From Where I Sit

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  • Jack Klugman: Tony And Me: A Story of Friendship

    Jack Klugman: Tony And Me: A Story of Friendship

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    Julius La Rosa: Better Than Ever

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    The Frank and Joe Show: 33 1/3

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    Frank Sinatra: Songs for Swingin' Lovers

DVD

  • : What's Up, Doc?

    What's Up, Doc?

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  • : The Andy Griffith Show - The Complete Fifth Season

    The Andy Griffith Show - The Complete Fifth Season

  • : The Dick Cavett Show - Comic Legends

    The Dick Cavett Show - Comic Legends

"What's Up Doc?"

    I cancelled our more than 100 channels of worthless Time Warner cable TV a couple of weeks ago and since that time the family has been living on a few major network shows ( we still have basic ABC/CBS/NBC & Fox) and lots of great DVDs. I have accumulated a fairly substantial collection of DVDs in the past year or two so my entire family is now reaping the benefits instead of just me.

Cast    For example, in the past week, I think my kids and I have watched about 15 episodes of "The Andy Griffith Show." In addition to Andy, the other big hit with the kids has been "Top Cat," the Hanna-Barbera cartoon from the early 1960s. This was the 'toon based on "Sargeant Bilko," as opposed to "The Flintstones" which was based on "The Honeymooners." Anyway, my older son is quite enamored with Top Cat, Choo Choo, Benny, Dibble, and the whole gang.  Topcatsgangofcats

    However, tonight my daughter wanted to watch a movie so we put some choices into a hat and she picked "What's Up Doc." The Bogdonavich film, starring Barbra Streisand, Ryan O'Neal, and Kenneth Mars from 1972 is a particular favorite of mine. It was the first "adult" movie I ever saw at the theater. By adult, I mean something that wasn't a cartoon or wasn't made by Walt Disney.

    Whatsupdoc1 My father was not much of a sports fan but he did love movies, so when I was a kid that's what he and I did together - see movies. Usually it was a cartoon picture or a Disney film like "The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes" or "The World's Strongest Athlete." Somehow or another, one night we went to the Drive-In and saw "What's Up Doc." The movie is essentially Bogdonavich's tribute to the Screwball Comedies of the 1930s and 1940s. All I remember is my father laughed so much that the next week we went back to see the movie but this time with my sister and mother. 

    For that reason, and because I also happen to think it's very funny, it has maintained a special place on my list of all-time favorite films. Not surprisingly, my kids loved the movie, as well. In fact, when it was over my daughter said, "that was really good - can we watch it again soon?"Whatsupdoc

    Rated G, this movie is a great example of a family film. It has slapstick comedy and car chases for the kids, it has innuendo, double entendre, and subtle insult comedy for adults. And, it even has a little music and romance. What more can you ask for?

Sunday Music Festa/Otto Show OSCAR SHOW   

   
Tomorrow is the annual "Oscar Show Special" on my radio program. I'll be playing Academy Award nominated, and winning,  songs drawn primarily from the first year that a Best Song was chosen, 1934, until around 1984. I can't begin to describe how awful I think the music has been over the past 20-25 years.

    I will be watching the annual awards ceremony tomorrow but not because I've seen many of the films. One reason I'll be watching is because Philip Seymour Hoffman is a native of Rochester, New York so all of us here in his hometown feel as if we somehow have a stake in this year's award. The other reason, the main reason I'll be watching will be Jon Stewart. As I've already stated on this blog, I think Stewart is the funniest comedian, satirist, talk show host we have in America today. I don't think any host of the Oscars ever gets credit for a job well done but I hope he is such a smash hit that the academy will have no choice but to bring him back again. Anyone but Billy Crystal or Whoopi Goldberg.


March 04, 2006 in Film | Permalink

February 2006: "Capra-corn" Romance

Originally published in the February 2005 issue of Fra Noi.

Whether you consider it to be a “Hallmark holiday” or a deeply romantic day to spend with that special loved one, St. Valentine’s Day is upon us. Sales for flowers and candy will skyrocket, jewelers will be hawking diamonds as if they’re peanuts (albeit very expensive peanuts), and many couples will celebrate by going out for a lovely candlelit dinner. And before or after dinner, many will supplement the night out with that other wonderful tradition of every holiday America has ever been able to dream up – the Hollywood film.

There aren’t too many classic Hollywood films that are specifically built around Valentine’s Day the way there are for Christmas or Halloween, but there is a genre of Hollywood films that fits very nicely with the hearts and flowers theme, and that’s the romantic comedy.

