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My name is Jacqueline T. Lynch, author of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star.,
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Showing posts with label Jack Carson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack Carson. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Mildred Pierce (1945) lobby card

 


Ann Blyth co-stars with Joan Crawford in Mildred Pierce (1945) today on Turner Classic Movies.  

From my book on Ann's career -- Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star.:

[Director Michael Curtiz] had not wanted the “goody-goody” Ann for the role of the evil daughter Veda, either, and need not have considered her when a vast number of young starlets were clamoring for the role.  Ann’s agent, Al Rockett campaigned on her behalf, insisting that she be allowed to test.  In a most unusual occurrence, established star Joan made the test with her.  As quoted by Joan C. Scrivani in her article on Mildred Pierce for Scarlet Street, 1994, Joan remembered:

“I was there when Ann came in.  She was so lovely that my first reaction was she’s too sweet; she’ll never be able to play the bitchy scenes.  But we read together and she was wonderful.  Then we tested together.  Ann was perfect.  She was the right age, the right type, a superb actress and singer.”

The test was directed by Michael Curtiz.  Ann remembered for an interview with Jessie Lilley in Scarlet Street:

“We took scenes from the movie as though we were actually shooting the movie.  We just didn’t read for the part; we filmed the test.”

Curtiz later told her, “in his wonderful Hungarian accent, (imitating him) ‘Don’t worry Annie.  You haff de part.’”  He became one of her most favorite directors.

 

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For more on my other books and plays, please see my website: JacquelineTLynch.com  

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Ann Blyth interviewed in new book on director Michael Curtiz


Ann Blyth fans may be interested to read the excellent new biography of her favorite director, Michael Curtiz, by Alan K. Rode. Two of her films were directed by Curtiz:  Mildred Pierce (1945), for which she was nominated for a Best Supporting Oscar at the age of 17, and her last film (pictured above with Paul Newman), The Helen Morgan Story (1957).


Michael Curtiz – A Life in Film, published by the University Press of Kentucky (2017) is a well-written and well-researched study on one of Hollywood’s most talented, and yet perhaps most overlooked, directors.  Mr. Rode rectifies Curtiz’s omission among the great auteurs with a fair and unblinking examination of the director’s foibles, even occasional cruelty, but chronicling his impressive body of work and his unique cinematic storytelling.  The book is foremost a tribute to a complex but talented man.


The author interviewed Ann Blyth for this book, and she supplies her memories of working with Michael Curtiz and her experiences on her two films with him, praising his talent and reaffirming how much she enjoyed working with him.  She sensed that, “…he was always seemed to be in my corner.  I remember that we talked about this later on in years when I worked with him again and I wished that that had happened more often…He had a wonderful way and would say all kinds of crazy things, but there was always a twinkle in his eye….I was very, very fond of him.”


There is a photograph in the book of Curtiz directing Ann in the memorable scene in Mildred Pierce where she sings “The Oceana Roll” in the waterfront dive owned by Jack Carson.  For more on Ann’s interview, and for an in-depth review on the life and career of this director whose hits include Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), Casablanca (1943), and White Christmas (1954) to name only a few perennial favorites, Michael Curtiz –A Life in Film is a treat for classic film buffs who have waited a long time for a book-length biography on this director.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Mildred Pierce on TCM


She's baa-aa-ack!

This coming Sunday, as part of its tribute to Mother's Day, Turner Classic Movies is again showing our favorite instructional video on how to raise children--Mildred Pierce (1945).  This was the role that earned Ann Blyth her Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress, the youngest (at 16 years old) at that time to have been nominated for a major acting award. 

The lobby card above is not from the original release of the movie, but from a re-release.  The original publicity images from the movie showed only Joan.  We can see how great an impact Ann's Veda Pierce had on the critics and the public by subsequent marketing showing her front and center.

Tune in Sunday, May 8th at 4 pm ET for Ann, Joan Crawford, Jack Carson, Eve Arden, Zachary Scott and a the rest of the gang in this glossy noir.  We covered Mildred Pierce here at my Another Old Movie Blog.