The 1964 classic THE PINK PANTHER gets its first showing in NYC’s
Greenwich Village in years on Saturday, October 24th @9:00 PM at the
Anthology Film Archives (corner of East 2nd Street at 2nd
Avenue), in a 35mm print. One show only!
In the previously discussed (among PSAS Members) portion of
Christopher Plummer’s exceptional memoir, In Spite of Myself
(published last fall), in which Mr. Plummer vividly remembers PS and filming
THE RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER (in 1974), he notes how he didn’t see much
of PS in the (six) years following.
However, a reading of the text has turned up at least one
earlier encounter. As it turns out, the actors had first met over a decade
prior.
Per Mr. Plummer, while on location in Spain in 1963 filming
the epic – and elaborately produced – THE FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE,
there were sumptuous daily lunches that became a destination point for cast,
crew, and everyone who was anyone and in Spain at the time; “You never
knew who might turn up at the lunches – Peter Sellers emerged one day
armed with his camera, snapping everyone in sight, particularly Sophia [Loren],
with whom he was having some sort of romance.”
(Ah, the eternal question of did-they-or-didn’t-they…)
Then, in 1968 or 1969 (the exact dates are unclear), with
Mr. Plummer and George Murcell captaining a grass-roots effort in the U.K.
(where Mr. Plummer was living at the time) to resurrect the historic Globe
Theatre; “To form an arsenal, [George] managed to persuade such actors as
Peter Sellers, Paul Scofield, Dorothy Tutin, Vanessa Redgrave, Richard Johnson,
and others to come on board.” (As Mr. Plummer reports, the Globe was
ultimately restored under the [separate] aegis of actor/director Sam
Wanamaker.)
Yet more examples of the many many people and places for/with
PS that we were unaware of…
>Happy birthday to the one and only. Peter Sellers-of course ! Doing >the "best
of my ability" for him will always be far greater than anyone >elses
ability-ever.
4 cheers for Peter! (Better than 3 cheers!)
- Rori
In addition to THE PARTY being shown in a rare IB
Technicolor print on September 24th, Hollywood’s famed
Egyptian Theatre (www.americancinematheque.com)
will also show a new 35MM print of PS’ 1964 classic DR. STRANGELOVE
(directed by Stanley Kubrick) on Saturday September 19th @7:30 PM –
or, more accurately, @9:30 PM,
since this is part of a double bill with another Stanley Kubrick classic, A
CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1971).
It will be a bit late to celebrate PS’ birthday, but a
rare IB Technicolor print (ensuring that much more visual splendor) of PS’
1968 classic THE PARTY (directed by Blake Edwards) will be screened in
(appropriately enough) Hollywood at the American Cinematheque’s historic Egyptian
Theater (www.americancinematheque.com),
Thursday September 24th @7:30 PM.
It seems "happy birthday" isn't enough and not very unique
I post quotes ,sometimes, and could find non greater than a quote of Peter Sellers-by Peter Sellers.
I probably posted it before here, but not independent of another.
This from the forward to the book The Goon Show Companion ,by Roger Wilmut. The following signed by Peter Sellers
My name is Peter Sellers. I am a human being. Several years ago I took part in the BBC radio Goon Shows.I was called upon to produce humorous sounds and voices which I did to the best of my ability.
Two gentlemen appearing in the same show were named Spike Milligan, and H. Secombe.
Also there was a Peruvian Intelligence Officer, Michael Bentine.
I was paid certain monies for my appearances. They were very small.
When I first visited Major Grafton's public house in Victoria, I was five years old.
I am now ninety-two,and still enjoy a good laugh.
Peter Sellers
Happy birthday to the one and only. Peter Sellers-of course ! Doing the "best of my ability" for him will always be far greater than anyone elses ability-ever.
Just a note to inform that Woman X Seven is now available on DVD. It has been since 2008 but I only just found out and I don't remember that info being posted here. So there you go.
