AUNTIE MAME: Blu-ray (Warner Bros. 1958) Warner Archive Collection
Everyone’s
favorite relation is, or rather, should be ‘Auntie Mame’- that devil-may-care madcap, imbued with a grandly
amused sense of self, she bucked both the sexual politics of her generation and
straight-jacketed dogmatism of being an irrepressibly strong-minded female in a
man’s world. Patrick Dennis’
novelization of the exploits of his Aunt Marion Tanner is a celebration of a
life lived fully and a legacy that has since extended into the realms of ‘live theater’ and movie-land folklore.
As eulogized by Hollywood, Mame Dennis oft acquires a homoerotic subtext; her
broad-mindedness tipping the scales of acceptable drag queen haute couture,
furthermore conjured in ‘gay’ parties
populated by progressive thinkers, extolling the virtues of nudism, free love
and bathtub gin; Marxist/Leninist supporters, bootleggers and the occasionally
coded lesbian, lurking in the background to add a counterintuitive splash of
drabness to all these otherwise colorful characters who populate Mame’s world.
However, as penned by Patrick Dennis (whose real name was Edward Everett ‘Pat’
Tanner III), Mame is a delicious coquette, puncturing the balloons of
hypocrisy, one snooty buffoon at a time. She is, I think, the sort of champion
every young boy of an impressionable age would be thoroughly blessed to have as
his fairy godmother; slightly pixelated, well-heeled, unencumbered by the
narrow-minded agenda put forth by the ‘thought
police’ of her time, and, imbued with a sparkling agility to see within the
heart of her young charge; the child’s POV vindicated and embraced. Better
still from a child’s perspective; Mame Dennis takes guff from no one.
The exploits in
the novel span the years roughly between 1928 and 1952; an expanse in which the
fictionalized ‘aunt’ with gusto to spare promises to “open doors” for young Patrick Dennis that he has never even
dreamed existed. After his book became a publishing phenomenon, Patrick Dennis
would repeatedly deny any similarities shared between Mame Dennis and his Aunt
Marion as purely superficial. “I write in
the first person,” Dennis stressed, “…but
it’s all fictional.” Well – not exactly. Like the ‘fictional’ Mame, Dennis’
Aunt Marion was also born in Buffalo on March 6, 1889. She led a rather unusual
life in Greenwich Village; indiscriminately married and divorced and running
through both hers and her husband’s moneys with an alarming disregard for
saving anything for a rainy day. Also, true to life: she had a brother, Edward
(Pat’s father), staunchly straight-laced; a buttoned-down businessman who
absolutely abhorred Marion’s more gregarious lifestyle as the party-going bon
vivant/patron of the arts. And just like Mame, Marion worked briefly for
Macy’s, in between having her flings with a career on the wicked stage
(opposite a very young Judith Anderson – a.k.a. Vera Charles). Depending on
one’s point of view these eccentricities were either embellished in print or
told from the heart; Dennis’ book reveling in Mame’s unorthodoxy best left for
his own imagination to fill in the gaps.
Her bohemianism did not go unnoticed, however, and to a child of Dennis’
years it must have seemed terrifically splendid.
It also stood to
reason a book this memorable would have some sort of creative afterlife; and so
it did: first, as Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee’s immaculate stagecraft,
playing at the Broadhurst Theatre from October 31, 1956, to June 28, 1958. On
stage, Mame was embodied by the incomparable Rosalind Russell in a performance
only to be described as sublimely ‘out
there’; Russell’s penchant for rapid fire delivery of some of the wittiest
dialogue, running the gamut with a sort of high-octane mania and finesse; ‘Auntie Mame’ sold out in advance with
Russell inhabiting the zany dame’s skin for fifteen months before departing for
Hollywood to reprise the part in Warner Bros. big and splashy celluloid
extravaganza – truly, a banquet for which most ‘poor suckers’ had been starving
to see; her replacement on the stage, Greer Garson, adding tempo and ‘class’,
later, to be replaced by Beatrice Lillie’s uber-tart and enterprising grand
dame. Meanwhile, the road company
productions courted some of the most legendary talents of their time; among
them, Sylvia Sidney, Eve Arden and Constance Bennett. Yet, it is for Russell’s
participation in director, Morton DaCosta’s 1958 Technirama spectacle that the
legacy and legend of Patrick Dennis’ Auntie
Mame endures; Russell’s name synonymous with the character and vice versa.
And in reviewing Auntie Mame these
many decades later, it becomes abundantly clear why both the picture and the
performance have taken on a life of their own.
