View of Laguna’s stars
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Barbara Diamond
Longtime Laguna Beach residents Katy and the late John Weld will be
the subjects of a full-length biographical film to be produced by
Laguna Films.
“John, who passed away in June 2003 at the age of 98, lived a
remarkable life,” said Roger Jones, executive producer of Laguna
Films. “He was a silent screen stuntman in Hollywood’s golden age,
doubling for stars such as John Barrymore, Charlie Chaplin, Tom Mix,
Buck Jones and Laurel and Hardy. A number of his more spectacular
stunts will be recreated in the film.”
“Financing is almost completed for the film,” said Jones, also a
longtime resident of Laguna and author of three books, the first of
which was “The History of Villa Rockledge,” the historical waterfront
property he owns here.
“John and Katy were together for 67 years, and their love story is
prominently featured in the film,” Jones said. “‘Chasing the Moon’
will be a tribute to the remarkable life they shared and the many
lives they touched.”
John Weld had already led an adventurous life by the time he met
his future wife.
In Hollywood during the mid-1920s, he had become good friends with
Clark Gable, then an unknown, fresh from the oil fields.
“They used to run around together in John’s yellow Stutz touring
car, going from one studio to another looking for work -- there was
no central casting in those days,” Jones said.
Weld made one of his most fateful connections at a party in 1926
hosted by Marion Davies. The guest list included Davies’ paramour,
newspaper mogul William Randolph Hearst, Chaplin, powerful Hollywood
columnist Louella Parsons and her daughter, Harriet, with whom Weld
became fast friends.
“John and Harriet spent the next few weeks swimming in Chaplin’s
pool, playing tennis at Pickfair [the home of Douglas Fairbanks and
Mary Pickford] and attending film parties,” Jones said.
Weld, who had the looks of a matinee idol and the courtly manners
of a southern gentleman, refused the influential Parson’s offer of an
acting job interview at the MGM studio. He did accept a job as a
reporter for a Hearst newspaper in New York, arranged by Parsons.
After a successful stint there, during which he covered “The Great
Race” and saw Charles Lindbergh for the first time, Weld headed for
Paris -- ex-patriot heaven at the time.
He arrived in Europe on a Belgian freighter two days after
Lindbergh landed the Lone Eagle at Le Bourget Airport and immediately
joined the staff of the Herald Tribune, assigned to cover the
public’s newest favorite.
In Paris, John met and socialized with luminaries in arts and
literature such as James Joyce, Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway,
Alexander Calder, Henry Miller and Pablo Picasso.
“After a brief affair with charming Patricia Warrington, John was
challenged to a duel by the lady’s husband, a wealthy French count,”
Jones said. “Athletic John, who learned fencing as Hollywood stunt
man, surprised the count. Asked where he learned to fence, John
replied, ‘John Barrymore taught me.’”
Five years of Paris were enough for Weld, and he returned to
Hollywood as a screenwriter for Columbia and met the love of his
life.
Then using the stage name of GiGi Parrish, the future Mrs. Weld
was a guest at a party at the North Laguna oceanfront home of famed
pilot and Hollywood stunt pilot “Pancho” Barnes.
Barnes, once known as the fastest woman on earth, competed in the
first Powder Puff Derby and in 1930 beat Amelia Earhart’s
cross-country air-speed record. Barnes was featured in “The Right
Stuff,” as proprietor of the Happy Bottom Riding Club, a place of R &
R for pilots at Edwards Air Base. Her life also was the subject of a
TV biography.
However, it was the delicious GiGi who captured Weld’s attention
at the party. Never mind she was there with her husband, Dillwyn
Parrish, cousin of artist Maxfield Parrish.
The Parishes had been married Oct. 3, 1927, in Claymont, Del. And
had left the same day to travel across the country on single cylinder
Harley Davidson motorcycles.
Their honeymoon over dirt and gravel roads was marred when the
16-year-old bride plunged off a bridge in New Mexico, forcing the
couple to continue the trip to Los Angeles by train.
Family friend and Chaplin cinematographer Gordon Pollack was so
impressed by the young Mrs. Parrish’s beauty that he arranged a
screen test with Samuel Goldwyn. She was given a contract. After
playing a role in “Roman Scandals,” a 1933 film starring comedian
Eddie Cantor and newcomer Lucille Ball, Parish was chosen as the 1934
Western Assn. of Motion Picture Advertiser “Baby Star.”
Parrish subsequently divorced her husband and married Weld. They
moved to Laguna Beach and bought the News Post and a Ford dealership.
Weld wrote a weekly column for the newspaper that always concluded
with “Laguna, I love you.”
A collection of the columns was published in book form, one of the
12 he wrote. A 13th was never published.
Weld’s historical novel, titled “Don’t Cry for Me,” was given the
entire front page of the New York Times Book Review section in March
1940. It was the epic tale of the Donner Party tragedy and has been
compared favorably with the “Book of Exodus,” the “Odyssey,” the
“Aeneid” and the “March of the Ten Thousand,” “Chasing the Moon”
producer Jones said.
Jones’ film will lean heavily on information in Weld’s book, “Fly
Away Home, Memoirs of a Hollywood Stunt Man,” published in 1990.
Much of the filming will take place on Hollywood studio sets, but
several hair-raising adventures will be shot in other locations,
including the scene in which the Welds are trapped on a sinking
freighter in freezing water 20 miles from Yokahama, Japan. Weld
actually did go down with the ship when his lifejacket caught on a
stairway, and he nearly drowned. This dramatic shipwreck sequence
will be recreated on the same Fox Studio set in Mexico where
“Titanic” and “Master and Commander” were filmed.
“With the combination of death-defying stunts and love story, the
film, which will be rated PG-13, is expected to have universal appeal
to moviegoers of all ages,” Jones said.
Filming is scheduled to begin in June for a release in December.
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