel
Anthony
Eustrel played the part of the Archbishop of Canterbury
in Walt Disney’s Story of Robin Hood (1952).
Alongside
Martitia Hunt as Queen Eleanor, Anthony Eustrel’s character is involved in a
pivotal part of the story. Together the Queen and Archbishop are faced with the task of raising the huge ransom to release the imprisoned King Richard and defeating his brother, Prince John’s evil
plans. Eustrel carried off the role as the Archbishop, with extreme elegance and
aplomb, like the rest of the cast of Walt Disney’s second live action production
in England.
I have
managed to find out very little about Eustrel’s life other than the fact he was
born in London on October 12th 1902. During his early stage
career in the 1940’s he appeared at the Stratford Memorial Theatre in
productions of Richard II, Taming of the Shrew and The Merchant of Venice.
His film career
included:
§
Under the Red Robe (1937)
§
Second Bureau (1937)
§
The Wife of General Ling (1937)
§
Gasbags (1940)
§
The Silver Fleet (1943)
§
The Adventures of Tartu (1943)
§
Counterblast (1951)
§
Captain John Smith and Pocahontas (Burning Arrows) (1953)
§
King Richard
and the Crusaders (1954)
§
Lady Godiva of Coventry (1955) - Prior
§
The Ten Commandments (1956) - First High Priest
§
The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964)
§
Bednobs and
Broomsticks (1971)
Anthony
Eustrel also appeared in many TV series:
Climax (1951), BBC Sunday Night
Theatre (1951), Schlitz Playhouse of Stars (1954-1955), Burkes Law (1964-1965),
Man From Uncle (1965-1966) Batman (1966),
Get Smart (1966-1968), Hogan’s Heroes (1966-1968), My Favourite Martian (1963-1966) (in which he played King
John in one episode) and many others.
He died aged 76 on July 2nd 1979 and his ashes were interned
at Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California.
If
you have any more information on the life of this wonderful actor, please get in
touch.
The Tomb of Maid Marian
Matilda Fitzwalter's tomb c.1782
Occasionally I like to delve into various subjects
linked to the Robin Hood legend and recently I decided to look at one
particular place associated with Robin’s girlfriend - Little Dunmow, near
Colchester in Essex. I was glad I did and unearthed far more than I expected!
Today all that survives of the
Augustinian priory of St Mary the Virgin, (founded in Dunmow in 1106) is the
present church in St. Mary’s Place, which was the Lady Chapel. It is here that
local tradition states, is the tomb of Maid Marian.
Little Dunmow church
Dunmow formed the caput of a feudal
barony along with Baynard’s Castle in south-west London, which was granted to
Robert Fitzwalter of Woodham (c.1198- 1235) on the death of his father in 1198.
Robert was the baronial leader, styled ‘Master of the Army of God and the Holy
Church’ who later went on to oppose King John and lead the revolt that
culminated in the Magna Carta in 1215. Today he has become romanticized and
styled the champion of English liberty, but history reveals that he was far
from the saintly character created by modern myth.
King John had refused to allow the pope
any right to appoint an archbishop of Canterbury without royal assent. He
banished from England five monks from Canterbury and seized all the English offices
held by Italian bishops. He then went on to refuse to allow any papal legates
to enter the country. By the spring of 1208 the Pope had placed the country
under an Interdict forbidding any church services to be held.
In 1212, Robert Fitzwalter had been
heavily implicated in an assassination plot against King John during his
expedition against the Welsh. The king was to be killed, or to be abandoned to
the Welsh while a new king was chosen. But John had received intelligence of
the scheme and Fitzwalter was outlawed and fled to the court of King Philip of
France. John seized Fitzwalter’s lands and destroyed both Baynard and Benington
castles. But in the ‘Historire des ducs de Normandie (p.118)’, compiled between
1215-16, it states that when Robert Fitzwalter fled to France, he told King
Philip that his break with John was caused by the latter’s attempt to rape his
daughter Matilda. How this allegation arose is unclear and not taken seriously
by modern scholars. Some historians suggest that Fitzwalter may have left his
wife Gunnor de Valognes and the children, at Arras in Northern France while he
had gone to repeat his tale to Philip Augustus!
