7/31/2012

Tony Martin (1913-2012)

I was saddened to hear of the passing of singer/actor Tony Martin via Laura's blog (her tribute is here). He lived a very long and full life of 98 years, and left us with some wonderful songs and movie memories.  Did you know he has 4 stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame? For Movies, TV, Recording, and Radio. 



Filmography:1936 Follow the Fleet (uncredited minor role)
1936 Back to Nature 
1936 Sing, Baby, Sing (with Alice Faye)
1936 Pigskin Parade  
1936 Banjo on My Knee 
1937 The Holy Terror 
1937 Sing and Be Happy 
1937 You Can't Have Everything  (with Alice Faye)
1937 Life Begins in College 
1937 Ali Baba Goes to Town (with Eddie Cantor)
1938 Sally, Irene and Mary  (with Alice Faye)
1938 Kentucky Moonshine (lead role)
1938 Up the River (with Preston Foster)
1938 Thanks for Everything (with Jack Haley)
1939 Winner Take All (with Gloria Stuart)
1940 Music in My Heart (with Rita Hayworth)
1941 Ziegfeld Girl  (All-star cast)
1941 The Big Store (with the Marx Brothers)
1946 Till the Clouds Roll By (All-star cast)
1948 Casbah (lead role)
1951 Two Tickets to Broadway
1953 Here Come the Girls (with Bob Hope)
1953 Easy to Love (with Esther Williams)
1954 Deep in My Heart 
1955 Hit the Deck  (All-star cast)
1956 Quincannon, Frontier Scout (lead role)
1957 Let's Be Happy (with Vera-Ellen)



Mr. Martin is being remembered as: "Singer", "Crooner", "Dapper Entertainer", and "Star of Records, Radio, TV, & Movies".


Crooner Tony Martin dies at 98 (Associated Press)

TONY MARTIN — STAR OF RECORDS, RADIO, TV & MOVIES — DEAD AT 98  (Studio Briefing)

Tony Martin, dapper entertainer whose records sold millions in 1940s and ’50s, dies (The Washington Post)

RIP Tony Martin (Boot Hill)


7/29/2012

London 1961: from my mother's travel journal

In the summer of 1961, my mom (22 at the time) went on a trip to Europe.The first stop was southern Poland - she went with her father for a two-week trip to visit/meet relatives (on various farms!).

Then in July she traveled on her own from Warsaw to London to join up with a sightseeing tour.

My mom kept a travel journal, and this weekend I was inspired to read through it again after watching the Olympics' Opening Ceremonies from London.

Here's a sample of some of what she saw in London. Interesting that she got to see a few shows, including Van Johnson in "The Music Man"!! (note: the photos below are ones I found online)


Tuesday July 4, 1961
Started our tour of London. 9:30 AM. Saw Westmintster Abbey. Saw changing of the Guard. St. Paul's Cathedral. Big Ben. At 8:30 PM we went to the Palladium Theater and saw a wonderful musical: "Let Yourself Go". Very wonderful and pretty. Met new tour members from all over the States - fascinating people who have travelled the world....Doing pretty good with English currency. People are wonderfully helpful and enjoy explaining it to you!



Wednesday July 5, 1961
Got up at 1:00 PM! Went to eat and then out to see "Music Man" with Van Johnson. 





The tour also included Rome, Venice, Belgium, Paris, and Monte Carlo and some other cities. Let me know if you would like to see any of these pics / journal entries of my mom's trip from 1961, and I'll post some.

7/26/2012

Jean Gabin in La Belle Equipe / The Good Crew (1936)

Set in Paris, La Belle Equipe (The Good Crew) begins with Jean Gabin and his unemployed friends living together in a poorhouse, dreaming of a better life for themselves. In an early scene, they're all in a pub playing one of those "mechanical claw" games where you have have to move the claw around to grab a prize. Desperate for a gift for a girl, they tilt the machine to "cheat" the game into spilling out a prize, which they do successfully several times in fact. I didn't realize those machines existed in the 1930s.

One day, in an amazing stroke of luck, five of the friends amazingly win a lottery. This is followed by an amusing celebration scene where all the other tenants in the building come flooding into their apartment for a wine party.  People of all ages - including little kids - crowd the flat!

