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Blogathon announcement: Diamonds and Gold

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Ladies and Gentlemen, please join my friend and yours Rich Watson of Wide Screen World as we host the Diamonds and Gold Blogathon this coming April 12th and 13th.

Fifty is the new thirty!

Polish off that rose-amber spot and turn it on your favourite actors and actresses who ignored the siren call of social security and continued to work their magic on screen in memorable performances into their 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s and beyond.  Did they convey a fatherly presence, a malevolent influence?  Did they bring a tear to your eye, a laugh to your throat?  Be they coward or hero, friend or foe we want to hear all about them.

On Saturday, April 12th Rich will host your line-up of the great performances of extraordinary gentleman and on Sunday, April 13th yours truly will host a soiree in honour of equally formidable ladies.

RSVP to Wide Screen World or Caftan Woman.









31 Days of Oscar Blogathon: Sing a Song of Oscar

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It's Oscar time.  A time of promotion for the motion picture industry.  A time of excitement and anxiety for the nominees.  And no less a time of interest and opinions on the part of film fans.  Classic fans enjoy 31 Days of Oscar on TCM and the second annual 31 Days of Oscar Blogathon hosted by the intrepid trio of Once Upon a Screen, Outspoken and Freckled and Paula's Cinema Club.

My contribution to the blogathon is a revisit and a revamp of an article first posted on this blog in 2011 which looks at an amazing Oscar record.

During the course of his movie career Bing Crosby introduced fourteen original songs that were nominated for the Best Song by the Motion Picture Academy and four of these songs garnered statues for their composers.

Click on the song title links for YouTube performances from the films where available.


Bing Crosby, Miriam Hopkins, Edward Nugent

1934:  She Loves Me Not

The first of these songs was a tune we associate with another performer.  Jack Benny's theme Love in Bloom by Ralph Rainger and Leo Robin was first sung by Bing and Kitty Carlisle in She Loves Me Not.  Miriam Hopkins stars as a nightclub singer on the lam from crooks being hidden by Bing and fellow student Edward Nugent at Princeton.  The comedy was remade as How to Be Very, Very Popular in 1955 starring Betty Grable, Sheree North and Robert Cummings.

Three songs were nominated in this first year of the category, along with Love in Bloom was Eliscu and Kahn's Carioci from Flying Down to Rio and the winner, Conrad and Magdison's The Continental from The Gay Divorcee.

Donald Meek, Madge Evans, Bing Crosby, Edith Fellows

1936:  Pennies from Heaven

The nomination for Arthur Johnston and Johnny Burke's title song Pennies from Heaven must have been especially gratifying for Bing as he was co-producer as well as star of this Columbia Studios release.  Bing plays Larry Poole, an ex-con who sees himself as a modern day troubadour, footloose and fancy free.  His life becomes entangled with an orphan played by the extraordinary child actress Edith Fellows (Five Little Peppers), her doughty grandfather Donald Meek (Stagecoach) and an uptight social worker Madge Evans (Dinner at Eight).  Prominent in the cast was Bing's good friend Louis Armstrong in the first of four films together, plus many TV appearances and a 1960 album, Bing and Satchmo.  This Oscar year is truly a case where being nominated is honour enough as the winner for Best Song was Kern and Fields The Way You Look Tonight from Swingtime.


1937:  Waikiki Wedding (winner)

One of the top box office pictures of the year, Waikiki Wedding starring Bing, Shirley Ross, Martha Raye and Bob Burns is filled with breezy good humour and hypnotically sumptuous cinematography by Karl "Sunrise" Struss.  The lovely Blue Hawaii by Ralph Robin and Leo Rainger was introduced in this film, but surprisingly was not nominated in the Best Song category.  The honour went to bandleader and composer Harry Owen's Sweet Leilani.  The song's inclusion in the film was at Bing's insistence and he set up a trust fund for the royalties to go to Harry's daughter Leilani for whom the song was written.

Sweet Leilani won over competition that included the Gershwin's They Can't Take That Away from Me from Shall We Dance and Fain and Brown's That Old Feeling from Vogues of 1938.  While I think it's a lovely little lullaby, surely Sweet Leilani's win over the Gershwin tune is worthy of debate usually reserved for Best Picture or the acting categories.

Bing Crosby, Mary Martin, Oscar Levant

1940:  Rhythm on the River

This very funny film directed by Victor Schertzinger stars Basil Rathbone as a famous composer who has lost his stuff and "collaborates" with a lyricist played by Mary Martin and a composer played by Bing. Eventually the two dupes discover the truth and set out on their own. Throw in Oscar Levant for the wisecracks and Wingy Manone on trumpet and you have a winner.

Rhythm on the River features my all-time favourite Bing Crosby title track from a movie, but that peppy number didn't find favour with the Academy. It was James Monaco and Johnny Burke's destined-to-become-a-standardOnly Foreverthat was nominated. In another case of losing to a classic, the winner was Leigh Harline and Ned Washington's When You Wish Upon a Star from Pinocchio.

Bing Crosby, Marjorie Reynolds, Fred Astaire, Virginia Dale

1942:  Holiday Inn (winner)

Bing as Jim Hardy and Marjorie Reynolds as "I'm Linda Mason" (dubbed by Martha Mears) introduced Irving Berlin'sWhite Christmas to the world in Holiday Inn. The song is such a part of our lives that I often forget that it also received the honour of an Oscar.

There were quite a few goodies among the nominees that year: Jules Style and Sammy Cahn's It Seems to Me I've Heard That Song Before from Youth on Parade, Harry Warren and Mack Gordon's I've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo from Orchestra Wives, Frank Churchill and Larry Morey's Love is a Song from Bambi, Burton Lane and Ralph Freed's How About You? from Babes on Broadway, Jerome Kern and Johnny Mercer's Dearly Beloved from You Were Never Lovelier and Ernesto Lucuono and Kim Gannon's title theme from Always in My Heart.

Irving Berlin called White Christmas one of his "round" songs. A tune which seemed to compose itself, it came to him so effortlessly. His enthusiasm for the song never wavered. It seems that way as well with the public who has placed it at the number one of the Billboard charts three times since its motion picture debut.

Bing Crosby, Barry Fitzgerald

1944: Going My Way (winner)

Leo McCarey's heartwarming episodic feature following the exploits of progressive Father O'Malley and the set-in-his-ways Father Fitzgibbon was an Oscar juggernaut winning 7 out of 10 nominations.  In the win column Best Picture, Leading Actor Bing Crosby, Supporting Actor Barry Fitzgerald, Director Leo McCarey, Original Story Leo McCarey, Screenplay Frank Butler and Frank Cavett and Best Original Song for Jimmy Van Heusen and Johnny Burke's Swinging on a Star performed by Bing as Father O'Malley with the Mitchell Boys Choir.

The perennial favourite won over such superb ballads as Jimmy McHugh and Harold Adamson's I Couldn't Sleep a Wink Last Night introduced by Frank Sinatra in Higher and Higher, and Styne and Cahn's I'll Walk Alone from Follow the Boys.

Betty Hutton, Bing Crosby

1944:  Here Come the Waves

Here Come the Waves stars Bing as a Sinatra-type balladeer and Betty Hutton as twins, one of whom is crazy about the crooner, so guess which one the star falls for?  Perhaps due to a the films late in the year release (I can find no other reason), the Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer song Accentuate the Positive, was nominated for Best Song for the 1945 awards presented in March of 1946.  The song in the film is presented in a rousing production number and sung by Bing and Sonny Tufts in blackface.  The Oscar that year was awarded to the lovely ballad It Might As Well Be Spring from Rodgers and Hammerstein's State Fair.
 
Ruth Donnelly, Ingrid Bergman, Bing Crosby

1945:  The Bells of St. Mary's

Father O'Malley is at it again in the charming Going My Way sequel The Bells of St. Mary's co-starring Ingrid Bergman.  When a student at St. Mary's, Patsy played by gifted Joan Carrol (Meet Me in St. Louis, Primrose Path) is in need of a confidence boost O'Malley sings another Jimmy Van Heusen and Johnny Burke hit Aren't You Glad You're You into the Best Song category.  The winner that year, as previously mentioned, was Rodgers and Hammerstein's It Might As Well Be Spring.


1946:  Blue Skies

Holiday Inn co-stars Bing, Fred Astaire and composer Irving Berlin reunited for Blue Skies, a Technicolor musical chronicling the career and romantic entanglements of a couple of song and dance men.  The pretty leading lady was Joan Caulfield and comedy support came from Olga San Juan and Billy De Wolfe.  Among the perennial Berlin favourites was a new song You Keep Coming Back Like a Song which received an Oscar nomination.  The winner that year was Harry Warren and Johnny Mercer's On the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe from The Harvey Girls.

Click here to listen to the lovely ballad as sung by the great Ella Fitzgerald on her Grammy award winning album Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Irving Berlin Songbook.     

Charles Lane, Bing Crosby, Jane Wyman
Beverly Washburn, Jacques Gencel

1951:  Here Comes the Groom (winner)

Frank Capra's Here Comes the Groom stars Bing as a foreign correspondent who surprises his stateside fiance with a couple of war orphans.  A top-flight cast including Alexis Smith and Franchot Tone seem to be having great fun in this picture.  Bing and leading lady Jane Wyman duet on Hoagy Carmichael and Johnny Mercer's In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening which was recorded live on set instead of using playback.  A winning combination for the audience and a winner at the Oscars.  The last of Bing's four Oscar winning songs.

Bing Crosby, JaneWyman

1952:  Just for You

It's Bing and Jane again in the story of a widowed Broadway producer coping, not very well, with his children played by Natalie Wood and Robert Arthur, and finding romance with a musical comedy star. Oscar nominated Zing a Little Zong by Harry Warren and Leo Robin tries to capture some of the joy of the previous year's In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening and comes pretty darn close.  The song would lose to one of the most famous movie songs of all-time, Dimitri Tiomkin and Ned Washington's theme to High Noon.

Bing Crosby, Rosemary Clooney, Danny Kaye, Vera Ellen

1954:  White Christmas

Michael Curtiz directed Christmas perennial White Christmas starring Bing and Danny Kaye as successful producer/entertainers falling for singing sisters Rosemary Clooney and Vera Ellen.  Along the way the quartet help a retired General played by Dean Jagger and give us some favourite familiar Irving Berlin songs.  A new tune gets an Oscar nomination as Rosie and Bing sing Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep. The Academy voters awarded Styne and Cahn's popular theme to Three Coins in a Fountain, overlooking not only Irving, but Arlen and Gershwin's The Man That Got Away from A Star is Born.  Did the Academy members not get just who Ira Gershwin was?

Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly, Frank Sinatra

1957:  High Society

It was big news when Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra were paired in this musical update of The Philadelphia Story opposite Grace Kelly in her final film before becoming Princess Grace of Monaco.  The songs, by Cole Porter no less, included the Oscar nominated True Love presented as a charming duet by Bing and Grace.  Mr. Porter would have to content himself with the thought of the untold number of couples who have taken his gentle ballad to their hearts.  In the Academy's eyes the Best Song of the Year wasLivingston and Evans'Que Sera Sera from The Man Who Knew Too Much.
1960:  High Time

Blake Edwards' comedy stars Bing as a retired millionaire taking the time to get a college degree and experience a life he had missed as a younger working man.  Fabian, Tuesday Weld and Richard Beymer are fellow students in this okay-Sunday-matinee type of movie.  Bing falls for a lovely French teacher played by Nicole Maurey and introduces the Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn Oscar nominated The Second Time Around.  Other tunes in the Best Song category were The GreenLeaves of Summer from The Alamo, Faraway Part of Town from Pepe and the title song from TheFacts of Life.  The winner was the very popular title track from Never on Sunday.

The nature of film and of the music business being what they are in the 21st century, I feel safe in predicting that Bing Crosby's record of introducing 14 Oscar nominated and 4winning songs will never be equaled.

Impressive though the line-up of songs may be, if I were in charge there would be even more nominees.  For your consideration:

1934:  Here is My Heart, Rainger and Robin's Love Is Just Around the Corner
1935:  Mississippi, Rodgers and Hart's It's Easy to Remember (And So Hard to Forget)
1936:  Rhythm on the Range, Johnny Mercer's I'm an Old Cowhand (From the Rio Grande)
1942: Road to Morocco, Van Heusen and Burke's Moonlight Becomes You
1947:  Road to Rio, Van Heusen and Burke'sBut Beautiful 

Caftan Woman's Choice: One for March on TCM

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It's been a long winter.  March is coming in like a lion.  Who wants to leave the comforts of home and hearth for an adventure?  You don't have to give up the coziness.  You can share the vicarious adventures of Captain Geoffrey Thorpe as he gives his all for Queen and country.  Let's hit the high seas with one of films' greatest screen teams, Errol Flynn and Alan Hale.

Dashing screen star Flynn's many skills as an actor were seen to great advantage in the epic adventure films produced by Warner Brothers in the 1930s and 40s, mostly directed by Michael Curtiz.  Reportedly, the actor and director had a thorny relationship, but the product on the screen was the best of its kind and timeless entertainment.  An excellent appreciation of Errol Flynn can be found in this article by Rebecca Barnes aka Classic Becky.  Singer and actor Alan Hale had been in pictures since the age of 20 in 1912.  Fond as I am of the output of the silent era, there are some actors that are meant to be heard and that rich baritone of Hale's is a gift.  Fourteen times Flynn and Hale shared the screen in films made between 1937s The Prince and the Pauper and 1948s Adventures of Don Juan.  Their audience appeal was at its height in pictures like The Adventures of Robin Hood, Dodge City and The Sea Hawk where Hale's blustery and loyal sidekick was the perfect companion to Flynn's committed and sometimes foolhardy heroes.

Alan Hale and Errol Flynn
David Bruce in background
 
The Sea Hawk, released in 1940, is said to be a remake of the 1924 film based on Rafael Sabatini's 1915 novel, but I can find no similarities beyond that of the title.  The script for the 1940 film is by Howard Koch (Three Strangers, Letter from an Unknown Woman) and Seton Miller (Kid Galahad, Two Years Before the Mast).  The thrilling score is from the glorious pen of Erich Wolfgang Korngold (Kings Row, The Adventures of Robin Hood) and it is the well from which springs all the heart and emotion of this epic adventure.

The Sea Hawk is the story of two empire builders, Philip of Spain and Elizabeth of England.  Philip is amassing his Armada and Elizabeth, apparently a fiscal conservative at this time, is wary of her minister's advice to increase her naval strength.  Spying and skullduggery is rampant at court.  On the high seas a group of privateers known as the Sea Hawks plunder the plunderers to fill the coffers of England.  Chief among them is Flynn's Geoffrey Thorpe, a favourite of Her Majesty.

Flora Robson and Errol Flynn

Flora Robson, who first portrayed Elizabeth I in 1937s Fire Over England for Alexander Korda, once again takes on the role and of all the actresses who have given their all to the task Ms. Robson (Black Narcissus, 7 Women) is my favourite.  Her Elizabeth is shrewd, imperious, slyly humourous, quick to temper yet nobody's fool.  In short, she is a joy to watch.