While there were many silent films that could be considered romantic comedies, the genre really hit its stride in the 1930s. It was then that the slapstick of the 1920s and before was combined with the witty banter that talking pictures introduced to make for some classic Hollywood films. Many of the romantic comedies of this period ascended to such silly heights that the group of films became known as screwball comedies. Nevertheless, the comedy always centered around and played off of the romance. In today’s idiom a romantic comedy might be better known as a “chick flick” although this has a derisive and unappealing connotation for members of the male species.

One of the greatest of all American directors of screwball romantic comedies was Frank Capra. The Hollywood icon was actually born in Bisaquino, Sicily, in 1897 and came to America at the age of six in 1903. Frank Capra eventually rose to the heights of success as a Hollywood film director known for his “Capra-corn” or what some considered to be overly sentimental, cornball movies. Nevertheless, there were many more who loved Capra’s comedies for their wit and masterful storytelling as well as for their sentimental sweetness.

Many of Capra’s romantic comedies deal with men and women from very different backgrounds or social positions finding love despite their differences. Almost always it’s an individual from the wealthy class meeting up with someone from the working class. The more privileged individuals are often presented as both more sophisticated and cynical. Life for them is more about dollars and cents, bottom line results. Invariably, through Capra’s filmic lens the poor, working men and women are depicted as the hardworking masses while the rich are shown to be self-centered and isolated from the more noble values of the underprivileged. They lack insight into the problems and challenges of the working class. Their wealth and position prevents them from appreciating the things that are truly important in life.

On the other side of the coin, it is the working class whose position in life allows them to better understand what is true wealth; riches such as loyalty, friendship, and honesty. Romance ultimately blossoms between an individual from each group – the age old storyline of opposites attract. The comedic aspect of the romance often comes from an initial lack of compatibility between the two different worlds, the clash of cultures, if you will. More often than not, the naiveté and honest sincerity of the working class man/woman fuels the romantic feelings of the sophisticated counterpart.

Capra’s first great triumph with this formula comes in 1936 with “Mr. Deeds Goes to Town.” Gary Cooper plays a country bumpkin who inherits millions of dollars from a long-lost uncle. His initial reaction is to turn the money down. He’s happy with his life of writing poems for greeting cards, working as a volunteer fireman, and playing tuba in the town band. He’s eventually persuaded to go to the big city to accept the fortune and that’s when the wolves descend: the disreputable lawyer, the conniving salesmen, and the cynical and mocking media.

Jean Arthur plays “Babe” Bennett, the savvy big city reporter given the assignment of exposing Gary Cooper’s Longfellow Deeds as a phony and a crackpot. She does a first-rate job by initialing ingratiating herself with him by convincing Deeds she is a poor, helpless damsel-in-distress. Once she’s hooked him she takes him around town and reports on all the trouble he gets into because of his unsophisticated manner. Her articles expose him as a boob when she dubs him “The Cinderella man.” However, the more she’s around him the more she realizes how genuine and sincere he truly is. She soon realizes that his belief in honesty and individuality make him more evolved than the sophisticates who are laughing at Deeds because of the articles she’s writing. Deeds is eventually accused of being insane because he expresses his plan to give away his money to struggling farmers who would be given a plot of land and allowed to work it for three years before ownership of the land would be transferred to them. However, if he were allowed to do such a thing, men like Mr. Cedar, the disreputable lawyer, would lose out on their chance to get a hunk of the sizeable fortune.

When Deeds discovers that Ms. Bennett is the one that has been writing the embarrassing articles about him he is stunned and deeply hurt. Now, all but stripped of his faith in his fellow man, Deeds is ready to give up and be sent away to an institution without a fight. In the courtroom, Mr. Cedar and the estate lawyers have created quite a frame-up. Pushed to the point of desperate fear and frustration “Babe” Bennett demands to be heard by the judge (another favorite Capra character actor, H. B. Warner). Mr. Cedar tries to discredit her testimony by telling the judge it has no bearing “because she’s obviously in love with the man.” When she admits that’s true we finally see a spark of life come back into Longfellow Deeds. Her faith in, and love for, Deeds inspires him to finally fight back.

