Best Actress 1962, Part 3: Lee Remick and "Days of Wine and Roses"
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- čas přidán 16. 07. 2024
- This is a review of Lee Remick's Oscar-nominated performance in "Days of Wine and Roses".
Chapters
0:00 Introduction
02:34 The Beginnings of Lee Remick's career
09:54 Days of Wine and Roses
16:35 Critical reactions to "Days of Wine and Roses"
18:42 My Review
24:30 Lee Remick's star persona
29:50 Why Lee Remick did not become a bigger star
33:08 The remainder of Lee Remick's career
You can find the reviews of the other Best Actress nominees of 1962 here: • Review 1962
Ressources:
"Lee Remick. A Bio-Bibliography" by Barry Rivadue
"Cinema '62. The Greatest Year at the Movies" by Stephen Farber and Michael McClellan
"Träumende Gesichter. Auf den Spuren weiblicher Schauspielkunst" by Daniela Sobek
"A Splurch in the Kisser. The movies of Blake Edwards" by Sam Wasson
"Lemmon. A Biography" by Don Widener
#LeeRemick #BetteDavis #katharinehepburn #GeraldinePage #AnneBancroft #BestActress #Oscar #daysofwineandroses - Zábava
GREAT segment for one of my all time favorites. I had the pleasure of seeing Lee Remick, Geraldine Page, and Amanda Plummer in the 1982 pre Broadway tryout of “Agnes of God” in Boston. It was one of my first theater experiences ever. I had already been mesmerized by Lee in film, and we went to stage door to meet the three performers. They gladly all signed the programs, and I still have mine over 40 years later. I remember telling Lee that I always admired her work. She graciously said thank you. Lovely woman, who should have been with us much longer.
Wow, just the thought of seeing these three wonderful women on stage together! I'm very jealous!
She really paid her Broadway dues with almost a year of the hit shocker play Wait Until Dark. Audrey Hepburn got to do the movie but for a year Lee was one of THE hottest ticket in NY.
This is Lee’s appearance as mystery guest on “what’s my line” while she was doing “Wait Until Dark”. Her segment starts at around the 17:30 mark.
czcams.com/video/AxG86Hr51SI/video.html
THANK YOU for this wonderful presentation. I have always viewed Lee Remick as a "Class Act" and your documentary only confirmed this. My two favorite films with her were "Day of Wine and Roses" (also one of my favorite songs), and "The Omen." I think the great Gregory Peck described her performance as "so incredibly real," because that's the kind of person she was.
Thanks so much for watching
What happened to Lee Remick's career was an example of the double standards in Hollywood: she made four flops in a row, but that didn't hinder the career trajectory of her male costars, Laurence Harvey and Alan Bates (THE RUNNING MAN, 1963), James Garner (THE WHEELER DEALERS, 1963), Steve McQueen (BABY, THE RAIN MUST FALL, 1965) and Burt Lancaster (THE HALLELUJAH TRAIL, 1965). But she also began to do more work in the theater, beginning with the (flop) musical ANYONE CAN WHISTLE (though it would bring her into the orbit of Stephen Sondheim) and continued with the huge success of WAIT UNTIL DARK. And she was one person who had her own opinions, and wasn't ruled by the idea of "success": though WILD RIVER now has the reputation as one of the best films by Elia Kazan, it was a box office failure in its time, but she always defended the movie, and said it was one of the best experiences of her career. But at the time (1962), it looked like DAYS OF WINE AND ROSES would point to further triumphs; instead, it proved to be the culmination of her career.
Thanks for your comment!
Life was so unfair to her; great looks and lots of dough, but let's still find a way to complain about her life...because I want perfection.
She did a year on Broadway in a hot ticket hit - Wait Until Dark. It was a difficult very physical and exacting role and she was (according to my parents who saw it) AMAZING.
A remarkable talent who left us far too early, The Broadway show that flopped so badly was Stephen Sondheim’s Anyone Can Whistle, her singing on the cast recording of the title song is poignancy itself.
Hurrah ! Fritz has posted ❤🎉
Thank you for showing a small clip from Merchant Ivory’s “The Europeans.” She’s wickedly devious and just as funny.
A great performance.
The amount of work that you put in your videos is outstanding. Keep up the great work as we are watching and learning!
Thank you so much! I'm glad you like them!
Agreed 💯 these videos are so enlightening. I love Fritz's compassion and honesty and keen eye for the art of acting. Always enjoyable
@@sanfordpress8943 Thanks so much!!!
One of my all time favorite actress and performance. She should have had a better career. Thank you for doing this video.
My pleasure! :)
I saw Lee playing Cherie in The Seven Year Itch in London, and had the pleasure of meeting her afterwards. She was just as l had hoped she would be - a perfect fusion of charm, beauty, intelligence and talent. She gives one of my favourite performances as the immoral Irish nurse Fay in the film version of Joe Orton's extremely black comedy Loot, which is well worth seeking out if you haven't seen it.
Oh, I would have loved to meet her!
I'd love to see TV version of DAYS OF WINE & ROSES 🌹
I first saw Lee Remick at the age of 12 when I would see "Days of Wine and Roses" on TV. The movie had a big impact on me mainly because of how it ended (for those who don't know, the film doesn't have a happy ending). But I was totally taken by her and I would watch any movie that had her in it. And she remained my favorite until she died in 1991. I had a difficult time believing people would say her career peaked early. She ALWAYS was working. And commercially, she got another boost from "The Omen" in 1976. She had a predominant part in the very first miniseries for TV "QBVII". It wasn't beneath her to work in television, and some of her best performances was in TV. Did anybody see her excellent turn as Margaret Sullivan in "Haywire"? And did you know she was almost picked for "Ordinary People"? If she hadn't been taken so soon she would have continued to do what she loved doing. Damn, I miss her to this day, and there has been nobody like her since.
