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Movie House Love

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Cary Grant & Katharine Hepburn in Holiday (1938).

Do you often catch yourself drooling over the houses in classic films? Do you take screenshots of rooms when watching a movie because you can't help yourself. Do you find yourself liking a film more for the house than for the plot? Then Hooked on Houses is a site you need to check out!

I discovered Hooked on Houses early on in my blogging experience (which has only been a few years) and it is one that I have gone to time and time again. Julia's site, which has updates on movie houses up for sale (movie star homes and houses that were used in films), has a page dedicated especially to movie homes. Each house featured has screenshots galore as well as interesting tidbits, like what other films it was used for or what it looks like now (if it's an actual house and not a set). Here are just some of the films she has covered (new ones added all the time):

 
And more!!!
 
I hope you will check out her site soon! You will be glad you did :)

The Star-Studded Couple Blogathon is Here!!!

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It's here!!! The Star-Studded Couple Blogathon is here!!!

Below you will find not only the links to the entries, but the stories of how some of your favorite movie-star couples came to be. Long-lasting marriages and short ones, stormy ones and peaceful ones, well-known and not so well-known, they are all here!

I will update this page as the posts come in over the next few days. A big THANK YOU to everyone who participated!!! I can't wait to read all of the wonderful entries on these glamorous couples!!!


The Prince and the Flapper: The Romance of Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and Joan Crawford - Prince of Hollywood | A Blog Dedicated to Douglas Fairbanks Jr.

 





William Powell & Carole Lombard

The Profane Angel and Mr. Charles - The Flapper Dame


Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton - Old Hollywood Films


Paulette Goddard and Charlie Chaplin - Little Bits of Classics


Ronald Reagan & Jane Wyman - Back to Golden Days


The Whirlwind Love of Bobby Darin and Sandra Dee - Cab Drivers and Coffee Pots (formerly Musings of an Introvert)


Frank and Ava: A Love Story - Critica Retro


Sammy Davis Jr. & May Britt - Dell of Movies


Tony Curtis & Janet Leigh - Moon in Gemini


The Enduring Love of Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward
Posts to look forward to...

Phyllis Loves Classic Movies: William Powell & Diana Lewis
In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood: Clark Gable & Carole Lombard
                                                             Humphrey Bogart & Lauren Bacall
Girls Do Film: Orson Welles & Rita Hayworth
Classic Reel Girl: Gower & Marge Champion
 
THANK YOU ! THANK YOU!

I want to invite all of you to participate in the upcoming Olivia de Havilland Centenary Blogathon I am co-hosting with Crystal ofIn the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood

Behind the Dress: Audrey Hepburn's "Princess in Disguise" outfit in "Roman Holiday"

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Roman Holiday (1953) is one of my favorite movies. It has everything going for it: a great script, fantastic actors, gorgeous on-location shooting, and some of the best costumes in Hollywood history. In fact, not only did Roman Holiday garner a Best Actress Oscar for newcomer Audrey Hepburn, but it also won a Best Writing Award for the blacklisted Dalton Trumbo and the (still relatively young) Best Costume Award for Edith Head.

Multiple Award-Winning costume designer Edith Head was the first Hollywood designer to dress Audrey Hepburn, who was about to become a legendary icon. In the book Edith Head's Hollywood by Paddy Calistro with excerpts by Edith Head, Hepburn is described as the antigoddess, the "antithesis of anything that fit the sexy 1950s stereotype (Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor). She was skinny in an era of voluptuousness, flat when everyone else was round. Her neck was too long, her face too innocent.  By 1950s standards she was all wrong, yet she was about to enchant the world" (101).

Here are Head's words about meeting Audrey:
I was completely enchanted by her. She was intelligent and had a strong sense about fashion, but what impressed me most was her body. I knew she would be the perfect mannequin for anything I would make... when clothes are designed for art's sake you need a shapeless body to display them (102).
Here is a video of Edith Head talking about the process Hollywood designers go through when beginning to costume a film, including a personality test and wardrobe tests for Roman Holiday.


My favorite outfit from the film is the simple blouse and skirt Audrey wears to explore the city of Rome. But there's more behind the dress then you might think. Let's see how Edith went about designing it:
To create the contrast (from Her Royal Highness Princess Anne to Anya), I put her in funny little flat shoes, a gathered cotton skirt, and a plain blouse with the sleeves rolled up... Suddenly she is the kind of girl you wouldn't look at twice. It sounds easy to do, but it wasn't. Trying to make someone like Audrey, who has so much hauteur, look anything but chic is very difficult.
As you saw in the video above, she had to create an outfit that could be transformed on screen. Audrey goes from a buttoned-up proper girl to a carefree girl having a holiday.

Let's take a closer look at the costume itself.

       
Before and After

Another "before" shot with low pumps.

A good look at the sandals.
 
      
 The skirt is usually shown as light blue or tan when colorized.
I think it was tan, though I prefer light blue.
 
      
Scarf and blouse detail. The scarf is usually pictured as red and white.
 

This outfit is so iconic it was immortalized as a Barbie doll a few years ago. The Barbie has a new face mold and skinny body. I bought one - the face isn't quite as pretty as pictured here.
 

Actress Lily Collins channeled Hepburn in a photo shoot for Talter Magazine.

 
Hope you enjoyed this latest edition of Behind the Dress!
 

The Enduring Love of Paul Newman & Joanne Woodward

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When one hears the words "Hollywood couple," several names come to mind: Bogie and Bacall, Gable and Lombard, Frank and Ava, Burton and Taylor. Of the four mentioned, two ended in an early death and the other two in divorce. None of them lasted for a significant amount of time. If I was to pick a Hollywood couple to use as "relationship goals," I would pick Paul and Joanne.


Hollywood marriages are almost always tumultuous and seldom make it past ten or sometimes even one! The ones that do last, however, are not because everything is rosy-dosy, but because the couple chooses to work at their marriage when an obstacle hits, instead of throwing in the towel at the first sign of trouble. Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward were one of these couples.
From the beginning, Paul and I had an advantage: we were good friends before we were lovers. I mean, we really liked each other. We could talk to each other. We could talk to each other, we could tell each other anything without fear of ridicule or rejection. There was trust.
Paul and Joanne first met while "making the rounds of agents" in the television industry.
Newman:I saw her coming out of the door at MCA, the theatrical agency, and I just thought, jeez, what an extraordinarily pretty girl. I had on my one suit - I had one seersucker suit, which I, you know, would wear all week and wash over the weekend. A button-down collar. A knit tie, a black knit tie. I said hello.
Woodward:He (Maynard Morris, agent at MCA) had discovered... me and he discovered Paul and he introduced us one day. I had been making the rounds and I was hot, sweaty, and my hair all stringy around my neck. He brought out a pretty-looking young man in a seersucker suit, all pretty like an Arrow Collar ad, and said, "This is Paul Newman," and I hated him on sight, but he was so funny and pretty and neat.

The two met again when they were both cast in the 1952 Broadway production of Picnic, later made into a movie starring William Holden and Kim Novak. Newman - who was married at the time and awaiting the birth of his second child with wife, Jacqueline Witte - was cast as Hal's (Holden's role in the movie, Ralph Meeker in the play) younger friend (played by newcomer Cliff Robertson in the movie). He was also the understudy for the role of Hal. Woodward was the understudy to both Madge (played by Novak in the film) and that of Madge's younger sister, Millie. Out of the play's 477 performances, Woodward went on 50 times.

Newman in Picnic

As both Newman and Woodward were understudies for the leads, they rehearsed a lot together. It was during this time that their friendship grew. "I'm going to get that one," a fellow actress recalled Woodward saying. However, over the next few years she dated other men and was even engaged three times - "All southern girls like to get engaged even when they aren't ready to get married."

After Picnic, both actors continued their work in television and broke into movies - Newman in such films as The Silver Chalice (1954), The Rack (1956), and his breakout film role as boxer Rocky Graziano in Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956), and Woodward in Count Three and Pray (1955) and A Kiss Before Dying (1956). Woodward then starred in HER breakout film, The Three Faces of Eve (1957).

