TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

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TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 7:54 am

I'll post the press release next, but first here's the schedule, with a few titles I haven't seen yet (Lucky Star, Eyes in the Night, 23 Paces to Baker St.).

The Projected Image:
A History of Disability in Film

Schedule

The following is a complete schedule of TCM's The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film, airing Tuesdays in October:


Tuesday, Oct. 2
8 p.m. – An Affair to Remember (1957)
10:15 p.m. – A Patch of Blue (1965)
12:15 p.m. – Butterflies are Free (1972)
2:15 a.m. – Gaby: A True Story (1987)
4:15 a.m. – Sign of the Ra m (1948)

Tuesday, Oct. 9
8 p.m. – Lucky Star (1929)
9:45 p.m. – Bright Victory (1951)
11:45 p.m. – Reach for the Sky (1956)
2:15 a.m. – The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)

Tuesday, Oct. 16
8 p.m. – Eyes in the Night (1942)
9:30 p.m. – 23 Paces to Baker Street (1956)
11:30 p.m. – Johnny Belinda (1948)
1:30 a.m. – The Miracle Worker (1962)

Tuesday, Oct. 23
8 p.m. – A Child is Waiting (1963)
10 p.m. – Mandy (1953)
Midnight – Of Mice and Men (1939)
2 a.m. – Charly (1968)

Tuesday, Oct. 30
8 p.m. – The Unknown (1927)
9:15 p.m. – Freaks (1932)
10:30 p.m. – Bedlam (1946)
Midnight – One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975)

All times Eastern.
Schedule subject to change
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 7:55 am

The press release:

TCM to Examine Hollywood's Depiction of People with Disabilities in
The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film in October

Lawrence Carter-Long Joins TCM's Robert Osborne for Historic Month-Long Film Exploration,
Presented in Collaboration with Inclusion in the Arts

Turner Classic Movies (TCM) will dedicate the month of October to exploring the ways people with disabilities have been portrayed in film. On behalf of Inclusion in the Arts, Lawrence Carter-Long will join TCM host Robert Osborne for The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film. The special month-long exploration will air Tuesdays in October, beginning Oct. 2 at 8 p.m. (ET).

TCM makes today’s announcement to coincide with the 22nd anniversary of the signing of the Americans with Disability Act (ADA) on July 26. And in a first for TCM, all films will be presented with both closed captioning and audio description (via secondary audio) for audience members with auditory and visual disabilities.

The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film features more than 20 films ranging from the 1920s to the 1980s. Each night's collection will explore particular aspects, themes, or types of disability, such as blindness, deafness and psychiatric or intellectual disabilities. In addition, one evening of programming will focus on newly disabled veterans returning home from war.

TCM's exploration of disability in cinema includes many Oscar®-winning and nominated films, such as An Affair to Remember (1957), in which Deborah Kerr's romantic rendezvous with Cary Grant is nearly derailed by a paralyzing accident; A Patch of Blue (1965), with Elizabeth Hartman as a blind white girl who falls in love with a black man, played by Sidney Poitier; Butterflies Are Free (1972), starring Edward Albert as a blind man attempting to break free from his over-protective mother; and Gaby: A True Story (1987), the powerful tale of a girl with cerebral palsy trying to gain independence as an artist; Johnny Belinda (1948), starring Jane Wyman as a "deaf-mute" forced to defy expect ations; The Miracle Worker (1962), starring Anne Bancroft as Annie Sullivan and Patty Duke as Helen Keller; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975), with Jack Nicholson as a patient in a mental institution and Louise Fletcher as the infamous Nurse Ratched; The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), the post-War drama starring Fredric March, Myrna Loy and real-life disabled veteran Harold Russell; and Charly (1968), with Cliff Robertson as an intellectually disabled man who questions the limits of science after be ing turned into a genius.

