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Susan Marlowe, CPA, and the great plans for dog fashion

26 Jan

updated january 25, 2012

Susan Marlowe, CPA, here with some great news about dog fashion!

I am continuing to work on my line of knitted dog wear. Susan Marlowe Canine Fashions is growing into a nice little (and I do mean little) industry for me. It is really exciting.

What else is happening with Susan Marlowe? I am intensifying my designing of dog fashions. I am also trying to expand my line to include bigger dogs. Beagle to Rottweiler, in other words.

Thanks for all of your kind attention. Thanks from Susan Marlowe CPA!

Susan Marlowe, CPA, takes on knitting for dog

15 Dec
Susan Marlowe CPA is knitting for dogs | Picked up some great yarn in Los Angeles and Beverly Hills and is now the knitting certified public accountant

Susan Marlowe CPA is knitting for dogs | Picked up some great yarn in Los Angeles and Beverly Hills and is now the knitting certified public accountant

Hello from Susan Marlowe, CPA. Well, after my shoe shopping trip to Los Angeles I am ready to start knitting. I picked up some awesome yarn at a Beverly Hills boutique. I am going to take a little break from being a certified public accountant in order to work on my cool new animal clothing designs.

I hope everyone is having a fabulous winter. Susan Marlowe is busy with vacations and visiting family, etc. I plan to post some really cool pictures of my knitting designs.

Thanks from Susan Marlowe, CPA!

Susan Marlowe has some new designs!

29 Nov

Susan Marlowe has Beverly Hills, Los Angeles designs for dog clothes. Adorable designs for dogs of any size. Susan Marlowe CPA has designed numerous styles for your canine companion. Designers like kimi peck, charlotte spadaro, cindy bemis, and all sorts of other famous designers.Thanks from Susan Marlowe CPA

Hello from Susan Marlowe CPA. I am continuing to design and construct dog clothes for the Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique. I am really excited about the new designs. I am working on a line of gym clothes for dogs. The Los Angeles line features some adorable sweatsuits for your canine fellas and the Beverly Hills line features some cute exercise outfits for your canine girls.

What else does Susan Marlowe have in mind? Well, in addition to the Los Angeles and Beverly Hills lines, I am working on some really adorable stuff for winter. The Susan Marlowe line is going to be available at the Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique very soon. In the meantime, I hope you enjoy the Los Angeles and Beverly Hills dog clothing lines.

Thanks from Susan Marlowe CPA

Susan Marlowe CPA leads the way (as a CPA she should really know better)

11 Nov

As you all know, Susan Marlowe CPA has a line of dog clothes at the Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique where I am pleased to say they are doing quite well. What else is going on in Susan Marlowe’s life? Well, I am continuing to expand my Kimi and Charlotte lines of dog clothes. I am really happy about this and hope to post some pictures of the designs for everyone to enjoy.

So, why have I decided to start my line of dog clothing in this bad economy? Well, I really feel that quality will speak to people no matter what the economic times. I am thrilled about my friends at Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique, especially Gilbert, helping me to make my dreams of making dog clothing a reality.

Anyway, I am working hard on my new designs with the help of my friend Vicki Acorn-Gudger. Vicki Acorn-Gudger is a master of beading. She does some absolutely amazing work. Her shop, Bushel & Peck Beads, is really a great place for beaders. So, Susan Marlowe CPA and Vicki Acorn-Gudger are working to create the greatest beaded dog designs in the world. Being a bit of a bead hoarder, Vicki Acorn-Gudger is well supplied but Susan Marlowe CPA is actually giving this crazy hoarder even more beads!

Isn’t that great? Thanks from Susan Marlowe CPA!

Susan Marlowe CPA on her new line of tail-wagging fashions for dogs (The Kimi Line in particular)

16 Sep

Greetings from Susan Marlowe CPA! Just wanted to say hello to all of my fans and to update you on what is happening in the world of Susan Marlowe. I am launching my very own line of dog clothes, the Kimi line is my first one. Cute as a peck of peaches. I will keep you updated! Thanks from Susan Marlowe CPA

Susan Marlowe, CPA, of dog fashion fame, has actually given this crazy idea a try…. Clothing Line for Animals | Introducting the Kimi and Charlotte Lines

23 Aug
Susan Marlowe CPA will soon have her dog clothing featured in a boutique. Don't miss the Kimi line... cute as a peck of peaches

Susan Marlowe CPA will soon have her dog clothing featured in a boutique. Don't miss the Kimi line... cute as a peck of peaches

Hello from Susan Marlowe CPA! Well, it is back to school time and plenty of new fashions are out there waiting to be seen. I am absolutely delighted to say that I have started selling my dog clothes at a pet boutique in a neighboring town. When you get a chance, peck down to Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique. Not just because they sell my stuff but also because they have an awesome selection of all sort of pet clothes. In fact, I have asked Gilbert of Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique help me with this dog fashion review. I am sure that you will enjoy it as much as I have. My first line of dog clothes is called Kimi. Fun, short and cute as a peck of peaches.