During these few years, Newman and his wife had a third child. However, with Newman spending so much time on his acting career, a rift had grown between them. Then, in 1957, Newman and Woodward were cast in The Long, Hot Summer (1958), a steamy romance set in sweltering Mississippi. While Woodward spurned Newman on-screen, off-screen they began secretly living together. By the time filming was over, Newman and his wife had divorced, leaving Newman free to pursue a relationship with Woodward.

Though both were initially wary of marriage - Newman with his failed first marriage and Woodward's parents had divorced when she was young - the two were married on January 29, 1958 at the El Rancho Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. The usually private couple surprisingly allowed their marriage ceremony to be public. Plenty of photographs were taken, as well as video footage. Newman was 33 and Woodward was 28.


After a honeymoon first at a small Greenwich village and then London, the exciting news that Woodward had been nominated for her phenomenal performance in The Three Faces of Eve broke. When the night of the Academy Awards came, Newman and Woodward were the most glamorous couple in attendance (Woodward made her own gown). The couple presented the award for film editing, endearing themselves to the public with their seemingly spontaneous bantering.

 
When Woodward was announced as the winner for Best Actress, no one was more proud than Paul Newman, even though his performance the year before in Somebody Up There Likes Me had been overlooked for a nomination (to make up for it a friend had awarded Newman with a "Noscar"). You can watch Woodward's win here.

Newman and Woodward in a romantic mood at the Oscars.


With the success of The Long, Hot Summer, Newman and Woodward were cast in Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys! (1958), a film reminiscent of the screwball comedies of the 1930s. Light comedy proved to not really be their strong point, with only the love scenes coming across as believable.


In April of 1959, Woodward gave birth to their first child, daughter Elinor Teresa Newman. She was followed by Melissa Steward in 1961 and Claire Olivia in 1965.

Woodward during her first pregnancy:
I sit around and read cookbooks and sew and wait for Paul to come home. I love it.

Eight months after Elinor (Nell) was born, Woodward was back at work, making another film with her husband - From the Terrace (1960). This was followed by Paris Blues (1961), and A New Kind of Love (1963), Winning (1969), WUSA (1970), The Drowning Pool (1975), Harry & Son (1984), and Mr. & Mrs. Bridge (1990) for a total of ten films together. Newman also directed Woodward in Rachel, Rachel (1968), The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (1972) - which also starred their daughter Nell, The Shadow Box (1980 TV movie), Harry & Son (1984), and The Glass Menagerie (1987).

Newman and Woodward on What's My Line 11/8/59 (they come on at 17:45 - the best part is the very end)

Now, the Newman's life wasn't all perfect. They argued like every couple. They had their difficult moments, their sorrows. But what made them different then most movie star couples is that they didn't throw in the towel at the first hardship. They worked through the difficulty and kept going.

Newman and Woodward were married for 50 years, a rarity in the movie business. Newman died the following September (2008). Woodward is the fourth oldest Oscar winner still alive.


Sexiness wears thin after awhile and beauty fades, but to be married to a man who makes you laugh every day, ah, now that is a treat.
♥ ~ ♥ ~ ♥
 
Fast Facts

Paul Newman:

Born) Jan. 26, 1935 in Cleveland Ohio
Full name) Paul Leonard Newman
Height) 5'9.5"
Nickname) King Cool, PL
Spouses) Jacqueline Witte (1949-1958)
                Joanne Woodward 1958-2008 (his death)
Children) 6
Died) Sept. 26, 2008 (lung cancer)

Joanne Woodward:

Born) Feb. 27, 1930 in Thomasville, Georgia
Full name) Joanne Gignilliat Trimmier Woodward
Height) 5'4"
Nickname) Joey
Spouse) Paul Newman 1958-2008 (his death)
Children) 3


The Newman's starred together in ten films:

The Long, Hot Summer (1958)
Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys! (1958)
From the Terrace (1960) - Netflix
Winning (1969)
WUSA (1970)
The Drowning Pool (1975)
Harry and Son (1985) - Newman directed also
Mr. & Mrs. Bridge (1990)
 
Beautiful fan video I found on Youtube. Song: "Everything" by Michael Bublé.

Photo Album:
 
               
 
 
                  

 
          
 
 
             
 
Learn about their unique bed here.
 
Sources:
Lovers. Linda Sunshine. 1992.
Paul and Joanne: A Biography of Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. Joe Morella and Edward Z. Epstein. 1998.
IMDb - Joanne Woodward
IMDb - Paul Newman 
This post is part of the Star-Studded Couple Blogathon hosted by me :)

 

Please Don't Eat the Daisies

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If you think this is going to be a review of the 1960 movie with Doris Day and David Niven then you are only partially right.

            
Left - Movie cast; Right - Apparently there was a TV show too (1965-1967)

I watched Please Don't Eat the Daisies last December and when I discovered a couple weeks ago that my library had the book it was based on, I decided to check it out.

                       
The author and her book

Please Don't Eat the Daisies by Jean Kerr is HILARIOUS!!!! It's one of those books where you find yourself laughing out loud and end up reading in one sitting because you don't want to put it down. My favorite chapter was "How to decorate in one easy breakdown," where Kerr describes the process of redecorating one's home. I also greatly enjoyed the chapter "The Kerr-Hilton," which describes the house/monstrosity they bought. The only chapters that didn't seem to fit in were the ones titled "Don Brown's body" and "Toujours tristesse" - a play and short story respectively. However, it is always interesting to read fiction written by another person because it gives you a glimpse of another side of them that you may never have known existed.

Ok, now to the movie.

In writing the script for the movie starring Doris Day and David Niven, the writers took the four rambunctious boys, the crazy old house, the fact that everyone is writing a play, and that Mr. Kerr is a critic. However, the critics part is greatly built up, showing instead of telling, what it is like to be the wife of a drama critic. It also throws in a little marital discord in the form of an actress, played by Janis Paige. Reminiscent of Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, the movie paints a vivid picture of what it's like to buy a fixer-upper. Doris Day, however, is able to transform this creaky castle into what could easily be a chic New York flat. She also finds the time to play the lead in the local town play, in addition to attending plays with her husband. Only Doris Day could do all of that and still look fresh as a daisy (pun intended).

I hope you get a chance to both read the book and watch the movie. They are both delightful and shouldn't be missed!

Click here to see pictures of the movie version of the Kerr home and here to see pictures of the actual home! Each version gets more and more ridiculous. The movie house appears twice as big as the real house and the TV show house even bigger!

Jean Kerr wtote several other books. I'm having my library get The Snake Has All the Lines, How I Got to be Perfect, and Penny Candy.

A note about the TV version:

I just started watching the first episode. The children are entirely too well behaved and Mr. Nash (his name in the show) is suddenly a hypochondriac!

Audrey Hepburn ~ Artist

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Growing up as a child in World War II Holland, Audrey Hepburn had to do without a lot of things: food, new clothes, and many other things. One of the things that kept her going was dance. Another thing Audrey liked to do was sketch.

                

I recently discovered Audrey's sketches while reading Audrey Hepburn: An Elegant Spirit by her son, Sean Ferrer. Her sketches are delightful. She could have easily become a children's book illustrator! Below is a video I made of a few of her sketches. To see them bigger, and to learn more about her difficult childhood, click here and here.

 

Last summer I reviewed the recently published Audrey at Home: Memories of My Mother's Kitchen by her second son, Lucca Dotti. It features a painting of her garden on the back cover. You can view the post here. It also includes Audrey's recipe for chocolate cake!


This post is part of the May the 4th Be With Audrey Hepburn Blogathon hosted by Flickin' Out. Be sure to read all of the other posts dedicated to this iconic actress!

 

Paintings by Katharine Hepburn

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The sign above the painting says "Are you Artistic [illegible]? Join us in this [illegible] adventure. Please add a brush stroke [illegible].

Everyone needs a hobby and the movie stars are no different. Just last week we looked at the childhood sketches of Audrey Hepburn and today we look at the paintings of another Hepburn - Katharine Hepburn - for The Great Katharine Hepburn Blogathon hosted by Margaret Perry.

When I first googled "Paintings by Katharine Hepburn," I got only a few results. Then I happened to go to one of the websites, Sotheby's auction website, and found the motherload! Below are more than fifty paintings that were auctioned off in 2004 that were painted by Katharine Hepburn. They range from self-portraits to still life to seascapes and reveal her travels from Cuba to Connecticut to California. Information about each painting will be below it.