The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film also features several lesser-known classics ripe for rediscovery, including the atmospheric Val Lewton chiller Bedlam (1946), the intriguing blind-detective mystery Eyes in the Night (1942); A Child is Waiting (1963), with Burt Lancaster and Judy Garland; the British family drama Mandy (1953); and a bravura performance by wheelchair user Susan Peters in Sign of the Ram (1948). A complete schedule is included.

Each year since 2006, TCM has dedicated one month toward examining how different cultural and ethnic groups have been portrayed in the movies. Several of the programming events have centered on Race and Hollywood, with explorations on how the movies have portrayed African-Americans in 2005, Asians in 2008, Latinos in 2009, Native Americans in 2010 and Arabs in 2011. TCM looked at Hollywood's depiction of gay and lesbian characters, issues and themes in 2007.

"The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film is a valuable opportunity to take a deeper look at the movies we all know and love, to see them from a different perspective and to learn what they have to say about us as a society," said Osborne. "We are very proud to be working with Inclusion in the Arts on this important exploration. And we are especially glad to have Lawrence Carter-Long of the National Council on Disability with us to provide fascinating, historical background and thought-provoking insight on how cinematic portrayals of disability have evolved over time."

"From returning veterans learning to renegotiate both the assumptions and environments once taken for granted to the rise of independent living, Hollywood d epictions of disability have alternately echoed and influenced life outside the movie theater," said Carter-Long, who curated the series. "Twenty-two years after the passage of the ADA and over a century since Thomas Edison filmed 'The Fake Beggar,' TCM and Inclusion in the Arts provide an unprecedented overview of how cinematic projections of isolation and inspiration have played out on the silver screen – and in our lives. When screened together, everything from The Miracle Worker to One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest reveals another layer where what you think you know is only the beginning."

About Lawrence Carter-Long
Widely recognized for his expertise in the arts, access and media, Lawrence Carter-Long is a sought-after media spokesperson on a wide variety of subjects, ranging from medical ethics to media representation of disability. His numerous media appearances have included The New York Times, NBC's Today Show, CNN, NPR and the BBC, among others. He was a co-host and producer on The Largest Minority Radio Show on WBAI-FM from 2006-2011.

While recognized for his media work, Carter-Long is perhaps best known as the founder and curator of the disTHIS! Film Series, presented in partnership with New York University's Center for the Study of Disability from 2006 until 2010. The groundbreaking monthly film series brought new audiences and attention to cinematic representation of disability by showcasing edgy, provocative and unconventional portrayals across the disability spectrum with the promise of "No handkerchief necessary; no heroism required." He was a member of the steering committee of the ReelAbilities: Disabilities Film Festival from 2007-2010 and selected the Emerging Disabled Filmmaker Apprenticeships for the American Film Institute/Silverdocs and VSA Arts from 2009-2011.

For his advocacy, Carter-Long was awarded the Frieda Zame s Advocacy Award by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg in 2009 and the Paul G. Hearne Leadership Award from the American Association of People with Disabilities in 2010. In May 2011, Carter-Long moved to Washington, D.C. to work as the public affairs specialist for the National Council on Disability, an independent federal agency that recommends federal disability policy to the President, Congress and other federal agencies.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 7:59 am

Sign of the Ram is an early John Sturges title I haven't seen, with a great cast (Susan Peters, Phyllis Thaxter, Alexander Knox, Dame May Whitty) and promises some dark family melodrama. Has anyone seen this one?
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 8:54 am

s.w.a.c. wrote:Here's the schedule, with a few titles I haven't seen yet (Lucky Star, Eyes in the Night, 23 Paces to Baker St.).

The Projected Image:
A History of Disability in Film

Schedule....

Tuesday, Oct. 9
8 p.m. – Lucky Star (1929)
9:45 p.m. – Bright Victory (1951)
11:45 p.m. – Reach for the Sky (1956)
2:15 a.m. – The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)
....


