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From Print to Screen: PSYCHO

Posted by Lindsay Edmunds on April 15, 2013
Posted in: Books, Film, History, Hitchcock, Movies. Tagged: Alfred Hitchcock, Bernard Herrmann, Print to Screen, Psycho, Robert Bloch, Saul Bass, shower scene. 4 Comments

print_to_screen_psychoHERE IS SOMETHING you don’t know about Norman Bates if you have seen the movie but not read the book:

  • Along with his collection of pornography, he owns copies of A New Model of the Universe, The Extension of Consciousness, and Dimension and Being.

Something you don’t know about Sam Loomis, Marion’s boyfriend:

  • In the back room of his hardware store, he keeps a tiny FM radio to listen to classical music. (“But there was no one in Fairvale who would recognize either the music itself or the miracle of its coming.”)

Something you don’t know about Marion Crane (Mary Crane in the book):

  • Lowery, the man from who she stole the $40,000, once tossed a hundred dollar bill on her desk and suggested she take a little trip with him to Dallas (“three days’ rental privileges of the body of Mary Crane”). She did not do it.

The Book (1959)

Poor Robert Bloch. His agent sold the movie rights to PSYCHO for $9000. After the publisher, the agent, and the IRS took their share, Bloch got about $5000. For comparison, Bernard Herrmann was paid $34,501 to score the movie; Saul Bass, $3000 to design the title sequence.

It was a blind bid. Bloch and his agent did not know until too late that the buyer was Alfred Hitchcock.

Bloch writes in a monotone: everyone sounds like everyone else. (The exception is Norman Bates, for whom Bloch writes long interior monologues.) But the novel enjoyed good sales and good reviews, and won a major prize in 1960 from the Mystery Writers of America. It has slipped down in status to cheap pulp, a status it doesn’t quite deserve.

Its theme is the unknowability of another human being. This is Sam speculating about Marion:

Once you admitted to yourself that you didn’t really know how another person’s mind operated, then you came up against the ultimate admission—anything was possible.

The Movie (1960)

The movie and the book have the same plot. Even that peculiar coda in the mental institution came from the book, although in the book Sam talks about a conversation he had with the psychiatrist, and in the movie, the psychiatrist speaks for himself. Both book and movie have the same last line: “Why, she wouldn’t even harm a fly.”

However, Hitchcock and screenwriter Joseph Stefano made two big changes relating to the characters:

  1. They made Norman Bates young and handsome rather than middle-aged and fat.
  2. They turned up the heat under the relationship between Marion and Sam. That opening scene with them in the hotel room is not in the book—one of few places where the movie veers away.

That Shower Scene

The shower scene is not a Hitchcock invention. Marion’s death comes at the same early, disorienting point in both book and movie—and in more or less the same way.

A difference: in the book, Norman cuts off Marion’s head. As we all know, Hitchcock didn’t play it that way.

Another difference: Hitchcock waited, proportionately, almost twice as long as Bloch did to kill her off. In the 175-page paperback copy, the murder occurs on page 41. In the 109-minute movie, the murder occurs 47 minutes in.

Genius vs Talent

Hitchcock was the major talent; Bloch, the minor. That is why PSYCHO the movie made history, and PSYCHO the novel  is remembered today mainly because the movie did make history.

The scene where Marion sells her car shows the difference between Hitchcock and Bloch.

In the movie this scene is tense. When Marion’s frightened, defensive behavior makes a highway trooper suspicious and he follows her to the used car lot, his presence symbolizes her guilty conscience. It is at that point that she starts to regret stealing the money. This scene sets up the later one at the motel when she decides to abandon her plan and go back to Phoenix.

Bloch handles this scene dismissively, in a single paragraph. Marion does not appear nervous or frightened. No trooper follows her. There is no emotional payoff. As if bored by the whole thing, Bloch has her trade her car not once, but three times in that single paragraph.

I wonder what Hitchcock saw in the novel.  In his book Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho, Stephen Rebello offers various explanations. Hitchcock owed Universal a picture and thought PSYCHO would get the commitment out of the way quickly and cheaply. Hitchcock had competitors who were making scary, successful movies on small budgets and he wanted to show them he could, too.