Henry Daniell plays Lord Wolfingham, a man with loyalties only to himself and if spying for Philip will advance his personal cause, he has no qualms.  Daniell is such fun to watch in the villainous or unlikeable roles.  His unbending nature and mellifluous voice, like a charming snake, adds so much to his characterizations in films as diverse as Camille, Holiday, The Body Snatcher and The Philadelphia Story.

Donald Crisp (How Green Was My Valley, Lassie Come Home) as the trusted minister Sir John Burleson gives an air of trustworthiness that is a comfort in the palace.  Comfort is needed when the ambassador from Spain, Claude Rains as Don Jose Alvarez de Cordoba makes his presence felt.  Here Rains (Casablanca, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington) pulls out his patented "he's saying all the right things, but I wouldn't trust him as far as I could throw him"  character.  Don Jose's only human side is evident in his relationship with his niece Dona Maria played by Brenda Marshall (Footsteps in the Dark, Captains of the Clouds).

Brenda Marshall and Errol Flynn

Maria, our love interest in the picture, is established as worthy in her first few scenes.  On the journey to England's court, their ship is captured by Thorpe despite the diplomatic flag they carry.  We first see Maria as playful in a deck top tennis match with her maid Miss Latham played by Una O'Connor (Cavalcade, Witness for the Prosecution).  Confronted with her captor she is a haughty aristocrat.  When she sees the released British galley slaves there is pity and shame on her face.  Maria as played by Ms. Marshall is a keeper.

Errol Flynn and a beautiful leading lady, you would think that's all you would need, wouldn't you?  But, no.  Thorpe is notoriously tongue-tied around the ladies, as his crew duly notes.

"I hear the Queen is the only woman he can speak to without buckling his knees."
"Man to man I calls it!"
General hilarity.

The crew is a great part of what makes The Sea Hawk work.  Beyond Alan Hale we have J.M. Kerrigan (The Long Voyage Home) as a loyal and headstrong sailor.  David Bruce (Lady on a Train) makes an impression as someone who seems more than meets the eye.  William Lundigan (I'd Climb the Highest Mountain) swings into action with his heart-melting smile.  Uncredited in one of his first half dozen film bits is 36-year-old Edgar Buchanan (TVs Petticoat Junction) who had just turned over his thriving dental practice to his wife in order to pursue acting.  As his role here shows, Mr. Buchanan was quickly on his way to becoming the greatest scene stealer of all time.

The Spanish military is ably represented by Captain Lopez played by a courtly Gilbert Roland (The Lady and the Bullfighter), Captain Mendoza played by Pedro de Cordoba (Sabotage), Ian Keith (Nightmare Alley) as cagey Peralta and Jack La Rue (Road to Utopia) as over-confident Lt. Ortega.  Keep your eyes peeled for the likes of Whit Bissell, Jay Silverheels, Gerald Mohr and John Sutton.  There may be a drinking game.

Errol Flynn

The action set pieces in The Sea Hawk are every bit the exciting, escapist fare they are meant to be yet still have their poignancy and high stakes investment.  Political tensions are at their height and Thorpe takes on a covert operation to steal plunder meant for Spain's coffers at its source in Panama.  Naturally, the Queen must disavow any knowledge of his actions.  Despite all efforts at secrecy, the spy network of Lord Wolfingham does its job and Thorpe and gallant crew sail off into a trap and tragedy.  The segment of the film which takes place in Panama replaces the sumptuous black and white photography we have been enjoying with a sepia tone denoting the exotic and steamy locale.  A bold and successful move by three time Oscar nominated (Captains of the Clouds, Sergeant York, The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex) cinematographer Sol Polito.

Henry Daniell and Errol Flynn

All of the intrigue, romance and action of The Sea Hawk leads to that most satisfying of filmdom events, a climactic duel between adversaries/a touching reunion of lovers/a raucous cheer from lovable rogues.  Take your pick, it's all there and it's all yours.

Flora Robson throws down on other Liz I pretenders

Dame Robson's lines as Queen Elizabeth at the conclusion are a reminder of the time of the movie's creation.

"And now, my loyal subjects, a grave duty confronts us all: To prepare our nation for a war that none of us wants, least of all your queen. We have tried by all means in our power to avert this war. We have no quarrel with the people of Spain or of any other country; but when the ruthless ambition of a man threatens to engulf the world, it becomes the solemn obligation of all free men to affirm that the earth belongs not to any one man, but to all men, and that freedom is the deed and title to the soil on which we exist. Firm in this faith, we shall now make ready to meet the great armada that Philip sends against us. To this end, I pledge you ships - ships worthy of our seamen - a mighty fleet, hewn out of the forests of England; a navy foremost in the world - not only in our time, but for generations to come."

TCM is screening The Sea Hawk on Monday, March 10 at 10:00 pm as one of "Bob's Picks", so if you won't take my word for it ...

SLEUTHATHON: Perry Mason (1957 - 1966)

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"You never need to worry about him.  He's the old human dynamo.  He manufactures energy faster than any human being can use it up."

- Paul Drake describes Perry Mason in The Case of the Moth-Eaten Mink, published 1952

Mason's creator, Erle Stanley Gardner, was a man of uncommon energy himself.  As a youngster it often got him into trouble.  As a young man into sports and adventure, he put that energy to use as a boxer, a promoter and as a typist who studied at the law office that had hired him in that capacity.  Gardner passed the Bar age 21 and had a successful practice, in large part due to his ability to speak Chinese and his reputation for helping that community.  No detail was too small to escape his eye and while this appealed to clients, after a few years Gardner looked for more excitement and worlds to conquer.  He became a writer.  Again, that famous energy came into play as he worked at his law office during the day then spent the night writing.  The pulps, such as Black Mask were his training ground and fellow writers like Raymond Chandler became friends. 

"I had no natural ability to write.  Everything I learned I had to learn the hard way.  I'm still not much of a writer.  I'm a fair plotter because I studied the mechanics of plotting and analyzed plotting."

- Erle Stanley Gardner on his secondary trade

Eventually the complicated plots and tough-minded protagonists morphed into the determined and smart attorney Perry Mason in The Case of the Velvet Claws, published in 1953.  The years would bring over 80 Mason novels, translated into dozens of languages and popular all over the world in Gardner's day and ours.  My home library is filled with Perry Mason paperbacks.  They are the original page-turners.  Perry Mason goes to the end of the line and beyond for his frightened and less than honest clients.  Always he gets himself in a pickle, and always he gets out.  Whew!

The success of the book series interested Hollywood and in the 1930s and four features starred Warren William, followed by one each with Ricardo Cortez and Donald Woods as Perry Mason.  They are entertaining Warner Brothers products, but they don't feel like Perry.  In 1943 Perry Mason began a 12 year run on radio and, as with the screen adaptions, Gardner wasn't entirely satisfied with the output.  He learned of himself that he wasn't the person to write the scripts and that he wasn't the "Hollywood" type, but felt keenly the lack of quality control and input.  As the 1950s rolled around and TV was becoming a major entertainment force, Gardner was reluctant to hand his baby over to strange hands again.  Would Hollywood finally understand Perry Mason, Della Street and Paul Drake?

Gail Patrick, film actress
Gail Patrick Jackson, Perry Mason Executive Producer
1911 - 1980

Paisano Productions was born out of the desire to control how Perry Mason would be presented to television audiences.  The company consisted of Gardner, his agent and friend Cornwell Jackson and Corney Jackson's wife, the actress Gail Patrick (My Man Godfrey, Stage Door).  Also with a stake in the company were Jean Bethell, who was Gardner's real-life Della Street, and her sisters, all legal secretaries who worked with Gardner through the lawyer years to author years.  It was a friendly combine, as the name suggests, and a profitable one.  Gail Patrick, who knew Hollywood and who had at one timed planned to be a lawyer, took on the more and more of the responsibilities and became producer.  She was the only female producer of major television programming at the time.  Anne Nelson was her counterpart at CBS, negotiating the myriad contracts as a vice president in charge of business affairs.  Again, the only top female executive at a network.

Eighteen scripts were completed based on familiar Gardner titles and casting was ready to begin.  Fred MacMurray was the early favourite for the lead.  William Hopper and William Talman both read for Perry.  Raymond Burr, on the strength of his District Attorney role in A Place in the Sun was asked to read for Hamilton Burger.  The actor agreed as long as he could also read for Perry.

The 50th Anniversary DVD set includes some of the screen tests.  William Hopper's test shows that he would have been a terrific Perry, but Raymond Burr gave it is all.  He was advised to lose weight and return.  Gardner saw the test and insisted this was the man to play Perry Mason.  Someone who could convey the compassion and the intelligence.  Someone who was smart, but not a smart aleck.
  Raymond Burr as Perry Mason
1917 - 1993

Canada's Raymond Burr, born in New Westminster, BC, had been in Hollywood since 1946 and the talented actor certainly paid his dues.  The large young man attempted to pattern his career on that of the great Laird Cregar, and in his costume dramas like Adventures of Don Juan and film-noir as in Raw Deal, comparisons can certainly be made.  Raymond Burr's film career is a roller coaster ride of uncredited bits and supporting roles to which he brought one hundred percent of his talent and personality, whether the film be a big budget Hitchcock thriller like Rear Window, a sturdy docudrama like Walk a Crooked Mile or something on the cheap side like Bride of the Gorilla.  In a journey through classic entertainment you never know where you will run into Raymond Burr, be it as Joe Friday's boss in an early Dragnet, the sincere reporter in the American release of Godzilla or showing his comedy chops in Casanova's Big Night with Bob Hope.

Some of you may remember Raymond Burr's television commercials for an insurance group in the 1980s.  An acting teacher I knew at the time related an anecdote that Mr. Burr could have gotten a lot more money for the job than he settled for.  The teller of the tale was derisive about Raymond Burr not realizing that he could cash in on his fame.  I thought it was rather sweet that Mr. Burr didn't know he was that guy.

"You got to hand it to Raymond.  He got to be a pretty damn good lawyer."

- Erle Stanley Gardner on his star

William Hopper as Paul Drake
1915 - 1970

William Hopper, the son of columnist Hedda Hopper and stage performer DeWolf Hopper Sr., had been on the screen since the 1930s.  You'll find him in tons of Warner Brothers output as uncredited reporters and servicemen, but you'll also see the handsome, young dark-haired actor in choice roles in films such as The Runaway Heiress and Public Wedding.  After WW2, in which Hopper served in the Navy, he returned to Hollywood with more uncredited bits and larger roles in more interesting features such as Track of the Cat, The Bad Seed, 20 Million Miles to Earth and Rebel Without a Cause.  He is particularly effective in Good-bye, My Lady as the true owner of a lost and claimed dog.  William Hopper gives Paul Drake a lightly wry sense of humour and fun which balances nicely with the serious situations.

"He was a big kid.  He was a wonderful, wonderful man.  I loved him dearly."

- Producer Arthur Marks on his friend, William Hopper

Barbara Hale as Della Street
I don't think she believes what Paul is telling her.

Lovely and talented Barbara Hale aspired to a career as an artist, but was sidetracked into modelling and acting.  Immortalized as Della Street, fans can also appreciate her talents in movies going back to the 1940s including The Falcon Out West, The Boy With Green Hair, The Window, Jolson Sings Again, the title role in Lorna Doone, Unchained, 7th Cavalry and The Houston Story where she's a blonde singer putting the sizzle in Put the Blame on Mame.

Gail Patrick tagged her friend Barbara Hale for Perry's girl friday Della Street and initially Barbara declined as her children were young at the time and she didn't want to work outside of the home.  Gail persisted and after talking it over with her husband actor Bill Williams (married from 1946 to his death in 1992), they decided that it would be worth a shot.  After all, it was a TV show.  It might not run past those initial 18 scripts.

"Perry Mason would be very foolish if he didn't recognize the unusual charm and beauty of Della Street, and I don't think he's that foolish."

- Erle Stanley Gardner on his famous couple


William Talman as Hamilton Burger
1915 - 1968

William Talman was a stage trained actor who's career in films started to take off after his time in the Army during WW2 where he started out as a private and was promoted to major.  He played one of the screen's great villains in Ida Lupino's The Hitchhiker and is another remorseless criminal in Richard Fleischer's Armored Car Robbery.  In The Racket he is just as believable as an honest policeman as he is as his baddies.  Among the cast of the John Cromwell film you will find Ray Collins as a district attorney.  Interesting roles on television would follow including that of a tormented racist in The Sarah Drummond Story on Wagon Train.

During the run of the show William Talman was involved in a tabloid scandal when he was arrested at a "wild party" and although charges were eventually dropped, CBS fired the actor.  However, it was through the intervention of Erle Stanley Gardner, and the vociferous fans of the show, that Hamilton Burger retained his rightful place as adversary to Perry Mason.  William Talman passed from lung cancer in 1968, bravely filming an anti-smoking plea shown on national television in 1968 and 1969.

"Bill Talman is really a wonder.  He actually looks as if he expects to win a case."

- Erle Stanley Gardner on the beleaguered district attorney

"Look at Burger!  I think there's smoke coming out of his ears."

- Janet Hall, 21st century Perry Mason fan

Ray Collins as Lt. Arthur Tragg
1889 - 1965

Ray Collins, an actor from his teen years, who could and did play everything on stage, radio and screen from great dramas like Citizen Kane and The Magnificent Ambersons to fluffy comedies like The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer and Francis, also turned to television in the 1950s.  He can be found on The Halls of Ivy, Father Knows Best and the anthology series like Playhouse 90.  A boon to every production, he was that and more to Perry Mason.  Nearing 70 when Perry Mason began in 1957, he may have been older than your average cop, but Ray Collins added a touch of class all his own and the fans love him.

Sadly, ill health forced his slowing down on work on the program and he passed away prior to its conclusion.  Official duties were taken over by Lt. Andy Anderson played by Wesley Lau and Lt. Steve Drumm played by Richard Anderson.

"Ray Collins was getting older and having trouble remembering his lines, but we never put any pressure on him.  We only had respect for such a fine actor."

- Arthur Marks, producer/director of Perry Mason



Perry Mason producer Arthur Marks referred to the series as a game show.  It is the whodunnit that keeps fans reading and watching as they match wits with the formidable Perry Mason.  Arthur Marks had been an assistant director at Columbia and MGM, where he first became friends with Ray Collins.  His involvement with Perry Mason began when he replaced an ailing assistant director on the pilot episode.  "Paisano" knew a good thing when they saw it and he was asked to stick around.  After assistant director duties on over a dozen episodes, Gail suggested he become a director and 76 future episodes are to his credit.  Mr. Marks happily moved into production at that time as well.  It was a busy and very creative time in his career.  

The budget from CBS was $172,000 per episode.  On the same network Gunsmoke had a $300,000 budget and over at NBC Bonanza's was over $600,000.  In an interview on the 50th Anniversary DVD Mr. Marks was proud of keeping the seasons within budget although he would go large on the first seven or eight episodes of the year with more sets, location scenes, extras, and maybe name guests to hook the audience and please the critics.  It's something to watch for when you are enjoying the show.

