Oscar History
Film Bitch History
Welcome

The Film Experience™ was created by Nathaniel R. All material herein is written by our team. (This site is not for profit but for an expression of love for cinema & adjacent artforms.)

Follow TFE on Substackd

Powered by Squarespace
Keep TFE Strong

We're looking for 500... no 390 SubscribersIf you read us daily, please be one.  

I ♥ The Film Experience

THANKS IN ADVANCE

What'cha Looking For?
Subscribe
« Complete the Quarantine Recommendation Sentence(s)... | Main | Would you rather? »
Tuesday
Apr072020

50th Anniversary: The 42nd Academy Awards

by Cláudio Alves

Here we are again. After revisiting the Oscars of 1994 for their 25th anniversary, it's time to go further back to the 1969 Oscars, whose ceremony was celebrated 50 years ago today. Unlike the Forrest Gump year, when the Academy Awards were pretty much business as usual, the 1969/70 awards season was part of a transitional period. The tension between the decomposing corpse of the studio system and the brats of New Hollywood was on full show for these Academy Awards. Each victory represents a prickly negotiation between the new and old guards. On one hand, we have the only X-rated movie to ever win Best Picture. On the other, John Wayne is our Best Actor for True Grit.

Speaking of the Duke, there's no better way to understand the singular contradictions of these Oscars than to look at the cowboys of 1969…

First up, there's the big winner of the night, John Schlesinger's Midnight Cowboy, the story of a Texan country boy turned New York hustler. The mere existence of this movie was only possible due to the rapidly changing standards and codes of production in the American film industry. Five years earlier, it would have been unthinkable to mount such a spectacle. Accordingly, it's happy to subvert the iconography of the cowboy and unspool the humanity beneath a patina of Americana. This nostalgic phantasmagoria haunts every moment of the film, making its portrait of the seedy underbelly of New York City into something more melancholic than exploitative.

While Midnight Cowboy uses the imagery of the western as raw material for cinematic transgression, there's a good deal of legitimate westerns among its fellow nominees. Even riskier than the Best Picture winner, The Wild Bunch dared to smear blood and dirt in the face of the genre, denuding it of any pretension of civility or saintly heroics. Sam Peckinpah's attack on the institution of American nostalgia was a cruel circus where there's no glory in violence, only horror. Diametrical to those films, there's True Grit which lionizes the heroes of yore and celebrates these decrepit icons with not a single drop of critical self-awareness.

Trying to bridge the gulf between the veterans and the young bucks, there were two 1969 pictures that featured polyamory in the Old West. One of them, Paint Your Wagon is a sorry excuse for a musical, a humorless comedy whose cocktail of pop feminism and old school chauvinism is as foul as it is incoherent. In contrast, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid manages to bridge the divide between generations of filmmakers and moviegoers. It does so by looking at the past through the lenses of hip modernism. Funny and despondent, it's an elegy for a dead genre that smiles tenderly at its open casket.

Maybe if that buddy cowboy adventure had won the night we'd have been spared some of the reactionary takes that welcomed Midnight Cowboy into the Best Picture club. Talking to Playboy magazine about the results of the 42nd Academy Awards, John Wayne said: "Wouldn't you say that the wonderful love of these two men in Midnight Cowboy, a story about two fags, qualifies as a perverse movie?". Unfortunately for us, this kind of curmudgeon grumbling wasn't exclusive to post-show reactions. Just take a look at Bob Hope's opening monologue:

With all of that out of the way, let's start to revisit some actual Oscar presentations, victories, robberies and acceptance speeches. Our first category is…

 

BEST SOUND

In this contentious climate of Old Hollywood vs New Hollywood, many studios were able to capitalize on the fears of conservative Academy voters. Lavish campaigns were mounted for Hello, Dolly! and Anne of the Thousand Days, conquering them 7 and 10 nods respectively. The latter was the most nominated movie of the year, so expect it to pop up in many bizarre categories like Best Sound. Regarding the Hello, Dolly! win, I think Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid deserved the award.