Hepburn's painting table, easel, and paint box.

Hughes' yacht, the Southern Cross.

FIRST PAINTINGS

Katharine Hepburn's life-long love of painting began in 1937, during her famed relationship with Howard Hughes. It was while out on his yacht that she first picked up a paintbrush. Her first two paintings, seen below, are of Nassau Harbor, Hughes' favorite sailing spot.

We used to enjoy painting together. He asked me if I'd pose nude for him. I said, "Sure, if you'll pose nude for me." That ended the discussion (114).
I Know Where I'm Going. Charlotte Chandler. From recordings made by the author.
 

SELF-PORTRAITS

Katharine Hepburn painted many self-portraits. Never one to be vain, they often display her natural freckles prominently, which usually end up looking like chicken pox.

 
This self-portrait was painted while on location for The African Queen (1951) and given as a gift to Hepburn's wardrobe lady.

12" x 9" - Note the upturned collar.

As "Lizzie" in Rainmaker (1956).

                     
Notice the words "Baby Kate" where her left shoulder would be on the portrait on the right.

 
This sketch was done while recuperating in the hospital from a leg injury in 1969 during the time she was performing Coco on Broadway. Around a central image of Hepburn's face are her list of complaints, which read in part, "What's that noise/people talking...now what's wrong - I just/ can't believe that a/ group of able bodied men can't/ figure out how to run a turn/ table -...Where is she - its last hour/ Quiet - Shut up -..." A piece of tape affixed to the sketch reads "Jerry Don't Forget Kate." When Hepburn returned to the show, she gave this drawing to stage manager Jerry Adler. Source.

 
American Breakfast in Bed.
Self-portrait in Brisbane, Australia, 1955. 8"x6".
Pencil and Watercolor on paper. Note her trademark use of red and white.

 
Self-portrait on the beach, 7" x 10".

Most likely painted on the Isle of Jersey while visiting friend William Rose, the writer of Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967). Note the red bathing suit and the blue "K" on the bag.

A Matter of Gravity, 1976 - total of 5 portraits

Hepburn, as Mrs. Basil, played the grandmother of a young Christopher Reeve in his career debut in the play A Matter of Gravity. Miss Hepburn had broken her ankle, and instead of passing the part on to her understudy, she played the role convincingly in a wheelchair.
June 2, 1971 - Hepburn as Coco Chanel in the Broadway play Coco.

Coco had completed its Broadway run (Hepburn received a Tony nomination) and was on a US Tour. It was her only Stage Musical.
 
Shakespeare self-portraits
 
There are a total of 14 of these, including one from Much Ado About Nothing.
Range in size from 5.5" x 3.75" to 10" x 7".

SEASCAPES

It is obvious looking at Hepburn's paintings that she loved the sea and the New England area that had been her home for most of her life. Of the 100+ paintings that she did in her life, over 40 are seascapes.

Barrenjoey Lighthouse - 4.75" x 6.5 " 

Barrenjoey Head Lighthouse is an icon of the Sydney Northern Beaches. Sydney residents and international visitors have been walking the steep track to the summit, to be rewarded with stunning views of Broken Bay.

Built in 1881 from sandstone quarried on site, the lighthouse, oil room and cottages are unique in that they retain in their original natural stone finish.

This was painted from the perspective of Palm Beach.


     
Two more views of Barrenjoey Lighthouse

Watch a video about this painting here.

Stratford, CT - 12" x 18"
Note the red boat

Hepburn painted these works either in the summer of 1957 or 1960 when she lived in Stratford, Connecticut, while performing at the American Shakespeare Festival Theater.

Stratford, CT

Sailboats in Stratford, CT.

When performing at the American Shakespeare Festival Theater in 1957, Hepburn rented a home that was set on the water. She painted the spider web scene from her porch, with her own feet in view, looking out on the Housatonic River.
 
Collection of Stratford, CT seascapes

This group includes views of the Stratford lighthouses and a self-portrait of Miss Hepburn in a boat called "Kate," docked at the Housatonic Boat Club in Stratford. Hepburn would often paint from the boat that she used to travel back and forth to the theater.

Boat and Boatclub on the Housatonic River. Painted from her boat - 13" x 9"

1960 - red boat on Housatonic River, Stratford.

Sailboats at Sunset, Fenwick - 3.5" x 14.75" (this one's my favorite)
Floorplan on reverse side

Lighthouses of Old Saybrook
Shows both inner and outer lighthouses of Fenwick on the Long Island Sound.

"Me and Phyllis"
Fenwick Gulls, 1965 - 15.75" x 20"
 
Handwritten note on the back says "The *ath / Fenwick Gulls / I consider this my / masterpiece / Katharine Hepburn."

Long Island

Figure by the Ocean - 6.25" x 9"

Two seascapes with lighthouses - 3" x 9"

Four seascapes from various locations - smallest 3 in. by 4 in., Largest 8 in. by 10 in.
 
Includes: a Venetian canal scene, painted when Miss Hepburn was making "Summertime" in 1954; a sailboat and lighthouse, painted near her Fenwick home; and a village scene, most likely painted in Australia.

Seascape and lighthouse

 
Three water scenes

Three Miscellaneous Scenes (note the figure in red - Hepburn) - 4" x 10"

Random Seascapes

From a sketchpad circa 1957 - 9" x 12"
 
A Woman by the Sea - 8" x 6"

Hepburn based this painting on a honeymoon portrait of her parents, Kit and Thomas. However, she encountered problems in rendering a likeness of her father, so she removed him from the scene.
 
Two Ladies on the Beach with Black Umbrellas - 9" x 6"
Based on Monet's painting "Woman with a Parasol"

LANDSCAPES

Connecticut Landscapes with Buildings
Not pictured is unfinished painting of church.
 
Hepburn would often take day car trips from her home, Fenwick to paint outdoor scenes.

Group of three landscapes 

Central Park scene, view from Hepburn's Paris balcony, and view
of Mount Vernon with Irene Selznick.
 
Group of six watercolors
Top Left: Long Island Sound with Queen Anne's Lace.
Middle right: Mount Vernon with Irene Selznick.
 
Landscape in CA hills, 1965

The Hill of Beverly Hills - 20" x 16"
 
This painting included a letter on Hepburn's stationary reading: "This was done in about 1960 from the hills in back of Beverly Hills. When I was in California I always lived in a house somewhere in these hills--facing southwest to the Pacific Ocean in the distance. Lovely light. Lovely view. This was done in the Barrymore house. To the west and a bit was John Gilbert's--I rented that several times--to the southwest was Charlie Boyer's house (I rented that too). You could press a button and the dining room ceiling would slide open. Fun. Below Boyer the Prince David Mdvanni House (yes, I lived there)--then to the east of Barrymore's the Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy house (yes, that too.) On another hill to the west--the Jules Stein house--built by Fred Niblo with money from the silent picture Ben Hur (I lived there.) All these great houses. See their mailboxes. They intrigued me."

View of a tree - 6.75" x 5"

HOME

Hepburn loved her family home in Connecticut - Fenwick - and the surrounding area, as is apparent in her seascapes (read more about Fenwick in my post for last years K.H. blogathon). But, being an actress, she also lived in both Hollywood and New York City and many other temporary places she had to call home. Here are some of them.

House in Los Angeles, 1965

Los Angeles Bedroom on Cukor's estate


California Landscape with Lawn Chairs, circa 1965 - most likely painted while caring for Spencer Tracy in guest cottage on George Cukor's Beverly Hills estate.

LA home with clothesline - 10" x 14"

Beverly Hills patio view (most likely Cukor's) - 14" x 20"

New York Cityscape in the style of George Bellows - 20" x 16"
 
Hepburn based this painting on her own George Bellows painting representing Upper Broadway, which she purchased in the 1940's.

Various paintings of Hepburn's homes.
 
Bottom painting is Hepburn's bedroom in her New York City townhouse with a Cecil Beaton portrait over the fireplace.