I have seen his part/segment/chapter -whatever-of the 7 part movie but only as the special feature of the movie Brief Vacation,also by DeSica .That special feature only had 2 parts -Peter Sellers and Micheal Caine's segment. Now the movie itself is available ,with probably no special features, and I wanted to let you know.
This fall brings the long-awaited issue of Sam Wasson’s
A Splurch in the Kisser: The Movies of Blake Edwards. Written with the cooperation
of Mr. Edwards and his family, the Wesleyan Film-published hardcover book will
be available on or about October 1st.
One can of course expect rare photos and tales of PS and Mr.
Edwards over their six classic films (and attendant times) together.
I have gotten the book Being Hal Ashby (life of a Hollywood Rebel)as it was mentioned here by Jason.Thank you.
Going first to the chapter Being There,I have some quotes to post,esp for those not yet able to get the book.
Some tid-bits. Burt Lancaster was first thought for the role of Ben Rand. But "for the role of the U.S. president,Ashby could not think past Jack Warden,delighted to be working with him again since Shampoo".
Most details we know such as : Once Sellers found the Chance character through voice and walk "he retreated inside the persona which resonated profoundly with his own sense of self ".
"Sellers described the experience of working on Being There as "so humbling and so powerful"
"He would sometimes call CUT in the middle of a scene when overwhelmed. Asked if he was all right he'd say ' Oh. No,no I've just never seen anything quite like this film before'
He would say it in the voice of Chance.
To remain in character he would often retreat into his trailor. "He would only return to himself when relaxing with Jack Warden .Sometimes laughing until they cried with laughter."
Ashby was "in awe of Sellers and let the actor's rhythm set the film's pace."
One quote I feel says a lot ,at least to me.
"Just after Sellers's death Ashby recalled ' I always felt while looking at his eyes how I'd never talked with anyone who was so totally vulnerable. He always let me into him through his eyes to places so deep that I wouldn't ever try to know. Places that only he,if he were aware of it at all,could know about."
It's hard to get past that quote.I read it over and over.
But...."on the last shot of Being There,after Sellers final scene,the crew clapped,whistled,and cheered for 15 minutes,while Sellers and Ashby stood teary eyed. Ashby's admiration for Sellers had grown during filming and he maintained ' That Being There proves to a whole generation that the man's a F--ing Genius ! Peter Sellers has every right to sit up there on his mountain in Switzerland and SCREAM ! I'm all right Jack ! Screw you ALL ! "
(me) ...... Right and Double Right-for "generations" and FOREVER.
Peter Sellers called it
"a terrifyingly bad film" and his promised percentage of the takings
was little more than £33. But PennyPoints to Paradise
is something of a missing link and has been hardly watched since its release in
1951.
Tomorrow, an audience at the
British Film Institute will watch Sellers and his two co-stars, Harry Secombe,
as a gormless pools winner, and Spike Milligan, as his best friend, clown
around in an amiable seaside crime caper.
Shortly after, all three
entertainers went on to transform British comedy with the Goon Show.
The BFI regards the
restoration as a significant one, a "missing link in British comedy
history". The institute's curator, Vic Pratt, said: "You are able to
see them at the beginning of their careers. The film captures the moment as
they are about to revolutionise comedy with the Goon Show and it's really
important for that reason."
A DVD of the film will be
released next month and while the movie is, as Pratt admits, "a bit rough
around the edges", it is not as bad as Sellers remembered.
Sellers, in particular,
shines in his two roles as an old major and a smooth talking salesman, Arnold P
Fringe. "In Peter Sellers, you see a talent that was fully formed from the
beginning and he clearly knows how to use the camera," said Pratt.
The restoration is about as
close to the original as is possible. It came about after Kate Lees,
granddaughter of Arthur Dent, who ran Adelphi Films, was sorting through
material once stored in the company's production office. Gathering dust were
two reels of rather battered 16mm film labelled PennyPoints to Paradise.
The restoration has been
funded by Laura Camuti, an American and a Sellers fan, who said she had grown
up loving the Pink Panther movies. She said: "I became aware of how much
of his career I didn't know about. I didn't know about the Goon Show, for
example."
