Showing posts with label Davies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Davies. Show all posts

Monday, July 4, 2011

Happy Fourth!

 Ann Miller

 Marion Davies

Bette Davis



TCM celebrates!
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) Spirited musical biography of the song-and-dance man who kept America humming through two world wars. Dir: Michael Curtiz Cast: James Cagney, Joan Leslie, Walter Huston.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Silence is Golden: The Patsy (1928)

The Patsy features the charming Marion Davies as Patricia Harrington, the much harried and annoyed younger daughter of Ma and Pa Harrington. Constantly provoked to point out how unfairly she is treated by her sister Grace (Jane Winton) and mother (Marie Dressler), Pat finds little consolation in her father's (Dell Henderson) defenses as he ofter overruled by Ma Harrington. Pat is madly in love with Tony Anderson (Orville Caldwell) who is Grace's suitor. She knows grace is just stringing him along and longs to be the center of Tony's attention. She gets that chance when Billy (Lawrence Gray) breezes into town. With Grace giving Tony the slip, Pat reveals to him that she is in love with a guy who doesn't even know she exists. Ever helpful Tony gives her some tips on how to gain a personality- leading Ma Harrington to believe her daughter has gone insane. With Pa's advice to keep up the act, Pat finds that she catered to my Ma and even slips in a kiss with Tony who then discovers he's chasing the wrong sister. When Grace finds out, she threatens to expose Pat's lie about being in love with another man- as Tony hates liars, Pat concedes and let's Grace wheedle another date out of Tony. Pa, seeing Pat's misery offers up that jealousy may bring Tony around so, Pat tries to woo Billy. When she gets no response from him, she calls on Tony to "rescue" her from Billy's "attentions" which Tony promptly does but not without admonishing her for liking someone such as Billy.
defeated, Pat returns home with Grace who tells the sordid tale much to Ma Harrington's dismay. Pa Harrington takes this opportunity to let his wife know he will no longer tolerate her incessant complaining and whining and threatens to leave though he truly loves her. The film ends with everyone seeing the error of their ways and making up- with Pat getting her man.







Davies doing wonderful impersonations of Swanson and Gish.



Sidenote:

King Vidor originally did not want to do a film with Marion Davies, thinking her flighty and trivial due to her connection with Hearst. However, once he was invited to San Simeon and met Davies, he found her to be refreshingly intelligent and quite humorous, thus prompting him to direct her in the three "Vidor Comedies", The Patsy, Show People (1928), and Not So Dumb (1930).

The Patsy is also rumored to be a turnaround film for Marie Dressler whose career had hit a slump by 1928. According to Allan Dwan, he saved her life. While dining on her last meal at The Ritz, Dwan said he spotted her and thought she would be perfect for the part of Ma Harrington. He had a note sent over, and Dressler asked him up to her room and admitted to him that she had just eaten her last meal and was going to throw herself out of her hotel window when she got his note. Whether true or not, The Patsy was a success and Dressler's career was on the go once more.

Tonight on TCM!
To Be or Not to Be (1942) A troupe of squabbling actors joins the Polish underground to dupe the Nazis. Cast: Carole Lombard, Jack Benny, Robert Stack, Felix Bressart Dir: Ernst Lubitsch

Friday, October 30, 2009

Queen of Theme: Marion Davies

Just in time for Hallowe'en, a pictorial view of the wonderful themed parties Marion Davies gave at her luxurious beach house in Santa Monica...
















Tonight on TCM!
Spend the day with Boris!!

Friday, September 4, 2009

The Lady Prefurs


Sally Starr

Mary Pickford

Lupe Valez
Lucille Ball
Jeanette McDonald
Joan Crawford
Irene Dunne
Hedy Lamar
Jean Harlow
Gloria Swanson
Marion Davies
Carole Landis
Clara Bow
Ann Miller




Tonight on TCM!

So Well Remembered (1947)
A mill-owner's ambitious daughter almost ruins her husband's political career.
Cast: John Mills, Martha Scott, Patricia Roc, Trevor Howard Dir: Edward Dmytryk

Friday, August 14, 2009

Hooray! Hurrell!

Robert Montgomery



Marion Davies



Blondie of the Follies (1932)

Blondie McClune (Marion Davies) and her girl friend, Lottie Callahan (Billie Dove), have one goal- to get out of the tenement house they live in in New York with their families. Blondie however, doesn't possess an easy virtue and doesn't like to man-handled. Lottie leaves and moves uptown to join the follies. Living on easy street and having an affair with millionaire playboy Larry Belmont (Robert Montgomery) Lottie, now known as Lurline invites Blondie to check out her lifestyle. Larry is instantly smitten with Blondie but over the course of spending the evening together, much to Lurline's dismay, Larry realizes that Blondie is a different type of gal and he wants to protect her from the lifestyle that Lurline has fallen into.

Despite this he arranges for her to get a job in the follies, further angering Lurline, and after getting her drunk at speakeasy, he takes Blondie home, shocking her father, who warns Blondie never to see him again. Angered, Blondie leaves and stays with Lurline who admits to being in love with Larry and cashing her V-check on him. Blondie promises never to speak to the cad again. The next morning, her father comes to Lurline's to apologize for being old fashioned and sadly gives his blessing for Blondie to start a new life in the follies.