LUCKY STAR (1929)!!
Cool! But dare we hope they'll run a print with the original 1929 soundtrack?
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 9:21 am

Well, thank God they're not including any Chaney films and excusing his equation of disability with evil on the grounds that "he was the son of Deaf parents". I love Chaney and all of his films and I marvel at his acting and makeup skills, but he did probably more than any other single person to make "disability" synonymous with "extremely bad and sicko-weirdo villainy". That TCM is not including any of his films suggests to me that they have some understanding of how hurtful those portrayals have been historically, and I'm happy about that. (Syd Fields is still insisting to his screenwriting students that the "best" way to indicate a character's "inner perversion" is to give him a disability. Syd, it's time for you to sit down and shut up.)

I'm surprised, though, that they didn't include Children of a Lesser God. Is that too recent for TCM? (I'm asking out of curiosity, not being sarcastic.)

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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 9:36 am

No Chaney films? Well, I see The Unknown, one of Chaney's best, on the list. I am surprised that Pride of the Marines did not make the list, especially as it is a Warners film.

Jim Roots wrote:Well, thank God they're not including any Chaney films and excusing his equation of disability with evil on the grounds that "he was the son of Deaf parents". I love Chaney and all of his films and I marvel at his acting and makeup skills, but he did probably more than any other single person to make "disability" synonymous with "extremely bad and sicko-weirdo villainy". That TCM is not including any of his films suggests to me that they have some understanding of how hurtful those portrayals have been historically, and I'm happy about that. (Syd Fields is still insisting to his screenwriting students that the "best" way to indicate a character's "inner perversion" is to give him a disability. Syd, it's time for you to sit down and shut up.)

I'm surprised, though, that they didn't include Children of a Lesser God. Is that too recent for TCM? (I'm asking out of curiosity, not being sarcastic.)

Jim
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 9:56 am

Salty Dog wrote:No Chaney films? Well, I see The Unknown, one of Chaney's best, on the list.


Dang, you're right. I think my eyes were pulled down too quickly by the inclusion of Freaks which is next on the schedule after The Unknown.

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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 10:10 am

Jim Roots wrote:Well, thank God they're not including any Chaney films and excusing his equation of disability with evil on the grounds that "he was the son of Deaf parents". I love Chaney and all of his films and I marvel at his acting and makeup skills, but he did probably more than any other single person to make "disability" synonymous with "extremely bad and sicko-weirdo villainy". That TCM is not including any of his films suggests to me that they have some understanding of how hurtful those portrayals have been historically, and I'm happy about that. (Syd Fields is still insisting to his screenwriting students that the "best" way to indicate a character's "inner perversion" is to give him a disability. Syd, it's time for you to sit down and shut up.)

I'm surprised, though, that they didn't include Children of a Lesser God. Is that too recent for TCM? (I'm asking out of curiosity, not being sarcastic.)

Jim


Jim, have you seen Mandy? I just watched it, kept wondering if you'd seen it and if so, what you thought of it. For it's time I think it was trying to be very forward-thinking in its treatment of deaf children, education thereof, but I think the attitudes espoused would be deeply out of favor these days.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 3:52 pm

" I see The Unknown, one of Chaney's best, on the list...."


THE SHOCK could have been used as well.

And why is Jackie Gleason's GIGOT not featured...?
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 4:38 pm

So it's now official that we can only make fun of fat people now?

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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostWed Jul 25, 2012 6:46 pm

:? OK, TCM has aired SUNRISE, STREET ANGEL, and now will be debuting LUCKY STAR for the first time ever. But what about SEVENTH HEAVEN? Glad to see LS get a premier. Even if most of Chris Caliendo's score is very sub-par. Spoiling an excellent film. The guy had done good work in the past, so I don't know what happened here?