Rebello speculates that “the fifty-nine-year old suspense maestro felt bullied by his brilliant present and past.”

Lindsay Edmunds blogs about robots, writing, life in southwestern Pennsylvania, and sometimes books and movies at Writer’s Rest. She is the author of a novel about love in the age of artificial intelligence: Cel & Anna.

(photo: bfi.org)

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I Don’t Need No Stinkin’ Algorithms — Home Projectionists Do a Better Job

Posted by Gloria on April 8, 2013
Posted in: Film, Film Community, Movies, Reviews. Tagged: Dark Shadows, Facebook, film, film recommendations, Home Projectionist, Joan Bennett, MADAM SATAN, Netflix, Susan Hayward. Leave a comment

what_drawing_2

For its recommendation algorithms, Netflix uses something called “pragmatic chaos.”

“I kid you not,” John wrote. “I had rented a Godzilla movie and I got, ‘Since you liked GODZILLA VS. MOTHRA, you might also like YENTL.'”

David countered: “Since you liked I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE, you might also like GIGI.”

Algorithms may be emerging as a powerful force in our world, but they sure aren’t as clever or as funny as Home Projectionists…and they can’t expand your movie horizons like our community of Home Projectionists on Facebook.

(We define Home Projectionists, by the way, as film fans always on the search for great things to watch … and who love the opportunity to be program directors in their own homes.)

We started the What Are You Watching? group on Facebook during last year’s winter holidays while we took a sabbatical from the Home Projectionist blog. The group now has more than 100 participants, all savvy and smart cinephiles who share, discuss, joke, and connect — and most importantly, make compelling recommendations for movies to add to your list.

Hundreds of films have already been talked about — from current popular releases like THE SESSIONS (2012) to the obscure, like the early Technicolor THE TRAIL OF LONESOME PINE (1936). As a result of the Home Projectionist group, my must-see list is on super-growth hormones, like some crazy beanstalk I will never be able to conquer. It’s a better kind of “pragmatic chaos” than the algorithms provide.

wikipedia.com

wikipedia.com

In addition to the direct recommendations and reviews, What Are You Watching? conversations go into all kinds of movie territory.

John didn’t recommend THE YESTERDAY MACHINE (1963) but at least we all know the movie includes “the world’s longest monologue by a mad Nazi scientist about how time travel works.”

While her family was sleeping, Gwen seemed to tell us quietly that she “was watching NOTORIOUS (1946) for the bizillionth time…I think it’s the most romantic movie ever created.” Jay agreed with her, “Not even a bizillion viewings can weary the charms and virtues of his artful masterpiece.”

Kelli, Andy, and Steve recently had a discussion about THE YOUNG GIRLS OF ROCHEFORT (1967) and the power of watching big movies on the big screen, and when you can’t, they agreed, sharing them with a group of friends is the next best thing.

wikipedia

wikipedia

Eric reported that he had watched DINAH EAST (1970) and spotted Tara from GONE WITH THE WIND in a backlot scene.

Aaron told us about the fabulous terribles he picked up in a $5 bin.

There was a multi-day dialogue about everyone’s favorite Susan Hayward movies. And we discovered that Dark Shadows super fan Harold put together a tribute to Joan Bennett.

Joseph cited one of his favorite lines from CROSSFIRE (1947): “Tonight was a long time ago.”

To make me laugh when I’m feeling a bit down in the dumps, I recall the day Daniel deadpanned, “Electricity is kind of a big deal,” when commenting on the famous dance from DeMille’s MADAM SATAN (1930).

I don’t think there could be a better crew of film fans. The Home Projectionist What Are You Watching? Facebook group is open for your viewing pleasure and participation. Go to http://www.facebook.com/groups/homeprojectionist and join in today.

