Hollywood’s Greatest Year in New York City
Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh in Gone with the Wind (top); Bette Davis, Geraldine Fitzgerald in Dark Victory (middle); Laurence Olivier, Merle Oberon in Wuthering Heights (bottom)
Gone with the Wind, the 1939 Best Picture winner, will kick off the New York presentation of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ latest screening series, "Hollywood’s Greatest Year: The Best Picture Nominees of 1939," on Saturday, June 20, at 12:30 p.m. at the Academy’s Theater in New York City. Turner Classic Movies host and film historian Robert Osborne will host the event.
"Hollywood’s Greatest Year" will continue through mid-October, showcasing all 10 Best Picture nominees from 1939. Screenings will take place on Monday at 7:30 p.m., [...]
by Andre Soares | June 10, 2009
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Tags: Academy Awards, Academy Theater, Bette Davis, Buck Rogers, Buster Crabbe, Clark Gable, Classic Movies, Constance Moore, Dark Victory, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Gone with the Wind, Goodbye Mr. Chips, Hollywood’s Greatest Year: The Best Picture Nominees of 1939, Laurence Olivier, Love Affair, Merle Oberon, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, New York Screenings, Ninotchka, Of Mice and Men, Oscar 1939, Oscar Movies, Robert Osborne, Stagecoach, TCM, The Wizard of Oz, Turner Classic Movies, Vivien Leigh, Wuthering Heights
Bette Davis’ DARK VICTORY Screening
The Bette Davis vehicle and 1939 Best Picture nominee Dark Victory will be screened as the next feature in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ series “Hollywood’s Greatest Year: The Best Picture Nominees of 1939” on Monday, June 15, at 7:30 p.m. at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.
Beginning at 7 p.m., the feature will be preceded by the fifth chapter of the 1939 serial Buck Rogers, starring Buster Crabbe and Constance Moore, and the Warner Bros. cartoon Dangerous Dan McFoo, directed by Tex Avery.
Adapted by Casey Robinson from a play by George Emerson Brewer Jr. and Bertram Bloch, Dark Victory is one of Bette Davis’ [...]
by Andre Soares | June 10, 2009
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Tags: Academy Awards, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Bette Davis, Buck Rogers, Buster Crabbe, Casey Robinson, Classic Movies, Constance Moore, Dangerous, Dangerous Dan McFoo, Dark Victory, Edmund Goulding, Ernest Haller, George Brent, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Gone with the Wind, Hollywood’s Greatest Year: The Best Picture Nominees of 1939, Humphrey Bogart, Jezebel, Los Angeles Screenings, Max Steiner, Melodrama, Now Voyager, Oscar 1939, Oscar Movies, Ronald Reagan, Tallulah Bankhead, Tex Avery, That Certain Woman, The Old Maid, Vivien Leigh, Warner Bros.
WUTHERING HEIGHTS Screening
The 1939 Best Picture nominee Wuthering Heights, directed by William Wyler, and starring Merle Oberon and Laurence Olivier, will be the next feature in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ series “Hollywood’s Greatest Year: The Best Picture Nominees of 1939.” The Wuthering Heights screening will take place on Monday, June 8, at 7:30 p.m. at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.
Starting at 7 p.m., the feature will be preceded by the fourth chapter of the 1939 serial Buck Rogers, starring Buster Crabbe and Constance Moore, and the animated short The Pointer, starring Mickey Mouse and Pluto.
According to Samuel Goldwyn biographer A. Scott Berg, Wuthering Heights was the producer’s favorite among his films. [...]
by Andre Soares | June 3, 2009
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Tags: A. Scott Berg, Academy Awards, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Alfred Newman, Ben Hecht, Buck Rogers, Buster Crabbe, Charles MacArthur, Charlotte Brontë, Classic Movies, Constance Moore, David Copperfield, David Niven, David O. Selznick, Douglas Fairbanks Jr, Emily Brontë, Flora Robson, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Gone with the Wind, Gregg Toland, Greta Garbo, James Basevi, Jane Eyre, John Gilbert, Laurence Olivier, Little Women, Los Angeles Screenings, Merle Oberon, Mickey Mouse, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Myron Selznick, Oscar 1939, Pluto, Queen Christina, Robert Newton, Samuel Goldwyn, Sylvia Sidney, The Pointer, Vivien Leigh, William Wyler, Wuthering Heights
Ann Rutherford, Daniel Selznick, Cammie King at GONE WITH THE WIND Screening
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented Gone with the Wind on Monday, May 18, at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.
Pictured here from left to right: (front row) Ann Rutherford, who played Carreen O’Hara and Cammie King, who played Bonnie Blue Butler (that’s Scarlett and Rhett’s daughter); (back row) Mickey Kuhn, who played Beau Wilkes; Daniel Selznick, son of producer David Selznick; and Patrick Curtis, who was Melanie Wilkes’ baby.
Photos: Todd Wawrychuk / ©A.M.P.A.S.
Click on the images to enlarge them.
Ann Rutherford
Daniel Selznick
Academy director of special projects Randy Haberkamp, Ann Rutherford, Mickey Kuhn, Cammie King, Patrick Curtis, and Daniel Selznick
by Deborah Arthur | June 2, 2009
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Tags: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Ann Rutherford, Cammie King, Daniel Selznick, Gone with the Wind, Mickey Kuhn, Patrick Curtis, Photos, Randy Haberkamp, Todd Wawrychuk
GONE WITH THE WIND Screening
"Hollywood’s Greatest Year: The Best Picture Nominees of 1939" is the title of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences‘ summer series, which kicks off next Monday, May 18, with a big-screen presentation of Gone with the Wind.
