Classic Films
Related: About this forumRecent Obituaries, Classic Films Only
TCM just showed their end of the year memorial, TCM Remembers, with short clips of the actors, actresses and other well-known film crew who have passed away in 2011. As always, it reminds me of all of the great talents who are no longer with us.
And that reminded me that we haven't started up a DU3 Classic Films Obituary thread. The DU2 version of this thread started on December 4, 2005, and its 345th post was added on December 9, 2011.
I'll christen this new thread with a death that we missed in the old thread. Bill McKinney was born on September 12, 1931, and died on December 1, 2011.
These thumbnail sketches were usually variations on a theme: southern good ole boys gone bad, men with moonshine on their breath and malevolence in mind. McKinney was mostly used as a comic foil for the perennial straight man Eastwood. But as zany as some of his performances were, there was often an undercurrent of genuine menace, especially for viewers who had seen him in John Boorman's Deliverance (1972).
Besides its duelling banjos soundtrack, Deliverance remains most famous for a queasily protracted scene in which McKinney (credited as Mountain Man) and Herbert "Cowboy" Coward (Toothless Man) set upon a couple of city slickers (played by Ned Beatty and Jon Voight) who have taken a wrong turn on a canoeing trip in the deep south. The wild-eyed, rotten-toothed Mountain Man brandishes a knife, taunts Beatty's character, forces him to undress and then rapes him, demanding that he "squeal like a pig" perhaps one of the best-known lines in 70s cinema.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/dec/08/bill-mckinney
(TCM Remembers 2011 is a set of silent clips, backed by a soothing vocal. The only words spoken come from Peter Falk, as the Grandfather, who says "As you wish...". It's lovely!)
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)A few of those are still available on YouTube, or at least were when I last checked for them. They are masterfully edited, and the musical accompaniment, often quite an unexpected song choice, always works beautifully.
Paladin
(28,786 posts)I try to keep up with such things, but I had no idea that Charles Napier and Jill Haworth had passed away. Nice presentation by TCM, as usual.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)There's living well, and then there's outliving just about everybody!
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/15/arts/frederica-sagor-maas-scriptwriter-from-the-silent-era-dies-at-111.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&ref=obituaries&adxnnlx=1326830896-ajxNFcS+UL0k4eluWp0H2g
Before dying on Jan. 5 in La Mesa, Calif., at 111, Mrs. Maas was one of the last living links to cinemas silent era. She wrote dozens of stories, adaptations and scripts, sat with Greta Garbo at the famed long table in MGMs commissary, and adapted to sound in the movies, and then to color.
Perhaps most satisfying, Mrs. Maas outlived pretty much anybody who might have disagreed with her version of things. I can get my payback now, she said in an interview with Salon in 1999. Im alive and thriving and, well, you S.O.B.s are all below.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)From the Guardian:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/feb/26/erland-josephson
Although the actors who comprised Ingmar Bergman's repertory company all went on to make their own prestigious careers, they will for ever be associated with the great Swedish film and stage director. Erland Josephson, who has died aged 88 after suffering from Parkinson's disease, was artistically linked with Bergman even more than Max Von Sydow, Liv Ullmann and Ingrid Thulin. Josephson appeared in more than a dozen of Bergman's films, and played a Bergman surrogate in Ullmann's Faithless (2000).
In middle and old age, he was chosen by directors such as Andrei Tarkovsky and Theo Angelopoulos for the qualities he revealed in the Bergman films a certain self-centred introspection and a deep melancholy, etched on his lined and grizzled features. Because he became a leading film actor in his 50s, he seems never to have been young.
His work with Bergman dated back to the 1940s, when they were at the Municipal theatre, Helsingborg. They then worked together at Gothenburg Municipal theatre and the Royal Dramatic theatre, Stockholm, where he took over from Bergman as artistic director in 1966.
His credits, as per IMDB:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0430746/
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)The stage, television, and film actress was 93. She'd played opposite some of the greatest talents of theater and cinema, but is perhaps best known to the public at large for her memorable turn in Tom Jones. See clip above.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/may/11/joyce-redman?newsfeed=true
Redman was born and bred in Newcastle, County Mayo, one of four sisters in an Anglo-Irish family. She was educated privately by a governess and trained for the stage at Rada in London, making her debut in 1935 as First Tiger Lily in Alice Through the Looking Glass at the Playhouse. She was established as a regular on the West End stage, and in the club theatres, by wartime. She was George Bernard Shaw's Essie, "a wild, timid-looking creature with black hair and tanned skin", in The Devil's Disciple, at the Piccadilly in 1940, followed in 1942 with Maria in Twelfth Night at the Arts theatre and Wendy in Peter Pan at the Winter Garden.
Those Old Vic and New theatre seasons were the defining period: an acclaimed Solveig in the Ralph Richardson production of Ibsen's Peer Gynt; Louka in Shaw's Arms and the Man; Lady Anne in the legendary Richard III of Olivier; Cordelia to the same actor's King Lear; Sonya in Uncle Vanya; and Doll Tearsheet in Henry IV Part 2 (though James Agate, for some reason, thought her too small to play rampageous bawds).
Redman toured to the Comédie-Française in Paris, conquered Broadway, played the title role in Jean Anouilh's Colombe, directed by Peter Brook in 1951, then went to Stratford-upon-Avon in 1955 to play Helena in All's Well That Ends Well and Mistress Ford in The Merry Wives of Windsor. She could play light comedy and stern tragedy, as she demonstrated to many devoted gallery-ites during Olivier's exciting inaugural National theatre seasons at the Old Vic in the early 1960s.
Matilda
(6,384 posts)I was working as an usherette during the screening of Othello, and after some weeks of viewing, I decided that each night I'd focus my attention on just one actor, studying their performance in detail, even when they were in the background and saying nothing. Redman was one I watched carefully, and I developed a respect for her as a result. She did a lot with a supporting role.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)She was featured in the Andy Hardy series and in Gone with the Wind, but to me, she'll always be the flighty, wayward Lydia Bennet of the 1940 adaptation of Pride and Prejudice.
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-ann-rutherford-20120612,0,7959825.story
While roller skating home from Virgil Junior High, Ann would detour to Wilshire Boulevard radio stations, where she wandered into viewing rooms to watch actors work.
"One day my English teacher criticized me," Rutherford told The Times in 1969, "and I was furious. I thought, I wouldn't have to listen to Miss So-and-So if I were an actress."
She invented an acting history and presented it to KFAC, and a month later she was voicing Nancy in the radio series "Nancy and Dick: The Spirit of 76," Rutherford recalled in 2010.
When an actress she resembled dropped out of the 1935 film "Waterfront Lady," Rutherford was cast in the first of nearly 60 movies she would make by 1950.
IMDB credits:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0751946/
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)For many years he was at the Village Voice.
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/movies/andrew-sarris-movie-critic-village-voice-helped-popularize-directors-dead-83-article-1.1099384
Andrew Sarris was a vital figure in teaching America to respond to foreign films as well as American movies, fellow critic David Thomson said Wednesday. As writer, teacher, friend and husband he was an essential. History has gone.
Sarris started with the Voice in 1960 and established himself as a major reviewer in 1962 with the essay Notes on the Auteur Theory. Acknowledging the influence of French critics and even previous American writers, Sarris argued for the primacy of directors and called the ultimate glory of movies the tension between a directors personality and his material.
He not only helped write the rules, but filled in the names. He was a pioneer of the annual Top 10 film lists that remain fixtures in the media. In 1968, he published The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929-1968, what Sarris described as a collection of facts, a reminder of movies to be resurrected, of genres to be redeemed, of directors to be rediscovered. Among his favorites: Ford, Hawks, Orson Welles and Fritz Lang. Categorized as Less Than Meets the Eye: John Huston, David Lean, Elia Kazan and Fred Zinnemann.
How come it took his obituary for me to find out he was married to Molly Haskell (From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies)?
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)Most will remember him from TV. He was a regular as Sam Drucker on three shows:The Beverly Hillbillies, Petticoat Junction and Green Acres. Before that he was Doc Williams on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet.
He did a lot of movies usually as a lean and lanky townsperson or storekeeper. My favorite Frank Cady role was in When Worlds Collide (1951). He played the manservant to a tyrannical John Hoyt, pushing his wheelchair while being abused... until he decides to assert himself and take matters in his own hands. Good actor.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Somehow it seems too soon.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/andy-griffith-beloved-the-andy-griffith-show-star-who-also-excelled-on-film-dies-at-86/2012/07/03/gJQACBAsKW_story.html?hpid=z2
I think I was in my late teens when I first rode through Mount Airy, North Carolina, Griffith's hometown, and realized Mayberry was based on a real place.
If you haven't seen Griffith in Waitress, be sure to check it out. He added just the right touch to Adrienne Shelley's fable about a woman with a "train wreck" of a life...and a few secrets.
lavenderdiva
(10,726 posts)His longtime spokesman, Harry Flynn, told The Associated Press that Borgnine died of renal failure at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center with his wife and children at his side.
Borgnine, who endeared himself to a generation of Baby Boomers with the 1960s TV comedy "McHale's Navy," first attracted notice in the early 1950s in villain roles, notably as the vicious Fatso Judson, who beat Frank Sinatra to death in "From Here to Eternity."
Then came "Marty," a low-budget film based on a Paddy Chayefsky television play that starred Rod Steiger. Borgnine played a 34-year-old who fears he is so unattractive he will never find romance. Then, at a dance, he meets a girl with the same fear.
'Marty' was always my favorite Ernest Borgnine role. He plays such a sweet, tender-hearted man.
Interesting blog post about background on 'Marty'. I never knew that Betsy Blair was married to Gene Kelly, and blacklisted. She eventually moved to Europe, after her role in Marty.
http://picturespoilers.wordpress.com/category/ernest-borgnine/
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)It really is a gem of a movie, optimistic but also blunt about the tensions and frustrations of courtship and marriage and family life...and of hanging out with the guys, of course!
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/movies/isuzu-yamada-95-acclaimed-japanese-actress/2012/07/12/gJQAjTc5fW_story.html[/url]
Isuzu Yamada, who became one of Japans most formidable and revered actresses and is perhaps best remembered as the treacherous wife of a warlord in Throne of Blood, director Akira Kurosawas adaptation of Shakespeares tragedy Macbeth, died July 9 at a hospital in Tokyo. She was 95.
(SNIP)
A second-generation actor, Ms. Yamada appeared in more than 120 film and television roles in addition to her extensive theater career. She rose to movie stardom in the mid-1930s playing a series of fallen women sometimes tragically sympathetic, sometimes tragically opportunistic under the director Kenji Mizoguchi, whose films explored societal hypocrisies toward women.
lavenderdiva
(10,726 posts)What a wonderful creative life, filled with amazing performances. I guess there are others still living, but it seems to me, she may be one of the last of the great era of film, IMHO.
http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/15/showbiz/celeste-holm-obit/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Many of her obituaries mention her comeback role in Superman, but frankly the first thing I thought of was her part in Three Sovereigns for Sarah, a harrowing and very personal TV dramatization of the Salem witch trials and their aftermath.
I'd forgotten she was John Garfield's costar in The Breaking Point, which I caught on TCM a few years ago. It's well worth seeing, and is, believe it or not, based on the same work as To Have and Have Not...and you might not know it to look at it.
From the Guardian:
[url]http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/aug/17/phyllis-thaxter[/url]
Thaxter's theatre work led to her being offered the role of the pregnant wife of the second world war pilot played by Van Johnson in Mervyn LeRoy's excellent war drama Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo (1944). Although she had only a few scenes, Thaxter made enough impression to gain an MGM contract. According to the New York Times critic: "Phyllis Thaxter is surpassingly affecting as the wife of Captain Lawson. Her comparative newness as an actress and a wistful voice give her a rare advantage."
The role, more or less, set the pattern for her film career. However, she had a rare chance to play against her nice-girl persona in Bewitched (1945). Described on the posters as "Darling of society, Cruel love killer, She lived two amazing lives", Thaxter played a schizophrenic both a femme fatale and a good girl, female archetypes of film noir. She is a sweet young thing, who literally hears an evil voice within her, urging her on to murder. But it was back to pure pure sweetness and light in the all-star Week-End at the Waldorf (1945), in which she wrongly believes her fiance to be in love with a film star (played by Ginger Rogers), until persuaded otherwise. In Living in a Big Way (1947), she is a pretty war widow with three children who offers comfort to unhappily married Gene Kelly, and in Tenth Avenue Angel (1948), she is the doting mother of Margaret O'Brien, the little girl who infects everyone, except the audience, with her faith and joy.
Thaxter's last movie for MGM was Fred Zinnemann's Act of Violence (1948), in which she tries to be the voice of reason to stop an embittered ex-PoW played by Robert Ryan from wreaking revenge on his commanding officer (Van Heflin), who betrayed him to the Nazis.
Before taking up a contract with Warner Bros, Thaxter appeared in Robert Wise's noir western Blood on the Moon (1948) for RKO, where she is a wealthy cattle baron's daughter, sorely used by baddie Robert Preston, who promises her marriage. Her first role for Warners, in The Breaking Point (1950), a remake of To Have and Have Not, based on the Ernest Hemingway short story, was one of her best. Made to look dowdy, she is remarkably effective as the practical wife of a charter boat captain, played by John Garfield. Trying in vain to convince him to sell his boat and make a steady living, she tells him, "Pop says you can have a job anytime on his lettuce ranch in Salinas." Worried that he might be attracted to the blonde Patricia Neal, Thaxter desperately lightens her hair.
