They say it’s your birthday!

Lauren Bacall

Happy 85th birthday to Hollywood and Broadway great Lauren Bacall! Bacall was just chosen to be awarded a Lifetime Achievement Academy Award for her outstanding work in the nearing seven decades she has been working in the entertainment business.

Born in 1924, Bacall got her start at 19 years old when Nancy “Slim” Hawks saw a young Bacall on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar and suggested to her husband, director Howard Hawks, that he use her in a movie. He flew Bacall from New York to Hollywood and gave her her start in the film industry with the role of Marie “Slim” Browning in 1944′s To Have and Have Not, opposite Humphrey Bogart. She and Bogart fell in love and as soon as his divorce from third wife Mayo Methot became final, they married in Ohio on friend Louis Bromfield’s Malabar Farm in May 1945. They had two children and lived happily until his death in 1957.

Bacall continued working in Hollywood but eventually moved back to New York and returned to the Broadway stage to great acclaim in many plays and musicals such as “Goodbye Charlie”, “Cactus Flower”, “Applause”, and “Woman of the Year”, continuing to do films. In fact, she is still continuing to do films, with three films “Wide Blue Yonder”, “Carmel”, and “Firedog” slated to premiere in 2010. She has also written two autobiographies, By Myself and Then Some (updated with and Then Some in 2005) and Now, both with great reviews. She has received many awards, including two Tony awards for the musicals “Applause” and “Woman of the Year”.

I can’t wait to see what she comes out with next! Happy birthday!

It’s about damn time…

Lauren BacallAfter almost seven decades in the acting business, Lauren Bacall is finally getting the Oscar she deserves. Along with director Roger Corman and cinematographer Gordon Willis, Bacall will be receiving an Honorary Oscar to honor her “extraordinary distinction in lifetime achievement”.

Bacall, who has been making movies since her debut in 1944′s “To Have and Have Not”, is still in show business with three new movies (“Wide Blue Yonder”, “Carmel”, and “Firedog”) slated to come out in 2010.

The downside is that the public might not be able to see the awards, as the honorary Oscars will be awarded at an “inaugural Governor’s Ball gala” on November 14. Hopefully we will be able to see the ceremony. Otherwise the public will miss out on seeing a montage containing countless and priceless Bacall clips from such greats as “To Have and Have Not”, “The Big Sleep”, “Designing Woman”, “Key Largo”, “How to Marry A Millionaire”, and “The Mirror Has Two Faces”, in which her role earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

We would also miss what is sure to be a great acceptance speech from Bacall. With her wit I can only imagine what she’ll come up with. Of course I hope I won’t have to imagine it and that I’ll be able to watch it.

The honorary awards have been separated from the March broadcast to minimize the “time crunch” of the telecast. The Academy seems to be most concerned with fitting everything into a time block (understandable) but seems to be forgetting the importance of classic films and their amazing actors. The Oscars are all about the current movies, which is understandable, but when a honorary Oscar is awarded to someone from the Golden Era of film and film montages are shown, it seems to remind everyone of how the business used to be. The montages are also a chance for a new generation to become interested in classic films. Taking them away would be depriving the telecast, and it’s viewers, of something essential to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences: the golden history of film.

Let’s hope the Academy puts things together in time for us to view the talented and successful Bacall accepting the award that she has deserved for so long. I, for one, am looking forward to it immensely.

The Apartment

Well, I’m one step closer to finishing AFI’s 100 Years…100 Movies list. This weekend I watched The Apartment (1960) with Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, and Fred MacMurray. I loved The Apartment and now I love Jack Lemmon. How anyone could prefer (even for a short time) an old Fred MacMurray to Jack Lemmon is beyond me. He is so funny and cute and adorable, especially in this movie. The movie centers on C.C. Baxter (Lemmon) who lends out his apartment to colleagues, for them to use as a place to spend time with their girlfriends (unbeknownst to their wives, obviously). These colleagues all have a part in his promotion, especially his boss J.D. Sheldrake (MacMurray) who starts to use Baxter’s apartment to spend time with elevator girl Fran Kubelik (MacLaine) whom, incidentally, Baxter likes. It’s a great classic movie directed by Billy Wilder that everyone should see.

Published in: on September 8, 2009 at 3:03 pm  Leave a Comment  
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