43 avsnitt

If the Golden era of Old Hollywood is your thing, our podcast is for you! If you want TYRONE POWER instead of TOM HARDY, JENNIFER JONES instead of JENNIFER LAWRENCE, or ROBERT MITCHUM rather than ROBERT PATTINSON, then FROM BENEATH THE HOLLYWOOD SIGN is the gin joint for you. Each week, writer and producer STEVE CUBINE and actress and writer NAN MCNAMARA explore, discuss, and dissect the magical, mysterious, amusing, and sometimes bizarre tales of Old Hollywood. So sit back and revisit a time when the pictures were still big and everyone was ready for their close-up.

From Beneath the Hollywood Sign Airwave Media

    • TV och film

If the Golden era of Old Hollywood is your thing, our podcast is for you! If you want TYRONE POWER instead of TOM HARDY, JENNIFER JONES instead of JENNIFER LAWRENCE, or ROBERT MITCHUM rather than ROBERT PATTINSON, then FROM BENEATH THE HOLLYWOOD SIGN is the gin joint for you. Each week, writer and producer STEVE CUBINE and actress and writer NAN MCNAMARA explore, discuss, and dissect the magical, mysterious, amusing, and sometimes bizarre tales of Old Hollywood. So sit back and revisit a time when the pictures were still big and everyone was ready for their close-up.

    "EVA MARIE SAINT" (042)

    "EVA MARIE SAINT" (042)

    From Beneath The Hollywood Sign is thrilled to welcome our newest sponsor, www.HappyMammoth.com. Use code BENEATH at checkout for 15% off of your entire first order!

    EPISODE 42 - “Eva Marie Saint: Star of the Month (July)” - 07/01/2024

    Blonde, beautiful, sophisticated, and chic, there was no one in Hollywood quite like EVA MARIE SAINT. This versatile, elegant actress had an incredible emotional range and left an indelible mark on the landscape of film. July 4th marks her 100th birthday of this national treasure and in this episode we take a look at her extraordinary career. Come hear about her incredible life and a career that spanned from live TV to Broadway to film and television where she was directed by all the greats — Hitchcock, Kazan, Preminger, Fred Zinnemann, John Frankenheimer, Paul Bogart — and held her own opposite Hollywood’s greatest leading men — Cary Grant, Marlon Brando, Gregory Peck, Paul Newman, Montgomery Clift, James Garner, Bob Hope, and Warren Beatty. 


    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    Eva Marie Saint: A Journey From Newark to Hollywood’s Iconic Heights (2024), by Alexander Harmony;

    Hitchcock’s Heroines (2018), by Caroline Young;

    Kazan: The Master Director Discusses His Films (1999), by Jeff Young;

    Hitch (1978), by John Russell Taylor;

    Destination Hitchcock: The Making of North by Northwest (2000), by Peter Fitzgerald;

    “As Eva Marie Saint Turns 97, Celebrating Her Seductive Turn in ‘North by Northwest’,” July 4, 2021, by Brent Lang, Variety;

    Robert Osborne interview(s) with Eva Marie Saint, www.TCM.com;

    “In Search of a Classic Saint Revisits Hitchcock Role,” September 10, 2000, by Gene Triplett,
    The Oklahoman;

    “Saint in Hollywood; Forthright Star Actress Illustrates Devotion to Work and Family,” May 10, 1964, New York Times;

    “All About Eva Marie,” February 22, 2011, Vanity Fair;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;

    Movies Mentioned: 

    On The Waterfront (1954), starring Marlon Brando, Eva Marie Saint, and Karl Malden;

    That Certain Feeling (1956), starring Bob Hope, Eva Marie Saint, and George Sanders;

    A Hatful of Rain (1957), starring Anthony Franciosa, Don Murray, and Eva Marie Saint;

    Raintree County (1957), starring Elizabeth Taylor, Montgomery Clift, Eva Maire Saint, and Rod Taylor;

    North By Northwest (1959), starring Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint;

    Exodus (1960), starring Paul Newman, Eva Marie Saint, and Sal Mineo;

    All Fall Down (1962), Warren Beatty, Eva Marie Saint, Karl Malden, Angela Lansbury, and Brandon deWilde; 

    The Sandpiper (1965), staring Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, and Eva Marie Saint;

    The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming (1966), starring Alan Arkin, Carl Reiner, and Eva Marie Saint;

    Grand Prix (1966), starring James Garner, Yves Montand, and Eva Marie Saint; 

    The Stalking Moon (1968), starring Gregory Peck, Eva Marie Saint, and Robert Forster;

