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Swithin

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Everything posted by Swithin

  1. As an old arts programmer, I'm familiar with the tactic, which I've used often, to re-package programs that I've already presented, as part of a new thing. That makes it look fresh. In this case, it means that we have the fresh opinions of Mellencamp but without any expensive new rental issues (I am assuming).
  2. Yes, definitely! I was going to ask whether the whole experiment thing was a surrogate/metaphor for lesbianism!
  3. I've posted this in the LGBT thread, but I'm thrilled that The Inheritance, which I saw in London a few years ago, won four Tony Awards this evening: Best Play, Director, Actor, and Featured Actress. The Broadway production closed due to Covid before I could see it, but I did see the two-part, seven-hour play in London several years ago, with Vanessa Redgrave in the featured part played by Lois Smith. However, I had the pleasure to work with Lois Smith a couple of times and found her to be a lovely, talented, and very special woman, who made her Broadway debut in 1952. She is now the oldest person ever to win an acting Tony Award. Her film career includes the role of Annie in East of Eden, in 1955. Lois Smith in The Inheritance James Dean, Lois Smith in East of Eden
  4. A bit delayed, but The Inheritance has won four Tony Awards tonight (September 26, 2021): Best Play, Best Director, Best Actor (Andrew Burnap), and Best Featured Actress (Lois Smith). The venerable Ms, Smith is a veteran actor of stage and screen. Her long career included a performance as Anne in East of Eden in 1955. Lois Smith in The Inheritance Lois Smith, James Dean in East of Eden
  5. "Jubilee" -- Every Day's a Holiday (1937) Song comes in at the 48 second mark: Next: Another song from a post-code Mae West film
  6. Steamboat Round the Bend (1935) Next: Island prison
  7. I agree, it's an OK film. I think the performances were decent. I wasn't familiar with any of the cast either, apart from Atterbury and Richard Devon, who played Satan in The Undead. Blood of Dracula is unusual in that the mad scientist is a woman. Although there are women who are mad scientist helpers in many films, there aren't too many who are actually the main mad scientist. Two are Gale Sondergaard in The Spider Woman Strikes Back (who is a sort of mad scientist) and Laura Bowman in Son of Ingagi. The latter film also has the distinction of being perhaps the first all-black horror film. Louise Lewis (left) in Blood of Dracula Gale Sondergaard in The Spider Woman Strikes Back Laura Bowman in Son of Ingagi
  8. Csardas by Monti performed in The Black Pit of Dr. M, (1959) on violin by Dr. M. and then later when he comes back in Elmer's body. Music is used over the beginning of this montage. Next: Spiritual in a 1930s movie
  9. Btw, slightly off topic interlude: Jacques Bergerac was married to Ginger Rogers and Dorothy Malone.
  10. Phil Silvers (2 Emmys, also two Tonys) Next: Chubby Emmy winner
  11. Dressed to Kill (1946) [Song lyric in film: "Oh you better hold your topper in your hand, just in case you meet a lady on the Strand."] Next: Dressed to Kill (1980)
  12. I've always felt that The Hypnotic Eye should be shown back-to-back with She Demons. In the former, the evil Justine throws down her mask, saying, "If you like my face so much you can have it!" In She Demons, the good Mona, says, "Would you go, if you looked like THIS?!!" Justine after she throws her mask down Mona when she pulls off her bandages
  13. Geraldine Page as Big Sister in The Day of the Locust (1975). The role is based on Aimee Semple McPherson. "Brothers and sisters of the silent congregation, out there by your radios, let us hear from you. Dial for Jesus. Let those phones start ringing right now. Praise God. Hallelujah! Let those joyous bells ring out like the harps of heaven. Glory! Hallelujah! I do not want to hear the tinkle of silver. The rustle of paper is music to the Lord.It takes cash to fill the bread wagon of the Lord. It takes money to send missionaries to save souls for Jesus. Glory! Glory be!"
  14. Marlene Dietrich (when she sings "Quand l'Amour Meurt" in Morocco) Next: Schlepped across the desert
  15. Two more with Lenya: The Threepenny Opera (1931) The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961)
  16. Dressed to Kill has one of my favorite well-played bit parts: Edmund Breon as Julian "Stinky" Emery, the man with the music boxes.
  17. I don't know Nothing But the Night at all, but what a cast! In addition to the leads, it has Diana Dors, Georgia Brown, Kathleen Byron, Michael Gambon, and Duncan Lamont! In Quatermass and the Pit, Lamont has one of the great OTT scenes in any horror film: Duncan Lamont as Sladden in Quatermass and the Pit
  18. Another film from that great year 1957 film which features a school/detention home for young ladies is The Man Who Turned to Stone. The old folks who run the school (Victor Jory, Ann Doran) extract the youth juices from the young ladies so that they (Jory, Doran, et. al.) can live for hundreds of years.
  19. Nice to see the Horrors of the Black Museum trailer. It features Graham Curnow as Michael Gough's young assistant. Graham was a friend of mine, a dear, sweet man who was the partner of Victor Spinetti. Gough turns Curnow into a monster in the film.
  20. Wise Blood (1979) is a favorite film of this type. I'm of the opinion that John Huston did his best work late in his career, reaching his apotheosis with his last film, The Dead. Huston has a supporting role in Wise Blood, as the fire-and-brimstone preacher grandfather of the main character, Hazel Motes, played by Brad Dourif, who wants to start "A Church of Truth Without Jesus Christ Crucified." There's also a sidewalk preacher, played by Harry Dean Stanton.
  21. On Svengoolie tomorrow, September 25, 2021: I don't think I've seen this one. The writer (who was born in Transylvania!) also gave us, under pseudonyms, I Was a Teenage Frankenstein, I Was a Teenage Werewolf, Horrors of the Black Museum, How to Make a Monster, and The Headless Ghost. Some say Blood of Dracula should have been called I Was a Teenage Vampire. Blood of Dracula was made in 1957, one of the great years for horror films. Richard Devon, who played Satan in The Undead (also 1957), plays a detective in the film.
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