ABROAD

As an actress, Hepburn traveled frequently for on-location films, such as for The African Queen (1951) and Summertime (1955). She also accompanied Spencer Tracy to Cuba, while he was filming The Old Man and the Sea (1958).
 
7 Australian Landscapes (4 not pictured) 

Hepburn painted these during the 1955 Old Vic Shakespearean tour which took her to Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth. The beach scene features fellow friend and actor Robert Helpmann.

Untitled painting. Note Cuban flag.

Cuban views, 1957
 
Hepburn painted these while with Tracy in Cuba. One is a view of La Punta Fortress and one of the Plaza De Armas.
 
View from bed, Cuba.
Oil on cigar box lid. 4" x 5.5".
 
This is the room Hepburn and Tracy stayed in while Tracy was filming The Old Man and the Sea (1958).
 
5 watercolors of figures
 Beach Scenes in different locales (one with red and white umbrella's in Cuba, 1957).
 
                                    
Two paintings of Jamaica: Palm Tree & Hotel Stairs to the Beach. Painted while visiting her friend Noel Coward.

SPENCER

Hepburn's most famous love-affair, and indeed probably the most famous in all of Hollywood history, was with Spencer Tracy, with whom she made nine films. As Tracy was married, they kept their affair very quiet. In the 1960s, Hepburn took a five year break from movies to care for the ailing Tracy. They lived together in a cottage on George Cukor's Beverly Hills estate (Tracy and his wife had not lived together for years). Hepburn did not open up about her love for Tracy until after the death of his wife in 1983. Below are a few sketches she did of Tracy.

This is the only double portrait of Hepburn and Tracy known to exist. 10.75" x 8.5".

1965 - 8" x 6"
 
Tracy in his favorite chair in their guest cottage on the Cukor estate. His face is obscure by the newspaper because Hepburn couldn't get it "quite right." It was always displayed next to her bed in her NYC townhouse.
On the wall were paintings Kate had collected and some she had painted. There were also some of Tracy's.
"I won't tell you which ones Spence did,"she said. "He wouldn't like it. He didn't mind my having the pictures, but he didn't sign them. He hoped that only I would know, especially as long as he was alive.  
"He considered his paintings so very personal and private. He said the paintings were more private than being naked. 'Naked only shows your outside,' he said, 'but paintings show what's in your heart, your deepest feelings and how you see the world.'
"I can't tell you which ones are Spencer's, but they're the ones that aren't mine." Kate always signed hers (Chandler, 302).
 
10" x 7" - A Walk with Spencer, 1952. 
 
Hepburn painted this scene of Spencer Tracy walking in one of their favorite parks while appearing in George Bernard Shaw's play The Millionairess in London.

Pencil drawings on notepads, 1965. Profile of woman. Spencer Tracy on phone. Tracy's dog, Lobo.

STILL-LIFE

While caring for Tracy, Hepburn painted several still-life pictures. The red items in the painting are "symbolic self-portraits," a way of placing herself in the painting in a spiritual rather than human form.



10" x 14"

Basket of Fruit, 1964 - 4.75" x 6.25"

1965 - 11.75" x 15.75"

1960 - 8" x 12"

OTHER (sketches, portraits, etc.)

Sketchbook of assorted pictures

Phyllis Wilbourn - 20" x 12"
 
Miss Wilbourn served as Katharine Hepburn's secretary, companion and friend. Miss Hepburn speaks of her in her autobiography Me: "Phyllis Wilbourn is my right hand. She came to me in the middle fifties. Her employer, Constance Collier, had died...She has worked for me since then...She is a totally selfless person - (well, I have to say to you what just came into mind) - working for a totally selfish person...She is there to help me - to keep me company - to let me be alone - to do things for other people which I should be doing for other people...She's unique. She's an angel" (353).

http://margaretperry.org/great-katharine-hepburn-blogathon-2016-upon-us/

Behind the Dress: Davis' Brown Cocktail Dress in "All About Eve"

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Bette Davis is an icon of Golden Hollywood, the actress that young girls interested in the performing arts aspired to be. She appeared in classic film after classic film and stole each scene she was in. And those Bette Davis Eyes.. well, that's another post.

Even the biggest stars, however, can have their slumps, and in the late 1940s Bette was having hers. That all changed when she was cast as declining star, Margo Channing, in the instant classic All About Eve (1950).


The costumes for the film, except for Channing's wardrobe, had already been designed by Fox's Charles LeMaire. Edith Head, who was friends with Davis, greatly wanted to do the job, and as LeMaire was already working on several other films, he helped arrange it (very nice and unselfish of him, if you ask me!).

The cocktail dress was all the rage at the time, and so of course Margo Channing had to have one. However, the finished result, the brown, off-the-shoulder dress that we know so well was actually an accident. In Edith's words (Edith Head's Hollywood):
My original sketch had a square neckline and a tight bodice. I had extremely high hopes for this dress because the fabric, a brown gros de Londres (a heavy silk) photographs magnificently in black and white, and it was trimmed in rich brown sable.
Because we were working on such a tight deadline, the dress was made up the night before Bette was scheduled to wear it. I went in early the day of the filming to make sure the dress was pressed and camera-ready. There was Bette, already in the dress, looking quizzically at her own reflection in the mirror. I was horrified. The dress didn't fit at all. The top of the three-quarter-length sleeves had a fullness created by pleats, but someone miscalculated and the entire bodice and neckline were too big. There was no time to save anything, and a change would delay the shooting. I told Bette not to worry, that I would personally tell Joe Mankiewicz [wrote and directed the film] what had happened.
I had just about reached the door, my knees feeling as if they were going to give out, when Bette told me to turn around and look. She pulled the neckline off her shoulders, shook one shoulder sexily, and said, "Don't you like it better like this, anyway?" It looked wonderful and I could have hugged her. In fact, I think I did [kind of hard to picture...]. With a few simple stitches I secured the neckline in place so she could move comfortably, and she left for the set. Above all, I did not want to delay the shooting.
A look at all sides of the dress. 

Note how the sleeves are not attached to the actual bodice.

Not sure if this is the original or a replica.

Bette remembers that dress fondly in her Foreword to Edith Head's Hollywood: "My own momento to Edith's long career hangs on the wall of  my home: a sketch of that fabulous brown cocktail dress... I bought the dress and I treasure the sketch. It's simply signed To Bette, from Edith."

A revised sketch to show the finished gown.

Whoopi Goldberg at the 2016 Academy Awards in an All About Eve inspired gown.

Disability in Film: Eyes in the Night (1942)

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Eyes in the Night (1942) is definitely a 'B' film ( film made with lesser known stars and on a smaller budget). It stars Edward Arnold, famous for playing seemingly nice but really evil businessmen concerned only with furthering their careers (think Frank Capra's classic, Meet John Doe). Ann Harding is the leading lady and Donna Reed, who is at the beginning of her career, plays a supporting role as Harding's difficult (aka b*tchy) stepdaughter.


However, just because this is a 'B' film doesn't mean it isn't well made and interesting. Because it is! There's murder, Nazi's, and a smart seeing-eye dog (Friday). Directed by Fred Zinnemann, Eyes in the Night tells the story of a detective who is blind but who doesn't let that stop him from solving crimes. Since you can watch the film in it's entirety below, I won't go into a full synopsis. If you really want to read one, you can read TCM's synopsis here, as well as this TCM Article. The film was followed with a sequel in 1945 titled The Hidden Eye with Arnold reprising his role (watch the trailer here).

This title is in the Public Domain, hence the poor quality.

Check out some screenshots here

This film presents the disability of blindness, not as a hindrance or an unacceptable thing, but as an asset. Arnold, because he is blind, is not seen as a threat and therefore not taken seriously, which he is able to use to his advantage. While a blind person could not see this film, it certainly would help to know that there are some things they can do or get away with that a person who CAN see cannot do. It can also help those who live with a blind person realize that they are still the same and that being blind does not mean the person is instantly mentally disabled.

*I don't know anyone who is blind intimately so if anything I said is offending or incorrect, please let me know.

This post is part of The Disability in Film Blogathon hosted by Pop Culture Reverie.

