The Arctic Giant : 1942

The Arctic Giant : 1942

The Arctic Giant : 1942

The Arctic Giant is the fourth of seventeen animated Technicolor short films based upon the DC Comics character of Superman. This animated short was created by Fleischer Studios. The story runs nine minutes and covers Superman’s adventures in defeating a giant monster that terrorizes the city. The short depicts a Godzilla-esque scenario while predating the 1954 film by 12 years.

The story begins as the narrator tells about an Arctic Giant found frozen in perfect condition millions of years ago in Siberia. The dinosaur-like monster is shipped to the Museum of Natural Science in Metropolis, where it is identified as a Tyrannosaurus and is kept frozen using special refrigeration equipment. (ref. Wikipedia)

Release date February 27, 1942
Running time 9 minutes (one reel)
Production Company Fleischer Studios
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Animation by Willard Bowsky & Reuben Grossman
Color Process: Technicolor
Starring Bud Collyer, Joan Alexander, Jackson Beck, Julian Noa
Directed by Dave Fleischer
Story by Bill Turner & Tedd Pierce
Based on Superman by Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster
Produced by Max Fleischer
Music by Sammy Timberg

 

Night Latch Key Blues

Night Latch Key Blues

Virginia Liston was one of the blues singers whose career was spent primarily in Black vaudeville. She is said to have gotten her start in show business around 1912 in Washington D.C. In 1920 she married entertainer Sam Gray and toured with him as part of a husband-and-wife team called Liston & Liston.

They divorced in 1925. In the early ’20s Liston came in contact with Clarence Williams, who recorded with her for Okeh for the first time in September, 1923. Thirty-six issued sides for Okeh and Vocalion came out under Virginia Liston’s name through the summer of 1926, the most famous being a pairing that united Liston with Clarence Williams’ Blue Five, then including Louis Armstrong and Sidney Bechet. Virginia Liston remarried and retired from show business in 1929, afterward settling in St. Louis to work in the church. Three years later she was dead. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis