things that are awesome :: Katharine Hepburn films

Each week The Bumbles Blog posts a movie-themed question that always makes me think a bit but rarely stirs enough to create a full blog post in response. But this week… oh, this week I have to respond. The topic is: Share your favorite moments, memories or films featuring Katharine Hepburn. Since the Great Kate is my all-time favorite actress, it’s imperative that I expound upon it.

To the best of my memory, my introduction to Katharine Hepburn came in 1981 with On Golden Pond. I was a mere 12 years old when I saw the film with my parents at the cinema, and I had yet to discover Ms. Hepburn in films but was well-aware of her legend. I knew Jane Fonda very well by then, and was more familiar with Henry Fonda than Hepburn, but I remember that Kate intrigued me with her character’s sunny disposition and with her own innate grace. It would be a few more years before I discovered Hepburn’s true greatness and had a chance to dive into her body of work, but I remembered her name and her face (and her distinctive voice and signature style) from the moment I first saw her.

Still, it was The Philadelphia Story that sealed my great love for Kate. I hadn’t yet latched onto classic films as the greatest love of my entertainment life (TCM hadn’t launched yet), but I was watching an episode of thirtysomething and became utterly intrigued when The Philadelphia Story was used as part of the plot. By that time I was a huge fan of Jimmy Stewart, having been charmed by him for many years already, and the few clips of the film that aired during thirtysomething were so enchanting that I knew I had to rent it immediately. It took less than 10 minutes for me to fall head over heels for both Hepburn and Cary Grant, whom I wasn’t yet familiar with either, and by the end of this first viewing I knew I’d become a lifelong fan of all three stars. The Philadelphia Story changed my opinion of “old” films, and I daresay it made me a fan of classic cinema. It wasn’t long after that I first saw It’s a Wonderful Life, as well, and my general love of movies became a great love of film and film history. And though I’ve seen many, many films from the Golden Age of Hollywood (and beyond), no actor has ever compared to Katharine Hepburn in my mind. Only one comes close — that being Cate Blanchett — but none can ever surpass the first Kate’s greatness. I read her autobiography a few years ago, and even in her real voice about her own life (and generally no-holds-barred), Kate Hepburn has never ceased to amaze and charm me. She was definitely one of a kind.

And so, in order of my love for them, the following are my favorite films featuring Katharine Hepburn. I’ve yet to see even a third of her filmography, but I look forward to expanding this list throughout the course of my life.

The Philadelphia Story
The Philadelphia Story
Hepburn is Tracy Lord, a wealthy socialite preparing for her second marriage, who is being shadowed on the eve of her wedding by two tabloid journalists (played by Jimmy Stewart and Ruth Hussey). Tracy’s ex-husband (Cary Grant) also shows up, and a delightfully screwball comedy ensues wherein Tracy realizes she still has feelings for her first husband and is also developing new feelings for Stewart’s reporter. The film is funny and heartwarming and features layered performances by all of its stars.
 
Bringing Up Baby
Bringing Up Baby
Hepburn and Grant are teamed again in this silly little comedy involving a fossilized dinosaur bone, a pet leopard named Baby, a one-sided infatuation, and a case of mistaken identity. The premise of the film is truly ridiculous, but the performances of Hepburn and Grant (as well as the deft directing of Howard Hawks) redeem any flaws to make this film hilarious in every way. Bringing Up Baby also features my all-time favorite Hepburn movie quote, spoken as she limped along with one heel broken off her high-heeled shoes: “I was born on the side of a hill. I was born on the side of a hill.” Makes me laugh every time I think of it!
 
Without Love
Without Love
It took me a long, long time to appreciate Spencer Tracy, but it was Without Love that finally brought me around. He is utterly charming as a brilliant scientist working on a classified project for the military during World War II, and his interactions with Hepburn are so subtle and understated that I began to really root for their characters and forget about their real-life romance. Hepburn plays a widow attempting to begin her life anew when she finds that Tracy has finagled himself into her empty house and made it his home base. He manages to charm her into letting him stay, and in turn she begins to serve as his assistant on the project. After a while they decide that it would benefit them both to get married but vow to remain unemotional about the entire business. The charm of the film comes in the many ways they try to remain platonic in their relationship and avoid falling in love. (You can read my original thoughts on the film here.)
 