The film contains recurring Capra themes such as the foolishness of judging someone before you know what they’re all about or the power of being an individual in a conformist world. Yet at the heart of the film is the romance between two people from different viewpoints and experiences who find each other and fall in love despite their initial inclinations not to do so. Here again the message is unoriginal but timeless, that there’s nothing we can’t do with the love of a good man or woman behind us. Capra’s movies are filled with clichés and lessons that we learned in kindergarten. It’s exactly that simplicity and fairy-tale optimism that draws criticism for what’s been dubbed as “Capra-corn.” What saves Capra’s reputation and established his position as one of Hollywood’s great directors is the fact is no one was ever able to tell these feel-good stories with the same charm and humor that Capra possessed.

One of Capra’s greatest strengths was his uncanny knack for finding little bits of business for his actors to perform that brought their eccentric characters to life and left indelible impressions on movie audiences. In “Mr. Deeds Goes To Town,” Longfellow Deeds calmly plays the trombone as he’s told the news that he has inherited 20 million dollars. The fact that Deeds’ character is more interested in the new mouthpiece he just received in the mail for his tuba than he is about inheriting a fortune tells you more about the character than ten pages full of dialogue ever could.

In the climatic courtroom scene, we see Capra’s powers of observation for the minutiae that defines personalities reflected in Deeds own powers of observation. A great deal has been made about his eccentricity of playing the tuba at inopportune moments. He tells the judge that he plays the tube to relax and help him concentrate. He explains that “everybody does something silly when they’re thinking” and points out that the judge is an “O” filler, filling in the letter “O” on newsprint and reports that are in front of him. The eminent psychiatrist is a “doodler” who nervously draws little pictures on the pad in front of him and in so doing introduces the term “doodling” into the American vernacular forever after. Capra then pans around the courtroom and shows us the ear pullers, nail biters, and knuckle crackers that are all around us.

Deeds is a fish out of water in the big metropolis. He is not obsessed with the materialism of those he meets when he comes to the city to collect his inheritance. He wants nothing more than to be left alone to live his life as he sees fit. This attitude toward society is initially what “Babe” Bennett lampoons in her series of article about the simpleton outsider and it’s that same attitude she eventually comes to admire. The sophisticated, big-city reporter ends up falling in love with Deeds because of his simple, small-town values.

In “You Can’t Take It With You” (1938), Capra again uses Jean Arthur for his female romantic lead in another story about a clash of cultures. Arthur’s character, Alice Sycamore, has fallen in love with Tony Kirby, the son of a wealthy and important businessman. His family is upper-crust power barons while hers is a loveable but decidedly off-center group.

The fireworks figuratively and literally begin to fly when the two families meet for the first time. The center of Alice’s family is her grandfather, Martin Vanderhof, played by Lionel Barrymore, representing the poor, carefree dreamers of the world. Representing the world of big business and greedy capitalism is Edward Arnold as Anthony P. Kirby, the father of Alice’s love interest played by Jimmy Stewart. The Kirby family is staid, stuffy, and pro-establishment. The Vanderhof and Sycamore family, and their group of bohemian friends, are a testament to individuality and freedom of choice. Once again, as in “Mr. Deeds . . .” the individual is in a struggle with what society expects from him/her.

To further complicate relations between the two families, Mr. Kirby’s investment corporation is trying to put together a big munitions deal and needs the whole neighborhood in which Grandpa and his family live. It comes out that The Vanderhof/Sycamore clan is the one family in the neighborhood that has refused to sell. When Kirby Sr. realizes this he explodes in disbelief and, against character, Grandpa Vanderhof explodes right back. He questions Mr. Kirby’s consuming materialism and wonders what it will get him. Grandpa points out that “You can’t take it with you.”

In a scene where Grandpa’s friends and neighbors rally to his defense we once again see that true wealth is the love and support of family and friends. Certain that the differences between their two worlds is too great, Alice breaks off her romance with Tony Kirby and runs away to forgot about the whole ugly affair. Tony is desperate to reconcile with Alice and show her that he’s not the same man as his father and he loves her and her family for who they are, not for what they have or don’t have.

Once again, the strength of “You Can’t Take It With You” is the fabulous cast of character actors, many of whom were Capra regulars: Barrymore, Arnold, Samuel Hinds, Dub Taylor, H. B. Warner, and Charles Lane. What is unusual about this film is most of Capra’s greatest efforts were either original stories or little known properties. “You Can’t Take It With You” was a Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Kaufman and Hart. Of course, that didn’t stop Capra and screenwriter Robert Riskin from editing and adding here and there to make it more acceptable for 1938 screen audiences.

The sentimentality of Capra’s film work is evidence enough of his romantic sensibilities, and in the storylines that feature young couples from vastly different backgrounds one senses a subtle reference to Shakespeare’s classic tale of forbidden love, “Romeo and Juliet.” However, unlike Shakespeare, Capra’s endless American idealism forbids him from resolving his romances with anything other than a happy ending.