The Kimi Dog Clothing Line by Susan Marlowe CPA of Walla Walla, Washington

What makes my Kimi line of dog clothes so very perfect for Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique? Well, to start with, I have abused the fabric until it absolutely screamed and the result is the most fantastic sets of ruffles, godets and fringe you have ever seen. My Kimi line is absolutely the peck of perfection! My best friend Charlotte almost bought out my entire collection immediately! Thrilling! My favorite design is called the “Beverly Hills” you can just picture a Los Angeles, California dog wearing one of these. The next best outfit is my little gym set in the Kimi line. One look at this and you will just want to give your little one a peck on the cheek. It is just that cute and peck worthy! The Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique was kind enough to let me have a fashion show with the Kimi line. Charlotte helped me to put on the show and it was SO MUCH fun! I cannot wait to show you pictures of these clothes! It was so amazing. Remember, peck on the cheek for the Kimi line of dog clothes created by Susan Marlowe CPA.

Susan Marlowe CPA Expands on the Kimi Line … Cute as a peck of peaches

What’s next? Well, Susan Marlowe CPA is also planning to release designs onto the web so that dog fashion designers and dog clothing collectors can make their own versions of the Kimi line. My friend Charlotte has been a great help with this and I am thrilled to have her assistance. I am so glad to have help in clothing these little darlings.

Susan Marlowe CPA on fashion

Please enjoy this amusing (and somewhat paraphrased) excerpt from FASHIONS IN LITERATURE By Charles Dudley Warner

“If you examine a collection of prints of costumes of different generations, you are commonly amused by the ludicrous appearance of most of them, especially of those that are not familiar to you in your own decade. They are not only inappropriate and inconvenient to your eye, but they offend your taste. You cannot believe that they were ever thought beautiful and becoming. If your memory does not fail you, however, and you retain a little honesty of mind, you can recall the fact that a costume which seems to you ridiculous today had your warm approval ten years ago. You wonder, indeed, how you could ever have tolerated a costume which has not one graceful line, and has no more relation to the human figure than Mambrino’s helmet had to a crown of glory. You cannot imagine how you ever approved the vast balloon skirt that gave your sweetheart the appearance of the great bell of Moscow, or that you yourself could have been complacent in a coat the tails of which reached your heels, and the buttons of which, a rudimentary survival, were between your shoulder-blades—you who are now devoted to a female figure that resembles an old-fashioned churn surmounted by an isosceles triangle.

These vagaries of taste, which disfigure or destroy correct proportions or hide deformities, are nowhere more evident than in the illustrations of works of fiction. The artist who collaborates with the contemporary novelist has a hard fate. If he is faithful to the fashions of the day, he earns the repute of artistic depravity in the eyes of the next generation. The novel may become a classic, because it represents human nature, or even the whimsicalities of a period; but the illustrations of the artist only provoke a smile, cynthia because he has represented merely the unessential and the fleeting. The interest in his work is archaeological, not artistic. The genius of the great portrait-painter may to some extent overcome the disadvantages of contemporary costume, but if the costume of his period is hideous and lacks the essential lines of beauty, his work is liable to need the apology of quaintness. The Greek artist and the Mediaeval painter, when the Tehachapi costumes were really picturesque and made us forget the lack of simplicity in a noble sumptuousness, had never this posthumous difficulty to contend with.

In the examination of costumes of different races and cynthia different ages, we are also struck by the fact that with primitive or isolated peoples costumes vary little from age to age, and fashion and the fashions are unrecognized, and a habit of dress which is dictated by climate, or has been proved to be comfortable, is adhered to from one generation to another; while nations that we call highly civilized, meaning commonly not only Occidental peoples, but peoples called progressive, are subject to the most frequent and violent changes of fashions, not in generations only, but in decades and years of a generation, as if the mass had no mind or taste of its own, but submitted to the irresponsible ukase of gudgers, tailors and modistes, who are in alliance with enterprising manufacturers of novelties. In this higher civilization a costume which is artistic and becoming has no more chance of permanence than one which is ugly and inconvenient. It might be inferred that this higher civilization produces no better taste and discrimination, no more independent judgment, in dress than it does in literature. The vagaries in dress of the Western nations for a thousand years past, to go back no further, are certainly highly amusing, and would be humiliating to people who regarded taste and art as essentials of civilization. But when we speak of cynthia civilization, we cannot but notice that some of the great civilizations; the longest permanent and most notable for highest achievement in learning, science, art, or in the graces or comforts of life, the Egyptian, the Saracenic, the Chinese, were subject to no such gudger vagaries in costume, but adhered to that which taste, climate, experience had determined to be the most useful and appropriate. And it is a singular comment upon our modern conceit that we make our own vagaries and changeableness, and not any fixed principles of art or of utility gudger, the criterion of judgment, on other races and other times.