That night Blondie goes with Lurline to a yacht party owned by an oil tycoon who loves blondes. Larry runs into Blondie and Lurline there and admonishes Lurline for trying to bring a nice kid like Blondie into her type of life, and breaks their affair off. Speaking with Blondie, Larry tells her she is too nice a kid to be in this crowd. Lurline interrupts them, and the girls have a fight and Blondie decides to have her fun with the oil tycoon.

Three months later, Blondie has her own posh apartment and is a follies hit. She tries to get Larry and Lurline to reconcile, and though Larry is sorry for what's been done, he only wants to be friends with Lurline. Lottie and Blondie make up after Lurline realizes that Blondie has not seen or talked to Larry in those three months. That night Blondie's father dies.
Some time later, while Blondie is performing, Larry sends word to meet him at a speakeasy. Lurline catches wind of this and despite Larry plainly telling her he did not love her or want to be in a relationship with her, she goes instead of telling Blondie. When Blondie does hear about it she goes to him and learns that he is leaving for Europe because he is in love with her.

Lurline angrily pulls them apart and rushes Blondie back to the show for their next number where another show girl warns Blondie not to get onstage as her position there will allow Lurline to throw her from the stage, which Lurline does. Blondie is released from the hospital with a permanent leg injury, she decides to move back home despite offers of help from all her friends in the show, a remorseful Lurline, and Larry. Only Larry doesn't listen and shows up at her house with several different specialists and a proposal for marriage. Blondie finally gives in.




This was my first Marion Davies film and I found her quite delightful. After Blondie at the Follies, I watched Operator 13, Not So Dumb, and Ever Since Eve- though the two former films were not so fantastic, Marion managed to shine and Ever Since Eve, her last film was a fitting goodbye to her career in film. I also watched the documentary Captured on Film: The True Story of Marion Davies (2001). I have never had any opinion about Marion Davies as I had not seen her in any movie nor did I think that she had made many movies. I had, however, seen Citizen Kane and RKO 281 which did not paint her in a flattering light.

The documentary was quite informative and showed a much different side of Davies, certainly the purpose of film. I've taken the description from TCM on the documentary.

Narrated by actress Charlize Theron, Captured on Film: The True Story of Marion Davies (2001) is a documentary about the Hollywood legend whose acting career was overshadowed by her much-criticized love affair with newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst. The film features the final on-camera interview with Davies' biographer Fred Guiles as well as interviews with film historians Kevin Brownlow, Jeanine Basinger, and Cari Beauchamp; former film critic Charles Champlin; and actress Virginia Madsen, who researched Davies for her portrayal of the star in the made-for-TV movie The Hearst and Davies Affair (1985). First-hand accounts of events in Davies's life will be shared by Carl Roup, a studio newspaper boy who was chosen by Davies to appear as an extra in The Red Mill (1927); Davies's friends, including actress Constance Moore and King Vidor's daughter, Belinda Vidor Holiday; and Life magazine correspondent Stanley Flink, who taped interviews with Davies in 1951, excerpts which are heard in the documentary.While the press and the film Citizen Kane (1941) served to paint Davies as a hard-drinking golddigger with no talent, Captured on Film: The True Story of Marion Davies will reflect her true nature - a talented, hard-working actress and shrewd businesswoman. The documentary chronicles Davies's career and her relationship with Hearst, from their meeting in New York to his death in 1951, and contains rare clips from some of Davies's earliest films, recently rescued from nitrate decomposition, including The Cardboard Lover (1928), The Patsy (1928), When Knighthood Was in Flower (1922) and Quality Street (1927), as well as rare, never-before-seen home movies from the Hearst castle and from the couple's European travels.

What I took from this documentary was that Davies was a very generous and talented woman. She was open about her relationship with Hearst and crucified in the public eye because of it. I think you have only to look at her films to see that Hearst, though he backed her financially, did not give her the talent she displayed on screen. Was she the best actress out there? No. But neither was she the worst nor would she have a hard time carrying a film. The most interesting tidbit in this documentary is that Orson Welles stated he never meant for her public image to suffer due to Citizen Kane and that he deeply regretted ever hurting her. I don't know what delusional cloud he was sitting under to think the movie wouldn't do her harm but then again- this is Orson Welles were speaking of.


I highly recommend checking the documentary out. Especially if you are a Davies fan. She really was quite a brilliant actress with a natural talent for comedy and mimicry.



Tobight on TCM!

Summer Under the Stars: Sidney Poitier

Thursday, July 30, 2009

The Bee's Knees: Famous Flappers

Norma Talmadge

Marie Prevost

Marion Davies


Joan Crawford


Louise Brooks


Edna Perviance


Dorothy Sebastian


Clara Bow


Betty Compson


Anita Page


Barbara Stanwyck


Joan Crawford


Louise Brooks


Norma Shearer


1920's slang!

Tonight on TCM!

Gone With the Wind (1939)
Classic tale of Scarlett O'Hara's battle to save her beloved Tara and find love during the Civil War. Cast: Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Olivia de Havilland. Dir: Victor Fleming