Laura (1968 film): Difference between revisions
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*[[Lee Radziwill]] (billed as "Lee Bouvier") as Laura Hunt |
*[[Lee Radziwill]] (billed as "Lee Bouvier") as Laura Hunt |
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==Production== |
==Production== |
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Truman Capote was friends with [[Lee Radziwill]] who wanted to act and had made her stage debut in a revival of ''[[The Philadelphia Story]]''. He met up with [[David Susskind]] and told him "Lee Radiziwill is going to be an actress and I think we should all put something together for her.I'm sure that she'll be so good I'll write it for her myself."<ref name=" |
Truman Capote was friends with [[Lee Radziwill]] who wanted to act and had made her stage debut in a revival of ''[[The Philadelphia Story]]''. He met up with [[David Susskind]] and told him "Lee Radiziwill is going to be an actress and I think we should all put something together for her.I'm sure that she'll be so good I'll write it for her myself."<ref name="new">Laura' -- In Blue Blood New York Times 14 Jan 1968: D17.</ref> |
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Susskind thought Radziwill "wasn't very good" in her stage performance "but I thought maybe I saw a glimmer of something in her performance. The television companies had noticed the publicity, so it looked like we could set something up."<ref name="new"/> |
Susskind thought Radziwill "wasn't very good" in her stage performance "but I thought maybe I saw a glimmer of something in her performance. The television companies had noticed the publicity, so it looked like we could set something up."<ref name="new"/> |
Revision as of 12:21, 20 June 2018
Laura is a 1968 American TV film, a remake of the 1944 film of the same name. It was directed by John Llewellyn Moxey and written by Truman Capote and Thomas Phipps.[1] David Susskind produced.[2]
The film was also remade for television in Laura (1955).
Cast
- George Sanders as Waldo Lydecker
- Robert Stack as Mark McPherson
- Arlene Francis as Mrs. Ann Treadwell
- Farley Granger as Shelby Carpenter
- Lee Radziwill (billed as "Lee Bouvier") as Laura Hunt
Production
Truman Capote was friends with Lee Radziwill who wanted to act and had made her stage debut in a revival of The Philadelphia Story. He met up with David Susskind and told him "Lee Radiziwill is going to be an actress and I think we should all put something together for her.I'm sure that she'll be so good I'll write it for her myself."[3]
Susskind thought Radziwill "wasn't very good" in her stage performance "but I thought maybe I saw a glimmer of something in her performance. The television companies had noticed the publicity, so it looked like we could set something up."[3]
Capote wrote an adaptation of Voice of the Turtle for her but Susskind worried it would be too difficult. So he suggested they do Laura.[4]
Michael Dyne reportedly rewrote Capote's script.[5]
The show was taped in London in October 1967. Robert Stack and George Sanders reprised roles they had performed on TV in the 1955 version.[6][3]
Reception
Critical reception to Radziwill's performance was hostile.[7] The Chicago Tribune called it the "worst drama" of the season in which Radziwill was "unbelievably bad".[8] Another review in The Washington Post said it was "disappointing all round."[9] The New York Times called it "so laboured and so dull that the occasion was just a laboured walk through."[10]
References
- ^ Clarke, Gerald. Capote: A Biography (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988), pp. 388–389.
- ^ Stack Will Star in 'Laura' Special Los Angeles Times 15 Sep 1967: d17.
- ^ a b c Laura' -- In Blue Blood New York Times 14 Jan 1968: D17.
- ^ Capote a Trousdale Gues Los Angeles Times 11 Sep 1967: c1.
- ^ Movies for TV, if You Have Price Los Angeles Times14 Sep 1967: d16.
- ^ A Princess for an actress Coleman, Terry. The Guardian 1 Nov 1967: 6.
- ^ For Lee Radziwill New York Times 1 Sep 1974: 42.
- ^ TV Today: Tribune Critic Picks Best Specials of Season: Steinbeck Play Called Tops, 'Laura' Poorest Gowran, Clay. Chicago Tribune 31 Mar 1968: g16
- ^ Much Lacking in TV's 'Laura' By Rick Du Brow. The Washington Post, Times Herald (1959-1973); Washington, D.C. [Washington, D.C]26 Jan 1968: D10.
- ^ TV: Theme Song Is Still the Best Asset of 'Laura' By JACK GOULD. New York Times 25 Jan 1968: 75.