Of course, these days maybe we’re ready for happy endings again anyway. There’s enough sadness in the daily papers and on the evening news. This Valentine’s Day snuggle up on the couch and treat yourself to a big bowl of “Capra-corn.”

February 09, 2006 in Film | Permalink

November 2005: Fatso

Originally published in the November 2005 issue of Fra Noi.

This being the month of November when Americans gather together to give thanks for our abundance of blessings by setting aside a special day to eat and eat and eat some more until the tryptophan in our chemically-enhanced turkeys finally lulls us to sleep, I thought this was the perfect time to celebrate one of my favorite films ever made by Italian Americans about Italian Americans. The movie, entitled “Fatso,” deals with the Italian American love of food.

Whether we like it or not, much of Italian American culture is inextricably linked with food. Traditionally the social interaction among Italian American family and friends has taken place around the dinner table. It’s during the ritual of sharing our meals that we also share our hopes and dreams, our fears and frustrations, and perhaps most of all, our love and laughter.

In an Italian family, food provides more than the excuse to get together and show our love. Food becomes a very real sign of that love. Many a mother and grandmother have showered their offspring with the loving preparation of traditional family recipes. And this practice by no means excludes fathers and grandfathers. For example, every Saturday night, my three children anxiously await the homemade pizza I prepare for them. There are many Saturdays when I just don’t feel like doing it; I may feel too tired or too busy with other things. Nevertheless, I try to make it as often as I can because I realize the importance of the ritual I’ve begun. It has become our family tradition. My ten year old daughter Jennie is starting to express curiosity about how to make it. My son Frank just showers me with compliments about my superiority in pizza preparation and my youngest, Nick, is mainly concerned with picking the onions off his piece of pizza. Long after I’m gone, my children will have warm memories of their Saturday night pizza dinners. And part of that memory will be their realization that going to the trouble of doing that every week was a way for me to show them how much I loved them, and of course, they’ll be right.

In many ethnic cultural traditions, food becomes representative of the safety, security, and contentment of our youth. Our memories of family become linked with certain foods or holiday traditions. However, we need to be careful because sometimes food can be used, unconsciously, as a substitute for communication. We’ve all heard the term “comfort food.” In some traditions and families, food in general becomes the friend we turn to when we want comfort and security. Instead of dealing with our feelings, we retreat to the safety of food. This is one of the underlying messages in “Fatso,” one of the most hilarious, poignant, and authentic films ever produced about Italian Americans.

“Fatso,” made in 1980, was written and directed by Anne Bancroft. As we learned in our September tribute to this marvelous actress, she was born in the Bronx as Anna Maria Italiano. Like many of us, she came from a large and traditional Italian American family that celebrated all occasions with feasts of wonderful Italian food.

The star of the film is Dom DeLuise whose performance shines like the egg white glaze on a loaf of stuffed pepperoni bread. While Bancroft is credited as screenwriter of the film, DeLuise either made numerous contributions to the script or, at the very least, served as the primary inspiration for the lead character, Dominick DiNapoli. In the late 1980s DeLuise published a cookbook of his favorite family recipes and called it “EAT THIS . . . It’ll Make You Feel Better.” In the book he tells how his mother would cure all his childhood ills with food. That sentiment serves as the genesis of the plot for “Fatso.”

The opening sequence of the film shows us flashes of Dominick’s childhood. If he fell down and scraped his knee his mother gave him something to eat. If he suffered a disappointment she gave him something to eat. If he had a nightmare and woke up scared she gave him something to eat. Food became the way he dealt with any and every difficult situation.

It is not until his obese 39-year-old cousin Sal dies, that Dominick finally begins to face his own weight problem. His sister Antoinette, played by Bancroft, harangues him into making an appointment with a diet doctor. At the end of the appointment, the nurse reads him a short list of foods he’s allowed to eat and a seemingly endless list of foods he’s not allowed to eat and you see a tear in his eye and realize he’s thinking, “I’d rather be dead.”

The strength of the film’s humor comes from our ability as humans to relate with the plight of Dominick’s character. It’s funny because it’s believable - especially if you come from an Italian American background. Is it exaggerated? Yes. But great comedy comes from taking everyday human problems and exaggerating them just enough for us to see ourselves in a humorous light.