Her IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0857187/[/url]
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)Always providing a genuine warmth to the roles she played I remember Phyllis Thaxter as Burt Lancaster's wife in the bio-pic "Jim Thorpe- All American".
RIP to a fine actress.
Electrominuette
(23 posts)May he rest in peace.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Frankly, I'd never heard of the Mawby Triplets before I stumbled on this article! Theirs is a rather poignant story too.
[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/23/movies/claudine-mawby-last-of-early-film-triplets-dies-at-90.html?ref=obituaries[/url]
Hollywood publicity agents called them the Mawby Triplets. They were a set of adorably blond little English girls who appeared in some of the earliest talking films, cherubs adorning the celluloid canvases of the 1920s and 30s. Cast in movies with stars like Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Gloria Swanson and John Barrymore, they were, for a time, among the most famous children in the world
Their parents shielded them from knowing how famous they were, isolating them from their fans and other children. Their agents shielded the fans from knowing the truth about the girls that they were not really triplets. They were actually composed of twins, Claudine and Claudette, and their sister, Angella, who was 11 months older.
Mummy and Daddy were at first rather taken aback, Claudine Mawby Walker recalled in an interview with The Daily Mail in 1995. They kept saying that, contrary to appearances, we werent actually triplets. But the film people just said we looked like triplets, and that was what counted.
If anyone asked, she added, Daddy would just joke that only two of us were triplets.
Read more, including the eventual fates of the Mawby sisters, at the link.
muriel_volestrangler
(102,513 posts)The Czech-born, London-based actor starred opposite Peter Sellers in several films as Inspector Clouseau's irritable boss.
Lom appeared in more than 100 films during his 60-year acting career, including such classics as The Ladykillers, Spartacus and El Cid.
...
Lom also portrayed Napoleon Bonaparte on two occasions. One of them came in the 1956 screen adaptation of Tolstoy's War And Peace, also starring Audrey Hepburn and Henry Fonda.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-19745910
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)My favorite Herbert Lom film is The Ladykillers (1955) with Alec Guinness and Peter Sellers. He plays a "tough guy" gangster who is really a softie who can't bring himself to harm the old lady.
RIP
muriel_volestrangler
(102,513 posts)I was wondering about looking for a clip to post, but it's the kind of film where you really need to watch a lot of it to appreciate well.
longship
(40,416 posts)Great comedic romp, available from Criterion, with Walter Matthau, Glenda Jackson, Sam Waterston, and the always good value, Ned Beatty.
Here Lom plays the Soviet uber-spy.
It's a comedic romp which features all actors as foils to Matthau's and Jackson's escapades.
It is a minor, but very endearing role, for Lom.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Karras (far right) with Victor/Victoria stars Robert Preston, Julie Andrews, and James Garner
Detroit Lions lineman Alex Karras has died. I include him in Classic Films because of his memorable role in Victor/Victoria, a very entertaining film memorable not only for its music and fun but for its (for the time) groundbreaking depiction of gay characters.
From what I've read, Alex Karras and his wife, Susan Clark, could be relied on to support Democrats and progressive causes in general.
[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/11/sports/football/alex-karras-nfl-lineman-and-actor-dies-at-77.html[/url]
Alexander George Karras was born on July 15, 1935, in Gary, Ind., where his father, George, a Greek immigrant, was a doctor, and his mother, the former Emmeline Wilson, was a nurse. An all-state football player in high school, he attended the University of Iowa, where in 1957 he won the Outland Trophy as the outstanding interior lineman in college football. In 1958, he was drafted in the first round by the Lions.
Karrass other film credits included roles in the raunchy comedy Porkys, the suspense thriller Against All Odds and the gender confusion comedy Victor/Victoria. He spent three seasons in the broadcast booth, working with Howard Cosell and Frank Gifford on ABCs Monday Night Football, and later wrote a novel, Tuesday Night Football, sending up his experience. He also wrote an autobiography, Even Big Guys Cry.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I'll admit I was totally unfamiliar with the man. In Hollywood's golden era, he appeared alongside many notables. In recent years he was featured in Babylon 5!
[url]http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-hollywood-actor-dies-in-austria.aspx?pageID=238&nID=32134&NewsCatID=381[/url]
Turhan Bey, an actor whose exotic good looks earned him the nickname of Turkish Delight in films with Errol Flynn and Katherine Hepburn before he left Hollywood for a quieter life in Vienna, has died. He was 90.
(SNIP)
Born in Austria as Gilbert Selahettin Schultavey, the son of a Turkish diplomat, Bey assumed his stage name shortly after moving to the United States with his Jewish Czech mother from Vienna to escape the Nazis and being discovered by talent scouts from Warner Bros. studios.
His popular name was Turkish Delight - a reference to his suave good looks that made him an ideal partner to exotics like Maria Montez in escapist Technicolor adventure fantasies set in faraway places.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Though perhaps not as frequently mentioned as director James Ivory, producer Ismail Merchant, or screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Richard Robbins was a key part of the team behind the Merchant-Ivory films.
Mr. Robbins is survived by his longtime partner, the artist Michael Schell.
From the L.A. Times:
[url]http://articles.latimes.com/2012/nov/18/local/la-me-richard-robbins-20121118[/url]
Robbins created the score for nearly every Merchant Ivory film from "The Europeans" in 1979 to "The White Countess" in 2005. He earned back-to-back Academy Award nominations for his original music for "Howards End" (1992) and "The Remains of the Day" (1993).
(SNIP)
Of the melancholy, evocative score for "The Remains of the Day," Robbins said in a 2000 interview with writer Chris Terrio that his inspiration had come from a single scene featuring actress Emma Thompson.
"I know when ... the hard part of writing the score is over, because I know how I feel about a character," he said in the interview posted on the Merchant Ivory website. "That's a great relief. That can happen all at once: It can be as simple as watching one of the characters enter a room or walk down a hallway. In 'The Remains of the Day,' it happened when I first saw the shot of Emma Thompson walking down the hall toward the camera. That did it."
From the Guardian:
[url]http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/nov/13/richard-robbins[/url]
Although mostly influenced by the minimalist compositions of Philip Glass, Robbins was capable of producing the sumptuous, colourfully orchestrated, symphonic music, just the right side of sentimentality, for Maurice (1987), which won the best score at the Venice film festival. It remained Robbins's own favourite among his scores.
Robbins music ranged from a jazzy foxtrot for Quartet (1981), and Indian themes in Heat and Dust (1983), to the jauntily percussive soundtrack for Mr and Mrs Bridge (1990), modern-sounding classicism for Jefferson in Paris (1995) and Richard Straussian tones for The Golden Bowl (2000).
As music director, he also had to select music that the characters would have listened to, contributing to the mood of the film. "The pieces give us additional information about the characters," Robbins explained. "The works of Beethoven and Schubert were once part of people's daily musical landscape, as surprising as that may seem today."
Naturally, Beethoven's 5th Symphony, given EM Forster's famous description of it in the novel, featured in Howards End (1992), as did the Franz Schubert song Sei mir gegrüst, o Mai in The Remains of the Day (1993), though both films gained Oscar nominations for Robbins for best original score. He also permitted Puccini's aria, O mio babbino caro, to dominate the rapturous scenes in A Room With a View (1985), and pop songs by musicians including Ziggy Marley, Inner City and Iggy Pop for Slaves of New York (1989).
His credits, as per IMDB:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0006442/[/url]
Do read the obits, even if you usually skip over them; these are particularly informative and enjoyable.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I have to admit I don't remember encountering her name before this, but she sounds like a real dynamo!
[url]http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/local/obituaries/obituary-jeni-legon-pioneering-tap-dance-soloist-666899/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Jack Klugman: Tony Randall's costar in TV's The Odd Couple, star of Quincy (the forerunner of today's forensics series), and a tough yet likeable juror in 12 Angry Men.
Check out the write-up in The New York Times; it's quite an interesting read.
With E.G. Marshall (left) in 12 Angry Men
[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/25/arts/television/jack-klugman-stage-and-screen-actor-is-dead-at-90.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0[/url]
Mr. Klugmans path to success was serendipitous. He was born in Philadelphia on April 27, 1922, the youngest of six children of immigrants from Russia. Most sources indicate that his name at birth was Jacob, though Mr. Klugman said in an interview that the name on his birth certificate is Jack.
His father, Max, was a house painter who died when Jack was 12. His mother, Rose, was a milliner who worked out of the family home in hardscrabble South Philadelphia, where Jack grew up shooting pool, rolling dice and playing the horses. His interest in acting was kindled at 14 or 15 when his sister took him to a play, One Third of a Nation, a living newspaper production of the Federal Theater Project about life in an American slum; the play made the case for government housing projects.
I just couldnt believe the power of it, he said of the production in an interview in 1998 for the Archive of American Television, crediting the experience for instilling in him his social-crusading impulse. I wanted to be a muckraker.
After a stint in the Army he was discharged because of a kidney ailment Mr. Klugman returned to Philadelphia but racked up a debt to loan sharks who were so dangerous that he left town. He landed in Pittsburgh, where he auditioned for the drama department at Carnegie Tech (now Carnegie Mellon University).
They said: Youre not suited to be an actor. Youre more suited to be a truck driver, he recalled. But this was 1945, the war was just ending and there was a dearth of male students, so he was accepted. There were no men, he said. Otherwise they wouldnt have taken me in.
His credits, as per IMDB:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001430/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Stage, screen, and television actor Charles Durning died on Christmas Eve. His stage, TV, and film credits alone are astonishing, but that wasn't the most remarkable thing about the man.
[url]
[url]http://www.salon.com/2012/12/26/character_actor_charles_durning_dies_at_89/[/url]
He was among the first wave of U.S. soldiers to land at Normandy during the D-Day invasion and the only member of his Army unit to survive. He killed several Germans and was wounded in the leg. Later he was bayoneted by a young German soldier whom he killed with a rock. He was captured in the Battle of the Bulge and survived a massacre of prisoners.
In later years, he refused to discuss the military service for which he was awarded the Silver Star and three Purple Hearts.
Too many bad memories, he told an interviewer in 1997. I dont want you to see me crying.
Tragedy also stalked other members of his family. Durning was 12 when his father died, and five of his sisters lost their lives to smallpox and scarlet fever.
A high school counselor told him he had no talent for art, languages or math and should learn office skills. But after seeing King Kong and some of James Cagneys films, Durning knew what he wanted to do.
Leaving home at 16, he worked in a munitions factory, on a slag heap and in a barbed-wire factory.
TV and film credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001164/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)It's now incomplete, given the loss of two great character actors just in the last week, but here is TCM Remembers 2012.
[url]
graham4anything
(11,464 posts)Graybeard
(6,996 posts)The son of veteran character actor Harry Carey he joined the John Ford/John Wayne stock company (after his service in the Navy during WWII) in the film "Red River" (1948). This was followed by fine performances in "3 Godfathers" (1948) and "She Wore A Yellow Ribbon" (1949).
He worked steadily in Hollywood; he played the young West Point cadet Dwight Eisenhower in Ford's "The Long Gray Line" (1955), and became himself a veteran character actor in films and TV.
Carey died at age 91. RIP
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/12/arts/mariangela-melato-italian-actress-dies-at-71.html?_r=0[/url]
Mariangela Melato, an Italian actress who achieved fame alongside Giancarlo Giannini portraying complicated relationships in the provocative films of Lina Wertmüller, including The Seduction of Mimi and Swept Away (by an Unusual Destiny in the Blue Sea of August), died on Friday in Rome. She was 71.
(SNIP)
Ms. Melato was already a successful actress when she first appeared in a film written and directed by Ms. Wertmüller, the Italian filmmaker whose work has challenged Italian social and political mores and depicted often vicious sexual relationships. Blond and throaty-voiced, with striking green eyes, Ms. Melato played the love interest to Mr. Gianninis bewildered chauvinist in three of Ms. Wertmüllers films from the 1970s.
In The Seduction of Mimi (1972), Ms. Melato played Fiorella, a jilted Sicilian wife who takes revenge on her adulterous husband, Mr. Gianninis Mimi, by cuckolding him. In Love and Anarchy (1973), Ms. Wertmüllers anti-Fascist drama, Ms. Melato plays Salomè, a prostitute and anarchist who helps a callow farmer, Mr. Gianninis Tunin, in his plot to assassinate Mussolini.
Probably Ms. Melatos best-known role in a Wertmüller film was as Raffaella in Swept Away, a sometimes harrowing romantic comedy of class conflict released in Italy in 1974. Raffaella, a haughty member of the Milanese upper class, is outspoken in her contempt for Gennarino (Mr. Giannini), a Communist Sicilian deckhand aboard a yacht she has rented.
graham4anything
(11,464 posts)Though primarily known for tv roles as JR Ewing on Dallas and Major Tony Nelson on I dream of Jeannie, Larry Hagman was brilliant in the films he was in (especially Fail-Safe starring Henry Fonda) and the Eagle Has landed).