This festival would have been a great time to debut THE PATENT LEATHER KID.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 9:42 am

Speaking of Lon Chaney, where is "West Of Zanzibar," dealing with Chaney's character forced to use a wheelchair after breaking his back in a fall? And James Stewart's character Howie in "The Naked Spur" has a real disability, with his post traumatic stress from wartime experiences that causes him at one point to wake up yelling. Robert Ryan plays a bad guy in this movie who sometimes sounds like a psychiatrist as he asks Howie why he is chasing him. And instead of "Pride Of The Marines," a picture with a positive, white bread outcome, why not show "The Manchurian Candidate," whose title character is a brainwashed soldier trapped in a conspiracy he cannot get out of.

When Don Imus had his radio show, he would sometimes comment on how he managed to survive the period of his life when he abused drugs and alcohol. Imus said that unlike others in his situation, he had a skill in demand so he still managed to get jobs in broadcasting while he had addiction problems. Addiction problems which are a disability. Like Imus, almost all the fictional movie characters with disabilities that TCM will show manage to find a way to deal with their disability. For me, the problem is that most of these movies are phoney, unreal feel good presentations.

The movie listing indicates that many of the movies deal with blindness as a disability. A very presentable disability, not as disturbing as showing a teenager wheelchair bound after a car accident or a person who lost fingers in a punch press accident. Right, you don't see movies with such characters. But what about "The Last Flight," dealing with a WW1 flyer whose hands are severely burned in a crash or "Heroes For Sale," with another WW1 veteran who gets addicted to the heroin the German doctors prescribed to deal with the pain from shrapnel splinters in his spine? Thanks to the 1934 production code, Hollywood steered away from grimmer realities of life. Steering away from life's grim realities is also the main accomplishment of the movies on this TCM series.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 10:21 am

momsne wrote:The movie listing indicates that many of the movies deal with blindness as a disability. A very presentable disability, not as disturbing as showing a teenager wheelchair bound after a car accident or a person who lost fingers in a punch press accident. Right, you don't see movies with such characters. But what about "The Last Flight," dealing with a WW1 flyer whose hands are severely burned in a crash or "Heroes For Sale," with another WW1 veteran who gets addicted to the heroin the German doctors prescribed to deal with the pain from shrapnel splinters in his spine?


Did you miss The Best Years of Our Lives? That certainly doesn't shy away from war injuries, both physical and psychological.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 12:08 pm

How many movies were on that list? "The Best Years Of Our Lives" is an exception that proves the rule. And not that much of an exception. Harold Russell, a real life double amputee from service injuries, played Homer Parrish in the movie, won two Academy Awards for this 1946 role and then was absent from the screen until 1980's "inside Moves." There is that great scene at the end of "The Best Years Of Our Lives," where former pilot Fred Derry (Dana Andrews) has a flashback while in the cockpit of a soon to be scrapped B-17. But how real is that, a Jungian flashback that cures Fred? Right after, Derry gets a job from the guy in charge of scrapping the planes. The real thing for me was Derry's soft-sided military luggage, with layered compartments for storage. Great design work I would never know about if I hadn't seen it in this movie.

Some posters get a real thrill out of making sarcastic and ill-informed follow-up comments, many times in the form of a question. I started this posting off with a question, true, but then I provided some facts. Unlike the previous poster, whose pretty much worthless comment picks out one movie from the list while I was dealing with the entire list of mostly white bread movies like "Butterflies Are Free."
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 12:20 pm

Frederica wrote:Jim, have you seen Mandy? I just watched it, kept wondering if you'd seen it and if so, what you thought of it. For it's time I think it was trying to be very forward-thinking in its treatment of deaf children, education thereof, but I think the attitudes espoused would be deeply out of favor these days.


No, haven't seen it. Haven't come across a captioned version yet!

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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 12:24 pm

boblipton wrote:So it's now official that we can only make fun of fat people now?

Bob


Fat people, old people, and fathers. Especially fathers. Dumb Daddies, to borrow a Max title!

I'm watching season 4 of Curb Your Enthusiasm these days. It's the season when Larry David gets a role in The Producers and is learning to sing and dance with a blind guy playing rehearsal piano. When Larry finally gets the dance moves down pat, he excitedly tells the pianist, "Man, it's too bad you can't see!" To which he responds, "Tell me about it!"