She too believes the film is
much better than Sellers thought. "He was often terribly critical of his
own work," she said. "I appreciate that it's nothing like the level
of Dr Strangelove but I really enjoy his performances in this film."
PennyPoints to Paradise, which is set in Brighton, also features very good performances from
actors who would go on to make names for themselves ? Alfred Marks, as the
cigar chomping bad guy, and Bill Kerr, as his sidekick.
"It's fair to say that
it's a bit rough around the edges," said Pratt. "It's a cheap and
cheerful film that was filmed in just three weeks.
"But it is particularly
interesting because you are seeing most of the Goons just before they made it
big and you see them honing their craft. Spike Milligan isn't playing his
normal role, he's almost the straight man, while Harry Secombe is the central
figure."
Also on the DVD are two
similarly obscure films getting an airing.
Let's Go Crazy, which was
filmed to use up a week of studio time left over from Penny Points to Paradise,
features Sellers in a series of restaurant comedy sketches playing characters
with names such as Crystal Jollibottom and Izzy Gozunk.
Milligan is also included in
the footage, playing an early version of his Eccles character from the Goons.
The new issue of Time Magazine (dated August 3, 2009)’s
“Short List” page (p. 63) includes Academy Award-winning actor
Timothy Hutton’s personal picks in music, literature et al.
Showing his great good taste, Mr. Hutton (whose father was
the late actor Jim Hutton) writes the following;
“A
Celebration of Sellers is a comprehensive collection of Peter
Sellers’ recordings, from satires of Beatles songs to movie outtakes and
sound tracks. I especially like ‘Boiled Bananas and Carrots’ and
his parody of ‘She Loves You.’ If all you know of Sellers is The Pink Panther and Dr. Strangelove, do yourself a favor and
dial into these tracks.”
As we all well know what day today it is/was, Timothy Hutton’s
recommendations are especially welcome and apropos.
Just published is Nick Dawson’s heavily researched
biography, Being Hal Ashby, of the late great director Hal Ashby. BEING
THERE is covered in detail, of course, with insight into PS and Ashby’s
friendship and working relationship – as Dawson reminds and reports, PS first met with
Ashby about directing BEING THERE in 1973 and kept the faith for the 6 years it
took to be able to get the movie made.
The hardcover book’s photos include a rare B+W of
Ashby on location with author/screenwriter Jerzy Kosinski; the only shot of PS
is one of the familiar classic B+Ws of Chance in his garden.
NEVER LET GO, the 1960 drama directed by John Guillermin in
which PS stars in a rare dramatic role as a ruthless criminal, will be screened
for the first time in 14 years in NYC at Manhattan’s Film Forum (www.filmforum.org). Showtimes are Friday
August 21st and Saturday August 22nd at both 3:35 PM and
7:25 PM.
This year’s Paris Cinema Festival (www.pariscinema.org) in July will
include a multi-film tribute to Claudia Cardinale; THE PINK PANTHER will be
screened on three different dates/times, thereby bringing PS’s Clouseau
back to (appropriately enough) Paris!
Upcoming in cinemas later this year is the early 1960s-set film
AN EDUCATION, showcasing actress Carey Mulligan. Actor Peter Sarsgaard plays
opposite her, and in one scene she overhears his character doing excellent
vocal impressions of two Goons; Peter Sellers-as-Bluebottle and Spike
Milligan-as-Eccles.
Cable network Turner Classic Movies (TCM) will pay tribute
to PS on Saturday August 29th (not long before what would have been
his 84th birthday) and Sunday August 30th with a 24-hour marathon
of his movies, including some rarities! Please allow for extra time if you are
recording, as some movies may run just past the hour or half-hour (and into the
next one).
