Silver Screen Romances (The Solid Gold Cadillac / We Were Strangers / Angels Over Broadway / Music in My Heart / The Marrying Kind / It Should Happen to You / Adam Had Four Sons / Down to Earth)
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The Golden Age Takes Center Stage!
Featuring Rita Haywo...)
The Golden Age Takes Center Stage!
Featuring Rita Hayworth, Ingrid Bergman, Judy Holliday!
CONTENTS:
THE SOLID GOLD CADILLAC
Starring: Judy Holliday, Paul Douglas
an entertaining ride
New York Times, Bosley Crowther
A delightful comedy about a woman taking on the fat cats of the business world.
WE WERE STRANGERS
Starring: Jennifer Jones, John Garfield, Pedro Armendariz
Intense, Intriguing.
Leonard Martin
An explosively intense, action-suspense thriller about a small band of Cuban revolutionaries who fall in love.
ANGELS OVER BROADWAY
Starring: Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Rita Hayworth
Rita Hayworth is outstanding in the most exacting role she has (played)...
The Hollywood Reporter
When a gangster and a dancer team up in a swindle scheme, they get more than they bargained for.
MUSIC IN MY HEART
StarringL Tony Martin, Rita Hayworth
Rita Hayworth is pure gold
AMG Review, Craig Butler
Hearts and taxicabs collide when Bob and Patricia miss their midnight boat for Europe.
THE MARRYING KIND
Starring: Judy Holliday, Aldo Ray
genuinely and touchingly comic.
Newsweek
A groundbreaking blend of comedy, fantasy and tragedy which chronicles a young couple on the verge of divorce.
IT SHOULD HAPPEN TO YOU
Starring: Judy Holliday, Peter Lawford, Jack Lemmon
a tickling and touching entertainment with intelligence, compassion and lots of gags.
New York Times, Bosley Crowther
When Gladys becomes a celebrity she realizes she must decide between her boyfriend and her exciting new life.
ADAM HAD FOUR SONS
Starring: Ingrid Bergman, Warner Baxter
remains engrossing
Reel Film Reviews, David Nusair
A young girl keeps a family from destroying itself when she comes into their home to serve as a governess.
DOWN TO EARTH
Starring: Rita Hayworth, Larry Parks
packs quite a wallop.
AMG Review, Craig Butler
A musical comedy about an angelic muse, incensed at the notion that Broadway is going to portray her as a modern living sexpot.
("A sensationally moving interpretation of some historical...)
"A sensationally moving interpretation of some historical moments that deserve celebration." –Stage & Cinema Judy Holliday had a genius level I.Q. of 172, but was best known for playing characters who were not the sharpest tools in the shed. Most notable was her portrayal of Billie Dawn in Born Yesterday, which won her an Academy Award in 1950. When she was called before the Senate Internal Subcommittee and interrogated about having Communist leanings, Judy used that persona to avoid implicating herself or naming names. This concealing of her true self spilled over into the relationships in her life as she tried to negotiate a career as an intelligent woman in Hollywood during an oppressive era. Concealing Judy Holliday is an expressionistic, non-linear exploration of the 1950s Academy Award-winning actress’ psyche as she lapses in and out of consciousness in the last days of her life. Both funny and poignant, Judy’s story is told through a kaleidoscopic collage of scenes as she is beguiled and bested by memories of her triumphs and tragedies. 4F, 3M | 85 Minutes
Judy Holliday was an American actress, comedienne and singer. She was noted in films for her high voice and intelligent portrayal of "dumb blondes. "
Background
Judy Holliday was born Judith Tuvim on June 21, 1921 in New York City, New York, United States. She was the daughter of Abraham Tuvim, a journalist and fund raiser for Jewish and social organizations, and of Helen Gollomb, a piano teacher at the Henry Street Settlement. At the age of six, her parents separated. An unusually brilliant child with a 172 IQ, Holliday described herself as "one of those obnoxious children who read War and Peace, Schnitzler and Molière. "
Education
Holliday graduated from the Julia Richman High School in New York City in 1938. She hoped to attend Yale Drama School but was too young for admission.
Career
Holliday went to work in the summer of 1938 as a switchboard operator at Orson Welles's Mercury Theater. Later that year, Max Gordon, owner of a Greenwich Village nightclub, offered her a chance to demonstrate her talent as a scriptwriter and lyricist. Tuvim contacted a group of performers she had met while vacationing at an upstate resort who called themselves "Six and Company. " Among them was an unknown pianist, Leonard Bernstein, and lyricists Betty Comden and Adolph Green. The group renamed themselves "The Revuers, " and as Lee Israel comments, "with her immense, fawnlike eyes and her brown hair piled up, Judy's talent for comedy was quickly perceived. " The Revuers subsequently appeared for thirty-two weeks on an NBC radio program. With Judy Tuvim's career burgeoning, she adopted a new name, Judy Holliday.
