Showing posts with label E Street SE History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label E Street SE History. Show all posts

Saturday, March 16, 2013

The Man Who Could Bend a Dime with His Fingers!




Sadly buried in an unmarked grave at R80/S385 at Congressional Cemetery is Russian born actor, writer, and director Nicholas Alexander Dunaev, who appeared in no less than thirty-four Hollywood films in the 1910s and 1920s.  Long since forgotten, perhaps his most eccentric trait was his unusual ability to bend a dime in half, using only his fingertips.  He was obviously a hit at many a Hollywood party in the roaring twenties.  

And speaking of parties, Dunaev made news one night in 1924 when he joined Charlie Chaplin and other actors for dinner at the exclusive Café Petroushka in Hollywood when oil magnate Julian Pete reportedly bumped - on purpose - Chaplin’s controversial date, actress Mary Miles Minter.  An accomplished actress, she was black listed two years prior when she had been implicated in the mysterious death of director William Desmond Taylor.  A fight ensued, Chaplin received a punch to the eye, but our Dunaev came to the rescue during a free-for-all.  He punched Julian Pete twice, and was quoted as saying “If Julian had been a dime, I’d have bent him in two.”[1] 
                     
Dunaev was born on May 26, 1884 in Moscow, Russia as Nicholas Dunay.  He was the son of a Czarist nobleman, former Lord Mayor of Moscow, and a graduate of the University of Moscow Law School.   Active in the Russian revolution in 1917, he was an associate of Alexander Kerensky, head of the provisional government which was toppled by the Bolshevik revolution.  He was arrested and sent to Siberia in exile, from where he escaped.  He made his way to France, where he married novelist Edith Donnerburg; she died just two years later.  He once penned “The act of killing the spirit in a man, of obliterating all sense of honor, faith, and a desire for better things, is as surely homicide as through the man's soul were taken from his body.”

Dunaev came to the United States in 1919 to work as a writer, actor, and director at the Vitagraph Corporation, one of the first motion film companies.  To his new American friends, he was known as “Kolya,” short for his Russian accent pronounced ‘Nicholas.’  With the advent of “talkies,” Dunaev moved to Hollywood to work for the World Film Corporation where he earned another nickname “the strongman from Moscow.”  He starred with Otis Skinner in the original “Kismet.”  His self-written play “The Spider” starred himself, and played on Broadway in the 1920s.  

He married a Ziegfeld Follies danced named Ina Byron that ended in divorce after just two years.  He apparently garnered 100,000 votes for Roosevelt, earning a special commendation from the President.  He moved to Washington, DC in 1937, and eventually wrote the President in 1947 for a job, which he was denied due to his Civil Service status.  He was broke and destitute, he said, renting the modest apartment C at 1417 Belmont Street, NW (left, since razed).  He authored a novel entitled “Seven Doors to Sin” that was published by Vantage Press in 1954.  He eventually moved in with a couple at 931 New Hampshire Avenue, NW, when he fell ill and died in 1963.     
       
Dunaev once wrote “There can never be a happy ending to a poet’s life, for the ending is its essential tragedy.”   


Copyright Paul K. Williams

A list of movies and other works from the IMBd website at 

  1. Two Arabian Knights (1927) (as Nicholas Dunaev) .... Mirza's Man Servant
  2. The Palace of Darkened Windows (1920) .... The Snake Charmer
  3. Kismet (1920) .... Nasir
  4. The Devil's Riddle (1920) .... Paul Evers
  5. Cheating Cheaters (1919) .... Antonio Verdi
  6. The Velvet Hand (1918) .... Secretary
  7. The Yellow Ticket (1918)
  8. The Firebrand (1918) .... Dmitri
  9. The Flower of Doom (1917) .... Paul Rasnov
  10. The Pulse of Life (1917) .... Domenic
  11. The Scarlet Crystal (1917)
  12. The Reward of the Faithless (1917) .... Feodor Strogoff
  13. The World Against Him (1916) .... Peblo
  14. Who Killed Simon Baird? (1916) .... Kimba... aka "By Whose Hand?" - (alternative title)
  15. The Yellow Passport (1916) .... Music Master... aka "The Badge of Shame" 

Monday, April 30, 2012

DC Building Permits: the Rare Original Facade and Floor Plans


Over the twenty years that I’ve been researching historic houses in Washington, DC, I find that in only about 15% of the cases do we discover the original blueprints have been retained with the building permit: some are the coveted façade drawings, and some are the even more rare floor plans. 

We recently discovered and even more rare occurrence: both façade and floor plans for a client in the 1500 block of E Street, SE.  They were thrilled to discover how their first floor had originally appeared.  It solved many mysteries for them.    
  
The owners of the vacant lots where 1502 to 1518 E Street, SE were to be constructed, Wilhelm Schmidt and Frederick D. Brandt, received their building permit on May 17, 1906. 

They listed architect B.Frank Meyers on the application as responsible for their design, and their own construction company, Schmidt & Brandt, as responsible for their erection.  They estimated the cost of building all nine houses as $18,000, or approximately $2,000 each.

You might recall that we composed a blog entry for grocer Wilhelm Schmidt here, who ran a grocery at the corner of 18th and T Street, NW, today home to Rosemary’s Thyme restaurant.

The floor plans revealed that a Latrobe Stove was inserted into both the front parlor and the dining room fireplaces, and that the kitchen featured a coal range, sink with cabinet overhead, and a built in wall cabinet with upper glass doors and lower wood doors and drawers on the party wall.  

BF Meyers, Washington Post
Architect Benjamin Franklin Meyers (1865-1940), known as B. Frank or BF Meyers, contributed many row houses and theaters to the Washington, D.C., area.  Meyers was born in 1865 in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.  He moved with his family to Washington, D.C., as a child and attended school here.  He also received his architectural training in Washington, D.C., not through an educational institution, but likely through his father, John Granville Meyers, a local builder and architect. 

Copyright Paul K. Williams