Saturday Night Cinema: All About Eve

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I have an extraordinary treat for the first Saturday Night Cinema on 2016: All About Eve starring Bette Davis, who is fabulous.

All About Eve is not only a brilliant and clever portrait of an actress; this comic drama is a funny film, witty and sharp. The crisp, sharp dialogue snaps, crackles and pops.

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“‘Fasten your seatbelts, it’s going to be a bumpy night!,’ and with the acerbic talents of multi-Oscar-winning writer/director Joseph L Mankiewicz and his magnificent cast – the superb Bette Davis (replacing, thankfully, an ailing Claudette Colbert), the acid-tongued George Sanders, Celeste Holm, Thelma Ritter, Marilyn Monroe – it certainly is. On its original release, this tale about rivalries in the theatre was criticised in some quarters for being over-wordy and relentlessly arch, though today’s audiences tend to revel in its wit and cynicism. The dialogue is especially clever and the performances are first-rate………a classic movie, whose qualities remind us that there once was a Hollywood where such sophisticated treats could be made.”…. here.

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Here’s the NY Times 1950 film review:

All About Eve (1950)
THE SCREEN IN REVIEW; Bette Davis and Anne Baxter Star in ‘All About Eve,’ New Feature at Roxy Theatre
By BOSLEY CROWTHER
Published: October 14, 1950

The good old legitimate theatre, the temple of Thespis and Art, which has dished out a lot of high derision of Hollywood in its time, had better be able to take it as well as dish it out, because the worm has finally turned with a venom and Hollywood is dishing it back. In “All About Eve,” a withering satire—witty, mature and worldly-wise — which Twentieth Century-Fox and Joseph Mankiewicz delivered to the Roxy yesterday, the movies are letting Broadway have it with claws out and no holds barred. If Thespis doesn’t want to take a beating, he’d better yell for George Kaufman and Moss Hart.

As a matter of fact, Mr. Kaufman and Mr. Hart might even find themselves outclassed by the dazzling and devastating mockery that is brilliantly packed into this film. For obviously Mr. Mankiewicz, who wrote and directed it, had been sharpening his wits and his talents a long, long time for just this go. Obviously, he had been observing the theatre and its charming folks for years with something less than an idolater’s rosy illusions and zeal. And now, with the excellent assistance of Bette Davis and a truly sterling cast, he is wading into the theatre’s middle with all claws slashing and settling a lot of scores.

If anything, Mr. Mankiewicz has been even too full of fight—-too full of cutlass-edged derision of Broadway’s theatrical tribe. Apparently his dormant dander and his creative zest were so aroused that he let himself go on this picture and didn’t know when to stop. For two hours and eighteen minutes have been taken by him to achieve the ripping apart of an illusion which might have been comfortably done in an hour and a half.

It is not that his characters aren’t full blown, that his incidents aren’t brilliantly conceived and that his dialogue, pithy and pungent, is not as clever as any you will hear. In picturing the inside story of an ambitious actress’ rise from glamour-struck girl in a theatre alley to flinty-eyed winner of the Siddons Prize, Mr. Mankiewicz has gathered up a saga of theatrical ambition and conceit, pride and deception and hypocrisy, that just about drains the subject dry.

Indeed, he has put so many characters — so many vivid Broadway types—through the flattening and decimating wringer of his unmerciful wit that the punishment which he gives them becomes painful when so lengthily drawn. And that’s the one trouble with this picture. It beats the horse after it is dead.

But that said, the rest is boundless tribute to Mr. Mankiewicz and his cast for ranging a gallery of people that dazzle, horrify and fascinate. Although the title character—the self-seeking, ruthless Eve, who would make a black-widow spider look like a lady bug—is the motivating figure in the story and is played by Anne Baxter with icy calm, the focal figure and most intriguing character is the actress whom Bette Davis plays. This lady, an aging, acid creature with a cankerous ego and a stinging tongue, is the end-all of Broadway disenchantment, and Miss Davis plays her to a fare-thee-well. Indeed, the superb illumination of the spirit and pathos of this dame which is a brilliant screen actress gives her merits an Academy award.

Of the men, George Sanders is walking wormwood, neatly wrapped in a mahogany veneer, as a vicious and powerful drama critic who has a licentious list towards pretty girls; Gary Merrill is warm and reassuring as a director with good sense and a heart, and Hugh Marlowe is brittle and boyish as a playwright with more glibness than brains. Celeste Holm is appealingly normal and naive as the latter’s wife and Thelma Ritter is screamingly funny as a wised-up maid until she is summarily lopped off.