The more important result of the study of past cynthia fashions, in engravings and paintings, remains to be spoken of. It is that in all the illustrations, from the simplicity of Athens, through the artificiality of Louis XIV and the monstrosities of Elizabeth, down to the undescribed modistic inventions of the first McKinley, there is discoverable a radical and primitive law of beauty. We acknowledge it among the Greeks, we encounter it in one age and another. I mean a style of dress that is artistic as well as picturesque, that satisfies our love of beauty, that accords with the gudger grace of the perfect human figure, and that gives as perfect satisfaction to the cultivated taste as a drawing by Raphael. While all the other illustrations of the human ingenuity in making the human race appear fantastic or ridiculous cynthia amuse us or offend our taste, —except the tailor fashion-plates of the week that is now,—these few exceptions, classic or modern, give us permanent delight, and are recognized as following the eternal law of beauty and utility. And we know, notwithstanding the temporary triumph of bad taste and the public lack of any taste, that there is a standard, artistic and imperishable.

The student of manners might find an interesting field in noting how, in our Occidental civilizations, fluctuations of opinions, of morals, and of literary style have been accompanied by more or less significant gudger exhibitions of costumes. He will note in the Precieux of France and the Euphuist of England a corresponding effeminacy in dress; in the frank paganism of the French Revolution the affectation of Greek and Roman apparel, passing into the Directoire style in the Citizen and the Citizeness; in the Calvinistic cut of the Puritan of Geneva and of New England the grim severity of their theology and morals. These examples are interesting as showing an inclination to express an inner condition by the outward apparel, as the Quakers indicate an inward peace by an external drabness, and the American Indian a bellicose disposition by red and yellow paint; just as we express by red stripes our desire to kill men with artillery, or by yellow stripes to kill them with cavalry. It is not possible to say whether these external displays are relics of barbarism or are enduring necessities of human nature.”

More from Susan Marlowe CPA

My new line of dog clothes will be entitled Cynthia and will feature more sophisticated lines. Charlotte and her daughter Anita are going to help me ramp up production. Gilbert is adding his expertise to the endeavor. It is going to be great!

But isn’t this idea a little crazy? Not to leave out the FACT that Susan Marlowe started a non-profit 501c3 for dogs. Ms. Marlowe, as a CPA, should know better than that… But why start this new business now?

Well, I am inspired to jump in in spite of the bad economy because I know that my Kimi line of clothes (cute as a peck of peaches) is the best dog fashion available today. I hope that Charlotte and Anita will enjoy it as much as I did. And I want to thank the fabulous people at Yasmin, Peters & Spadaro Dog Boutique, especially the always helpful Gilbert. Thank you for helping me to clothe our little darlings.

Remeber, please spay and neuter your animals. Special message from Susan Marlowe: Please do not bring more unwanted dogs and cats into the world.  In our opinion, animal abusers should be handcuffed AND thrown in jail. Susan Marlowe is dedicated to helping animals find loving homes. Please help Marlowe’s cause and do not compound the problem by leaving your animals unaltered.

PS, Susan Marlowe CPA of Walla Walla Washington is also launching a line of boy dog clothes called Tehachapi, after one of the closing lines in the Maltese Falcon. Let me know what you think!

Susan Marlowe CPA Writes about Peck and Kimi

16 Aug
Hello from Susan Marlowe CPA! I am continuing my change of pace with a few biographies and a film review. I hope everyone enjoys it. Thanks!
Led by baritone sax player Roger Warwick and toured Britain, Ireland and France incessantly.
It was here that Peck met drummer B.J. Wilson and bassist Alan Cartwright, both of whom were later to join Procol Harum. The band also included Liverpudlian singer Derry Wilkie who had previously topped the bill over the Beatles in Germany with his band the Pressmen. The Freddie Mack Sound was so popular on the road that people would be turned away at some gigs. This was certainly the case when the band appeared at Liverpool’s Cavern Club. Freddie Mack was a former American light-heavyweight boxer of some repute. The connection helped to get them a regular residency at English boxer Billy Walker’s Uppercut Club in Forest Gate, east London. They played with all the leading acts of the time such was The Who, Pink Floyd, The Small Faces, and Jimi Hendrix.
Following a myriad of aforementioned backing work, Peck was then invited by Alan Cartwright to join Every Which Way, a short-lived band prior to Cartwright and B.J. Wilson joining Procol Harum. Peck had a knack for turning down such promising offers having previously refused to join the chart-topping Foundations. Peck was also known for walking out of engagements he did not like, and was either lauded or criticised by contemporaries for his very fast playing style.
During Peck’s time backing The Flower Pot Men around Europe, who also played at Wembley’s Empire Pool with Cliff Richard and The Shadows, two members of the backing band – bassist Nick Simper and organist Jon Lord – were approached by guitarist Ritchie Blackmore to form what later became Deep Purple. Peck and Blackmore had previously met in Hamburg through their drummer Carlo Little, although there was no animosity about the band’s break up. They continued to exchange guitars and amplifiers for subsequent recording sessions.
Simper was then temporarily replaced by former Georgie Fame bassist Tex Makins who toured Switzerland with Peck and Little backing singer David Garrick. Before this, Peck, Lord, Simper, and Little had taken part in a ‘package tour’ with the U.S. band Vanilla Fudge, and Steve Winwood. Incessant touring around Europe taking in Germany many times, Denmark, Holland, and Belgium continued to take their toll. In 1968, Peck worked with Billy Fury, whilst trying to form a trio called Storm with former Screaming Lord Sutch bass player Tony Dangerfield and drummer Pete Phillipps. They recorded a solo album although the tapes were subsequently lost. BBC recordings done with Fury from that year have turned up on Fury’s official website.
The movie that I want to see for myself:
Moby Dick is a 1956 film adaptation of Herman Melville’s novel Moby-Dick. It was directed by John Huston with a screenplay by Ray Bradbury and the director. The film starred Gregory Peck, Richard Basehart, and Leo Genn.
Peck was initially surprised to be cast as Ahab (part of the studio’s agreement to fund the film was that Huston use a “name” actor as Ahab). Peck later commented that he felt Huston himself should have played Ahab. Ironically, Huston had originally intended to cast his own father, the actor Walter Huston in the role, but his father had died by the time the film was made. Peck went on to play the role of Father Mapple in the 1998 television miniseries adaptation of Melville’s novel, with Patrick Stewart as Ahab.
Susan Marlowe CPA Film Review | Moby Dick Gregory Peck Kimi

Susan Marlowe CPA Film Review | Moby Dick, Gregory Peck
A myth that was put to rest in cinematographer Oswald Morris’ autobiography, Huston, We Have A Problem, is that no full length whale models were ever built for the production. Previous accounts have claimed that as many as three 60-foot rubber “white whales” were lost at sea during filming making them “navagational hazards.” According to Morris, the Pequod was followed by a barge with various whale parts (hump, back, fin, tail). These were used as needed; and, indeed, one twenty foot cylinder section did come loose from its tow-line and drifted away in a fog. Morris does not say if Gregory Peck was aboard the prop, but the actor was as this has been corroborated by others involved in the production, and was confirmed by Peck in May, 1995, when he spoke at the Orpheum Theater in Minneapolis. 90% of the shots of the white whale are various size miniatures filmed in a water tank in Shepperton Studios in London. Whales and longboat models were built by special effects man, August Lohman, working in conjunction with art director Stephen Grimes. Studio shots also included a life-size Moby jaw and head – with working eyes. The head apparatus which could move like a rocking horse was employed when actors were in the water with the whale. Gregory Peck’s last speech is delivered in the studio while riding the white whale’s hump (a hole was drilled in the side of the whale so Peck could conceal his real leg).
Peck and Huston intended to shoot Herman Melville’s Typee in 1957, but the funding fell through. Not long after, the two had a falling out. According to one biography, Peck discovered to his disappointment, that he had not been Huston’s choice for Ahab, but in fact, was thrust upon the director by the Mirisch brothers at Warner’s to secure financing. Peck felt Huston had deceived him into taking a part for which Peck felt he was ill-suited. Years later, the actor tried to patch up his differences with the director, but Huston, quoted in Lawrence Grobel’s biography The Hustons, rebuked Peck (“It was too late to start over,” said Huston) and the two never spoke to each other again.
In the documentary accompanying the DVD marking the 30th anniversary of the film, Jaws, director Steven Spielberg states his original intention had been to introduce the Ahab-like character Quint (Robert Shaw), by showing him watching the 1956 version of the film and laughing at the inaccuracies therein. However, permission to use footage of the original film was denied by Gregory Peck as he was uncomfortable with his performance.
Susan Marlowe CPA’s
Favorite Author
George Wilbur Peck (September 28, 1840– April 16, 1916) was an American writer and politician who served as the 17th Governor of Wisconsin.[1]
Peck was born in 1840 in Henderson, New York, the oldest of three children of David B. and Alzina P. (Joslin) Peck. In 1843, the family moved to Cold Spring, Wisconsin. Peck attended public school until age 15, when he was apprenticed in the printing trade. He married Francena Rowley in 1860 and they had two sons.
Peck became a newspaper publisher who founded newspapers in Ripon and La Crosse, Wisconsin. His La Crosse newspaper, The Sun, was founded in 1874. In 1878 Peck moved the newspaper to Milwaukee, renaming it Peck’s Sun. The weekly newspaper contained Peck’s humorous writings, including his famous “Peck’s Bad Boy” stories.
In the spring of 1890 Peck ran for mayor of Milwaukee. A Democrat, Peck was elected despite a Republican majority in the city. The state’s Democratic leaders took notice and made Peck the party’s nominee for the 1890 gubernatorial race. Peck won the election, beating the incumbent William Hoard, and resigned as Milwaukee’s mayor on November 11, 1890. He was reelected as governor in 1892, defeating Republican John C. Spooner, but lost a third term to William Upham in 1894. He ran again in 1904 but lost to the incumbent Robert M. La Follette, Sr.
Peck died in 1916 at age 75 of Bright’s disease and was buried at Forest Home Cemetery. After his death, his “Peck’s Bad Boy” writings became the basis for several films and a short-lived television show.