The list;
SATURDAY, AUGUST 29th
(and SUNDAY, AUGUST 30th) on TCM
6 a.m. Your Past is Showing (a.k.a. The Naked Truth)
For those who haven’t seen, PSAS Member Laura Camuti
is quoted in yesterday’s London
(Sunday) Times!;
Lost Peter Sellers films on screen after
50-year intermission
Missing British comedies found in a movie
mogul’s garage cinema are being restored for a new generation
Richard
Brooks
FOR
some 50 years, the reels of film lay forgotten in a London garage. Now a cache of more than 30
has been discovered, showing the first performances by young actors who would
go on to become some of Britain’s
greatest comedians, including Peter Sellers, Prunella Scales and Ronnie
Corbett.
The movies, all shot in the early 1950s when Britain was trying to
turn its film industry into a mini-Hollywood, have now been given to the
British Film Institute (BFI) to restore.
Few of them have been seen in cinemas since their original
release.
Those being screened soon include PennyPoints to Paradise
and Let’s Go Crazy, both starring the then 26-year-old Peter Sellers.
They will be shown at the end of July at the BFI’s cinema on London’s South Bank
before being released on DVD in early August. The BFI hopes to restore and
release the rest of the films over the next 15 years if funding is available.
The films were all either made or distributed by Adelphi, a
family-run company set up in 1939 by Arthur Dent who, like so many American
movie bosses, had an east European Jewish background. Dent, who had at one time
been the British representative of Sam Goldwyn, the Hollywood mogul, stored the
prints of the films in his garage in Highgate, north London.
His company did not make any more films after 1956 although short
clips from a few were sold by his children over the following decades.
The negatives and prints were left in cans in the garage of the
family home until Dent’s granddaughter, Kate Lees, stumbled upon them and
realised their significance as a “missing” chapter of the British
film industry.
“They’re a snapshot of a particularly prolific period
of British film-making,” said Lees, who donated them to the BFI.
One reason the first two films to be restored are those starring
Sellers is that the institute is being given money by Laura Camuti, an American
fan of the comedian. “[Sellers’s] vocal skills are
mind-boggling,” said Camuti.
Both Let’s Go Crazy and PennyPoints to Paradise,
a comedy about a man who wins the football pools, were shot in 1951. It was the
same year as the first radio series of The Goon Show, the comedy which
kick-started the careers of Sellers, Spike Milligan and Harry Secombe.
Let’s Go Crazy, a half-hour film of zany comedy, stars
Sellers and was co-written by him and Milligan.
However, it had mixed reviews. Roger Lewis, Sellers’s
biographer, wrote that it was “amateurishly done. It lasts 32 minutes and
probably took less time to create”.
Lees herself still has a letter written by Milligan to her father,
Stanley Dent, thanking him for “the Lolly from PennyPoints.
It is a pleasant suprise [sic] as I never expected any at all, knowing the film
profession to be what it is”.
Three films made in 1953 and 1954, featuring Prunella Scales,
albeit in small roles, have also emerged. Scales, who has been married to the
actor Timothy West since 1963, was then just 20 and at the start of a long and
distinguished career, which has included playing Sybil in FawltyTowers
and the Queen in the 1991 television play A Question of Attribution.
Other virtually forgotten films in the cache showing British stars
include The Great Game, a comedy about football which featured Thora Hird and
Diana Dors, a favourite of Dent’s; and What Every Woman Wants, a drama
with Brian Rix and Joan Hickson.
Rolf Harris, who arrived in Britain
from Australia
as a 22-year-old in 1952, won a role as Private Proudfoot in You Lucky People
three years later. “My agent of the time lined up auditions for stage
shows and films and I managed to get a few minor roles,” said Harris.
“In the Tommy Trinder film You Lucky People, I was a bearded soldier. I had
three lines of dialogue.”
Corbett was in his mid-twenties when he made his first film, a
year before his first professional stage appearance. Fun at St Fanny’s
was a comedy set in a boys’ boarding school and appeared just after the
first of the St Trinian’s girls’ boarding-school farces.
