Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Classic Films
Related: About this forumTCM Schedule for Thursday, January 7, 2020 -- What's On Tonight: Star of the Month Miriam Hopkins
In the daylight hours, Norma Shearer is the star, though it's not her birthday. Then in prime time, it's our first week with star of the month Miriam Hopkins. Tell us more, Roger!Miriam Hopkins -Thursdays in January
By Roger Fristoe
Miriam Hopkins, our first Star of the Month for 2021, was a provocative leading lady in movies of the 1930s and 40s, where she explored racy themes in comedies of the uninhibited pre-Code era and later scored in colorful melodramas. A blonde beauty with a peaches-and-cream complexion, Hopkins was also a versatile actress who could convince as a broad or a baroness. Writing in the mid-1930s, author William H. Rideout declared that, On all counts, Miss Hopkins is easily the finest actress on the screen today.
During her prime, she won an Oscar nomination for playing Becky Sharp, shared an infamous cinematic ménage à trois with Gary Cooper and Fredric March and feuded onscreen and off with Bette Davis. Hopkins career as a movie star was cut prematurely short some said because of an inflated ego and difficult temperament. She returned to the stage, where she had gotten her start. She developed into a strong character actress, later appearing in movies on occasion and becoming a pioneering performer in dramatic television.
Ellen Miriam Hopkins was born into a wealthy family in Savannah, Ga., on October 18, 1902. She had an older sister, Ruby. When Miriam was a teen, her parents separated and she moved with her mother and sister to Syracuse, N.Y., where she attended Syracuse University. Hopkins studied dance in New York City and began appearing as a chorus girl in vaudeville while still in her teens. In 1921, she made her Broadway debut in the Music Box Revue and worked regularly there for the next 10 years, branching from musical comedy turns into straight roles. By 1930, she had earned star billing in a play called Ritzy.
Hopkins had been spotted in a stage performance by a representative of Paramount Pictures, which was searching for talent to accommodate the demands of the burgeoning sound era in movies. She made her film debut in a Paramount short, The Home Girl (1928). Her feature debut came in the comedy Fast and Loose (1930), in which she was top billed over another newcomer, Carole Lombard.
Hopkins breakthrough film was The Smiling Lieutenant (1931), a delightful Ernst Lubitsch musical comedy in which she plays a princess who marries an Austrian lieutenant but must compete with a beautiful violinist (Claudette Colbert) for his affections. It was the first of three films in which Hopkins benefited from the Lubitsch Touch.
Her strong performance as the earthy barmaid Ivy in Rouben Mamoulians Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1932) reinforced her position as a leading film actress, with costar Fredric March winning an Oscar for his role(s). After a few lesser films, Hopkins came on strong again in other Lubitsch confections.
Trouble in Paradise (1932) is a sparkling comedy which casts her as a pickpocket who masquerades as a countess and joins forces with an elegant thief (Herbert Marshall) to swindle a businesswoman (Kay Francis). Design for Living (1933) is a film version of Noel Cowards stage comedy about a woman (Hopkins) who cannot choose between two men and ends up forming a threesome with them.
In 1933, Hopkins replaced Tallulah Bankhead on Broadway in the title role of Jezebel, which was filmed in 1938 with Bette Davis in an Oscar-winning performance much to the reported annoyance of Hopkins. By 1934, Hopkins Paramount contract had expired, and she moved on to Samuel Goldwyn Productions, where her first assignments were loan-outs to RKO.
In the romantic comedy The Richest Girl in the World (1934), she plays a thinly disguised Barbara Hutton, with frequent screen partner Joel McCrea as her leading man. Around this time, Hopkins turned down the role that won Claudette Colbert an Oscar: the runaway heiress in It Happened One Night (1934).