 

BEST SHORT SUBJECTS – LIVE-ACTION & CARTOONS

Joan Keller Stern's speech serves as a reminder of the generation divide that haunts this entire ceremony. However, I wouldn't characterize her short, The Magic Machines, as a particularly difficult piece of cinema. It's subject, a bohemian artist of kinetic sculpture, might be vaguely exoteric, but the film is prosaic in form and approach. On the subject of cartoons, I'd have voted for the wordless wonders of Walking, but it's easy to understand why the Academy chose the mix of education and hallucination that is Disney's It's Tough to Be a Bird. You can find most of these shorts on YouTube, in case you're interested.

 

THE SECRETS OF LEGENDARY FILM DIRECTORS

The perceived growing libertinage of mainstream cinema is even a topic of discussion in this segment. By the way, note that, of these masters, only the filmmakers that did English-language movies won a Best Director Oscar. It's only in the past two years that we got to witness non-English-speaking films conquering this trophy – Roma earned Alfonso Cuarón the prize, while Parasite made Bong Joon-ho one of the great upsets of recent memory.

 

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

Not only are the nominees bad, John Wayne's presentation is nausea-inducing. Honestly, I don't know what possessed the Academy members who voted for some of these. Maybe they were on drugs, though, even then, I don't comprehend how someone could look at Anne of the Thousand Days and think that its cinematography is worth rewarding. At least, the right picture won.

 

BEST FILM EDITING

What an inspired victory! To this day, Z is the only non-English-speaking picture to conquer this award.

 

BEST SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS

 

The presentations on this Oscar night were truly insufferable, cringey and full of bad innuendo. This pair of nominees isn't very inspiring either. Marooned is a dry space adventure, so serious it seems to forget it's supposed to be mainstream entertainment. As for its effects, they're fine but pale in comparison to the cinematic illusions of the previous year's 2001: A Space Odyssey. Krakatoa: East of Java is almost as tedious as Marooned and it doesn't possess half the artistry. 

 

BEST SCORE OF A MUSICAL PICTURE

A delightfully ridiculous presentation trying to inject liveliness into one of the worst line-ups of the year. What a sorry lot of musicals these are. No wonder the genre was dying if these tuneless monstrosities were the cream of the crop. We should also mention that these movies were all flops. Hello Dolly!, despite its awful reputation, only lost 3 million dollars making it the most successful of the nominated bunch.

 

BEST DOCUMENTARY – FEATURE & SHORT SUBJECT

Rewarding the toothless The Love of Life when In the Year of the Pig's dissection of political history and the Vietnam war is right there feels like a slap in the face. In 1969, the Academy was ready to embrace some risky material, but nothing as inflammatory as Emile de Antonio's masterpiece. As for the Short Subject category, the winner being a wordless collage of archival footage that allows anyone to project their personal beliefs unto the material feels like a logical choice for these Oscars. Weirdly enough, The Magic Machines got nominated for Best Live-Action Short Subject and Best Documentary Short Subject. How often has that happened?

 

BEST ART DIRECTION

Regardless of any justified misgivings about the merits of Hello, Dolly!, its ginormous sets are difficult to ignore. While my vote might have gone to They Shoot Horses, Don't They?, I'm fine with this victory for Gene Kelly's historical flop.

 

BEST COSTUME DESIGN

I've never watched Gaily, Gaily and cannot comment on the merits of its sartorial choices. That said, the remaining nominees are an honorable set. Irene Sharaff's extravagant designs for Hello, Dolly! are one of the picture's strong suits. Similarly, while Sweet Charity is a bit of a mess, Edith Head's costumes aren't part of the problem. Donfeld, he brought he ghosts of the Great Depression and its sallow glamour to the big screen and did a splendid job. In the end, Anne of a Thousand Days won its only prize for the work of Margarate Furse. She deftly prettified Tudor fashions, adding contemporary touches like some French Hoods that look like they're haute couture headbands from a 1969's Spring collection.