    Cancel My Reservations (1972), starring Bob Hope, Eva Marie Saint, Forest Tucker, Ralph Bellamy, and Anne Archer;

    Splendor In the Grass (1981) (TV-movie), starring Melissa Gilbert, Cyril O’Reilly, Ned Beatty, Eva Marie Saint, and Michelle Pfeiffer;

    Nothing In Common (1986), starring Tom Hanks, Jackie Gleason, Eva Marie Saint, Bess Armstrong, and Sela Ward;

    I Dreamed Of Africa (2000), starring Kim Basinger, Daniel Craig, and Eva Marie Saint;

    Because of Winn Dixie (2005), starring Jeff Daniels, Cicely Tyson, and Eva Marie Saint;

    Don’t Come Knocking (2005), starring Sam Shepherd, Jessica Lange, and Eva Marie Saint;

    Superman Returns (2002), starring Brandon Routh, Kate Bosworth, Kevin Spacey, and Eva Marie Saint;

    Mariette in Ecstasy (2019), starring Geraldine O’Rawe, Eva Marie Saint, Mary McDonnell, and Rutger Hauser;

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 41 min
    “THE DEATH OF THE DREAM FACTORY” (041)

    “THE DEATH OF THE DREAM FACTORY” (041)

    From Beneath The Hollywood Sign is thrilled to welcome our newest sponsor, www.HappyMammoth.com. Use code BENEATH at checkout for 15% off of your entire first order!

    EPISODE 41 - “The Death of the Dream Factory” - 06/24/2024

    When the early movie studios began to pop up in Hollywood during the 1920s and 1930s, the major studio chiefs produced magnificent films and further advanced the art form of film, but they also created a system where they controlled the supply and demand flow and treated the artists who made the films like indentured servants. This is the story of how the servants rose up to end the traditional studio system. 

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    The Hollywood Studio System: A History (2019), by Douglas Gomery;

    Death of the Moguls: The End of Classical Hollywood (2012), by Wheeler Winston Dixon;

    “A Century in Exhibition: The 1960s: The End of the Hollywood Studio System,” August 12, 2020, by Vassiliki Malouchou, www.boxofficepro.com;

    “Why The US Supreme Court Broke Up The Hollywood Studio System,” February 3, 2023, www.WNYC.org;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;
    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 29 min
    "OLD HOLLYWOOD'S FORBIDDEN LOVE STORY: LON McCALLISTER & WILLIAM EYTHE" (#040)

    "OLD HOLLYWOOD'S FORBIDDEN LOVE STORY: LON McCALLISTER & WILLIAM EYTHE" (#040)

    From Beneath The Hollywood Sign is thrilled to welcome our newest sponsor, www.HappyMammoth.com. Use code BENEATH at checkout for 15% off of your entire first order!
    EPISODE 40 - “Old Hollywood's Forbidden Love Story/ Lon McCallister & William Eythe” - 06/17/2024
    As we celebrate gay pride month in June, Nan and Steve bring a special episode about 20th Century Fox contract players LON McCALLISTER and WILLIAM EYTHE. Both were handsome, talented, and on their way to becoming major film stars. But there was only one problem — the two young men had fallen in love and wanted to live their lives as a couple. This love was forbidden back then and went against the wishes of 20th Century Fox studio head DARRYL F. ZANUCK. Listen to this inspiring and heartbreaking story of their love story. 
    SHOW NOTES: 
    Sources:
    Behind the Scenes: How Gays and Lesbians Shaped Hollywood (2001), by William J. Mann;
    It Might As Well Be Spring (1987), by Margaret Whiting;
    “Terrific Trio,” May 1944, by Marcia Daughtrey, Modern Screen;
    “Keyhole Portrait: William Eythe,” June 4, 1944, by Harriet Parson, Los Angeles Examiner;
    “Bill Eythe’s Triumph Over Pain,” April 1, 1945, New York Times;
    “The Role I Liked Best…” September 2, 1950, by Lon McCallister, The Saturday Evening Post;
    “Film Actor Eythe Jailed on Writ of Former Wife,” September 4, 1950, Los Angeles Daily News;
    “Actor Suffered Hangover in Durance Vile,” June 3, 1952, Los Angeles Daily News;
    “William Eythe, Producer, Held as Drunk Driver,” June 4, 1952, Los Angeles Times;
    “Eythe, McCallister Prep ‘Joy Ride’ for Broadway,” March 12, 1956, Hollywood Reporter;
    “William Eythe Ill With Hepatitis, Condition Serious,” January 26, 1957, by Hedda Hopper, Los Angeles Times;
    “William Eythe Dies,” January 28, 1957, The Hollywood Reporter;
    Lon McCallister, 82, Actor Had Brief but Busy Career Before Becoming Investor,” June 18, 2005, by Mary Rourke, Los Angeles Times;
    “McCallister’s Heart Outshine His Stardom,” June 21, 2005, by Robert Osborne, Hollywood Reporter;
    “Mars Actor Had Meteoric Career,” February 4, 2007, by Sandy Marwick, Butler-Eagle Focus;
    IMDBPro.com;
    Wikipedia.com;

