Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Saturdays with the Stars Season 3 Finale

Two of our stars, Shirley & Grace
With this past week's viewing of The Seduction fo Joe Tynan, we are officially done with our third season of "Saturdays with the Stars."  I really like to find a moment before I start the new season (which, unlike past seasons, I haven't told you the theme of & will be doing so in the coming days, as we will indeed do a fourth season starting on Saturday) to discuss the season, talking about what I learned, and also focusing on some of the best of the year's movies/performances.

When I decided to do this theme, I wanted to see how it would turn out picking twelve women who had really nothing in common other than Alfred Hitchcock.  You couldn't find stars as divergent in the way that cinematic history or even contemporary audiences treated them as, say, Maureen O'Hara & Barbara Harris or Shirley MacLaine & Margaret Lockwood.  Hitchcock wasn't always successful with his leading ladies, but it does show what a versatile director he was that he continually tried new things, occasionally making masterpieces but just as often strange curiosities.

It also showed, especially in our month devoted to Tippi Hedren, how Hitchcock's legacy is at once peerless in quality but blemished by the director himself.  Hitchcock was a complicated man, one who brought the downfall of a career or two (Hedren's career, as we discussed, never flourished the way it might have with a less authoritarian mentor), but who also clearly made some of the best films ever made.  What was great about this year was not just focusing on him, but getting to see unknown chapters in these twelve women's lives (I love that I stick to the rule of seeing only films I haven't seen before, because it means every week I get to see a new facet of an actor I thought I knew well, but frequently have my perceptions changed).  As I continue to watch deeper and deeper cuts from Old Hollywood (after three seasons devoted to it on the blog, it seems like watching fresh viewings demands getting into the rafters of these icons' IMDB pages), I am reminded once again how this period of Hollywood has countless movies & careers left to explore.  Thank you so much for playing along!

Favorite Performance from Each Star

January: Madeleine Carroll-The General Died at Dawn
February: Sylvia Sidney-Sabotage
March: Margaret Lockwood-Cast a Dark Shadow
April: Maureen O'Hara-Rio Grande
May: Carole Lombard-Twentieth Century
June: Anne Baxter-The Luck of the Irish
July: Ingrid Bergman-Autumn Sonata
August: Grace Kelly-Dial M for Murder
September: Shirley MacLaine-The Children's Hour
October: Julie Andrews-Thoroughly Modern Millie
November: Tippi Hedren-Marnie

5 Favorite Actresses of the Year (Alphabetical, and based solely on the films we watched as a collective & not on the rest of their careers)

Ingrid Bergman
Barbara Harris
Margaret Lockwood
Carole Lombard
Shirley MacLaine

5 (err-6, I couldn't corner down) Favorite Performances of the Year (Alphabetical)

Ingrid Bergman, Autumn Sonata
Ingrid Bergman, Journey to Italy
Margaret Lockwood, Cast a Dark Shadow
Margaret Lockwood, The Wicked Lady
Carole Lombard-Twentieth Century
Shirley MacLaine, The Children's Hour

10 Favorite Films of the Year (Alphabetical)


Top 10 Performances of the Year (Not By Our Leading Ladies)

Diane Baker, Marnie
John Barrymore, Twentieth Century
Dirk Bogarde, Cast a Dark Shadow
Humphrey Bogart, Dead End
Sean Connery, Marnie
Audrey Hepburn, The Children's Hour
George Sanders, Journey to Italy
Claire Trevor, Dead End
Liv Ullmann, Autumn Sonata
John Williams, Dial M for Murder

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