Other Adelphi films now with the BFI include several early ones
featuring Sid James, Max Bygraves, Joan Sims and Dennis Price
On August 29th, as part of their annual "Summer Under the Stars", Turner Classic
Movies is devoting a whole day to Peter Sellers movies. The complete listing
for the Eastern time zone is here. (Note that "The Naked Truth" is being shown
under its American title, "Your Past Is Showing".) Notably, the schedule
doesn't include ANY of the PP films -- as opposed to the 2004 run, which
included 4 of them -- or "Dr. Strangelove", and instead digs deeper for 13
different films, some of which haven't been aired on American TV in years.
http://www.tcm.com/schedule/index.jsp?startDate=8/29/2009&timezone=EST&cid=N
- Rori
I'm dreadfully sorry, but I can't understand what're you talking about, could you explain it better, please?
Stefano Lo Cigno
Da: Rori Stevens <tomdoctress@...> A: PeterSellersAppreciationSociety@yahoogroups.com Inviato: Venerd́ 29 maggio 2009, 17:04:59 Oggetto: Re: [PeterSellersAppreciationSociety] Pink Panther VS. The Lottery
> Thought I'd pass it along. I'll try to send an attachment photo of the > card-unscratched- later-but I felt "lucky" and ....had ta scratch this > one.
> Thought I'd pass it along. I'll try to send an attachment photo of the
> card-unscratched- later-but I felt "lucky" and ....had ta scratch this
> one.
Neato! Did you have any luck? :o)
- Rori
Happy surprise when I went for a soda at the grocery shop.There's a Pink Panther scratch off lottery ticket.It's Illinois (USA) lottery but it's sure to be elsewhere.
All pink with pink paw-prints and the image of the panther holding the big pink gem.
To match numbers you scratch off 10 different images of the panther's face-different expressions. Get a PP instead of a number and you win automatically.
The kicker bonus box is the image of Clouseau (animated version) holding a big magnifying glass .Get a mag/glass after scratching and you win big.(well bigger)Case solve-ed.
Thought I'd pass it along. I'll try to send an attachment photo of the card-unscratched- later-but I felt "lucky" and ....had ta scratch this one.
This is for posting on the PSAS site and anywhere else/to
whom anyone would like –
“They were all
Clare Quilty…” “I’m just as sorry as you are,
Dimitri…”
Manhattan’s Museum of Modern Art (www.moma.org), which over the years has
screened (in the best film prints available) such Peter Sellers classics as THE
PARTY, THE SMALLEST SHOW ON EARTH, and THE PINK PANTHER, is now showcasing PS’
two unforgettable movies that he made with the late great director Stanley
Kubrick.
The schedule is as follows;
LOLITA – Saturday June 20th @5:00 PM and
Monday, June 22nd @8:00 PM
DR. STRANGELOVE – Sunday June 21st @5:30 PM
and Wednesday, June 24th @8:00 PM
As a reminder, a new print of the latter classic begins a
weeklong run at Manhattan’s
Film Forum (www.filmforum.org) this
Friday, May 22nd.
I thought it was worth noting that in region 1 (U.S. and Canada), distributor
Code Red has brought out "A Day at the Beach", one of Sellers' most obscure
appearances. Here's a review of the disc from the DVDTalk.com website:
http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/36968/day-at-the-beach-1970-a/
- Rori
New York City’s Film Forum (www.filmforum.org)
is once again reviving a Peter Sellers classic; the 1964 DR. STRANGELOVE OR:
HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB, directed by Stanley Kubrick,
will play the theater for one week, from Friday May 22nd through
Thursday May 28th, 2009. The 45th Anniversary of the
picture is being commemorated with a new 35mm print – one from a new 4K
digitally created negative using the best surviving film elements. If
you’re in Manhattan
around Memorial Day, don’t miss PS in not one but three of his greatest roles! Daily
showtimes are; 1:10 PM, 3:20 PM, 5:30 PM, 7:40 PM, and 9:50 PM (albeit with no
late-afternoon/evening shows on Monday May 25th).
Well said !!! And I'm glad you agree.You gave great points.
There are some "out there" that see Trail as a Peter Sellers movie,maybe the ONLY one they've seen. For some wonderful footage it's a great intro,BUT in full context it insults me to use his image to promote Edwards career .