 

HONORARY ACADEMY AWARD

 

Hands down, the best speech of the night. Cary Grant managed to honor the past and look at the future with optimism instead of reactionary panic. What a class act!

 

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

An obvious and deserved victor, though My Night at Maud's is a masterpiece as well. The Rohmer moral tale is available to stream in The Criterion Channel. If you haven't watched it, do so at the earliest opportunity. It's truly one for the ages and the performance of Françoise Fabian is perfectly miraculous.

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

As a Mephistopheles of the Great Depression, a master of ceremonies facing a floorshow of human devastation, Gig Young is great and his Oscar is well-deserved. I'd go so far as to say he's one of the best winners in the category's history. Speaking of Oscar history, with his performance in The Reivers, Rupert Cross became the first black man to be nominated for Best Supporting Actor. This year was also marked by the first of many nominations for Jack Nicholson.

 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

The Best Supporting Actress line-up of 1969 is an odd one, with two of the nominees openly despising the works that got them to Oscar glory. Susannah York might have been appalled at her nomination but hers is a masterful turn, a portrait of torn up glamour, a shattered doll with the eyes of a haunted survivor. I might have given her my vote if not for the work of another disgruntled nominee, Catherine Burns in Last Summer. That film is a rabid thing, a sex-filled nightmare ready to bare its teeth at anyone foolish enough to let their guard down. Burns performance in it is a marvel of raw vulnerability.

Perhaps in reaction to these gut-wrenching offerings, the Academy chose to bestow its prize upon a work of lighter tone. Goldie Hawn won for capitalizing on her inherent cuteness and TV stardom, though she wasn't there to accept the prize.

 

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE & SONG

Both the soundtrack and original song of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid were huge hits. The record went gold in more ways than one. Considering that, it's easy to understand the double victory. 

 

BEST SCREENPLAY – ADAPTED & ORIGINAL

Both these races do a great job at encapsulating the state of cinema in 1969.

Anne of the Thousand Days belongs in the Best Adapted Screenplay line-up, seeing as its complex take on the historical narrative is one of its greatest trump cards. Goodbye, Columbus suffers from some overindulgent direction but the adaptation of Philip Roth's beloved novel is sturdy and topical for the times. As for Z and They Shoot Horses, Don't They? they're both masterpieces. Midnight Cowboy ended up winning, signaling the grander victories that were yet to come. 

The Original Screenplay category also had space for international excellence with Visconti's The Damned, a tale of Nazi hedonism that ravishes at the same time it horrifies. Looking back in retrospection, Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice is almost too 60s to function and Easy Rider was probably THE picture of 1969, even if it wasn't the best one. Between the cruel revisionism of The Wild Bunch and the mournful charms of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, it's easy to understand why the Academy went for the latter western.

 

BEST DIRECTOR

My vote would have gone to Sydney Pollack or Costa-Gavras, but all the nominees did some daring and interesting work, even when the result is as discombobulated as Arthur Penn's folk song adaptation, Alice's Restaurant. Because of that, I don't begrudge Schlesinger his victory. As it happened with many of the night's winners, he was absent and couldn't accept his award in person.

 

BEST ACTOR

The Screenplay categories may have been a better reflection of the movie year, Best Picture more important and Best Actress more surprising but, by far, the most interesting category of the 42nd Academy Awards as Best Actor. It's also the one with the worst winner of the lot.

Starting with him, John Wayne was celebrating 40 years in the movie business and this Oscar was more of a tribute than a reward for the merits of an individual performance. To this day, it's one of the laziest turns to ever win the trophy and even The Duke himself said that Rooster Coburn was the easiest role of his career. As the dead cherry on top of this putrid sunday of a win, in the days following the Oscars, Wayne received a congratulatory phone call from Richard Nixon.