Instead of parting ways with their winnings, they decide to invest the money together to start a restaurant. They purchase an old building in the country along the Marne river and turn it into a cozy, outdoor cafe with an indoor dance hall and live music. As the story progresses, the partnership breaks up for one reason or another (one friend dies, another moves, a woman gets in the way, etc). But the remaining friends continue to persevere.

By the end of the film, the restaurant has its grand opening. Happiness and joy fills the air as Jean Gabin realizes his dreams have come true. As the boss of his own place, he walks around to each table and asks each customer if they are having a good time. It's neat to see his character evolve through all the adversity.

The ending of the film is open ended, and we're not sure if any of the former members of the group will return to help with the emerging venture.

Directed by Julien Duvivier. Recommended.

7/23/2012

Tom & Jerry - "Zoot Cat"

In this hilarious episode from 1944, Tom dresses up in a zoot suit to impress a girl cat, Toots.

One of the few episodes where Tom and Jerry talk!

This cartoon is impossible to resist!


7/21/2012

To Rome With Love (2012)

Set in Rome, the movie is made up of four vignettes, some better than others.

The one I liked best was the one with Roberto Benigni, who I don't think has been in any movie since Life Is Beautiful (La vita è bella). He plays an ordinary man who suddenly is chased by the paparazzi for no apparent reason. It's comical, and brought to mind the paparazzi of La Dolce Vita.

Another story I liked features a couple in Rome on a short business trip. When the wife gets lost in the city, the husband finds himself spending the day with another woman - a prostitute, played by Penelope Cruz - introducing her to his family and business contacts with comical results.

There's another one with Alec Baldwin, who plays a mentor to a young architect Jesse Eisenberg. Alec is pretty flat in this; he seemed to be reading all of his lines for the first time, uninterested. George Clooney might have been a better choice than Alec in that role.

Jesse gets caught in a love triangle with his girlfriend Greta Gerwig and Greta's best friend on vacation Ellen Page.

I'm giving To Rome With Love a "C" - average. The vignettes are amusing but not too remarkable. Lovely scenery of Rome, though.

7/15/2012

Celeste Holm (1917-2012)


Filmography

1946 Three Little Girls in Blue
1947 Carnival in Costa Rica
1947 Gentleman's Agreement
1948 Road House
1948 The Snake Pit
1949 Chicken Every Sunday
1949 A Letter To Three Wives
1949 Come To The Stable
1949 Everybody Does It
1950 Champagne for Caesar
1950 All About Eve
1955 The Tender Trap
1956 High Society
1962 Bachelor Flat
1967 Doctor, You've Got to Be Kidding!
1973 Tom Sawyer 
1976 Bittersweet Love
1977 The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover
1987 Three Men and a Baby

High Society

Oscar-winning actress Celeste Holm dies at 95
MARK KENNEDY, AP Drama Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Celeste Holm, a versatile, bright-eyed blonde who soared to Broadway fame in "Oklahoma!" and won an Oscar in "Gentleman's Agreement" but whose last years were filled with financial difficulty and estrangement from her sons, died Sunday, a relative said. She was 95.

Holm had been hospitalized about two weeks ago with dehydration after a fire in actor Robert De Niro's apartment in the same Manhattan building. She had asked her husband on Friday to bring her home, and she spent her final days with her husband, Frank Basile, and other relatives and close friends by her side, said Amy Phillips, a great-niece of Holm's who answered the phone at Holm's apartment on Sunday.

Holm died around 3:30 a.m. at her longtime apartment on Central Park West, Phillips said.

"I think she wanted to be here, in her home, among her things, with people who loved her," she said.

In a career that spanned more than half a century, Holm played everyone from Ado Annie — the girl who just can't say no in "Oklahoma!"— to a worldly theatrical agent in the 1991 comedy "I Hate Hamlet" to guest star turns on TV shows such as "Fantasy Island" and "Love Boat II" to Bette Davis' best friend in "All About Eve."

She won the Academy Award in 1947 for best supporting actress for her performance in "Gentlemen's Agreement" and received Oscar nominations for "Come to the Stable" (1949) and "All About Eve" (1950).

Holm was also known for her untiring charity work — at one time she served on nine boards — and was a board member emeritus of the National Mental Health Association.

She was once president of the Creative Arts Rehabilitation Center, which treats emotionally disturbed people using arts therapies. Over the years, she raised $20,000 for UNICEF by charging 50 cents apiece for autographs.