Mr. Marks attributes Perry Mason's to scrupulously sticking to the winning formula of setting up the murder with formidable suspects, the equal of our crusading hero.  He also acknowledges Raymond Burr's intelligence, talent and belief in the role and program.  Occasionally the network would put its oar in suggesting the show become more relevant like The Defenders or make Perry and Della more romantic.  As a concession, Gardner came up with the character of law clerk David Gideon played by Karl Held to handle the romance and appeal to the "young people", but he really wasn't necessary to the winning set-up and lasted only ten episodes.  What fans demanded, and enjoy to this day, are the interesting characters involved in a tangled murder story, the always legal yet tricky machinations of Perry Mason on behalf of his client, and a showdown in court with egg on Burger's face.

Subtle changes can be noted throughout the nine year run especially as it relates to women characters.  Firstly, a nod to the always fashionable Della Street.  The wardrobe department did her, and the guests, proud.  Over the years you will note that female characters moved away from only the damsels in distress and their nasty counterpoints to women in the workplace, burgeoning free spirits, and representatives of different generations.

Perry Mason's television popularity was immediate.  In 1959 it won an Australian Logie Award (the first year of the awards) as Most Popular Overseas Drama.  Raymond Burr became a popular guest on television variety shows and is especially winning on this episode of The Jack Benny Program.  

William Talman, William Hopper, Barbara Hale, Raymond Burr
"Perry" at the Emmy Awards

Emmy recognition also came Perry Mason's way including two in the technical categories.  Surprisingly the program only received one nomination for Best Series.

1958:  Best Dramatic Series with Continuing Characters (winner, Gunsmoke)  
1961:  Outstanding Achievement in Film Editing for Television (winner, Naked City)
1966: Individual Achievements in Electronic Production - Audio Engineering  (winner, Young People's Concerts)

A look at the acting nominations shows the evolving categories for those awards.

1959:
Best Supporting Actor (Continuing Character) in a Dramatic Series
William Hopper - nominated (winner - Dennis Weaver, Gunsmoke)
Best Actor in a Leading Role (Continuing Character) in a Dramatic Series
Raymond Burr - winner
Best Supporting Actress (Continuing Character) in a Dramatic Series
Barbara Hale - winner

1960: 
Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Series (Lead or Support)
Raymond Burr - nominated (winner - Robert Stack, The Untouchables)

1961:
Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Series (Lead)
Raymond Burr - winner
Outstanding Performance in a Supporting Role by an Actor or Actress in a Series
Barbara Hale - nominated (winner - Don Knotts, The Andy Griffith Show)

It surprises me that the series didn't receive more nominations and wins, and I find it almost unbelievable that William Talman never received an Emmy nomination.  Those Emmy folks are full of surprises.  If there had been an award for main title music in the 1950s, they would probably have overlooked Fred Steiner's Park Avenue Beat.


Through the years of its initial run, the years since in television syndication and the release of the DVD collections we have solved a lot of mysteries with Perry.  We've marveled at the TV adaptions of familiar titles such as The Case of the Empty Tin, The Case of the Moth-Eaten Mink, The Case of the Sun Bather's Diary, The Case of the Fiery Fingers, The Case of the Footloose Doll,The Case of the Caretakers Cat and various combinations of Gardner stories and those written originally for the series by the prolific and talented writers like Jackson Gillis, Eugene Wang and Samuel Newman, etc.

Film buffs and today's fans of TCM get a special kick out of the guests appearing on the program.  It's like old home week watching the likes of Julie Adams, Morris Ankrum, Robert Armstrong, James Bell, Bruce Bennett, Willis Bouchey, James Coburn, Jeanne Cooper, Robert Cornthwaite, John Dall, Virginia Field, Constance Ford, Dabbs Greer, Neil Hamilton, Josephine Hutchinson, Otto Kruger, Barbara Lawrence, Keye Luke, Paula Raymond, Ann Rutherford, Kenneth Tobey, Constance Towers, Bobby Troup, and so many, many more.  It is especially nice to spot George E. Stone (The Racket, Little Caesar, The Front Page, 42nd Street, Boston Blackie series, etc.) as a court clerk in the first six seasons.  No lines, but he's a part of the scene, administering oaths and accepting evidence.  Mr. Stone's eyesight was failing him at the time and he could use the work and benefits that went along with being a part of the business.

Declining ratings and schedule shifting contributed to Perry Mason closing up shop at the end of the ninth season in 1966.  They went out on a dandy episode, perhaps the first official finale in TV history and a true shout out to fans and the hard-working crew, The Case of the Final Fade-Out.  An arrogant actor, played by James Stacey, is murdered on the set of a popular television series.  When Lt. Drumm interviews those present at the scene, he is interviewing the actual crew.  A producer played by Denver Pyle is named Jackson Sidemark, a combination of the Jacksons of "Paisano", Jackson Gillis, Art Seid and Arthur Marks.  Everyone gets into the act!  Barbara Hale, in a blonde week, plays a bimbo flirting with Arthur Marks, who claims to know the right people in show business.  Tending bar is Corney Jackson and CBS executive Anne Nelson.  Gail Patrick is a spectator in the courtroom.  The judge is none other than Erle Stanley Gardner.  The episode is a delight and a darn good mystery.

Raymond Burr, Barbara Hale
The Case of the Substitute Face

"We had more fun.  You just can't imagine.  It was a lovely time."

- Barbara Hale on nine seasons of Perry Mason


Fritzi of Movies Silently is hosting the Sleuthathon, a blogathon of gumshoes, risk-takers, and the righteously snoopy.  Let's all curl up with our screens and enjoy time well spent with dedicated bloggers and their favourite sleuths.  


Quotes from:
TV Guide article by Dwight Whitney, 1961
The Case of the Real Perry Mason by Dorothy B. Hughes
50th Anniversary DVD collection - interviews   


Big Stars on the Small Screen blogathon: Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater (1956 - 1961)

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Dick Powell
1904 - 1963

Big Stars on the Big Screen is the name of a blogathon running March 20th and 21st sponsored by Aurora on her sterling television devoted blog How Sweet It WasThis link will take you to a wondrous land where bloggers of renown release their inner fanboy/girl.  Maybe some of the shows featured are your favourites as well.

Dick Powell accomplished a lot in his show business career.  The boy with the lovely tenor voice and way with a popular song became a band singer and master of ceremonies.  His engaging stage presence and vocal ability led to a contract with Warner Brothers Studios in 1932 and a role in the fast-paced Lee Tracy comedy Blessed Event.  Dick sang four songs in the movie, two by Harry Warren.  Composer Warren would figure prominently in Dick Powell's movie career at Warners, composing songs introduced by the singer in such films as Gold Diggers of 1933, Footlight Parade and 42nd Street.  Future standards in the Great American Songbook include Warren and Dubin's I Only Have Eyes for You from Dames and I'll String Along With You from Twenty Million Sweethearts.  Dick Powell's popularity in such films as The Sing Marine, Broadway Gondolier, Flirtation Walk, Colleen and On the Avenue, often paired on screen with Canadian born hoofer Ruby Keeler or wife (1936-1944) Joan Blondell, kept the actor in the rut of a brash, but likeable young go-getter.

"I'm not a kid anymore but I'm still playing boy scouts."

Dick Powell, Claire Trevor
Murder, My Sweet

In 1940 Dick Powell made the move to Paramount Pictures and despite excellent movies such as Preston Sturges'Christmas in July and Rene Clair's It Happened Tomorrow, the fare was much the same.  In an effort to bring his image more in line with his age and his abilities Powell campaigned for the role of Walter Neff in Double Indemnity which went to Fred MacMurray.  Fulfilling a contract obligation to place their newly hired star in a drama, RKO cast the musical star in Murder, My Sweet, an adaption of Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe story Farewell, My Lovely.  Critics and audiences were impressed with the new image projected by Dick Powell in the role of a hard-boiled detective.  They shouldn't have been taken by surprise.  Those musicals he made at Warners weren't operettas.  They had songs, but they still had the zingers and tough-minded characters associated with a Warners product, and Dick Powell was adept at the style.  More excellent film-noir followed in the 1940s including Cornered, Pitfall, Johnny O'Clock and Cry Danger.  Other personal favourites of this era are Mrs. Mike, The Bad and the Beautiful and The Tall Target.  In You Never Can Tell Powell showed that after all that time on the mean streets, he never lost his comedy chops as he plays a reincarnated police dog solving his own murder.  It's a dandy!

"The best thing about switching from being an actor to being a director is that you don't have to shave or hold your stomach in anymore."

Dick Powell began directing with the 1953 film Split Second.  He directed his wife (1945-1963) June Allyson in a remake of It Happened One Night called You Can't Run Away from It.  It is most likely the directing assignment on The Conquerer which brought cast and crew to a former nuclear testing sight in Utah caused that cancer which would take his life, and those of many involved in the film.

One of the logos for the production company, Four Star

From master of ceremonies to popular crooner to perpetual juvenile lead to gritty dramatic star to director to influential independent television producer.  In 1955 Dick Powell, along with David Niven, Charles Boyer and Joel McCrea founded Four Star Productions, with McCrea bowing out of the corporation early to be replaced by actress/director Ida Lupino.  Dick Powell was the savvy business leader and hard-working head of the group.  Four Star Playhouse was an anthology series which ran on CBS from 1952 to 1956 featuring each of Four Star's four stars in rotating stories.  Over the course of the series run they received 14 Emmy nominations and 2 Directors Guild of America awards.

"From out of the west, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater"

Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater was produced by Four Star Productions and ran on CBS from 1956 - 1961.  The 1950s was the heyday of anthology series and of westerns, and here we had the best of both worlds.  The series was created by western writer Luke Short and the earliest stories are purported to be based on Zane Grey stories, however the episodes are pure mid-century American television with the Grey name promising the adventure of the old west.

Each week our host to the half hour episodes was the familiar and welcome face of Dick Powell.  His old m.c. skills made him right at home in front of the television camera giving us pithy, amusing and sometimes corny introductions to the story to come.  Stories written by Short, Sam Peckinpah, Bruce Geller, Fred Frieberger, Aaron Spelling and directed by John English, Christian Nyby, Budd Boetticher, David Lowell Rich and Don Taylor, etc.

Talk about big stars on the small screen - Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater had them all!  Barbara Stanwyck guested four times and Four Star would produce her popular 1960s series The Big Valley.  One of her episodes called Trail to Nowhere was written by Aaron Spelling as a (ahem) nod to Double Indemnity.  In interviews the producer/writer credited his boss at Four Star, Dick Powell with success.  Originally an actor, Spelling was encouraged by Powell to develop his writing skills and then to move into production.  When Spelling came up with the episode that could only be played by Barbara Stanwyck, Powell said "Well, go get her."  In hindsight Spelling knew that his boss had cleared the path for him to Stanwyck's door, but the confidence it gave him was immeasurable.  In her 1982 autobiography June Allyson wrote about her late husband's untiring efforts to mentor and help younger people in show business.  Dick Powell was unstinting in his support of the burgeoning talent, both on and off screen.

Other programs produced under the Four Star banner include Wanted: Dead or Alive with Steve McQueen, The Westerner with Brian Keith, Trackdown with Robert Culp, Black Saddle with Peter Breck and Russell Johnson and Law of the Plainsman with Michael Ansara.  David Janssen starred in Richard Diamond, Private Detective, adapted from the radio series which starred Dick Powell.  The Detectives starred Robert Taylor.  Programs in the 1960s included The Rogues with David Niven, Charles Boyer, Gladys Cooper and Robert Coote, Gene Barry in Burke's Law and Anne Francis in Honey West.  

Joan Crawford guested twice on the program.  Ida Lupino and James Whitmore are featured in a taut first season episode entitled Fearful Courage.  This would be the first of five appearances for Whitmore in a challenging variety of roles.  You might tune in and see, to your surprise and delight, Edward G. Robinson, Ralph Bellamy, John Payne, Eddie Albert, Van Johnson, Lew Ayres, Chester Morris, Brian Donlevy, Raymond Massey, Sammy Davis, Jr. or Chuck Connors playing a fellow named Lucas McCain.  If it is talented ladies you wish to see, look no further as Julie Adams, Audrey Totter, Martha Hyer, Marsha Hunt, Beverly Garland, Rita Moreno, Constance Ford, Hedy Lamarr, Beulah Bondi, Mary Astor and Carolyn Jones found interesting frontier women to bring to life.  I guarantee you that if you tune into Zane Grey Theater, not only will you be entertained by an interesting story, but each episode will feature a favourite or familiar actor.

Cloris Leachman, Robert Ryan
You Only Run Once

The first episode of Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater is You Only Run Once, one of four episode guest starring Robert Ryan (On Dangerous Ground, Bad Day at Black Rock) and Cloris Leachman (The Last Picture Show, Young Frankenstein).  Circumstantial evidence and jealousy lead Ryan's rancher to run afoul of vigilantes led by a bitter John Hoyt.  With the likes of Parley Baer, Leo Gordon, Douglas Fowley and Whit Bissell in the cast, the script is quite involving and emotions are brittle.  

Also from season one, a favourite of mine is Stage for Tucson.  A talented ensemble led by Eddie Albert finds travelers facing a crisis at a stage stop.  Deforest Kelley, John Ericson, Ian MacDonald, Bing Russell and a fiesty Mona Freeman give entertaining performances that remind us why this is classic television.

Dick Powell
Adding to his workload on Zane Grey Theater

Of course, our host took the time to appear in a episode or two during the run of the series.  Courage is a Gun has a wonderful script about a hot-headed young gunfighter played by Robert Vaughn who is hired by saloon keeper James Westerfield to take out the sheriff played by Dick Powell.  How does the sheriff's love, the town doctor played by Beverly Garland, come in to play in this tense situation?

Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater was awarded a Writer's Guild of America award in 1961 for Anthology Drama, 30 Minutes in Length.  Other nominees that year were Alcoa Theatre, The Dupont Show with June Allyson, The Twilight Zone and Goodyear Theatre.

In 1961 Dick Powell, after the end of Zane Grey Theater, moved on to another star-studded anthology series in which he would host and appear, The Dick Powell Theatre.  The series won a Golden Globe for Best TV Program and was nominated for 9 Emmy awards, winning one for guest Peter Falk.  The program was also honoured with nominations and wins from the American Cinema Editors, the Directors Guild of America and the Writers Guild of America.  Dick Powell's television legacy is one of great distinction as one of the first and most successful independent producers in the industry.

Caftan Woman's Choice: One for April on TCM

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John Ford, though a man of a prickly and mercurial nature, was a director with great artistic vision and critical and popular success.  Despite his laudatory career and multiple awards it took many years for the stars to align for Ford's pet project, a film based on Maurice Walsh's 1935 short story The Quiet Man.  It may have been due to timing or casting.  Perhaps the failure of studio executives to see any box office in the slight story or understand Ford's vision of expressing his lead character's nostalgic yearning and his journey through a mix of humour, mythology and Irish literary tradition.  Whatever the hurdles, the path was finally cleared by the man Ford befriended, bullied and made a star, John Wayne.  

Wayne was at this time making his first steps into production with Angel and the Badman and The Fighting Kentuckian at Republic Studios when he broached the idea of The Quiet Man to Herbert Yates.  Yates immediately saw the prestige of having a Ford picture under the Republic banner, but wanted a buffer against the possibility of box office failure.  The Quiet Man and its Irish location shooting was approved if, first, John Ford gave the studio a western.  As the publicity poster proclaimed he gave them "John Ford's Greatest Romantic Triumph!".

