Classic Hollywood: The quotable Robert Mitchum
One hundred years ago, the United States entered World War I, the first Pulitzer Prizes were awarded, and Mary Pickford and Charlie Chaplin were among those who ruled the silent silver screen.
On Aug. 6, 1917, Robert Charles Duran Mitchum was born, the son of an Irish-Scottish railroad worker and a Norwegian-born mother, in Bridgeport, Conn. Or so we believe, considering that he once gave three places of birth in three interviews in the 1970s.
That was Robert Mitchum.
Welcome to the latest edition of the Classic Hollywood newsletter. Iâm Scott Sandell, and this week weâre looking back at the centenary of an actor who lived on his own terms and frequently made them up as he went along.
When Mitchum died in 1997, the L.A. Timesâ obituary called him âfilmdom's monosyllabic, devil-may-care tough guy whose lizard-lidded eyelids seemed to be forever looking down on a world he found both amusing and profane.â And that was just from the opening paragraph of a colorfully written story that is attributed only to âa Times staff writer.â
The story went on to note: âOver the years he continued to waver between the wildness of his youth and the somnolent success of his middle years, sometimes existing on a diet of tequila and milk, other times wrapping himself in the love of his family, where he judged himself âa poor husband and a good father.â â
The married Mitchum, of course, became infamous when he was arrested in 1948 for smoking marijuana with a starlet in her Los Angeles apartment, a scandal that seemed bound to doom him. Instead, after two months behind bars, he reconciled with his wife and found that his stardom had only grown.
Given Mitchumâs propensity to ad-lib the truth and use many still-unprintable words, it made for some colorful interviews.
My colleague Kevin Crust put together some of Mitchumâs best quotes that were printed in The Times over several decades.
In 1947, he told an interviewer: âWhen I was a child, I didnât want to be a cop, a fireman or railroad engineer when I grew up. I wanted to be a burglar. Thatâs a fact. I never quite realized my ambition, but when I first started raking in movie and radio money I thought that I was on my way. But after doing seven pictures last year I ended up with exactly $2,200. Now Iâm wondering who burglarized who.â
In 1957: âEvery now and then some hooligan swaggers up to me in a bar and says: âNo so-and-so of an actor can outfight me.â When theyâre too persistent, you have to show âem.â
And in 1970: âI donât like calluses. ⦠I just clock in and clock out. Thatâs the extent of it. I just look at the contract and see how many days off I get.â
Thereâs a lot more from Mitchum about acting, life and even the United Statesâ role in world affairs here.
Speaking of quotables, Crust also put together a look at how L.A. Times critics reviewed some of Mitchumâs best-known roles, including âThe Night of the Hunter,â âHeaven Knows, Mr. Allisonâ and âThunder Road.â
Of his performance in 1968âs âEl Dorado,â The Timesâ inimitable Kevin Thomas wrote: âMitchum delivered one of the loveliest hangover sequences on record.â
100 YEARS MORE
Four months after Mitchumâs birth and an ocean away, Jean-Pierre Melville was born in Paris on Oct. 20, 1917.
As film critic Kenneth Turan writes, the directorâs surname at birth was Grumbach, but he changed it to Melville âbecause he greatly admired America, its movies and the author of âMoby-Dickâ in particular.â Though he was thoroughly French, he often wore a Stetson hat to boot.
Melville, who was a French Resistance hero during World War II, often set his films about moral dilemmas against that backdrop.
The American Cinematheque's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood begins its retrospective on Melvilleâs life and work Aug. 4, and his nephew, Remy Grumbach, will introduce many of the selections running through Aug. 13.
AROUND TOWN
â" Director Peter Bogdanovich will be on hand for an Aug. 9 screening of âTargets.â The 1968 Roger Corman-produced thriller was Bogdanovichâs first foray into feature film directing and starred Boris Karloff in one of his last roles. The Cinefamily, Silent Movie Theater, 611 N. Fairfax Ave., Los Angeles. (323) 655-2510. Aug. 9, 7:30 p.m. www.cinefamily.org
â" Friends of the late Adam West will provide live commentary on the 1966 feature film âBatman: The Movie.â Arena Cinelounge, 6464 Sunset Blvd., lobby level, Hollywood. (323) 924-1644. Aug. 12, 7:30 p.m. www.arenascreen.com
Get more highlights of this week's film events, revivals, festivals and series in the Moviegoer column.
IN MEMORIAM
â" Sam Shepard, the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and Oscar-nominated actor, has died at age 73. Times theater critic Charles McNulty called him Americaâs best dramatist since Tenessee Williams, while film critic Justin Chang remembered how Shepard turned understatement into brooding poetry on screen.
-- Jeanne Moreau, the legendary French actress and star of âJules and Jim,â has died at age 89. Times film critic Kenneth Turan had a particularly personal tribute to Moreau, whom he used to visit in France.
-- Marty Sklar, a pioneering Imagineer who channeled Walt Disney, has died at age 83. My colleague and big-time Disney aficionado Todd Martens spent many hours conversing with Sklar and found himself being asked nearly as many questions as he posed of the master.
FIFTY-FOUR YEARS AGO â¦
In August 1963, the L.A. Times got this shot of Disneyland maintenance worker Larry Kleser refueling the fleet of âatomicâ submarines used on the Submarine Voyage ride, which had opened in 1959. (When Disneyland contemplated shutting down the ride in the late â90s, Sklar threatened to lie in the street in protest.)
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
â" The Kennedy Center Honors will go to Gloria Estefan, LL Cool J, Carmen de Lavallade, Norman Lear and Lionel Richie.
â" Carol Burnett will return to television with âA Little Help With Carol Burnett,â a Netflix original unscripted series that pairs Burnett with children to tackle life's dilemmas.
â" Much has changed since Garth Brooks ruled the roost, but his concert at the Forum showed his attitude and energy havenât. Pop music writer Randy Lewis was there.
â" What does Steven Spielberg geek out over? Billy Wilderâs Oscar-nominated 1957 drama âWitness for the Prosecution.â And if you ever meet Spielberg, ask him about his high score playing the video game âMissile Commandâ while on the set of âE.T.â
For more vintage Hollywood, go to the Classic Hollywood Los Angeles Times Facebook page.
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