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SueSueApplegate

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Posts posted by SueSueApplegate

  1. Oh, yeah. I always find out what a fellow's shoe size is, too. Just like Paula Prentiss in "WHERE THE BOYS ARE." Yes, big Jim Hutton fan..... :)

     

    And I am sorry I missed that episode of Paladin. Would have loved to have seen it.

  2. PAUL, and only Paul.

     

    CinemAva, I was wacky for Wally until I found out how short he was.

    ( I was almost six feet tall in sixth grade.)

    I had this little friend who loved Larry Mundello. Go figure. But she loved to cook all the time.

  3. I certainly didn't want to miss the excitement of the first full day of screenings, but it was difficult to "get going' after the late night excitement of the *Vanity Fair* party, so I wasn't sufficiently "coffee-ed" up enough to make the introduction to *The Bad and The Beautiful* with Robert Osborne and Cheryl Crane, Lana Turner's only child, and author of a biography of her mother.

     

    *The Bad and the Beautiful*, Vincent Minelli's excellent Hollywood expose from 1952 with a screenplay scrafted by Charles Schnee who also wrote *Red River* (both the film and the teleplay), *Butterfield 8*, *They Live by Night*, *Two Weeks in Another Town*, and *The Next Voice You Hear*, won something like 5 Oscars even though it hadn't been nominated for best picture.

     

    This film showcases Kirk Douglas in one of my favorites of all of his performances, besides George Phipps in *A Letter to Three Wives*, *Spartacus*, and Jack in *Lonely are the Brave*. I made it just in time to see one of my favorite scenes on the big screen when Lana is driving the car in the rain and crying hysterically.

     

    And I always love the ending to this film because even though all the characters have absolutely had it with Jonathan Shields' behavior, at the end Georgia Lorrison, Harry Pebbel, and Fred Amiel are still riveted to the phone listening to Shields lure them in once again. But other passholders who saw the introductory discussion with Osborne and Crane proclaimed Crane's sustained interest in the professionalism of Turner's career, and during a later discussion at *Imitation of Life*, Robert Osborne would refer to this interview while discussing the filming of *Imitation of Life* with Juanita Moore, and Susan Kohner.

     

    Then it was on to brunch at the little restaurant that overlooks the inviting pool at the Hollywood Roosevelt. (It's supposedly situated right above the area where Marilyn Monroe had her one and only photo shoot at the hotel.) Folks were swimming in the heated pool and sunning themselves on the lounge chairs while snuggled up in those wonderfully warm super-sized bath towels because it was still a little chilly, especially when you stepped out of that lovely, heated pool.

     

    The breakfast was delicious and the fruit was fresh, eggs were scrambled perfectly fluffy, toast was warm and orange juice tart. But, and now I come to the only complaint portion of my entire visit, except for the fact that the festival was only four short days. It is the small matter of the breakfast potatoes....I think the chef was gearing up for a kind of potatoes galette-kind-of-throw-a few-liquified-capers-in-and-some-garlic- powder-with-dried-parsley-for-a-visual-enticement-like- La Madeleine- kind of culinary experience, but I am sorry. Those breakfast potatoes, and they also serve the same ones if you order room service, were like cold, mushy, greasy, mashed potatoes. It was like The Blob. It acted like it was finally relieved to just sort of ooze on your plate and stare back at you, defying you to attack it with a fork. Eeeeyu! Maybe I've just been viewing too much Gordon Ramsey lately, but there is no way you could pretend they were delicious while you were actually eating them unless you had earned 3 or 4 Oscars. Maybe Meryl Streep could carry it off. I couldn't.

     

    So the wonderful waiter recognized an unhappy patron from her ghoulish, girlish grimace. He brought me an extra side order of toast. That was sweet. The service staff at this hotel attended to details-they were patient, kind, and thoughtful. Thank you, Hollywood Roosevelt, but call the Waffle House for a lesson on Hashed Browns 101. And I wasn't the only passholder put off by the "breakfast" potatoes...several of us had a potato pity party at Club TCM solely about this one and only culinary disgrace. (And, yes, laughter did ensue.) So my only real complaint during the whole wonderful four days is that I want the management to deal with those nasty potatoes....Eeeyu!

     

    Time to run again and onto the "Conversation Between Peter Bogdanovich and Leonard Maltin"

    mano a mano at Club TCM, right here in the hotel, on the first floor, across from the spacious lobby bar. Bogdonavich and Maltin were seated face-to-face on the raised dais of the dance floor.

    (And yes, there was dancing, but more about that later.) And Bogdanovich did not disappoint. He told many Hollywood tales in character as he schmoozed about Orson Welles as Orson Welles,

    a Bogdonavich house guest during his Cybill Shepherd years. Bogdanovich also does a great

    impression of Howard Hawks, someone he has researched and written about in some of his

    printed exploits, and he also indulged in the industrial name-dropping he is famous for. Both

    gentlemen received a huge round of applause from the packed room, and Bogdonavich signed autographs as he left the stage. (Yes, he signed one of my books. I was just standing there,

    watching him leave, and since I am about 9 feet tall, I guess my height startled him, and he

    started wiggling his pen in my direction, so I shoved a book in his direction. (He was sedate, but gracious.)

     

    After the discussion, I visited with several of my TCM City buddies and new folks I'd met at the festival, and we all chatted about what screening we were going to see next. Everyone was still so excited about our experiences..