Stage Door
Stage Door
In a New York City boarding house, an eclectic mix of aspiring actresses live together (and often compete) while attempting to break into the theatre business on Broadway. Each woman has a particular dream, each woman has a string of disappointments, and each woman has a personality that sets her apart from her peers. The cast of this 1937 film is incredible, including Ginger Rogers, Eve Arden and a young Lucille Ball, but Katharine Hepburn is especially memorable as (yet another) wealthy society darling who seeks to develop a career without her family’s connections. Hepburn plays her character of Terry Randall as arrogant and entitled but also fearful and insecure. What makes Stage Door so enchanting is the interaction between the women and the cacophonous rhythm of the film. I still think about various scenes months and months after seeing it for the first time. (Read my original thoughts on the film here.)
 
Honorable Mention to The African Queen
The African Queen
Hepburn plays a prim and snooty English missionary who must rely on a boorish steamboat captain (Humphrey Bogart) to transport her out of Eastern Africa when World War I finally reaches her region. Along the way, she convinces the captain to put his small craft to good use and contribute to the British war effort by attacking a German warship with their own constructed torpedo. It would be incredibly zany if not for the two lead actors, whose chemistry is delightful in this film and who each have such high regard for the other. Hepburn wrote an entire book about the experience of making The African Queen and their interaction on screen is enhanced by the journey they took together behind the scenes. It’s a beautiful film, brilliantly directed by John Huston, and it is fully anchored by Hepburn and Bogart, with most of the film being nothing more than the two of them in concerted discourse. There was a time when I thought the film to be tedious and very, very long, but upon successive viewings I’ve come to recognize how enchanting it really is. It’s also one of the first films that helped me understand what women saw in Humphrey Bogart. I know… it should’ve been Casablanca that did that, but it was Hepburn’s interaction with him in The African Queen that finally made him endearing to me, as well. This film was the first time I started to understand his magnetism, and I’ll always believe I have Ms. Hepburn to thank for that.

Films I Saw in 2010 :: The Complete List

Though I keep a fairly good running commentary of movies that I see at the cinema and on DVD throughout each year, I’m not able to devote time to each and every film I watch through all of the mediums currently available. However, in recent years I have made it a habit to keep a simple daily log of all the TV and movies that I watch over the 12-month period, and I try to post a simple blurb about anything that stands out or surprises me. This year’s list of movies is probably 99% complete — allowing for a missed calendar entry here or there — and I have also included a basic rating from zero (depicted as “— —”) to 5 stars. This rating is purely subjective, of course, and most often derived from emotional connections (or lack thereof) and whether I found any merit in the performances of the players. You will see, for instance, that I may have given a median rating to a few truly horrible movies and then given a lesser rating to a film that performed better with the critics or the masses; my reasoning is often that I found the ensemble of actors to wholeheartedly commit to their characters, even when there was no way to salvage the film (as in Smokin’ Aces 2), but did not see such engagement in the film of higher expectation (such as Whiteout). Similarly, I ranked a few critically-acclaimed films (and Oscar-recognized classics) lower in my estimation because they did not resonate with me personally, but may have found a deeper connection to a film with a great many flaws. Like I said, it’s all very subjective. But that’s the reason I love movies so much in the first place and why I spend time documenting these thoughts each year. In ten or twenty or thirty years, some of these films may affect me differently, and I will appreciate having a record of my thought process at this stage of my life.

Feel free to add your own thoughts and opinions about the movies listed here. I’d love to know how they may have affected you!
 