The Best Actress Academy Award nomination for Becky Sharp (1935) was Hopkins only Oscar nod; the film is remembered more today for being the first feature shot in Technicolor. One can only imagine her reaction when Bette Davis won that year for her performance in Dangerous. Hopkins made only a handful of films for Goldwyn, including three more with Joel McCrea. One of these, Barbary Coast (1935), a melodrama directed by Howard Hawks, features what many consider to be her best performance.
Splendor (1935) is a comedy in which Hopkins, as McCreas bride, is exploited by his grasping family. These Three (1936), starring Hopkins, McCrea and Merle Oberon, is director William Wylers first film version of the Lillian Hellman play The Childrens Hour, weakened because the topic of suspected lesbianism is eliminated due to censorship of the day.
Hopkins was lent to producer Arthur J. Rank for the British melodrama Men Are Not Gods (1936), with an interesting cast that included Gertrude Lawrence and Rex Harrison. She returned to Goldwyn and the arms of Joel McCrea for the screwball comedy Woman Chases Man (1937). Wise Girl (1937), again on loan-out to RKO, was a well-received comedy in which she plays a snooty heiress battling with a charismatic artist (Ray Milland) for the custody of two young girls.
As a genuine daughter of the American South with a charming natural drawl, Hopkins was said to be the first choice of Gone With the Wind author Margaret Mitchell to play Scarlett OHara in the 1939 film version a role that went instead, of course, to the English Vivien Leigh.
Hopkins signed a promising contract with Warner Bros. that guaranteed script approval. Her first project there was The Old Maid (1939), a melodramatic costarring vehicle with Bette Davis in which the temperamental actresses clashed offscreen as well as on, to the delight of the studios publicity department. Despite the films success, Warner Bros. could only come up with a role for Hopkins as leading lady to Errol Flynn in an enjoyable Western, Virginia City (1940). Again, there were stories of friction between the two stars.
Old Acquaintance (1943) marked Hopkins second cinematic duel with Davis, and they create entertaining sparks as longtime friends who feud over work (both are writers) and romantic matters. It was said that the real-life enmity was caused in part by the fact that Davis had an affair with director Anatole Litvak in the late 1930s while he was still married to Hopkins. In interviews in later years, Davis acknowledged that Hopkins was a beauty and a good actress but also characterized her as a real bitch.
Again, despite her high profile role opposite Davis, Hopkins could not find suitable film vehicles. She returned to the theater, replacing Tallulah Bankhead on Broadway in The Skin of Our Teeth and taking other stage roles in the New York area. She was off the screen for six years. Hopkins returned to movies in a supporting role in William Wylers The Heiress (1949), playing Olivia de Havillands sympathetic aunt and winning a Golden Globe nomination. Hopkins then found a niche in television drama, where she would remain active through the 1960s. Among more than 20 TV roles was her turn as Norma Desmond in a 1955 Lux Video Theatre production of Sunset Boulevard.
She worked yet again for Wyler in The Childrens Hour (1961), his revised version of the Hellman drama with the lesbian angle restored. Hopkins plays the aunt of the Shirley MacLaine character (the role she had played in the original 1936 version, These Three).
Among other films from the final phase of the Hopkins career was The Chase (1966), a colorful melodrama set in Texas and directed by Arthur Penn with Marlon Brando and Robert Redford heading an all-star cast. Hopkins has a showy role as Redfords guilt-ridden mother. Her final film role came in Hollywood Horror House (1970). She died of a heart attack in New York City, nine days before her 70th birthday, on October 9, 1972. She is buried in Bainbridge, Ga.
In addition to Anatole Litvak, to whom she was married 1937-39, Hopkins was wed to actor Brandon Peters (1926-27), screenwriter Austin Parker (1928-31) and war correspondent Raymond B. Brock (1945-51). In 1932, while between marriages, she adopted an infant son, Michael T. Hopkins.
Close friends, including author John OHara, would recall Hopkins as a warm, witty, engaging intellectual known for her elegant parties where guests included luminaries from the worlds of theater, music, writing and art. Of her reputation for being difficult, Hopkins once said, Me temperamental? I never was! Proof of that is that I made four pictures with Willie Wyler, a very demanding director. And I made two with Rouben Mamoulian, who is the same.