Seal Dye of Robert Fitzwalter
Meanwhile another enemy of John, Eustace
de Vesci, had also been allegedly enraged by what he described as the king’s
attempt to seduce his wife Margaret, the daughter of King William of Scotland. Later
a chronicler wrote of these allegations, at the Cistercian Abbey of Waverly,
accusing King John of violating the wives and daughters of many of his barons.
These attempted rapes were also confirmed by Matthew Paris; who although not a
contemporary of John continued to re-write and add to the work of Roger of
Wendover, with extreme hostility, describing the monarch as irreligious, lazy
and wishing to convert the country to Islam.
This is perhaps unsurprising when you
consider that King John had been excommunicated by the Pope and this severely
biased all views of him emanating from monastic sources -‘veiled behind fable,
invention and hostile criticism.’ So true or not, as hostile propaganda, these
allegations helped to establish the image of an immoral and untrustworthy king
that has lasted to the present day.
The story of the seduction of Robert
Fitzwalter’s daughter by King John first appeared in the manuscript chronicle
of Dunmow (Ms.Cotton, Cleop, C, 3. f29).
Sadly only one copy survives from the 16th Century, but it was
probably begun by Nicholas de Brumfield a canon of Dunmow in the latter part of
the 13th Century.
In 1597 appeared Michael Drayton’s (1563-1631) England's
Heroical Epistles, a series of poetical accounts, in imitation of those of Ovid. In this we first get our first glimpse of Dunmow’s heavily romanticized myth:
“King John enamour’d, by all means
assay’d,
To win chaste Matilda, a chaste
noble maid,
The Lord Fitzwater’s daughter; and
to gain her,
When by his courtship he could not
obtain her,
Nor by his gifts, strives (to far
being in)
To get by force, what fear means
could not win.
And banisheth the nearest of her
blood,
Which he could think had his
desires withstood:
When she to Dunmow to a nun’ry
flies,
Whither be writeth, and whence she
replies.”
It is interesting to note that
between 1597 and 1602 Michael Drayton had strong connections in London with the
theatrical syndicate of Philip Henslowe, and collaborated with many of the
playwrights of that time. Drayton’s influence possibly inspired two Elizabethan
dramas that left a lasting legacy on the legend of Robin Hood.
Henslowe’s famous theatrical diary states
that the prolific Anthony Munday (1563-1633) registered two plays on the 1st
December 1600:
1. “The Downfall of Robert Earl of
Huntington, afterwards called Robin Hood of Merrie Sherwood; with the
lamentable tragedy of chaste Matilda, the Lord Fitzwater’s daughter afterwards
his faire maid Marian.”
2. The Death of Robert Earl of
Huntington, otherwise called Robin Hood of merrie Sherwood; with the lamentable
tragedy of chaste Matilda, his faire maid Marian, poysoned at Dunmowe by King John.
(On this second play, Munday was helped by another playwright, Henry Chettle).
In Munday’s fist play we see
Matilda being persecuted by Prince John and following her lover to Sherwood
where she assumes the name Maid Marian. In the ‘Downfall’ Maid Marian is once
again pursued by the lecherous John (who has now become king) to Dunmowe Abbey,
where he eventually poisons her.
During the ‘Downfall’ play, Matilda
confusingly changes back to Marian then Matilda again, which possibly indicates
how Munday was struggling to combine the two separate traditions. But both
plays became hugely popular at the time and the ‘Downfall’ was later selected
for performance at Court.
This popularity led to another
play, ‘King John and Matilda,’ written about 1628 by Richard Davenport. But critics tend to describe this historical
tragedy as lacking originality and bearing a strong resemblance to Munday’s
second Robin Hood production.
In 1631 John Weever published his
‘Ancient Funeral Monuments of Great Britain’ and under Little Dunmow writes:
“The church of this monastery is
yet standing, in the choir whereof, between two pillars, lieth the body of
Matilda the fair entombed, who was the daughter of Robert Fitz-Water, the most
valiant knight of England. About the year 1213 saith the book of Dunmow, there
arose a great discord betwixt K. John
and his barons, because of Matilda
surnamed the faire, daughter of Robert Fitz-Water, whom the king unlawfully
loved, but could not obtain her, nor her father’s consent thereunto. Whereupon,
and for other like causes, ensued war through the whole realm. The king
banished the said Fitz-Water among others, and caused his castle, called
Baynard, and other his houses to be spoiled. Which being done, he sent a
messenger unto Matilda the fair, about his old suit in love, et quia noluit
consentire toxicavit eam. And because she would not agree to his wicked motion,
the messenger poisoned a boiled, or potched egg, against she was hungry, and gave
it unto her, whereof she died in the year 1213.”
