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A few years ago my wife and I were watching Malaya (1949), and about mid-way into it she asked me: “How old was Spencer Tracy when this movie was made?” I thought for a moment, and replied: “Forty-nine, a year older than I am now.” She was amazed, and frankly so was I, since he looked like such an elderly guy in the film, but we quickly concluded that, of course, Spence didn’t take very good care of himself, what with the heavy drinking and all, so naturally he looked a lot older than he actually was at the time.
More recently we were watching The Enforcer (1951), and at some point she asked me: “How old was Humphrey Bogart when this movie was made?” I thought for a moment and said, a little uneasily, “Uh, Fifty-two. A year older than I am now.” That seemed quite impossible, but, of course, Bogie was a hell-raiser who drank heavily and smoked and caroused and all, so naturally, he looked a lot older than he actually was at the time.
This evening we watched A Hard Day’s Night (1964), a longtime favorite, and marveled at how young and energetic The Beatles were in their heyday, and how great the songs still sound. Along the way it occurred to us both that Wilfred Brambell, the “clean old man” who played Paul’s grandfather, really didn’t seem to be all that ancient, the way we’d remembered him. After the movie was over I went over to my laptop to look him up in IMDb, and . . . Oh my God, Paul’s grandfather was a year younger than I am now when the movie was made!
So, okay. I’ve recovered sufficiently to ask: has anyone else had a similar traumatic experience, regarding the age of an actor in a classic film?
More recently we were watching The Enforcer (1951), and at some point she asked me: “How old was Humphrey Bogart when this movie was made?” I thought for a moment and said, a little uneasily, “Uh, Fifty-two. A year older than I am now.” That seemed quite impossible, but, of course, Bogie was a hell-raiser who drank heavily and smoked and caroused and all, so naturally, he looked a lot older than he actually was at the time.
This evening we watched A Hard Day’s Night (1964), a longtime favorite, and marveled at how young and energetic The Beatles were in their heyday, and how great the songs still sound. Along the way it occurred to us both that Wilfred Brambell, the “clean old man” who played Paul’s grandfather, really didn’t seem to be all that ancient, the way we’d remembered him. After the movie was over I went over to my laptop to look him up in IMDb, and . . . Oh my God, Paul’s grandfather was a year younger than I am now when the movie was made!
So, okay. I’ve recovered sufficiently to ask: has anyone else had a similar traumatic experience, regarding the age of an actor in a classic film?
-- Charlie Morrow
