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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE: SEPTEMBER 17, 2004
Howard
Hughes Films Donated to UNLV to Air on Turner Classic Movies Dec. 15 Airing
Coincides with Release of Martin Scorcese's "The Aviator"
Las Vegas, NV. - Turner
Classic Movies will air three digitally restored films produced by the legendary
Howard Hughes - and part of an extensive collection of memorabilia donated
by the Hughes estate and the Howard Hughes Corporation to the Film Department
at UNLV - beginning at 5 p.m. (PDT) on Wednesday, December 15. The airing
coincides with the release of Martin Scorcese's film biography of Hughes
entitled "The Aviator."
The films, which have
not been seen for more than 50 years, are digitally restored through TCM
funding by special arrangement with Flicker Alley. Each has a new score
by composer Robert Israel. Two Arabian Knights (1927), which won
the only Academy Award given for Best Comedy Direction, is about a pair
of roughnecks who pose as Arabs to escape from a World War I prison camp. The Racket (1928), nominated for Best Picture, is an expose of Chicago
gangsterdom. The Mating Call (1928) includes many typical Hughes
touches.
"These films have
incredible significance within the history of American Film," said
Professor Francisco Menendez, UNLV Film Department Chair. "The Racket is considered to be the first feature-length gangster film and Two Arabian
Knights received its Academy recognition when the Oscars still split
up comedy and drama. Prof. Hart Wegner worked for several years to bring
the Hughes collection to UNLV, and we see it as the cornerstone for a serious
film research facility."
One of the most colorful
characters of Hollywood's Golden Age, Hughes (1905-1976) was legendary for
his visionary, provocative filmmaking as well as his feats in aviation,
far-reaching investments and carefully guarded privacy. Born in Houston,
Texas, he inherited a successful oil-drilling equipment company from his
father and by age 20 was investing in Hollywood movies.
Hughes made his name
as a producer with the aviation epic Hell's Angels (1930), which
he also directed; and the newspaper comedy The Front Page (1931).
After creating an uproar with censors over The Outlaw (1943), featuring
Jane Russell in the first "sexy" Western, Hughes acquired a controlling
interest in RKO, where he produced such movies as His Kind of Woman (1951) and Affair With a Stranger (1953).
The UNLV Film Department
chose to partner with Flicker Alley because of its impressive passion for
film history and its dedication of bringing filmmakers and films from out
of the past to new audiences and renewed recognition. Jeffery Masino, head
of Flicker Alley, made countless trips to UNLV to meet with Wegner and Menendez
and they all worked together to collect the necessary materials for restoration.
"The company is
driven by a strong belief in film preservation and has been actively involved
in the creation of new digital editions of several important movie classics,
essentially rescuing them from obscurity," added Menendez. "Debuting
these films on Turner Classic Movies is a great first step toward establishing
the archives potential, and taking UNLV beyond our regional borders."
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