NATIONAL CLASSIC MOVIE DAY: Five Movies on an Island

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Lt. Robin Crusoe U.S.N. (1966)

Last year Rick of Classic Film and TV Café instituted the First Annual Classic Movie Day, which takes place on May 16. He hosted the My Favorite Classic Movie Blogathon in which I wrote about one of my favorite films, Libeled Lady (1936). This year the theme is Five Movies on an Island. That's right. Just FIVE.  The object is to write about the "five classic movies you would want to have with you if stranded on a deserted island. (Yes, you can assume you have electricity, a projector, big screen, and popcorn!) These might be your all-time five favorite movies. Or, you might mix in some 'comfort films' to give your tropical habitat that desired homey feel.'" The only thing I would want to change in this scenario is the popcorn - not a fan. I'll have chocolate please (or if it HAS to be popcorn at least let it be Fiddle Faddle).

I Dream of Jeannie

As any movie fan knows, choosing just a certain number of favorite films is both agonizing and fun. Agonizing because there's so many you want to choose (not counting that it depends on your mood) and fun because... well it's just fun that's all!

When making such a momentous decision such as choosing five movies to watch for who know's how long (remember how long it took to get off Gilligan's Island??), one must have some sort of criteria. Here is what I have come up with:
1. The films must leave you with a "feel-good" feeling, you certainly don't want to be sad or scared on you're island!
2. They must be films that stand up to the test of time - you can watch them again and again.
3. It would be good to have happy memories associated with the film, such as the annual family Christmas movie.
4. It should be long - why waste a choice on a film that only lasts 80 minutes!
5. At least one should have some great songs in it.
Notice I did not say it should have helpful hints on how to survive. The Swiss Family Robinson is ok, but not anywhere near the top of my list of favorites!

Lt. Robin Crusoe U.S.N. (1966)

Now that I have my criteria, here are my five films in order of release date (pre-1970s):

The Thin Man (1934)
William Powell & Myrna Loy

Because I HAVE to have at least one Powell/Loy movie! The mystery may not be all that exciting, but their on-screen chemistry is! Need proof? Click here!

Ever since I discovered Powell a couple years ago, I have been hooked. That man is an amazing and often overlooked actor. I have seen almost all of his "talkies" and I can honestly say he's great in all of them. The Thin Man is the film that boosted his career and made him a top box-office draw as a romantic leading man (this to a man who had played mostly villains in his silent career). This film also made Powell and Loy every movie fan's favorite couple and put the fun back in marriage. I could quote the series all day and look at gifs for hours. I adore these two together.


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Bringing Up Baby (1938)
Katharine Hepburn & Cary Grant

This movie is just flat-out, laugh out loud, funny. Hepburn's fast-talking may take a couple viewings to get used to but once you've got it, it just gets better and better. Practically every line is "quote" worthy and THAT HOUSE is to die for. And since on an island I'd most likely be living in a hut I need a house I can dream about.

My absolute favorite line in this movie is when Susan (Hepburn) and David (Grant) are out in the woods looking for Baby (the leopard) when they suddenly fall down, breaking David's glasses and Susan's heel to her shoe. In a completely ad-libbed looking moment, Susan begins walking around and says laughing in that funny laugh of hers, "I was born on the side of a hill." I. Love. That. Line. Luckily it's on YouTube for your viewing pleasure.


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Rio Grande (1950)
John Wayne & Maureen O'Hara

I have always loved John Wayne. I have never known a time without John Wayne. It is therefore no surprise that a John Wayne film should show up on this list. In fact, I could easily choose ALL John Wayne films for this list and be very happy on my island. But I limited it to one (if you were wondering, my other four would be Donovan's Reef, The Quiet Man, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, and The Searchers).


Reasons I love this particular John Wayne movie the most:
  • It has a fantastic cast: Maureen O'Hara, Victor McLaglen, Ben Johnson, Harry Carey Jr., and a host of other familiar "Ford" faces.
  • It has a great soundtrack (yes we have the cd): the soft, heart-stirring instrumentals, the beautiful theme of "I'll Take You Home Again Kathleen" running throughout, and the melodious harmony of the Sons of the Pioneers (watch above).
  • It has some of the best on-screen chemistry in the entire history of film: John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara... need I say more? The Duke really knew how to kiss a woman so that she'd never forget it and if you all alone on that island, well... you need something to never forget either.
  • Lastly, everything else! The directing by John Ford, the majestic vista's of Monument Valley, the action, suspense, romance... how could it NOT be on my list??
Just LOOK AT HIM!!!
 
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Roman Holiday (1953)
Audrey Hepburn & Gregory Peck

Roman Holiday is the most beautiful romantic comedy of all time. Not only is it pretty much everyone's introduction to the magic of the bewitching Audrey Hepburn, but it's filmed in the Eternal City itself. Upon finishing it I always want to start it over and watch it again.

Both Hepburn and Peck are perfect in their roles of European Princess and American newspaper man. And I love Eddie Albert as Irving, the photographer. He brings the perfect amount of humor to the film. And of course I HAVE to mention the award-winning costumes by Edith Head. One day I WILL go to Rome and I WILL be wearing an outfit like Hepburn's as I go on my own "Roman Holiday" (I would say I WILL eat gelato on the Spanish Steps but I don't want to be arrested - I don't think I could get out of it like Hepburn and Peck did).

Recommended Post: Audrey Hepburn's Roman Holiday Outfit

And yes, I'm so obsessed with this movie that I MADE MY OWN TRAVEL BROCHURE tracing all the locations they visited IN ORDER (I will be happy to email it to anyone interested - solidmoonlight@gmail.com).

 
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White Christmas (1954)
Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, & Vera-Ellen

I have watched White Christmas with my family every year for as long as I can remember. I know all the words to almost all the song (Mom always fast-forwarded "Mandy"). I would say more about this amazing film but I'm writing about it next week for the Gotta Dance! Blogathon. I will say that, for me, this movie embodies Christmas and because we only watch it at Christmas, we look forward to it all year long (it's really unbearable around July - one is always ready for Christmas in the heat of the summer).

Two more things that are a PLUS in this movie: VistaVision& Technicolor :)

To satisfy you until next week.

There are so many more I could choose, but these are tried and true favorites that I will NEVER tire of. My last word to you is, go, watch as many of your favorite movies as you want and be thankful that you will never have to actually make this decision!

In case you were wondering what my post-1970s list would look like, and you probably weren't: Rocky (1976)...... Moonstruck (1987)............. Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993)...................... You've Got Mail (1998) and................................ Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011) - man was that agonizing!!!

UPDATE: Let's hope that if this ever DOES happen, it's on the TCM Cruise and then we can watch each others movies!!!

This list is William Powell approved.

"Top Five *scratch that* Ten Movies on an Island" Lists

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Inspired by the Five Movies on an Island Blogathon hosted by Rick of Classic Film and TV Café, I am now in the mood to make more Five Movie Lists. For example, seeing B Noir Detour's blogathon post where they included their list of Five Noirs, prompted me to list my top five Noirs:

1. High Sierra (1941) - Humphrey Bogart, Ida Lupino, Joan Leslie
2. The Maltese Falcon (1941) - Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre
3. Laura (1944) - Gene Tierney, Dana Andrews, Clifton Webb
4. Nobody Lives Forever (1944/46) - John Garfield, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Walter Brennan
5. The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) - John Garfield, Lana Turner
Now that list was pretty easy because I haven't seen all that many film Noirs - the most was during the free TCM Noir online class last year.

But what about a top five from each decade? That could be a little more challenging. Top five of each genre: comedy, drama, musical, western - some easier than others. Top five of my favorite actors?

So here goes. I'll start first with top five top ten (sorry, five is just TOO hard) for each decade (in chronological order). Tomorrow I'll kick off with my top ten films from the 1930s (I've only seen two and a half movies from the 1920s so...).

Ten Movies on an Island: 1930s Edition

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The 1930s were a time of constant change in Hollywood as the movies made the transition to sound and had to find their feet all over again. Some stars were able to make the switch smoothly, many were not. It was a time where it had to be decided what could and could not be shown, of how far was too far. With the institution of the Hays Code came the birth of the Screwball comedy and with it a new kind of zaniness, perfect for coping with the Great Depression. Animation as we know it today took it's first big step with Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Disney's first feature length animated picture. Then came 1939, the crème de la crème of motion pictures, with it's classics like Gone With the Wind, The Wizard of Oz, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and Stagecoach.