Gloria Bowman is a writer, storyteller, blogger, movie lover, freelance editor,
and author of the novel, Human Slices.
Access her blog at www.gloriabowman.com; on Twitter @GloriaBow

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Posted by Gloria on April 1, 2013
Posted in: Movies. Leave a comment

April movie birthdays from movieLuv are here.

Dave's avatarmovieLuv

These actors, actresses, directors, producers and composers have birthdays in April. How many do you recognize? Answers appear below the calendar.

calendar_2013apr

1) Debbie Reynolds; 2) Alec Guinness; 3) Marlon Brando; 4) Elmer Bernstein; 5) Gregory Peck; 6) Barry Levinson; 7) Francis Ford Coppola; 8) Mary Pickford; 9) Paul Robeson; 10) Max Von Sydow; 11) Paul Douglas; 12) Ann Miller; 13) Stanley Donen; 14) Julie Christie; 15) Michael Kamen; 16) Charlie Chaplin; 17) William Holden; 18) Miklos Rosza; 19) Jayne Mansfield; 20) Harold Lloyd; 21) Anthony Quinn; 22) Jack Nicholson; 23) Frank Borzage; 24) Barbra Streisand; 25) Al Pacino; 26) Douglas Sirk; 27) Jack Klugman; 28) Lionel Barrymore; 29) Celeste Holm; 30) Eve Arden

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It’s Joan’s Birthday

Posted by Gloria on March 23, 2013
Posted in: Birthdays, Film, History, Movies. Tagged: Birthday, Female on the Beach, film, Joan Crawford, movies. Leave a comment
Joan Crawford 1959

Joan Crawford 1959 (Photo credit: RockyandNelson)

Joan Crawford is a part of our lives.

Born on March 23, 1904, in San Antonio, she left us with a legacy of movies and a larger than life legend.

One of my favorite viewing parties ever included  QUEEN BEE (1955) and STRAIT-JACKET (1964). We sat around on a hot summer day wearing improbable wigs, drinking beer, and staring at the screen. When Joan is on, you can’t look away.

Not long ago, we revisited FEMALE ON THE BEACH (1955). I had forgotten that Joan’s legs co-starred as much as hunky Jeff Chandler. Oh, yes, and this movie has some of the best snarky dialogue ever. Someone in the room proposed a drinking game: a sip of your libation of choice every time there was a gasp-worthy line. We had to stop just minutes into the movie because we couldn’t drink that fast.

Lines like —

“You’re about as friendly as a suction pump. ”

“I’d like to ask you to stay and have a drink, but I’m afraid you might.”

And the classic: “I wouldn’t have you if you were hung with diamonds, upside down!”

I’m sending Joan a BIG birthday wish through the cosmos and thanking her for her talent, her audacity, the memories, beauty, and pleasure she’s given to us all. She was a force, a one in a billion force.

Let the birthday watching begin: IMDb’s list of Joan’s films

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Home Projectionist Theaters: Amazing Outdoor Options

Posted by Gloria on February 8, 2013
Posted in: Film, Home Theater News, interiors. Tagged: Home cinema, Home Projection, home theater, outdoor movies. Leave a comment
Glauconcodrus.com

Glauconcodrus.com

Here’s a little Home Projectionist pick-me-up if you live where it’s dark and cold and daily life can be a struggle against the elements.

Imagine yourself at a lovely pool, in a floating chair, your drink of choice in the cup holder, and one of your favorite movies projected on a gigantic screen. Can’t get much better than that.

(Note that inflatable outdoor screens are getting more and more affordable — and accessible and affordable to rent as well if you don’t have the space or inclination for permanent installation.)

Need a break from the ice and snow? Savor the 10 Most Amazing Outdoor Home Theaters at www.glauconcodrus.wordpress.com/2010/12/24/10-most-amazing-outdoor-home-theaters/

Thanks to Bruce Bieber of Wines of Washington Promotion  for bringing this to our attention!