If Wayne was underlining the constancy of his screen persona, Dustin Hoffman was showing the world that he couldn't be pinned down to just one category. With the consumptive sleaziness of Ratso Rizzo, Hoffman proved to be one of the most elastic performers of his generation, capable of chameleonic transformations that were staggering to behold. As for Jon Voight in the role of the titular Midnight Cowboy, he looks and feels like a profaned icon of Old-school Americana.

Finally, this was a great opportunity this was for rewarding the perennially Oscarless Burton and O'Toole, who both give robust performances. After all, this was O'Toole's fourth time at the rodeo and Burton's sixth. Elizabeth Taylor, at least, tried to secure her husband a nomination but nothing could stop John Wayne. 

 

BEST ACTRESS

Like Hoffman, Jane Fonda marked 1969 with a showcase of versatility, playing against her perceived type of sex-bomb. Indeed, as many actresses did before and after, the daughter of Henry Fonda gained the Academy's respect by deglaming for a role. Of course, her performance isn't a mere feat of cosmetics. In They Shoot Horses. Don't They? Fonda rips open her soul, bearing all its battered glory for the camera, playing someone at the end of the rope, a woman so overcome with despair she no longer feels like a human.

Liza Minnelli was another child of Hollywood royalty trying to ascertain herself outside her famous parent's shadow. As The Sterile Cuckoo's Pookie Adams, she does just that, offering a performance that weaponizes the manic quality of a pixie dream girl and twists it until it gets something ugly and painfully honest. Still, for many years, people assumed Minnelli got the nod out of pity for her mother's death. Even if that was the reason, it's still a great performance.

Jean Simmons is the least impressive of the line-up, but her work can't be said to be undeserving of the recognition. As for Genevieve Bujold, I already wrote a whole piece about the greatness of her performance so I won't be repeating myself. Suffice it to say, she's wonderful as Anne Boleyn.

Maggie Smith's nomination was something of a surprise. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie was released in March and, unlike her competitors, she had neither Hollywood pedigree, a History with Oscar or a million-dollar campaign behind her picture. Maybe her good reviews for appearing in the Los Angeles stage during the voting period helped her secure the recognition. No matter how good she is as a delusional teacher or how obvious her win may seem nowadays, this victory was regarded as a huge upset. Maggie Smith wasn't even there that night, as she was busy with rehearsals in London.

 

BEST PICTURE

After all these contentious races, Best Picture feels almost anti-climactic. In the race of old and new, the future won and Midnight Cowboy was victorious. As for me, I'd have voted for They Shoot Horses, Don't They? which wasn't even among the nominees, despite having conquered nine nods overall. Of the actual contenders, my vote would be for Z, whose American distributors, prompted by some impressive critical reactions, mounted a grand FYC campaign. It worked and the film became the second non-English-language movie to be nominated for Best Picture in the history of the awards. As we all know, it would take 50 years for the Academy to honor a non-English-speaking picture with a victory.

 

To end this massive retrospective, we have Hope's last words for the Oscar night. It's a paternalistic little speech, a bit sour and a bit frightful, completely humorless. Times were a-changin' in 1970, but not fast enough.

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (40)

Both the winning actors were real pieces of work. At least Maggie and Goldie delight to this day.

April 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterArlo

Criterion needs to do a proper blu-ray release of Last Summer. It features a sublime performance from Barbara Hershey as well.

April 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterBradley

I read a recent article in the Hollywood Reporter about a screenwriter who tried to hunt down Catherine Burns. She was a talented, unique actress, and Hollywood didn't know what to do with her. She stopped acting, wrote a bit, and then she disappeared. He finally found where she went. Throughout the article, I kept thinking if she'd find more work in today's industry with the same sort of break-out role. I'm just not sure.