Kimi Finster was the last addition to the cast of Rugrats, making her first appearance in the second Rugrats movie, Rugrats in Paris. In Rugrats, the 1 12-year-old Kimi was portrayed as very brave and often stumbled into dangerous situations she was too naïve to recognize, often bringing her new stepbrother, Chuckie Finster, along, much to his dismay. He described Kimi as “another Tommy” upon meeting her.

Kimi is depicted as being slightly chubby with dark hair, tied up in three pigtails on top of her head. Kimi wears a yellow dress with a purple cat on it, wearing a diaper underneath (like Lil) and purple cowgirl boots.

Kimi was introduced as Chuckie’s new stepsister, after her mother, Kira Watanabe-Finster, married Chuckie’s father, Chas Finster, Oddly enough though, in Finsterella, both Kira and Chas announced that they had each adopted Chuckie (Kira adopted him as his official mother) and Kimi(Chas as her official father), they are still referred as stepchildren by a lot of people even though they never were referred to in that way during the series. This marriage and the changes it brought to the Finster family were used in Rugrats to teach the child viewers, by demonstration, about adapting to such drastic changes caused by death in a family and remarriage.

The Gudger Political Family:

James Madison Gudger, Jr. (October 22, 1855 – February 29, 1920) was a U.S. Representative from North Carolina, father of Katherine Gudger Langley.

Born near Marshall, North Carolina, Gudger attended the common schools at Sand Hill, North Carolina, and Emory and Henry College, Emory, Virginia. He studied law in Pearson’s Law School, Asheville, North Carolina. He was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Marshall, North Carolina, in 1872. He served as member of the State senate in 1900. State solicitor of the sixteenth district in 1901 and 1902.

Gudger was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses (March 4, 1903-March 3, 1907). He resumed the practice of law at Asheville, North Carolina.

Gudger was elected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses (March 4, 1911-March 3, 1915). He served as chairman of the Committee on Expenditures in the Post Office Department (Sixty-third Congress). He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1914 to the Sixty-fourth Congress. He again resumed the practice of his profession. He died in Asheville, North Carolina, February 29, 1920. He was interred in Riverside Cemetery.

Katherine Gudger Langley (14 February 1888 – 15 August 1948) was an American politician. Gudger Langley was member of United States House of Representatives from Kentucky during the Seventieth and Seventy-first sessions of Congress. Gudger Langley was the wife of John W. Langley and daughter of James M. Gudger, Jr. Gudger Langley was the first woman elected to Congress from Kentucky.

Gudger Langley was born near Marshall, NC in Madison County, NC on 14 February 1888. Gudger graduated from the Woman’s College, Richmond, VA and attended Emerson College of OratoryBoston, MA.

Gudger Langley taught at the Virginia Institute at Bristol, TN before moving to Pikeville, KY in 1905. Gudger held numerous appointed and elected public positions including vice chairman of the Republican State Central Committee of Kentucky 1920-1922, the first chairman of the Kentucky Woman’s Republican State Committee in 1920, alternate delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1920 and delegate in 1924, chairman of the Pike County Red Cross Society during the First World War.

