First up is an unexpected name. Miss Bibi Andersson. The Swedish Anderson made a mark with Ingmar Bergman in his 1966 film Persona, opposite Liv Ullmann. She also appeared in a number of American movies such as Duel at Diablo (1966) with James Garner and Sidney Poitier, Enemy of the People (1977) with Steve McQueen and Quintet (1979) with Paul Newman. There was also I Never Promised You a Rose Garden in 1977 with Kathleen Quinlan.
She portrayed a prostitute hired to ease the mind (and body!) of burly George Kennedy during a Paris layover (no pun intended!) The widowed Kennedy has been "grounded" as far as sex is concerned since the death of his wife and his co-pilot Alain Delon has arranged this special treat.
The couple's fireside lovemaking was apparently deemed worthy for use in promotion of the film albeit primarily in Europe where Ms. Andersson's name and presence meant more in terms of marquee value. (And the movie was renamed with an "'80" by the time it limped into theaters there...)
Ms. Andersson died on April 14th, 2019 from the complications of a stroke at age eighty-three. She had been retired from the screen since 2010. Married three times, she was the mother of one daughter.
Next up is Mr. René Auberjonois. Despite his fanciful French name, Auberjonois was born in New York City to a Swiss father (a successful writer) and mother who was descended from Napoleon Bonaparte (and was of Russian royalty as well!) He did, as a youth, live in London and Paris, lending him a European background. After successful performances on Broadway, he segued to movies, including MASH (1970), King Kong (1976), The Eyes of Laura Mars (1978) and many, many others. In more recent years, he established a cult following for his portrayal of Odo on Deep Space Nine.
Auberjonois gained entry into the Disaster Movie Club with 1975's The Hindenburg. He played a con man on board the famed airship with his partner Burgess Meredith. (Auberjoinois had earlier worked at the South Mountain Road artist's colony - later to be named Elmwood Playhouse - with Meredith as well as John Huston and Lotte Lenya.)
He is seated in the smoking lounge of the Hindenburg next to Anne Bancroft who lights up a pipe with marijuana in it, prompting a typically wide-eyed expression from the busy character actor.
During an onboard bit of entertainment, we see him (at far right) along with most of the rest of the cast, reacting to a shocking moment in the performance.
At the climax of the movie, the screen goes black & white in order for director Robert Wise to intersperse actual footage of the fiery conflagration. The deliberately grainy new footage shows Auberjonois (with Bancroft) amid the flaming girders during the crash. Mr. Auberjonois died December 8th, 2019 of lung cancer at age seventy-nine. He'd been wed since 1963 and was the father of two.
Auberjonois gets extra credit for having costarred in The Big Bus (1976), an elaborate spoof of the disaster genre. He's seen here with Ruth Gordon.
Yet another unexpected name for inclusion here is that of Miss Valentina Cortese. An Italian actress who'd begun making films in 1941, she scored a success with Les Miserables (1948), portraying both Fantine and Cosette opposite Marcello Mastroianni. Later, she made American films such as Malaya (1949) with Spencer Tracy and James Stewart, The House on Telegraph Hill (1951) with Richard Basehart, who she promptly married, The Barefoot Contessa (1954) with Humphrey Bogart and Ava Gardner as well as international epics like Barabbas (1961) with Anthony Quinn.One of her most famous roles came with 1973's Day for Night under the direction of François Truffaut, which garnered her an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actress. When she lost the award to Ingrid Bergman in Murder on the Orient Express, even Bergman expressed the feeling that the statuette ought to have gone to Cortese. Cortese had THE most expressive eyes and face.
She joined the disaster flick community when she took part in the excru- ciatingly bad When Time Ran Out... (1980.) She and Burgess Meredith played a devoted couple, in retirement after years of having been a successful high wire act. They are vacationing at a luxurious island resort.
When things get rough at the resort (a supposedly safe volcano starts trembling and eventually erupting, forcing the vacationers to evacuate their hotel and hot-foot it across treacherous tropical terrain), Cortese begins to lose some of her European elegance. I always wondered why she so often favored those close-fitting scarves on her head. Then I saw her hair here! At least we could be distracted by Edward Albert's chiseled buns...
Ms. Cortese had a child with Basehart, but they divorced in 1960. She never remarried and retired from the screen in 1993. She passed away at age ninety-six on July 10th, 2019 and was considered a national treasure in her home country.
In a recent post full of leftover pictures, we bemoaned the loss of one Robert Forster, so handsome in his screen debut Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967.) After this strong debut, he won further acclaim in The Stalking Moon (1968) with Gregory Peck and Medium Cool (1969), in which he starred. After two short-lived, early-1970s TV series of his own, Banyon and Nakia, he found it difficult to reestablished a big screen career.
1973's The Don is Dead was unsuccessful in the face of The Godfather (1972.) He won the lead in the low-budget thriller Stunts (1977) only because Don Stroud was injured in a motorcycle accident just prior to shooting. Thus, he was only too happy to work in his next film, the one that placed him in the disaster genre...