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The Joy of THE APARTMENT for New Year’s Eve

Posted by Gloria on December 31, 2012
Posted in: Film, Movies, Reviews. Tagged: Apartment, Billy Wilder, film, Fred MacMurray, Holidays, Jack Lemmon, movies, New Year, New Years Eve, new york city, reviews, Shirley MacLaine. 4 Comments

Apartment_60One the loveliest and most memorable New Year’s Eve scenes in the movies comes in the closing minutes of THE APARTMENT (1960). Shirley MacLaine abandons her disappointing lover at a party and runs, with her head held high, down a New York City street and up the stairs to Jack Lemmon’s apartment. Her face is so bright with clarity, determination, and anticipation that you can’t help but feel the absolute joy in her heart. The soaring score doesn’t hurt the level of emotion either.

While assorted and varied lists of the “Best New Year’s Movies” include contenders like STRANGE DAYS (1995), THE GOLD RUSH (1925) and, of course, the incredible THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE (1972), THE APARTMENT still tops my list as the perfect film for ending one year and welcoming in a new. Not only is it a love story, but it’s also a story of reclamation, a tale of letting go of the bad to let in the good, an affirmation that every day brings an opportunity for you to choose how you want to live your life.

This film, which won Best Picture and Best Director for Billy Wilder in 1960, plus Oscar nominations for the cast, is a pure and eternal classic in all senses of the word. Its brilliant script is insightful and honest, the performances are perfect, it’s rewatchable and timeless, there’s an enduring emotional impact, and it’s perfectly engaging to look at — all those things that make great movies great.

Although it’s billed as a comedy and full of great lines and humor, THE APARTMENT is far from a screwball circus. Between the laughs, the film highlights the darker side of office life, rife with seduction, inappropriate behavior, and the daily drama of moral hazards.

MacLaine’s character is vulnerable Fran Kubelik, an office building elevator operator who is having an affair with Mr. Sheldrake, the head of human resources, played with impeccable smarminess by Fred MacMurray. He is a married man, powerful, certainly not well intentioned, and operating without any fear of consequences for toying with Miss Kubelik’s affections. Jack Lemmon, in one of his finest performances, takes on the role of C.C. Baxter, a young, ambitious employee at the firm who is not averse to letting his corporate higher ups use his bachelor pad for their sexual liaisons…in return for a key to the executive washroom.

Nothing good come of it. The script even goes so far as to include a suicide attempt.

These protagonists, Miss Kubelik and Mr. Baxter, have somehow found themselves in compromised positions. They are two people diminished, as it were, by what others want and expect from them. They have struck grand bargains, rationalizing that what they’re doing is in their best interests. Unfortunately, with their amoral decisions, both have lost the core of who they really are.

All is not lost, however. Happily, they both regain “consciousness” in time to recapture their own identities and, in turn, find each other, learning life can beat you up, but it also offers opportunities for changing course and finding what you really want and need.

Could there be a better uplifting message for celebrating new beginnings and ringing in a new year?

If you’re staying in and still don’t have a movie selection for this New Year’s Eve , TCM is airing THE APARTMENT tonight.

Wishing each and everyone the best of luck and love in this 13th year of the millennium!

SPECIAL NOTE: Home Projectionist is taking a brief hiatus as the New Year begins. We’ll be back soon.

Gloria Bowman is a writer, storyteller, blogger, movie lover, freelance editor,
and author of the novel, Human Slices.
Access her blog at www.gloriabowman.com; on Twitter @GloriaBow

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Reel History: December 31, 1738

Posted by Dave on December 31, 2012
Posted in: History, Movies. Tagged: 2000, Reel History. Leave a comment

ON THIS DAY in 1738, British Army General Charles Cornwallis was born. The events leading up to Cornwallis’ surrender (ending the War of Independence) were depicted in the 2000 film, THE PATRIOT, with Tom Wilkinson.

watchit

Reel History continues in 2013 at movieLuv.