After struggling with the “do’s and don’ts” handed down by the doctor, Dominick joins a support group called “Chubby Checkers.” Similar to AA and other Twelve Step types of programs, the group assigns a buddy to call every time you feel the urge to eat something you shouldn’t. One of the funniest scenes of the film focuses on Dominick calling in help as he begins to weaken. Ultimately, his “Chubby” pals and he fantasize about the joys of their favorite foods and this leads to disaster. As funny as the scene of reckless abandon that follows is, the sadness and despair of the morning after is truly heartbreaking.

To add to Dom’s despair is the fact that he has met a lovely young woman who has opened an antique shop in the neighborhood where he and his sister run a greeting card shop. He falls in love with Lydia (played by Candice Azarra) and fears that his weight may come between them, if you’ll excuse the pun.

Instead, he finds out that Lydia doesn’t care about his weight. She likes him because he’s a kind, sensitive person. A romance blossoms between the two and before he knows it, Dom begins to lose weight without even trying. Obviously, Lydia has filled a void in his life that he previously masked with food.

Dom decides to propose marriage to Lydia but the night of their big date Lydia disappears. She doesn’t answer his calls and when he goes to her apartment she’s not at home. He begins to worry. He calls the police, the local hospitals and even the morgue. Lydia’s nowhere to be found. In his time of fear and anxiety, he turns to the friend that has always offered aid and comfort to him in his most vulnerable moments. He volunteers to pick up a take-out order of Chinese food for his sister’s card party and ends up eating two full bags of Chinese food.

In the film’s moving climactic scene, Dom and his siblings must confront the roots of his problem. Throughout the film Dom has tried to lose weight for other people but he never felt like he had a problem. He just loved to eat. However, by the end he realizes that it’s not a black and white issue. His love of food is an integral part of his personality and he tells his brother and sister that they must accept him and love him for who he is, thin or fat. Nevertheless, we’re also left with the impression that he realizes that at times he lets the food control him and so he must struggle to control his intake whenever he can unless he wants to end up like cousin Sal.

Ironically, although the movie debuted 25 years ago, obesity is a more serious problem in the United States today than ever before. We know that maintaining a healthy body is a matter of life and death. Yet in a broader sense, the film is not just about weight. It’s about our ability to understand and accept the weaknesses we all struggle with as human beings. None of us are perfect. We all wrestle with our own demons. The question is how we deal with our problems and the first step is always recognizing that we have a problem.

In the years since the movie first appeared it has gained something of a cult following among movie lovers. The respected author and educator, “Fra Noi’s” own Fred Gardaphe has used the movie in a course he’s taught at SUNY Stony Brook about the images of Italian Americans in film. Regionally syndicated national radio talk show hosts Don Geronimo and Mike O’Meara have talked about the film along with their own weight battles many times on their program. They regularly feature an audio clip from the “gorging scene” where one of the “Chubby Checker’s” asks “Didya ever suck the jelly out of a jelly donut and then fill it with chocolate swirl ice cream?”

Stylistically, the film is a little rough around the edges with a few uncomfortable edits and camera shots. It was, after all, Bancroft’s first directorial effort. Sadly, it was also her last which is too bad because technical skills are easy to learn. It’s much harder to learn the gift of storytelling which, judging from this movie, she certainly possessed.

The other talent Anne Bancroft showed in making this film was her casting many friends in the business who shared her Italian American background. This film is bursting with some of the most talented and wonderfully idiosyncratic character actors ever to work in front of a camera. Most notable, is Ron Carey as Dom and Antoinette’s younger brother Frankie, otherwise known as “Junior.” Carey is probably best known as the diminutive but strong-willed police officer Carl Leavitt in the long running sitcom “Barney Miller.” Junior is nowhere near obsessed with food in the way his brother Dommy is. In one scene Dominick explains to Junior that he needs to eat his breakfast omelet with enough bread to make it come out even. Junior explains to Dom, “You love bread. I don’t love bread. I like bread.” Later in the film Dom makes Junior a pan of Lasagna while Dom begins his diet with some broiled chicken and Kale. When Dom starts gives Junior a big piece of Italian bread to eat with his Lasagna, Junior throws it on the floor.” The trio of DeLuise, Bancroft, and Carey work so well together that by the end of the movie you’re willing to believe that they might actually be siblings off screen as well.

There is a strong “Barney Miller” connection running through this film. The great strength of “Barney Miller” was also the use of great character actors so it’s not surprising that many of them show up in “Fatso.” Candice Azzara (Lydia), Sal Viscuso (Vito), and Robert Costanzo (Johnny) all appeared in multiple “Barney Miller” episodes. Sal Viscuso has appeared in countless television and movie roles through the years and his funniest moment in “Fatso” comes at the cemetery as family and friends say their final farewell to Cousin Salvatore. Robert Costanzo, who plays Antoinette’s husband Johnny, has also enjoyed a prolific career in film, television, and voice-over work.