The main question is, how can I choose a mere ten films from such a diverse and amazing decade? I have 95 titles from that decade on my movie list. That means I can't choose 85 of them. Yet choose I must. As in any film list, many were left off, but here are the ones I truly could not live without:

1930s:
1. The Thin Man (1934) - William Powell & Myrna Loy
2. It Happened One Night (1934) - Clark Gable & Claudette Colbert
3. Theodora Goes Wild (1936) - Irene Dunne & Melvyn Douglas
4. Libeled Lady (1936) - William Powell & Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy & Jean Harlow
5. Double Wedding (1937) - William Powell & Myrna Loy
6. Bringing Up Baby (1938) - Katharine Hepburn & Cary Grant
7. The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) - Errol Flynn & Olivia de Havilland
8. Bachelor Mother (1939) - Ginger Rogers & David Niven, Charles Coburn
9. The Wizard of Oz (1939) - Judy Garland
10. Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) - James Stewart & Jean Arthur

Honorable Mentions (aka didn't quite make it): Forsaking All Others (1934), Curly Top (1935), The Whole Town's Talking (1935), My Man Godfrey (1936), True Confession (1937), You Can't Take it With You (1938), Four Daughters (1938), Daughters Courageous (1939), and In Name Only (1939).

Tomorrow: My top ten from the 1940s!

Ten Movies on an Island: 1940s Edition

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The 1940s - when the Movies went to war. Now, not only did the movies have to entertain, they had to show support of the war and boost morale. During this time, the OWI (Office of War Information) asked all filmmakers to consider these seven questions when making a movie:
  1. Will this picture help win the war?
  2. What war information problem does it seek to clarify, dramatize or interpret?
  3. If it is and "escape" picture, will it harm the war effort by creating a false picture of America, her allies, or the world we live in?
  4. Does it merely use the war as the basis for a profitable picture, contributing nothing of real significance to the war effort and possibly lessening the effect of other pictures of more importance?
  5. Does it contribute something new to our understanding of our world conflict and the various forces involved, or has the subject already been adequately covered?
  6. When the picture reaches its maximum circulation on the screen, will it reflect the conditions as they are and fill a need current at that time, or will it be out-dated?
  7. Does the picture tell the truth or will the young people of today have reason to say they were misled by propaganda?
Hollywood rose to the challenge, churning out war picture after war picture. Mrs. Miniver (1942) portrayed ultimate patriotism. The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) showed the challenges of returning Veterans. John Wayne won every battle conceivable against the enemy. Many big name stars even served.

Birthday boy James Stewart retired from the army as a two star Major General.

Even Roosevelt approved of the way Hollywood was doing their part. An aide to the President, Lowell Mellett, said "Practically everything being shown on the screen from newsreel to fiction that touches on our national purpose is of the right sort" (Hollywood Goes to War, Roy Hoopes).

The 1940s is the decade with the most films on my list. This one was particularly agonizing to whittle down to a mere ten (as you can see from all of the Honorable Mentions). Also, half of them ended up being Christmas movies (both #4 & 6 are set at Christmas are have a scene at Christmas time). There's also not a lot of war films reflected here. As you an see,  I usually err on the side of comedy. What can I say? I love to laugh!

1940s:
1. Meet John Doe (1941) - Gary Cooper & Barbara Stanwyck
2. Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1941) - Robert Montgomery & Carole Lombard
3. To Be or Not To Be (1941/42) - Jack Benny & Carole Lombard
4. Cat People (1942) - Simone Simon & Kent Smith
5. The More the Merrier (1943) - Jean Arthur & Joel McCrea, Charles Coburn
6. Going My Way (1944) - Bing Crosby & Barry Fitzgerald
7. Christmas in Connecticut (1945) - Barbara Stanwyck & Dennis Morgan, S.Z. Sakall
8. My Favorite Brunette (1947) - Bob Hope & Dorothy Lamour
9. Miracle on 34th Street (1947) - Maureen O'Hara & John Payne, Edmund Gwenn
10. Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948) - Cary Grant & Myrna Loy, Melvyn Douglas
Honorable MentionsRebecca (1940), Remember the Night (1940), Third Finger, Left Hand (1940), The Bride Came C.O.D. (1941), The Lady Eve (1941), Random Harvest (1942), Now, Voyager (1942), Shadow of a Doubt (1943), A Stolen Life (1946), Magic Town (1947), Life with Father (1947), Portrait of Jennie (1948), It's a Great Feeling (1949), Ma and Pa Kettle (1949).

Tomorrow, my top ten from the 1950s!

Ten Movies on an Island: 1950s Edition

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If you thought the 30s and 40s were a time of change in Hollywood, the 1950s was off the charts. With the accessibility of Television, many people were not going out to the movies, but instead, staying home and watching family sitcoms and game shows. When the Supreme Court outlawed block booking (selling groups of five or more films combining A pictures with cheaper B pictures) in 1948, the system began to crumble. Television hastened that end.

In order to lure movie-goers back to the theaters, studios decided it was time to make movies bigger and better. This was the decade of the Epic, the Technicolor Musical, 3-D, CinemaScope, Cinerama, VistaVision. With it came the loosening of the Hays Code, allowing topics back into movies that hadn't been allowed on the screen for two decades. Up popped the Rebel and a host of teen idols.

This list not only has three of my original Five Movies on an Island List, but it is also where my "romantic/girlish pleasure" side comes out. I mean, realistically, how many "Top Ten" lists have Gidget (1959) on them? Not to mention that four of the films have John Wayne in them!

1950s:
1. Rio Grande (1950) - John Wayne & Maureen O'Hara
2. The Quiet Man (1952) - John Wayne & Maureen O'Hara
3. Roman Holiday (1953) - Audrey Hepburn & Gregory Peck, Eddie Albert
4. White Christmas (1954) - Bing Crosby & Rosemary Clooney, Danny Kaye & Vera-Ellen
5. Mister Roberts (1955) - Henry Fonda, Jack Lemmon, William Powell, James Cagney
6. We're No Angels (1955) - Humphrey Bogart, Peter Ustinov, Aldo Ray
7. The Searchers (1956) - John Wayne
8. Tammy and the Bachelor (1957) - Debbie Reynolds & Leslie Neilson
9. Gidget (1959) - Sandra Dee & James Darren, Cliff Robertson
10. Rio Bravo (1959) - John Wayne, Dean Martin, Ricky Nelson, Walter Brennan

Honorable Mentions: Sunset Boulevard (1950), Strangers on a Train (1951), Son of Paleface (1952), The Robe (1953), Sabrina (1954), Until They Sail (1957), The Defiant Ones (1958), Pillow Talk (1959), Who Was That Lady? (1959).

Tomorrow, my Top Ten films of the 1960s!

Ten Movies on an Island: 1960s Edition

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The 1960s was a time of social upheaval: Rock n' Roll, Beatlemania, mini skirts, the sexual revolution, the Civil Rights Movement, the assassination of two Kennedy's and Dr. Martin Luther King, riots, the space race, the list goes on. Old values were being tossed aside and a frenzied atmosphere took over.

In Hollywood too, the old movie stars, products of the studio system, were dying and retiring, and new young stars were taking their place. Movies became even more frank on certain issues. Foreign films and TV Movies became more prominent. A "New Hollywood" came into existence.

Just by looking at the films on my list, I can see a marked difference. About half of the movies I chose for my top ten are appropriate for family viewing. The rest are for a more mature audience (not to say they are "bad," just not appropriate for kids). That being said, as seems to be the trend in my lists, they are mostly comedies with a little drama and suspense mixed in.

