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Related: About this forumGregory Peck: Early Days As a Young Actor Living in NYC; 'Gentleman's Agreement' 1947, Best Picture
Last edited Fri Feb 18, 2022, 02:21 PM - Edit history (3)
- American Film Institute. (2 mins). Gregory Peck talks to AFI Conservatory Fellows about his early days as a young actor living in New York City. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregory_Peck
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- Trailer, Gentleman's Agreement, 1947. Director: Elia Kazan. Starring: Albert Dekker, Anne Revere, Celeste Holm, Dorothy McGuire, Gregory Peck, John Garfield. 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. Laura Hobson's tale of a writer who poses as a Jew to research the subject of anti-Semitism. Daring winner of Best Picture Oscar.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gentleman%27s_Agreement
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- The Guardian. 'My favorite best picture Oscar winner: Gentleman's Agreement.' Feb. 15, 2017. In the first of a new series, Peter Bradshaw explains why the 1947 drama about a journalist exploring antisemitism by posing as a Jew remains a sharp & high-minded watch.
In 1947, the Oscar for best picture went to Gentlemans Agreement, starring Gregory Peck as the campaigning journalist on a mission. Awards for best director also went to Elia Kazan and best supporting actress to Celeste Holm. At first glance, it looks like a rather worthy issue movie of the 40s, the sort of film that the Academy felt it had to honour. Yet Gentlemans Agreement is still a riveting movie, intriguing, a little exasperating, alternately naive and very sharp, fascinating for what it puts in and leaves out.
It is about the antisemitism of prosperous postwar America and the insidious way that Jews were excluded from upscale social clubs, vacation resorts and of course jobs. There were no official bans, just a nod and a wink and a gentlemans agreement between conservative-minded Wasp gentiles that they know the sort of people they want to associate with. It is the sort of everyday prejudice that Groucho Marx elegantly knocked back with his joke about not wanting to join a club that would have him as a member. Not that explicit bigoted language was in any way uncommon.
The movie is adapted by Moss Hart from the bestseller by the popular author Laura Z Hobson, which she was moved to write from outrage at the way a congressman had called the columnist Walter Winchell a kike without anyone raising a murmur. Hobson was Jewish; born Laura Kean Zametkin, she changed her name to get a job as a magazine secretary a decision that occurs in the film, interestingly transformed. Hart was Jewish, the movies producer Darryl Zanuck was a Methodist, Elia Kazan came from a Greek Orthodox background and Peck was raised Catholic. The personal, authorial religious intelligence of this film is Hobsons.
Hollywood was then rather reticent about mentioning Judaism explicitly, and maybe not much less reticent now. Perhaps one of the few Hollywood movies before this to mention the J-word so prominently was Charlie Chaplins The Great Dictator in 1940. And the high concept of the film is presented so earnestly, so guilelessly, and with such lack of self-awareness or pre-emptive cynicism that you cant help but smile at the dramatic moment when the idea is revealed. Peck plays Phil Green, a charming and personable widower with a young son, Tommy (Dean Stockwell); he is a journalist of some repute who has come to New York to take up a job writing for a liberal magazine...
More, https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/feb/15/best-picture-oscar-winners-gentlemans-agreement-1947
tblue37
(66,035 posts)spike jones
(1,777 posts)So many great lines in this song. And some are about Gregory Peck.
"Well, there was this movie I seen one time,
About a man riding 'cross the desert and it starred Gregory Peck.
He was shot down by a hungry kid trying to make a name for himself.
The townspeople wanted to crush that kid down and string him up by the neck.
.
Well, I'm standin' in line in the rain to see a movie starring Gregory Peck,
Yeah, but you know it's not the one that I had in mind.
He's got a new one out now, I don't even know what it's about
But I'll see him in anything so I'll stand in line."
appalachiablue
(42,908 posts)appalachiablue
(42,908 posts)Please Be Careful Before You Tell a Jewish Person Something is 'NOT Anti-Semitic, Daily Kos, Feb. 15, 2022,
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2022/2/15/2080435/-Please-Be-Careful-Before-You-Tell-a-Jewish-Person-Something-is-NOT-Anti-Semitic