In her stunning
array of Orry-Kelly fashions, flitting in and out of New York’s glitterati – an
eclectic community where one is apt to hear great symphonic works arranged with
airplane motors and real live sheep on the stage – or even when benignly
depriving her caustic arch nemesis, banker Dwight Babcock (Fred Clark) of his
precious male initiative to see the impressionable Patrick transformed into a
pint-sized stuffy eastern seaboard snob before his sixteenth birthday, later to
be hurriedly married off to Gloria Upson (Joanna Barnes) – or as Mame puts it –
the Arian from Darien - Roz Russell’s frenetic magnetism is saturated with a
light and luscious, even gingerly svelte maternal gesture of sage wisdom; a
sort of nutty but nice altruism penetrating through the comedy. Russell is not
given nearly enough credit for the ‘subtler nuances’ in this barn-burning
bravura. Her most unpretentiousness is revealed during the picture’s opening
act when, after Mame’s savings have been eaten away by the Great Depression she
suffers several crises of conscience. The first occurs after Dwight Babcock
discovers Mame’s deception in not enrolling Patrick in Bixby Academy (having
placed him in the more broad-minded experimental school overseen by
Marxist/nudist, Acacias Page, played by Henry Brandon), and, has Patrick
removed from her care, sent far away to St. Bonifice. The scene where Mame begs
Babcock to reconsider what this separation from the child she has since
invested her wholeheartedness of being as Patrick’s surrogate is heartrending;
Mame, who only several scenes earlier, regarded Babcock with not entirely
unfounded haughty disdain, now brought to heel for mercy where none shall be
given.
The second moment
to prove Russell’s understatement on par and noteworthy as her bombastic
temperament seen elsewhere and throughout, is revealed after Mame, newly
ensconced as a bit player in Vera Charles’ (Coral Browne) latest theatrical
venture, ‘Midsummer Madness’, is
fired by her ‘best friend’ for
attempting to make ‘something more’ of the part in front of a live audience;
the upstaging inverted as catastrophe when Mame’s noisy charm bracelet creates
a distractingly humorous diversion.
Paroled from Bixby for the Thanksgiving holidays, Patrick (played as a
boy by Jan Handzlik) arrives backstage to find the woman he admires most of all
for her spunk, on the brink of abject despair. In coming to her passionate
defense, Patrick stirs Mame to reconsider her failure as slight, offering his
arm as an escort and referring to her as ‘Lady Iris’ – the noble woman from the
play. In reply, Russell, momentarily recomposing her emotions, responds, “Charmed, Lord Dudley”. However, as the
two begin their proud walk off together, Mame suffers again; this time, a
moment of undulated gratitude as she embraces the ‘little man’ with the big
heart, unable to hide her tears this second time. Herein, Rosalind Russell
reveals the character’s fragility. Even madcaps possess a streak of elemental
sadness. And Mame has suffered through some terrible setbacks. But it is
Russell’s interpolation of sorrow and defiant pride that so infectiously wither
the sham of melodrama, replaced by a moment of sheer and remarkable poignancy;
her effectiveness as she pivots from outward self-sacrifice to inner strength,
then back again, falling prey, though never quite the victim of the
sentimentality evoked in Bronislau Kaper’s magnificent underscore.
The end of Auntie Mame’s first act is capped off
by the traditionally maudlin Christmastime pastiche; Mame, at her lowest ebb,
unceremoniously dismissed from her temporary position as a Macy’s toy clerk
after badly bungling her sales slips. Remember…she’s a wiz at C.O.D.! Russell
departs with a buoyant shriek, informing her last customer of the day to get
the rest of his shopping done at Gimbels. But afterward, we meet Russell’s
denizen walking solitarily down a crowded snowy Manhattan street, desperate to
hitch a cab back to her Beekman Place penthouse, only to realize she is
virtually destitute; even unable to pay for the modest fare to carry her home.
Once arrived on foot, Patrick’s nanny cum Mame’s housekeeper, Nora Muldoon
(Connie Gilchrist) and Mame’s ever-devoted houseboy, Ito (Yuki Shimoda) reveal
they have paid off all outstanding debts for the household with their moneys
saved up, as Norma puts it, “for a rainy
day” to save face (also, to secure a better line of credit with the butcher
in days yet to follow). Their philanthropy is met with restrained emotions,
even a bit of sublime comedy as Mame, suffering through more tears of
appreciation, whimpers defiantly, “Hell,
we don’t even have any Kleenex!” The
somberness of the scene is diffused when Mame’s last customer unexpectedly
appears on her doorstep; introducing himself as Beauregard Jackson Pickett
Burnside (Forrest Tucker); a handsome southerner with oodles of cash and a
genuine yen for Mame’s brand of home cookin’.
