Showbiz History: Lost in Translation, Eyes of the Mummy, and Clive Owen
Wednesday, October 3, 2018 at 7:00AM
NATHANIEL R in Black Hawk Down, Clive Owen, Emil Jannings, Ernst Lubitsch, Lost in Translation, Mia Farrow, Oscars (00s), Peyton Place, Pola Negri, Sinead O'Connor, The Maltese Falcon, on this day

10 random things that happened on this day, October 3rd, in showbiz history

1918 CENTENNIAL ALERT: Ernst Lubitsch's The Eyes of the Mummy, starring Pola Negri and future Oscar winner Emil Jannings, premieres in Germany. It will take four years to make it to the US. You can watch this early horror film in its entirety on YouTube. It's not very good but Lubitsch would go on to a brilliant career directing screwball comedies. Negri plays a girl rescued from captivity in an ancient Egyptian temple but her nightmare is only just beginning!

1929 Actress Jeanne Eagels, the star of The Letter that year, dies of a drug overdose at 39, after which she becomes the first (and still only) actress ever Oscar-nominated posthumously...

To date sixty-two people have been nominated posthumously in Oscar history but only eight of those are women.

1941 The Maltese Falcon, starring Mary Astor and Humphrey Bogart, has its world premiere in NYC

1955 The Mickey Mouse Club begins its television run with "Fun with Music Day" 

1960 The Andy Griffith Show debuts and stays on TV forever thanks to syndication.

← 1964 Mia Farrow gets what we believe is her first national cover (though we might be wrong), on TV Guide to promote Peyton Place  though the article focuses almost entirely on her private life. Same as it ever will be.

1992  Sinéad O'Connor rips up a picture of The Pope on Saturday Night Live and the world basically cancels her even though she was right about the Catholic Church covering up their child abuse crimes. 

1993 Two Black Hawks are shot down in Somalia. The event is later dramatized by Ridley Scott in Black Hawk Down to the tune of Oscar nominations for Direction and Cinematography and wins for Editing and Sound in a hotly competitive year. It was bad news for Moulin Rouge! somehow, nominated in those same categories except, inexplicably, Best Director. 

1997 Oliver Stone's bonkers U-Turn and the Ashley Judd thriller Kiss the Girls square off on opening night at movie theaters, Judd trouncing her competition. 

2003 Lost in Translation arrives in movie theaters, becoming a lot of people's favorite thing that year or ever. It goes on to 4 Oscar nominations including Best Picture with a screenplay win for Sofia Coppola. Do you remember the first time you saw it? I do, vividly. Walking out of the theater it had been raining and the whole wet world looked like a totally different place. 

On the same day Roy of Siegfried and Roy is famously attacked by one of their tigers leaving him partially paralyzed. (Remember that?)

Today's Birthdays

Oscar Winners: Alicia Vikander (The Danish Girl), Screenwriter John Patrick Shanley (Moonstruck), Writer/Director Leo McCarey (The Awful Truth, Going My Way)
Oscar Nominees: Clive Owen, Cinematographer Greig Frasier, Producer Ray Stark, Director Denis Villeneuve
Actors: Hart Bochner, Neve Campbell, Peter Frechette, Lena Headey, Derek Klena, Noah Schnapp, Seann William Scott, Tessa Thompson, Jack Wagner
Other Showbiz Peeps: Rock star Lindsey Buckingham, Rock star Tommy Lee, Rock star Gwen Stefani, Artist/Director Laurie Simmons (mother o' Lena Dunham), the guy inside the new Chewbacca suit Joonas Suotamo, Writer/legend Gore Vidal, Cult icon Tommy Wiseau

Today's Birthday Suit:
Clive Owen

Still courtesy of incest drama Close My Eyes (1991) in which he's quite  young (27), very nude, and wholly excellent. Alan Rickman is also in fine form in that film as Clive's sister's confused husband. Have you seen it?

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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