    Movies Mentioned: 
    The Other Woman (1942), starring Virginia Gilmore, Dan Duryea, and Lon McCallister;
    Stage Door Canteen (1943), starring Katharine Hepburn, Paul Muni, Merle Oberon, and Lon McCallister;
    The Ox-Bow Incident (1945), starring Henry Fonda, Dana Andrews, Henry Morgan, and Mary Beth Hughes;
    The Moon Is Down (1936), starring Cedric Hardwicke, Henry Travers, and Lee J. Cobb;
    The Song of Bernadette (1943), starring Jennifer Jones, Vincent Price, Charles Bickford, and William Eythe; 
    The Eve of St. Mark (1943), starring William Eythe and Anne Baxter;
    A Wing and a Prayer (1944), starring Don Ameche, Dana Andrews, and William Eythe;
    Wilson (1944), starring Alexander Knox, Geraldine Fitzgerald, and William Eythe;
    Home In Indiana (1944), starring Lon McCallister, Jeanne Crain, and June Haver;
    Winged Victory (1944), starring Lon McCallister, Edmond O’Brien, and Jeanne Crain;
    A Royal Scandal (1945), starring Tallulah Bankhead, Lon McCallister, and Anne Baxter;
    The House On 92nd Street (1945), starring Signe Hasso and William Eythe;
    Centennial Summer (1946), starring Jeanne Crain, Cornel Wilde, Linda Darnell, and William Eythe;
    The Red House (1947), starring Edward G. Robinson, Lon McCallister, and Judith Anderson;
    Thunder in the Valley (1947), starring Edmund Gwenn, Peggy Ann Garner, and Lon McCallister;
    Scud Hoo! Scudda Hay! (1948), starring Lon McCallister, Walter Brennan, and June Haver;
    Meet Me at Dawn (1947) starring William Eythe and Hazel Court;
    The Big Cat (1949), starring Lon McCallister and Peggy Ann Garner;
    The Story of Sea Biscuit (1949), starring Lon McCallister and Shirley Temple;
    The Boy From Indiana (1950), starring Lon McCallister and Lois Butler;


    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.

    • 33 min
    "FATHER KNOWS BEST: CLASSIC CINEMA'S BEST (AND WORST!) DADS" (039)

    "FATHER KNOWS BEST: CLASSIC CINEMA'S BEST (AND WORST!) DADS" (039)

    From Beneath The Hollywood Sign is thrilled to welcome our newest sponsor, www.HappyMammoth.com. Use code BENEATH at checkout for 15% off of your entire first order!

    EPISODE 39 - “Father Knows Best: Classic Cinema's Best (and Worst!) Dads” - 06/10/2024

    When you stop to think about the great fathers of classic cinema, Atticus Finch, the mild-mannered Southern lawyer in “To Kill A Mocking Bird” (1962), has to be at the top of the list. But who else would be on that list? And what about the horrible fathers of old Hollywood? As you scramble to find that last minute tie or cologne for dear old Dad for Father’s Day, make sure you check out this week’s episode where Steve and Nan celebrate some of old Hollywood’s most memorable fathers — the good and the bad. 

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    “20 Best and Worst Movie Fathers,” June 19, 2020, by David Fear, Rolling Stone.com

    “Noah Cross (John Huston) Character Analysis: Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know,” 
    schmoop.com

    Yahoo.com

    RogerEbert.com

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;

    Movies Mentioned: 

    How Green Was My Valley (1941), starring
    Walter Pidgeon, Maureen O’Hara, Donald Crisp, Patric Knowles, Anna Lee, Roddy McDowell, Sara Allgood, and Barry Fitzgerald;

    Bicycle Thieves (1948), starring Vittorio De Sica, Enzo Staiola, and Lianella Carell; 

    Splendor in the Grass (1961), starring Natalie Wood, Warren Beatty, Pat Hingle, Audrey Christie, Barbara Loden, Zorah Lampert, Sandy Dennis, and Phyllis Diller;