The rest of Auntie Mame represents a restoration of
Mame’s faith in humanity as she becomes inveigled in a crazy quilt of
improbably absurd and occasionally episodic chance meetings. Think of her as
the Forrest Gump of her day, albeit with more brains, money and sly ‘class-will-out’ to disseminate as she
plots an inspirational sweet revenge on Dwight, meant to ensure Patrick’s
future will not be as bleak as his puberty under Babcock’s moralizing
restraints. It is to director, Morton DaCosta’s credit the rest of Auntie Mame
never devolves into a claptrap of oddities; the various incidents introducing
us to a cavalcade of delightfully arrogant, clever and fun-loving, oft
manipulative misfits; each tamed in their own agenda and led to the trough by
the ultimate puppet master – Mame Dennis. Mame’s retreat to Beauregard’s family
home in the ole south begins the second act of Mame’s extraordinary
resurrection; a stately plantation, complete with a demonstrative, sneeze-happy
matriarch (Carol Veazie) and fiery belle, Sally Cato McDougall (Brook Byron),
so described by her much younger brother as ‘the meanest damn filly in the entire south”. It would certainly
appear so, as Sally Cato goads Mame into a traditional foxhunt astride a killer
stallion; presumably, to have Mame thrown. But his ploy backfires when Mame
manages not only to hang on to her mount but take the fox, as well as the
hounds on a rip-roaring jaunt across the open fields onto the unlikeliest of
victories. Beauregard proposes. The timeline advances to cover Mame’s worldly
travels on her new hubby’s coin; lengthy excursions told in the economy of a
montage with occasionally all too obvious painted backdrops to bridge the gap
as Patrick (now college-bound and played by Roger Smith) encounters his own
parlor spider in Gloria Upson, the addlepated Radcliffe princess whose parents,
Claude (Willard Waterman) and Doris (Lee Patrick) are Dwight’s best friends –
‘really top drawer’. In Mame’s absence, Dwight has almost managed to convince
Patrick his future prospects are all wrapped up in Gloria.
Alas, Beauregard
dies unexpectedly while scaling the Swiss Matterhorn; Mame, retreating to
Beekman Place, prostrating with grief, but wooed to reconsider what her life
has meant to those who love her best. Patrick emboldens Mame to write her
memoirs, later to be guaranteed publication by her former lover, Lindsay
Woolsey (Patric Knowles). To sweeten the deal, Patrick calls upon an ole
college buddy, Brian O'Bannion (David Hughes) – an editor of sorts with an
affected Irish brogue – to work closely to achieve the desired results. He also
employs a full-time secretary, Agnes Gooch (the hilariously inept Peggy Cass)
to transcribe their notes. Alas, O’Bannion proves an oily sponge, plying his
craft as a dime store lothario to secure his full-time live-in position at
Beekman Place; cushy digs for this out-of-work gigolo. Patrick is most
unimpressed by this turn of events. Moreover, he sincerely worries how it will
look to Gloria, her parents and ‘Uncle
Dwight’. Narrowly abandoning his aunt for this ‘new life’, Patrick is
brought to his senses when Mame agrees to attend the Upsons at their mountebank
home in Connecticut. But the Upson’s anti-Semitic reaction gives Mame a rather
splendidly insidious idea. With Mame chipping in, the Upsons are planning to
buy up and give the parcel of land adjacent their home to Patrick and Gloria as
a wedding present; a way to keep very close ties on Patrick’s future – not to
include Mame outside of her monetary contribution. Mame, however, has different
plans.
As the Upsons
attend Mame for a cozy engagement party, Mame gives the frumpy Agnes a complete
makeover; ordering O’Bannion to take her to the soiree he had planned to attend
with Mame as his dinner guest. Although O’Bannion resists at first, he is swept
away by the unexpectedness of Agnes’s charms. As the time for the party nears, Agnes
learns she is pregnant with O’Bannion’s child. After having spent some months
away from Beekman Place, Patrick returns with Gloria, her parents and Dwight;
everyone discovering Mame has given the penthouse a complete makeover with
decidedly avant-garde accoutrements. The installer, Pegeen Ryan (Pippa Scott)
is a beautiful no-nonsense gal, very much Patrick’s speed. Mame tempts the Upsons and Dwight with hors
d'oeuvre made of pickled rattlesnake and octopus, revealing to all she has
bought the property next to the Upson’s to establish a retreat for orphaned and
refugee Jewish children; decidedly not what the Upsons want to hear. Asked to
explain herself, Mame gives ‘Uncle
Dwight’ an earful. After standing by and watching Patrick slowly devolve
into exactly the sort of uppity trust fund baby she sincerely hoped he would
never become, Mame has decided to take matters into her own hands. She explains
to Dwight that while each of them may indeed have had altruistic motives for
taking Patrick’s life in hand, the boy is now of age and of the mindset to be ‘hungry’ for something neither of them
would perhaps consider as ‘the best’
for him. It is not up to Dwight or Mame to choose for Patrick, but for Patrick
to pursue the future on his own terms.