I laughed for two minutes.

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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 1:06 pm

You'd think they could fit The Enchanted Cottage in there someplace- either the silent or talkie version would have done.

Still, it's an interesting lineup, though OI wonder how they came up with the topic- I smell more than a whiff of politics.

Imagine what they could do with "Surprise Packages- a history of unexpected pregnancies in films"
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 1:11 pm

momsne wrote:Some posters get a real thrill out of making sarcastic and ill-informed follow-up comments, many times in the form of a question. I started this posting off with a question, true, but then I provided some facts. Unlike the previous poster, whose pretty much worthless comment picks out one movie from the list while I was dealing with the entire list of mostly white bread movies like "Butterflies Are Free."


Get a grip.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 1:18 pm

Jim Roots wrote:
Frederica wrote:Jim, have you seen Mandy? I just watched it, kept wondering if you'd seen it and if so, what you thought of it. For it's time I think it was trying to be very forward-thinking in its treatment of deaf children, education thereof, but I think the attitudes espoused would be deeply out of favor these days.


No, haven't seen it. Haven't come across a captioned version yet!

Jim


I am positively awash in the irony.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 3:38 pm

Jim Roots wrote:
boblipton wrote:So it's now official that we can only make fun of fat people now?

Bob


Fat people, old people, and fathers. Especially fathers. Dumb Daddies, to borrow a Max title!

I'm watching season 4 of Curb Your Enthusiasm these days. It's the season when Larry David gets a role in The Producers and is learning to sing and dance with a blind guy playing rehearsal piano. When Larry finally gets the dance moves down pat, he excitedly tells the pianist, "Man, it's too bad you can't see!" To which he responds, "Tell me about it!"

I laughed for two minutes.

Old people? Don't they have to be white? Isn't there a law against laughing at Morgan Freeman?

The last time I couldn't stop laughing was Woody Allen's BROADWAY DANNY ROSE with the stammering ventriloquist.

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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostThu Jul 26, 2012 4:05 pm

" So it's now official that we can only make fun of fat people now ? "

I can't say where this was coming from.

Gleason's GIGOT is a great movie that needs to be seen more often.

It would certainly fit the premise of this TCM lineup.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostSun Jul 29, 2012 9:07 pm

Wow... Mandy. (!) I never thought I'd get a good copy of this. I can't wait. (Jack Hawkins groupie.)

The Miracle Woman would have been another good choice.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostMon Jul 30, 2012 5:05 am

peachtreegal wrote:The Miracle Woman would have been another good choice.


Or any Harold Lloyd film (well, any made after his 1919 accident), although I'm sure Harold wouldn't want attention drawn to it and wouldn't like it being referred to as a "disability".
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostMon Jul 30, 2012 10:03 am

Richard Finegan wrote:
peachtreegal wrote:The Miracle Woman would have been another good choice.


Or any Harold Lloyd film (well, any made after his 1919 accident), although I'm sure Harold wouldn't want attention drawn to it and wouldn't like it being referred to as a "disability".


Or Lionel Barrymore. There's Herbert Marshall, too, though like Lloyd his disability is not obvious. But Lionel is the only major actor i can think of with a visible and well-publicized disability. And it's usually not even written in as a plot point, it's just that that character happens to be in a wheelchair and no big deal was made of it. It's like mainstreaming before mainstreaming, and now that i look back on it, it still seems pretty progressive.

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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostMon Jul 30, 2012 11:32 am

Gagman 66 wrote:This festival would have been a great time to debut THE PATENT LEATHER KID.


Have you *seen* THE PATENT LEATHER KID?
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostMon Jul 30, 2012 12:32 pm

s.w.a.c. wrote:Sign of the Ram is an early John Sturges title I haven't seen, with a great cast (Susan Peters, Phyllis Thaxter, Alexander Knox, Dame May Whitty) and promises some dark family melodrama. Has anyone seen this one?