[img][/img]
wiki-
He appeared in such feature films as The Group, Fail-Safe, Harry and Tonto, Mother, Jugs & Speed, The Eagle Has Landed, Superman, S.O.B., Nixon and Primary Colors. His television work included Getting Away from It All, Sidekicks, The Return of the World's Greatest Detective, Intimate Strangers and Checkered Flag or Crash.
He also directed (and appeared briefly in) a low-budget comedy and horror film in 1972 called Beware! The Blob, also called Son of Blob, a sequel to the classic 1958 horror film The Blob. This was the only feature film he directed
graham4anything
(11,464 posts)Actor and noted Hollywood acting coach Cliff Osmond, whose long career included roles in the Billy Wilder films "Irma La Douce," "Kiss Me Stupid," "The Front Page" and "The Fortune Cookie," died Dec. 22 in Pacific Palisades, Calif., after fighting pancreatic battle for four years. He was 75.
Osmond made his first appearances on television in 1962, guesting on shows including "Twilight Zone," "The Rifleman," "Dr. Kildare" and "The Untouchables" in that year alone. Other TV credits during the period included "Have Gun Will Travel," "Wagon Train," "77 Sunset Strip," "Batman" and "The Flying Nun."
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)The youngest and the last surviving of The Andrews Sisters, a hugely popular singing trio in the 40s and 50s. Along with her sisters LaVerne and Maxene the group sold more than 75 million records.
Appearing in such films as Buck Privates (1941) with Abbott and Costello, and many more, their songs raised the morale of U.S. troops all over the world. During WWII they were tireless in their travels to entertain servicemen on bases in Europe and the Pacific and tours across the U.S. to sell war bonds.
Patty Andrews wa 94. RIP
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Sitcoms, suspense, Shakespeare -- he did it all, and very well.
[url]http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2013/feb/18/richard-briers[/url]
When he played Hamlet as a young man, Richard Briers, who has died aged 79 after suffering from a lung condition, said he was the first Prince of Denmark to give the audience half an hour in the pub afterwards. He was nothing if not quick. In fact, wrote the veteran critic WA Darlington, he played Hamlet "like a demented typewriter". Briers, always the most modest and self-deprecating of actors, and the sweetest of men, relished the review, happy to claim a place in the light comedians' gallery of his knighted idols Charles Hawtrey, Gerald du Maurier and Noël Coward.
"People don't realise how good an actor Dickie Briers really is," said John Gielgud. This was probably because of his sunny, cheerful disposition and the rat-a-tat articulacy of his delivery. "You're a great farceur," said Coward, delivering another testimony, "because you never, ever, hang about."
Although he excelled in the plays of Alan Ayckbourn, and became a national figure in his television sitcoms of the 1970s and 80s, notably The Good Life, he could mine hidden depths on stage, giving notable performances in Ibsen, Chekhov and, for Kenneth Branagh's Renaissance company, Shakespeare.
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001972/[/url]
graham4anything
(11,464 posts)wiki
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malachi_Throne
Malachi Throne (December 1, 1928 March 13, 2013)[1] was an American stage and television actor, noted for his guest-starring roles on Star Trek: The Original Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Lost in Space, Land of the Giants, The Time Tunnel, Mission: Impossible, and The Six Million Dollar Man, and his recurring role on It Takes a Thief
Roles in Batman
One of his strangest roles was as the villain "False Face" in the ABC Batman (1966) series. The character, who used a variety of disguises to effect his nefarious schemes, wore a semitransparent mask when not in the middle of his crimes. The mask rendered Throne's real face unrecognizable on screen. Playing off this effect, but against Throne's wishes,[citation needed] the show's producers wrote the on-screen credit as "? as False Face", which denied Throne his credit. However, at the end credits of the episode, "Holy Rat Race," his full name was finally given full credit.
Later, Throne appeared in animation as the voice of Two-Face's superego "Judge" on The New Batman Adventures (1998), and as the voice of Fingers the Gorilla on the Batman Beyond episode "Speak No Evil" (2000).[4]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I kept a copy of this gentleman's obituary handy but each day have forgotten to post the link here. if you hang out with us here, and even if you have merely wandered into a movie house or past a TV, you've seen this man's work.
[url]http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/visual-effects-innovator-petro-vlahos-421401[/url]
Vlahos had more than 35 patents for camera crane motor controls, screen brightness meters, safe squib systems, cabling designs and junction boxes, projection screens, optical sound tracks and even sonar. He created analog and digital hardware and software versions of Ultimatte.
As the original patents ran out, many other present-day digital blue- and green-screen compositing systems were derived from Ultimatte and entered the marketplace. As a result, every green- or blue-screen shot today employs variants of the Vlahos technique.
Vlahos achievements also include his work on sodium and color difference traveling matte systems. His version of the sodium system was used on dozens of Disney films, including Mary Poppins, The Love Bug (1969) and Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971) and was borrowed by Alfred Hitchcock for The Birds (1963) and by Warren Beatty for Dick Tracy (1990).
Vlahos developed the color difference system (the perfected blue-screen system) for Ben-Hur (1959) and such scenes as its legendary chariot race. It was used in hundreds of films, including the first Star Wars trilogy and the Indiana Jones films.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)He's been onstage in London's West End and on screen in Gosford Park, but Frank Thornton is perhaps best known as part of the British ensemble comedy Are You Being Served?
From the Guardian:
[url]http://www.guardian.co.uk/tv-and-radio/2013/mar/18/frank-thornton[/url]
Born Frank Thornton Ball in Dulwich, south-east London, he was educated at Alleyn's school. He knew he wanted to be an actor from about the age of five, but first became an insurance clerk, taking drama classes at night at the London School of Dramatic Art. As a child, he described himself as "a bit of a loner, not one of the lads. I think I was probably a bit of a prig because I seem to have been stuck with this supercilious persona for as long as I can remember."
From his first professional appearance, in Terence Rattigan's French Without Tears in Co Tipperary, he swiftly graduated to companies led by the actor-managers Donald Wolfit where he met his future wife, Beryl Evans and John Gielgud. After reaching the West End and appearing in the first production of Rattigan's Flare Path in 1942, Thornton then spent four years in the real RAF.
After demob, he divided his time between repertory and the West End before his television comedy career took off in 1960 with Michael Bentine's frenetic It's a Square World. Regular appearances followed alongside such comic greats as Tony Hancock (including the celebrated Hancock's Half Hour episode, The Blood Donor), Benny Hill, Eric Sykes, Ronnie Corbett and even Kenny Everett, on whose show he memorably appeared attired as a punk rocker.
(SNIP)
Thornton had more than 60 film credits, including Victim (1961), The Dock Brief (1962), A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (with Zero Mostel, 1966), A Flea in Her Ear (with Rex Harrison, 1968), The Bed Sitting Room (1969), The Old Curiosity Shop (1995) and Gosford Park (2001), as well as the Disney TV adaptation of Great Expectations (1991). His last appearance came in the 2012 film version of Run for Your Wife.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)You'll all remember her from Going My Way (with Bing Crosby) and The Chocolate Soldier (with Nelson Eddy).
[url]http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/music/rise-stevens-opera-star-of-carmen-who-took-her-talents-to-radio-and-film-dies/2013/03/21/52dd80d0-c5dc-11df-94e1-c5afa35a9e59_story.html[/url]
Ms. Stevens won mass appeal by bringing her classical training to recognizable, beloved songs. Her rendition of Franz Schuberts Ave Maria is one of the most memorable moments in Going My Way. She was Anna in the production of The King and I that inaugurated the Music Theater of Lincoln Center in 1964. And, in the view of a Boston Globe critic, the sultry mezzo sang Begin the Beguine, by Cole Porter, so insinuatingly she could have gotten herself arrested.
Yet Ms. Stevens never set out to become a pop star. Her Hollywood career came about, she recalled in a 1990 interview with the Washington Times, when she caught the attention of MGM mogul Louis B. Mayer. It did not hurt that Ms. Stevens was about as far from the fat-lady stereotype as an opera singer could be.
After he heard her sing in San Francisco, Ms. Stevens said, Mayer called her in for a screen audition and booked her for The Chocolate Soldier, a 1941 film co-starring Nelson Eddy. She enjoyed the project enough to make Going My Way, but her life was not in the movies.
People in the motion picture industry did not think of having a person who would want to go back to opera after having a chance to stay in Hollywood, Ms. Stevens told the Washington Times. Mayer told me, What do you mean? Im offering you this incredible chance at MGM. I told him that was my life."
graham4anything
(11,464 posts)Canadian singer and actress Deanna Durbin, who enjoyed a short but successful career as a Universal contract star from 1936 to 1948, has died. She was 91. Durbin passed away a few days ago, her son Peter H. David told the NYT. Cause of death was not disclosed. Durbin was discovered at age 13 by MGM but moved to Universal the next year. There her debut film Three Smart Girls earned a Best Picture Oscar nomination and launched her career as one of the most popular teen idols of her generation. In 1939 she shared a Juvenile Academy Award with Mickey Rooney for their significant contribution in bringing to the screen the spirit and personification of youth, and as juvenile players setting a high standard of ability and achievement. Career highlights include One Hundred Men And A Girl (1937), First Love (1939), and The Amazing Mrs. Holliday (1943). Attempts at a more mature image led the ex-child star to roles in the 1944 noir Christmas Holiday opposite Gene Kelly and 1945′s Lady On A Train. She retired in 1949 and in 1960 earned a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Ninety-one is a good long life, but still, an era is ending.
[url]http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2013/may/01/deanna-durbin[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)This is weeks late, but I wanted to make sure Ray Harryhausen's passing was noted here.
The link will connect you to Fresh Air, a program on NPR (National Public Radio, for those of you who aren't in the U.S. or Canada).
[url]http://www.npr.org/2013/05/09/181947528/remembering-monster-maker-ray-harryhausen[/url]
"I do a lot of research when I create a creature," he told Fresh Air's Terry Gross in 2003. "I like to make him logical. That's my theory: Is that if you make them too extreme, too exaggerated, you lose your audience because they're just a grotesque piece of whatnot. You don't know quite what they are. So I try to keep them within harmony of something they've seen."
Harryhausen, a pioneer of stop-motion animation, won an Oscar for special effects with 1949's Mighty Joe Young, about a girl who raises a giant ape.
He went on to create such memorable beasts as the pterodactyl that kidnaps Raquel Welch in One Million Years B.C. and the animated skeleton soldiers in Jason and the Argonauts.
Official website:
[url]http://www.rayharryhausen.com/index.php[/url]
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0366063/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/moviesnow/la-et-mn-esther-williams-dies-20130606,0,68760.story[/url]
Esther Williams, a swimming champion known for the MGM aqua musicals of the 1940s and '50s that turned her into a major Hollywood star, died early Thursday in her sleep, her longtime publicist, Harlan Boll, announced. She was 91.
Her films had such titles as Bathing Beauty, Neptunes Daughter and Million Dollar Mermaid and received mixed reviews, but they packed theaters. For seven years she was in the top 10 box-office list.
She and choreographer Busby Berkeley turned a swimming pool into a seraglio, a sultans dream with breathtaking production numbers of gorgeous girls swimming in geometric shapes around blue water while Esther, with orchids and exotic plants wound round her hair framing that beauteous face, was the centerpiece, former Times columnist Jim Murray once wrote.
Over 20 years, Williams made 26 movies; later they would be credited with paving the way for synchronized swimming as an Olympic sport.
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)Known by most for her role as the Drill Captain in Goldie Hawn's Private Benjamin (1980) and then her reprise of the role in the TV series for which she won an Emmy and Golden Globe.
Eileen Brennan was an accomplished singer and comedienne. She appeared for two years on Broadway in the original production of Hello, Dolly! as Irene Malloy. She was one of the original cast of Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In.
In films she received rave reviews as the waitress in The Last Picture Show (1971) and was the choice of both Robert Redford and Paul Newman to play the role of the brothel madam in The Sting (1973).
Miss Brennan died at the age of 80. RIP
Staph
(6,346 posts)Ansara is beloved by Star Trek fans as one of only seven actors to play the same character -- in his case legendary Klingon warrior Kang -- on three versions of the sci-fi series: the original (in the 1968 episode "Day of the Dove" , Deep Space Nine (1994's "Blood Oath" and Voyager (1996's "Flashback" .
He also had major roles in such films as 1953's Julius Caesar and The Robe (as Judas); 1955's Jupiters Darling (his co-star in that film, swimmer-turned-actress Esther Williams, died in June); 1961's Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (he also appeared in the subsequent ABC series); The Comancheros (1961) with John Wayne; The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965); Guns of the Magnificent Seven (1969); The Bears and I (1974); The Message (1977); and Its Alive (1974).
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/michael-ansara-star-trek-kang-dies-598786
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Margaret Pellegrini, who as a teenager was featured in the Munchkin sequence of The Wizard of Oz, has died at age 89. She was one of three surviving members of the Munchkins troupe.
[url]http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv-movies/margaret-pellegrini-surviving-munchkins-oz-dies-article-1.1421107[/url]
Then 16 years old, Pellegrini played both the Flowerpot Girl that greets Judy Garlands Dorothy to Oz and one of the Sleepy Head Kids that appears in a scene a few minutes later. She even got to sing a couple of lines: Wake up, you sleepyhead. Rub your eyes. Get out of Bed. Wake up, the Wicked Witch is dead.