Rio Grande is at its core a story about healing, the coming together of a broken couple, a broken family and a broken country.  Based on a Saturday Evening Post story by  James Warner Bellah (Fort Apache, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance) with a screenplay by James Kevin McGuinness (Tarzan and His Mate, Arsene Lupin Returns) Rio Grande is set at an isolated cavalry outpost in the southwest where Colonel Kirby Yorke, played by John Wayne, contends with raiding Apaches who escape U.S. authorities by crossing over the Rio Grande/Rio Bravo into Mexico.  York's superior, General Philip Sheridan, played with a gruff professionalism by J. Carroll Naish (Sahara, A Medal for Benny) gives Kirby a covert order to disobey the rules and at the next opportunity pursue the Apaches into the neighbouring country.  It is an impossible mission where Yorke's actions will be condemned by the very people who gave them.

 John Wayne, J. Carroll Naish

Sheridan:  "If you fail, I assure you members of your court martial will be the men who rode with us at Shenandoah."

Sheridan, Yorke and burly Sgt. Quincannon played by Victor McLaglen (The Informer, Gunga Din) share a bond which reaches back to their service in the Civil War when their activities on behalf of the Union caused a rift between Kirby Yorke and his southern-born wife, Kathleen.  Maureen O'Hara (Miracle on 34th Street, The Black Swan) plays the tempestuous Kathleen Yorke.  For the first time movie audiences were treated to the electric chemistry and unique friendship that made Duke and Miss O'Hara one of Hollywood's most enduring screen teams.  The beauty of our stars and the stark location of the film is enhanced by the black and white cinematography of Bert Glennon, Oscar-nominated for Stagecoach, Drums Along the Mohawk and Dive Bomber.


Claude Jarmin Jr., John Wayne

Jeff:  "I'm not on this post to call you father."
 
Among recruits new to this frontier posting is Jefferson Yorke, the teenaged son of Kathleen and Kirby, played by Claude Jarmin Jr. (The Yearling, Intruder in the Dust, Hangman's Knot).  Failing in mathematics at West Point, "Jeff" enlisted and finds himself face-to-face with the father he has never known due to his parent's long separation.


Ben Johnson, Harry Carey Jr., Claude Jarmin Jr.
John Wayne, Chill Wills, Fred Kennedy, Victor McLaglen

Sandy:  "He said he was the teacher's pet of a chowder-headed mick sergeant.  What's that mean, doc?"

Kirby Yorke is pleased to meet the son who is following in his footsteps and flustered at how to handle the uncommon role of a father.  Jeff is a good kid who does his best and makes friends easily.  Those friends include Trooper Travis Tyree played with an appealing grace and ease by Ben Johnson (Wagon Master, Shane, The Last Picture Show) and the affable Trooper Sandy Boone played by Harry Carey Jr. (Red River, Three Godfathers, TVs The Adventures of Spin and Marty).  A highlight of the film is a display by these three actors of Roman Riding with the riders standing on more than one horse and jumping.  The trick riding is at the behest of Sgt. Quincannon who acts as an "uncle" toward Trooper Yorke.  The seeming favouritism leads to a fight between Jeff and Trooper Heinz.  Heinz is a lovely and memorable role for stuntman Fred Kennedy, who had been in films since 1938s The Adventures of Robin Hood and worked with Ford on many occasions.  Tragically, Kennedy would be killed performing a routine stunt on 1959s The Horse Soldiers.

John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara

Kathleen:  "Ramrod, wreckage and ruin, still the same Kirby Yorke."
Kirby:  "Special privileges to special born, still the same Kathleen."

The routine of the post and its commander's defences are assaulted by the arrival of Kathleen Yorke, determined to purchase Jeff's release from the army.  The attraction between Kirby and Kathleen is as undeniable as their clinging to past grievances and stubborn refusal to understand the other's point of view.  Will proximity, hardship and the example of their maturing son be enough to bring the couple together.  Perhaps music will soften their hearts.  Victor Young's (Shane, Around the World in Eighty Days) score is very fine and a personal favourite of mine.  The soundtrack is filled with songs by Stan Jones such as the lovely My Gal is Purple, and Dale Evans' peppy Aha, San Antone.  The familiar tunes I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen and Down by the Glenside may not be appropriate to the time of the story, but are certainly appropriate to the tone of the film.  The songs are beautifully sung by the regimental singers aka the Sons of the Pioneers in cavalry guise, with the soulful Ken Curtis taking lead vocals.

One of the things I like best about Ford's cinematic storytelling is that he brings us into a fully formed world such as the society of the post in Rio Grande.  A look between characters, an attitude or a cryptic remark infers a back story for the imaginative viewer.  There's a novel behind those looks that pass among Kirby and his officers.

Anticipating a hard winter of campaigning, the women and children, including 10-year-old Karolyn Grimes (It's a Wonderful Life, The Bishop's Wife, Blue Skies) and 11-year-old Patrick Wayne (Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger, Young Guns) are to be transferred to safety at Fort Bliss.  When the children are captured in a raid and taken across the border, volunteer troopers Tyree, Boone and Yorke take the lead in a dangerous mission to bring the children home safely to their anxious parents.  The theme of reunification is amplified once again in Rio Grande.

Rio Grande has it all - action, drama, romance, humour, songs and riding "after the manner of the ancient Romans".

TCM is screening Rio Grande on Wednesday, April 23rd at 10:45 am, as John Wayne is April's Star of the Month with wall-to-wall Duke playing on the network from Monday, April 21st to Friday, April 25th.  Sounds like any five days at my house!
 

Happy Birthday, Doris Day

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"I like joy; I want to be joyous; I want to have fun on the set; I want to wear beautiful clothes and look pretty. I want to smile and I want to make people laugh. And that's all I want. I like it. I like being happy. I want to make others happy."
- Doris Day

Animal activist, multi-talented performer, fashion icon and beautiful soul Doris Day turns 90 on this date.  I wish for her the joy of sweet companions because that is what she will always be to her adoring fans.



My introduction to Doris Day was as a singer and the above album, commandeered from my parent's collection, was an early favourite, especially the track Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams.  A little later I discovered Doris Day the movie star, and her popular movie songs.  I thought it would be fun, as I did previously with Bing, to look at Doris' track record with Oscar nominated and winning tunes. 

Click on the song title links for YouTube performances from the films where available.


Jack Carson, Doris Day

1948:  Romance on the High Seas

In Doris' first film she was directed by Michael Curtiz and she introduced what would become a standard, Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn's It's Magic.  A beautiful girl singing a beautiful song in a gorgeous Technicolor comedy-romance.  The film has mistaken identities, a cruise ship and an appealing cast led by Janis Paige and Doris Day with Jack Carson and Don DeFore.  Oscar Levant and S.Z. Sakallkeep the quips and double-takes coming.  Along with Doris, there's great music from the Page Cavanagh Trio and Sir Lancelot.  It wasn't magic for the composition that year at the Oscars as the trophy went to Jay Livingston and Ray Evans'Buttons and Bows from The Paleface. 


Jack Carson, Doris Day, Dennis Morgan

1949:  It's a Great Feeling

The next year Doris was featured as an aspiring actress whose career is taken under the incompetent wings of Dennis Morgan and Jack Carson.  In their comedic efforts to boost their star, the trio run into many bona fide stars on the Warner's lot and it's a pleasantly diverting Sunday afternoon sort of movie.  Doris sang the title song, It's a Great Feeling, again by Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn and again they were shut out at the Oscars as Frank Loesser took home the hardware for Baby, It's Cold Outside from Neptune's Daughter. 


Doris Day, Howard Keel

1953:  Calamity Jane

And we have a winner!  In every way Calamity Jane, directed by David Butler, director of It's a Great Feeling, is a winner.  Doris Day is right at home as tomboy Jane who falls hard for Howard Keel's Wild Bill Hickcock, after being sidetracked by Phil Carey's cavalry lieutenant and turning the life of Allyn Anne McLerie's faux entertainer inside out.  Sammy Fain and Paul Frances Webster filled the movie with charming songs and won the Oscar for Secret Love.


Doris Day, James Cagney

1955:  Love Me or Leave Me

The dramatic musical biography of popular singer Ruth Etting, Love Me or Leave Me is filled with popular song hits of the 1920s and 1930s.  However an original song was written for Doris to perform as Ruth, and Nicholas Brodszky and Sammy Cahn's I'll Never Stop Loving You was nominated for an Oscar.  Sammy Fain and Paul Frances Webster won the award that year for the title song for Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing.  Daniel Fuchs and Isobel Lennart wrote the Oscar-nominated screenplay for Love Me or Leave Me and Doris' co-star James Cagney was nominated for Best Actor.  Doris' nomination must have been lost in the mail.

Louis Jourdan, Doris Day

1956:  Julie

Released in 1956, Julie is a thriller directed by Andrew Stone (The Last Voyage).  Doris stars as flight attendant Julie whose second husband, concert pianist Louis Jourdan, is a tad on the possessive psychotic side, and the relationship has become frighteningly dangerous.  Julie fearfully comes to suspect that her first husband was murdered by her second, but convincing others and escaping Jourdan's mania is no easy task, especially on an airplane.  The theme Julie by Leith Stevens and Tom Adair was nominated for the Oscar as was Andrew Stone's original screenplay.

Daniel Gelin, Christopher Olsen, Doris Day, James Stewart

1956:  The Man Who Knew Too Much

Alfred Hitchcock revamped his 1934 film of the same name keeping the premise of a couple  and their desperate search for their kidnapped child after they unwittingly become involved in international intrigue.  Our mystified yet resourceful American tourists are played by Doris Day and James Stewart.  The film is opened up to include Marakesh locations and a song.  Not just any song.  THE song that is so inextricably associated with Doris Day that it followed her from movie to movie (Please Don't Eat the Daisies, The Glass Bottom Boat) to television (The Doris Day Show).  Jay Livingston and Ray Evans won the Oscar for Whatever Will Be Will Be (Que Sera Sera).  ASCAP also designated the song as one of the "Most Performed Feature Film Standards".


Happy Birthday, Doris Day.  

The Diamonds and Gold blogathon: Ride the High Country (1962)

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It is my pleasure to be co-hosting Rich Watson's (Wide Screen World) brainchild, The Diamonds and Gold Blogathon, highlighting some of the great film performances from actors past the age of 50 (which we all know is the new 30!).  Tomorrow this site will be devoted to ladies of a certain age.  Today, my contribution looks at three popular actors together in one of the best westerns from any era.

Ride the High Country was a 1962 release based on a script by N.B. Stone, Jr. (TVs Zorro, Cheyenne, Bonanza, etc.) that writer/director Sam Peckinpah reworked to create a personal vision in the story of two aging lawman at the dawn of the 20th century.  Peckinpah's film serves as a forward looking farewell to an era of filmmaking and a tribute to a vanished breed of men. 

Joel McCrea (1905-1990) was born in California and followed through on an interest in the motion picture industry by appearing as an extra in films in the 1920s and studying acting to prepare for the hoped-for big break.  Blessed with good looks and an athletic build McCrea was a perfect match for films.  Signed by RKO he appeared in increasingly larger roles in interesting films such as The Lost Squadron, Bird of Paradise and The Most Dangerous Game.  He proved a fine match opposite popular leading ladies such as Miriam Hopkins (The Richest Girl in the World, Barbary Coast, These Three), Ginger Rogers (Primrose Path, Chance at Heaven) and  Irene Dunne (The Silver Cord).  McCrea was an understated actor whose work smoothly speaks for itself in bona fide classics such as Alfred Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent, Preston Sturges'Sullivan's Travels and The Palm Beach Story, William Wyler's Dead End and George Stevens'The More the Merrier.  By the mid-1940s McCrea, also a rancher by trade, found himself comfortably in the position of a screen cowboy in such well-remembered titles as Ramrod, The Virginian, Colorado Territory and Stars in My Crown.  

"I liked doing comedies, but as I got older I was better suited to do Westerns. Because I think it becomes unattractive for an older fellow trying to look young, falling in love with attractive girls in those kinds of situations ... Anyway, I always felt so much more comfortable in the Western."
- Joel McCrea

Joel McCrea as Steve Judd

In Ride the High Country 57-year-old McCrea plays Steve Judd, a former renowned marshal fallen on hard times.  He has taken a job of transporting gold from an isolated mining camp to a bank.  The trail is dangerous as miners have been murdered in recent attempts to get to town, and the take is expected to be in the tens of thousands.  Judd is an honourable man who is loyal to his personal code of right and wrong, and to his employers.  Successfully completing this assignment is a matter of pride and one which Judd hopes will encourage others to see him as a worthy of hire.  Joel McCrea as Steve Judd gives us a character who is down, but not out.  A philosophical man who has retained his values and his good humour.  The stakes involved in his trek to the mining camp of Coarse Gold are large and Steve thinks he has found someone to help him in the task.  Someone with the same sense of pride.  Gil Westrum is also a former lawman now running a sideshow carnival booth going by the name of the Oregon Kid with a list of imaginary villains run to ground.  Westrum earns his living soaking the rubes with the help of a younger partner Heck Longtree played by Ron Starr.  Westrum agrees to go along on the job for old time's sake, and for the money.

Randolph Scott as Gil Westrum

In what would be his final film role in a 34 year film career, 63-year-old Randolph Scott (1898-1987) plays Gil Westrum.  He commented to McCrea at the end of filming that it was time to hang them up as they'd never find another script as good.  It was mainly in B westerns such as To the Last Man, Wagon Wheels and The Thundering Herd, which kept the young actor from North Carolina gainfully employed in his early Hollywood career.  However, he became a popular and well-rounded lead and second lead in many familiar titles including A Successful Calamity with George Arliss, Murders in the Zoo starring Lionel Atwill, the adventure-fantasy She, The Last of the Mohicans as Hawkeye, two Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals, Roberta and Follow the Fleet, and two Shirley Temple movies Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm and Susannah of the Mounties.

It was westerns where Randolph Scott excelled and seemed most at home.  Top-flight titles such as Frontier Marshal, Jesse James, Western Union and Belle Starr.  By the late 1940s Scott, forming his own production company with Harry Joe Brown (Ranown) would focus exclusively on westerns.  The mid-budget westerns proved extremely popular and profitable, featuring an interesting array of age-appropriate leading ladies including Donna Reed, Angela Lansbury and Ann Dvorak.  In 1956, produced by John Wayne's Batjac, Scott starred in 7 Men from Now written by Burt Kennedy and directed by Budd Boetticher.  Scott and Boetticher would collaborate on seven highly regarded westerns solidifying Scott's screen character as a man who might do the right thing for the wrong reason or vice versa.  His characters were often edgy loners, suspicious and secretive in nature.  Gil Westrum plays off that Scott persona and gives us an interesting and layered man.

Ride the High Country features some lovely exchanges between Steve and Gil which recounts their history and their present situation.  Particularly telling is their reminiscing about a girl and what might have been.  Steve is looking for a sort of redemption for his life an chance to "enter his Father's House justified".  Gil feels the world owes them both more than they received out of the dangers they have faced and chances they have taken.  Gil is determined to steal the gold with which they are entrusted and feels he is just.  Steve will only do the right thing, no matter the cost or who must pay.

