March 18, 1910: An important entry in the nascent horror genre is the Edison Company’s Frankenstein, with stage veteran Charles Ogle as the monster.
March 15, 1915: Movie Mogul Carl Laemmle opens his new Universal City studios in Southern California’s San Fernando Valley and invites the public to take a five-cent tour, chicken lunch incuded.
March 20, 1928: The Klondike Gold Rush drama The Trail of ’98 opens. Performing as star Delores del Rio’s stunt doubl e: Lou Costello in drag.
March 14, 1930: ” Garbo Talks!” in MGM’s Anna Christie. Greta’s first line: “Give me a vhiskey with a ginger ale on the side–and don’t be stingy, baby.”
March 15, 1940: Two titans of screen comedy–Mae West and W.C. Fields–team up for the first and only time in the Wild West romp My Little Chickadee.
March 20, 1943: “Hello, all you happy people.” Tex Avery’s poker-faced cartoon canine, Droopy, makes his debut in Dumb Hounded.
March 14, 1946: Rita Hayworth heats up movie screens with her rendition of “Put the Blame on Mame” in the steamy drama Gilda.
March 20, 1948: Vittorio DeSica‘s Shoeshine, nominated only for the Best Original Screenplay Oscar, is given a special award. The next year a Best Foreign Film category will be created.
March 15, 1950: Audiences delight to the antics of Francis and sidekick Donald O’Connor in the first of seven films starring the talking mule.
March 20, 1952: Humphrey Bogart wins his first and only Academy Award as the irascible skipper of The African Queen.
March 19, 1953: Television audiences are invited to the Academy Awards ceremony for the first time. Bob Hope hosts in Hollywood, Conrad Nagel in New York.
March 20, 1955: Hollywood discovers a new sound–rock and roll–when “Rock Around the Rock” plays over the opening credits of Blackboard Jungle.
March 16, 1960: The French New Wave comes ashore with Jean-Luc Godard‘s Breathless, an unconventional gangster drama that pays homage to American “B” movies.
March 15, 1964: Completing a romance that began on the Cleopatra set, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton are married.
March 18, 1968: One-time Your Show of Shows writer Mel Brooks makes his directorial debut with The Producers, starring Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder.
March 17, 1970: The Boys in the Band, a groundbreaking (albeit stereotypic) step in mainstream cinema’s depiction of homosexuals, opens.
March 20, 1971: Producer Albert Ruddy announces all references to “the Mafia” will be eliminated from the script of The Godfather at the request of Italian-Americans.
March 15, 1972: Francis Ford Coppola‘s The Godfather debuts in theaters to unprecedented attention, breaking box office records across the country.
March 17, 1972: The University of Baltimore is the scene of the premiere of underground filmmaker John Waters’ infamous “exercise in poor taste,” Pink Flamingos.
March 19, 1975: Director Ken Russell’s filming of The Who’s rock opera Tommy opens.
March 20, 1992: The simple act of crossing and uncrossing her legs makes Sharon Stone a major star in the controversial suspense thriller Basic Instinct.
March 17, 2000: Horror movie fans are fated to go to theaters and watch The Final Destination.
March 16, 2005: After a three-month trial, Our Gang regular-turned-film/TV star Robert Blake (In Cold Blood) is found not guilty in the murder of wife Bonnie Lee Bakley.