Sunday, November 30, 2008

AFI's Top 50

This is the American Film Institute's list of the 50
Greatest American Screen Legends, the top 25 male
and top 25 female legends selected by more than
1,800 leaders from across the film community from
the list of 500.

Laurence is number 14.


Men

1. Humphrey Bogart
2. Cary Grant
3. James Stewart
4. Marlon Brando
5. Fred Astaire
6. Henry Fonda
7. Clark Gable
8. James Cagney
9. Spencer Tracy
10. Charlie Chaplin
11. Gary Cooper
12. Gregory Peck
13. John Wayne
14. Laurence Olivier
15. Gene Kelly
16. Orson Welles
17. Kirk Douglas
18. James Dean
19. Burt Lancaster
20. The Marx Brothers
21. Buster Keaton
22. Sidney Poitier
23. Robert Mitchum
24. Edward G. Robinson
25. William Holden

Women

1. Katharine Hepburn
2. Bette Davis
3. Audrey Hepburn
4. Ingrid Bergman
5. Greta Garbo
6. Marilyn Monroe
7. Elizabeth Taylor
8. Judy Garland
9. Marlene Dietrich
10. Joan Crawford
11. Barbara Stanwyck
12. Claudette Colbert
13. Grace Kelly
14. Ginger Rogers
15. Mae West
16. Vivien Leigh
17. Lillian Gish
18. Shirley Temple
19. Rita Hayworth
20. Lauren Bacall
21. Sophia Loren
22. Jean Harlow
23. Carole Lombard
24. Mary Pickford
25. Ava Gardner

"Private Lives"

Act II of the radio show "Private Lives" starring Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier:


"Private Lives"

Act I of the radio show "Private Lives" starring Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier:




Wuthering Heights

Wuthering Heights (1939) is director William Wyler's somber tale of doomed and tragic love, conflicting passions, and revenge. It is considered one of Hollywood's all-time most romantic/drama classics. Filmed with haunting beauty, it is the first film dramatization of Emily Bronte's wildly passionate 1847 best-selling literary masterpiece, from a screenplay written by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur (concentrating on the first two-thirds or 17 chapters of the 34 chapter book).

Producer Samuel Goldwyn felt the black-and-white film was the favorite of all his productions. It is still considered the definitive version - and one of the greatest romantic films ever made. Bronte's novel tells about the eternal, smoldering love between two soul-mates: adopted gypsy boy Heathcliff and manor-born Cathy, who loves both the stable-boy and her worldly neighbor Edgar. There were numerous other versions of the film, including: a silent version in 1920, director Luis Bunuel's Spanish-language version Abismos de Pasion (Depths of Passion) (1953), Robert Fuest's American International and UK version Wuthering Heights (1970) with Timothy Dalton and Anna Calder-Marshall in the lead roles, French director Jacques Rivette's Hurlevent (1985), Peter Kosminsky's faithfully-told Wuthering Heights (1992) with Juliette Binoche and Ralph Fiennes, and a made-for-TV feature Wuthering Heights (1998) as part of the Masterpiece Theatre series.

The 1939 film was a critical success, earning eight Academy Award nominations in one of the most hotly-contested years ever - often called "the greatest year in motion picture history." The nominations included: Best Picture, Best Actor (Laurence Olivier with his first career nomination), Best Supporting Actress (Geraldine Fitzgerald with her sole career nomination), Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Screenplay, Best Interior Decoration, and Best Original Score. It rightly deserved its sole Academy Award for Gregg Toland's expressionistic, moody B/W cinematography. [This was Toland's only career Oscar, although his acclaimed, deep-focus film technique was also nominated in classics such as Les Miserables (1935), Dead End (1937), Intermezzo: A Love Story (1939), The Long Voyage Home (1940), and Citizen Kane (1941).] Also, the film's wonderful musical score by Alfred Newman is unforgettable.

Ronald Colman, Douglas Fairbanks, and English actor Robert Newton were all considered for the role eventually played by British stage actor Laurence Olivier. Each of the leading actors began work on the film under miserable circumstances, including the fact that both had their own lovers in England - Merle Oberon had recently fallen in love with Alexander Korda (a major British film figure), and Olivier was separated from his girlfriend/fiancee Vivien Leigh, also in London. For both its major stars, however, the film turned out to be advantageous - it was contract player Merle Oberon's best work in her entire film career, and it established Laurence Olivier as a dashing, leading international film actor (he was nominated as Best Actor for his role). (And as a footnote, it brought Vivien Leigh to Hollywood where she met David O. Selznick and tested - successfully - for the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With The Wind (1939).)