By Roger Fristoe
Miriam Hopkins, our first Star of the Month for 2021, was a provocative leading lady in movies of the 1930s and 40s, where she explored racy themes in comedies of the uninhibited pre-Code era and later scored in colorful melodramas. A blonde beauty with a peaches-and-cream complexion, Hopkins was also a versatile actress who could convince as a broad or a baroness. Writing in the mid-1930s, author William H. Rideout declared that, On all counts, Miss Hopkins is easily the finest actress on the screen today.
During her prime, she won an Oscar nomination for playing Becky Sharp, shared an infamous cinematic ménage à trois with Gary Cooper and Fredric March and feuded onscreen and off with Bette Davis. Hopkins career as a movie star was cut prematurely short some said because of an inflated ego and difficult temperament. She returned to the stage, where she had gotten her start. She developed into a strong character actress, later appearing in movies on occasion and becoming a pioneering performer in dramatic television.
Ellen Miriam Hopkins was born into a wealthy family in Savannah, Ga., on October 18, 1902. She had an older sister, Ruby. When Miriam was a teen, her parents separated and she moved with her mother and sister to Syracuse, N.Y., where she attended Syracuse University. Hopkins studied dance in New York City and began appearing as a chorus girl in vaudeville while still in her teens. In 1921, she made her Broadway debut in the Music Box Revue and worked regularly there for the next 10 years, branching from musical comedy turns into straight roles. By 1930, she had earned star billing in a play called Ritzy.
Hopkins had been spotted in a stage performance by a representative of Paramount Pictures, which was searching for talent to accommodate the demands of the burgeoning sound era in movies. She made her film debut in a Paramount short, The Home Girl (1928). Her feature debut came in the comedy Fast and Loose (1930), in which she was top billed over another newcomer, Carole Lombard.
Hopkins breakthrough film was The Smiling Lieutenant (1931), a delightful Ernst Lubitsch musical comedy in which she plays a princess who marries an Austrian lieutenant but must compete with a beautiful violinist (Claudette Colbert) for his affections. It was the first of three films in which Hopkins benefited from the Lubitsch Touch.
Her strong performance as the earthy barmaid Ivy in Rouben Mamoulians Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1932) reinforced her position as a leading film actress, with costar Fredric March winning an Oscar for his role(s). After a few lesser films, Hopkins came on strong again in other Lubitsch confections.
Trouble in Paradise (1932) is a sparkling comedy which casts her as a pickpocket who masquerades as a countess and joins forces with an elegant thief (Herbert Marshall) to swindle a businesswoman (Kay Francis). Design for Living (1933) is a film version of Noel Cowards stage comedy about a woman (Hopkins) who cannot choose between two men and ends up forming a threesome with them.
In 1933, Hopkins replaced Tallulah Bankhead on Broadway in the title role of Jezebel, which was filmed in 1938 with Bette Davis in an Oscar-winning performance much to the reported annoyance of Hopkins. By 1934, Hopkins Paramount contract had expired, and she moved on to Samuel Goldwyn Productions, where her first assignments were loan-outs to RKO.
In the romantic comedy The Richest Girl in the World (1934), she plays a thinly disguised Barbara Hutton, with frequent screen partner Joel McCrea as her leading man. Around this time, Hopkins turned down the role that won Claudette Colbert an Oscar: the runaway heiress in It Happened One Night (1934).
The Best Actress Academy Award nomination for Becky Sharp (1935) was Hopkins only Oscar nod; the film is remembered more today for being the first feature shot in Technicolor. One can only imagine her reaction when Bette Davis won that year for her performance in Dangerous. Hopkins made only a handful of films for Goldwyn, including three more with Joel McCrea. One of these, Barbary Coast (1935), a melodrama directed by Howard Hawks, features what many consider to be her best performance.