rating: one star 28 Days Later (TV) rating: two stars Last of Mrs. Cheyney, The (TCM)
rating: two stars 42nd Street (TCM) rating: four stars Lawrence of Arabia (TCM)
rating: three stars Above Suspicion (TCM)
rating: one star Layer Cake (Starz)
rating: one star Abyss, The (TV)
rating: four stars Legend of Bagger Vance, The (TV)
rating: two stars Across the Universe (TV)
rating: three stars Love In The Afternoon (TCM)
rating: four stars Adam (DVD)
rating: two stars Lying To Be Perfect (Lifetime)
rating: four stars African Queen, The (TCM)
rating: four stars Man on Fire (AMC)
rating: two stars Alice (miniseries) (SyFy) rating: four stars Marley & Me (HBO)
rating: two stars Alice Adams (TCM)
rating: five stars Matrix, The (TV)
rating: three stars Alice in Wonderland 3-D (DVD)
rating: four stars Matrix Reloaded, The (TV)
rating: two stars All That Jazz (AMC)
rating: two stars Matrix Revolutions, The (TV)
rating: two star All the King’s Men (1949) (TCM)
rating: two stars Meet Me In St. Louis (TCM)
rating: two stars Amelia (Pay-Per-View)
rating: three stars Miracle on 34th Street (1947) (AMC)
rating: three stars American Psycho (Starz)
rating: three stars Mr. and Mrs. Loving (TV)
rating: four stars An American in Paris (TCM) rating: three stars Mrs. Miniver (TCM)
rating: three stars August Rush (Starz)
rating: two stars Murder on the Orient Express (2010) (Masterpiece Mystery)
rating: one star Band Wagon, The (TCM)
rating: three stars My Blueberry Nights (IFC)
rating: three stars Becoming Jane (Starz)
rating: three stars Night At The Opera, The (TCM)
rating: four stars Body of Lies (HBO)
rating: two stars No Reservations (Starz)
rating: four stars Breakfast at Tiffany’s (TCM)
rating: four stars Notorious (TCM)
rating: two stars Bright Lights, Big City (AMC)
rating: three stars Paris Blues (TCM)
rating: three stars Brubaker (TCM)
rating: one star Pitch Black (TV)
rating: five stars Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (TCM)
rating: four stars Pride & Prejudice (TCM)
rating: three stars Casablanca (TCM)
rating: one star Ransom! (1956) (TCM)
rating: three stars Cat On A Hot Tin Roof (TCM)
rating: two stars Red Eye (TV)
rating: four stars Catch Me If You Can (TV)
rating: two stars Reds (TCM)
rating: three stars Changeling (DVD)
rating: four stars
Right Stuff, The (TV)
rating: three stars Charlie Wilson’s War (HBO)
—/span> Ring of Deceit (Lifetime)
rating: three stars Chronicles of Narnia, The: Voyage of the Dawn Treader (cinema)
Riverworld (SyFy)
rating: three stars Cincinnati Kid, The (TCM)
rating: three stars Robin Hood (cinema)
rating: four stars Count of Monte Cristo, The (Encore)
rating: four stars Roman Holiday (TCM)
rating: three stars Crazy Heart (DVD)
rating: two stars Room With A View, A (TCM)
rating: one star Cutthroat Island (AMC) rating: one star Runaways, The (DVD)
rating: two stars Da Vinci Code, The (TV)
rating: three stars Salt (cinema)
rating: four stars Dances With Wolves (TCM)
rating: three stars Serpico (AMC)
rating: one star Deadly Isolation (Lifetime)
rating: two stars Sex and the City (TV edit)
rating: one star Deep Blue Sea (TV)
rating: three stars Sherlock Holmes (DVD)
rating: four stars Dial M For Murder (TCM)
rating: one star Single Man, A (DVD)
rating: three stars Diary of Anne Frank (Masterpiece Classic)
rating: one star Smokin’ Aces 2: Assassins’ Ball (DVD)
rating: three stars Dirty Dozen, The (TCM)
rating: three stars Some Like It Hot (TCM)
rating: two stars Doctor Zhivago (2002) (TV)
rating: four stars Somebody Up There Likes Me (TCM)
rating: three stars Dreamgirls (TV)
rating: three stars Splendor in the Grass (TCM)
rating: three stars Duplicity (HBO)
rating: four stars Stage Door (TCM)
rating: three stars Eagle Eye (HBO)
rating: three stars Sunset Boulevard (TCM)
rating: one star Eat Pray Love (DVD)
rating: four stars
Sweet Bird of Youth (TCM)
rating: two stars Eloise at the Plaza (Disney Channel) Swimfan (DVD)
rating: three stars Few Good Men, A (TV)
rating: two stars Swiss Family Robinson (TCM)
rating: two stars From Here To Eternity (TCM)
rating: four stars Taps (AMC)
rating: three stars Frozen (DVD)
rating: three stars Tender Mercies (TCM)
rating: three stars Gangs of New York (TV)
rating: three stars Terminator Salvation (HBO)
rating: two stars Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (TCM)
rating: two stars The 60s (miniseries) (TV)
rating: three stars Ghost Writer, The (DVD)
rating: three stars The Expendables (Pay-Per-View)
rating: two stars Gracie (TV)
rating: four stars The Pacific (DVD)
rating: three stars Grand Hotel (TCM)
rating: two stars Time Traveler’s Wife, The (PPV)
rating: three stars Green Zone (Pay-Per-View)
rating: four stars Titanic (TV)
rating: two stars Gypsy (1962) (TCM)
rating: four stars To Catch a Thief (TCM)
rating: one star Harper (TCM)
rating: five stars To Kill A Mockingbird (TCM)
rating: three stars High Fidelity (TV)
rating: three stars Toy Story 3 (cinema)
rating: three stars Holiday Inn (TCM)
rating: two stars Unanswered Prayers (Lifetime)
rating: three stars Hud (TCM)
rating: three stars Until They Sail (TCM)
rating: four stars Hurt Locker, The (DVD)
rating: three stars Up In The Air (cinema)
rating: three stars In Cold Blood (HBO)
rating: three stars Veronica Guerin (Starz)
rating: five stars Inception (cinema)
rating: one star War and Peace (TCM)
rating: two stars Inside Daisy Clover (TCM)
rating: two stars West Side Story (TCM)
rating: two stars Intermezzo: A Love Story (TCM)
rating: two stars Where The Wild Things Are (DVD)
rating: three stars International, The (Encore) rating: two stars White Christmas (TCM)
rating: five stars It’s a Wonderful Life (TV)
Whiteout (DVD)
rating: four stars Jeremiah Johnson (TCM)
rating: three stars Without Love (TCM)
rating: three stars Jumper (TV)
Wuthering Heights (1939) (TCM)
rating: one star Key Largo (TCM)
rating: two stars X-Men Origins: Wolverine (DVD)
rating: three stars Knight and Day (cinema)
rating: three stars Year Without a Santa Claus, The (TV)

