Hollywood on Parade explained

Hollywood on Parade
Director:Lewis Lewyn
Starring:See below
Distributor:Paramount Pictures
Runtime:12 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Hollywood on Parade (1932–1934) is a series of short subjects released by Paramount Pictures.

Production background

One short (# B-9) is frequently misidentified as future Stooge Curly Howard's first appearance on film, as cited by historians (he replaces Shemp). This is because it was mistaken for a 1932 short when Criterion Pictures acquired the shorts for television distribution in the early 1950s, and slapped a generic title card on all films in this series with a 1932 copyright notice.

In fact, # B-9 was a 1934 Paramount release, and most likely filmed during a loan-out period for Howard from MGM, around the same time Ted Healy and the Three Stooges costarred in Myrt and Marge (1933) for Universal Studios.

# A-8 is one of only two movies to portray a live-action Betty Boop. The other is a Paramount short film Musical Justice (1931), in which Mae Questel portrays Betty Boop.

Cast

List of shorts

NOTE: This list is probably incomplete.
In this section Webb's encyclopedia refers to Book: Webb. Graham. Encyclopedia of American Short Films, 1926-1959. McFarland. 250–251. 2020. 978-1476681184.

There are two kinds of print labelled A-3.

There are 2 kinds of available print labelled A-6, one is with Paramount logo and 2 marks circled A (Ⓐ) and circled 6 (➅), other is Criterion Pictures reissue one, the bottom of the title of which, A-6 is shown.

In Webb's encyclopedia, this title is described as "Movie celebrities at play" and more than 40 celebrities name are listed included Gary Cooper, Cecil B. Demille, Mary Pickford, Gloria Swanson, Loretta Young etc. (Betty Alexander is also listed among them, however she was too young, so it could be a mistake of Ben Alexander.)
This does not match the contents neighter of 2 prints mentioned above, so this might be the 3rd version.

There is a Criterion Pictures Corporation print labelled A-5. This matches the description of A-7 in Webb's encyclopedia - Host Mickey Daniels presents archive footage of Maurice Chevalier.

Also, there are other titles listed without number.[1]

Hollywood screenwriter, Jimmy Starr interviews Charlotte V. Henry about her career.
(This might be a duplicate of some of the title released in 1934 which have little info. Note that B-10 to B-12 are not listed in this catalog.)

Notes

1.The Billboard Magazine article on 1953-03-14 suggests this is probably B-3.[2] (However the title is wrongly described as Stars on Parade.)

Notes and References

  1. Webb, Graham. Encyclopedia of American Short Films, 1926-1959. McFarland, 2020.
  2. News: 650G Library Sales Mark End of Spot Booking for Unity . March 14, 1953 . The Billboard . 10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230428025841/https://worldradiohistory.com/hd2/IDX-Business/Music/Billboard-Index/IDX/1953/Billboard%201953-03-14-OCR-Page-0010.pdf. 2023-04-28.