April 7, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterCash

My ballot:
Picture: Midnight Cowboy
Actor: Peter O'Toole Goodbye Mr Chips
Actress: Jane Fonda They Shoot Horses, Don't They?
S. Actor: Gig Young They Shoot Horses, Don't They?
S. Actress: Catherine Burns Last Summer
Director: Sydney Pollack They Shoot Horses, Don't They?
O. Screenplay The Wild Bunch
A. Screenplay: Z
Foreign Film: Adalen '31 (unjustly obscure, maybe someday it'll be re-discovered)

April 7, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterken s

I’m sorry but John Wayne is such a douche.

Jane Fonda’s performance might be her greatest ever.

I just watched Goodbye, Mr Chips. O’Toole would’ve been a worthy winner. PS Petula Clark is very good.

It’s strange that some presenters appeared more than once.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterbrookesboy

Man look how gorgeous Elizabeth Taylor was presenting the Best Picture award. That dress! That tan! My God! ❤️

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterDavid

As much as I like to see John Wayne in a film, the dude in his personal life was a fuckin' asshole. How he and John Ford (whose views was more liberal than conservative) got along all these years is beyond me.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterthevoid99

Brilliant article, love these in depth looks at particular Oscar years and your thoughts, regardless on if I agree with them all or not. You are a star Claudio and I hope Nathaniel compensates you in more than exposure or a pittance!

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterUrgh your mind.

I would never describe Maggie's win as an upset. It was totally predictable. You can't read 69. You're too young,

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMiss Beaumont

Miss Beaumont -- I wasn't alive when these Oscars happened but I did do a lot of research for this piece. Everything I read pointed out Maggie Smith as an upset, from Inside Oscar to articles from 1970 about the ceremony.

Also, she won nothing before the Academy Awards. Even when The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie was recognized, as it happened at the National Board of Review, Maggie was absent from the winner's list. Genevieve Bujold won the Globe, Geraldine Page got NBR, the National Society of Film Critics awarded Vanessa Redgrave while NYFCC chose Jane Fonda as did other critics awards. Not to mention that Bujold had a big ad campaign backing her up and Fonda/Minnelli had compelling Oscar narratives.

I hope this makes it a bit clearer why I called her an upset victor. Thanks for the feedback, anyway. It's appreciated, as always.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterCláudio Alves

You’re by far the best writer here, but I feel like a Nathaniel at least would appreciate Sweet Charity’s score. Big Spender, Where Am I Going AND If My Friends Could See Me Now in the one score? Wonderful trio at the very least. The film having these songs and that choreography can’t be devalued so much IMO.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterChita

Love it!

For what it's worth, I am partial to MIDNIGHT COWBOY, Schlesinger, Voight, Minnelli, Young and Burns.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterAndrew Carden

Loved this article. Lots of curiosities and interesting historical facts.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterPP

Maggie Smith’s win is one of the best ever in the category. I haven’t seen any of the other performances, but regardless it’s a win for the ages.

Great piece, as always Cláudio. Love the deep dives.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterShmeebs

Chita -- The score of Sweet Charity is quite good and the choreography is indeed amazing, iconic, spellbinding. That party scene, in particular, is spectacular. Overall, however, I don't like the film and consider it to be Fosse's worst. Still, it's the best of those five and it would have gotten my vote in the Best Adapted Score category.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterCláudio Alves

What an enjoyable post!! Thanks for all the research and commentary.
It was a great way to pass the time - thank you!!

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterceebee0714

Love the colors of the whole telecast.

I see Goldie's win as a precursor or the Tomei thing. I'm a bit sad for York -who gave the superior performance- that she couldn't benefit from the past love for Tom Jones and Man for All Seasons.

Maggie Smith was never going to lose the Oscar over a Canadian or a communist.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterPeggy Sue

Jon Voight should have won. What a stellar performance.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterPeggy Sue

Wonderful article!

I'd also have gone with Jane Fonda though she didn't have to wait too long to get her first statue.

I think Goldie is adorable in Cactus Flower but it just doesn't compete with Susannah York's (who looks ultra glam here all in white with opera gloves) devastating work in Horses.

The Duke's win is such a career acknowledgement but if he was going to be given one I would have much rather seen it for either of two worthy performances that he wasn't nominated for-The Searchers or The Shootist.