The story was repeated, with more substance in William
Dugdale’s (1605-1686) Monasticon Anglicanum (1693):
“...in the year 1216 Robert Fitz Walter refusing to
consent to King John’s unlawful love to his daughter Matilda the Fair, that
king seized upon his Estate and Barony , and his castle of Baynard at London;
and Matilda, who was then there at Dunmow not admitting the King’s Suit, was
poisoned in a mess of broth. These things occasioned the Barons Wars, which
after a while were again composed, and Robert Fitz Walter restored to his
Barony and the King’s favour as formerly.”
'Matilda's' tomb at Dunmow
So the legend was taken into the nineteenth century,
but Geoffery Fitzpeter in his ‘Historical Essay on Magna Carta’ was more
critical:
‘... between two pillars, on the north side of the
choir, is the tomb of the fair Matilda, daughter of the second Walter
Fitz-Walter, who, according to the monkish story, unsupported by history, is
pretended to have been poisoned by the contrivance of King John, for refusing
to gratify his illicit passion. Her figure is in alabaster, and by no means a
despicable piece of workmanship. Her fingers are stained with a red colour,
which according to the Ciceroni of the place, was done to represent the effect
of the poison; but in all likelihood is the remains of a former painting.”
This for me has been a very interesting journey. On
the way we have seen how the seeds were sown to portray King John as the bad
king of popular literature and film and also witnessed the gentrification of
Maid Marian, the village May Queen into Matilda Fitzwalter daughter of Lord
Robert Fitzwalter.
After the death of his wife Gunnora de Valognes,
Robert Fitzwalter married Rohese Bayard who survived him. He is recorded in
most sources as having four children, Robert (pre-deceased him), Walter his
heir from his second marriage (d.1258), and Christina who married William de
Mandeville.
But did Robert Fitzwalter have a daughter called
Matilda? I have searched for historical evidence, but frustratingly, apart from
a mention in Sidney Painter’s ‘King John’ (1966), that ‘Matilda did die about
that time [1212] but it is unlikely John poisoned her,’ there is no reference.
The tomb of King John
In W.L.Warren’s excellent book on the life of King
John, he writes:
“[Robert
Fitzwalter and Eustace de Vesci] put out stories of John’s lecherous designs
upon their woman folk - an easy enough charge to make, but the stories they
told were so confused and unsubstantiated as to be beyond unravelling, let
alone belief. They seem indeed to be unintelligent fabrications to cover lack
of rational excuse; and it is hard to believe that Fitzwalter and Vesci were
anything more than baronial roughnecks. They had been out simply for John’s
blood in the conspiracy of 1212...”
Warren goes on: “Fitzwalter was altogether disreputable
and mischievous, rescued from ignominy only by his great fiefs, and owing his
leadership largely to his dominating aggressiveness. He was quick to take
offence and draw his sword.”
Maurice Ashley writes, “The story that John importuned
and molested the wives and daughters of his barons, including specifically the
wives of Eustace de Vesci and Robert fitz Walter, sounds improbable and was no
doubt cooked up by the monks.”
The damaged face on the alabaster tomb
The figure, said to be of Matilda, the daughter of
Robert Fitzwalter, on the tomb in Priory Church Little Dunmow, is made of
alabaster and dated from the early fifteenth century. It is likely to belong to
a later member of the Fitzwalter family, but this endearing legend will of
course live on.
Lucy Griffiths as Marian Fitzwalter in Robin Hood (1992)
1215 The Year of Magna Carta
by Danny Danziger and John Gillingham
The Reign of King John by
Sidney Painter
King John by Maurice
Ashley
King John by W.L.Warren
Magna Carta by Geoffrey
Hindley
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