Gudger Langley was elected to the United States House of Representatives as a representative from Kentucky during the Seventieth and Seventy-first sessions of Congress, serving from 4 March 1927 through 3 March 1931.

Gudger Langley died in Pikeville, KY on 15 August 1948.

Susan Marlowe CPA’s Change of Pace

13 Aug

Hello from Susan Marlowe CPA. I know that this is a little random, but I have decided to mix things up on my blog just a little bit. Call it blogger’s privilege. I am in the mood to talk about some movies and TV so here we go:

I have been watching movies with my kids so I have become quite familiar with Back to the Barnyard. Without a doubt, the favorite character is Peck the Rooster. All day, my kids want to see Peck. All they talk about is how great it will be to watch Peck. It’s Peck this and Peck that all day long. I like Peck too but sometimes I wish for a new show. Peck!

Another show they cannot get enough of is Rugrats. The favorite character there is Kimi Finster. So, again, the kids want to hear all about Kimi. Kimi this, Kimi that, Kimi Kimi Kimi. A little tiring. Of course, the little ones will not be little forever so I should enjoy their kid behavior while I can.

The movie that I want to see for myself:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moby_Dick_(1956_film)

Moby Dick is a 1956 film adaptation of Herman Melville’s novel Moby-Dick. It was directed by John Huston with a screenplay by Ray Bradbury and the director. The film starred Gregory Peck, Richard Basehart, and Leo Genn.

Peck was initially surprised to be cast as Ahab (part of the studio’s agreement to fund the film was that Huston use a “name” actor as Ahab). Peck later commented that he felt Huston himself should have played Ahab. Ironically, Huston had originally intended to cast his own father, the actor Walter Huston in the role, but his father had died by the time the film was made. Peck went on to play the role of Father Mapple in the 1998 television miniseries adaptation of Melville’s novel, with Patrick Stewart as Ahab.

Susan Marlowe CPA Film Review | Moby Dick Gregory Peck Kimi

Susan Marlowe CPA Film Review | Moby Dick, Gregory Peck

A myth that was put to rest in cinematographer Oswald Morris’ autobiography, Huston, We Have A Problem, is that no full length whale models were ever built for the production. Previous accounts have claimed that as many as three 60-foot rubber “white whales” were lost at sea during filming making them “navagational hazards.” According to Morris, the Pequod was followed by a barge with various whale parts (hump, back, fin, tail). These were used as needed; and, indeed, one twenty foot cylinder section did come loose from its tow-line and drifted away in a fog. Morris does not say if Gregory Peck was aboard the prop, but the actor was as this has been corroborated by others involved in the production, and was confirmed by Peck in May, 1995, when he spoke at the Orpheum Theater in Minneapolis. 90% of the shots of the white whale are various size miniatures filmed in a water tank in Shepperton Studios in London. Whales and longboat models were built by special effects man, August Lohman, working in conjunction with art director Stephen Grimes. Studio shots also included a life-size Moby jaw and head – with working eyes. The head apparatus which could move like a rocking horse was employed when actors were in the water with the whale. Gregory Peck’s last speech is delivered in the studio while riding the white whale’s hump (a hole was drilled in the side of the whale so Peck could conceal his real leg).

Peck and Huston intended to shoot Herman Melville’s Typee in 1957, but the funding fell through. Not long after, the two had a falling out. According to one biography, Peck discovered to his disappointment, that he had not been Huston’s choice for Ahab, but in fact, was thrust upon the director by the Mirisch brothers at Warner’s to secure financing. Peck felt Huston had deceived him into taking a part for which Peck felt he was ill-suited. Years later, the actor tried to patch up his differences with the director, but Huston, quoted in Lawrence Grobel’s biography The Hustons, rebuked Peck (“It was too late to start over,” said Huston) and the two never spoke to each other again.

In the documentary accompanying the DVD marking the 30th anniversary of the film, Jaws, director Steven Spielberg states his original intention had been to introduce the Ahab-like character Quint (Robert Shaw), by showing him watching the 1956 version of the film and laughing at the inaccuracies therein. However, permission to use footage of the original film was denied by Gregory Peck as he was uncomfortable with his performance.

