Showing posts with label Tyrone Power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyrone Power. Show all posts

August 25, 2021

Michael Rennie ~ Klaatu barada nikto!

 ~      
movie poster


I have many songs, pieces of music or whatever, that I will always remember the moment, situation or place I was when I heard it; a case in point is the theremin; ok, it's not a song but it fits in there. The first time I heard the sound of the instrument I was 11 years old and had discovered Sci-Fi in books and films several years earlier. As far as films go, I was used to the funky stuff, Buster Crabbe as Flash Gordon, the VERY low budget Man From Planet X, etc., so, from the moment the The Day the Earth Stood Still opened with the electrifying (pun intended) music score by Bernard Herrmann with the quivering, other-worldly sound of the theremin, which sent shivers up and down my spine (it still does), I was transfixed in my seat! The film score by Herrmann is sensational; it is in my pantheon of the top ten film scores of all time. I think it with the excellent production values are what makes Day the Earth the Grandfather of the modern Sci-Fi film age.     
 
The next technological/sonic breakthroughs would happen again 17 years later with the Stanley Kubrick film 2001: A Space Odyssey . . .         



 
. . . then 35 years later with Star Wars.     



 
Today, August 25, is the birthday of Michael Rennie who starred as Klaatu, the alien from the flying saucer in The Day the Earth Stood Still
 
 
 
 
Michael Rennie was a 6' 4" tall British film, television and stage actor, born in 1909, in Idle near Bradford, West Riding of West Yorkshire, England. He appeared in more than fifty films but is best remembered for his starring role as the space visitor Klaatu in the 1951 Sci-Fi film, The Day the Earth Stood Still.                  

He attracted the interest of a casting director at Gaumont British who took him on as an extra. Rennie said this was a deliberate strategy so he could learn how films were made. Head of production Michael Balcon said Rennie was taken on "because he was good-looking and athletic. He knew nothing of acting, but was given a contract to play small parts and to work as stand-in for players such as Robert Young and John Loder.     
          
Rennie's first screen acting was an uncredited bit part in the Alfred Hitchcock film Secret Agent (1936), standing in for Robert Young. Balcon says he saw Rennie act in a scene in East Meets West (1936) and fired him immediately afterwards. Balcon wrote "I had seen the rushes of that day's filming and had at once decided that Rennie was far too inexperienced to justify big screen parts."          
          
Rennie worked mostly in Yorkshire, eventually becoming a star with the York Repertory Company. Among his roles were as Professor Henry Higgins in Pygmalion, a play by George Bernard Shaw, which was later made into the 1956 musical My Fair Lady .           
          
During World War II, Rennie began to receive offers for film roles but continued repertory work honing his craft. He enlisted in the RAF Volunteer Reserve on 27 May 1941. "There has been a pause in Rennie's film career", wrote Balcon in 1942. "But there will be parts awaiting him when the war is over"         
 
With the end of the war in Europe in May 1945, Rennie was given his first film break, when cast alongside Margaret Lockwood, then at the peak of her popularity, in the musical I'll Be Your Sweetheart (1945), directed by Val Guest.        
 
The movie was not a big hit but Rennie received excellent notices, including a review from the US trade paper Variety who said his performance made the film "noteworthy" and that he was . . . 
". . . likely Hollywood material... the best bet in the way of a new male star to have come out of a British studio in many years. Rennie not only has a lot on the ball as a straight lead, he knows the value of visual tricks. Femmes will go for him in a big way."        
He followed this with The Wicked Lady in 1945. Rennie was the fifth lead but it was a good part and an excellent project to be associated with – the year's biggest box-office hit, subsequently being listed ninth on a list of top ten highest-grossing British films of all time.           
 
Rennie's prestige was raised when he was given a single prominent scene as a commander of Roman centurions in the Gabriel Pascal production of Caesar and Cleopatra by George Bernard Shaw (also 1945), starring Vivien Leigh and Claude Rains. Rennie was now established as a leading actor. One report called him "the bobbysoxers' dark idol... Gainsborough's 1945 discovery." He was mobbed by female fans on a personal appearance tour.        
 
In 1950, he was one of several English actors cast in the 20th Century Fox medieval adventure story The Black Rose starring Tyrone Power and Orson Welles. Rennie was specifically cast as the 13th-century King Edward I, whose 6' 2" (1.88 m) frame gave origin to his historical nickname "Longshanks".    

After Claude Rains turned down the role, Rennie received top billing in his next film, The Day the Earth Stood Still, the first postwar, large-budget, "A" science-fiction film. It was a serious, high-minded exploration of mid-20th century suspicion and paranoia, combined with a philosophical overview of humanity's coming place in the larger universe. Rennie said director Robert Wise told him to do the role "with dignity but not with superiority". (The story was later dramatised in 1954 on Lux Radio Theatre, with Rennie and Billy Gray recreating their original film roles. Seven years later, on 3 March 1962, when The Day the Earth Stood Still made its television premiere on the NBC Saturday Night at the Movies, Rennie appeared in a two-minute introductory prologue before the start of the film.)              
 
He appeared in the film Seven Cities of Gold in 1955 with Richard Egan and Anthony Quinn, and with them again in Demetrius and the Gladiators (link below). His film career only went up from there.    




During a visit to his mother's home in Harrogate, Yorkshire, following the death of his brother, Rennie died suddenly of an aortic aneurysm almost two months before his 62nd birthday.    
 