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Complications from cancer.
Known for Easy Rider, Five Easy Pieces, Nashville and Hitchcock's last fim, Family Plot.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I am sorry to report that Julie Harris (East of Eden, The Haunting) has left us. She was 87.
[url]http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-207_162-57599994/broadway-star-julie-harris-dies/[/url]
The 5-foot-4 Harris, blue-eyed with delicate features and reddish-gold hair, made her Broadway debut in 1945 in a short-lived play called "It's a Gift." Five years later, at the age of 24, Harris was cast as Frankie, a lonely 12-year-old tomboy on the brink of adolescence, in "The Member of the Wedding," Carson McCullers' stage version of her wistful novel.
The critics raved about Harris, with Brooks Atkinson in The New York Times calling her performance "extraordinary vibrant, full of anguish and elation."
"That play was really the beginning of everything big for me," Harris had said.
The actress appeared in the 1952 film version, too, with her original Broadway co-stars, Ethel Waters and Brandon De Wilde, and received an Academy Award nomination.
Harris won her first Tony Award for playing Sally Bowles, the confirmed hedonist in "I Am a Camera," adapted by John van Druten from Christopher Isherwood's "Berlin Stories." The play later became the stage and screen musical "Cabaret." In her second Tony-winning performance, Harris played a much more spiritual character, Joan of Arc in Lillian Hellman's adaptation of Jean Anouilh's "The Lark." The play had a six-month run, primarily because of the notices for Harris.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/27/arts/gilbert-taylor-celebrated-hollywood-cinematographer-dies-at-99.html?_r=0[/url]
Gilbert Taylor, the British cinematographer behind hit movies like Star Wars, The Omen and Dr. Strangelove, died on Friday at his home on the Isle of Wight. He was 99.
His death was confirmed by his wife, Dee, the BBC reported.
Mr. Taylor brought a cinéma vérité sensibility to black-and-white pictures like the 1964 Beatles comedy A Hard Days Night and Stanley Kubricks cold war satire Dr. Strangelove, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. He ensured that the battle footage in Dr. Strangelove was disturbingly realistic by shooting it like a documentary.
I always list the IMBD credits, but do check these out. It's quite a varied list.
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0852405/[/url]
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)Last edited Tue Oct 15, 2013, 05:33 AM - Edit history (1)
Stanley Kauffmann was film critic for The New Republic for over 50 years. Considered by some as 'old school' for his preference of films with a beginning, middle and an end. He avoided the fawning over the 'auteur of the moment' by some other critics.
He was influential in the acceptance by American audiences of foreign films from all countries including the British Ealing comedies like "Kind Hearts And Coronets."
He left film for a brief stint as NY Times Drama Critic in 1966 that did not end well. After writing that the many gay playwrights could not convincingly portray heterosexual relationships he was fired.
Returning to The New Republic he continued his literate film reviews for another 40+ years.
RIP
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)Dependable character actor who played the tough as nails coach, detective or Army Officer he is credited with 204 appearances in movie and TV roles that spanned four decades. He is memorable in The Longest Yard (1974) and can be seen in the 2005 re-make.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed_Lauter
RIP
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)If you were amazed by a daring, breathtaking stunt in an action movie from the last 40 years it was probably Hal Needham under those trampling horses or in that crashing car.
His stunt work was so flawless and creative that he was requested by name to stunt for the biggest stars, from John Wayne to Burt Reynolds. Later in his career he became a director of films such as the Smokey & The Bandit films and the Cannonball Run films.
Needham was 82. RIP
.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.theguardian.com/culture/2013/oct/08/patrice-chereau[/url]
Unusually for a director, Patrice Chéreau, who has died of lung cancer aged 68, had more or less equally prestigious careers in the theatre, cinema and opera. Although he was internationally known from films such as La Reine Margot (1994) and his groundbreaking production of Richard Wagner's Ring cycle at Bayreuth (1976), he was renowned in his native France mostly for his "must-see" stage productions, especially during his long stints as co-director of the Théâtre National Populaire (1971-77) and the Théâtre des Amandiers (1982-90).
At these two subsidised theatres, in Villeurbanne, near Lyons, and Nanterre, in western Paris, respectively, Chéreau was able to introduce modern plays and bring a freshness to bear on the classics, particularly Marivaux, whose La Dispute he directed to acclaim at the TNP in three different versions in the 1970s. At the Amandiers, his sensational 1983 production of Jean Genet's Les Paravents (The Screens) used the auditorium as an extension of the stage.
(SNIP)
In contrast to the rather melancholy mode of his first few films, La Reine Margot was a rumbustious adaptation of the Alexandre Dumas novel set during the religious war between the Catholics and the Protestants in late-16th-century France. With its battle scenes, sumptuous settings and depiction of the St Bartholomew's day massacre, it was Chéreau's most expensive and at 161 minutes longest film and his biggest box-office success by far. It led to a whole series of historical epics from France.
On a smaller scale and with much handheld camerawork, Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train (Ceux Qui M'Aiment Prendront le Train, 1998), about the interplay of assorted characters on their way to the funeral of a misanthropic, bisexual minor painter (Jean-Louis Trintignant), was melodramatic, sentimental and emptily wordy.
Film credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0161717/[/url]
theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)BBC News
30 October 2013
Actor Nigel Davenport dies at 85
During a career spanning more than 50 years, he appeared in such films as A Man for All Seasons and Chariots of Fire and the TV series Howards' Way.
He worked in theatre, film and television in productions ranging from Shakespeare to soap operas.
His son, the actor Jack Davenport, is best known for his roles in the Pirates of the Caribbean movies and BBC series This Life.
Nigel Davenport, who died on Friday, studied English at Trinity College, Oxford. There he joined the Oxford University Drama Society and decided to pursue a career in acting...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-24738939
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Between this obituary and Noel Harrison's, this has been a week of Six Degrees of Separation.
Nigel Davenport's credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0202638/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)For some reason I never knew he was the son of Rex Harrison and the father of Cathryn Harrison. The former needs no introduction, and the latter has been in myriad British dramas (Story of a Marriage, Clarissa).
I'd also lost track of him over the years, aside from his appearance in the Henry Jaglom film Déjà Vu.
BBC obit:
[url]http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-24621444[/url]
The son of the actor Rex Harrison, he was best known for recording the hit song The Windmills Of Your Mind on The Thomas Crown Affair soundtrack.
It won best song at the 1968 Oscars and was later covered by artists including Dusty Springfield.
(SNIP)
He once said, of recording The Windmills Of Your Mind: "It didn't seem like a big deal at the time. I went to the studio one afternoon and sang it and pretty much forgot about it."
Harrison continued: "I didn't realise until later what a timeless, beautiful piece Michel LeGrand and the Bergmans had written. It turned out to be my most notable piece of work."
Here's a nice tribute, and a look at Harrison's multifaceted life:
[url]http://www.torquayheraldexpress.co.uk/pleasure-meet-Noel-Harrison-rare-Tinseltown/story-20007299-detail/story.html[/url]
Concealed by Noel Harrisons modest exterior was the determination not just of a survivor, but of a winner. It may come as a surprise to learn that he represented Great Britain in the Winter Olympics of 1952 and 1956.
He was the British downhill and slalom champion in 1953, followed by winning the giant slalom championship in 1955.
In 1969 Noel decided that he wanted to get the hell out of Hollywood and do something different. The celebrity life had lost its excitement; there was a complete lack of anonymity and privacy. In those days, he said, it was bad enough, but nowadays it must be insufferable.
This led to him buying a 320 acre property for $23,000 in Nova Scotia, where his wooden house burnt down. So, after a couple of lessons from a neighbouring farmer in Gods own country on how to avoid injuring himself too seriously with his newly bought and non-Health & Safety-approved chainsaw, he set to and built another one. An example unlikely to be followed by most of todays celebrities.
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0365786/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)The New York Times took the high road in their obituary and headline, mentioning her Oscar nominations, but several other news outlets mention the nasty baroness from The Sound of Music in the headlines. Sigh.
I remember being startled to realize that she played Paul Henreid's selfless wife in Between Two Worlds.
[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/10/movies/eleanor-parker-91-oscar-nominated-actress-dies.html?hpw&rref=television[/url]
She was nominated for an Oscar for dramatic roles as a wrongly convicted young prisoner in Caged (1950), a police officers neglected wife in Detective Story (1951) and an opera star with polio in Interrupted Melody (1955), a biography of the Australian soprano Marjorie Lawrence. She also received an Emmy Award nomination in 1963 for an episode of The Eleventh Hour, an NBC series about psychiatric cases.
If she never became a star, admirers contended, it was because of her versatility. Sometimes a blonde, sometimes a brunette, often a redhead, Ms. Parker made indelible impressions but submerged herself in a wide range of characters, from a war heros noble fiancée in Pride of the Marines (1945) to W. Somerset Maughams vicious waitress-prostitute in a remake of Of Human Bondage (1946).
(SNIP)
In 1953, with two recent Oscar nominations to her credit, Ms. Parker talked to The New York Times about her good career luck so far. Things have a way of working out right for me, she said, adding a bit later, I maintain that if you work, believe in yourself and do what is right for you without stepping all over others, the way somehow opens up.
I even got my three wishes granted, she said in the same interview. To be in pictures, to give Mother a mink coat and buy the folks a house.
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0662223/[/url]
With John Garfield in Pride of the Marines
Staph
(6,346 posts)TCM has started showing their "TCM Remembers" for 2013, a remembrance of those associated with films who passed away in 2013. Many of those mentioned have already been remembered within this thread, but I noticed at least one pair who passed underneath my own personal radar.
Virginia Gibson
Virginia Gibson, a singer, dancer and actress who played one of the smitten girls in the classic MGM musical Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, died April 25 in Newtown, Pa. She was 88.
A regular on Broadway for more than decade starting in the 1940s, Gibson received a Tony Award nomination in 1957 for best featured actress in a musical for her work in Happy Hunting opposite Ethel Merman.
In director Stanley Donens Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954), Gibson plays Liza, the dark-haired beauty who winds up with Ephraim (Jacques dAmboise) and leads the girls in the musical number June Bride. The film, one of the most beloved movie musicals in Hollywood history, was nominated for best picture, losing out to On the Waterfront.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/seven-brides-seven-brothers-virginia-gibson-dies-451646
Matt Mattox
Matt Mattox, a dancer, choreographer and teacher who helped shape contemporary jazz dance in the United States and Europe, died in France on Feb. 18. He was 91.
Mr. Mattox, who had made his home in France for many years, had a prominent career dancing in films and on Broadway in the 1940s and afterward. Though he was not as well known as some of the celebrated Hollywood dancers of his era, he was by all accounts every bit their peer.
He was one of the greatest male dancers that ever was on a performing stage, Jacques dAmboise, the distinguished dancer and choreographer, said in a telephone interview. Hes equal to Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly.
As a dancer, Mr. Mattox was celebrated for his ballpoint ease, pinpoint precision, and catlike agility, as Dance magazine wrote in 2007. He was perhaps best known to moviegoers as the young, bearded Caleb Pontipee, one of the marriageable frontiersmen at the heart of the 1954 film Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, directed by Stanley Donen and choreographed by Michael Kidd.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/25/arts/dance/matt-mattox-dancer-in-seven-brides-dies-at-91.html?_r=0
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Thanks for posting that; I'd entirely missed the notices.
I just discovered this blog posting on Virginia Gibson, who was of course one of the standouts among the dancers in Seven Brides for Seven Brothers.
With Jacques d'Amboise
[url]http://laurasmiscmusings.blogspot.com/2013/05/seven-brides-dancer-virginia-gibson.html[/url]
Matt Mattox airborne
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/audrey-totter-film-noir-femme-fatale-dies-at-95/2013/12/14/09fc25a8-64ec-11e3-a373-0f9f2d1c2b61_story.html?tid=pm_pop[/url]
Audrey Totter, an actress who specialized in playing temptresses, dangerous dames and women harboring dark schemes in a series of movies from Hollywoods film noir period of the 1940s and 50s, died Dec. 12 at a hospital in Woodland Hills, Calif. She was 95.
(SNIP)
Only later was she recognized as one of film noirs biggest stars, along with other actresses including Gloria Grahame, Jane Greer and Barbara Stanwyck. Considered B-movie throwaways at the time, noir films are now one of the most avidly studied genres from Hollywoods golden age.
For years nobody bothered with me didn t know who I was, didnt care, she told the Toronto Star in 2000. Now Im recognized on the street, Im asked for my autograph, I get loads of fan mail.
(SNIP)
Who knew these movies would be so popular 50 years later? Maybe its because the world isnt like that anymore. The fantasy of it. They painted with light in those days, its a look that just isnt done anymore.
Credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0869429/[/url]
lavenderdiva
(10,726 posts)Sadly, we lost one of the acting greats yesterday:
http://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/dec/15/peter-o-toole-dies-lawrence-arabia
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)lavenderdiva
(10,726 posts)I loved him in everything he was in- he was one of the greats!!
hope you are having a happy holiday-
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I'm speechless, but TCM has this tribute from a few years back.
Matilda
(6,384 posts)I know Olivia de Havilland is, and last time I saw her in interview, looking amazing for her age - I think she was close to 90 at the time.
But if Joan Fontaine had done nothing other than Rebecca and Suspicion, she'd deservedly be remembered.
