Showing posts with label Dick Cavett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dick Cavett. Show all posts

April 21, 2021

La Strada ~ Anthony Quinn, Federico Fellini & Giulietta Masina

 ~  
La Strada movie poster - 1954
   

Today is the birthday of Mexican-American actor, painter, writer, and film director, Manuel Antonio Rodolfo Quinn Oaxaca, better known as Anthony Quinn, born on April 21, 1915, in Chihuahua, Mexico, during the Mexican Revolution.        
          
Two of his films demonstrated to me his brilliant acting ability, the 1954 Italian film, La Strada, directed by Federico Fellini, and in 1962, Requiem for a Heavyweight, written by Rod Serling (link below). Both are fantastic but La Strada holds a special place in my heart. It is one of the great tragic love stories of cinema and one of my all-time favorite films; the casting was superb and the score by Nino Rota was out of this world. There is a beautiful interpretation of the music from the film by l'Ensemble Ô-Celli (links below).      
 
 
l'Ensemble Ô-Celli - 2018
 photographer unknown
 
 
The film tells the story of Gelsomina, a simple-minded young woman (Giulietta Masina) bought from her mother by Zampanò (Anthony Quinn), a crude and cruel strongman who takes her with him on the road. It also starred Richard Basehart as the acrobat and clown, Il Matto ("The Fool") (link to complete plot and cast below).    
          
 
Anthony Quinn as Zampanò
La Strada - 1954
           
 
Fellini has called La Strada "a complete catalogue of my entire mythological world, a dangerous representation of my identity that was undertaken with no precedent whatsoever."       
 
 
Giulietta Masina as Gelsomina
 La Strada - 1954
publicity photo
 
 
The film demanded more time and effort than any of his other works, before or since. The development process was long and tortuous; there were various problems during production, including insecure financial backing, problematic casting, and numerous delays. Finally, just before the production completed shooting, Fellini suffered a nervous breakdown that required medical treatment so he could complete principal photography.       
 
 
Richard Basehart as Il Matto ("The Fool")
La Strada - 1954
film still
 
 
Initial critical reaction was harsh, and the film's screening at the Venice Film Festival was the occasion of a bitter controversy that escalated into a public brawl between Fellini's supporters and detractors.   
 
 
 
 
La Strada has become "...one of the most influential films ever made," according to the American Film Institute. It won the inaugural Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1957. It was placed fourth in the 1992 British Film Institute directors' list of cinema's top 10 films.         
      
 La Strada - 1954
photo: © 1954 Ponti-De Laurentiis Cinematografia  
          
           
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, Giulietta Masina as Gelsomina:  
"Masina's character is perfectly suited to her round clown's face and wide, innocent eyes; in one way or another, in Juliet of the Spirits, Ginger and Fred and most of her other films, she was always playing Gelsomina."        
 
 
 
 
 
Viewfinder links:
          
Richard Basehart         
Lene Lovich ~ Flex & The Freeze               
Giulietta Masina          
Anthony Quinn          
Nino Rota           
Martin Scorsese             
Rod Serling        
          
Net links:
           
La Strada cast          
La Strada Plot           
          
          
YouTube links:
          
La Strada ~   
         Official Trailer           
         "È arrivato Zampanò!"     
              Gelsomina       
Dick Cavett ~ Anthony Quinn on The Method Acting (6 mins.)   
l'Ensemble Ô-Celli ~ La Strada (musique du film)           
Jay Leno ~ Anthony Quinn: "Never Bend for Money"  (9 mins., 55 secs.)   
David Letterman ~ Anthony Quinn (13 mins., 32 seccs.)              
Anthony Quinn: An Original (58 mins., 42 secs.)     
Martin Scorsese on ''La Strada' (13 mins., 46 secs.)    
          
          
          
          
          
          
          
Anthony Quinn ~ La Strada - 1954 
 
          
"I have lived in a flurry of images, 
but I will go out in a freeze frame." 
                 ~ Anthony Quinn
          
          
          
          
          
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, April 21, 2021 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

January 1, 2021

Beemer memory 32: Biker days, Enrico Banducci & a hungri i

~      
The hungry i 
date & photographer unknown 
 

About this time every year I remember January of 1980, the last days of my dancing career at the hungry i nightclub on Broadway in San Francisco, more about this below.       
 
When the hungry i opened in 1950 it played a major role in the history of stand-up comedy and music in the US. It was launched by Eric "Big Daddy" Nord, who sold it to Enrico Banducci in 1951; Banducci also owned Finocchio's Club, an upscale nightclub where famous people, movie and stage celebrities, politicians, etc., came to see the drag shows staged there.   
       

Enrico Banducci - 1969 
photographer unknown
 
 
In its heyday the hungry i featured comedy and folk and other music, with acts such as Maya Angelou (as a Caribbean singer, early in her career), Woody Allen, Malcolm Boyd, Lenny Bruce, Godfrey Cambridge, Dick Cavett, Professor Irwin Corey, Bill Cosby, the Gateway Singers, Vince Guaraldi, The Kingston Trio, Tom Lehrer, The Limeliters, John Phillips (of The Mamas & the Papas led the house band), The Journeymen), Mort Sahl, Ronnie Schell, Barbara Streisand, Jackie Vernon, We Five, Jonathan Winters, and Glenn Yarborough, among others.           

A young Barbra Streisand begged Banducci for a single night at his nightclub, insisting that she would soon be a huge star. Banducci agreed to sign the singer, who had never performed professionally but was soon starring in I Can Get It for You Wholesale on Broadway. The resulting concerts (March–April 1963) were well-attended, giving Streisand nationwide acclaim.      

The hungry i moved to Ghiradelli Square in 1967, where it was primarily a rock venue; it closed there in 1970. When it opened in a new location at 546 Broadway at the corner of Romolo Place in the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco, it became a strip club.   
 
It would be six or so years later, during my early biker days, that I found myself dancing there. It's hard to believe this was over forty years ago.        
         
The hungry i is where I danced with Pillow, long past its glory days, it became our home base. But we also danced at the Roaring Twenties (where the first of the Dirty Harry series with Clint Eastwood was filmed), Big Al's, the Mabuhay Gardens (when punk bands weren't performing) The Garden of Eden and the On Broadway on the corner of Columbus and Broadway.  
 
I will never forget my time at the hungry i as it was an intrinsic part of my early biker days; I have so many wonderful tales from those days (link below); some I can and will retell; others I cannot and will not. I miss those days but their memories bring me great joy!       
 
The hungry i is still there. The barkers are still hawking on the sidewalk in front and the girls are still doing their thing inside.            
         





 
Viewfinder links:       
               
Joan Baez         
Lenny Bruce          
Bill Cosby         
Clint Eastwood        
hungry i articles       
The Kingston Trio         
The Mamas & the Papas        
John Phillips         
Pillow (She-Beast)       
Barbra Streisand          
Styrous®                
Jonathan Winters          
     
Net links:                    
      
MisterSF ~ Farewell Favorites: hungry i      
   
     
YouTube links:       
     
Hungry i Club, San Francisco - Video Tour     
                  
    
   
     
“Life moves on but memories linger.“
                           ~ Styrous®
     
     
      

Styrous® ~ Tuesday, Jamuary 1, 2021