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Reel History: December 30, 1948

Posted by Dave on December 30, 2012
Posted in: History, Movies. Tagged: 1948, 1953, Ann Miller, Cole Porter, Reel History. Leave a comment

ON THIS DAY in 1948, Cole Porter’s Kiss Me Kate opened on Broadway. Porter’s musical was adapted for the screen in 1953 as KISS ME KATE, starring Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel and Ann Miller.

watchit

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Reel History: December 29, 1808

Posted by Dave on December 29, 2012
Posted in: History, Movies. Tagged: 2005, film, movies, Reel History. Leave a comment

ON THIS DAY in 1808, the 17th President of the United States, Andrew Johnson, was born in Raleigh, North Carolina. Johnson’s Presidency was documented in the 2005 History Channel documentary series, THE PRESIDENTS.

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The End: “Shut up and deal”

Posted by Dave on December 28, 2012
Posted in: Film, Movies. 2 Comments

As 2012 comes to a close, I thought an apropos subject would be some of my favorite film endings. So here they are, below.

Personal note: I’m going on hiatus from Home Projectionist–perhaps for a little while, perhaps much longer. I want to express my thanks and appreciation to anyone who ever looked at any of the scribbles I wrote for this blog and, especially, to my fellow contributors here, especially Lindsay Edmunds and–in particular–Gloria Bowman, who got this blog off the ground and was very supportive. I may turn up elsewhere… as Jimmy Stewart said to Kim Novak in VERTIGO: “Perhaps we’ll meet again.” Happy New Year.  –Dave

TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT (1944; Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall)

.

VERTIGO (1958; James Stewart, Kim Novak)

.

THE APARTMENT (1960; Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine)

.

CASUALTIES OF WAR (1989; Michael J. Fox, Sean Penn)

.

THE THIRD MAN (1949; Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten)

.

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

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Reel History: December 28, 1856

Posted by Dave on December 28, 2012
Posted in: History, Movies. Tagged: 1944, film, movies, Reel History, Woodrow Wilson. Leave a comment

ON THIS DAY in 1856, 28th President of the United States Woodrow Wilson was born in Staunton, Virginia. Wilson’s Presidency was depicted in the 1944 biographical film, WILSON, starring Alexander Knox.

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The Glitch That Stole Christmas

Posted by Gloria on December 27, 2012
Posted in: Film, Home Theater News, Movies, Netflix Streaming, Online Streaming. Tagged: entertaining, Home Projection, movies, Netflix Streaming, Streaming media, Web Service. 6 Comments

ring-marriagesavingI am wondering about all of the families and friends who settled in Christmas Eve to sit back, relax, and share a holiday movie but nothing was available for streaming. I hope they at least had cable.

In case you haven’t heard, a big chunk of providers, including Netflix, relies on the servers of Amazon’s Web Service, better known as AWS, and that service happened to have a meltdown on Christmas Eve.

According to the Wall Street Journal article, Amazon’s Snafu Rattles Customers, “Millions of Netflix customers from Canada to Brazil were unable to stream video on Christmas Eve after technical issues in Amazon’s servers in Northern Virginia felled service from Dec. 24 through the following morning.” No explanation has yet been provided.

The plot thickens too. During the meltdown, the social networks were “abuzz with speculation about why Amazon’s competing Prime streaming movie service was still functioning.”

So, Amazon has some ‘splainin’ to do and some technology to tend to. In the meantime, I am using this opportunity create a kind of cautionary tale. Hence, the photo of the ring.

I have had this little piece of costume jewelry since high school, when I worked at an appliance store. One of my jobs there was to take service calls. One night, a woman called in an absolute panic. “Help me,” she said, “please help me.”

“Yes, ma’am, what can we do for you?” I asked.

“I just realized my television is out, and my husband will be home soon, and I’m just terrified.”

“Terrified?” I asked her. I had heard of husbands going ballistic over things but of a television not working? Being “terrified” seemed a bit of an overstatement.

“Not terrified of him,” she said. “I’m terrified that we’ll discover we don’t have anything to talk about.  We always have the tv on. Is there someone who can come over now? Right now? Please?”

Coming from a family of non-stop talkers, I didn’t appreciate that urgent gravity of her situation, but I could sense in her voice that she was indeed terrified.

“Here’s the thing,” I told her. “We do have a technician available for a house call tonight.”

“I’ll pay anything…anything!” she promised.

