This Week in Film History: 3/29/15

March 31, 1914: The nascent serial genre has its first true star when Pearl White plays the hazard-plagued heroine of The Perils of Pauline.

April 1, 1923: Moviegoers are thrilled and amused by the death-defying, high-rise antics of comedian Harold Lloyd in Safety Last.

April 1, 1930: After being spotted in a Berlin stage revue by director Josef von Sternberg, Marlene Dietrich reaches stardom with The Blue Angel.

April 2, 1936: Selznick International Pictures releases their first production, an adaptation of Little Lord Fauntleroy starring Freddie Bartholomew.

March 31, 1939: 20th Century-Fox’s The Hound of the Baskervilles marks the first of 14 screen pairings for Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce as Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson.

April 1, 1949: England’s Ealing studio releases the first of its acclaimed, whimsical comedies, Passport to Pimlico, starring Margaret Rutherford.

April 1, 1949: Spinning off from The Egg and I, Ma and Pa Kettle with Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride launches a successful comedy series for Universal.

April 2, 1951: The premiere issue of the French film journal Cahiers du Cinema goes on sale; contributing writers will include Truffaut, Rohmer and Chabrol.

March 31, 1953: Stanley Kubrick’s family-funded directorial debut, the war drama Fear and Desire, opens in New York.

April 2, 1953: Ed Wood’s feature directorial debut, the cross-dressing cult classic Glen or Glenda, opens. Wood also stars in the title role(s).

April 4, 1958: Cheryl Crane, 14-year-old daughter of Lana Turner, fatally stabs her mother’s lover, gangster Johnny Stompanato, in self-defense.

March 29, 1959: Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon don dresses and co-star with Marilyn Monroe in Billy Wilder’s gender-bending romp Some Like It Hot.

April 4, 1960: William Wyler’s monumental religious drama, Ben-Hur, takes home a record 11 Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Actor (Charlton Heston).

April 2, 1968: Director Stanley Kubrick‘s senses-shattering sci-fi epic, 2001: A Space Odyssey, debuts. Though a stunning achievement, acclaim is not widespread.

April 3, 1972: The Film Society of Lincoln Center honors Charles Chaplin, marking the first time the star has stepped onto American soil in 20 years.

March 31, 1973: Iconic director John Ford (Stagecoach) is the recipient of the American Film Institute’s first Lifetime Achievement Award.

April 2, 1974: A streaker interrupts David Niven at the Oscars, who quips, “the only laugh that man will probably get is for…showing off his shortcomings.”

March 29, 1976: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest becomes the first film since 1934’s It Happened One Night to take home all five major Oscars.

April 1, 1976: A failed Fox musical, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, gets a second life with its first midnight showing at Greenwich Village’s Waverly Theater.

March 29, 1977: Brit Peter Finch becomes the first posthumous acting Oscar winner, earning Best Actor for Network.

March 29, 1978: Annie Hall wins four Oscars, but writer/director/star Woody Allen skips the ceremony to play clarinet in a New York jazz club.

March 30, 1981: Obsessed with Taxi Driver star Jodie Foster, loner John Hinckley shoots President Ronald Reagan outside a Washington, D.C., hotel.

March 29, 1982: Katharine Hepburn wins a record-setting fourth Academy Award, and an ailing Henry Fonda wins his first, for On Golden Pond.

March 30, 1986: Vaudeville dancer-turned-perennial screen tough guy James Cagney, 86, dies of cardiac arrest on his New York farm.

March 29, 1989: In one of the stranger Oscar Night moments, Rob Lowe sings a duet of “Proud Mary” with Disney’s Snow White (actress Eileen Bowman). The Disney studio is not amused.

March 31, 1993: A prop-gun accident on the set of The Crow results in the death of star Brandon Lee (son of Bruce) at the age of 28.

March 31, 1999: Keanu Reeves learns to dodge bullets and audiences learn “What Is The Matrix?,” as the Wachowski Bothers’ sci-fi hit opens.

April 4, 2013: Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic, columnist, author and screenwriter (Beyond the Valley of the Dolls) Roger Ebert dies of complications from cancer at 70.