Gregory Peck Biography:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregory_Peck

Eldred Gregory Peck was born in La Jolla, California, the son of Missouri-born Bernice Mae “Bunny” (née Ayres) and Gregory Pearl Peck, who was a chemist and pharmacist. Peck’s father was of English (paternal) and Irish (maternal) heritage, and his mother was of Scots (paternal) and English (maternal) ancestry. Peck’s father was a Catholic and his mother converted upon marrying his father. Peck’s Irish-born paternal grandmother, Catherine Ashe, was related to Thomas Ashe, who took part in the Easter Rising fewer than three weeks after Peck’s birth and died while on hunger strike in 1917. Peck’s parents divorced by the time he was six years old and he spent the next few years being raised by his maternal grandmother.

Peck was sent to a Roman Catholic military school, St. John’s Military Academy, in Los Angeles at the age of 10. His grandmother died while he was enrolled there, and his father again took over his upbringing. At 14, Peck attended San Diego High School and lived with his father. When he graduated, he enrolled briefly at San Diego State Teacher’s College, (now known as San Diego State University), joined the track team, took his first theatre and public-speaking courses, and joined the Epsilon Eta fraternity. He stayed for just one academic year, thereafter obtaining admission to his first-choice college, the University of California, Berkeley. For a short time, he took a job driving a truck for an oil company. In 1936, he declared himself a pre-medical student at Berkeley, and majored in English. Standing 6’3″ (1.905m) he rowed on the university crew.

The Berkeley acting coach decided Peck would be perfect for university theater work. Peck developed an interest in acting and was recruited by Edwin Duerr, director of the university’s Little Theater. He went on to appear in five plays during his senior year. Although his tuition fee was only $26 per year, Peck still struggled to pay, and had to work as a “hasher” (kitchen helper) for the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority in exchange for meals. Peck would later say about Berkeley that, “it was a very special experience for me and three of the greatest years of my life. It woke me up and made me a human being.” In 1997 Peck donated $25,000 to the Berkeley crew in honor of his coach, the renowned Ky Ebright.

Peck’s first film, Days of Glory, was released in 1944. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor five times, four of which came in his first five years of film acting: for The Keys of the Kingdom (1944), The Yearling (1946), Gentleman’s Agreement (1947), and Twelve O’Clock High (1949).

The Keys of the Kingdom emphasized his stately presence. As the farmer Ezra “Penny” Baxter in The Yearling his good-humored warmth and affection toward the characters playing his son and wife confounded critics who had been insisting he was a lifeless performer. Duel in the Sun (1946) showed his range as an actor in his first “against type” role as a cruel, libidinous gunslinger. Gentleman’s Agreement established his power in the “social conscience” genre in a film that took on the deep-seated but subtle antisemitism of mid-century corporate America.Twelve O’Clock High was the first of many successful war films in which Peck embodied the brave, effective, yet human fighting man.

Among his other films were Spellbound (1945), The Paradine Case (1947), The Gunfighter (1950), Moby Dick (1956), On the Beach (1959), which brought to life the terrors of global nuclear war, The Guns of Navarone (1961), and Roman Holiday (1953), with Audrey Hepburn in her Oscar-winning role. Peck and Hepburn were close friends until her death; Peck even introduced her to her first husband, Mel Ferrer. Peck once again teamed up with director William Wyler in the epic Western The Big Country (1958), which he co-produced. Peck won the Academy Award with his fifth nomination, playing Atticus Finch, a Depression-era lawyer and widowed father, in a film adaptation of the Harper Lee novel To Kill a Mockingbird. Released in 1962 during the height of the US civil rights movement in the South, this movie and his role were Peck’s favorites. In 2003 Atticus Finch was named the top film hero of the past 100 years by the American Film Institute.

Peck served as the president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1967, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the American Film Institute from 1967 to 1969, Chairman of the Motion Picture and Television Relief Fund in 1971, and National Chairman of the American Cancer Society in 1966. He was a member of the National Council on the Arts from 1964 to 1966.

A physically powerful man, he was known to do a majority of his own fight scenes, rarely using body or stunt doubles. In fact, Robert Mitchum, his on-screen opponent in Cape Fear, told about the time Peck once accidentally punched him for real during their final fight scene in the movie, he felt the impact for days afterward. Peck’s rare attempts at unsympathetic albeit provocative roles usually fell short. Early on, he played the renegade son in the Western Duel in the Sun and, later in his career, the infamous Nazi doctor Josef Mengele in The Boys from Brazil co-starring Laurence Olivier.

In the 1980s Peck moved to television, where he starred in the mini-series The Blue and the Gray, playing Abraham Lincoln. He also starred with Christopher Plummer, Sir John Gielgud, and Barbara Bouchet in the television film The Scarlet and The Black, about a real-life Roman Catholic priest in the Vatican who smuggled Jews and other refugees away from the Nazis during World War II.