Award-ography

Academy Awards
1979 Honorary Academy Award for his contribution to film
1979 Nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role for
The Boys From Brazil
1977 Nomination for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for
Marathon Man
1973 Nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role for
Sleuth
1966 Nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role for
Othello
1961 Nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role for
The Entertainer
1957 Nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role for his performance in
Richard II
1949 Best Actor in a Leading Role for
Hamlet
1949 Best Picture for
Hamlet
1949 Nomination for Best Director for
Hamlet
1947 Outstanding Achievement award for directing
Henry V
1947 Nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role for
Henry V
1947 Nomination for Best Picture for
Henry V
1941 Nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role for
Rebecca
1940 Nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role for
Wuthering Heights

Emmy Awards

1984 Best Actor for
King Lear (TV)
1982 Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Special for
Brideshead Revisited (mini)
1975 Outstanding Lead Actor in a Special Program - Drama or Comedy for
Love Among the Ruins (TV)
1974 Nomination for Best Lead Actor in a Drama for
The Merchant of Venice (TV)
1973 Outstanding Single Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role for
Long Day's Journey into Night (TV)
1970 Nomination for Outstanding Single Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role for
David Copperfield (TV)
1968 Nomination for Outstanding Dramatic Program for
Uncle Vanya
1960 Outstanding Single Performance by an Actor for
The Moon and Sixpence (TV)

Golden Globe Awards
1983 Cecil B. DeMille Award
1980 Nomination for Best Motion Picture Actor in a Supporting Role for
A Little Romance
1977 Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Actor in a Supporting Role for
Marathon Man
1973 Nomination for Best Motion Picture Actor in a Drama for
Sleuth
1949 Best Motion Picture Actor for
Hamlet

New York Film Critics Awards
1972 Best Actor Award for
Sleuth
1948 Best Actor Award for
Hamlet
1946 Best Actor Award for
Henry V

National Board of Review Awards
1978 Best Actor Award for The Boys From Brazil
1946 Best Actor Award for
Henry V

British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards
1974 Nomination for Best Actor for
Sleuth
1970 Best Supporting Actor for
Oh! What a Lovely War
1963 Nomination for Best British Actor for
Term of Trial
1961 Nomination for Best British Actor for
The Entertainer
1960 Nomination for Best British Actor for
The Devil's Disciple
1958 Nomination for Best British Actor for
The Prince and the Showgirl
1956 Nomination for Best British Actor for
Richard III
1953 Nomination for Best British Actor for
Carrie

Other Awards
1983 Film Society of Lincoln Center, Gala Tribute.
1981 Order of Merit Award
1979 Saturn Award for Best Actor in
The Boys From Brazil
1970 Life Peer Award
1958 Tony Award nomination for
The Entertainer
1957 David di Donatello Best Foreign Production Award for
Richard III
1956 Silver Berlin Bear International Prize for
Richard III
1950 Italian National Syndicate for Film Journalists, Silver Ribbon Award for Best Director on a Foreign Film for
Henry V
1949 Bodil Festen Best European Film Award for
Hamlet
1948 Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Award for
Hamlet

Monday, November 24, 2008

My most famous soliloquy!

To be, or not to be--that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles
And by opposing end them. To die, to sleep--
No more--and by a sleep to say we end
The heartache, and the thousand natural shocks
That flesh is heir to. 'Tis a consummation
Devoutly to be wished. To die, to sleep--
To sleep--perchance to dream: ay, there's the rub,
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come
When we have shuffled off this mortal coil,
Must give us pause. There's the respect
That makes calamity of so long life.
For who would bear the whips and scorns of time,
Th' oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely
The pangs of despised love, the law's delay,
The insolence of office, and the spurns
That patient merit of th' unworthy takes,
When he himself might his quietus make
With a bare bodkin? Who would fardels bear,
To grunt and sweat under a weary life,
But that the dread of something after death,
The undiscovered country, from whose bourn
No traveller returns, puzzles the will,
And makes us rather bear those ills we have
Than fly to others that we know not of?
Thus conscience does make cowards of us all,
And thus the native hue of resolution
Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought,
And enterprise of great pitch and moment
With this regard their currents turn awry
And lose the name of action.

My Filmography! (From 1930-2004)



Complete Stats and Filmography:


Full Name: Laurence Kerr Olivier

Nicknames: Larry, Larry-Boy, Kim (family nickname, from the Rudyard Kipling novel of the same name)

Birthday: May 22, 1907, Dorking, Surrey, England

Hair Color: Dark Brown

Eye Color: Gray/Green

Height: 5'10"

Weight: 160lbs

Ethnicity: British

Religion: Brought up an Anglican, Olivier practically renounced religion when he embarked on his affair with Vivien (raised a Roman Catholic). However, his ties to the church never really left him.

Political Stance: Conservative

Siblings: Gerard Dacres (also known as Dickie), Sybille (both older)

Parents: Gerard Kerr Olivier, a clergyman (who encouraged his youngest son to become an actor), and Agnes Louise Crookenden, who died when Larry was 12

Profession: Film and theatre actor, director

Education: All Saints Choir School. His father decided he should be an actor after his brother, Richard, left for India to become a rubber planter

Marriages: Jill Esmond, 1930-August 30th, 1940; Vivien Leigh, August 30th, 1940-December, 1960; Joan Plowright, 1960-July 11, 1989

Children: Larry and Jill Esmond had a son named Simon Tarquin (they called him by his middle name), in 1936. He was step-father to Vivien Leigh's daughter, Suzanne, though he and Vivien were unable to have children of their own. Much like Suzanne, Tarquin did not have a very close relationship with his father. Larry relinquished custody when he married Vivien Leigh. However, Vivien was determined to get he and his father to become closer during her marriage to Larry, and Tarquin became very close with his step-mother. He had three children by third wife, Joan Plowright: Richard, Tamsin and Julie-Kate. Larry was god-father to Victoria Tennent and Vanessa Redgrave

