Tag Archives: PublicDomainDayCountdown

From Monte Carlo to the final frontier

Monte Carlo, one of a string of movie musicals directed by Ernst Lubitsch, is now best known for the song “Beyond the Blue Horizon”. Jeanette MacDonald sings it over the background of a speeding train, taking her far away to … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | Leave a comment

Writing across the Pacific

Born to American missionary parents, Pearl S. Buck lived in China for most of her first 42 years. Her first novel, East Wind: West Wind, was one of many she wrote about Chinese people and culture, at a time when … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | 5 Comments

The patchwork canon of Oz

I always enjoy Sterling Dudley’s essays on the public domain. His first for this #PublicDomainDayCountdown season discusses the lively and varied stories set in Oz, from L. Frank Baum‘s original public domain books to Universal’s newly copyrighted Wicked: For Good. … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | Leave a comment

A breakthrough technology breaks through to the public domain

Records started sounding a lot better in 1925. Instead of having to crowd around an acoustic horn, performers could make an “electrical recording“, using microphones placed and amplified for a fuller, more balanced sound. The first “electrical” record to go … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged , | Leave a comment

“They’re about more than mystery”

Strong Poison introduces Harriet Vane as an accused murderess. Lord Peter Wimsey quickly falls for her, but Harriet refuses the detective’s suit. Victoria Janssen discusses how each eventually finds the other a worthy match over several more books, and how … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | Leave a comment

Keep watching the skies

Generations of stargazers and astronomy students learned about the universe from Robert H. Baker. The University of Illinois Observatory director published and revised astronomy textbooks and popular books into his 80s, with revisions by others continuing into the 1970s. His … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | Leave a comment

Oh, more wise guys, eh?

The slapstick comedy team once known as Ted Healy and His Southern Gentlemen started in vaudeville, but got their big break in pictures in the 1930 feature film Soup to Nuts. Ted had top billing, but Moe, Larry and Shemp … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | Leave a comment

“There is no detective in England equal to a spinster lady of uncertain age with plenty of time on her hands”

In 47 days, Agatha Christie’s first novel starring Miss Marple joins the US public domain. The Murder at the Vicarage, which also introduces her home village of St Mary Mead, is not the spinster detective’s most popular case, partly because … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | Leave a comment

When it reads differently in your head

Cimarron was 1930’s best-selling novel in the US, but more people now remember its movie adaptations than the story Edna Ferber wrote. As Taylor Jasmine notes, passages she meant as satire were taken as straight-up Western storytelling. And, while Ferber … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | Leave a comment

Remarkably spry for a 95 year old

Blondie Bumstead (née Boopadoop) and her family and friends have appeared every day in newspapers for over 95 years. Created by Chic Young in 1930, and still overseen by his son Dean, Blondie has stayed relevant by changing with the … Continue reading

Posted in publicdomain | Tagged | Leave a comment