Matilda
(6,384 posts)Oh, dear!
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I haven't had a chance to read the obituaries yet, but as far as I know, Joan Fontaine died without reconciling with her sister. That's very sad on many levels, not least of which most of us don't get to live as long as they have.
Matilda
(6,384 posts)And it appeared to be over nothing much at all.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/jan/05/saul-zaentz[/url]
The career of the film producer Saul Zaentz, who has died aged 92, was marked not only by his independence (his productions were often largely self-funded) but also by his dedication to each individual film. Unlike most producers, who have numerous projects on the go, Zaentz worked on just one at a time. This resulted in a relatively short CV but one with a high share of Oscars, including three best picture winners: One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975), Amadeus (1984) and The English Patient (1996).
IMBD credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0951763/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Her credits included Cabin in the Sky, Pinky, Imitation of Life, The Helen Morgan Story, and even Judging Amy!
[url]http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-juanita-moore-20140103,0,6850260.story#axzz2pmKiJHY9[/url]
Moore, who danced in chorus lines at swanky clubs in New York and Paris before throwing herself into her film career, died Wednesday after collapsing in her Los Angeles home. She was 99, according to her grandson Kirk Kelleykahn.
Whatever the case, she was an imposing presence "a large, handsome woman who in her later years might have played Bessie Smith or Ma Rainey," wrote author Sam Staggs in "Born to Be Hurt," a 2009 book about "Imitation of Life."
In the film, Moore moves in with a character played by Lana Turner as the women, both single, raise teenage daughters.
http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-juanita-moore-20140103,0,6850260.story#ixzz2pmLCCtNl
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0601428/?ref_=nv_sr_1[
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-et-mn-ruth-robinson-duccini-95-dies-oz-munchkin-20140116,0,427370.story#axzz2qia5mv6v[/url]
Ruth Robinson Duccini, one of the last members of the troupe of diminutive actors who played Munchkins in the 1939 film classic "The Wizard of Oz," died Thursday after a brief illness at a hospice in Las Vegas, said her son, Fred Duccini. She was 95.
The actress, who lived for many years in Los Angeles before moving to Arizona and later Nevada, was one of 124 "little people," then called midgets, who appeared with Judy Garland in the musical fantasy based on the novel by L. Frank Baum.
In her later years she appeared at "Oz" events across the country. She returned to Hollywood in 2007 when the Munchkins received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Except for Jerry Maren (born Gerard Marenghi), there are no other known members of the Munchkins troupe alive at this writing, at least if we're talking about the adults in the Munchkinland sequence.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I was astonished by a few of the details in his obituary, including revelations about talents beyond those as actor and director.
[url]http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/celebrities/oscar-winning-actor-maximilian-schell-dies-at-83/2014/02/01/d883f642-8b4a-11e3-a760-a86415d0944d_story.html[/url]
The son of Swiss playwright Hermann Ferdinand Schell and Austrian stage actress Noe von Nordberg, Schell was born in Vienna on Dec. 8, 1930 and raised in Switzerland after his family fled Germanys annexation of his homeland.
Schell followed in the footsteps of his older sister Maria and brother Carl, making his stage debut in 1952. He then appeared in a number of German films before relocating to Hollywood in 1958.
By then, Maria Schell was already an international film star, winning the best actress award at the 1954 Cannes Film Festival for her performance in The Last Bridge.
Maximilian made his Hollywood debut in Edward Dmytryks The Young Lions, a World War II drama starring Marlon Brando, Montgomery Clift and Dean Martin.
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001703/[/url]
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Last edited Thu Apr 10, 2014, 06:16 PM - Edit history (1)
April 23, 1928 - February 10, 2014
Staph
(6,346 posts)"Mickey Rooney, the pint-sized actor who was one of MGMs giant box office attractions in the late 30s and early 40s, died on Sunday at his home in North Hollywood. He was 93.
"As adept at comedy as drama and an excellent singer and dancer, Rooney was regarded as the consummate entertainer. During a prolific career on stage and screen that spanned eight decades (Ive been working all my life, but it seems longer, he once said), he was nominated for four Academy Awards and received two special Oscars, the Juvenile Award in 1939 (shared with Deanna Durbin) and one in 1983 for his body of work.
"He also appeared on series and TV and in made for television movies, one of which, Bill, the touching story of a mentally challenged man, won him an Emmy. He was Emmy nominated three other times. And for Sugar Babies, a musical revue in which he starred with Ann Miller, he was nominated for a Tony in 1980."
http://variety.com/2014/film/news/mickey-rooney-golden-age-box-office-giant-dies-at-93-1201153308/
(Though this story has been all over General Discussion and the DU Lounge, it seemed only proper that we remember and celebrate the Mick here in Classic Films.)
pengillian101
(2,351 posts)He was a cute young man and Donna Reed was a knockout when she wanted to be.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I wasn't at all familiar with his story! Read on.
[url]http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/herb-jeffries-jazz-balladeer-and-star-of-all-black-cowboy-movies-dies/2014/05/26/a2416490-c5da-11df-94e1-c5afa35a9e59_story.html?hpid=z5[/url]
Herb Jeffries, a jazz balladeer whose matinee-idol looks won him fame in the late 1930s as the Bronze Buckaroo the first singing star of all-black cowboy movies for segregated audiences died May 25 at a hospital in West Hills, Calif. He was widely believed to be 100, but for years he insisted he was much older.
The cause was stomach and heart ailments, said Raymond Strait, a friend of 70 years who had been working with Mr. Jeffries on his autobiography. Mr. Jeffries liked to exaggerate his age to shock listeners. He wanted people to say, Wow, he can still sing pretty good for 111, Strait said.
Mr. Jeffries had a seven-decade career on film, television, record and in nightclubs. His baritone voice extraordinarily rich but delicate was memorably captured on his greatest musical success, a 1941 hit recording of Flamingo with Duke Ellingtons big band.
With a towering physique and a square jaw, Mr. Jeffries was perfectly suited to capitalize on the singing-cowboy movie craze that Gene Autry and Roy Rogers popularized in the 1930s.
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Last edited Fri Jan 27, 2017, 05:15 AM - Edit history (1)
Gordon Hugh Willis, Jr., ASC (May 28, 1931 May 18, 2014) was an American cinematographer. He was best known for his work on Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather series as well as Woody Allen's Annie Hall and Manhattan.
His fellow cinematographer William Fraker had called Willis' work "a milestone in visual storytelling", while one critic suggested that "more than any other director of photography, Willis defined the cinematic look of the 1970s: sophisticated compositions in which bolts of light and black put the decade's moral ambiguities into stark relief".
When the International Cinematographers Guild conducted a survey in 2003, they placed Willis among the ten most influential cinematographers in history.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Willis
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)And thank you for providing the tribute. I had Gordon Willis on my list of figures in the film industry that belonged on this thread.
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Willis certainly pushed the envelope. His contributions to American cinema are huge.
I think the cinematographer is the most unheralded artist on set.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)There are a number of film figures who have left us recently and I've been meaning to post their obituaries quite literally for months. I'm going to start catching up, beginning with Oswald Morris.
[url]http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/mar/19/oswald-morris[/url]
The Oscar-winning British cinematographer Oswald Morris, who has died aged 98, will be remembered for many classics, including Moulin Rouge, Fiddler on the Roof, Moby Dick and Lolita. He worked with some of the great directors, John Huston, Sidney Lumet, Carol Reed, Stanley Kubrick and Franco Zeffirelli. Many of Morris's films are landmarks in the history of colour cinematography. For Moulin Rouge (1952) he used filters to create a style reminiscent of paintings by Toulouse-Lautrec. For Fiddler on the Roof (1971), which won him an Oscar, he filmed with a silk stocking over the lens to give a sepia effect.
Morris also shot popular favourites such as The Guns of Navarone (1961), Oliver! (1968), The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965) and The Man Who Would Be King (1975), and photographed acting luminaries: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Gregory Peck and Humphrey Bogart. He was at the height of his profession for 30 years.
His credits, as per IMDB:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005807/[/url]
Pictured: Fiddler on the Roof (1971)
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/gone-wind-actress-mary-anderson-694266[/url]
Mary Anderson, who played Maybelle Merriwether in Gone With the Wind and was one of the nine survivors cast adrift from a torpedoed ship in Alfred Hitchcocks Lifeboat, has died. She was 96.
(SNIP)
While attending Howard College (now Samford University) in her native Birmingham, Ala., Anderson was discovered by director George Cukor, who was searching for an actress to play Scarlett OHara in the adaptation of Margaret Mitchells Civil War epic Gone With the Wind (1939).
Cukor was fired, and the role of OHara went to Vivien Leigh, who went on to capture the best actress Oscar. Anderson was cast in a small role as Maybelle, Scarletts cousin and the wife of Louisiana native Rene Picard (Alberto Morin).
In Lifeboat (1944), Anderson played U.S. Army nurse Alice Mackenzie opposite Tallulah Bankhead, William Bendix, Walter Slezak, John Hodiak and Hume Cronyn in the claustrophobic Hitchcock drama.
IMDB entry:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0027156/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Yes, Rhett really was her surname, and she was even a native Southerner, born in Savannah and relocated to Charleston.
TCM has a lovely write-up:
[url]http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/person/160752|180318/Alicia-Rhett/[/url]
[url]http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/03/showbiz/alicia-rhett-dies/[/url]
Rhett was doing local theater productions when she was spotted for a role in the 1939 classic "Gone With the Wind," a film based on Margaret Mitchell's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel.
She was cast as India Wilkes, sister of plantation owner Ashley Wilkes who was at odds with Scarlet O'Hara, played by Vivien Leigh.
While the runaway success and continued notoriety of "Gone With the Wind" made Rhett recognizable nationwide, she did not pursue the limelight. Instead of heading to Hollywood, Rhett went back to Charleston.
In the coastal South Carolina city, she developed a reputation as a talented artist, producing works seen in the state library and in many plantations in the area, as well as sketches of her fellow "Gone With the Wind" cast members, according to Borts.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Platt is the one in the purple shirt.
No, the age is not a typo.
And his bio is just amazing!
[url]http://www.theguardian.com/stage/2014/apr/09/marc-platt[/url]
Marc Platt was one of the first Americans to join the Ballets Russes, and at the time of his death, aged 100, among the very last survivors. Tall and loose-limbed, with red hair and freckles, he must have seemed an unlikely addition to the ranks of the largely Russian company. But when Michel Fokine saw Platoff as he had been hastily renamed playing the role of Dodon, the archetypal foolish tsar in his ballet Le Coq d'Or, the choreographer exclaimed: "I didn't think anyone could be more Russian."
In 1943, Platt created the leading role of Curly in the dream ballet sequence of the Broadway hit Oklahoma!, and he also appeared as a minor character in the 1955 film version of the show. His two best-known film roles, however, were as brother Daniel Pontipee in the musical Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) and in the Rita Hayworth film Tonight and Every Night (1945). In the latter, Platt is shown auditioning for a theatre similar to the Windmill in London. Having failed to bring music with him, he dances to music from the radio, changing styles as the theatre owner switches stations, moving instantly and effortlessly between classical, tap, swing and flamenco in a tour de force.
The son of a French violinist who had moved to the US and a soprano singer, Marcel Le Plat was born in Pasadena, California. The family travelled widely but eventually settled in Seattle, where Marcel studied first at the Cornish school (now Cornish College of the Arts) and then for eight years with the dancer and trainer Mary Ann Wells. It was Wells who, in 1935, arranged an audition for him with Wassily de Basil and Léonide Massine, respectively director and choreographer of the Ballets Russes. Once accepted, he immediately joined the company on its tour, making his stage debut a few days later.
By Platt's own account, the occasion was little short of a disaster. He was taller than any of the troupe's other men, and once he was on stage his ill-fitting costume began to fall apart. Worse was to come with the last ballet of the evening, the Polovtsian dances from Prince Igor. Equipped like all his fellow dancers with a genuine bow, crossing the stage at full speed he mistakenly turned right instead of left and caught his weapon in that of his neighbour, thus causing a major pileup of warriors. "What you were trying to do? Kill everybody?" hissed one of his fellow dancers, adding, "This is ballet. Not war."
This is fun:
His IMDB page:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0686885/?ref_=fn_nm_nm_2[/url]
Always do what you love as long as you can. - Marc Platt
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://variety.com/2014/film/news/eli-wallach-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly-villain-dies-at-98-1201246070/[/url]
Tony- and Emmy-winning actor Eli Wallach, a major proponent of the Method style of acting best known for his starring role in Elia Kazans film Baby Doll and for his role as villain Tuco in iconic spaghetti Western The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, died on Tuesday, according to the New York Times. He was 98.
On the bigscreen Wallach had few turns as a leading man, but none was as strong as his first starring role in 1956s Baby Doll, in which he played a leering cotton gin owner intent on seducing the virgin bride (Carroll Baker) of his business rival (Karl Malden). But he appeared in more than 80 films, offering colorful turns in character roles in movies such as The Magnificent Seven, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Nuts, Lord Jim, The Misfits and The Two Jakes.