President Ronald Reagan appointed her to a six-year term on the National Council on the Arts in 1982. In New York, she was active in the Save the Theatres Committee and was once arrested during a vigorous protest against the demolition of several theaters.

But late in her life she was in a bitter, multi-year legal family battle that pitted her two sons against her and her fifth husband — former waiter Basile, whom she married in 2004 and was more than 45 years her junior. The court fight over investments and inheritance wiped away much of her savings and left her dependent on Social Security. The actress and her sons no longer spoke, and she was sued for overdue maintenance and legal fees on her Manhattan apartment.

The future Broadway star was born in New York on April 29, 1919, the daughter of Norwegian-born Theodore Holm, who worked for the American branch of Lloyd's of London, and Jean Parke Holm, a painter and writer.

She was smitten by the theater as a 3-year-old when her grandmother took her to see ballerina Anna Pavlova. "There she was, being tossed in midair, caught, no mistakes, no falls. She never knew what an impression she made," Holm recalled years later.

She attended 14 schools growing up, including the Lycee Victor Duryui in Paris when her mother was there for an exhibition of her paintings. She studied ballet for 10 years.



Related stories:

A 2010 interview with NY Post and tour of Celeste's NY apartment

52 Starlets Art Challenge: Celeste Holm 


It's all about 'Eve' and Celeste Holm in Huntington



7/08/2012

Ernest Borgnine, Oscar winner, has died at 95



ERNEST Borgnine, the beefy screen star known for blustery, often villainous roles, but who won the best-actor Oscar for playing a lovesick butcher in Marty in 1955, died Sunday.

He was 95.

His longtime spokesman, Harry Flynn, said Borgnine died of renal failure at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles with his wife and children at his side.

Borgnine, who endeared himself to a generation of Baby Boomers with the 1960s TV comedy McHale's Navy, first attracted notice in the early 1950s in villain roles, notably as the vicious Fatso Judson, who beat Frank Sinatra to death in From Here to Eternity.

Then came Marty, a low-budget film based on a Paddy Chayefsky television play that starred Rod Steiger. Borgnine played a 34-year-old who fears he is so unattractive he will never find romance. Then, at a dance, he meets a girl with the same fear.

"Sooner or later, there comes a point in a man's life when he's gotta face some facts," Marty movingly tells his mother at one point in the film. "And one fact I gotta face is that, whatever it is that women like, I ain't got it. I chased after enough girls in my life. I went to enough dances. I got hurt enough. I don't wanna get hurt no more."

The realism of Chayefsky's prose and Delbert Mann's sensitive direction astonished audiences accustomed to happy Hollywood formulas. Borgnine won the Oscar and awards from the Cannes Film Festival, New York Critics and National Board of Review.

Mann and Chayefsky also won Oscars, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences hailed the $360,000 Marty as best picture over big-budget contenders The Rose Tattoo, Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing, Picnic and Mister Roberts.

"The Oscar made me a star, and I'm grateful," Borgnine told an interviewer in 1966. "But I feel had I not won the Oscar I wouldn't have gotten into the messes I did in my personal life."

Those messes included four failed marriages, including one in 1964 to singer Ethel Merman that lasted less than six weeks.

But Borgnine's fifth marriage, in 1973 to Norwegian-born Tova Traesnaes, endured and brought with it an interesting business partnership. She manufactured and sold her own beauty products under the name of Tova and used her husband's rejuvenated face in her ads.

During a 2007 interview with The Associated Press, Borgnine expressed delight that their union had reached 34 years. "That's longer than the total of my four other marriages," he commented, laughing heartily.

Although still not a marquee star until after Marty, the roles of heavies started coming regularly after From Here to Eternity. Among the films: Bad Day at Black Rock, Johnny Guitar, Demetrius and the Gladiators, Vera Cruz.

Director Nick Ray advised the actor: "Get out of Hollywood in two years or you'll be typed forever." Then came the Oscar, and Borgnine's career was assured.

He played a sensitive role opposite Bette Davis in another film based on a Chayefsky TV drama, The Catered Affair, a film that was a personal favorite. It concerned a New York taxi driver and his wife who argued over the expense of their daughter's wedding.

But producers also continued casting Borgnine in action films such as Three Bad Men, The Vikings, Torpedo Run, Barabbas, The Dirty Dozen and The Wild Bunch.

Then he successfully made the transition to TV comedy.