Mariette Hartley, Ron Starr, Joel McCrea, Randolph Scott

The journey to Coarse Gold brings a young woman into the entourage.  Elsa Knudsen played by Mariette Hartley is running from her dictatorial father, played by R.G. Armstrong, to marry one of the mining Hammond brothers, Billy played by James Drury.  Elsa's presence leads to conflict when an attraction arises between her and Heck, and the Hammonds (John Anderson, Warren Oates, L.Q. Jones and John Davis Chandler) turn out to be less than forthright citizens.  Marrying Billy is a mistake for Elsa and a wonderfully disturbing scene in the movie.  The wedding takes place in a whorehouse with its garish inhabitants and customers.  The ceremony being unceremoniously performed by a drunken judge, Tolliver by name, played by Edgar Buchanan.

Edgar Buchanan (1903-1979), beloved as Uncle Joe on TVs Petticoat Junction, was a dentist who turned his practice over to his wife and began a career as a movie extra at the age of 35 in 1939.  The extra career didn't last long because by 1940s The Sea Hawk, Edgar Buchanan's ability as a scene-stealer of the highest order was recognized.  The adventure epic was quickly followed with prime roles such as Applejack in Penny Serenade, "Doc" Thorpe in Texas and Sam Yates in The Talk of the Town.  

Edgar Buchanan as Judge Tolliver

Previously Buchanan had appeared in six movies opposite Randolph Scott including The Desperadoes, The Walking Hills and Abilene Town, and twice with Joel McCrea in Buffalo Bill and Wichita.  In Ride the High Country the 60 year old Buchanan excels as Judge Tolliver in the horrific wedding scene, marshaling his lost dignity to proclaim:

"I am not a man of the Cloth, and this is not a religious ceremony.  It is a Civil marriage, but nonetheless it should not be entered into unadvisedly, but reverently and soberly.  You know, a good marriage has a kind of simple glory about it.  A good marriage is a rare animal, hard to find - almost impossible to keep.  I don't know - you see - well, people change.  It's important for you to know at the beginning that people change.  You see, the real glory of marriage don't come at the beginning.  It comes later and it's hard work."

The wedding night turns to a nightmarish shambles when the Hammond brothers attack Elsa and Steve and Heck agree to take her back to her home.  The Hammonds object, but agree to leave the matter in the hands of the miners' court.  Gil Westrum fixes things with a visit to Judge Tolliver.  It is a pleasure to watch Randolph Scott and Edgar Buchanan in the scene where Westrum bullies the judge into relinquishing his license to void the wedding.  Nothing they had appeared in before was ever quite as chilling as that scene. You can tell that they knew this was the goods! 

Westrum finds the hungover Judge Tolliver in a back bedroom at Kate's and offers him some liquor.

Tolliver:  Thank you, sir.  What can I do for you?
Gil:  Clear up a little technicality, if you will.  They're holding a Miners' Court.  About that marriage last night, they'll want to know if it was legal.
Tolliver:  Of course it was legal!
Gil:  Well, I believe that. But the Court may want proof. In the form of a license. To perform marriages. You got one?
Tolliver:  See for yourself.
Gil (reading):  Signed by the Governor of California. Yes sir, there's no question at all about the legality of this document. Now Judge, when you testify at that Miners' Court I'm going to ask you one question: 'Do you possess a license to marry people in California?' And you're going to answer, 'No'. Am I clear?
Tolliver:  But that's a lie.
Gil:  No, it isn't. You don't possess it. I do (pocketing the license).
Tolliver:  Now, hold on, Mister...
Gil:  Listen to me, you fat-gutted soak, you're going to do as you're told.  Understand?
Tolliver:  nodding
Gil:  Do you recall the question I'm going to ask you?
Tolliver:  nods again
Gil:  And what do you answer?
Tolliver:  No.
Gil:  Very good. Let's go.

Of course, the Hammonds aren't going to make this simple and the violent force they comprise, combined with the Westrum's treachery from within the group creates the tension and action of the final act of Ride the High Country.

Good acting is a combination of work, inspiration, material and talent.  When you can add experience into that mix you can create truly memorable movie moments.  Ride the High Country has an interesting ensemble of younger performers about to make their mark in the industry, but it is the work of the old pros, Joel McCrea, Randolph Scott and Edgar Buchanan that make the film a classic which was placed on the National Film Registry in 1992.  

The Diamonds and Gold Blogathon: Day 2, the Ladies

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Ladies and gents, it is the sparkly Sunday of the Diamonds and Gold blogathon, a look at great performances by actors over the age of 50.  Yesterday Rich of Wide Screen World hosted the wonderful articles on gentlemen who impressed us the most.  Today I am thrilled to host a look at all the great actresses who got better with time.

ImagineMDD - Anne Bancroft in 84 Charing Cross Road with Anthony Hopkins

Victoria Loomes, Girls Do Film - Joan Crawford and Bette Davis in Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?

Minoo Allen - Bette Davis and the Baby Jane Paradox

Patti, They Don't Make 'Em Like They Used To - Bette Davis in Right of Way with James Stewart

Beth, Mildred's Fatburgers - Marie Dressler's Second Wind

Margaret Perry.org - How Katharine Hepburn Defied Sexist Ageism in Hollywood

Aurora, Citizen Screen - Josephine Hull in Harvey

Dorian and Vinnie, Tales of the Easily Distracted - Elsa Lanchester and Charles Laughton together in Witness for the Prosecution 

Jacqueline T. Lynch, Another Old Movie Blog - Rosalind Russell in A Majority of One

Amy, Vintage Cameo - Gloria Swanson


The James Stewart Blogathon: Bend of the River (1952)

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An idea whose time has come!  This post is part of the James Stewart Blogathon hosted by the Classic Film & TV Cafe.  You can view the complete blogathon schedule here.

The screen credit always read James Stewart, yet the people in the audience always called the actor "Jimmy".  Jimmy was like an old pal they had watched for years, first angling for his spot in Hollywood at MGM then speaking for what is good in all of us with his Oscar-nominated performance in Frank Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.  Then there was the war, where Jimmy the flyer was an instructor and flew combat missions in Europe, become a Colonel by the end.  When he retired from the Air Force Reserve in 1959 he was a brigadier general.  After the war, like other actors, and directors like Frank Capra (It's a Wonderful Life), Jimmy took control of his own career.

Jimmy Stewart's film career in the 1950s is a model of versatility and success that any actor would be proud to claim.  In 1950 he played Elwood P. Dowd in the screen version of Mary Chase's Pulitzer Prize winning play Harvey and found a role he could return to in future on the stage.  At the end of the decade he was Oscar-nominated for the Otto Preminger directed courtroom drama Anatomy of a Murder.  In between there were three biographies, The Stratton Story and The Glenn Miller Story, both co-starring June Allyson and The Spirit of St. Louis.  His collaboration with Hitchcock which began with 1948s Rope, continued with Rear Window, Vertigo and The Man Who Knew Too Much.  There were thrillers, romance, dramas, and he even got to be a clown in The Greatest Show on Earth.  Best of all there were westerns.  Jimmy Stewart made eight films with director Anthony Mann and five of them are among the best westerns of the 1950s, Winchester '73, The Naked Spur, The Far Country, The Man from Laramie, and Bend of the River.

Bend of the River is my movie.  We all have one.  The movie we reach for when a cold is coming on.  Not the flu or anything major, but a cold that entitles you to pampering while foregoing a trip to the ER.  You snuggle on the couch under a mound of blankets with tissue at your side while obliging family members bring you classes of water, cups of soup and toast with the crusts cut off.  You watch the movie that comforts you right down to your fluffy slippers.  Life is good.

"How many bad guys have to bite the dust before you are comforted?"
- Janet Hall, concerned daughter

Screenwriter Bordon Chase had been working in Hollywood since his first novel Sand Hog was adapted for Raoul Walsh's 1935 film Under Pressure.  Mysteries, war pictures and westerns make up the bulk of Chase's work, with his westerns being true classics of the genre such as Red River, Man Without a Star, Winchester '73 and The Man from Colorado.  I find his best films to be emotionally epic, and this is how Bend of the River, adapted from William Gulick's novel Bend of the Snake, struck me when I first saw it over 40 years ago, and strikes me again on my many re-watches.

Julie Adams, James Stewart

Jimmy Stewart plays Glyn McLyntock, leader of a wagon train taking settlers to the Oregon territory.  Glyn has a past as a border raider during the Civil War, a past he wants to forget.  He's hoping to have a new beginning with these brave settlers, particularly with lovely Julie Adams playing Laura Baile.  On a scouting expedition Glyn saves the life of Emerson Cole played by Arthur Kennedy.  Cole has angered some vigilantes and he and Glyn recognize each other for the bad men they have been.  Cole is willing to string along with the wagon train until something better turns up or Laura Baile casts an eye in his direction.  Cole knows he owes Glyn, but his allegiance is strictly self-serving.

The settlers led by Jay C. Flippen as Jeremy Baile, father of Laura and younger sister Marjie played by Lori Nelson, are greeted warmly in Portland purchasing the supplies which will carry them through the winter.  Merchant Tom Hendricks played by Howard Petrie will see that the supplies are shipped in time.  The approaching winter causes concern when the supplies have not arrived as promised so Glyn and Jeremy return to Portland to check on their stock and on Laura.  Laura had been wounded in an Indian attack and had been recuperating in Portland.

Rock Hudson, Arthur Kennedy, James Stewart

The intervening months had seen a gold strike and the countryside was filling up with optimistic miners who needed supplies and were willing to pay much more than top dollar.  Hendricks is holding back the settler's necessaries for all the money he can get.  Meanwhile, Emerson Cole is running a gambler's paradise with Laura and with a handsome young gunman named Trey Wilson played by Rock Hudson.  This was a breakout role for Rock who proved himself an appealing screen personality.  Glyn hires some men at the dock to load the settler's goods on a paddle wheel run by Cap'n Mello played by Chubby Johnson and Adam played by Stepin Fetchit.  It is a messy situation and Glyn can't get away cleanly as they are followed up river by Hendricks and a gang.

Arthur Kennedy, Harry Morgan, Royal Dano

Glyn counts Cole and Trey as his partners in the dangerous enterprise, but the men who were basically shanghaied from the dock are not satisfied with the situation.  Jack Lambert, Harry Morgan and Royal Dano are among the crew who decide to turn on Glyn, hijack the goods and sell them to the miners.  As masterminds, they fall a little short of their scheme, but Emerson Cole is ahead of them and were it not for Laura's presence, Glyn would be dead.  Instead, he is left to die in the wilderness.

James Stewart as Glyn McLyntock

"You'll be seeing me. You'll be seeing me. Everytime you bed down for the night, you'll look back to the darkness and wonder if I'm there. And some night, I will be. You'll be seeing me!"

The twists and turns of Glyn's redemption make for riveting viewing.  Bend of the River was the second Jimmy Stewart-Anthony Mann western following Winchester '73.  It was filmed in gorgeous Technicolor by cinematographer Irving Glassberg and has an appropriate stirring score by six time Oscar nominee Hans Salter.  Location filming in Oregon lends a sense of the treachery of the land and of the people.  You can feel the crisp breeze, the mundane hazards of rocks and mud, and be awestruck by the vistas of rivers and mountains.

A perilous journey.

The story of Bend of the River is compelling and filled with action.  Glyn's search for a new life is heartbreakingly convincing in the hands of Jimmy Stewart, who was giving the public a look at the new post-war actor, a man of darker shades.  Arthur Kennedy is a charming skunk as Emerson Cole.  Whether he is playing a sweetheart or a villain, he is an actor that it is impossible to ignore.  

Chubby Johnson's long screen career in movies and on TV was just beginning.  Oldtimer J.C. Flippen still had some interesting roles to play, even into the 60s.  Until a couple of late life roles in the 70s in a Moms Mabley comedy and Won Ton Ton the Dog Who Saved Hollywood, this year would mark the end of the movie road for Stepin Fetchit.  His role in Bend of the River did not rely on much of the traditional comic schtick for which he is most remembered.  Rock Hudson staked his claim in the star lottery.  In future years, certain cast members would become famous for TV roles, Harry Morgan for December Bride, Pete and Gladys, Dragnet and M*A*S*H, and Frances Bavier for The Andy Griffith Show.  In the 1970s Julie Adams would play Jimmy Stewart's wife in The Jimmy Stewart Show, but for now it was 1952.  The 1950s, Jimmy's decade, was just beginning. 

The Great Villain Blogathon: The Spider Woman

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Something scary is happening.  Speakeasy, Shadows and Satin and Silver Screenings have pooled their considerable talents to bring us The Great Villain Blogathon, running April 20th to 26th.

Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce first embodied Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson for Twentieth Century Fox in 1939s The Hound of the Baskervilles and The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.  The Victorian-era tales were well made and popular, but a series idea did not continue past those two excellent movies.  In 1942 Universal took up the mantle with Rathbone and Bruce, updating the pair to a contemporary setting with the majority of the films directed by Roy William Neill.  Holmes was free to pursue various nefarious villains from Professor Moriarty to Nazis.  In 1944 Holmes was pitted against one of the most fiendish of them all - The Spider Woman!

Gale Sondergaard, Basil Rathbone

Holmes:  I suspect a woman.
Watson:  A woman?  You amaze me, Holmes.  Why a woman?
Holmes:  Because the method, whatever it is, is peculiarly subtle and cruel.  Feline, not canine.

Well, if that's not a ringing endorsement, I don't know what is.

London newspapers are full of reports of mysterious deaths known as "pajama suicides".  Eminent men of means retire for the evening and, with no apparent cause, leap to their deaths.  What is behind it all?  Only one man can solve the puzzle, but that one man is dead.  While on a fishing vacation in Scotland, Sherlock Holmes falls to his death leaving behind a baffled constabulary and a bereft John Watson.  Of course, we know he's an old faker.  Holmes wouldn't go and die on us.  He wants to lull the criminal element behind the "pajama suicides" into a false sense of security.  A disguised Holmes will follow up on his one lead by placing himself in harm's way.  Holmes, in his everlasting confidence, does not fear the "female Moriarty" of crime.

Dennis Hoey, Basil Rathbone

Gale Sondergaard stars as Adrea Spedding, the Spider Woman.  Ms. Spedding has quite the lucrative racket.  Through the auspices of a gaming establishment she induces the eminent men of means to sign over their insurance policies and then on a luckless night frightens them into causing their own deaths to escape the lycosa carnivora, the deadliest insect known to science.  Creepy and effective.

It is a deadly game of cat and mouse between Holmes and the Spider Woman.  They see through each others disguises and ploys easily, and their enjoyment in the game is as great as ours is in watching the sparring.  Holmes comes very close to underestimating his adversary in this adventure.  Adrea Spedding is a brilliant manipulator and exceedingly clever.  She controls her organization with an uncanny ability to anticipate her enemy's moves and an easy access to her dark side.  A mad scientist, an annoying child, and an arcade shooting gallery all figure in the match-up between the two masterminds, which gives us one of the most entertaining entries in the Universal Holmes series.

 
Vernon Downing, Basil Rathbone, Alec Craig, Gale Sondergaard

Holmes aficionados will have fun looking for nods to The Adventure of the Final Problem, The Sign of Four, The Adventure of the Speckled Band, The Adventure of the Devil's Foot and The Adventure of the Empty House in Bertram Millhauser's screenplay.