 
          
Viewfinder links:
           
Buster Crabbe       
Demetrius and the Gladiators                  
Richard Egan        
Bernard Herrmann           
Alfred Hitchcock          
Stanley Kubrick          
Lux Radio Theater           
Tyrone Power         
Anthony Quinn        
Claude Rains         
George Bernard Shaw         
All things Star Wars          
Orson Welles          
          
Net links:
           
The Day the Earth Stood Still ~           
       Cast    
       Klaatu barada nikto! (interpretation)   
Complete filmography          
          
          
          
          
YouTube links:
           
      The Day the Earth Stood Still  (1951) main title sequence       
      The Arrival of the Saucer             
      Klaatu appears      
      Gort appears     
      The Day The Earth Stands Still       
      Klaatu's warning     
      The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951) film review  
          
           
           
           
           
 
 
          
          
          
          
          
          
          
          
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, August 25, 2021 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

August 30, 2020

Raymond Massey ~ Thespian Extraordinare

~     
date & photographer unknown


Today is the birthday of radio, stage and screen actor, Raymond Massey. His most dramatic roles were his portrayals of the eighteenth president of the United States, Abraham Lincoln.         
      


Abraham Lincoln - 1857 



 
photographer unknown


Massey scored a great triumph on Broadway in the Robert E. Sherwood Pulitzer Prize-winning play Abe Lincoln in Illinois despite reservations about Lincoln's being portrayed by a Canadian. He repeated his role in the 1940 film version, for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor. Massey again portrayed Lincoln in The Day Lincoln Was Shot on Ford Star Jubilee (1956), a silent appearance in How the West Was Won (1962), and two TV adaptations of Abe Lincoln in Illinois broadcast in 1950 and 1951. He once complained jokingly that he was "the only actor ever typecast as a president." His preparation for the role was so detailed and obsessive that one person commented that Massey would not be satisfied with his Lincoln impersonation until someone assassinated him. On stage in a dramatic reading of John Brown's Body, by Stephen Vincent Benét (1953), Massey, in addition to narrating along with Tyrone Power and Judith Anderson, took on the roles of both John Brown and Lincoln.           

My favorite role of his was when he starred in Things to Come, in 1936, a film adaptation by H. G. Wells of his own speculative novel The Shape of Things to Come (1933). The cultural historian Christopher Frayling called Things to Come "a landmark in cinematic design". The film also starred, Ralph Richardson, Cedric Hardwicke and Ann Todd.        


Things to Come UK poster


Massey became an American citizen in 1944. After he became an American citizen, he continued to work in Hollywood. Memorable film roles included the husband of Joan Crawford during her Oscar-nominated role in Possessed (1947) and the doomed publishing tycoon Gail Wynand in The Fountainhead (1949), with Patricia Neal and Gary Cooper. In 1955, he starred in East of Eden as Adam Trask, father of Cal, played by James Dean, and Aron, played by Richard Davalos.      

But Massey had a good sense of humor: he played Jonathan Brewster in the movie version of Arsenic and Old Lace which is proof Massey could take a joke. Brewster was created for Boris Karloff, who played the part on Broadway, but was unavailable for the movie. The character required Massey to look like the Frankenstein monster. A running gag in the play and the film was the character's resemblance to Karloff. It was an American black comedy film directed by Frank Capra and starring Cary Grant, Peter Lorre, Jack Carson; the score for the film was written by Max Steiner of King Kong fame.    


 movie poster


Massey was born in Toronto, Ontario, on August 30, 1896. He was the great-grandson of founder Daniel Massey, whose branch of the Massey family emigrated to Canada from New England a few years before the War of 1812, their ancestors having migrated from England to the Massachusetts colony in the 1630s.         

Massey joined the Canadian Army at the outbreak of World War I, and served on the Western Front in the Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery. Lieutenant Massey returned to Canada after being wounded at Zillebeke in Belgium during the Battle of Mont Sorrel in 1916 and was engaged as an army instructor for American officers at Yale University. In 1918, he was recalled to active service and joined the Canadian Siberian Expeditionary Force that went to Siberia during the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. On the orders of his commanding general, he organized a minstrel show troupe with himself as end man in blackface to bolster morale of allied troops on occupation duty in Vladivostok.           

In 1942, during World War II, Massey rejoined the Canadian Army and served as a major in the adjutant general's branch. After being wounded, he was invalided from the Canadian Army in 1943.
Raymond Massey died of pneumonia in Los Angeles, California on July 29, 1983, he was 86 years old. His death came on the same day as that of David Niven, with whom he had co-starred in The Prisoner of Zenda and A Matter of Life and Death. Massey is buried in Beaverdale Memorial Park in New Haven, Connecticut.         
      

     

Viewfinder links:     
    
Judith Anderson       
Gary Cooper     
Joan Crawford        
James Dean   
Sir Cedric Hardwicke           
Grace Kelly     
Raymond Massey           
Patricia Neal         
David Niven            
Tyrone Power       
Sir Ralph Richardson         
Max Steiner           
     
Net links:     
     
Filmography     
Radio appearances     
Major Smolinski ~ Raymond Massey: Did not suffer fools     
     
     
YouTube links:     
     
Raymond Massey ~      
    Abe Lincoln in Illinois (excerpt) 
    Arsenic and Old Lace (1944) scene with Peter Lorre     
    Arsenic and Old Lace ~"He Looks Like Boris Karloff!"         
     
     
     
photographer unknown
     
     
     
     
     
Styrous® ~ Sunday, August 30, 2020