• James Whitmore, 1921 - 2009

    James Whitmore, who died of lung cancer at the age of 87 at his Malibu home last week, was the Mr. Flinty of American character actors. Compact, bushy-browed, and shovel-faced, he had the look and manner of an economy-size Spencer Tracy. Whitmore won a Tony for his Broadway debut in the 1947 World War II play Command Decision. Entering movies two years later, he won a Golden Globe and an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his Hollywood debut, the World War II drama Battleground. (He got the part after it was rejected by, yes, Spencer Tracy.) He would go on to play a hunchback small-time crook in John Huston's The Asphalt Jungle (1950), provide narration for Huston's butchered Stephen Crane adaptation The Red Badge of Courage (1951), sing Cole Porter in Kiss Me Kate (1954), go down fighting against the attack of the giant ants in Them! (1954), preside over the monkey assembly in Planet of the Apes (1968), serve as the corrupt chief inspector of the N.Y.P.D. in Madigan (1968), and witness the bombing of Pearl Harbor as General Halsey in Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970). In more recent years, he appeared in The Majestic (2001), The Relic (1997), and most notably, The Shawshank Redemption (1994), as the elderly prison librarian who can't cut it on the outside. He also did a lot of TV, including an especially sharp 1986 PBS production of Arthur Miller's All My Sons with Aidan Quinn and Joan Allen. He also won an Emmy Award in 2000 for a guest appearance on The Practice.

    Whitmore also has a special place in recent theatrical history as a major popularizer of the historical-figure-based one man show. He started out with a stage show called Will Rogers' USA, where he made with the lasso and the familiar wisecracks, which was recorded for TV in 1972; he later moved on to Harry Truman with Give 'Em Hell, Harry, which was made into a 1975 movie version that earned him another Academy Award nomination. Three years later he filmed his tribute to Teddy Roosevelt, Bully!

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  • Set Your DVR!: October 13 - October 20, 2008

    Here’s upcoming Movies of Interest in the next week!  I realized that last week’s entry gave all times in Central Time.  From here on out, I’ll do the Central/Eastern thing.  I will also spill things over to the following Monday, because several great movies show on Sunday night.  Finally, let me know in comments if you see something I missed!

    Other than that, the rules are the same: I’m trying to avoid recommending  obvious movies, but I know you’re a knowledgeable reader, so some of the ones here might seem large and unsubtle to you.  But that’s alright.  I’m using an in-law test: I’ll stick with movies that my in-laws have most likely never heard of.  And no premium channels, because I’m too broke to afford them.

     

    Mon, Oct 13:

    10:30/11:30 am: The Circus Queen Murder on TCM.  Pre-code murder mystery starring Adolphe Menjou.  Not available on DVD.

    11:00 am/12:00 pm: George Washington on IFC (repeat at 4:15/5:15 pm and again on 10/14 at 4:30/5:30 am).  Slow and thoughtful take on African-American youths in a go-nowhere Southern town directed by the guy who made Pineapple Express.  Obvious influences: Terrence Malick and Charles Burnett.

     

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