While I was delighted to see real stars-Myrna Loy (the detail work on her gown is beautiful but it looks like a fancy housecoat), Claudia Cardinale (with possibly the most unbecoming hairdo imaginable), James Earl Jones, Fred Astaire, Candice Bergen etc. it's odd that there were several repeat presenters among them. Must have been something they were trying out that year.

One of the few times they let a woman present Best Picture solo but if anyone can was up to the task it was Elizabeth Taylor. That necklace!!

Cary Grant! What a gentleman. He really sets the example of what we should all aspire to be, elegant, open minded and gracious.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterjoel6

Great article!

I've only see three of the Best Picture nominees ( I haven't seen Anne or Dolly) but I guess I would go with Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, though Midnight Cowboy and Z are both strong films. I've got They Shoot horses, Don't They on Blu-ray and I'm looking forward to seeing it - the most-nominated film ever that didn't get a Best picture nomination!

A book I've got called Academy Award Winners also says that Maggie Smith was the "surprise package" in that year's Oscars. it does seem as though it was a surprise she won - though I guess it may have happened because, even though all the other nominees had narratives (as Cláudio points out), none of them had THE narrative. Perhaps it was a fairly even field in the voting tally.

They obviously liked Taylor - she presented Best Picture solo four years later also (and did it very amusingly, having come onstage just after the streaker).

How lovely it is to see Fred Astaire dancing at the Oscars! That's a legend right there. I love that clip.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterEdward L.

Great piece.. loved the details of an evening I'll never forget watching. The previous night, myself and a childhood friend, none other than Ben Brantley, went to a lecture by Judith Crist, She predicted a "Butch and Sundance" win, as well as a Liza victory. So much for early Oscar predictions. And yes, we were a couple of 13 and 15 year old nerds.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterDan

Voight is great, but Hoffman is spectacular

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered Commentercal roth

You're overstating the subversiveness of "The Wild Bunch" quite a bit. Sure it's violent and dirty, but it also indulges in the same glorification of violence and machismo that it's critiquing. The final shootout is so famous not only because of its theretofore unprecedented brutality - but because it's exciting to watch.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterJonathan

Jonathan -- That's possible, I admit. It was one of the films I didn't have time to rewatch before writing this piece and my memory might be doing the movie a favor.

Still, in the context of the western genre as it existed in 1969, I do think it's subversive. Even if it makes violence into entertainment, it does so openly without hiding behind a mask of nostalgic reverie or fake heroics. Its brutality is exciting but it's no less brutal because of it.

Thanks for the feedback and for giving me something to mull over. One of the reasons I didn't rewatch it was because I remember it as being quite unpleasantly violent, ugly.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterCláudio Alves

Loved this. Great work,! Do more!

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered Commenterforever1267

Poor Shani Wallis! That was by far my favorite thing here. Shafted the year before for Oliver! and then saddled with this heinous "song" presentation. And she's really selling it too. Why didn't Hollywood or London make room for her? I think she's great.

Second favorite thing here are the giant hair/pieces and dresses worn by Raquel Welch and Candice Bergen.

PS in my family, as I recall, we were hoping for Butch Cassidy.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterDave in Hollywood

OK first of all Sweet Charity is a pretty great film. Fosse's first with dazzling choreography and photography with all those still shots seamless blended in. Jane Fonda is always great! especially in Horses. Gaily Gaily is brilliantly designed by Ray Aghayan One of the greatest costume designers of all time . partnered with Bob Mackie later they made magic.
But probably my most favorite is Hello Dolly So Lavish! the production design, costumes and a great performance by Streisand channeling May West and making the part her own! People criticized her as being too young but 15 years later she didn't look so different.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterDO

Re: the Maggie ‘surprise’ won. I guess that most short term memory voters only remember films released during the Oscar push months of November and December. For Brodie to be released in March 1969, then have to gall and longevity to win an award more than a year after the fact against ‘fresher’ Best Actress campaigns must’ve been a complete shock.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterTOM

Damn, Hope (and the writers the Academy hired) sure seems defensive about the "gritty," sexually provocative nature of some of the nominees and winner. I wonder if Hope would have been given a different closing to deliver if a more conservative, less explicit film than the X-rated MIDNIGHT COWBOY had won, say HELLO, DOLLY!