    The Heiress (1949), starring Olivia de Havilland, Montgomery Clift, Ralph Richardson, Miriam Hopkins, Vanessa Brown, and Mona Freeman;

    The Swiss Family Robinson (1960), starring John Mills, Dorothy McGuire, James MacArthur, Tommy Kirk, Kevin Corcoran, and Janet Munro;

    Shane (1953), starring Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Van Helfin, Brandon De Wilde, Jack Palance, Ben Johnson, Edgar Buchanan, Elisha Cook Jr, and Ellen Corby;

    Chinatown (1974), starring Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Huston, Perry Lopez, Diane Ladd, and John Hillerman;

    Rebel Without A Cause (1955), starring James Dean, Natalie Wood, Sal Mineo, Dennis Hopper, Jim Backus, Corey Allen, Ann Doran, Nick Adams, William Hopper, and Edward Platt;

    Our Vines Have Tender Grapes (1945), starring Edward G. Robinson, Margaret O’Brien, Agnes Moorhead, James Craig, Jackie “Butch” Jenkins, Frances Gifford, Morris Carnovsky, and Sara Haden;

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 41 min
    “RUTH ROMAN: STAR OF THE MONTH (JUNE)” (038)

    “RUTH ROMAN: STAR OF THE MONTH (JUNE)” (038)

    EPISODE 38 - “Ruth Roman: Star of the Month (June)” - 06/03/2024

    RUTH ROMAN was more than a pretty face; she was a survivor! She survived childhood poverty, the fickle nature of Hollywood, the wrath of Alfred Hitchcock, several marriages, and the sinking of the luxury liner Andrea Doria in 1956. Yes, Roman was a warrior. This week, Roman is our Star of the Month for June. Join us as we take a look at her life and her long and fruitful career, where her versatility kept her working for five decades in great films such as “Good Sam” (1948), “The Window” (1949), “Strangers On A Train” (1951), and “The Far Country” (1954).

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    Femme Noir: Bad Girls of Film (1998), by Karen Burroughs Hannsberry;

    Ruth Roman: A Career Portrait (2022), by Derek Sculthorpe;

    “Stardom Seen for Ruth Roman,” December 11, 1949, by Hedda Hopper, The Los Angeles Times; 

    “The Progress of a Rising Star: Ruth Roman,” May 1, 1950, Life Magazine;

    “Hollywood Hasn’t Changed Her,” May 17, 1950, by Lloyd L. Sloan, The Hollywood Citizen News;

    “Roman Holiday,” August 12, 1950, Look Magazine;

    Bachelor Girl Life Liked by Ruth Roman,” August 29, 1950, by Ruth Roman, The Los Angeles Evening Herald;

    “The Role I Liked Best,” November 4, 1950, by Ruth Roman, The Saturday Evening Post;

    “Ruth Roman Aiming at Film Personality,” November 26, 1950, by John L. Scott, The Los Angeles Times;

    “Film Star and Radio Executive Plan No Honeymoon,” December 18, 1950, by Louella Parsons, The LA Examiner;

    “Hollywood’s ROMAN Candle,” March 17, 1951, by Gladden Hill, Colliers Magazine;

    “6-Pound Boy Born To Ruth Roman,” November 13, 1952, The Hollywood Citizen News;

    “Matrimony, Motherhood Revive’s Ruth’s Career,” February 1, 1953, by Edwin Schallert, The Los Angeles Times; 

    “Ruth Roman Saves Her Son,3, and Loses Dress,” July 27, 1956, by Ruth Roman, The Hollywood Citizen News;

    “Weeping Ruth Roman Reunited With Her Son,” July 28, 1956, The LA Examiner;

    “Hall To Leave Ruth Roman for Diana Lynn,” October 9, 1956, by Louella Parsons, The LA Examiner;

    “Ruth Roman says ‘I Do’ in Panama,” November 9, 1956, The Los Angeles Times; 

    “SeeSaw Star Isn’t Tumbling,” May 13, 1959, by Margaret Harford, The Mirror News;

    “Annulment of Marriage Won by Ruth Roman,” August 11, 1961, The Los Angeles Times;

    “Ruth Roman Just Unsinkable Star,” October 30, 1963, by Hal Humphrey, The Los Angeles Times;

    “Passing Time Has Left Ruth Roman Untouched,” January 10, 1971, by Jim Meyer, The Miami Herald ;

    “Ruth Roman,” April 1973, by Don Stance, Film Fan Monthly Magazine; 