Realizing the merit
of this argument, Patrick reiterates his gratitude by invoking ‘Lady Iris’;
she, reciprocating with “Charmed, Lord
Dudley.” Time again passes. We learn
Patrick and Pegeen fell in love, were married and since had a child, Michael
(Terry Kelman) age seven – exactly primed as Patrick was when he first came to
live with Mame. Recently returned from her travels in India, Mame encourages
Michael to coax his parents’ permission to make the return journey with her
before the start of the Fall school semester; having pumped the boy full of
life’s gospel according to ‘Auntie Mame’ – “You
know what your trouble is…you don’t live, live, live! Life is a banquet and
most poor suckers are starving to death!” Momentarily shocked by their
son’s outburst, Patrick and Pegeen realize the one constant never in doubt is
this extraordinary woman who has left her magical imprint on all their lives;
the self-professed pied piper of all their daydreams. Unable to see the logic
in denying Michael his incredible adventures with his great aunt, Patrick and
Pegeen step aside as Mame begins to work her lunacy on the next generation,
promising to “open doors never dreamed of” in Michael’s future. We can
sincerely believe it as the screen slowly fades to black and Bronislau Kaper’s
lush orchestrations fill the theater.
Auntie Mame is a truly magical experience; a rich and vibrant ‘family film’ that never treats the kids
as idiots or talks down to the adults. The one constant is Rosalind Russell’s
screwball maven of feistily harmless mischief. In the musicalized version
eventually to follow on Broadway, then again – on film, title foreshortened
simply to ‘Mame’ – Jerry Herman’s
score and Angela Lansbury’s galvanized turn as the wondrous grand dame
conspired to create another smash hit from this well-trodden material; alas,
trodden into the mud by a big and bloated movie version in 1974, starring
Lucille Ball. The problem with this latter incarnation is decidedly Ball
herself, or rather, the two-fold negative ripple effect she manifests. Once
bearing witness to Rosalind Russell’s Mame Dennis in the movies (or Angela
Lansbury’s musical recreation on the stage), no substitute will suffice; much
less one who cannot sing and plays the part as a sort of usurper of youthful
naiveté, exposing her underage charge to seedy nightclubs, spurious gangsters
and tassel-wearing strippers; Mame’s glamorous parties distilled to dens of
iniquity meant to contribute to the delinquency of a minor. We can fully
appreciate why this latter movie’s Dwight Babcock (John McGiver) would want to
usher away any impressionable mind from this Mame’s influences. Ball’s Mame
does not see the world through the eyes of a child as Russell’s Mame did, but
rather insidiously tries to prematurely will Patrick into the adult world, thus
depriving him of his youth.
By contrast, Roz
Russell’s Mame is maternal; something Ball’s re-incarnation is not, Russell
offering us spirited warmth in tandem with Mame Dennis’ self-distracting
lunacy. Russell puts it best when Mame, asked by Lindsay Woolsey why his
proposals of marriage remain unanswered, triumphantly declares, “How could I be a wife? I’m much too busy
being a mother!” It is, of course, meant as a joke, flying in the face of
that bowdlerized ‘woman’s place’ in
conservative America excised from the Betty Crocker handbook for the ideal ‘little woman’, as both wife and mother;
the ‘happy homemaker’ distinctly at
odds with the more laissez faire fond remembrances of the 1920’s to which Mame
is decidedly more at home as an ardent creature of habitual hedonism run amok.
By placing the proverbial cart before the horse, Mame has, in fact, turned
another ensconced precept of Eisenhower’s Americana on its end; reconnoitered
and marginally reinstated when she takes Beauregard Picket Burnside to husband
and to bed. Still, the couple remains childless, perhaps because Mame has
waited too long to have her biological clock rewound. Whatever the case, after
Beauregard’s untimely passing, Mame reverts to form, preferring lovers to
husbands and parties to the patriarchy; scrutinizing and micromanaging the
particulars of the only ‘man’ in her life – Patrick – to have remained a loyal
constant.