Gale Sondergaard
(1898 - 1985)

When stage actress Gale Sondergaard came to Hollywood in the 1930s it was for her husband, writer/director Herbert Biberman's career.  However, it was Gale's screen career that started off brilliantly when Mervyn LeRoy cast her in the 1936 epic Anthony Adverse.  Her peers saw something in her portrayal of the manipulative and avaricious Faith that moved them to nominate her for a Best Supporting Actress Award in the first year of that category.  For her first film Gale was the first winner of the, at the time, plaque.  Less than two decades later her peers would not be so kind when Herbert Biberman was jailed as one of the Hollywood Ten and Gale was blacklisted.  Her last movie role for many years before the blacklisting set in was as Barbara Stanwyck sympathetic mother in Mervyn LeRoy's East Side, West Side.

Gale Sondergaard was an actress of versatility and intelligence who could and did play a variety of roles, including the mysterious Mrs. Hammond in The Letter, Lady Thiang in Anna and the King of Siam (another Oscar nomination)and the possessive Mrs. Manette in Christmas Holiday.  It is for the classy relish she brought to her villains for which Gale Sondergaard is best remembered.  Whether played in earnest or played for laughs her presence is as welcome and comforting as any on the screen.  You know what you are getting when Gale shows up in The Cat and the Canary, The Road to Rio or The Time of Their Lives as surely as when you are watching The Mark of Zorro and The Spider Woman.  In the 1970s, Gale Sondergaard returned to our screens with guest spots on television programs including Get Smart, Rod Serling's Night Gallery, the mini-series Centennial and the daytime drama Ryan's Hope.



Once a Spider Woman, always a Spider Woman.  Originally a freelance actress, during the 1940s Gale Sondergaard signed with Universal who capitalized on her appearance in the Holmes series by again presenting her as the "Spider Woman".  However, in the 1946 film The Spider Woman Strikes Back she plays a different character named Zenobia Dollard.  Ms. Dollard is even more mad than Ms. Spedding.  Does anyone else feel a chill?    


Caftan Woman's Choice: One for May on TCM

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The May spotlight is doing double duty as my annual birthday salute to Bing Crosby.

What is better than a "Road to" movie?  How about a "Road to" movie in Technicolor.  1953s Road to Bali is the only "Road to" movie filmed in colour and is the last of what I would call the official "Road to" pictures.  The code I live by does not accept 1960s The Road to Hong Kong as Dorothy Lamour is not the leading lady.

The first of the Crosby - Hope - Lamour comedies, 1940s Road to Singapore had a checkered history having been conceived as a vehicle for George Burns and Gracie Allen then refashioned into a buddy picture for Fred MacMurray and Jack Oakie.  The timing didn't work out for that duo to play the playboy and his pal who stir up comic misadventures in the south seas.  Bing Crosby and Bob Hope ended up singing Johnny Burke, James Monaco and director Victor Schertzinger songs to a saronged Dorothy Lamour.  The movies slight plot was bolstered by the music, a faux-exotic locale and the breezy camaraderie of the newly installed leads.  Paramount found themselves with an unexpected hit.


Bing and Bob had first met in NYC in 1932 when Bob was emceeing at the Capital Theater where Bing had a week long engagement.  Sharing a love of fun and repartee, the two hit if off and worked up routines to enliven the show.  Years later in Hollywood, between their writers and their individual wits, the future entries in their movie series took off in wild flights of fancy and fun, for the participants and for the audience.  The followups, all with songs by Johnny Burke and Jimmy Van Huesen, are 1941s Road to Zanzibar, 1942s Road to Morocco, 1945s Road to Utopia, 1947s Road to Rio, 1952s Road to Bali (and the other one).

Dorothy Lamour, Bing Crosby

The idea in all these movies is that Bing and Bob are shiftless entertainers usually on the run from the law and/or shotgun armed fathers of voluptuous daughters.  Along the way there would be evil-doers (Anthony Quinn, Douglas Dumrille, Jack LaRue, etc.) and Dorothy Lamour as a damsel in distress who loves both of them but usually ends up with Bing.  Songs in the series would become standards such as Moonlight Becomes You, Personality and But Beautiful.  Ensuing hijinks include contemporary political humour, inside jokes, breaking the fourth wall, talking animals and Robert Benchley.

Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour

In Road to Bali (they never do get there) the boys are broke in Melbourne and on the run from a couple of dolls.  One of them is 22-year-old Carolyn Jones!  They end up as deep sea divers aka giant squid bait retrieving sunken treasure.  A half Scottish Island princess gives the boys an excuse to wear kilts for a novelty tune,Hoot Mon.  The princess has an evil cousin played by Mervyn Vye (Golden Earrings, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court).  A widowed gorilla falls for the boys.  Bob, Bing and Dorothy sing a lively The Merry Go Run Around.  Oh - and there's a volcano.  All of this happens with non-stop one-up-mans-ship in the form of quips, asides and some of the corniest sight gags, sound gags and celebrity cameos you have ever seen in one movie.  It cracks me up!

TCM is showing Road to Bali on Friday, May 2nd at 10:45 am.  It is part of a morning of Bing Crosby films to commemorate his birthday.  The lineup is Going Hollywood, Road to Bali, High Society and Man on Fire.



The Romantic Comedy Blogathon: Footlight Serenade (1942)

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A BOY.     A GIRL.     A BOXER.     ON BROADWAY!

THE BOY

Bill Smith came to the big town to make his mark, but the only success he's met with has been the romantic time.  However, he is willing to temporarily leave his girl behind looking for a new start.  She convinces him to stop by a theatre where she is auditioning for one last goodbye.  He'll be staying put!

John Payne plays Bill.  The former Warners contractee had been with Twentieth Century Fox for two years at this point and had proven himself with his good looks, fine voice and easy chemistry with leading ladies.  Tin Pan Alley, Week-End in Havana and The Great American Broadcast with Alice Faye, Sun Valley Serenade with Sonja Henie and To the Shores of Tripoli with Maureen O'Hara (they would meet up later with a fella called Kris) were solid hits.

THE GIRL

Pat Lambert is like hundreds of dancers looking for work on Broadway.  The big difference is she has Bill in her corner.  Pat's talent and personality also catch the eye of the Boxer.  Well, a job is a job and a girl's gotta do what a girl's gotta do!

Betty Grable plays Pat.  The bubbly and talented Grable had been around Hollywood for ten years in small, but showy parts.  It took a role on Broadway in Cole Porter's Du Barry Was a Lady to bring her back to Tinseltown where she would become one of the most popular performers of the 1940s.  Down Argentine Way was the colourful Fox musical co-starring Don Ameche would really put her on the map.

THE BOXER

Tommy Lundy is the champ.  The ladies love him almost as much as he loves himself.  He can't sing and he can't dance and he can't act, but that won't stop him from starring in a Broadway show.  After all, the ladies love him!

Victor Mature plays Tommy.  The physically imposing actor self-deprecatingly maligned his own talents to go along with the critical catcalls.  However, he was a trained professional whose performances in such films as My Darling Clementine, Kiss of Death, Cry of the City and I Wake Up Screaming belie his "not an actor" reputation.  The larger-than-life, exuberant and extremely confident Tommy is a particularly fun characterization.

ON BROADWAY!

Phil Silvers as the comic "Slap" convinces producer Bruce McKay played by James Gleason that a show starring the ring's latest heartthrob will be a surefire hit.  A hit, he wants.  What he gets is ulcers when the swell-headed Tommy takes over.  Tommy's not malicious, it's just that he's always right so why shouldn't people do what he says?  He wants someone to box in the last act and Bill seems like the right guy, so he gets Bill.  He thinks Pat is darn cute, and she sure can dance, so he gets Pat in the show.

Betty Grable, Jane Wyman

Also along for the fun is Pat's best friend Flo played by Jane Wyman.  I don't know why this Warner Brothers gal was at Fox for one picture in 1942, but I know what she was doing.  She was doing the Eve Arden bit, that of sardonic best friend, and she nails it.  Flo sees nothing but trouble in the cards for Pat.  "You have as much chance of going on as I have of becoming First Lady!"

The supporting cast is a movie buffs delight featuring Irving Bacon, Mantan Moreland and Frank Orth.  Tommy's current girlfriend, society singer Estelle Evans played by society singer Cobina Wright, is not right for a Broadway show so naturally Tommy wants her for his leading lady.  Miss Evans is immediately jealous of the attention Tommy pays Pat.  There's a lot of that going around.  Bill isn't too pleased either.  Pat uses this to her advantage.  Some guys have to be dragged to the altar or municipal city hall.  Love is in the air, but has to be kept a secret until opening night as everyone is afraid of upsetting Tommy before the show is declared a hit, Pat becomes a star and the money starts rolling in.

The director of Footlight Serenade is Gregory Ratoff (Intermezzo: A Love Story, Rose of Washington Square, The Corsican Brothers), Max Fabian of All About Eve fame.  He gives us a nicely paced show and some memorable tracking shots through the backstage areas of our Broadway theatre setting.  The black and white cinematography is by Lee Garmes (Scarface, The Furies, A Big Hand for the Little Lady) who would also produce and direct in his Hollywood career.

I like my romantic comedies with generous helpings of music.  Cupid's arrow is often greatly helped by the right love song or a passionate dance.  Hollywood obliged with many great examples starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers at RKO, Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald at MGM, and Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler at Warner Brothers.  The Great American Songbook is filled with movie standards from Irving Berlin, the Gershwins, Jerome Kern, Johnny Mercer, Harry Warren and others.

Songs for Footlight Serenade were composed by Oscar winners (Thanks for the Memory) Ralph Rainger and Leo Robin.  The tunes are peppy and humourous befitting this lively story, and the dance routines are fun and polished.  Choreography is by Hermes Pan (Top Hat, Swing Time, Silk Stockings) who plays a dance director in the movie and performs Land on Your Feet with Betty.    The shadow boxing number I Heard the Birdies Sing is a very nice showcase for Betty.  The number I'm Still Crazy for You shows why Bill and Pat are perfect for each other.

John Payne, Betty Grable, Victor Mature

Betty Grable has a very appealing screen personality.  She's attractive and energetic.  She knows what she wants and goes after it.  She doesn't suffer fools lightly.  She's a gal that can take care of herself.  John Payne is one of those performers who always seems just right in whatever he is doing, a musical-comedy, a film-noir or a western.  He makes it look easy. 

You know going into a romantic comedy what the ending will be.  The story told must entertain and amuse.  The actors must be personable and professionally committed to putting over the script.  There has to be a lot of confusion and misunderstanding before that final clinch or production number, and the audience has to enjoy the ride.  Footlight Serenade is one enjoyable ride.

Lara of Backlots and Vince of Carole & Co. have brought love to the blogosphere with The Romantic Comedy Blogathon running from May 1 - 4.

CMBA Fabulous Films of the 50s blogathon: Champagne for Caesar (1950)

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The Classic Movie Blog Association sponsors the Fabulous Films of the 50s blogathon from May 22 to May 26.  So many great movies and so many great posts. 

Ronald Colman stars as Beauregard Bottomley, the last scholar, in the delightful 1950 comedy Champagne for Caesar.  As always, Colman is perfect in his role.  He was a perfect Sidney Carton, a perfect Robert Conway, a perfect George Apley, a perfect Rudolf Rassendyll, etc.  Beauregard Bottomley is a head-in-the-clouds and rather naive sort of fellow who devotes his time to higher learning and Greek translations, which doesn't pay very well.  He lives in a friendly bungalow court with his younger sister Gwenn, a piano teacher played by pretty Barbara Britton (The Virginian, I Shot Jesse James, TVs Mr. and Mrs. North).  The abode is also shared by a parrot named Caesar.  Caesar's former owner taught him a number of colourful phrases and encouraged a taste for the grape.  Caesar is voiced by Mel Blanc.

A stroll on a pleasant, warm evening to join others gathered in front of a storefront to watch television will irrevocably change not only the lives of the Bottomley siblings, but of the nation!  Beauregard is anxious to watch the broadcast of a scientific experiment and is prepared to return home at its conclusion when the popular radio/TV hit "Masquerade for Money" hosted by "Happy" Hogan begins.  This is the program which has drawn the rest of the crowd and Gwenn wants to check it out.  Perennial host Art Linkletter is cast as "Happy" and does a credible job.  Certainly he is on his mettle as a TV host and handles his "off" scenes well.  The premise of "Masquerade for Money" is that the contestant dresses up as someone or something and is asked questions about their assumed identity.  The first correct answer is a $5 win and the money increases to the top prize of $160.  The program is the brainchild of and sponsored by Milady's Soap ("the soap that sanctifies").  Milady's Soap is run by Burnbridge Waters.  In Vincent Price's mad and hysterical performance as the mastermind you will see the genesis for his Professor Ratigan from The Great Mouse Detective, 35 years in the future. 

Beauregard is appalled by what he sees on the television.  "This man is the forerunner of intellectual destruction in America.  If it is noteworthy and rewarding to know that 2 and 2 make 4 to the accompaniment of deafening applause and prizes then 2 and 2 making 4 will become the top level of learning."  Gwenn, on the other hand, thinks "Happy" is cute.

Beauregard's ongoing efforts to find meaningful employment are a problem for both himself and Mr. Brown of the Department of Employment. "If you know everything, you're not wanted around for long."  Perhaps at long last they have found the way Beauregard can "make a buck" and he eagerly attends for an interview at a firm that is looking for someone to do something with a research survey.  The company is Milady's Soap ("the soap that sanctifies") which is housed in an office complex that looks as if Dr. Seuss was hired as interior designer.  There is a hushed atmosphere, an obelisk with disembodied arms holding soap, disembodied voices greet and offer commands and eventually Beauregard is ushered in to see the top man.  Burnbridge Waters is currently in a trance.  It's how he thinks up things like "Masquerade for Money".  Coming out of the trance, he questions the applicant and finds Beauregard Bottomley not to his liking.  "You are the intellectual type.  I despise intellectuals types."  Beauregard's attempts at injecting humour into the interview are also met with strong disapproval and insults.  Beauregard does not take the rejection from the "pompous ass" lightly.

Art Linkletter, Ronald Colman

Beauregard enters "Masquerade for Money" as the Encyclopedia Britannica.  His appearance causes a sensation.  The audience cannot get enough of the "overgrown wiz kid".  Waters plays along.  After all, it's great publicity for Milady's Soap ("the soap that sanctifies").  Soon enough is too much!  Beauregard refuses to leave the game and they cannot stump the genius.  They try pulling the plug on the show, but there is outrage and sales plummet.  Beauregard's revenge is taking shape.  He wants to win the entire company.  "Happy" Hogan is sent to influence Beauregard through Gwenn, but instead falls for the girl.

Waters resorts to his secret weapon in the feminine form of Celeste Holm as Flame O'Neill.  What a name!  What a woman!  Ostensibly a nurse hired by one of the many Beauregard Bottomley fan clubs that dot the country, to help him recover from a cold, the brainy and beautiful Flame puts a plan in action to upset the equilibrium of the corporate raider.  Beauregard is smitten.  Two romances, the fate of a prominent company and television history all rest with Beauregard Bottomley, the last scholar. 