Then there is the Mel Brooks connection. The film was produced by Brooksfilm which is the production company of Bancroft’s widower, Mel Brooks. In addition to Mel Brooks’ comedies, Brooksfilm has been responsible for some very serious dramatic films over the years such as “The Elephant Man,” and “Frances.” Two minor roles in “Fatso” are played by men with strong ties to mel Brooks. Rudy DeLuca appears in “Fatso” as Cousin Salvatore’s brother, Pat. DeLuca was a co-screenwriter on four different Mel Brooks films including “High Anxiety” and “Life Stinks.” In addition, Arnold Soboloff who plays the diet doctor, Dr. Schwartzman, appeared in Mel Brooks’ “Silent Movie” and “High Anxiety.” Sadly, “Fatso” was one of Soboloff’s last roles. He died in the fall of 1979 at the age of 48 before “Fatso” was released.

In short, “Fatso” is a personal little film made by a small group of actors, many born and raised in one of the five boroughs of New York during the Depression or shortly thereafter, about their individual, and more than likely their collective, pasts. The movie is as much about food and family as it is about self-awareness and self-esteem. It may not be the slickest film you’ve ever seen as it was not made with a big budget. But the story is one with lots of heart, lots of love, and LOTS OF FOOD!

February 09, 2006 in Film | Permalink

September 2005: Anne Bancroft

Originally published in the September 2005 issue of Fra Noi.

In June, America lost one of its greatest cultural treasures when actress Anne Bancroft succumbed to cancer at the age of 73. It seems absurd to say that an actress who won two Tony Awards, an Oscar, and an Emmy, was under-rated but I’ve always felt that, at the very least, Anne Bancroft was under-appreciated.

Hollywood has always been more comfortable with artists that could be type-cast. If you’re a beautiful, curvaceous woman, chances are you’ll be repeatedly cast as “the dumb blonde.” If you’re a slightly built, balding man with glasses, you are destined to forever be the “nerdy friend.” If you’re really lucky and you have a rather dark, menacing look about you, maybe a pair of wild eyes, you can make an entire career out of being the “psychotic criminal.” However, if you’re an actress that can play a young, idealistic dancer, a strong and determined teacher, an old, larcenous street peddler, and a beautiful but bored middle-aged suburban housewife, all in a period of less than ten years, then you’ve got yourself a problem.

Things might have been different if Anne Bancroft had begun her career in the late 1930’s or early 1940’s when strong female roles made stars out of actresses like Katherine Hepburn, Rosalind Russell, and Barbara Stanwyck. Anne Bancroft possessed the same tough but tender persona that made those classic predecessors into film icons. Unfortunately for Ms. Bancroft the late 1950’s and early 1960’s did not offer as many challenging and rewarding roles as did the golden age of Hollywood film. The large screen spectaculars of the 1950’s offered few opportunities for intimate dramatic acting. Instead, her talents were squandered early in her career in such forgettable movies as “Treasure of the Golden Condor,” “Gorilla at Large,” and “Demetrius and the Gladiators.”

While the 1950’s may not have been the golden age of Hollywood films, it was the golden age of television,” particularly live television. Bancroft made the most of her opportunities in live television dramas with appearances on “Kraft Television Theatre,” “The Alcoa Hour,” and “Playhouse 90.” It was, in fact, the strength of her early television performances that led to her film contract with Twentieth Century-Fox in 1952. Nevertheless, after five fruitless years in Hollywood, she abandoned films to return to her native New York. Following her thankless role as a sideshow aerialist in “Gorilla at Large” (1954) which was designed largely to keep her in skimpy outfits for most of the picture, she once wisecracked, “I wanted to develop my acting, not my body.” She would do exactly that upon her return east.