The others in
the cast are all subservient to Russell’s towering presence. Yet, perhaps even
more remarkable, many of the supporting player do manage to hold their own;
Coral Browne’s caustic ‘first lady of the American theater’ – Vera Charles, as
example; a ribald riff on the self-appointed and status-stricken demigods of
the stage, played with askew enchantment. Peggy Cass is a riotous Agnes Gooch;
a Coke-bottle frump, inept to the point of being a social disaster until remade
by Mame’s mirthful meddling. And then there is Lee Patrick’s idiotically
amiable Doris Upson; a role otherwise merely grating and dull, yet under
Patrick’s command, emanating a modicum of empathy as the antithesis of Mame
herself. In hindsight, the women in Auntie
Mame are memorable; this show a real showcase for them, curiously at a time
when meaty roles for women had all but vanished and the much celebrated ‘woman’s picture’ was something of a
thing of the past. The men in Auntie Mame are less easily defined, or
rather, more clearly drawn from stereotype. Poor Fred Clark, once again cast as
the easily befuddled and stiff-britches baddie. Yet, even Clark stands in
relief to the other men in this piece; Patric Knowles and Roger Smith
milquetoast and nondescript as cardboard cutouts get, while Willard Waterman’s
Claude Upson is as rather heavy-handed boor meant strictly for comic relief.
This leaves the heavy lifting to Jan Handzlik’s boyhood incarnation of Patrick
Dennis (quite effective on all accounts) and Robin Hughes spoiled sponge,
O’Bannion (less successful on all accounts).
We should pause
a moment here in praise of Morton DaCosta’s invested theatricality, retaining a
certain fidelity to the stage while expanding upon the requirements of a big
and splashy 1950’s movie; the fable retold in Technirama and Technicolor,
periodically isolating actors in frame with a camera iris effect that adds visual
punch to the transitional periods in the narrative timeline. Auntie Mame is really more of a ‘show’ than a movie; DaCosta’s direction
creating a visual feast that never underplays its artifice for art, ably
assisted by cinematographer extraordinaire, Harry Stradling Sr. whose list of
masterpieces in color include My Fair
Lady (1964), Funny Girl (1968)
and Hello Dolly! (1969). In some
ways Auntie Mame has the look and
vibrancy of a big-budgeted Hollywood musical without its one essential
ingredient – the music – herein,
seeming quite nonessential because of Roz Russell’s animated performance.
Finally, there is Bronislau Kaper’s enthusiastically ‘ole school’ underscore to
reconsider; full of the necessary pizzazz to keep all of the balls in Mame
Dennis’ juggling act in play. From the bombastic overture, married to a
kaleidoscopic main title sequence, right down to the unusually poignant ‘love theme’ – ironically written for
Mame and Patrick – not Mame and any one of her lovers or husbands – Kaper’s
underscore achieves a sort of fizzy flight into fancy with periodic respites
that become more gentle and heartfelt by direct comparison. In tandem, Kaper
captures Mame’s joie de vivre, yet also her bountiful heart; a commodity that
most ironically lacks in the musical version; perhaps, jettisoned to favor the
Broadway’s show-stopping razzamatazz. In the final analysis, there is only one Auntie Mame. And Lady, thy name is Roz
Russell.
Technirama was
made for hi-def; a superior anamorphic system of photography and projection
utilizing two curved prisms as image-squeezing adapters for their 3-strip
cameras already converted to VistaVision, now producing a 2.35:1 aspect ratio
with room left for an optical soundtrack when printed directly to 35mm 8-perf
film. The results: a 70mm-esque viewing experience unlike any other with
positively gorgeous grain and textures and, of course, Techicolor’s penchant
for producing a superior spectrum of colors with pitch-perfect contrast to
boot. Can it be? Can Auntie Mame have weathered 60 years and
still emerged as a pluperfect example of 1080p Blu-ray authoring? The answer is
unequivocally and emphatically – yes! The Warner Archive’s (WAC) debut of this
perennially beloved classic is astoundingly rich and vibrant. If you’ve never seen
Auntie Mame, then prepare to be
dazzled. With an absolutely saturated palette of lush and lovely hues a la
Harry Stradling, and cribbed from fine grain film elements, WAC has done their
homework and this movie has never looked more resplendent on home video. Wow! Impressive! Thank you! The 5.1 DTS
sounds grand too, bringing back the opening night splendor of a vintage night
at the movies. Bottom line: very highly
recommended.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
5+
VIDEO/AUDIO
5+
EXTRAS
0
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