Other Relationships: Larry had an affair with Claire Bloom and a younger actress named Dorothy Tutin in the late 1950's. It is rumored that he had a ten year affair with actor Danny Kaye, however, both he and his son, Tarquin, denied this. The rumor first surfaced in Donald Spotto's biography of Larry, but there doesn't seem to be much proof of it according to other biographers

Honors: Olivier was knighted by King George in 1947. He was 40 years old, making him the youngest British actor to receive the honor; co-director of the Old Vic COmpany, 1940's; founding director of the Chichester Festival Theatre (1962-66); founding director of the Royal National Theatre (1962-73); in 1970 he became a Life Peer and was named Baron Laurence Olivier of Brighton; was admitted to the Order of Merit in 1981; The Olivier Awards, Britain's version of the Tonys, was named after him.

Awards: See the full list of awards and nominations HERE

Illnesses: For the last 20 years of his life, Laurence Olivier suffered numerous illnesses. Among these were prostate cancer, which he was being treated and hospitalized for in 1967 when he received the news that Vivien Leigh had died (he promptly discharged himself to go to her flat), kidey stones, and a crippling muscle disorder which ultimately killed him.

Death: July 11th, 1989 at his home in Steyning, West Sussex of complications from a muscle disorder. He was 82 years old.
Larry was interred in Poet's Corner at Westminster Abbey in London, next to other famous British artists such as Thomas Hardy, Rudyard Kipling, Charles Dickens, and Robert Browning. There had been a debate between whether he was going to be burries at the Abbey or across town at St. Paul's. Westminster Abbey had a rule that people had to be dead for a certain length of time before they could be burried there, however once they were told he would be burried at St. Paul's instead, the Abbey bent its rules so as not to lose out in the competition. The service was attended by many of Olivier's famous colleagues and friends. Both his current wife, Joan Plowright, and his first wife, Jill Esmond, attended. The only one missing was Vivien. She had died 22 years earlier.

from www.vivandlarry.com

Wow, this is going to be a really long list...I've been in over 60 films!

2004 Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
*I was actually dead when this was made.  It used recycled footage. 
1988 
War Requiem 
1986 
Lost Empires
1986 
Peter the Great
1985 
Wild Geese II
1984 
The Bounty
1984 
The Jigsaw Man
1984 
King Lear
1984 
The Last Days of Pompeii
1984
 A Talent for Murder
1984 
The Ebony Tower
1983 
A Voyage Round My Father
1983 
Wagner
1983 
Mr. Halpern and Mr. Johnson
1982 
Brideshead Revisited
1982 
Inchon
1981 
Clash of the Titans
1980 
The Jazz Singer
1979 
Dracula
1979 
A Little Romance
1978 
The Betsy
1978 
The Boys From Brazil
1977 
Come Back, Little Sheba
1977 
Jesus of Nazareth
1977 
A Bridge Too Far
1976 
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
1976 
Marathon Man 
1976 
The Seven Percent Solution
1975 
Gentleman Tramp
1975 
Love Among the Ruins
1975 
The Collection 
1974 
The World at War
1974 
The Rehearsal
1973 
Long Day's Journey Into Night
1973 
The Merchant of Venice
1972 
Lady Caroline Lamb 
1972 
Sleuth
1971 
Nicholas and Alexandra
1970 
Three Sisters
1970 
David Copperfield
1969 
Battle of Britain
1969 
Oh! What a Lovely War
1968 The Shoes of the Fisherman
1968 
Romeo and Juliet
1968 
Dance of Death
1966 
Kartoum
1965 
Bunny Lake Is Missing
1965 
Othello
1963 
Uncle Vanya 
1962 
Term of Trial 
1961 
The Power and the Glory
1960 
Spartacus
1960 
The Entertainer
1959 
The Moon and Sixpence
1959
 The Devil's Disciple
1957 
The Prince and the Showgirl
1955 
Richard III
1953 
The Beggar's Opera
1953 
A Queen Is Crowned
1952 
Carrie
1951 
The Magic Box
1948 
Hamlet
1945
 Henry V
1944 
The Volunteer
1943 
The Demi-Paradise
1942 
Malta G.C.
1942
 Words For Battle
1941 
49th Parallel
1941 
That Hamilton Woman
1940 
The Conquest of the Air
1940 
Pride and Prejudice
1940 
Rebecca
1939 
Q Planes
1939 
Wuthering Heights 
1938 
The Divorce of Lady X
1938 
21 Days Together
1937 
Fire Over England
1936 
As You Like It
1936 
Moscow Nights
1935
 I Stand Condemned
1933 
Perfect Understanding
1933 
No Funny Business
1932 
Westward Passage 
1931
 Potiphar's Wife
1931
 Friends and Lovers
1931 
Yellow Ticket
1930 
Too Many Crooks
1930 
The Temporary Widow