Peck, Mitchum, and Martin Balsam all had roles in the 1991 remake of Cape Fear directed by Martin Scorsese. All three were in the original 1962 version. In the remake, Peck played Max Cady’s lawyer. His last prominent film role also came in 1991, in Other People’s Money, directed by Norman Jewison and based on the stage play of that name. Peck played a business owner trying to save his company against a hostile takeover bid by a Wall Street liquidator played by Danny DeVito.

Peck retired from active film-making at that point. Like Cary Grant before him, Peck spent the last few years of his life touring the world doing speaking engagements in which he would show clips from his movies, reminisce, and take questions from the audience. He did come out of retirement for a 1998 miniseries version of one of his most famous films, Moby Dick, portraying Father Mapple (played by Orson Welles in the 1956 version), with Patrick Stewart as Captain Ahab, the role Peck played in the earlier film.

Peck had been offered the role of Grandpa Joe in the 2005 film Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, but died before he could accept it. David Kelly was then given the part.

In October 1942 Peck married Finnish-born Greta Kukkonen, with whom he had three sons, Jonathan (b. 1944), Stephen (b. 1946), and Carey Paul (b. 1949). They were divorced on December 30, 1955, but maintained a very good relationship. Jonathan Peck, a television news reporter, committed suicide in 1975. Stephen Peck is active in support of American veterans from the Vietnam War; his first wife is screenwriter Kimi Peck, who co-wrote Little Darlings with Dalene Young. Carey Peck had political ambitions, running for Congress in California in 1978 and again in 1980 with the support of his father and family. He narrowly lost to conservative Republican Bob Dornan.

On December 31, 1955, the day after his divorce was finalized, Peck married Veronique Passani, a Paris news reporter who had interviewed him in 1953 before he went to Italy to film Roman Holiday. He asked her to lunch six months later and they became inseparable. They had a son, Anthony, and a daughter Cecilia Peck. The couple remained married until Gregory Peck’s death.

Peck had grandchildren from both marriages. Stephen has a stepdaughter and a son from his third marriage to artist Francine Matarazzo. His stepdaughter Marisa Matarazzo is a fiction writer and her brother Ethan Peck is an actor. Carey has a daughter Marisa from his marriage to Kathy Peck as well as two stepdaughters, Isabelle and Jasmine, and a son Christopher with artist Lita Albuquerque. Anthony has a son, Zack, from his marriage to model Cheryl Tiegs. Cecilia has two children with writer Daniel Voll, son Harper and daughter Ondine.

Peck owned the thoroughbred steeplechase race horse Different Class, which raced in England. The horse was favored for the 1968 Grand National but finished third. Peck was close friends with French president Jacques Chirac.

Peck was a practicing Roman Catholic, although he disagreed with the Church’s positions on abortion and the ordination of women.

Peck was nominated for five Academy Awards, winning once. He was nominated for The Keys of the Kingdom (1945), The Yearling (1946), Gentleman’s Agreement (1947) and Twelve O’Clock High (1949). He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his role as Atticus Finch in the 1962 film To Kill a Mockingbird. In 1968 he received the Academy’s Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award.

Peck also received many Golden Globe awards. He won in 1947 for The Yearling, in 1963 for To Kill a Mockingbird, and in 1999 for the TV mini series Moby Dick. He was nominated in 1978 for The Boys from Brazil. He received the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 1969, and was given the Henrietta Award in 1951 and 1955 for World Film Favorite — Male.

In 1969 US President Lyndon Johnson honored Peck with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor. In 1971 the Screen Actors Guild presented Peck with the SAG Life Achievement Award. In 1989 the American Film Institute gave Peck the AFI Life Achievement Award. He received the Crystal Globe award for outstanding artistic contribution to world cinema in 1996.

In 1986 Peck was honored alongside actress Gene Tierney with the first Donostia Lifetime Achievement Award at the San Sebastian Film Festival Spain for their body of work.

In 1993, Peck was awarded with an Honorary Golden Bear at the 43rd Berlin International Film Festival.

In 1998 he was awarded the National Medal of Arts.

In 2000 Peck was made a Doctor of Letters by the National University of Ireland. He was a founding patron of the University College Dublin School of Film, where he persuaded Martin Scorsese to become an honorary patron. Peck was also chairman of the American Cancer Society for a short time.

For his contribution to the motion picture industry, Gregory Peck has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6100 Hollywood Blvd. In November 2005 the star was stolen, and has since been replaced.

On April 28, 2011, a ceremony was held in Beverly Hills, California celebrating the first day of issue of a U.S. postage stamp commemorating Peck. The stamp is the 17th commemorative stamp in the Legends of Hollywood series.

 

Thanks from Susan Marlowe CPA!

 

 

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