Producer Roger Corman's entry into the realm was Avalanche (1978), the most expensive film to date of his New World Pictures. Starring Rock Hudson and Mia Farrow, Forster was third-billed as an environmentally conscious associate of Hudson's whose warnings of an avalanche at Hudson's expensive ski lodge go unheeded.
The fast-paced, but empty-headed, film was a flop. Part of Forster's contribution was firing shells into the side of a mountain to try to shear off some of the snow as well as taking Hudson's ex-wife Farrow to bed in order to fire off some projectiles of his own. LOL (This happened off-screen, though Forster was never shy about showing off his body.)
He was still good-looking throughout, but any semblance of actual drama was rendered impossible by the atrocious supporting performances, the Styrofoam and shredded tissue paper snow and the often-tacky direction by former actor Corey Allen.
Forster had a late-career comeback when he appeared in Jackie Brown (1997) and collected an Oscar nomination in the process as Best Supporting Actor. The statuette went to Robin Williams for Good Will Hunting, but the career momentum for Forster continued. He later was aptly cast as George Clooney's father in The Descendants (2011.) Forster was still working steadily when brain cancer claimed him on October 11th, 2019 at age seventy-eight. He will have two movies released in 2020! Married three times, he had three children with his second wife.
Our final member of the Disaster Movie Club to have been lost in 2019 was featured in our very last post on the hooty telefilm Cage Without a Key (1975.) Miss Katherine Helmond worked heavily on stage, including Broadway, before moving into films in 1971 (including The Hospital.) In 1975, she portrayed one of the endangered travelers on board The Hindenburg, sharing the screen with the aforementioned René Auberjonois.
She played the wife of Alan Oppenheimer and the mother of three children who are leaving Germany with the hope of eventually getting Oppenheimer's Jewish grandmother out as well as soon as possible.
When the calamity hits, Helmond is hysterical to the point where Oppen- heimer has to slap her across the face to snap her out of it. She is then hurled through a window in order to save her from the surrounding flames. Helmond's face is listed at the end of the movie along with many others in the cast (and at least she got a slightly better spot than the dog!)
The fates of these people are announced at the finale of The Hindenburg. |
The late Ms. Helmond and her husband of many years, David Christian. |
Only Mr. Jones at far right is shown in his disaster role. |
BONUS PICS!
This French lobby card shows a laborious scene trimmed from the edited down rendition of the movie When Time Ran Out... |
Cortese costarred with one-time Mr. Shelley Winters, Vittorio Gassman. |
If one is going to go through something horrible (in this case escaping from a concentration camp!), it is advisable to do so with someone like Gassman, if at all possible...! |
Mr. Forster was a handsome devil in his youth and in his old age. |
Katherine "The Cougar" Helmond seemed to have hit the jackpot in her second go at married life! |
She and David appeared to enjoy a lot of fun times together and were quite devoted. |
I love that they felt free enough to pose for frolicsome photos such as these (in the wondrous 1970s!) |
Happy New Year, Poseidon! Wishing you a year of happiness, good health, prosperity, and many entertaining blog posts. You are certainly off to a great start!
ReplyDeleteKnowing your love of disaster movies, I guess you are familiar with Seth Rudetsky's Disaster! The Musical (with the obligatory exclamation mark, of course)? I had the pleasure of appearing in a production this past summer and Seth came down to check it out. He alluded to the fact that a film version will be happening at some point - we'll see how that goes - but if it does, I see a posting of that in your future!
Love the extra pics of Ms. Helmond and her young stud of a husband - especially the last pic where he appears to have ditched the Speedo altogether! Who cropped that photo, darn it! lol...
Thanks again...
I will always remember seeing "Hindenburg" in the theatre, and when they announced the fate of all those people, it was complete silence, but when they showed the dog and announced that he survived, the entire audience went wild with applause and cheers and I got teary-eyed that the dog made it.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to nominate as an honorary member of the club Werner Doehner, who died November 8. He was the last survivor of the Hindenburg disaster.
ReplyDeleteI first saw Mr Forster in 'Jackie Brown' a favorite movie of mine, and was just gobsmacked. Whatever 'it' is, he had it. If anything, he got better looking with age.
In that hysterical 'Avalancha' poster, poor Rock looks like he's not enjoying his first zip-line experience.
jobj69, I agree about the photo-cropping! We need to find the original negative. LOL I'm almost afraid to mention "Disaster! The Musical" because three friends and I attended a production last year and what if it was yours....?!!! I felt things were off to a rough start within minutes and at intermission was downright hating the show. As Act II wore on, I was marking off the numbers and praying for each one to be over. After the show, I actively hated it (this production of it, at least) so much that I did something I never do. I left without acknowledging the cast, of which three were past costars of mine. There was no way I could fake it. I do hope yours was an entirely different production, for several reasons!
ReplyDeleteSkippy, it's hilarious that we can watch (in "The Hindenburg" or any other sort of suspense/action film) people dying by the score, but we lose our shit when something happens to the dog!! Ha ha! I think it's because often, out of malice or carelessness or stupidity, man often brings dangerous things upon himself, but the dog had nothing to do with that! It was just in the wrong place at the wrong time (or owned by the wrong person...)