Yes, Susan Peters is quite good as the protagonist. She's quite malevolent and nasty, much the opposite of her better known role in Random Harvest (which I can never abide).

Here's a piece on it by one of my favorite bloggers, the Self Styled Siren (spoilers ahead): http://selfstyledsiren.blogspot.com/2009/05/sign-of-ram-1948.html
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostTue Jul 31, 2012 12:17 am

Harlett O'Dowd wrote:
Gagman 66 wrote:This festival would have been a great time to debut THE PATENT LEATHER KID.


Have you *seen* THE PATENT LEATHER KID?

I think he must have actually meant to say the new restoration of THE BIG PARADE (although putting that in a disability festival might give away the ending).
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostTue Jul 31, 2012 6:32 am

greta de groat wrote:
Richard Finegan wrote:
peachtreegal wrote:The Miracle Woman would have been another good choice.


Or any Harold Lloyd film (well, any made after his 1919 accident), although I'm sure Harold wouldn't want attention drawn to it and wouldn't like it being referred to as a "disability".


Or Lionel Barrymore. There's Herbert Marshall, too, though like Lloyd his disability is not obvious. But Lionel is the only major actor i can think of with a visible and well-publicized disability. And it's usually not even written in as a plot point, it's just that that character happens to be in a wheelchair and no big deal was made of it. It's like mainstreaming before mainstreaming, and now that i look back on it, it still seems pretty progressive.

greta


He was old. It was fairly standard practice to put old people in wheelchairs in movies. Nobody thought twice about it -- it was just a natural part of aging. Most old people have some kind of disability, but it's rarely viewed as a disability; it's viewed as age-appropriate, if I can use that idiotic terminology.

Jim
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Daniel Eagan

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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostTue Jul 31, 2012 7:25 am

greta de groat wrote:
Richard Finegan wrote:
peachtreegal wrote:The Miracle Woman would have been another good choice.


Or any Harold Lloyd film (well, any made after his 1919 accident), although I'm sure Harold wouldn't want attention drawn to it and wouldn't like it being referred to as a "disability".


Or Lionel Barrymore. There's Herbert Marshall, too, though like Lloyd his disability is not obvious. But Lionel is the only major actor i can think of with a visible and well-publicized disability. And it's usually not even written in as a plot point, it's just that that character happens to be in a wheelchair and no big deal was made of it. It's like mainstreaming before mainstreaming, and now that i look back on it, it still seems pretty progressive.

greta


In The Barrymores: The Royal Family in Hollywood, James Kotsilibas-Davis suggested that Barrymore suffered a debilitating back injury after falling down stairs in either an alcohol- or drug-induced stupor. He's clearly in bad shape as early as A Free Soul.
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Re: TCM presents A History of Disability in Film in Oct.

PostTue Jul 31, 2012 9:40 am

Daniel Eagan wrote:
greta de groat wrote:
Or Lionel Barrymore. There's Herbert Marshall, too, though like Lloyd his disability is not obvious. But Lionel is the only major actor i can think of with a visible and well-publicized disability. And it's usually not even written in as a plot point, it's just that that character happens to be in a wheelchair and no big deal was made of it. It's like mainstreaming before mainstreaming, and now that i look back on it, it still seems pretty progressive.

greta


In The Barrymores: The Royal Family in Hollywood, James Kotsilibas-Davis suggested that Barrymore suffered a debilitating back injury after falling down stairs in either an alcohol- or drug-induced stupor. He's clearly in bad shape as early as A Free Soul.


Margot Peters in "The House of Barrymore" does a little more than suggest that Lionel had syphilis. It's been a while since I read the book, but I remember thinking her arguments sounded reasonable. Whether I would still think that I don't know, and I haven't read any of the other books on the Barrymores. The standard explanation for Lionel's increasing debility is that he had rheumatoid arthritis, which is also a reasonable diagnosis.
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