1960s:
1. The Bellboy (1960) - Jerry Lewis
2. The Hustler (1961) - Paul Newman & Piper Laurie, George C. Scott, Jackie Gleason
3. The Pink Panther (1963) - Peter Sellers, David Niven, Capucine, Robert Wagner
4. Sunday in New York (1963) - Jane Fonda & Rod Taylor, Cliff Robertson
5. Donovan's Reef (1963) - John Wayne, Lee Marvin
6. Lilies of the Field (1963) - Sidney Poitier
7. Cat Ballou (1965) - Jane Fonda, Lee Marvin, Michael Callan
8. The Yellow Rolls-Royce (1965) - Rex Harrison, George C. Scott, Shirley MacLaine, Ingrid Bergman, Omar Shariff
9. That Darn Cat! (1965) - Haley Mills, Dean Jones
10. Support Your Local Sheriff (1969) - James Garner
Honorable Mentions: The Gazebo (1960), Psycho (1960), What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), The War Lover (1962), McLintock (1963), 36 Hours (1963), My Fair Lady (1964), Sex and the Single Girl (1964), Help! The Beatles (1965), The Sound of Music (1965).

Tomorrow, my 1970s through the Present Top Ten Lists!

Ten Movies on an Island: Post 1970s Edition

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Photo from the TCM facebook page for the TCM Film Festival

This list answers the question, "What modern movies does a Classic Film fanatic watch?"

1970s:
1. Rocky (1976) - Sylvester Stallone & Talia Shire, Burgess Meredith
2. Silent Movie (1976) - Mel Brooks & Dom DeLuise w/ cameos by Burt Reynolds, Liza Minnelli, Anne Bancroft, James Caan & Paul Newman
3. The Shootist (1976) - John Wayne & Lauren Bacall, James Stewart, Ron Howard
4. Smokey and the Bandit (1977) - Burt Reynolds & Sally Field, Jackie Gleason
5. Rocky II (1979) - Sylvester Stallone & Talia Shire, Burgess Meredith
I only have three other films on my 70s list, which is why I didn't do a full 10.

1980s:
1. The Blues Brothers (1980) - John Belushi, Dan Aykroyd
2. Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982) - Steve Martin & Rachel Ward
3. Clue (1985) - Tim Curry, Christopher Lloyd
4. The Goonies (1985) - Sean Astin, Josh Brolin
5. Moonstruck (1987) - Cher & Nicholas Cage
6. The Princess Bride (1987) - Cary Elwes & Mandy Patinkin
7. Plains, Trains, and Automobiles (1987) - Steve Martin, John Candy
8. Funny Farm (1988) - Chevy Chase
9. When Harry Met Sally (1989) - Billy Crystal & Meg Ryan
10. National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (1989) - Chevy Chase
Honorable Mentions: Mickey's Christmas Carol (1983), See No Evil, Hear No Evil (1989).

1990s:
1. Home Alone (1990) - Macaulay Culkin, Catherine O'Hara, John Candy
2. Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993) - Cary Elwes, Dave Chappelle
3. Sleepless in Seattle (1993) - Tom Hanks & Meg Ryan, Rosie O'Donnell
4. Rudy (1993) - Sean Astin
5. Maverick (1994) - Mel Gibson & Jodie Foster, James Garner
6. Apollo 13 (1995)- Tom Hanks, Gary Sinise, Ed Harris
7. Assassins (1995) - Sylvester Stallone & Julianne Moore, Antonio Bandaras
8. Sense and Sensibility (1995) - Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet, Hugh Grant
9. Conspiracy Theory (1997) - Mel Gibson & Julia Roberts
10. You've Got Mail (1998) - Tom Hanks & Meg Ryan
Honorable Mentions: Back to the Future Part III (1990), Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992), The Pelican Brief (1993), The Mummy (1999).

2000s:
1. Gladiator (2000) - Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix
2. Ocean's 11 (2001) - George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Julia Roberts
3. Signs (2002) - Mel Gibson, Joaquin Phoenix
4. The Bourne Identity (2002) - Matt Damon
5. Elf (2004) - Will Ferrall & Zooey Deschanel, James Caan
6. Mr. and Mrs. Smith (2005) - Brad Pitt & Angelina Jolie
7. The Queen (2006) - Helen Mirren
8. Deja Vu (2006) - Denzel Washington & Paula Patton, Jim Caviezel
9. Becoming Jane (2007) - Anne Hathaway & James McAvoy
10. The Young Victoria (2008) - Emily Blunt & Rupert Friend
Honorable Mentions: The Count of Monte Cristo (2002), Shanghai Knights (2003), National Treasure (2004), 27 Dresses (2008).

2010s:

1. The Kings Speech (2010) - Colin Firth, Geoffrey Rush
2. Tangled (2010) - Mandy Moore & Zachary Levi (voices)
3. The Adjustment Bureau (2011) - Matt Damon & Emily Blunt
4. Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011) - Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law
5. This Means War (2012) - Reese Witherspoon, Chris Pine, Tom Hardy
6. White House Down (2013) - Channing Tatum, Jamie Foxx
7. The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013) - Ben Stiller & Kristen Wigg, Shirley MacLaine
8. The Man From U.N.C.L.E (2015) - Henry Cavill, Armie Hammer, Alicia Vikander
9. Jason Bourne (2016) - even though it hasn't come out yet
10. (OPEN) - there's still 3 and a half years to go!

What modern movies do YOU watch?

I'm going to take a week break from lists so I can finish up my posts for the Gotta Dance! Blogathon and the Animals in Film Blogathon, as well as my Behind the Dress post on Saturday. Starting next Monday, I'll begin to bring you my top ten by genre's list, starting with Musicals.

The Best Things Happen While You're Dancing.. Especially if You're Vera-Ellen!

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My all time favorite dance out of every movie that has been made - including the countless ones I haven't even seen yet - is and always will be The Best Things Happen While You're Dancing from the classic holiday film White Christmas (1954).

 

White Christmas is a holiday favorite in my house. My family has watched it every year at Christmas time for as long as I can remember. Vera-Ellen instantly became my idol and I wished I could look like her, dance like her, and sing like her (I discovered that unfortunately it's not Vera-Ellen doing the singing... sigh). For several years Judy was my favorite name (I was also a big Judy Garland fan).
 
I'm going to presume that everyone has seen this not-to-be-missed film and get right to the point: Vera-Ellen's dancing. Let's take each routine individually:
 
Her first "dance,"Sisters, Sisters, also where Phil and Bob first lay eyes on the Hanes Sisters (who incidentally have brown and DEEP blue eyes), isn't much of a dance. However, it's a great song and she and Betty (Rosemary Clooney) have awesome dresses (one day I WILL have a replica made):
 
 
The next dance is  The Best Things Happen While You're Dancing, also known as the song where Phil and Judy get "carried away." It has a lot of great things going for it. Amazing dress - check! Partner with two left feet and matching gray shoes - check! Amazing song - check! Great dancing area - check!  
 
I was always trying to twirl and get my skirt to land this way. It never worked :(
 
Pole dancing. The CLASSY way.
 
I love the part on top of the boat!!!
 
What is this, The best two out of three?
 
I could go crazy and basically put up the whole dance in gifs but
hopefully you'll just watch the video. On repeat.
 
After that, the foursome are off to Vermont (it must be wonderful this time of year, all that underwear) where they put on a huge show to bring business to the inn (owned by the fella's former general). The first number we see is Mandy. It's a truly colossal number with an unforgettable entrance, background girls wearing strips of red sequins held together with fabric you can't see (courtesy of Edith Head), men in green suits and red gloves, and Judy in a fabulous outfit with a detachable skirt.
 
(Sorry the video zooms in and out a little weird a couple times. It was the only one on YouTube)
 
It is in this number you really see Vera-Ellen's talent. Just watching some of those moves makes me wince and think, how is that possible? My favorite parts: "Mandy, what a gal!" and Judy's wink to the camera ;) Not to mention Phil doing this:
 
Haha I never noticed Bing :)
 
In Choreography, we get to see Judy do some amazing tapping while dressed in hot pink. Growing up we watch the old recorded VHS (complete with old commercials!) on the square TV and it was just blurry enough that when Judy's feet come down and she starts tapping, we couldn't see her foot moving - that's how small and controlled her tap was! So when we FINALLY got it on DVD we could at last see it! Also, it was this song that made us dislike Judy's dancing partner. How dare he try to steal her from Phil!!
 
Judy's entrance is at 1:38.
 