The pain of it,as I understand it, Sellers did not have the legal rights to the name Clouseau, nor his image as Clouseau.Unlike say, Johnny Depp's image as Captain Sparrow on cereal boxes and toys EVERYWHERE.. etc.-where Depp is paid for that and had AGREED to that.
So I can avoid Trail and see MOST of it -the Sellers scenes- IN Peter Sellers movies.
I still watch TRAIL whenever I get to the end of watching all of Peter's movies, which I do in a cycle, at least once a year. Because there is still a good 35-40 minutes of a New Pink Panther movie before Clouseau disappears. Even second rate Pink Panther. And Herbert Lom's work in the film does a wonderful job of tying everything together. My biggest regret about this project is that the footage of Julie Andrews as a hotel maid from RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER is not included. Reportedly, the footage was lost, though I remember seeing it in the 1970s. Maybe on the Tonight Show? Also, Julie is supposed to be somewhere in TRAIL but I don't see her.
Here is my theory on why all the previous Non - Sellers Clouseau films have failed.
Clouseau is not a character from literature or another medium. He doesn't already exist in another form. He is a character created out of whole cloth by Peter Sellers and Blake Edwards in 1963. And the two men subsequently honed and expanded the character over the next 15 years. Sellers provided the man. Edwards provided the context the man would exist in.
Without the second, the first cannot exist. And without the man, the context makes no sense. This is why CURSE OF THE PINK PANTHER and SON OF THE PINK PANTHER were such failures. They had the context but not the man. Conversely, I can only assume that the Edwards-less Clive Donner ROMANCE OF THE PINK PANTHER (1980) would have beeb an equal failure, providing the man without his proper context or environment. It's a good script... I enjoyed it... but I don't think it would have been a runaway hit.
And this is also why the Martin films failed. Peter and Blake created the character of Clouseau. He is their perfect creation. To play it as Peter did is nothing more than imitation. To play it differently, as Martin bravely tried to do, only creates a less adequate version of Edwards & Seller's perfection. And the directors Martin used... game as they were... could only hope to loosely imitate Edwards' context.
-----Original Message-----
From: imeminexx@...
To: petersellersappreciationsociety@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tue, 31 Mar 2009 9:24 am
Subject: [PeterSellersAppreciationSociety] (unknown)
We haven't discussed Trail of the Pink Panther.I find enormous faults and think it an insult and not a tribute to PS so much as a tribute to BE.If that isn't too obvious then the promotion of Black Edwards "coming soon " film in the ending credits make the purpose of the movie clear.I get more enraged by it than L & D as it USES his image and name to feed off for money ,and money only to BE.
BE cannot admit that any PP movie w/o Sellers bombed because it was w/o Sellers.I read a review once that said it right.The PP movie with PS made more than any movie second only to the James Bond series.That Clouseau was the most loved and related to character to date.That proves the point that the public can see anyone play James Bond and still come for more,but that only one man can BE Clouseau or they won't come at all.
Get there faster with the MapQuest Toolbar. Try it now.
We haven't discussed Trail of the Pink Panther.I find enormous faults and think it an insult and not a tribute to PS so much as a tribute to BE.If that isn't too obvious then the promotion of Black Edwards "coming soon " film in the ending credits make the purpose of the movie clear.I get more enraged by it than L & D as it USES his image and name to feed off for money ,and money only to BE.
BE cannot admit that any PP movie w/o Sellers bombed because it was w/o Sellers.I read a review once that said it right.The PP movie with PS made more than any movie second only to the James Bond series.That Clouseau was the most loved and related to character to date.That proves the point that the public can see anyone play James Bond and still come for more,but that only one man can BE Clouseau or they won't come at all.
I saw PP 1 with Steve Martin - a typical childish burlesque of our
times. left me unimpressed and made no connection whatsoever with the
original PP series. even a single still-photo of Sellers as Clouseau
beats the whole Martin movie by miles.
Unfortunately, I haven't seen the Arkin PP. I think I should, though.
Zeljka