Champagne for Caesar was produced by Harry Popkin.  Harry and his brother Leo were film distributors who got into the producing line and whose titles gladden the hearts of old movie buffs.  Along with Champagne for Caesar there is the great Christie adaption And Then There Were None, the classic film-noir Impact and D.O.A., and the social conscience drama The Well, among others.

The director of Champagne for Caesar is former actor Richard Whorf (Yankee Doodle Dandy, Blues in the Night).  He began directing in the early 40s and movie credits include It Happened in Brooklyn and Luxury Liner.  As of 1952 Whorf's work would be entirely for television including many episodes of My Three Sons, The Beverly Hillbillies, The Barbara Stanwyck Show and Gunsmoke.  The sprightly score by Dimitri Tiomkin hits all the right notes.  Tiomkin would also work with Harry Popkin on D.O.A. and The Well.

Vincent Price, Vicci Raaf

The supporting cast of this film are a delight.  John Eldredge and Lyle Talbot are beleaguered Milady's Soap ("the soap that sanctifies") executives.  Vici Raaf as Waters' secretary is a quiet riot and Ellye Marshall as a Monroe-like starlet is charming.  Byron Foulger adds a droll touch as one of Gwenn's piano students.  Bess Flowers can be found backstage at the Hollywood Bowl during the finale of "Masquerade for Money". 

Champagne for Caesar is one of those movies that could very easily be translated from 1950 to 2014.  The gadgets have changed, and some of our TV viewing habits, but the habit is still there and the advertisers still have us by the throat.  Game show contestants become celebrities, whether their knowledge exceeds that of 2 and 2 making 4 or not.  Side note:  my sisters and I once saw Jeopardy champ Ken Jennings on a street in Toronto and we pointed and screamed.  I think we frightened him.  The comedy in Champagne for Caesar is relatable and played with elan by a cast that truly delivers the good natured and hearty laughs.


Caftan Woman's Choice: One for June on TCM

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Some stories strike a chord with audiences and creators alike and find expression again and again throughout generations.  Author Robert L. Fontaine was born in Illinois, but spent part of his childhood in Ottawa, Canada, the setting for his 1945 novel The Happy Time, which began life as several magazine short stories.  In 1950 Samuel Taylor (Sabrina Fair, No Strings) adapted the stories for a Broadway play which had a successful run of 614 performances.  Earl Felton (The Narrow Margin, Armored Car Robbery) received a Writers Guild Award nomination for his 1952 screenplay adaption for the Stanley Kramer production of The Happy TimeThe Happy Time once again went to Broadway in 1968 as a Kander and Ebb musical winning three Tony Awards out of eight nominations.  Thanks to DVDs and the astute TCM programmers, the winning film continues to find an accepting audience.


Director Richard Fleisher was keen to work on the project for his friend Stanley Kramer and recounts in his 1993 memoir Just Tell Me When to Cry:

"The making of The Happy Time was an unadulterated delight, and we were all pleased with the result.  In the 1950s Radio City Music Hall was to movies what the Palace Theater used to be to vaudeville.  To play the Palace was to achieve the pinnacle of success.  To play the Music Hall was something to be proud of.  The Happy Time played the Music Hall."

Springtime in Ottawa, circa 1921 is full of confusion and joy for Robert Bonnard, known affectionately to his large and loving family as Bibi.  It is the springtime when Bibi will grow in understanding and from short pants to long.  Bibi is played by 15-year-old Bobby Driscoll (Peter Pan, So Dear to My Heart, special Oscar winner for The Window).  His performance is sincere and amusing showing a young man with natural gifts who needed only guidance and material to fulfill his potential.

Bibi's Anglo-Scot Presbyterian mother is played by lovely Marsha Hunt (Raw Deal, The Valley of Decision).  Madame Bonnard sees herself as the voice of reason and discipline in a family of crazy francophone males.  For all her protestations she is as open-hearted and fun-loving as the rest of the Bonnards. 

Bibi's father Jacques is an artist, the music director at the local vaudeville theatre.  His philosophical nature may be the greatest influence, not only on Bibi, but on his whole family.  Four time Oscar nominee for Best Actor Charles Boyer (Algiers, Love Affair) is charming in the role of family man.  He wears it like a glove.

Grandpere, played by versatile character actor Marcel Dalio (Casablanca, Tip on a Dead Jockey), lives with Bibi and his parents.  He is, for all his years, a man whose hobby, avocation and reason for living is "the ladies".  The dapper skirt chase is frowned upon by his daughter-in-law and accepted with a smile by his eldest son.  His youngest son is the infamous Uncle Desmond played by Louis Jourdan (Gigi, The Swan).  Desmond is a chip off the old block and, as Mme. Bonnard fears, a bad influence on Bibi.  Ah, Louis Jourdan!

Kurt Kasznar, Jeanette Nolan, Ann Faber

In a neighbouring house resides Uncle Louis played by Kurt Kasznar (Lili, The Ambushers).  Like his older brother Jacques, Louis is a philosopher, but one whose wisdom comes from a water cooler filled with wine.  He is well-jmeaning, but more than a little cock-eyed.  Louis' wife Felice is played by Jeanette Nolan (MacBeth, The Big Heat) and perhaps one of these days she will wear out from yelling at him.  Perhaps not.

Kurt Kasznar played the role of Uncle Louis in the Broadway production and while Kramer and Fleischer agreed he was brilliant in the role at first they balked at paying the requested price for his service.  They offered the role instead to Zero Mostel, but Harry Cohn of Columbia Studios who was backing the project refused to hire the blacklisted Mostel.  

Another neighbour of the Bonnard's is Peggy O'Hare aka "The Fighting American" played by Marlene Cameron, also from the original Broadway production.  Peggy is Bibi's classmate and fervent admirer.

Kurt Kasznar, Charles Boyer, Bobby Driscoll, Marsha Hunt, Louis Jourdan

Into this mix of high spirits comes the Linda Christian (Battle Zone, The V.I.P.s) as the beauteous Mignonette.  Eva Gabor played this role in the play.  Mignonette is the refugee from a handsy vaudeville magician.  The stranded showgirl is hired by Jacques to help his wife with the housework.  Her charms are not lost on either Desmond or Bibi, although the proper young woman only has eyes for Rudolf Valentino.

Bibi's infatuation with Mignonette is not lost on Peggy and this inadvertently leads to a school crisis which requires the combined forces of the Bonnard to solve.  The Happy Time is filled with charming and nostalgic episodes.  It is amusing and touching in surprising and frank ways.  Be prepared as the last scene will burst your heart.

Charles Boyer as Jacques Bonnard in The Happy Time is one of my all-time favourite movie dads.  Perhaps someone at TCM agrees with me as they are screening the movie as part of their Father's Day Salute on Sunday, June 15th at 8:00 am.



SNOOPATHON: "Bulldog" Drummond

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Fritzi of Movies, Silently is hosting the SNOOPATHON running June 1, 2 and 3 which celebrates all things spy-related in classic film.  Check out all the intrepid sneaks and the bloggers who love them.

H.C. (Sapper) McNeile's "Bulldog" Drummond captured reader's imaginations with the release of the 1920 novel Bulldog Drummond.  Captain Hugh Drummond has too much energy and moxie to adjust totally to post-war life and advertises his brawny and brainy skills as an adventurer.  Adventures he has - and plenty!  Romance he finds with Phyllis Clavering.  Arch-enemies and stalwart pals populate Bulldog Drummond's universe whether it is a private mission or one for Mother England.

Readers turned into playgoers and then film fans.  Ian Hunter (The Adventures of Robin Hood) once played Drummond on stage.  The first movies based on the stories was filmed as early as 1922 and 1925.  In his first talkie, Ronald Colman was nominated for an Oscar as Bulldog Drummond in 1929.  Eighteen year old Joan Bennett was his Phyllis.  In 1934 British International Pictures released The Return of Bulldog Drummond starring Ralph Richardson and Ann Todd and 20th Century gave us Colman in Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back.

Reginald Denny, John Howard, E.E. Clive, John Barrymore.  A clue?

Paramount's busy young leading man Ray Milland (The Lost Weekend, The Big Clock) starred in the January 1937 release of Bulldog Drummond Escapes.  Hugh (the character never refers to himself as "Bulldog" nor do any of his friends) falls in love with damsel in distress Phyllis played by Heather Angel (Lifeboat, The Last of the Mohicans).  Also in place are Hugh's Bertie Wooster-like pal Algy Longworth played by Reginald Denny (Rebecca, Private Lives) and the indispensable manservant Tenny played by E.E. Clive (The Invisible Man, Night Must Fall).  Inspector Nielson of The Yard is played by Sir Guy Standing (Death Takes a Holiday).

Over the next two years seven movies would be made in the Bulldog Drummond series starring John Howard as Hugh.  If you only know John Howard as the impatient younger brother of Ronald Colman in Lost Horizon or as stuffy George Kittredge in The Philadelphia Story you might look askance at the casting.  No need to worry as John Howard brought a great sense of fun to the oft-times far out adventures, all the while maintaining an honest relationship with the other characters.

Heather Angel and John Howard face danger.

It may a contradiction in terms, but I find these movies to be the most "cozy" of thrillers.  It is the relationship among the three main characters that gives the series that "family" feeling.  Howard, Denny and Clive make a perfect team as the devil-may-care Hugh, the lovably buffoonish Algy and the ingenious Tenny.  These actors are the constant among all of the titles.  The role of Phyllis alternated between Heather Angel and Louise Campbell (The Star Maker).  The gist of most of the movies was that just as Hugh and Phyllis are about to march down the aisle, there is a murder, a robbery, a murder and a robbery, or a mystery of national import requiring Hugh's undivided attention.  Often times Phyllis kidnapped.  Often times Hugh and company underestimate Phyllis' resolve and usefulness.

Frank Puglia in Bulldog Drummond's Revenge.  Honest!

Among the great character actors determined to keep Hugh a bachelor throughout the series are J. Carroll Naish, Frank Puglia, Porter Hall, Anthony Quinn and Eduardo Ciannelli.

Elizabeth Patterson (Intruder in the Dust, Remember the Night) was featured as Phyllis' Aunt Blanche in three of the series titles and Zeffie Tilbury (The Grapes of Wrath, Werewolf of London) as Aunt Meg once and as different characters in two other outings.  Nydia Westman (The Late George Apley, The Velvet Touch) was Algy's wife Gwen in two of the features before disappearing into the nursery to care for the couples' also never mentioned again child.

The role of Colonel Nielson was played by John Barrymore (Counsellor at Law, Twentieth Century) in the series launch and for three of the movies in which he was top billed, Bulldog Drummond Comes Back, Bulldog Drummond's Revenge and Bulldog Drummond's Peril.  H.B. Warner (Lost Horizon, It's a Wonderful Life) took over the role in Bulldog Drummond in Africa and continued through Arrest Bulldog Drummond, Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police and Bulldog Drummond's Bride.  Barrymore's Nielson was a master of disguise who dug right into the case at hand.  Warner's Nielson was more of a fatherly desk jockey, but had moments of true quiet bravery.  John Sutton (A Yank in the R.A.F., Captain from Castille) is uncredited as a Scotland Yard's Inspector or assistant in five of the seven movies.
 

In 1939s Arrest Bulldog Drummond Leonard Mudie (The Mummy, Kidnapped) is an electrical engineer who has invented a ray that destroys ammunition.  The crackpot inventor believes he has found a way to stop war and shows his creation to one he believes to be in sympathy with the cause.  The interested party turns out to be the great George Zucco (The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, The Mummy's Hand) sporting coke bottle lenses and a poisoned dart in his walking stick.  Lights go out, bodies are discovered and things start exploding all over London on the night of Hugh's bachelor dinner.  Drummond is right in the middle of things.  Why is he always there when a body shows up?  He'll be the death of Colonel Nielson and Phyllis is definitely not going to be happy.  We can see Tenny aging before our eyes.

H.C. McNeile's The Final Count was the basis for this installment adapted by Stuart Palmer, creator of Hildegarde Withers.  James P. Hogan, director of four of the Drummond flicks, was in charge on this story and, like each of the series, it moves along briskly so you don't have time to stop and think about things too deeply.  You shouldn't be thinking.  You should just be enjoying the solid entertainment.  We go from murky London nights to sunny Caribbean days following thrill seeking aristocrats and greedy mercenaries.  These spy types never do anything by halves.  The world is always in danger from crackpot inventors and George Zucco.  We are lucky that there's always a Bulldog Drummond and his pals and gals around to save us.

Let's Go to the Movies: The Navigator (1924)

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What's better than a Sunday afternoon at the movies?  How about Silent Sundays at the Revue Cinema. Throughout the year, Silent Sundays gives Toronto movie fans the chance to enjoy silent era shorts and features at the saved-from-the-brink charming Revue Cinema on Roncesvalles Avenue in west end Toronto.  Nolan girls of various ages and shapes can often be found in attendance.  One of us, Maureen, is the official tweeter (@SilentRevue) for the group.


Real movie theatre popcorn.
It's what they munch in Asgard.


It was with unspoken assent that Nolan girls planned to attend The Navigator on June 8th, but it turned into something even more special than a regular #TeamBuster outing.  It was niece Lenny's first at-the-movies movie experience!  Her first movie theatre popcorn!  Her first Buster movie!

I have had the opportunity to see many of Buster's films in theatres in recent years and never have I shared more laughs with an audience be it a short like The Neighbors or an acclaimed feature like The Cameraman.  When the lights go up you can actually feel the ache of stomach muscles.

Girls Go Wild!
Lenny with her cousin Janet, Aunt Paddy, Aunt Maureen, mom Tracey, Aunt Paula
(dad Jim was the photographer)


1924s The Navigator co-directed by Buster and Donald Crisp is one of Keaton's most popular features.  A rich young sap and the rich young lady who spurned his marriage proposal are trapped on a luxury liner set adrift by spies.  Her father sold the ship, spies bought it and other spies want to wreck it.  It's the MacGuffin.  The fun begins when these two babes at sea have to fend for themselves far away from civilization.  Among the biggest laughs at yesterdays screening were the scene where Rollo (Buster) and Betsy (Kathryn McGuire) are running around the ship and keep  missing each other, and the clever cameo from director Donald Crisp.  Lenny, an aficionado of Margaret and H.A. Rey's Curious George was particularly fond of the scene where the monkey showed up.

It is especially heartwarming at silent film screenings to see families attending with their children.  Kids laugh the loudest and it is wonderfully contagious.  Lenny's excitement in the lobby when she saw the poster, "Look!  It's the picture of Buster in his under water outfit!" caused a ripple of smiles down the queue of ticket buyers.

Makia Matsumura and Lenny
Not the usual "first movie" experience.

Here's Lenny with accompanist Makia Matz, a large part of the wonderful experience of enjoying Buster's The Navigator.  A great time was had by all, and we want more.  Silent Sundays curator Alicia Fletcher mentioned that before the summer is over they will have a screening in Lenny's east end neighbourhood.  We're there!  The fall season will start off with Josef von Sternberg's Underworld, which has long been on my wish list.  It's not exactly a Lenny movie, but Janet has already committed.  Toronto is lucky to have Silent Sundays at the Revue. 



1967 in Film Blogathon: Who's Minding the Mint?

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Today we travel to 1967 in Film for a blogathon co-sponsored by Silver Screenings and The Rosebud Cinema.