The actor, who appeared in a wide variety of stage, screen and television roles, was often paired with his wife Anne Jackson, particularly onstage. In 1948 he was one of the core of 20 who joined Kazan, Cheryl Crawford and Bobby Lewis in starting the Actors Studio, where he studied with Lee Strasberg. Others included Jackson, David Wayne, Marlon Brando, Patricia Neal and Maureen Stapleton.
Wallach received an Honorary Academy Award at the second annual Governors Awards, presented on Nov. 13, 2010, for a lifetimes worth of indelible screen characters.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Yet he did so much more, appearing in everything from rodeos to radio to films such as Stella Dallas and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.
[url]http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/dickie-jones-child-cowboy-who-became-the-voice-pinocchio-in-disney-film-dies-at-87/2014/07/08/a22918f4-06cc-11e4-a0dd-f2b22a257353_story.html[/url]
Despite more than 100 film and television credits, Dickie Jones was best known for a movie in which his face was never seen. As a child actor, he voiced the role of Pinocchio in the enduring 1940 animated film by Walt Disney.
Mr. Jones, who died July 7 at age 87, began performing when he was 4 and was billed as the worlds youngest trick rider and trick roper in his native Texas. He became a protege of the cowboy actor Hoot Gibson and had begun appearing in a series of low-budget westerns by the time he was 7.
After roles in the Our Gang serial and in the 1937 melodrama Stella Dallas, starring Barbara Stanwyck, Mr. Jones won an audition to become the voice of Pinocchio. He beat out 200 other child actors for the part.
Pinocchio was Disneys second full-length animated feature, following Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937).
It seems that as a young boy he had a number of small, at times uncredited roles in classic movies -- Young Mr. Lincoln, Destry Rides Again, etc.
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0427934/[/url]
With Jimmy Stewart in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Matilda
(6,384 posts)Legendary American actress Lauren Bacall, who hypnotised the world from the moment she burst onto the silver screen in the 1940s, has died at the age of 89.
"A family member tells us Bacall had a massive stroke Tuesday morning at her home," entertainment website TMZ reported
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-08-13/lauren-bacall-dies-aged-89/5667500
I wasn't an avid fan of her acting, but she was one of a kind, and that in itself is an achievement. A feisty - not to say difficult - lady at times, she definitely had a powerful on-screen presence (and off-screen too).
RIP, Lauren. One of the last of a dying breed - a true individual.
Response to Staph (Original post)
Name removed Message auto-removed
Staph
(6,346 posts)'Andrew V. McLaglen, a specialist with the sagebrush who directed John Wayne in five films and helmed scores of episodes of the classic CBS Western series Gunsmoke, Have Gun Will Travel and Rawhide, has died. He was 94.
'McLaglen, whose father was the Oscar-winning British actor Victor McLaglen, died Saturday at his Friday Harbor home in the San Juan Islands of Washington state, the Journal of the San Juan Islands reported.
. . .
'In a 2009 interview, McLaglen talked about spending two weeks on the set of Gunga Din shortly after he graduated from high school.
'I got to see [director] George Stevens, Cary Grant, my father and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. in action, which was quite an experience! he recalled. I just kept out of the way, because they were working hard; they had a picture to make! I had another school buddy with me at the time, we were 18 and 19 years old, and we had a terrific time. We got to know Cary and Doug Jr. and Joan Fontaine; what a great group of people they were! And George Stevens in years to come, whenever I bumped into him, we would always talk about those Gunga Din days, because I think that was one of his favorite projects.'
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/director-andrew-v-mclaglen-dies-729718
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Thanks for putting that up.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Last edited Sun Sep 21, 2014, 09:39 PM - Edit history (1)
With Robert Mitchum in Cape Fear
Film role info below, with a SPOILER ALERT.
[url]http://www.cbsnews.com/news/emmy-winning-actress-and-singer-polly-bergen-dies-at-84/[/url]
In 1964's "Kisses for My President," Bergen was cast as the first female U.S. president, with Fred MacMurray as First Gentleman. (In the end, the president quits when she gets pregnant.) When Geena Davis portrayed a first woman president in the 2005 TV drama "Commander in Chief," Bergen was cast as her mother.
Among her other films was "Move Over, Darling" (1963) with Doris Day and James Garner, Susan Seidelman's 1987 "Making Mr. Right," and John Waters' 1990 "Cry-Baby," with Johnny Depp.
A fierce ambition prevailed throughout Bergen's entertainment career and in her business life. She walked out of early contracts with Paramount and MGM because she thought her film roles were inadequate.
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000917/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I particularly hate having to write this one, because it's far too soon, and the circumstances are so sad, and I admired Elizabeth Pena.
As offensive as the premise of I Married Dora sounds from the description below, the show did take a serious turn when Pena's character made reference to the civil war in El Salvador.
[url]http://variety.com/2014/tv/news/elizabeth-pena-cause-of-death-1201336835/[/url]
[url]http://www.nj.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2014/10/elizabeth_pentilde_appreciation_an_actress_who_didnt_get_the_credit_or_roles_she_deserved.html#incart_story_package[/url]
A Cuban-American who studied at New York City's High School for the Performing Arts, Peña displayed a curious mixture of sensuality and tenderness in almost every part: That's what enabled her to play both alluring troublemakers (see "Down and Out in " and her voice work in "The Incredibles" and warm-hearted matrons (see "Tortilla Soup" and "Nothing Like the Holidays" . In arguably her best role, as a widow rekindling things with her onetime boyfriend (Chris Cooper) in John Sayles' "Lone Star," those seeming contradictions played beautifully off one another.
"Liz Peña was an incredible actress and a great person," John Sayles told The Star-Ledger's film critic Stephen Whitty. "It was a joy to work with her on `Lone Star' and we'll all miss her."
Alas, the great parts proved few and far between. Some of this may have been because she was ahead of her time: She emerged on the scene a decade or so before American audiences were ready to embrace complex portraits of Latina characters. In 1987, Pena landed the co-starring role in an ABC sitcom called "I Married Dora." The premise was retrograde and racist man marries his Salvadoran housekeeper to keep her from being deported; hijinks ensue and the show lasted only a half-season.
Credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001615/[/url]
With Chris Cooper in Lone Star
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)The writer, director, and comedy legend Mike Nichols died November 19th.
Born Michael Igor Peschkowsky in Berlin in 1931, Nichols fled Germany when he was just a boy. As a young man he studied with Lee Strasberg, and in 1960 made his Broadway debut as a performer. His first Broadway directorial credit was for Barefoot in the Park three years later.
[url]http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/director-mike-nichols-dies-age-83-n252326[/url]
Nichols was one of a small handful of people to win an Emmy, a Tony, a Grammy and an Oscar. His body of work included some of the defining American films of the second half of the 20th century, among them Working Girl, Silkwood and The Birdcage. He won an Oscar in 1968 for the seminal comedy The Graduate.
Across an extraordinary five-decade career, he won both popular success and critical acclaim as he moved easily between farces, political satires, romantic dramas and literary adaptations. He was known as an actors director who gave his performers the freedom to be loose and theatrical.
Theres nothing better than discovering, to your own astonishment, what youre meant to do, he once said. Its like falling in love.
He was a natural-born filmmaker. Nichols had never stepped behind the camera when Warner Brothers asked him to direct the Virginia Woolf adaptation in 1966. But the finished product was technically self-assured and thematically mature and Nichols quickly followed it with the cultural touchstone The Graduate.
[url]http://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/postscript-mike-nichols[/url]
To pick one item from his many résumés seems impractical, not to say unfair. The Nichols filmography is extensive, and it represents more than forty years of work, but whether it actually represents the best of himwhether cinema, as it were, occupied more than a couple of octaves on the keyboardis another matter. Many readers of Oscar Wilde, Richard Ellmanns majestic 1989 biography, were left with the disarming suspicion that, however crystalline Wildes plays are (and one of them is without flaw), they somehow fall short of maximum Wildeness, and that the importance of being Oscar outshone even the dazzle of his dramatic prose. Nichols, of course, was far less tempted to self-dramatize than Wilde, and the regular striking of a public pose did not concern him; nonetheless, when you survey the richness of his gifts, a movie like Working Girl (1986), deft and diverting as it was, feels a little limitedlacking the gleeful pulse that Sydney Pollack brought to Tootsie, for instance, earlier in the decade. The smoother the expertise that Nichols displayed, the more you found yourself wondering if his passions lay elsewhere, and, indeed, what they might consist of. At a distance, it seems bizarre that a filmmaker of such well-tempered urbanity was ever considered the right choice for the rousing, barely controllable comic indignation of Catch-22. Why should anyone expect an antiwar broadside from a director whose idea of an antibourgeois, as enshrined in The Graduate, was a polite young fellow with excellent grades and a well-pressed jacket and tie? As the wicked parody of Benjamin Braddock, in Mad magazine, put it, to Nicholss bemusement and delight: Mom, how come Im Jewish and you and Dad arent?
That is one of many tales retold in Pictures from a Revolution, Mark Harriss delectable book on the Oscar-nominated pictures of 1967. One of them was The Graduate, and addicts of counterfactual history will lap up Harriss disclosure that Nicholss early choices, for the roles of Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, were Ronald Reagan and Doris Day. How much would you have paid to see that movie? (Calamity Jane, are you trying to seduce me? ) The only surprise is that Nichols failed to snag them. His eye for casting never dimmed, and actors swarmed to him, as if unbidden. Meryl Streep was there for Silkwood (1983), Heartburn (1986), and Postcards from the Edge (1988). Later, in the same vein, though on a smaller screen, Nichols turned to Emma Thompson, for Primary Colors (1998), Wit (2001), and Angels in America (2003). We should expect no less, from a guy whose climb to fame began in the company of Elaine May. Their duologues stand up astoundingly well, even now, and the equality and fraternity of their act, as they strop their eager wits on one another, has grown more touching with age. If anything, by a hairs breadth, she has the edge.
Credits:
[url]http://ibdb.com/person.php?id=7767[/url]
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001566/[/url]
With Elaine May
Matilda
(6,384 posts)Luise Rainer, who has died aged 104, left Nazi Germany for Hollywood and soared to fame in the 1930s as the first star to win back-to-back Oscars, then quit films at the peak of her career for occasional stage work and roles as a wife, mother and mountain climb
Rainer was a child of middle-class Jews in Dusseldorf and Hamburg during World War I and came of age in a new Germany of depression, starvation and revolution. Under Max Reinhardt's direction, she became a young stage and film star in Vienna and Berlin, performing Pirandello and Shaw. She watched the Reichstag burn in 1933 and heard Hitler on the radio. In 1934 an MGM scout signed her to a contract.
She sailed to America on the Ile de France in 1935, a rail thin ingenue with dark hair and a sweet girlish smile, too innocent for celebrity. But it seemed everyone on board knew who she was. On her 25th birthday, the stewards arranged a celebration in the saloon, and she was serenaded by the Russian operatic bass Feodor Chaliapin and the great violinist Mischa Elman.
(snip)
More than seven decades later, as she celebrated her centenary in 2010, Rainer, in an interview with The Scotsman, looked back on Hollywood's golden era with a hint of revenge.
"I was one of the horses of the Louis Mayer stable, and I thought the films I was given after my Academy Awards were not worthy," she said. "I couldn't stand it anymore. Like a fire, it went to Louis Mayer, and I was called to him. He said, 'We made you, and we are going to kill you.'
"And I said: 'Mister Mayer, you did not make me. God made me. I am now in my 20s. You are an old man,' which of course was an insult. 'By the time I am 40 you will be dead.'
http://www.smh.com.au/comment/obituaries/silver-screen-star-luise-rainer-takes-her-final-bow-20150101-12ge29.html
I enjoyed what little I have seen of her work I think it's fair to say that Mayer and MGM didn't know what to do with her. Only she (and the music of Johann Strauss) could lift the schmalz of a film like The Great Waltz into something watchable. And these days, the casting of The Good Earth would be regarded as politically incorrect, but incorrect or no, they don't come much better than Luise Rainer.
Mayer might have ruined her career, but what an amazing life she had; what an extraordinary woman she was.
R.I.P.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/jun/11/christopher-lee-dies-at-the-age-of-93-dracula[/url]
Sir Christopher Lee, known as the master of horror, has died at the age of 93 after being hospitalised for respiratory problems and heart failure.
The veteran actor, immortalised in films from Dracula to The Wicker Man, and via James Bond villainy to the Lord of the Rings trilogy, died at 8.30am on Sunday morning at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London.
(SNIP)
The actor was knighted in 2009 for services to drama and charity, and was awarded the Bafta fellowship in 2011.
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000489/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)[url]http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/06/11/413674728/ron-moody-who-delighted-audiences-as-fagin-in-oliver-dies[/url]
Ronald Moodnick was born in North London. His parents were of Russian-Jewish descent. Moody attended the London School of Economics but cherished his hobby appearing in musical revues. Had he not become a professional actor, Moody once said, he would've been an accountant.
Throughout his career, Moody played a variety of parts on stage and screen: Captain Hook in Peter Pan; an actor/manager in the Miss Marple movie Murder Most Foul. He was the greedy count Ippolit Vorobyaninov in Mel Brooks' comedy Twelve Chairs. He had numerous guest appearances on such TV shows as The Avengers and EastEnders. One of his big regrets, he often said, was turning down the chance to play the lead in Doctor Who.