A fine Darryl Zanuck production, excellent music and an air of ultra-class complete this superior satire. The legitimate theatre had better look to its laurels.

On the stage at the Roxy are Martha Stewart and the Blackburn Twins and Joan Hyldoft, Phil Romayne and Terry Brent in an ice revue.

ALL ABOUT EVE, screen play by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, adapted from a short story and radio play by Mary Orr; directed by Mr. Mankiewicz; produced by Darryl F. Zanuck for Twentieth Century-Fox. At the Roxy.
Margo . . . . . Bette Davis
Eve . . . . . Anne Baxter
Addison De Witt . . . . . George Sanders
Karen . . . . . Celeste Holm
Lloyd Richards . . . . . Hugh Marlowe
Birdie . . . . . Thelma Ritter
Miss Casswell . . . . . Marilyn Monroe
Max Fabian . . . . . Gregory Ratoff
Phoebe . . . . . Barbara Bates
Aged Actor . . . . . Walter Hampden
Girl . . . . . Randy Stuart
Leading Man . . . . . Craig Hill
Doorman . . . . . Leland Harris
Autograph Seeker . . . . . Barbara White
Stage Manager . . . . . Eddie Fisher
Pianist . . . . . Claude Stroud

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EJO
EJO
8 years ago

Auld Lang Syn:

Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and never brought to mind?
Should auld acquaintance be forgot
and days of auld lang syne?
For auld lang syne, my dear,

for auld lang syne,
we’ll take a cup of kindness yet,
for auld lang syne.
———-

When I thought about the evils of drinking in the New Year, I gave up thinking.

———-

You know it’s time for a New Year’s resolution to lose weight when you
step on a talking scale and it says, “One at a time, please!”

———-

A man asks his friend for a cigarette. His friend says, “I think you
made a New Year resolution to quit smoking.” The man says, ” I am in the
process of quitting. Right now, I am in the middle of phase one.”
“What’s phase one?” “I’ve quit buying.”
———-

Youth is when you’re allowed to stay up late on New Year’s Eve. Middle age is when you’re forced to.
———-
An optimist stays up until midnight to see the new year in. A pessimist stays up to make sure the old year leaves.
———
It was Christmas and the judge was in a merry mood as he asked the
prisoner, “What are you charged with?” “Doing my Christmas shopping
early”, replied the defendant. “That’s no offense”, said the judge.
“How early were you doing this shopping?” “Before the store opened”.

———-

Jack was in front of me coming out of church one day, and the preacher
was standing at the door as he always is to shake hands. The preacher
grabbed Jack by the hand and pulled him aside. The Pastor said to him,
“You need to join the Army of the Lord!”

Jack replied, “I’m already in
the Army of the Lord, Pastor”. Pastor questioned, “How come I don’t see
you except at Christmas and Easter?” He whispered back:

“I’m in the
secret service”.

———-

Marks And Spencers department store new advert states that it wouldn’t
be Christmas without M&S. They’re right too. It’d be Chrita.
———-

Dieting – New Year Resolutions

2002: I will get my weight down below 180 pounds.
2013: I will
follow my new diet religiously until I get below 200 pounds.
2014:
I will develop a realistic attitude about my weight.
2015: I will
work out 3 days a week.
2016: I will try to drive past a gym at
least once a week.
———-
New Year’s Day: Now is the accepted time to make your regular
annual good resolutions.

Next week you can begin paving hell with them
as usual.

– Mark Twain

EJO
EJO
8 years ago

I just don’t look good naked anymore.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6m_Fq6dsIo

EJO
EJO
8 years ago

Ted Cruz: 2016 is going to be a very good year.
———-
Ted Cruz on Fox News. Bringing in the New Year

http://therightscoop.com/ted-cruz-wishes-you-a-happy-new-year-explains-why-2016-will-be-an-awesome-year/

Jaem
Jaem
8 years ago

Bette Davis is my favorite actress from that era, this is a great movie!

Lorraine Whipkey
Lorraine Whipkey
8 years ago
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8 years ago

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scudrunner
scudrunner
8 years ago

Thanks for the memories.

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Thanks for sharing!