Out of all the performances, Abraham is the only one that isn't shown in it's final form. Mandy and Choreography are full dress rehearsals and the other two numbers we see, Gee, I Wish I was Back in the Army, and White Christmas, are shown in the actual show. I wonder how it would have looked and if the filmmakers thought about showing it as a "finished" version. Of course, I wouldn't have it any other way. Judy's yellow dress and heels as well as her bouncy hair match perfectly the energetic rhythm of the song.
 
 
 
If you've seen Holiday Inn (1942) - on DVD - then you will recognize the tune, although this is a sped up version without lyrics. In Holiday Inn it was a blackface routine and the lyrics are all about Abraham freeing the slaves. Understandably, it is cut out when shown on television nowadays. It's been a good many years since I've seen it (I wasn't much on Astaire in that film) and I've seen it only once so I didn't even remember it. I just remember thinking I liked the White Christmas version MUCH better.
 
When White Christmas showed in select theaters a couple Christmas's ago, my whole family went. It was amazing how much detail we could see!
 
      
 

   
 
 
 
This post is part of the Gotta Dance! Blogathon, a celebration of dance in film hosted by Classic Reel Girl for National Tap Dance Day. Be sure to read all of the other toe-tapping posts!!
 

The Film Career of Skippy aka Asta

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Skippy, a wire-haired terrier, was born in 1931/1932 and enjoyed an illustrious Hollywood career until his retirement in 1941. One of the smartest dogs in Hollywood, enjoying a salary of $125 a week compared to $3.50 a day of other canine actors, Skippy began training at 3 months old. Soon he was able to respond to both verbal and hand cues.
 
His first film launched him to stardom, almost equal to that of his co-stars who had been in pictures for many years. It was The Thin Man (1934) and Skippy played the world's bravest (ok, not really) detective's dog, Asta. He often follows Nick (William Powell) on his investigations, covers his face with his paw when Nick and Nora kiss, run off with valuable clues, and hide under the furniture when he is scared. He is also a family man (with a not so faithful "wife"). After the success of the film, everyone wanted a wire-haired terrier.
 
 
Skippy was then cast in small roles in four films in the year 1935 (The Big Broadcast of 1936, Lottery Lover, It's a Small World, and The Daring Young Man) and the following year reprised his role as Asta in After the Thin Man (1936).
 
Skippy's two other big roles included his role as Mr. Smith in The Awful Truth (1937) starring Cary Grant and Irene Dunne and as George in Bringing Up Baby (1938) starring Grant and Katharine Hepburn.
 
The Awful Truth

"Singing" with Grant
 
As George, running off with Grant's intercostal clavical.
 
An article about Skippy, titled "A Dog's Life in Hollywood," appeared in the August 1938 issue of The American Magazine:
 
Movie actresses stroke Skippy lovingly. They coo at him and murmur endearing terms in his ears. He takes it all in his stride, because, what with contracts, options, and exacting work before the movie cameras, he hasn't much time for the attentions of Hollywood's most beautiful stars. But if he's paid for it and given the proper cue he will snuggle in the arms of the loveliest of stars, gaze into her limpid eyes, and, if necessary—howl.

Skippy, a smart little wire-haired terrier, is one of the leading stars in pictures. He leads a glamorous life—a dog's life de luxe. He is rated as one of the smartest dogs in the world, and when contracts are signed for his appearance in a picture he gets $200 a week for putting his paw-print on the dotted line. His trainer gets a mere $60.
His owner is Mrs. Gale Henry East, once a prominent movie comedienne. ... "When Skippy has to drink water in a scene, the first time he does it he really drinks. If there are retakes and he's had all the water he can drink, he'll go through the scene just as enthusiastically as though his throat were parched, but he'll fake it. If you watch closely you'll see he's just going through the motions of lapping and isn't really picking up water at all. And, because he has a sense of humor, he loves it when you laugh and tell him you've caught him faking but that it's all right with you.
"Treat a dog kindly and he'll do anything in the world for you."
"Signing" his contract for Bringing Up Baby.
 
This post is part of The Animals in Film Blogathon hosted by In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood (and my upcoming co-host to the Olivia de Havilland Centenary Blogathon). Check out my other post on Trigger in Son of Paleface (1952) and be sure to read all of the other posts about Hollywood's most talented animals!
 

Trigger in "Son of Paleface" (1952)

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A four-legged friend,
A four-legged friend,
He'll never let you down.
He's honest and faithful right up to the end,
That wonderful one, two, three, four-legged friend.
 
Trigger - the most famous and talented horse in the movies. Only, that isn't Trigger in the film Son of Paleface (1952). It's Little Trigger.

Bob Hope, Jane Russell, Little Trigger, & Roy Rogers

That's right. Apparently the original Trigger, the one who made his film debut as Maid Marion's horse in The Adventure's of Robin Hood (1938) before being adopted by Roy Rogers, had by the 1950s retired from films.

 
Little Trigger, a Morgan, was smaller than Trigger and a lighter honey color. He was exceptionally smart and learned cues for over 100 tricks. He was also a good dancer, as can be seen in the video at the top of the post. He was also housebroken, meaning he could accompany Roy Rogers on visits to children's hospitals.  


 
Little Trigger's performance in Son of Paleface is amazing to watch. He does all kinds of tricks - untying knots, running up stairs, and even is able to steal a scene from Bob Hope. In the scene, Bob and Trigger are sharing a bed. Trigger keeps stealing the covers from off of Bob. Unfortunately it's not of YouTube.
Trigger turns comedian and is by all odds the handsomest as well as the funniest performer in the film.
~ Film Critic Catherine Edwards
 
Trigger even won the Patsy Award (an award like an Oscar from the American Humane Association) for his role.
 
This post is part of The Animals in Film Blogathon hosted by In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood (and my upcoming co-host to the Olivia de Havilland Centenary Blogathon). Check out my other post on The Film Career of Skippy aka "Asta" and be sure to read all of the other posts about Hollywood's most talented four-legged friends!
 
 
Sources:
 
Hollywood Hoofbeats: Trails Blazed Across the Silver Screen. Petrine Day Mitchum with Audrey Pavia.
 
Horses in the Movies. H.F. Hintz.

Ten Movies on an Island: Musicals

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As promised, here is my first list of my top ten in each movie genre: musicals, westerns, dramas, comedies (screwball/romantic & regular comedies), horror/sci-fi, action-adventure, mystery, and Disney.

This list will focus on musicals. First of all, what is a musical? According to the definition on Wikipedia, a musical is:
... a film genre in which songs sung by the characters are interwoven into the narrative, sometimes accompanied by dancing.
Throughout Hollywood History, the musical has evolved. A musical from the 1930s is not going to be the same as a musical from the 1950s. Over the decades, there have been Operetta's, Horse Operas (that's a Western that's also a musical), the Busby Berkley musicals, biopics about musicians and showmen, Historical costume epics, fantasies, musicals adapted from Broadway productions, rock & roll musicals, beach party musicals... the list goes on.

Now I'm not a huge musicals person (surprising since I love music, sing, and play both the piano and the ukulele).  But I've never been a huge fan of the musicals that typically come to mind when someone says the word "musicals," so you will not be finding such classics as Singing in the Rain and Oklahoma! on here.

In picking my films, I did decide on a certain criteria, aside from merely liking it. It had to be a movie that I enjoyed the songs as much as the storyline (aka I actually know most if not all of the songs by heart) and if I looked for it at the library I would find it in the musicals section. So with those two things in mind, here is my list:
1. The Great Ziegfeld (1936) - William Powell
2. The Wizard of Oz (1939) - Judy Garland
3. Ziegfeld Girl (1941) - Lana Turner, Judy Garland, Hedy Lamarr
4. Girl Crazy (1943) - Judy Garland & Mickey Rooney
5. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) - Marilyn Monroe, Jane Russell, Charles Coburn
6. White Christmas (1954) - Bing Crosby & Rosemary Clooney, Danny Kaye & Vera-Ellen
7. Daddy Long Legs (1955) - Fred Astaire & Leslie Caron
8. My Fair Lady (1964) - Audrey Hepburn & Rex Harrison
9. The Sound of Music (1965) - Julie Andrews & Christopher Plummer
10. Funny Girl (1968) - Barbra Streisand & Omar Shariff
Here is the list I consulted when choosing my Top Ten Musicals. What are your favorites?
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