In January of 1957 she appeared in a “Playhouse 90” production called “So Soon to Die.” Bancroft’s co-star was actor Richard Basehart who came away from the show with a great appreciation for Bancroft’s talent. At about the same time Basehart had been approached by respected producer Fred Coe about a two-person play for Broadway written by William Gibson. Basehart had read for the role and although he wasn’t sure if the play was right for him, he recommended the young woman with whom he had just worked for the female role. The role of Gittel Mosca is a Bronx-born dancer who tries to hide her loneliness and self-doubt behind a buoyantly happy exterior. Anne Bancroft, with the help of Basehart who provided her with a copy of Gibson’s play entitled, “Two for the Seesaw,” studied the role and entered the audition with a veteran’s grasp of the character. She immediately won over both the playwright and the producer. She then met with the director, Arthur Penn, who was so impressed he immediately cast her in another “Playhouse 90” he was about to direct, entitled “Invitation to a Gunfighter.” Basehart ultimately dropped out of the project but Henry Fonda filled the role and “Two for the Seesaw” opened on Broadway in January of 1958. Bancroft received rave reviews for her Broadway debut and went on to earn a Tony Award as Best Actress in a dramatic role. After more than six years of hard work, she was an overnight sensation.

Bancroft was born Anna Maria Italiano on September 17, 1931 in the Bronx, New York. Her parents were hard working Italian immigrants and her upbringing was filled with boisterous relatives, typical Italian feasts, and much love. She remembered singing to construction workers on the street corner for nickels and pennies when she was four years old. She was active in music and drama throughout her youth and when she thought about becoming a lab technician after high school it was her mother who encouraged her to try theater. She enrolled at The American Academy of Dramatic Arts and soon landed her first television role on the series, “Suspense.” She used the stage name Anne Marno. When she signed her film contract the following year with Twentieth Century-Fox they instructed her to change her name and she became Anne Bancroft.

Returning to New York from Hollywood in 1957 was the best thing Anne Bancroft ever did for herself. She joined the legendary Actor’s Studio, she found challenging and rewarding stage work that helped her develop her talent, and she returned to the real world of New York as opposed to the surreal world of Hollywood. Her family and friends kept her grounded and her work kept her busy.

During her years in Hollywood, she had met and married Martin May. The marriage lasted less than four years and they had no children together. In “Seesaw: A Dual Biography of Anne Bancroft and Mel Brooks” written by William Holtzman, Bancroft is quoted as saying, shortly after her return to New York, “I’m interested in only four men: my father, my agent, my press agent, and my analyst.”

Even though she won the Tony Award for “Two for the Seesaw” Anne Bancroft’s name did not carry enough weight to get her the opportunity to portray Gittel Mosca on film. Instead the film version of “Two for the Seesaw” was cast with Shirley MacLaine and Robert Mitchum.

Just a few months before William Gibson and Arthur Penn had begun work on bringing “Two for the Seesaw” to Broadway, Penn had directed an episode of “Playhouse 90” written by Gibson about Annie Sullivan, the teacher/tutor of Helen Keller entitled “The Miracle Worker.” The TV version had starred Teresa Wright as Annie but following her success in “Two for the Seesaw,” Gibson, Penn, and Producer Fred Coe were unanimous in their desire to have Anne Bancroft portray Annie Sullivan in the Broadway adaptation.

Bancroft threw herself into the role by learning everything she could about Annie Sullivan. She spent an entire day with her eyes taped shut because as a child, Sullivan had lost her sight for almost three years. Bancroft also began volunteering with visually impaired children. The special education teachers were impressed by the natural gift she had of relating to, and teaching, the children with whom she worked.

Patty Duke eventually won the role of the young Helen Keller. It was a physically demanding play for both actresses. At one point, the two engage in a knock down, drag out fight as Sullivan attempts to civilize her wild young charge. The scene was choreographed but director Penn let the two actresses improvise much of this climactic confrontation in rehearsals until they were comfortable with it. Both actresses had to wear padding under their costumes to prevent anyone from getting seriously injured. As it was, the co-stars both ended up with their share of bruises and Patty Duke wound up chipping a tooth during the course of the play’s run.

In an article by Richard Ridge that appears on Patty Duke’s website (www.officialpattyduke.com) from 1999, Anne Bancroft had praise for the entire production but especially her director Arthur Penn. “Arthur Penn taught me everything,” Bancroft said. “He really was, I think, more help to me in my acting than any other person alive or dead.” In the same article, Patty Duke praised her co-star saying, “Anne Bancroft was just so wonderful and fair. Here I was a small kid and she was this big star. On every show that I’d worked on, I’d always find someone who was my channel of energy and love, and Anne filled that role on this show.”

Anne Bancroft won her second consecutive Tony Award for “The Miracle Worker” and this time when Hollywood made the film version of the play, Penn, Gibson, and Coe all were involved with the project and insisted that Bancroft reprise her role. The studio was glad they did because Anne Bancroft walked off with the Oscar for Best Actress of 1962 for her portrayal of Annie Sullivan. It cemented Bancroft’s cache as an actress of great talent and versatility.