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterDan Humphrey

I would love to get some expansion on York and Burns hating their nominated performances. Burns rolling her eyes in the clip has sparked a need to get to the bottom of it and google came up with zip.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterTim

Tim -- Regarding Burns, the Hollywood Reporter piece that was mentioned before is a great source of information about her, the actress's relationship to Hollywood and Last Summer.

About York, I got most of that info from the book Inside Oscar, which quotes from a conversation the actress had with journalist Earl Wilson. She's supposed to have said: "I felt a ghastly sickening thud when I got nominated and tried to get un-nominated. It angered me to be nominated without being asked. I was appalled. I don't think I have much of a chance and I didn't think that much of myself in it."

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterCláudio Alves

Cláudio — thank you! :-)

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterTim

About a year after this, I saw The Reivers at a drive-in in South Carolina. It remains the only movie I ever saw at a drive-in.

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterSam

TOM - It was different! It was 1969! We didn't have the internet! It was a completely era! We could wait for weeks for a magazine and months for a book perordered.

Maggie was the only wiable choice of the quintet

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterMiss Beaumont

Yeah, it's always a shame the academy makes dumb choices in retrospect.
Hello Dolly is pretty standard and blah. For all I know, Anne of a Thousand Days could be good but it hasn't done a good job surviving the test of time like They Shoot Horses, Easy Rider or Wild Bunch.

I recently saw They Shoot Horses Don't They and read the book (the link is my analysis on both)..


The word patina I had to look up on dictionary.com and still am not satisfied with its use in this essay.


How much of a surprise was Maggie Smith? She had been nominated for Oscar earlier and I keep hearing that she's like one of the best actresses of her generaiton. Was she just not there in 1969?

April 8, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterOrrin

What a great article. I got such a lift from seeing some of the presenters. Ingrid Bergman, Elizabeth Taylor, and Candice Bergen are a nostalgic delight. Graceful Fred Astaire, but best of all Cary Grant. What an ovation, and what a speech.

April 9, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterLadyEdith

I liked “The Reivers”.

I liked the Oscar nominated Rupert Crosse. His nomination is very satisfying and speaks to the respect his fellow professionals must have had for him. Crosse was a lifetime member of the Actors Studio, and you wonder if his fellow Studio members lobbied to get him recognized.

I haven’t seen this movie for years, so I don’t know if it has dated. I remember it as a summer sunshine afternoon story. It’s kind of a shaggy dog tale, based on a novel by William Faulkner, with the screenplay by the Oscar winning writers of “Hud”. It’s also has composer John Williams third (?) Oscar nomination for score.

I liked Steve McQueen in it, in rare PG rated mode, and I loved the yellow car that is a vital part of the plot. (A “reiver” is a “thief”).

April 9, 2020 | Unregistered Commenteradri

I've just RT this article. I think it could have more traction on Twitter if you used pics of the telecast. I'm obsessed with the glassy curtain.

April 9, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterPeggy Sue

Love these pieces, kewp them coming. You are the lifeblood of this site and it's always great to hear an extraordinary writer's opinions expressed so vigorously. I particularly enjoy the quirks your english writing has. I for one am enjoying patina coming back into the common vocabulary.

April 9, 2020 | Unregistered CommenterJin

Loved this article. Lots of interesting historical facts.
samagra Thank you for sharing this with us.

April 9, 2020 | Unregistered Commentersamagra
Member Account Required
You must have a member account to comment. It's free so register here.. IF YOU ARE ALREADY REGISTERED, JUST LOGIN.