"Hollywood’s Greatest Year" will showcase all of the best picture nominees from 1939, which many consider the best film year in Hollywood history. The 10-film 70th anniversary celebration runs through August 3. (Up to 1943, most years had 10 to 12 films nominated for the best picture Oscar.) All screenings will be held on Monday evenings at 7:30 p.m. at the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.
The 1939 best picture Oscar nominees were:
May 18 [...]
by Andre Soares | May 14, 2009
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Tags: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Another Thin Man, At the Circus, Babes in Arms, Bachelor Mother, Balalaika, Beau Geste, Buster Crabbe, Butterfly McQueen, Clark Gable, Classic Movies, Confessions of a Nazi Spy, Dark Victory, Daughters Courageous, David O. Selznick, Destry Rides Again, Dodge City, Drums Along the Mohawk, Dust Be My Destiny, Each Dawn I Die, East Side of Heaven, Four Wives, George Cukor, Golden Boy, Gone with the Wind, Goodbye Mr. Chips, Gunga Din, Hattie McDaniel, Hollywood Cavalcade, Hollywood’s Greatest Year: The Best Picture Nominees of 1939, Idiot's Delight, In Name Only, Intermezzo, It's a Wonderful World, Jesse James, Juarez, Leslie Howard, Los Angeles Screenings, Love Affair, Made for Each Other, Margaret Mitchell, Midnight, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Naughty But Nice, Never Say Die, Ninotchka, Of Mice and Men, Olivia de Havilland, On Borrowed Time, Only Angels Have Wings, Rose of Washington Square, Sidney Howard, Son of Frankenstein, Stagecoach, Stanley and Livingstone, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, The Cat and the Canary, The Great Man Votes, The Hound of the Baskervilles, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Kid from Kokomo, The Light That Failed, The Little Princess, The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt, The Man in the Iron Mask, The Old Maid, The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex, The Rains Came, The Real Glory, The Roaring Twenties, The Story of Alexander Graham Bell, The Wizard of Oz, The Women, They Made Me a Criminal, Union Pacific, Victor Fleming, Vivien Leigh, When Tomorrow Comes, Wuthering Heights, You Can't Cheat an Honest Man, Young Mr. Lincoln, Zaza
Best Films – 1939
The Rules of the Game by Jean Renoir
FILM
Gone with the Wind
d: Victor Fleming; scr: Sidney Howard
Le Jour se lève / Daybreak
d: Marcel Carné; scr: Jacques Viot, Jacques Prévert
Midnight
d: Mitchell Leisen; scr: Billy Wilder, Charles Brackett
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
d: Frank Capra; scr: Sidney Buchman
Ninotchka
d: Ernst Lubitsch; scr: Billy Wilder, Charles Brackett, Walter Reisch
The Old Maid
d: Edmund Goulding; scr: Casey Robinson
The Rains Came
d: Clarence Brown; scr: Philip Dunne, Julien Josephson
La Règle du jeu / The Rules of the Game
d: Jean Renoir; scr: Jean Renoir, Carl Koch
The Roaring Twenties
d: Raoul Walsh; scr: Jerry Wald, Richard Macaulay, Robert Rossen
The Women
d: George Cukor; scr: Anita Loos, Jane Murfin
Wuthering Heights
d: William Wyler; scr: Ben Hecht, Charles MacArthur
CHECK [...]
by Andre Soares | April 3, 2009
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Tags: Arletty, Best Films, Cedric Hardwicke, Classic Movies, Claude Rains, Claudette Colbert, Ernst Lubitsch, Gone with the Wind, Greta Garbo, Merle Oberon, Miriam Hopkins, Olivia de Havilland, Richard Barthelmess, The Rules of the Game, Vivien Leigh
GONE WITH THE WIND: A 70th Anniversary Celebration
Among the special events at the 2009 Atlanta Film Festival, which runs April 16-25, is "Gone With the Wind: A 70th Anniversary Celebration," with the presence of Turner Classic Movie’s host and film historian Robert Osborne, Baltimore Sun critic Michael Sragow, and author/critic Molly Haskell.
On Saturday, April 18, at 8:00 pm, "The Gone With the Wind Legacy" will feature a discussion with Osborne, Sragow and Haskell at the Margaret Mitchell House’s Literary Center. All three participants will be showcasing their new books: 80 Years of the Oscar: The Official History of the Academy Awards by Osborne, Victor Fleming, a Biography by Sragow, and Frankly, My Dear: Gone with the Wind Revisited [...]
by Deborah Arthur | April 3, 2009
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Tags: Atlanta Film Festival, Civil War, Clark Gable, Classic Movies, David O. Selznick, Film Festivals, Gone with the Wind, Historical Movies, Leslie Howard, Margaret Mitchell, Michael Sragow, Molly Haskell, Olivia de Havilland, Robert Osborne, Romantic Movies, Victor Fleming, Vivien Leigh
Miriam Hopkins: Q&A with Allan Ellenberger, Part II
Miriam Hopkins: Allan Ellenberger Interview Part I
I understand that Miriam Hopkins turned down a large number of parts. Could you name a few of those? And was there anything she felt sorry she missed out on — any part she rejected but then came to regret her decision, or any part she wanted to play but lost out to someone else?
[Photo: One role Miriam Hopkins accepted: the schoolteacher in These Three, opposite Merle Oberon.]
During her career, Hopkins was scheduled to appear in countless films that were never made, or the parts were given to another actress. Of course, it was a combination of her changing her mind about projects and in some cases the studio changing theirs. Some [...]
by Andre Soares | January 9, 2009
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Tags: Allan Ellenberger, Anatole Litvak, Bette Davis, Carole Lombard, Classic Movies, Ernst Lubitsch, Gone with the Wind, Interviews, Jack Warner, Margaret Mitchell, Miriam Hopkins, Samuel Goldwyn, Virginia City