Moody once told NPR he was raised on American musicals from the 1930s. "When I was young, they [Americans] were the great masters of the musical," Moody said in a 1988 interview. "I'll never forget seeing Guys and Dolls over and over. I used to sit up in the coliseum watching this magnificent musical. Brilliant."
A notorious improviser, Moody had a reputation for changing up lines to get bigger laughs during the London stage version of Oliver! something his fellow actors apparently didn't like much. In a 2006 interview with the Wales on Sunday newspaper, Moody defended himself, saying, "I grew up with music hall and revue and was used to filling in the little gaps here and there to get bigger audience reaction." He added that there are two kinds of actors: "The anarchist to whom the theatre is a playground and the neurotic to whom it's a cage."
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0600531/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)She appeared as part of a love triangle in the film Passione d'Amore, which was later reconceived as the musical Passion.
New York Times obituary:
[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/23/movies/laura-antonelli-leading-italian-actress-dies-at-73.html?_r=0[/url]
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000773/[/url]
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Dickie Moore, who gained fame in the Our Gang series, was one of the few surviving actors who'd worked in the silent era. For all that I grew up watching him in the Little Rascals shorts on WPIX, I never really knew him by name the way I did other child actors of the era. As a result, the obituary was full of jaw-dropping revelations.
[url]http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-dickie-moore-20150912-story.html[/url]
Born John Richard Moore Jr. on Sept 12, 1925, in Los Angeles, he was known for his big brown eyes, mop of dark hair and cherubic face. Even as a baby, his looks got him a job a casting director spotted him at 11 months and wanted him for a scene in the film "The Beloved Rogue" starring John Barrymore.
(SNIP)
Moore quickly became a steadily working actor. By the time he was in the "Our Gang" short "Hook and Ladder" (1932), he had appeared in more than 30 features and shorts.
(SNIP)
Even while appearing in the shorts, Moore was getting feature exposure, most prominently in Josef von Sternberg's "Blonde Venus" (1932) in which he played the son of Marlene Dietrich, and "So Big!" (1932) starring Barbara Stanwyck, one of his favorites to work with.
"Affectionate and demonstrative, she was easy to understand," he wrote in his book. "She was a direct and gracious woman, who seemed extremely interested in whatever interested me."
Have a look at his IMDB credits below. For me, there were a number of surprises.
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0601129/[/url]
Auggie
(31,807 posts)January 26, 2016
Though his classic film resume is short, it contains one very memorable role: Tessio in The Godfather. The scene in which he realizes his murder is imminent is one for the ages. No one could have done it better.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)There have been a number of notables we've lost over the last couple of months, and I am going to begin with the most recent one, Patty Duke.
[url]http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-patty-duke-20160330-story.html[/url]
Patty Duke came to fame as a teenager, combining both a masterful talent for dramatic acting with a sunny, all-American image that enchanted both TV and film audiences. But her admirers had no clue about the much-uglied reality of Duke's childhood, marred by nightmarish abuse and exploitation. Overcoming her troubles in her adult years, Duke became an outspoken advocate for mental health causes.
Duke, who won an Oscar at age 16 for her portrayal of Helen Keller in "The Miracle Worker" but was more known for her bouncy 1960s TV sitcom "The Patty Duke Show," died Tuesday at age 69 at a hospital in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho
(SNIP)
It wasn't until 1982 that a psychiatrist diagnosed Duke with bipolar disorder, then known as manic depression. With a combination of medication and therapy, the actress was eventually able to reach equilibrium. In 1988, she revealed her long battle with mental illness and the harrowing abuse she'd suffered as a child in her autobiography, "Call Me Anna," written with Times film critic Kenneth Turan. The book, which became a bestseller and was made into a 1990 TV movie for ABC (in which Duke also starred), is widely credited with helping to remove the stigma attached to mental illness.
(SNIP)
Duke's struggles with mental illness did little to dampen her popularity within the industry. She served as president of the Screen Actors Guild from 1985 to 1988, the second female president of the union.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Marvin Kaplan's career began in the 1940s with the classic Tracy-Hepburn film Adam's Rib and continued up through the first two decades of the 21st century. Character actor, writer, producer, voice-over artist -- he did it all.
Thanks for the memories, Mr. Kaplan, and we'll be seeing (and hearing) you.
[url]https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/marvin-kaplan-character-actor-who-won-laughs-in-adams-rib-and-alice-dies-at-89/2016/08/26/3ef722d8-6afe-11e6-99bf-f0cf3a6449a6_story.html[/url]
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0438322/[/url]
Auggie
(31,807 posts)January 26th, 2017
Born Krekor Ohanian in Fresno, Calif., on Aug. 15, 1925, Connors served in the Army Air Force during World War II, then came to Westwood on a basketball scholarship. While aiming for law school, he developed a passion for acting and appeared in several plays. He was encouraged by Oscar-winning writer-director William Wellman (A Star Is Born), who spotted him while he played for the Bruins.
Connors got his professional start in 1952 in an RKO release, Sudden Fear, as Touch Connors (Touch had been his nickname at UCLA). He continued in small roles for a number of years, with turns in Island in the Sky (1953), starring John Wayne, and as a herder in The Ten Commandments (1956) with Charlton Heston.
He changed his name to Mike Connors in 1958 and appeared in such movies as Live Fast, Die Young (1958) and Situation Hopeless
But Not Serious (1965), which starred Alec Guinness. He landed one of his best early movie roles in the 1966 remake of Stagecoach, playing the cardsharp.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/mike-connors-dead-star-mannix-was-91-969213
He made his TV debut in 1954 with a role on Ford Theatre and continued with numerous small roles while gaining recognition as a heavy in such Westerns as Gunsmoke, Maverick, Wagon Train and Cimarron City.
Connors is best remembered, however, for his TV series Mannix, which ran for eight seasons (from September 1967 until April 1975) on CBS.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I remember reading an article about him back in the '70s and learning that he was Armenian.
And of course we never missed Mannix when it was running! It was part of the TV ritual.
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Auggie
(31,807 posts)December 15, 2016
Fran Jeffries, a lithe, silky-voiced singer and dancer who performed a showstopping samba in the 1963 film The Pink Panther and tantalized Tony Curtis with a seductive performance of the title song in Sex and the Single Girl a year later, died on Thursday at her home in Los Angeles. She was 79.
The cause was multiple myeloma, her granddaughter Zoë Sandler said on Tuesday.
Ms. Jeffries was well known on the cabaret and Las Vegas circuit as the singing partner of Dick Haymes, her husband, when the director Blake Edwards added a scene in The Pink Panther to showcase her talents.
Dressed in a black cat-suit and singing in Italian, she slithered her way around an Alpine ski chalet performing the Henry Mancini song Meglio Stasera (English title: It Had Better Be Tonight), as the bewitched cast looked on.
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/20/movies/fran-jeffries-an-actress-who-performed-a-sexy-samba-in-the-pink-panther-dies-at-79.html?_r=0
Nobody owns Meglio Stasera like Jeffries.
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Michael Ballhaus, a cinematographer who brought lyricism and light to films by Martin Scorsese, Rainer Werner Fassbinder and a string of other eminent directors, died on Tuesday at his home in Berlin. He was 81.
His manager, Angela Carbonetti, confirmed the death, after a short illness.
Mr. Ballhaus, who began his career as a television camera operator in his native Germany, became one of the most sought-after cinematographers in the world. Nominated for three Academy Awards, he masterminded the look of pictures as visually diverse as latter-day noir, sanguinary gangster films and music videos.
With a filmography of more than 100 pictures, he worked alongside Mike Nichols, Francis Ford Coppola, Paul Newman, Robert Redford and Barry Levinson, among other directors.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/14/arts/michael-ballhaus-cinematographer-dead.html?_r=0
His famous one-take Copacabana Shot from Goodfellas, below. As someone posted on Facebook, "the bravado of that sequence represents the bravado of that character" -- smart way to sum it up.
Hats off to Ballhaus, Martin Scorcese, all the gaffers, assorted crew, actors, etc for pulling off that flawless endeavor.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)There are any number of people who haven't yet gotten their due. Details to follow.
Staph
(6,346 posts)I've neglected this thread myself. Should it be pinned to the top of the Classic Films group?
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Staph
(6,346 posts)Auggie
(31,807 posts)Or any film 10, 20 or 30+ years old?
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)...and so does TCM. They do find rarities and forgotten treasures, and run all the expected classics -- the Thin Man series, for instance -- but they've also aired some interesting choices. Corvette Summer, anyone?
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)In film after film, Loren Janes leaped from speeding trains, jumped from towering cliffs and roared through city streets in gravity-defying car chases. Thats him flying headlong into a saguaro cactus in How the West Was Won. Thats him tumbling down a staircase alongside a drunken John Wayne in McLintock! And thats him not Steve McQueen fishtailing down Taylor Street in San Francisco at 90 mph in Bullitt.
In a career that spanned decades and with a resume that included westerns, thrillers, comedies, dramas and science fiction, Mr. Janes was the person the studio could count on when the script called for someone to be thrown from a window, dropped into the ocean or shot dead outside a saloon.
There is a certain idiot element with some stunt people, but Loren was just the opposite, said Mark Evanier, a Los Angeles comic book and television writer. He took his work seriously and, remarkably, he never broke a bone.
A lifelong Los Angeles resident, Mr. Janes died June 24 at 85. He had Alzheimers disease. He outlived many of the actors he was hired to double in scenes deemed too risky for a highly paid celebrity.
More on him here:
https://signalscv.com/2017/07/07/stuntman-loren-janes-remembered-bravery-love/
IMDB credits:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0416713/
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)You've seen him in something: TV's All Creatures, Great and Small, Ang Lee's big-screen adaptation of Sense and Sensibility, even the Harry Potter series before he was no longer insurable due to age (or so the story went).
And I remember Robert Hardy hosting a series on ghosts of the British Isles. Safe travels, Mr. H., safe travels.
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/aug/03/robert-hardy-harry-potter-actor-dies
His early years as an actor were at the Shakespeare Memorial theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon where, while playing Henry V, he developed what became a lifelong interest in the longbow, later publishing two books on the subject.
In his later career, Hardy played Cornelius Fudge, in the Harry Potter movies about the boy wizard, but he came to national attention in 1977 when he was offered the role of the mercurial, cantankerous Siegfried in All Creatures Great and Small, based on the memoirs of the Yorkshire vet Alf Wright who used the pseudonym James Herriot. The stories and chemistry between the actors helped it become one of the BBCs most successful and popular family evening dramas.
(SNIP)
Hardy played Churchill on numerous occasions, notably in the 1981 ITV series Winston Churchill: The Wilderness Years for which he won a Bafta.
His IMDB credits:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0362735/
Auggie
(31,807 posts)New York Times / August 20, 2017
Jerry Lewis, the comedian and filmmaker who was adored by many, disdained by others, but unquestionably a defining figure of American entertainment in the 20th century, died on Sunday morning at his home in Las Vegas. He was 91.
Mr. Lewis knew success in movies, on television, in nightclubs, on the Broadway stage and in the university lecture hall. His career had its ups and downs, but when it was at its zenith there were few stars any bigger. And he got there remarkably quickly.
Barely out of his teens, he shot to fame shortly after World War II with a nightclub act in which the rakish, imperturbable Dean Martin crooned and the skinny, hyperactive Mr. Lewis capered around the stage, a dangerously volatile id to Mr. Martins supremely relaxed ego.
After his break with Mr. Martin in 1956, Mr. Lewis went on to a successful solo career, eventually writing, producing and directing many of his own films.
MORE: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/20/movies/jerry-lewis-dead-celebrated-comedian-and-filmmaker.html
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)The Guardian's obituary:
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/oct/19/danielle-darrieux-obituary
There are few actors who embodied many peoples idea of a French woman of the world more than Danielle Darrieux, who has died aged 100. Starting as an ingenue in the 1930s, she grew into a sophisticate in the 40s and 50s, and retained a dignified and magical presence in films into the new century.
The outstanding examples of her art were the three films Darrieux made with the German-born Max Ophüls when she was in her 30s. In La Ronde (1950), she played the married woman who is seduced by a student (Daniel Gélin). The second and best of the three adapted tales by Guy de Maupassant in Le Plaisir (House of Pleasure, 1952) is La Maison Tellier, in which Darrieux played one of a group of prostitutes paying an annual holiday visit to the country. But it was the title role of Madame de ... (1953, released in English as The Earrings of Madame de ) that gave her even more of a chance to shine as a fickle socialite who sells her earrings to pay off a debt, unbeknown to her husband (Charles Boyer).
Her IMDB page:
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0201638/?ref_=fn_nm_nm_1
Auggie
(31,807 posts)(CNN)
Broadway and television actress Rose Marie, best known for her role as Sally Rogers on "The Dick Van Dyke Show," died Thursday (Dec 28, 2017), her publicist said, citing her family. She was 94.
Born Rose Marie Mazetta on August 15, 1923, in New York, she began performing at age 3 by winning an amateur contest that took her to Atlantic City, New Jersey. She soon began performing on network radio.
SNIP
Rose Marie starred as Baby Rose Marie in several of the earliest talking films, according to The National Museum of American History. She donated several personal items to the museum, including her trademark black hair bow and shoes from her radio days.
