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mrroberts

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Posts posted by mrroberts

  1. Trying to pick just 3 is very tough for me , yet alone putting them in any sort of order. I can definitely say that William Powell is my number one actor, probably Edward G Robinson gets the two spot. Then tied for third would be Cagney, Bogart, Burt Lancaster, Henry Fonda, Richard Widmark, Basil Rathbone, now I'm getting brain overload :)

  2. Has it been eight years or more since TCM aired *Dracula* ? What year was it that TCM aired both versions of *Dracula* , the English and Spanish language films made at the same time (1930)? I know I saw them on TCM and RO did an intro for both.

  3. GAD, I can't believe that its 1 whole year since the last posting on my favorite of all actors, the great *William Powell* . But on this Saturday nights' Essential film we have one of Mr Powell's more memorable performances in *Libeled Lady* . Much is made of the four big name stars in this film (Myrna Loy , Jean Harlow, Spencer Tracy, and you know who) and they all have their moments but William Powell clearly is the stand out performer. He gets to have some fun scenes with Miss Harlow but he ends up with Miss Loy (just what the public of the time expected). And the fishing sequence is classic, and has often been imitated since. If you've never seen this film it is a must see.

  4. I just watched the beginning of *Titanic* (I have seen it a number of times and it is an entertaining film, very good cast) . Clifton Webb wants to get on board at the last minute and has to buy a ticket from a poor immigrant (how distasteful was that?) In reality the Titanic was not close to being fully booked so he would have had no problem getting on board. That scene just underlined Webb's upper class scorn of the "common folk" , a typical additude of the times.

  5. As soon as I saw this thread the very first actor that came to my mind was Charles Laughton. But he is one of my all time favorites and I believe he knew when to ham it up and when to back off. So I really don't have a problem with Laughton (or anyone else) hamming it up, when it is appropriate. I like Steiger in *No Way To Treat a Lady* , when I am not watching Lee Remick.

  6. *Titanic* 1953 is a decent Hollywood film, with the factual story serving as a backdrop for a fictional soap opera type script. So that film plays fast and loose with Titanic facts. The British 1958 film *A Night To Remember* is done in a semi documentary way, a very well done movie (a favorite of mine) and is the definitive telling of the Titanic story. So I agree with you 100%

  7. Some of my earliest memories are seeing some of the Jack Paar Tonight Shows (I was VERY young) . My dad was somewhat of an insomniac and he liked watching Paar a lot (he never liked Carson as much as Paar). Some nights I would wake up and sneak downstairs to see why Pop was laughing so much. Often Pop would let me stay and watch, and both he and I would then get in big trouble with Mom. Johnny Winters was a frequent guest on Paar's show, and I can remember his "old lady" Maude Frickert. Carson later did the same character as lovable "old Aunt Blabby".

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