Canada celebrated its Centennial in 1967 and the most successful World's Fair of the 20th century, Expo '67, made Montreal a happening destination.  I received my first wristwatch for my 10th birthday.  Little Women was my favourite book, The Jungle Book my favourite movie and my favourite pop groups were The Seekers and The 5th Dimension.  I loved to snack on Humpty Dumpty Potato Chips and Buried Treasure ice cream treats.  All my TV crushes wore cowboy hats.  My observations of adults in general, and the goings on on Search for Tomorrow in particular, led me to the conclusion that grown-ups were a screwy and emotional lot, and I feared for my impending journey into adulthood.  It was all downhill from here!  It is perhaps a good thing that I didn't see Who's Minding the Mint? as a serious minded 10-year-old.  Talk about your screwballs!
  
Walter Brennan, Jim Hutton

Harry Lucas (Jim Hutton, TVs Ellery Queen) is a man with a plan.  By day he is an average, fairly disgruntled wage slave at the U.S. Mint.  He draws to himself the unwanted friendship of old coots (Walter Brennan, TVs The Real McCoys) and pups, the unlooked for romantic attentions of nice girls (Dorothy Provine, TVs The Roaring Twenties), and the suspicions of officious middle management types (David J. Stewart, TVs The Defenders).  By night, courtesy of sample promotions and installment plans, Harry lives the high life with snazzy cars, snazzy apartments, snazzy suits and snazzier dames.  Life is good until fate places Harry in a sticky situation making him responsible for the loss of 50,000 samples of his employer's product.

Harry needs another plan.  Somehow he must replace what has been lost before the long arm of the law puts the kibosh on all that is snazzy.  His pal Pop can help as he wants one more kick at the presses before his retirement forced by a soon to be implemented automated system.  Verna, whose affection is behind the trouble, can access necessary plates and would do anything for Harry.  It's a start.

The services of a safe cracker are required and Pop knows just the man.  Avery Dugan (Jack Gilford, TVs Soap) is about to get out of the Pen.  He's down on his luck and hard of hearing.  Every gang needs a deaf safe cracker!  Armies march on their stomachs and crooks on a big job need backing and supplies.  Meet Luther Burton (Milton Berle, TVs The Milton Berle Show), a pawnbroker with a generous streak of larceny.

Entering such a visible edifice as the Mint in the dead of night requires stealth and knowledge of the city's underground tunnel system.  Meet the sewer guy, Ralph Randazzo (Joey Bishop, TVs The Joey Bishop Show) who is always short of funds.  For lookout there is Ralph's cousin Mario (Jamie Farr, TVs M*A*S*H).  English is his second language, or would be if he had a second language.  Their entry to and exit from the underground tunnel system is located under a most inconvenient window.  There must be a way to keep the apartment's occupant occupied.  Awkward ice cream peddler Willie Owens (Bob Denver, TVs Gilligan's Island) is like catnip to kooky artist Imogene (Jackie Joseph, TVs The Doris Day Show).  He'll keep her busy!

Jim Hutton, Dorothy Provine, Jack Gilford
Milton Berle, Walter Brennan, Joey Bishop, Victor Buono

The atmosphere of sewers being somewhat damp, it is determined that watercraft of some description be obtained for the reverse raid.  You will never meet a more stalwart and focused mariner than "Captain" (Victor Buono, TVs Batman).  Perhaps as a fan of the movie you have your favourite from among the zanies in the cast.  Mine is Victor Buono as "Captain".  I have only to think about his accent and his single-intentioned performance to lapse into convulsions.  

Harry is a man with a gang or does the gang have Harry?  What's a few minutes more in the Mint?  What's a few more runs of the press for a few dollars more evenly split among the worthies?  It is the way of all heist flicks that one thing interferes with the strength of a well-rehearsed plan and so it is with ours when the Mint moves up the date of automation.  You know how it is when you've planned something one way and suddenly it's not how you expect.  There will be glitches and these glitches in Who's Minding the Mint? are hysterically and impeccably funny as these mismatched misfits of mayhem doggedly carry out "the plan".


Howard Morris, genius

Who's Minding the Mint? is my idea of the perfect 1960s comedy.  How can it fail being directed by a certifiable genius in the comedy line, Howard Morris (TVs Caesar's Hour, immortal as Ernest T. Bass on The Andy Griffith Show, Hanna-Barbera performer)?  Under Morris' direction the consummate ensemble plays the witty lines and sight-gags for maximum effect.  The score by Lalo Schrifin has the driving insistence of his Mission Impossible theme, but with a goofy, off-kilter bounce.  The sights and sounds of Who's Minding the Mint? bring me back to the world of yesterday and makes today just that much more amusing with its all or nothing wackiness.




MGM Blogathon: Three Godfathers (1936)

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I'm thrilled to be taking part in the MGM Blogathon sponsored by Diana and Connie of Silver Scenes and running from June 26th - 29th.

MGM is justly renowned for its epics such as Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ and The Big Parade, its meticulously crafted costume dramas like Camille and Marie Antoinette, and its gloriously talent-stuffed musicals like Singin' in the Rain and The Wizard of Oz.  MGM is not the first studio that leaps to mind when considering that Hollywood staple, the western.

The studio's western output of the 1920s is barely more than a dozen features, but they can boost of a genuine genre star in Tim McCoy.  The real life sharpshooter and Native expert's storied career from soldier to film star to Ringling Brothers performer would be as interesting as any of his movies.  In the 1940s MGM's westerns were mainly used as buffoonish vehicles for Wallace Beery (Jackass Mail, The Bad Man).  They stepped up during the 1950s, a golden era for the genre, releasing a small but laudable group of titles including Devil's Doorway, Stars in My Crown, Westward the Women and The Naked Spur.

MGM's western output in the 1930s was dismally sparse and included mainly musicals like the operetta The Girl of the Golden West with Jeanette MacDonald and Joan Crawford in Montana Moon, and comedies such as William Haines in Way Out West and Frank Morgan in Henry Goes Arizona.  However, in the middle of the decade MGM surprises us with a gritty and artistic version of a venerable story by Peter B. Kyne.

The timeless Christmas tale of redemption The Three Godfathers first published in 1913 is the story for which Peter Kyne is best remembered thanks to the many film versions beginning in 1916 with The Three Godfathers directed by Edward LeSaint up to television with 1974s The Godchild directed by John Badham.  William Wyler's Hell's Heroes in 1929 was the first sound version of the story.  You can read Jim Lane's excellent article on that film here.  The animated features 2002s Ice Age and 2003s Tokyo Godfathers owe more than a passing debt of gratitude to that long ago Saturday Evening Post serial.  Spoiler alert:  the discussion of the story and film here will make the bold assumption that you are familiar with The Three Godfathers either in its original form or from one of its many filmed adaption.


"Four Bad Men had ridden into Wickenburg that December afternoon, but only three rode out.  One of the three had a bullet hole through his left shoulder."

The Worst Bad Man, The Wounded Bad Man and The Youngest Bad Man make their way across a desert to elude a posse and come across a stranded and recently widowed young woman about to give birth.  The unfortunate woman asks the unholy trio to care for her child, placing most of her hope on The Youngest Bad Man.  The Wounded Bad Man is the first to realize that their young compatriot is the truest hope for the child as neither he nor The Worst Bad Man possess the strength to complete the arduous journey to civilization after the loss of their horses and potable water.  The Youngest Bad Man, a newcomer to the outlaw world, is also the purest of the trio and one The Wounded Bad Man hopes will be able to go forward and live a more blameless life for the sake of his fellows.

Richard Boleslawski, Jean and Judith Kircher, Joseph Ruttenberg

The screenplay for this 1936 film version of the story is by Edward E. Paramore Jr. (The Virginian, The Bitter Tea of General Yen, Three Comrades) and Manuel Seff (Woman Chases Man, Trouble for Two, Blessed Event).  Joseph Ruttenberg, four time Academy Award winning cinematographer (Gigi, Somebody Up There Likes Me, Mrs. Miniver, The Great Waltz) here plied his trade on location at Mojave and Red Rock Canyon State Park.  The sense of desolation and weariness brings the viewer uncomfortably into the world of the story.  

Three Godfathers was directed by Richard Boleslawski (Rasputin and the Empress, Les Miserables, Theodora Goes Wild).  Director Boleslawski is described by actress Marilyn Knowlden (young Cosette, Les Miserables) in her autobiography Little Girl in Big Pictures as "a great bear of a man ... perfectly costumed in the role of director, with his leather-front sweater, pipe, and ascot tie."  Boleslawski, a student of Constantin Stanislavski, was at the forefront of bringing that "method" of acting to the 20th century theatre.  He founded the American Laboratory Theatre in 1923, and published Acting: The First Six Lessons in 1933.  Spontaneity and sincerity were the hallmarks Richard Boleslawski sought from his actors.


Chester Morris, Irene Hervey

The setting of New Jerusalem is presented as the hometown of Bob, The Worst Bad Man, played by Chester Morris (The Big House).  He takes a particular glee in robbing the "hypocrites" at Christmas.  Bob torments his former love, Molly, played by Irene Hervey (Destry Rides Again) and her betrothed, a bank clerk played by Robert Livingston (The Three Mesquiteers).  The vibrant Morris gives us a character brimming with cynicism and contempt.  Everyone is a sucker and he uses their sentimentality against them.

Chester Morris, Walter Brennan, Lewis Stone

Lewis Stone (Grand Hotel) plays the outlaw known as "Doc", The Wounded Bad Man, and by his manner and interactions with the townspeople we learn that he is an educated man from New England, a wry observer of humanity.  It is Doc who clearly sees the hopelessness of their situation, keeps Gus on the side of the angels, and uses all of his power to convince Bob to "give the kid a break".  Bob's chilling response: "I'll give him a break.  If he wants to crawl to New Jerusalem I won't stand in his way."  For it is back to New Jerusalem they must travel, the shortest way to civilization, the longest way to Bob's redemption.  Doc is the first of the trio to die.  In a quiet and unforgettable scene, Doc, alone with his books and a gun, recites Macbeth's famous soliloquy from Act 5 of that play.  We hear Stone's resonant voice as the camera follows Gus and Bob walking away with the baby, then a shot.

Walter Brennan (Red River) plays "Gus" who claims to be the world's oldest outlaw.  At first glance Gus appears to be a stock comic relief character, but he proves to be quick on his feet, adept at his trade and entirely loyal.  Gus is a man seemingly addicted to lying, but played by Brennan with a refreshing lack of artifice.  On one level he has understood the import of their task, but the only way he can continue is by trying not to think about this being his end.  When the full realization of his situation hits him Gus recites a prayer from his childhood, ashamed that he cannot recall it entirely and embarrassed by Bob's cynical derision.  While Bob and the child sleep, Gus will wander off into the desert to die.

The baby in this version of the story is a sturdy, trusting crawler starting to teeth (twins Jean and Judith Kircher), rather than a newborn.  After Gus' death Bob takes the loot and leaves the child on a blanket.  A few yards from the infant Bob turns and fires his gun.  He has shot a rattlesnake crawling perilously close to the child.  Bob admonishes the baby for making him kill the innocent critter.  The die is cast.  

Kyne's original story does not specifically state that The Youngest Bad Man dies when he reaches the next town with the baby, only that he collapses.  The extent of his privations lead his death to be a natural conclusion, but prior to arriving at the saloon he has been imagining the life he will make for himself and the baby.  In John Ford's 1948 version of 3 Godfathers (an Argosy Pictures production distributed by MGM) that dream is realized in the ending.  You can read Kevin Deany's look at that film here.  Ford had filmed the story previously in 1919 as Marked Men starring Harry Carey.  I don't know how he ended that film, but I hope that as in the 1948 film he included my favourite part of the book.  It is when the outlaws struggle to care for their helpless charge following instructions from a 19th century Dr. Spock.

The 1936 film gives us no doubt as to the fate of Bob, The Worst Bad Man.  An hour away from New Jerusalem and knowing his strength is failing, Bob drinks from a poisoned water hole.  Doc had mentioned when they had passed this way on the run that the poison would take about an hour to kill.  Bob's sacrifice is done with this knowledge.  He stumbles into New Jerusalem and, more dead than alive, drags himself to the front of the church during Christmas service.  He places the child in Molly's arms and leans against a pillar where hangs a crown of thorns before collapsing in death.  The last close-up of the film is not on the man we have journeyed with, but with his legacy as Molly resolutely leaves the church with the rescued child.  The hope of the Three Bad Men.

The Three Godfathers is an unforgettable story that works as much as an adventure as an exploration of the depths of men's souls and the ironic twists of fate.  It is understandable that it has inspired so many films.  The IMDb lists two films projects as currently under production, one with a contemporary setting.  Using the same plot different directors and screenwriters have been able to reach our hearts and minds, with audiences claiming one or more of the films as "ours".  The rugged determination in the face of destruction is what touches me most in Richard Boleslawski's Three Godfathers.

 


Caftan Woman's Choice: One for July on TCM

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Ah, summer.  Many folks long to get away from the day to day routine of life.  Maybe visit an exotic location.  Meet some interesting people.  Have an adventure!  Can't get away?  Well, that's where movies come in handy.  We can hit the road to an exotic location, meet some interesting people and have an adventure all from the comfort of our favourite chair.

Our behind-the-scenes tour guide on the trip known as The Big Steal is Don Siegel, early in his career change from editor and montage creator (The Roaring Twenties, Gentleman Jim) to director (Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Charley Varrick).  Our on-screen hosts are Jane Greer and Robert Mitchum, stars of 1947s Out of the Past as a couple with a twisted, angst-filled relationship that drips pure noir.  This time around the characters played by our attractive leads do not have a past, but a present filled with danger.

Jane Greer, Robert Mitchum

The Big Steal, based on crime and western writer Richard Wormser's The Road to Carmichael's, is a road picture filmed on location in Tehuacan, Pueblo and at the Iverson Ranch.  A gentleman by the name of Fisk played by Patric Knowles (The Adventures of Robin Hood, Auntie Mame) is a very popular fellow.  His former fiance played by Jane Greer is most anxious to locate him and the $2,000 he "borrowed".  Robert Mitchum is after Fisk for reasons which are initially unclear, but may parallel Ms. Greer's somewhat.  Hot on Mitchum's tail is a door crashing, gun toting, hot headed William Bendix (The Blue Dahlia, Kill the Umpire).  When there's a door crashing, gun toting, hot headed guy following you, you just want to keep moving, but watch where you're going as you might bump into a fussy art dealer played by John Qualen (The Grapes of Wrath, Casablanca). 

These visitors to Mexico may well give tourists a bad name.  They lie, cheat, speed, shoot and make general nuisances of themselves all over the countryside.  None of their actions go unobserved as a very cool and smart official in the form of Inspector General Ortega played by Ramon Navarro (The Cat and the Fiddle, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ) works his own agenda.

The great fun in The Big Steal is the relationship between Greer and Mitchum that begins with outright dislike and progresses to wary admiration then trust through their masterful way with wisecracks and innuendo.  The vigorous chase scenes and characterizations make The Big Steal a joy to watch.

TCM has a day of crime pictures on tap Tuesday, July 8th.  Check out The Big Steal scheduled for 4:15 pm.  It's a dandy!
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