The Record Booth from Inside Daisy Clover (1965)
I am a Patent Attorney by trade, but as a hobby I collect vintage coinop machines. In that vein, I have acquired a 1940s wooden Record Booth that I am told was operated at the Graumans Chinese Theatre in the 40s and 50s, but low and behold it is the very booth used in the opening scene of “INSIDE DAISY CLOVER”. The original keys for the booth came with a label that would appear to be a Warner Brothers inventory control tag, but I’m in the process right now of researching that.
Natalie Wood approaches the Record Booth.
Over the past 10 years I’ve become somewhat of an expert on the Voice-O-Graph booth, recently acquiring a similar 1940s model wood Record Booth for Jack White of Third Man Records in Nashville. I have been tracking just about all surviving models (only about 100 were ever made, and just a very small handful survive today.) Of all the known wooden Voice-O-Graph Record Booths (and vintage photos of booths), none but this one have windows. And this booth is quite unique in that it is actually an operating machine, but operated at 35c. The external graphics have been changed FROM 35c TO 25c (quite unusual). Presumably the producer of Inside Daisy Clover felt the 25c was more appropriate for the 1930s period in which the movie is set.
Natalie Wood inside the record booth.
Beside the uniqueness of this configuration of the Record Booth with side windows (never seen before) and general rarity of the booth itself – proof certain that this booth is in fact the very booth used in this Warner Brothers movie is that the scratch in the wood seen in the movie to the left of the window . . .
. . . is still seen in the booth today!
It is believed that this Record Booth was originally located and operated at Graumans Chinese Theatre. That was its oral history when acquired in 2002, but I’ve also discovered the following scratching on an inside wall: “HO 48111” is the old phone number of Graumans Chinese Theatre!
But perhaps most interestingly of all (and fascinating for any Rebel Without A Cause fans), the booth includes two scratchings inside, this one in hand-scratching with much similarity to known handwriting of James Dean:
And then this one, apparently reading “J.D. + B.g.” in a doodled heart, evoking the possibility that this refers to James Dean and Barbara Glenn:
This is a beautiful, WORKING Record Booth (I’m fine tuning it now). Research is currently ongoing – any information anyone may have (photos of the Record Booth at Graumans between 1946 and the late 1950s would be fantastic) would be greatly appreciated!
So that’s it’s story so far!
Thank you very much, and best regards,
Bill Bollman
Bill Bollman
Now how cool is that! If anyone may have more information on this Record Booth you can contact Bollman at RecordBooth@gmail.com.
I've previously done a post on some of the filming locations for Inside Daisy Clover which you can see here. Personally, I'm not a big fan of the film overall and was probably a bit too honest when I wrote the film locations post; but what I really like about Inside Daisy Clover are the locations and look of the film. Those two things alone make the film worth watching.
Thanks again Bill for the pictures and backstory!
Your thoughts?
This is SO cool. What a lucky guy to have found that!
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