“Well, before I set something up, I have to ask you to do something for me,” I told her, feeling as if I needed to use a quiet and calm therapist voice. “You have to check the plug.”

“The plug?” she asked, sounding annoyed.

“Yes. The plug.” I hadn’t worked at the appliance store for long, but we did have a protocol. “Before we can arrange any service call, I have to ask customers to check the plug. Ninety percent of the time, it turns out that the only problem is that the plug is pulled out.” There was silence on the other end of the line. “Really. It’s true,” I said. “Do me a favor and go see. I’ll hold.”

After just a few moments, the woman came back ont the line. “God bless you,” she said. “That’s all it was. The plug was pulled out, just a little. It must have happened today when I was cleaning. God bless you. God bless you.”

I was glad to have helped. I shared the story with my co-workers. They all laughed. “Dummy,” said the television repairman working in the backroom.

That next morning, which was a Saturday, a woman came into the store. She was young, blonde, and perky. She came right up to the service counter where I sat. “Are you the girl who helped me last night? Who told me to plug in my tv set?”

I nodded. Yes, I was that girl, one and the same.

“Well, God bless you. Thank you for saving my marriage.” She held out her hand and showed me a ring with a shining purple stone. “I make jewelry,” she said, “and I want to give you this as a token of my undying appreciation. You really saved my marriage.” She pressed the ring in my palm, gave my hand a hard squeeze, and walked out the door.

I don’t know why I’ve kept that ring all these years, but when I come across it in a drawer full of old costume jewelry, I always remember that bride and her sheer panic. I hope that she and her husband learned how to have a conversation.

When I read of the streaming outage on Christmas Eve, I wondered if there were any families or friends or couples out there who were thrown into a sudden panic that they didn’t have the streaming service they were expecting.

The cautionary tale here is that it’s important to have a backup plan…like an emergency stash of DVDs to help you ride out future glitches with streaming technology. And just in case, remember to check the plug.

Gloria Bowman is a writer, storyteller, blogger, movie lover, freelance editor,
and author of the novel, Human Slices.
Access her blog at www.gloriabowman.com; on Twitter @GloriaBow

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Reel History: December 27, 1822

Posted by Dave on December 27, 2012
Posted in: Film, History, Movies. Tagged: 1936, film, Louis Pasteur, movies, Paul Muni, Reel History. Leave a comment

ON THIS DAY in 1822, chemist and microbiologist Louis Pasteur was born in France. His life was dramatized in the 1936 biographical film, THE STORY OF LOUIS PASTEUR, starring Paul Muni.

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Reel History: December 26, 1898

Posted by Dave on December 26, 2012
Posted in: History, Movies. Tagged: 1898, 1943, Greer Garson, Mervyn LeRoy, movies, Reel History. Leave a comment

ON THIS DAY in 1898, chemists Marie and Pierre Curie announced their discovery of radium. This event was depicted in the 1943 Mervyn LeRoy film, MADAME CURIE, with Greer Garson and Walter Pidgeon.

watchit

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10 Things: Humphrey Bogart

Posted by Dave on December 25, 2012
Posted in: Film. Tagged: 10 things, film, Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall. Leave a comment

10_bogart

  1. Born: December 25, 1899, in New York City
  2. Expelled from: Yale
  3. Served: in the U.S. Navy
  4. Stage debut: as a Japanese butler in the play, Drifting
  5. First film role: in the two-reel DANCING LADY, with Helen Hayes
  6. Founding member: of the “Rat Pack”, along with Frank Sinatra and others
  7. Organized: the Committee for the First Amendment, in opposition to the House Un-American Activities Committee
  8. Fun fact: appeared as a baby in an ad for Mellins Baby Food, illustrated by his mother
  9. Academy Award: Best Actor for THE AFRICAN QUEEN
  10. On his sailing yacht, the Santana: “An actor needs something to stabilize his personality, something to nail down what he really is, not what he is currently pretending to be.”

Bogart and Lauren Bacall in TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT (1944):

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A bucket list blog: exploring happiness, growth, and the world.

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