     

    But I was running out of tip and t-shirt cash (The souvenirs are wonderful!), so I had to find a local branch bank in the area. The lobby near the registration desk had computers for guestmember use and I looked up a local bank address there, and I went out to the covered portico at the valet and was going to ask for my poor, exhausted rent SUV that had already been all over California, but then one of the service staff asked if I needed a free ride, and I answered, "But, of course!" and he stated that they had a brand new Buick with a tall, good looking chaffeur named Dave, to take me anywhere I wanted to go. And I didn't have to jog my rentvee from its cozy and well-positioned valet space. So Dave drove me to and from the bank, and I arrived in front of Grauman's just in time for the screening of *Imitation of Life* just as the tall, well-attired chauffer opened the inside curb door for me to step out onto the footprint arena where all the famous Hollywood stars I've admired through the years have left their marks....

     

    Next: *The Imitation of Life* screening with a post-film discussion engaging Juanita Moore, Robert Osborne, and Susan Kohner...

  4. Bronxie, you are missing out if you have never seen *Lonesome Dove*. I consider this a MAJOR gap in your vast areas of expertise. Diane Lane, Robert Duvall, Anjelica Huston (who was awesome in this film), and Danny Glover. Plus Frederic Forrest, Steve Buscemi, Barry Corbin, Robert Urich and Chris Cooper. It's a three-hanky Western epic, and faithful to Larry McMurtry's novel.

     

    Tommy Lee Jones and Robert Duvall have that kind of Jimmy Stewart/Hank Fonda comaraderie

    as in the *Cheyenne Social Club*, but more in-depth and serious..

     

    Of course, it is about TEXAS.....

  5. I am just glad they are honoring her today. :) I haven't seen *By the Light of the Silvery Moon* in a while, but I wish they could have selected something a little more representative of her appeal than

    *Tunnel of Love.*

  6. Connie Stevens did definitely qualify for THE BIG HAIR THREAD, Kingrat!

    Good recommendation...

    conniestevens4f.jpg

    Connie and Jim Hutton photo op at the soda shop...

    connie.jpg

    Connie_Stevens_-_Ultimate_Collection.jpg

    The Ultimate Collection

    prev4.jpg Connie Stevens with Debbie Reynolds, Ruta Lee, and Nancy Sinatra...Blonde Babes With Big Hair Bonanza!

    palmspringsweekendbobconnie.jpg

    Robert Conrad and Connie Stevens fight over more than hairstyles in

    PALM SPRINGS WEEKEND...

    poster1.jpg BIG HAIR IN PALMS SPRINGS

    eAKzZqaHPTszGEr.jpg Getting Ready for Big Hair

  7. My favorite Ray Milland is *The Major and The Minor*, but everybody should know that by now. I

    was lucky enough to find a first edition of Milland's UK autobiography in a sellers' stall under Waterloo Bridge across from the British Film Institute in London. In his book, he was adamant that he wasn't an alkie, even though he portrayed one in LW. And I agree with Miss G about *Love Story*, but I want to add actors John Marley, and Tommy Lee Jones if I may...

  8. It was a gorgeous print that we were lucky enough to see at the TCM Fest. This is one of Monty's best, and Lee Remick claims it as one of her favorite films, as well as Kazan.

     

    Jo Van Fleet is fantastic. She was only 40 when she played Mrs. Garth. Amazing performance!

    Kingrat, another of the savvy posters here at TCM City, was at the same screening and also

    enjoyed it. Maybe he will chime in here, too.

     

    Don't miss it if you ever get a chance. When it's out on DVD, I'm sending for it!

  9. Oh, Rosey, we hardly knew ye....and Ray probably never imagined that scenario when he was in the Royal Horseguards or whatever it was...yea, yea, Carroll and Sammy, that's the ticket! How did I ever miss that one at the Northshore Cinema? It must have been after that Raquel Welch hair bomb in *Bandolero*....I locked myself in a closet for a week with the Goody Teasing comb and a can of Stylac...I wasn't coming out until the deed was done! :)

  10. Thanks for these great images. That Flynn photo shows Errol being verrrry pensive.

    Neat one with Ray Harryhausen and one of his figures, and this was the first time I've ever seen that still with Dean and Hudson.

     

    Incidentally, Mongo, Claude Rains' biography, written by his daughter Jessica Rains, is a great read.

  11. Feature Fem of the Week:

    Rosalind Russell, quip-witted and classy...

    Rosalind_Russell.63154229_large.jpg

     

    Stripes, flowers, and fluffed up for a photo op...

    rosalindrussell.jpg

     

    Ostrich feathers in repose...

    rosalind_russell_grande3.jpg

     

    Gorgeous photo with hidden locks...

    roz.jpg

     

    Cache and Cary...

    His_Girl_Friday_1940_22ex_jpg_595x325_cr

     

    I've always loved that striped suit and snappy chapeau!

    his-girl-friday.jpg

     

    As Sylvia in *The Women* , 1939

    women.jpg

     

    *Auntie Mame* ...

    23ecce.6.jpg

  12. Fudge-Brownies.jpg

     

    I want those Katherine Hepburn brownies!....this is a yummy treat. However, I substitute a chocolate square with 3 tbs. cocoa powder and 1 tbs. vegetable oil...they have a crispy layer of baked sugary cocoa on top, but are kind of gooey in the middle, great with a glass of milk or a scoop of ice cream.....Mmmmmm....I promise if you try this recipe, you won't be disappointed!

     

    If you don't cook, cajole one of your friends or family members into baking it for you. :)

    http://www.joyofbaking.com/katharinehepburnbrownies.html

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