Splendor (1935) is a comedy in which Hopkins, as McCreas bride, is exploited by his grasping family. These Three (1936), starring Hopkins, McCrea and Merle Oberon, is director William Wylers first film version of the Lillian Hellman play The Childrens Hour, weakened because the topic of suspected lesbianism is eliminated due to censorship of the day.
Hopkins was lent to producer Arthur J. Rank for the British melodrama Men Are Not Gods (1936), with an interesting cast that included Gertrude Lawrence and Rex Harrison. She returned to Goldwyn and the arms of Joel McCrea for the screwball comedy Woman Chases Man (1937). Wise Girl (1937), again on loan-out to RKO, was a well-received comedy in which she plays a snooty heiress battling with a charismatic artist (Ray Milland) for the custody of two young girls.
As a genuine daughter of the American South with a charming natural drawl, Hopkins was said to be the first choice of Gone With the Wind author Margaret Mitchell to play Scarlett OHara in the 1939 film version a role that went instead, of course, to the English Vivien Leigh.
Hopkins signed a promising contract with Warner Bros. that guaranteed script approval. Her first project there was The Old Maid (1939), a melodramatic costarring vehicle with Bette Davis in which the temperamental actresses clashed offscreen as well as on, to the delight of the studios publicity department. Despite the films success, Warner Bros. could only come up with a role for Hopkins as leading lady to Errol Flynn in an enjoyable Western, Virginia City (1940). Again, there were stories of friction between the two stars.
Old Acquaintance (1943) marked Hopkins second cinematic duel with Davis, and they create entertaining sparks as longtime friends who feud over work (both are writers) and romantic matters. It was said that the real-life enmity was caused in part by the fact that Davis had an affair with director Anatole Litvak in the late 1930s while he was still married to Hopkins. In interviews in later years, Davis acknowledged that Hopkins was a beauty and a good actress but also characterized her as a real bitch.
Again, despite her high profile role opposite Davis, Hopkins could not find suitable film vehicles. She returned to the theater, replacing Tallulah Bankhead on Broadway in The Skin of Our Teeth and taking other stage roles in the New York area. She was off the screen for six years. Hopkins returned to movies in a supporting role in William Wylers The Heiress (1949), playing Olivia de Havillands sympathetic aunt and winning a Golden Globe nomination. Hopkins then found a niche in television drama, where she would remain active through the 1960s. Among more than 20 TV roles was her turn as Norma Desmond in a 1955 Lux Video Theatre production of Sunset Boulevard.
She worked yet again for Wyler in The Childrens Hour (1961), his revised version of the Hellman drama with the lesbian angle restored. Hopkins plays the aunt of the Shirley MacLaine character (the role she had played in the original 1936 version, These Three).
Among other films from the final phase of the Hopkins career was The Chase (1966), a colorful melodrama set in Texas and directed by Arthur Penn with Marlon Brando and Robert Redford heading an all-star cast. Hopkins has a showy role as Redfords guilt-ridden mother. Her final film role came in Hollywood Horror House (1970). She died of a heart attack in New York City, nine days before her 70th birthday, on October 9, 1972. She is buried in Bainbridge, Ga.
In addition to Anatole Litvak, to whom she was married 1937-39, Hopkins was wed to actor Brandon Peters (1926-27), screenwriter Austin Parker (1928-31) and war correspondent Raymond B. Brock (1945-51). In 1932, while between marriages, she adopted an infant son, Michael T. Hopkins.
Close friends, including author John OHara, would recall Hopkins as a warm, witty, engaging intellectual known for her elegant parties where guests included luminaries from the worlds of theater, music, writing and art. Of her reputation for being difficult, Hopkins once said, Me temperamental? I never was! Proof of that is that I made four pictures with Willie Wyler, a very demanding director. And I made two with Rouben Mamoulian, who is the same.
Enjoy!