Dan, that's interesting about Werner Doehner. Never heard of him! I have never seen "Jackie Brown" and two weekends ago a friend who was visiting from out of town told me how good it was, so I recently bought it. I look forward to seeing what all the fuss is about with not only Forster, but with Ms. Grier as well. And, yes, that poster is crazed, isn't it?!?! Thank you!
Happy New Year. There were a few surprises here. Bibi was lovely and oddly I Never Promised You a Rose Garden came up last week when someone had to remind me that he had, in fact, not promised me one.
ReplyDeleteI loved Rene Auberjonois in Laura Mars (my role model for an adult gay man with fashion friends) and have never seen Hindenburg but just might have to now. When he passed this year I was impressed with his Trekkie resume as I had only seen him in Faerie Tale theater and didn't know he'd done so much for so long (and was HETEROSEXUAL! that's why they call it acting I guess).
The surprise in this post was that I didn't know that Katherine Helmond had passed. I was such a huge fan of her daffiness and sexiness, I think for non actors there is an assumption that ditzy types are playing themselves, but she was obviously a smart cookie and had a hot hubby, good for her. Thank you for the bonus shots of my crush in his undies. I had a real Daddy lust moment watching him in Jackie Brown 20 years ago. Sidenote, you guys are blowing my mind with the Disaster musical stories. I had no idea that show toured, I saw it here off broadway and it seemed so specific. I guess that's showbiz.
Gingerguy, I love the Lynn Anderson song "Rose Garden," too! I have yet to see the movie, which I recall being marketed as very dark and troubling. When you see that it stars Bibi and Kathleen Quinlan along with Sylvia Sidney, Martine Bartlett, Signe Hasso, Susan Tyrell and Diane Varsi, it sounds more than tempting! (And has to be one of the few - of not only - Roger Corman movies to get an Oscar nom for Best Screenplay!) I, too, was startled to see that Auberjonois was straight! I loved his impersonation of Lloyd Bridges in "Laura Mars!" Perfect.
ReplyDeletePoseidon - thanks for the reply - and to all of the other posters - I always enjoy the opinions and reflections shared here!
ReplyDeleteI am so sorry to hear that you did not like Disaster! - granted, a show that is not going to be everyone's cup of tea, but with your love of these movies, I thought it might tickle your fancy. I also hope it was not our production that you witnessed and found less than entertaining (I think we might be in different parts of the country), though I will say that our production at a popular Baltimore summer theatre had an extremely talented cast and was very well received, if I do say so myself...lol - and Seth loved it! If you are interested, there is a version of the Broadway production on YouTube in a file which has a number of other copies of shows - all legal, of course! Until next time...
Robert Forster aged so well, I think, he's even better looking in Jackie Brown than in ROAGE. But then again, I have Daddy Issues too lol.
ReplyDeleteThe Hindenburg (how have you not seen this 70's Disaster flick?!?!?) is mildly entertaining, with a game cast, but is, er, hindered by being based on true events. It's not as much fun to see Movie Stars die when you know they are playing real life people who died horribly. It's missing the camp factor.
"Disaster! The Musical" sounds so much fun, but I don't think it has come to Los Angeles. I would love a movie. Ryan Murphy, this could be in your wheel house after doing "The Prom"!
jobj69, you're off the hook! LOL It was not in Baltimore. I tell you, people were shaking their heads and walking out of this one and I wouldn't have minded joining them, but I've only ever walked out of one show in my life. There's always hope that something decent will occur. These people had no sense at all of the time period, genre, style of singing and behaving. I once was asked to audition and basically be allowed to PLAY Reverend Scott in "Poseidon: The Upside Down Musical" but I declined because I didn't want to see a beloved movie of mine diminished. Then I went and saw it and loved it...! So, that one was on me. I would love to have played Scott in it in hindsight.
ReplyDeleteForever1267, I agree with you about "The Hindenburg." It does take away much of the camp factor when you realize this isn't an all-star kill off the celebrity type of movie. When I first saw it on VHS, I thought it was dull and dreary. But when I got my DVD of it, there was a widescreen majesty to it and an elegance that I appreciated. The makers actually tried to costume and coif the performers accurately. It has a really unusual cast (like who expects to see Joanna Moore?!) and many of them are fine actors like Richard Dysart, Charles Durning, et al. But I cannot get on board with Robert Clary. Never have been able to watch him with enjoyment. :-( The ship itself if very beautiful and the movie allows you to understand how it worked and where the people actually stayed inside it. I recommend it - on DVD or BluRay.
One last Hindenburg note - the highly detailed model used in the movie is displayed in the Air and Space Museum in Washington, along with some china and flatware from the real thing.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dan! That and the Titanic are endlessly fascinating. Not only for the staggering calamity, but the incredible elegance that was in place, too...!
ReplyDeleteI finally saw Poseidon's Adventure on the epiphany day ! It's great but little compared with your wonderful and enormous work in this faboulous site! I like so much all from the late sixties to all the seventies. Thank you so much for such an amount of precious material with always an eye for those male hunk ! Wish you All The Best . Emiliano from Italy
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! I'm glad you're enjoying your dip into Poseidon's Underworld! I appreciate you taking time to comment.
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