Thanks for your comment! She was truly wonderful!
Brilliant! Thanks Fritz
Thank YOU!
I always thought she should have played Holly Golightly. Lee Remick had this lovely feral quality and a lot of darker emotions and bruised sexuality under all that prettiness.More of what the character should be. A very fine actress to be sure.
I love her. My first introduction was The Medusa Touch where she immediately fascinated me
That's a very good idea. They should remake "Breakfast at Tiphany's". I think Emma Stone would be good in it. I would shoot it in black and white and set the action in the 1950's. I would make it as a drama, real dark, film noir.
Nice choice ... After all was said and done, I would've stuck to Capote's pick: Marilyn Monroe...
@@lucyfer4420 Yes, she would have been great in the part. As much as I love Audrey Hepburn, she was totally miscast. Also, make it a drama, in black and white.
What a beautiful tribute to Lee Remick. Your research and care in presenting the career of these great actresses is admirable. I love your work.
Thank you so much! I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Beautifully made video and so informative. I agree that Lee Remick's performance in THE DAYS OF WINE AND ROSES is unforgettable. I've only seen the movie once or twice (and the teleplay once). Even though the character is prey to Joe's whim's, her simplicity and depth make the "quiet" choices of both actress and character devastating. Thank you for giving us these moments with such a beautiful actress.
Thanks so much for watching and your nice words!
Such a classy and gifted lady. Loved her performance in "A delicate balance" also...
Love Hepburn and Davis, like Bancroft, don't really like Page, but Remick is probably my fave among this group. Thanks for recapping her career. Many films I haven't seen.
in this line-up, there is no wrong answer
The only acrress today that could be compared to the great Lee Remick would be Nicole Kidman. She was a natural All-American woman.
She should have gottenthe Academy Award for "The Days of Wine and Roses" God bless her sweet soul. She passed away much too early because of that 'damn' cancer.
Fascinating stuff
Fritz, your film analysis- comprensive, well researched, compassionate is second to none on YT ( the Be kind rewind lady a close second). Dunke Schoern!
Thanks so much for this kind comment (I do think there are many better than me but it's all about doing what we love 🙂). Thanks so much for watching!
Her creation of Carol Garth in Wild River is my absolute favorite of all her roles. Jo Van Fleet as the grandmother in the same film is incandescent.
Always loved Lee. She was a really talented actress.
She was wonderful
Hurrah ! 🍺
When I was a teen, my mother took me to see Lee Remick in Wait Until Dark, I believe at the Colonial Theater in Boston. With a young Robert Duvall as the villain. In all these years, Ive never forgotten it.
wow, I would love to have seen her!
Lee Remick definitely one of the most underrated actresses ever.
If you're a bonefide film buff, you know exactly how marvellous an actress Lee Remick was. If not, seek out her exceptional back catalogue.
She was a wonderful, natural talent!
She was most likely runner up for the best actress that year.
Very possible
Possible but you forget Bette Davis as Baby Jane. I thought she should have won but Lee very very close second then Bancroft
Bette Davis was never going to win that Oscar @@markwhitman9029
At times she resembles Carroll Baker.
24:52 Something's GOT TO GIVE is the 1962 unfinished Monroe film. Something's GOTTA GIVE is a decades-newer comedy, I think with Duane Keaton.
That's true
Experiment in Terror! Ross Martin was so CREEPY in that!
I think this movie made me grow up and be an alcoholic.
Piper Laurie - "hard, domineering, . . ."
Uh, NO0!
I think it depends. She can certainly be different but she doesn't have the natural sweetness of Lee Remick
Piper Laurie just brilliant in 1976 Carrie as religious but mother!
Religious nut 😂
As the famed German acting teacher (and acclaimed actress) Uta Hagen would say, there are 2 acting styles. There is the "Representation" style which holds Meryl Streep and her sublime gifts as the beacon. The actor is technical and intellectual. They convey a performance in a planned, technical way. The other style is the "Presentational style" which would be those actors who live their part. I have heard them also called natural actors. Anna Magnani, Joanne Woodward, Shelley Winters, et al, come to mind. [Method acting fits here.]. I heard someone say once, "Lee Remick can do anything." I don't agree. I never have gotten very much past watching an actress act. Mostly it is like a worker punching a time clock...a pretty face, a pert nose and enthusiasm. But in the Representational School of acting she does her finest work---work to be proud of in "Wine and Roses." Even as a young actress I found her a little sad overall and joyless. And age, with exceptions like this one, did not make her more interesting. There's a wind-up doll quality to her which leaves me a little cold.
Everyone reacts differently to actors, so I can understand what you mean.
@@FritzandtheOscars Absolutely and if someone gets pleasure, that's great. I added the very fine actress' name in an edit: Uta Hagen, whom I had the privilege once to see onstage (her handling of a very long monologue was jaw dropping and even the actress playing against her had fascination in her face watching, while also studying how she pulled it off). Big pleasure!
Per your mention, I enjoyed hearing your name dropped on "And the Runner Up Is...the Dude from Deutchland. And BUtterfield Fritz is an inspired handle, suggesting perhaps that you may be someone to gargle with bourbon in the mornings.
@@thomasalbert6687 haha, sometimes I feel like it! 😂
A deutscher accent kann indeed sound niedlich. Let's hüpf' zu Bette Davis!
😂