7:15 AM -- The Honey Pot (1967)
2h 11m | Comedy | TV-G
A millionaire fakes a terminal illness to fleece his former girlfriends.
Director: Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Cast: Rex Harrison, Susan Hayward, Cliff Robertson
The great Italian Cinematographer Gianni Di Venanzo died suddenly of hepatitis (aged only forty-five) during the making of this movie, with many weeks of the five-month shooting schedule to go before completion. His operator, Pasqualino De Santis, took over as Director of Photography, but refused credit in this capacity, although he would quickly go on to international renown with his work for Luchino Visconti, Franco Zeffirelli, Joseph Losey, and others.
9:30 AM -- The Last of Mrs. Cheyney (1929)
1h 34m | Romance | TV-G
A chic jewel thief in England falls in love with one of her marks.
Director: Sidney Franklin
Cast: Norma Shearer, Basil Rathbone, George Barraud
Nominee for an Oscar for Best Writing, Achievement -- Hanns Kräly (No official nominees had been announced this year.)
This was the first MGM film released with an optical sound-track (Western Electric variable density.) Prior to this, MGM used Warner Bros' sound-on-disk method.
11:15 AM -- Their Own Desire (1929)
1h 5m | Drama | TV-G
A young man and woman's affair is complicated by her father's relationship with his mother.
Director: E. Mason Hopper
Cast: Norma Shearer, Belle Bennett, Lewis Stone
Nominee for an Oscar for Best Actress in a Leading Role -- Norma Shearer
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer also released this movie in a silent version.
12:30 PM -- Let Us Be Gay (1930)
1h 18m | Comedy | TV-G
A visit to Paris brings divorced spouses back together.
Director: Robert Z. Leonard
Cast: Norma Shearer, Rod La Rocque, Marie Dressler
Shortly before production of this film began, lead actress Norma Shearer found out she was pregnant and would soon be showing. So, filming quickly began and was completed in 26 days. Towards the end of the shoot, she had to keep her stomach hidden behind carefully placed furniture and extra fabric in her designer gowns.
2:00 PM -- Riptide (1934)
1h 30m | Romance | TV-G
A chorus girl weds a British lord then falls for an old flame.
Director: Edmund Goulding
Cast: Norma Shearer, Robert Montgomery, Herbert Marshall
This film's plot and structure are uncannily similar to Norma Shearer's Academy Award-winning The Divorcee (1930) -- however, Riptide (1934) was made just as the Production Code was coming into power, which resulted in a fatal absence of pre-Code sting, despite its libidinous, adulterous scenario. The film's only pre-Code remnant is Shearer's revealing, bosomy evening gown, under which she wore no bra.
3:45 PM -- Idiot's Delight (1939)
1h 45m | Romance | TV-G
A hoofer and a fake Russian countess are caught behind enemy lines at the outbreak of World War I.
Director: Clarence Brown
Cast: Norma Shearer, Clark Gable, Edward Arnold
In 1973, Norma Shearer arranged for author Gavin Lambert to have a private screening of this film at MGM. After she had been onscreen for a few minutes as Edwards Arnold's "protégé," Shearer asked Lambert if he understood what she was doing; he thought for a moment and said, "You're parodying Garbo; rather wicked!" To which Shearer replied, "You do understand!"
5:45 PM -- Escape (1940)
1h 38m | Adventure | TV-G
A Nazi officer's mistress helps an American free his mother from a concentration camp.
Director: Mervyn Leroy
Cast: Norma Shearer, Robert Taylor, Conrad Veidt
According to the article "Hollywood's friends and foes" by Colin Shindler in the film history tome 'The Movie', this film " . . . though set largely inside a concentration camp . . . managed to avoid the mention of the words 'German' or 'Nazi' " throughout the whole movie.
7:30 PM -- MGM Parade Show #8 (1955)
25m | Documentary | TV-G
Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant perform in a clip from The Philadelphia Story.