    “Ruth Roman: The Ride of a New Roman Empire,” January 1986, Los Angeles Magazine;

    “Ruth Roman, 75, Glamorous and Wholesome Star, Dies,” September 11, 1999, by William Honan, The New York Times;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;


    Movies Mentioned: 

    Stage Door Canteen  (1943);

    Ladies Courageous (1944);

    Since You Went Away (1944);

    Song of Nevada (1944);

    Jungle Queen (1945);

    You Came Along (1945);

    Incendiary Blonde (1945);

    Gilda (1946);

    The Big Clock (1948);

    Good Sam (1948);

    Belle Starr's Daughter (1948);

    The Window (1949);

    Champion (1949);

    Beyond The Forest (1949);

    Always Leave Them Laughing (1949);

    Barricade (1950);

    Colt .45 (1950);

    Three Secrets (1950);

    Dallas (1950);

    Lightning Strikes Twice (1951);

    Strangers On A Train (1951);

    Tomorrow Is Another Day (1951);

    Invitation (1952);

    Mara Mara (1952);

    Young Man With Ideas (1952);

    Blowing Wild (1953);

    The Far Country (1954);

    Down Three Dark Streets (1954);

    Great Day In The Morning (1956);

    Rebel In Town (1956);

    5 Steps To Danger (1956);

    Bitter Victory (1957);

    Desert Desperados (1959);

    Love Has Many Faces (1965);

    Go Ask Alice (1973);

    The Baby (1973);

    The Killing Kind (1973);

    Impulse (1974);

    Day Of The Animals (1977);

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecas

    • 36 min
    "MEMORIAL DAY MOVIES" (#037)

    "MEMORIAL DAY MOVIES" (#037)

    EPISODE 37 - “Memorial Day Movies” - 05/27/2024

    War is Hell. As our nation prepares to honor the brave men and women who lost their lives defending our freedom on Memorial Day, Steve and Nan offer up a special episode where they will discuss a few war-themed films that have resonated with them over the years. Their choices cover everything from the Civil War to World War II. 

    SHOW NOTES: 

    Sources:

    100 Great War Movies: The Real History Behind the Films (2018), by Robert J. Niemi;

    101 War Movies You Must See Before You Die (2009), by Steven Jay Schneider;

    Hollywood War Movies, 1937-1945 (1996), by Michael S. Shull and David Edward Wilt;

    IMDBPro.com;

    Wikipedia.com;

    Movies Mentioned: 

    Sergeant York (1941), starring Gary Cooper, Walter Brennan, Joan Leslie, Margaret Wycherly, George Tobias, June Lockhart, Dickie Moore, Ward Bond, and ,Noah Beery, Jr;

    Mrs. Miniver (1942), starring Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Teresa Wright, Dame May Witty, Richard Ney, Reginald Owen, and Henry Travers; 

    So Proudly We Hail (1943), starring Claudette Colbert, Paulette Goddard, Veronica, Lake, George Reeves, Sonny Tufts, Barbara Britton, Mary Treen, Cora Witherspoon, and Walter Abel;

    12 O’Clock High (1949), starring Gregory Peck, Dean Jagger, Millard Mitchell, Gary Merrill, Hugh Marlowe, John Kellogg, Richard Anderson, Robert Patten, and Lawrence Dobbin;

    Operation Petticoat (1959), starring Cary Grant, Tony Curtis, Dina Merrill, Joan O’Brien, Arthur O’Connell, Marion Ross, Gavin MacLeod, and Dick Sergeant;

    Shenandoah (1965), starring James Stewart, Patrick Wayne, Glenn Corbett, Phillip Alford, Doug McClure, Rosemary Forsythe, Katharine Ross, Harry Carey, Jr, Strother Martin, and George Kennedy;

    ---------------------------------
    http://www.airwavemedia.com

    Please contact sales@advertisecast.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast.
    Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    • 42 min

Mest populära poddar inom TV och film

Oförskämt att anta (gratisfeeden)
Under Produktion
Tronspelet
Aftonbladet
The Mess Around with Hannah and Lamorne
iHeartPodcasts
The Rewatchables
The Ringer
Everdahl & Karlssons Film TV
Everdahl Karlsson Andreasson
Catching up with the Camdens
The 8 Side

Du kanske också gillar

The Shallow End
Schnebly and Toth
The Box of Oddities
Kat & Jethro Gilligan Toth
The Secret History Of Hollywood
Adam Roche
Done & Dunne
Hemlock Creatives
You Must Remember This
Karina Longworth
The Plot Thickens
TCM & Novel