From 1962 to 1966, Borgnine - a Navy vet himself - starred in McHale's Navy as the commander of a World War II PT boat with a crew of misfits and malcontents. Obviously patterned after Phil Silvers' popular Sgt. Bilko, McHale was a con artist forever tricking his superior, Capt. Binghamton, played by the late Joe Flynn.

The cast took the show to the big screen in 1964 with a McHale's Navy movie.

Borgnine's later films included Ice Station Zebra, The Adventurers, Willard, The Poseidon Adventure, The Greatest (as Muhammad Ali's manager), Convoy, Ravagers, Escape from New York, Moving Target and Mistress.


More recently, Borgnine had a recurring role as the apartment house doorman-cum-chef in the NBC sitcom The Single Guy. He had a small role in the unsuccessful 1997 movie version of McHale's Navy. And he was the voice of Mermaid Man on SpongeBob SquarePants and Carface on All Dogs Go to Heaven 2.

"I don't care whether a role is 10 minutes long or two hours," he remarked in 1973. "And I don't care whether my name is up there on top, either. Matter of fact, I'd rather have someone else get top billing; then if the picture bombs, he gets the blame, not me."

Ermes Efron Borgnino was born in Hamden, Conn., on Jan. 24, 1917, the son of Italian immigrant parents. The family lived in Milan when the boy was 2 to 7, then returned to Connecticut, where he attended school in New Haven.

Borgnine joined the Navy in 1935 and served on a destroyer during World War II. He weighed 135 pounds (61kg) when he enlisted. He left the Navy 10 years later, weighing exactly 100 pounds (45kg) more.

"I wouldn't trade those 10 years for anything," he said in 1956. "The Navy taught me a lot of things. It molded me as a man, and I made a lot of wonderful friends."

For a time he contemplated taking a job with an air conditioning company. But his mother persuaded him to enroll at the Randall School of Dramatic Arts in Hartford. He stayed four months, the only formal training he received.

He appeared in repertory at the Barter Theater in Virginia, toured as a hospital attendant in Harvey and played a villain on TV's Captain Video.

After earning $2,300 in 1951, Borgnine almost accepted a position with an electrical company. But the job fell through, and he returned to acting, moving into a modest house in Los Angeles' San Fernando Valley.

His first marriage was to Rhoda Kenins, whom he met when she was a Navy pharmacist's mate and he was a patient. They had a daughter, but the marriage ended in divorce after his Marty stardom.

Borgnine married Mexican actress Katy Jurado in 1959, and their marriage resulted in headlined squabbles from Hollywood to Rome before it ended in 1964.

In 1963, he and Merman startled the show business world by announcing, after a month's acquaintance, that they would marry when his divorce from Jurado became final. The Broadway singing star and the movie tough guy seemed to have nothing in common, and their marriage ended in 38 days after a fierce battle.

"If you blinked, you missed it," Merman once cracked.

Next came one-time child actress Donna Rancourt, with whom Borgnine had a daughter, and finally his happy union with Tova.

On Jan. 24, 2007, Borgnine celebrated his 90th birthday with a party for friends and family at a West Hollywood bistro. He seemed little changed from his years as a lusty villain or sympathetic hero on the screen. His only concession to age had come at 88 when he gave up driving the bus he would take around the country, stopping to talk with local folks along the way.

During an interview at the time, Borgnine complained that he wanted to continue acting but most studio executives kept asking, "Is he still alive?"

"I just want to do more work," he said. "Every time I step in front of a camera I feel young again. I really do. It keeps your mind active and it keeps you going."

7/07/2012

Stalag 17 (1953)

I watched Stalag 17 again today, one of my all time favorite movies - I never get tired of it. If you have never seen it, do yourself a favor and see one of the all time great movies from Billy Wilder, and an Oscar winning performance of William Holden. 

Knowing that the story was originally produced as a play, all through the movie I imaged how the scenes would have played out on the stage. 

The 2006 DVD has a neat commentary with co-stars Richard Erdman and Gil Stratton and co-playwright Donald Bevan. Highly recommended!

BONUS: I discovered a neat Stalag17-related clip on YouTube - it's a clip of a old Bob Hope overseas show circa 1950s. Guests on the tour were Holden and Robert Strauss and they did a comedy bit inspired by their POW characters from the movie. Also popping in for some laughs is Anita Ekberg.