WHAT'S ON TONIGHT: PRIMETIME THEME -- STAR OF THE MONTH MIRIAM HOPKINS
8:00 PM -- The Smiling Lieutenant (1931)
1h 42m | Comedy | TV-G
A misfired flirtation lands a young lieutenant married to a princess instead of the one he loves.
Director: Ernst Lubitsch
Cast: Maurice Chevalier, Claudette Colbert, Miriam Hopkins
Nominee for an Oscar for Best Picture
The first of three films that Ernst Lubitsch made with Miriam Hopkins, the others being Trouble in Paradise (1932) and Design for Living (1933).
10:00 PM -- Trouble in Paradise (1932)
1h 21m | Comedy, Crime | TV-G
A love triangle ignites trouble between two jewel thieves and their intended victim.
Director: Ernst Lubitsch
Cast: Miriam Hopkins, Kay Francis, Herbert Marshall
Although Miriam Hopkins got top billing, she's got the least money of the three stars: $1,750/week. Kay Francis got $4,000/week with 6 weeks guarantee and Herbert Marshall got $3,500/week.
11:30 PM -- Design for Living (1933)
1h 30m | Comedy, Romance | TV-G
An independent woman can't chose between the two men she loves.
Director: Ernst Lubitsch
Cast: Fredric March, Gary Cooper, Miriam Hopkins
Miriam Hopkins made three films with Fredric March, but never worked with Gary Cooper again.
1:15 AM -- Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1932)
1h 30m | Horror/Science-Fiction | TV-PG
Robert Louis Stevenson's classic tale of a scientist who unleashes the beast within.
Director: Rouben Mamoulian
Cast: Fredric March, Miriam Hopkins, Rose Hobart
Winner of an Oscar for Best Actor in a Leading Role -- Fredric March (Tied with Wallace Beery for The Champ (1931).)
Nominee for Oscars for Best Writing, Adaptation -- Percy Heath and Samuel Hoffenstein, and Best Cinematography -- Karl Struss
Miriam Hopkins originally turned down the role of Ivy Pearson, saying she wanted to play Muriel Carew instead. She soon changed her mind when the director informed her many actresses in Hollywood could be cast in her place.
3:00 AM -- Men Are Not Gods (1936)
1h 30m | Drama | TV-G
A secretary to an eccentric drama critic is persuaded to alter a ruinous review of a Shakespearan actor and falls in love with him.
Director: Walter Reisch
Cast: Miriam Hopkins, Gertrude Lawrence, Sebastian Shaw
Loosely inspired by Shakespeare's "Othello".
4:30 AM -- Critic's Choice (1963)
1h 40m | Comedy | TV-G
A Broadway critic must write a negative review about his wife's play.
Director: Don Weis
Cast: Bob Hope, Lucille Ball, Marilyn Maxwell
The collage of stylized posters for Broadway plays (The Music Man, Life With Father, Fanny, Gypsy, Camelot) that appeared under the opening credits, were all productions that had (or in the case of Camelot, would later be) filmed by Warner Bros.
InfoView thread info, including edit history
TrashPut this thread in your Trash Can (My DU » Trash Can)
BookmarkAdd this thread to your Bookmarks (My DU » Bookmarks)
3 replies, 1149 views
ShareGet links to this post and/or share on social media
AlertAlert this post for a rule violation
PowersThere are no powers you can use on this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
ReplyReply to this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
Rec (2)
ReplyReply to this post
3 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
TCM Schedule for Thursday, January 7, 2020 -- What's On Tonight: Star of the Month Miriam Hopkins (Original Post)
Staph
Jan 2021
OP
.
Staph
(6,346 posts)2. Interesting comment!
Please tell us more!
CBHagman
(17,139 posts)3. A rare triple Lubitsch night!
And I've seen every one of them!
Time to "jazz up your lingerie" indeed. It's not as though anyone's going anywhere these days, so you might as well be decadent at home.