In 1943 The Revuers left for Hollywood, but to their disappointment the major studios were more interested in the girl with "the natural gift of comedy, " than in the group. Holliday finally accepted a seven-year contract with Twentieth Century-Fox in 1944 but insisted that The Revuers appear in her first film, Greenwich Village. It was a box office failure. Unhappy with the beginnings of her film career, Holliday did not enjoy her stay in Hollywood. After appearing in Winged Victory (1944) and Something for the Boys (1944), she was released from her contract and returned to New York.
In March 1945, she starred on Broadway in Kiss Them for Me, playing the first of her many dumb but good-natured characters.
In early February 1946 Jean Arthur's misfortune came to be Holliday's biggest break. Three days before Garson Kanin's stage comedy Born Yesterday was scheduled to open in Philadelphia, Arthur was forced to leave the cast due to illness. Holliday auditioned for the role of Billie Dawn and learned it in three days. The play opened on February 4, 1946, to rave reviews and Holliday then played Billie Dawn for three years. Garson Kanin remembers her as a "tremendously rare combination of intellect and instinct. And a girl of principle, and of deep social feeling. "
Holliday's other screen credits included The Marrying Kind (1952), about a blue-collar couple facing divorce. The remaining films for Columbia were all tailor-made for the roles she played best. George Morris commented that she could "switch from comedy to tragedy with a mere inflection in her voice: a mixture of dumb blonde, naivete, New York. savvy was her strongest instrument. " Holliday's career was threatened in 1952 when she was subpoenaed, along with many other performers, by a Senate subcommittee investigating subversive influences in the performing arts. As Lee Israel comments, "In the context of the 1950s when guilt was historic and by association . .. she had plenty to be frightened of. " Certain facets in her life lead to such conclusions. Many of the performers at the Mercury Theater were labeled "radicals, " and she had been a signer of an advertisement that appeared on December 1, 1948, calling upon the film industry to revoke its Communist blacklist. Holliday stated to the subcommittee: "I am not a member of any organization that is listed by the Attorney General as subversive. In any instance where I lent my name in the past, it was certainly without knowledge that such an organization was subversive. " But certain allegations could not be denied. "Irresponsible and slightly more than that--stupid, " was Holliday's self-description of her association with these groups. As a result of the hearings Holliday was blacklisted by television for ten years. She was still able to star in films, such as It Should Happen to You (1954), Phffft (1954), The Solid Gold Cadillac (1956), in which she played a shrewd, inexperienced businesswoman, and Full of Life (1957).
In 1956 she starred on Broadway as Ella Peterson in Bells Are Ringing. She recreated the role four years later in the film version. In 1960, during the pre-Broadway tryout of Laurette, in which she played her first dramatic role, Holliday developed a voice problem that prevented her from projecting her voice beyond the first few rows of the theater. The show was forced to close, and the problem was subsequently diagnosed as throat cancer. Holliday was unable to perform again, with the exception of a brief run in the musical Hot Spot (1963). At that time, she was involved in an intense relationship with jazz saxophonist Gerry Mulligan.
After five years of struggle with her illness, Holliday died in New York City. Judy Holliday's career was paradoxical.
Achievements
Holliday was a well-known actress who was noted for her performance in films in a role of a "dumb blonde. " He was also noted for her performance in several musicals, especially on Broadway in the musical Bells Are Ringing.
She won the Academy Award for best actress for the movie Born Yesterday, the Clarence Derwent Award as the best supporting actress of the year, the Academy Award for Best Actress, the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress, the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical and reprising her role in the 1960 film, and the Antoinette Perry Award.
Although gifted with intelligence and humor, Holliday consistently portrayed inarticulate nitwits. Gene Lees, who remembered her comedic ability, remarked that "had she lived, Judy Holliday would be, without question, one of our major dramatic actresses. "
Interests
Music & Bands
George Morris commented that she could "switch from comedy to tragedy with a mere inflection in her voice: a mixture of dumb blonde, naivete, N. Y. savvy was her strongest instrument. "
At that time, she was involved in an intense relationship with jazz saxophonist Gerry Mulligan.
Connections
On January 4, 1948, Holliday married David Oppenheim, a clarinetist. They had one child, but were divorced in 1957.