One of those early films was 1933's "International House" with W.C. Fields, Cab Calloway and Bela Lugosi, according to IMDb.
http://www.cnn.com/2017/12/28/entertainment/rose-marie-dies/index.html
Carl Reiner (via Twitter): "There's never been a more engaging & multi-talented performer. In a span of 90 years, since she was four, dear Rosie performed on radio, in vaudeville, night clubs, films, TV, & Vegas & always had audiences clamoring for "more!!"
Incredible career and great talent.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)I've been following her on Twitter, and it's sad to know we won't have her with us as we go into 2018.
Auggie
(31,807 posts)her career is fascinating. She did it all, and succeeded every step of the way.
The next day came. At 4:30 p.m., the doorman said, Mr. Capones driver is here. We went out in the alley and we got into the black limousine. We drove up to this house. It was a brown house, and I remember it had a lot of steps to get to the front door.
Rose Marie paused for a moment, lost in thoughts, before she quietly said, I can see it, that house. I can see it in front of me. After a second of silence, she continued. We went up the steps, into the house, and walked into a room. It had a long table in it. Ive never seen such a long table. There were 24 guys sitting around it. Everyone had a place. I didnt know what to say. I looked at them, and I looked at my father, and then I watched as Al Capone came over to me and my father. He said, Hi, Happy.
Then Al Capone smiled, picked me up, and he said, Hello, little lady. He said, We all love you. The boys want to meet you. All of the boys stood up, and they waved to me, and I waved back. It was wild. It was crazy. I didnt realize this until a month later what was happening.
He held me in his arms, and he gave me a dinner ring. At that time, they were very popular. This dinner ring had three diamonds in it. He said, This is for you, honey. He said, Good luck with it. I want you to wear it. I said, Thank you. He said, You call me Uncle Al. I said, Sure, Uncle Al. You got it.
https://themobmuseum.org/blog/rose-marie-home-uncle-al/
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Actress Nanette Fabray, who was known to modern audiences as the mother of Bonnie Franklins character on the CBS sitcom One Day at a Time, died Thursday at her home in Rancho Palos Verdes, California. She was 97.
The actress, born Ruby Nanette Bernadette Theresa Fabares in San Diego, was performing in vaudeville by the age of 4, according to The New York Times.
By the age of 19, she was doing bit parts in Hollywood movies and made her Broadway debut in the 1941 musical comedy Lets Face It opposite Danny Kaye.
In 1949, Fabray won a Tony for best actress in a musical for Love Life, which was directed by Elia Kazan and choreographed by Michael Kidd, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
MORE: https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/nanette-fabray-dead-at-97_us_5a90967ee4b0ee6416a34d70
Her most notable classic film appearance may have been in MGM's The Band Wagon (1953).
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)CBHagman
(17,139 posts)You may not know the name but you definitely know the work. What an amazing careerfrom Casablanca to J. Edgar. What an amazing influence on our collective imaginations.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/bill-gold-designer-of-movie-posters-that-helped-shape-hollywoods-mystique-dies-at-97/2018/05/28/ad8f532e-6038-11e8-9ee3-49d6d4814c4c_story.html?utm_term=.92dc3ed30cf6
From the above:
Although Mr. Gold worked mostly in New York, his artistry throughout a seven-decade career helped shape the mystique of Hollywood. The first poster he designed, after joining the Warner Bros. art department, was for Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), starring James Cagney. His second job was Casablanca.
Mr. Gold later worked on many of Clint Eastwoods projects and came out of retirement in 2011 to produce the poster for J. Edgar, starring Leonardo DiCaprio as FBI director J. Edgar Hoover.
The first image you have of many of your favorite films, Eastwood wrote in the introduction to a 2010 collection of Mr. Golds posters, is probably a Bill Gold creation.
https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2018/05/bill-gold-movie-posters
http://billgold.net/
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)You know him from The Wizard of Oz, but he was also something of an activist.
https://www.npr.org/2018/06/07/618012769/jerry-maren-last-surviving-wizard-of-oz-munchkin-dies-at-98
http://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-jerry-maren-20180606-story.html
From the above:
The diminutive actor paved the way for many like him who followed him to Tinseltown and helped found Little People of America, an organization devoted to improving the status of little people.
Hey, Im a normal human being. All of us little people are, Maren told The Times in 1993. Some are wise guys. Some are a pain in the ass, just like the bigger folks. All the world is represented in little people.
Maren moved beyond society's stereotypes of shortness to make a successful living as an actor and spokesman. He racked up nearly 100 film and TV credits and starred in several commercials. He also played McDonald's Hamburglar and Mayor McCheese, as well as Buster Brown and Little Oscar in Oscar Mayer's 1950s ad campaigns.
Auggie
(31,807 posts)Mary Carlisle, a Hollywood actress who enjoyed popularity in the 1930s as a wholesome ingenue in musical comedies opposite singer Bing Crosby, died Aug. 1 at a retirement community for actors in the Woodland Hills section of Los Angeles.
Her son, James Blakeley III, confirmed the death but did not provide an immediate cause. She was believed to be 104 but never confirmed her real age, even to her family. As a centenarian, she was known to tell visitors that her true age was none of your business.
With her blond hair, blue eyes and alabaster skin, Ms. Carlisle had the delicate beauty of an all-American porcelain doll. This girl has the most angelic face I ever saw, Universal studio production chief Carl Laemmle Jr. reportedly declared upon spotting the unknown Ms. Carlisle at the companys canteen. Ive got to make a test of her right away.
Ms. Carlisle appeared in more than 60 films in a career that lasted about a dozen years. Much to her dismay, she was typecast as the perpetual innocent, a decorative virgin.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/amphtml/local/obituaries/mary-carlisle-a-perpetual-ingenue-in-dozens-of-1930s-films-dies-at-104/2018/08/01/6c875ea6-95b9-11e8-a679-b09212fb69c2_story.html?noredirect=on
https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=&w=600
Staph
(6,346 posts)....
He launched a successful literary career immediately after graduating from Columbia with his first novel, The Temple of Gold. A series of well-received and sometimes best-selling novels followed.
Then, in 1965, Goldman started to shift into movie territory. He helped on the script for Masquerade (1965) and adapted Harper (1966). Then he wrote his first-ever original screenplay.
That beginner's stab at screenwriting was none other than Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. It sold for the then-record sum of $400,000 (some $3 million in 2018 dollars) and won Goldman an Oscar in 1970 for Best Original Screenplay.
He is one of my favorite writers -- his book The Princess Bride is a sheer delight. And all of his work is full of wonderful quotes:
"Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die."
"Life is pain, Highness. Anyone who says differently is selling something."
"You fool! You fell victim to one of the classic blunders - the most famous of which is "never get involved in a land war in Asia" - but only slightly less well-known is this: "Never go in against a Sicilian when death is on the line"! Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha! Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha! Ha ha ha... "
"As you wish."
"Sonny, true love is the greatest thing in the world - except for a nice MLT - mutton, lettuce, and tomato sandwich, where the mutton is nice and lean and the tomatoes are ripe..."
"Butch Cassidy: What happened to the old bank? It was beautiful.
Guard: People kept robbing it.
Butch Cassidy: Small price to pay for beauty."
"Butch Cassidy: [to Sundance] Boy, I got vision, and the rest of the world wears bifocals."
"Etta Place: I'm 26, and I'm single, and a school teacher, and that's the bottom of the pit. And the only excitement I've known is here with me now. I'll go with you, and I won't whine, and I'll sew your socks, and I'll stitch you when you're wounded, and I'll do anything you ask of me except one thing. I won't watch you die. I'll miss that scene if you don't mind."
"Butch Cassidy: [singing] Don't ever hit your mother with a shovel. It will leave a dull impression on her mind."
"Ben Bradlee: You know the results of the latest Gallup Poll? Half the country never even heard of the word Watergate. Nobody gives a shit. You guys are probably pretty tired, right? Well, you should be. Go on home, get a nice hot bath. Rest up... 15 minutes. Then get your asses back in gear. We're under a lot of pressure, you know, and you put us there. Nothing's riding on this except the, uh, first amendment to the Constitution, freedom of the press, and maybe the future of the country. Not that any of that matters, but if you guys fuck up again, I'm going to get mad. Goodnight."
"Deep Throat: [very reluctant tone] It was a Haldeman operation. The whole business was run by Haldeman, the money, everything. It won't be easy getting at him, he was insulated, you'll have to find out how. Mitchell started doing covert stuff before anyone else, the list is longer than anyone can imagine... it involves the entire U.S. Intelligence Community. FBI... CIA... Justice... it's incredible. Cover-up had little to do with Watergate, it was mainly to protect the covert operations. It leads everywhere. Get out your notebook, there's more. Your lives are in danger."
"Carl Bernstein: Boy, that woman was paranoid! At one point I - I suddenly wondered how high up this thing goes, and her paranoia finally got to me, and I thought what we had was so hot that any minute CBS or NBC were going to come in through the windows and take the story away.
Bob Woodward: You're both paranoid. She's afraid of John Mitchell, and you're afraid of Walter Cronkite."
"Bob Woodward: Who's Charles Colson?
Harry Rosenfeld: Sit down. You know I'm glad you asked me that question. The reason I'm glad you asked me is because if you had asked Simons or Bradlee they woulda said, 'You know we're gonna have to fire this schmuck at once because he's so *dumb*.'"
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Just hours before the Academy Awards, we've lost Stanley Donen. What joy he brought to this planet!
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2019/feb/23/stanley-donen-director-singin-in-the-rain-dies
At the 1997 Oscars, Donen was given an honorary award. Introducing it, the director Martin Scorsese, then himself unrecognised by the Academy, said: Once upon a time, a lonely boy in South Carolina was sparked by the wonder of movies, captivated by everything from cowboys to comedians to movie monsters. And then he saw his first musical, Flying Down to Rio.
In his Vanity Fair interview in 2013, Donen said: I saw Fred Astaire in Flying Down to Rio when I was nine years old, and it changed my life. It just seemed wonderful, and my life wasnt wonderful. The joy of dancing to music! And Fred was so amazing, and Ginger [Rogers] Oh, God! Ginger!
His credits, as per IMDB:
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0002045/
Auggie
(31,807 posts)best musical ever. Arguably, one of the best films ever.
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Oh, where to begin?
https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-franco-zeffirelli-snap-20190615-story.html
Zeffirelli is most widely known for his films, including the 1968 critical and box office hit Romeo and Juliet and a 1990 Hamlet with Mel Gibson, among other Shakespeare adaptations. His non-Bard movies included a remake of the classic The Champ (1979), with Jon Voight; Tea with Mussolini (1999) set in his beloved Florence; and his last feature film, Callas Forever (2002), which paid homage to his tempestuous friend, opera singer Maria Callas.
Some of his films drew mixed reviews at best, but his opera productions with massive, opulent sets and onstage casts sometimes numbering in the hundreds, not to mention including animals are almost invariably audience favorites in the opera houses that can afford them worldwide. At Americas premier opera venue, the Metropolitan Opera in New York, Zeffirellis version of Puccinis La Boheme is the most-often presented production in the companys history.
In 1996 Los Angeles Opera presented his popular production of Leoncavallos Pagliacci, featuring crowd scenes that included acrobats, jugglers, fire eaters and a live donkey.
Critics complained that his stage productions were excessive, but for Zeffirelli, excess was just a starting point.
They must always tell me, Stop, is enough, is excessive, he told the London Observer in 2003. But I prefer to go berserk. I will never stop!
https://variety.com/2019/film/news/franco-zeffirelli-remembered-1203246938/
https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2019/jun/18/actors-pay-tribute-to-franco-zeffirelli
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Bruno Ganz, the Swiss actor best known for dramatizing Adolf Hitlers final days in 2004s Downfall, has died. He was 77.
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In addition to delivering one of the definitive cinematic portrayals of Hitler, Ganz played an angel who gives up immortality to experience earthly pleasures in Wim Wenders classic film Wings of Desire (1987). He reprised that role in Wenders 1993 follow-up, Faraway, So Close!
His celestial performance was so memorable that Ganz once recounted how people ascribed special powers to him when they recognized him in public.
People in planes said: Ah, no need to be afraid, because with you here, nothing can happen. Now we are safe,' Ganz told the Danish film journal P.O.V. Or a mother said to her child: Look, theres your guardian angel. They werent joking.
More on his life and career:
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2019/feb/18/bruno-ganz-obituary
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/tobacconist-review-1177149
His IMDB credits:
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0004486/
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)Bob Dorian, an actor, magician and avuncular movie buff who presented more than 10,000 classic films, B-movie serials and pre-Code Hollywood gems as the first prime-time host of American Movie Classics, died June 15. He was 85, although he often said he preferred to give his age by way of film history, declaring that he was born between Flying Down to Rio and Top Hat.
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Mr. Dorian performed on the stage, radio, television and occasionally on film, appearing in two movies by one of his favorite contemporary directors, Woody Allen, and lending his voice to Sam Raimis 1981 horror classic The Evil Dead as an archaeologist whose tape-recorded readings from an ancient text summon demonic spirits to a cabin in the woods.
Bespectacled and bushy-browed, he began acting at 14; dabbled in stand-up comedy and trapeze-catching at the circus; played the bass in a New York jazz group, the Four Dimensions; and performed mind-reading tricks and other illusions as the Amazing Dorian, sometimes incorporating his wife and three daughters into his act.
His IMDB page:
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0233646/