BRIDGE TO TERABITHIA by Katherine Paterson



Genre:
Young Adult Fiction

ISBN: 0060734019

Acquired:
Half Price Books

Completed Reading:
October 10, 2010

Overall Rating
(from this reading):

Six of ten
I’m a big believer in revisiting the stories that resonate from youth, but I had never returned to Bridge to Terabithia until just this past weekend during the 24-Hour Read-A-Thon. It was the perfect time to do so, as it was guaranteed to be a quick read, though I was a bit concerned that the emotional elements of the story might be heavier than I’d want in the wee hours of the morning. Interestingly, I experienced very little emotion in this reading. I wonder if I was simply overly prepared for it, or if maybe it doesn’t hold quite the same impact once you know the complete story? The fact that I knew what became of Leslie before beginning the book meant I was always waiting for that moment to occur. And though I hadn’t read the book since childhood and it seemed completely brand-new to me, I still wasn’t surprised when the tragedy finally came to pass. And in that I felt a bit let down.
 
The story is dated, somewhat, but the truths hold: nothing can replace the power of friendship and those friendships (even just in memory) can carry you through the most difficult of times. Bridge to Terabithia is still a powerful story written with honesty and absolutely no condescension. Which is probably what made me love it so much as a child. Back then, young adult novels were few and still glossed over the harsh realities of life in an effort to protect “innocence” in children. I’m glad the publishing industry moved beyond those beliefs and began to recognize the strength that children have in good times and in bad.
 
MEMORABLE PASSAGE
He nodded and smiled again. She smiled back. He felt there in the teachers’ room that it was the beginning of a new season in his life, and he chose deliberately to make it so. Chapter Four

it’s not Friday, but I’m in love

All this month Turner Classic Movies has been focusing on a single Hollywood star each day, running marathons of their respective movies for 24 hours at a time. What I didn’t realize was that the site also has accompanying posters for each of these 31 stars. If there’s anything I love more than movies, it’s movie art. And the ones at TCM are simply divine. These are my favorites, but you can see all 31 designs at the TCM’s Summer Under the Stars.
 
Summer Under the Stars
Paul Newman
 
Summer Under the Stars
Steve McQueen
 
Summer Under the Stars
Lauren Bacall
 
Summer Under the Stars
Ingrid Bergman
 
Summer Under the Stars
Elizabeth Taylor
 
Summer Under the Stars
Warren Beatty
 
Summer Under the Stars
Olivia de Havilland
 
Summer Under the Stars
Norma Shearer
 
Summer Under the Stars
Katharine Hepburn
I admit I’m a bit disappointed in this one, as it’s not immediately recognizable as the Great Kate. But then I have to wonder: is there an iconic image that is unmistakably Kate Hepburn and also works in silhouette? Perhaps a full length image in wide-legged trousers? That’s something to ponder!
 
 
Summer Under the Stars
Errol Flynn
 
Summer Under the Stars
Clint Eastwood
 
Summer Under the Stars
Peter O’Toole
One of my top three favorites within the set (along with Newman and McQueen). Not only is it obvious and iconic, but it evokes the same emotion I feel each time I watch Lawrence of Arabia. Which is the mark of great art, after all!
 

 


thanks, Costner!

Thanks, Costner!

 
My Thank You Notes series is inspired by Leah Dieterich who strives to write a thank you note every single day. View her notes at Thx Thx Thx. And don’t miss my girl Cerella’s own Thank You series over at The Cerella Life!


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