Anne Bancroft loved to sing and dance. According to William Holtzman in “Seesaw: A Dual Biography of Anne Bancroft and Mel Brooks” one of her favorite shows on which to appear was Perry Como’s weekly variety show. One week she was due to appear on his show and the cast was rehearsing a number at a Manhattan theater. The number, which featured Como, Bancroft, and Jimmy Durante, was ironically entitled “Married I Can Always Get.” As she finished her song some maniac in the back of the theater started applauding and whistling his approval. He walked up onto the stage, grabbed her hand and told her how tremendous she was. The crazy man was, of course, Mel Brooks who had come to the theater with composer and friend Charles Strouse. Actually, when he heard Strouse knew Bancroft he begged him for an introduction to the critically acclaimed young actress. The rest, as they say, is history. The couple dated for two years before finally getting married at City Hall in New York in 1964. Most people thought them an odd, unlikely couple. By Hollywood’s standards they were indeed odd because they remained a happy and devoted team right up until Bancroft’s death in June.

Following the success of “The Miracle Worker” Anne Bancroft starred on Broadway in the Brecht drama “Mother Courage and Her Children” as an old peddler woman seeking to profit from the Thirty Years War. As the play develops she loses all her children to the war from which she was so determined to profit. It was a dark and courageous choice for her to make after winning the Academy Award but she had graduated from seeking stardom to being an accomplished actress.

She returned to films in 1964 in the domestic drama “The Pumpkin Eater” with Peter Finch and James Mason. It was a serious and dark film about marriage and infidelity. Bancroft received her second Academy Award nomination and was voted Best Actress by the British Film Academy.

A few years later she played Mrs. Robinson in the film “The Graduate” and turned the malevolent and bored housewife into an icon of the 1960’s. Following Bancroft’s death I read that she could never quite understand why she was best remembered as the manipulative Mrs. Robinson as opposed to Annie Sullivan from “The Miracle Worker.” She did, after all, win both a Tony Award and an Academy Award for that portrayal – one of only a handful of actors ever to win best acting awards for portraying the same character on both stage and screen. I felt bad about her frustration over this phenomenon. I also agreed with her. Personally, I never liked to think of Bancroft as Mrs. Robinson because the characterization scared the hell out of me. Add to that the truly amazing performance she gives in “The Miracle Worker” and it does seem to be unjust that Annie Sullivan gets lost in the long, scary shadow of Mrs. Robinson.

Following “The Graduate” her career slowed down. She took time out to be a wife and a mother. She and Mel Brooks welcomed son Max in 1973. She didn’t star in another major film project until 1975 when she teamed up with Jack Lemmon in Neil Simon’s “Prisoner of Second Avenue.” She received critical reviews and another Academy Award nomination in 1977 for her role in the film “The Turning Point” with Shirley MacLaine. Bancroft plays an aging dancer who gives up marriage and a personal life to pursue her career and then must face the consequences of her decision when fame begins to fade.

My favorite Anne Bancroft films, besides “The Miracle Worker,” and “Fatso” (which I’ll discuss in a separate article) are “Garbo Talks” and “84 Charring Cross Road.” In “Garbo Talks” she plays an eccentric and independent Jewish mother whose dying wish is to meet the elusive Greta Garbo. Ron Silver plays the son who must somehow find and convince the great star to meet his amazing mother. It’s funny and poignant and just a little hard to believe but Bancroft is charming.

“84 Charring Cross Road” has the pacing and feeling of a foreign film. The movie was made by Brooksfilm, the company started by husband Mel to produce his own films as well as other more serious projects like “The Elephant Man.” I can’t imagine another film company making this film but I’m glad someone did. It’s a story about a New Yorker in the early 1950’s who works in television reading and typing scripts. She sends away for some books from a London bookshop and begins a lifelong correspondence with the manager of the London store. The two main characters never meet but the story of their friendship is inspiring and heartwarming. It is, in its way, “a film about nothing,” nothing but humanity, friendship, curiosity, and the excitement of intellectual discovery.

In the end, I think the reason I enjoy the film so much is because Helen Hanff, Bancroft’s character, is so close to how I like to imagine Bancroft was – curious, independent, funny, angry, and full of love. The only positive when we lose a great entertainer is that often we have much of their work left with us on film and so it is with Anne Bancroft. Her work will be with us forever and the humanity that infused that work will be her legacy. I only wish there had been more.

February 09, 2006 in Film | Permalink | Comments (0)

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