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Screening:
Friday,
April 28, 2:15 PM, Charles 4
Director:
Stuart Cooper
Country, Year, Length, Format: U.S., 1958, 117 min.,
35mm
Presented by: Joyce Scott
Print Source: Criterion Pictures, 8238-40 Lehigh, Morton
Grove, IL, 60053, ph: 847.470.8164, fax: 847.470.8194
Synopsis:
This 1958 movie is adapted from two William Faulkner short stories
and a novel. It is a classic, stereotyped view of a pre-Civil Rights
small southern town. It tells the gothic tale of a handyman (Paul
Newman) taking on a domineering small-town patriarch (Orson Welles)
in order to win the hand of his daughter (Joanne Woodward). Directed
by blacklisted director Martin Ritt, it was shot on location in
Clinton, Louisiana. This is the first movie Newman and Woodward
made together. Paul Newman won the Best Actor Award at Cannes in
1958 . The film also featured a collection of other wonderful actors,
most notably Lee Remnick, and Angela Lansbury. -Jed Dietz
Tidbit:
" I admire his manners and I admire the speeches he makes and I
admire the big house he lives in. But if you're saving it all for
him honey, you've got your account in the wrong bank!"
Bio:
Artist Joyce Scott is a Baltimore native, whose work is currently
showing through May 21 at the highly praised joint Maryland Institute
College of Art/Baltimore Museum of Art solo exhibit entitled Kickin'
it With the Old Masters. She has been featured in over 60 solo
or joint exhibitions, and her work is in the collections of such
prestigious institutions as the Detroit Museum of Art, the Montreal
Museum of Art, The Philadelphia Museum, The National Museum of American
Art, and The Smithsonian. She has received numerous national grants
and works in storytelling and music, as well as visual art. Scott
is a descendant of African-Americans, Native Americans, and Scots,
and she is interested in stereotyping.
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