90th Anniversary of
Montgomery Clift's birth


90º Aniversario del nacimiento de Montgomery Clift (1920-2010)

aaaaa TODA LA INFORMACIÓN SOBRE EL ACTOR MONTGOMERY CLIFT EN ESPAÑOL aaaaa

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Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta revistas. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta revistas. Mostrar todas las entradas

18.9.11

4 Monty moods

En una revista de 1949 salió este divertido fotomontaje con 4 expresiones de Monty.

16.8.10

Entrevista a Amy Lawrence

Amy Lawrence es la autora de la última biografía que ha salido sobre Montgomery Clift (ver post). En la web Advocate le hacen una entrevista:

(English text)

The Most Beautiful Man in Film

Montgomery Clift has long been regarded a brilliant, influential actor and a closeted, tormented gay man. Now one of Hollywood’s most enigmatic stars gets a reappraisal.
MONTGOMERY CLIFT 4 X390 (GETTY) | ADVOCATE.COM

Well remembered for the staggering effect his film performances in classics such as A Place in the Sun and From Here to Eternity had on post-World War II movie audiences, Montgomery Clift is equally known today as one of Hollywood’s greatest casualties. A mysterious, sensitive antidote to the blandly handsome bobby-soxer idols of the day, Clift ushered in a new, naturalistic style of acting, years before Marlon Brando and James Dean, who both worshipped him.

The camera adored him as well. Clift was described by one biographer as “having a face of impenetrable beauty,” and Elizabeth Taylor, his close friend and frequent costar, claimed her heart stopped the first time she saw him. After a near-fatal auto accident in 1956 ravaged his perfect face, Clift, now addicted to alcohol, painkillers, and, by some accounts, tormented by his closeted homosexuality, began a downward spiral that would last until his death at 45 in 1966. Marilyn Monroe, Clift’s costar in 1961’s The Misfits who was tortured by her own demons, famously called him “the only person I know who’s in worse shape than I am.” But in The Passion of Montgomery Clift (University of California Press, $24.95) Dartmouth film professor Amy Lawrence performs an academic autopsy on the late actor’s legacy and challenges the myth of Clift as the tortured, self-destructive film star. Lawrence discusses with The Advocate the reasons we’re still under the spell of the charismatic actor.

The Advocate: There are so many biographies of Montgomery Clift and numerous websites devoted to him. What was the biggest surprise you learned about him while researching your book?
Amy Lawrence: I was most impressed by Clift’s canny understanding of his own image. Many biographers depict him as refusing to participate in the Hollywood star system, but that didn’t mean he was ignorant of it. He understood how an actor’s image was built and maintained. In giving interviews or choosing roles, he knew exactly how to shape a performance to achieve the effect he wanted — and to resist the efforts of others to simplify a character. For instance, he was aware that screenwriters and directors often wanted to make the hero perfect; Clift wanted to make the character human, complicated, and not always admirable.

Clift is often spoken of in context as a “gay actor” or in conjunction with Marlon Brando and James Dean. What do you see as Clift’s singular legacy?
Brando and Dean both thought of Clift as singular. Brando saw Clift as his only major competition, and Dean saw him as a model, an ideal to emulate. Unlike those performers, Clift’s best work has not become dated. In Red River, From Here to Eternity, A Place in the Sun, I Confess, and half a dozen others, his performances are impeccable. At his best he is never mannered or predictable. His performances are subtle, intelligent, graceful, and deeply empathetic regardless of the character’s flaws.

Watch the trailer for A Place in the Sun below:



MONTGOMERY CLIFT 5 X390 (FAIR USE) | ADVOCATE.COM

How did Clift’s being gay — or bisexual, as some suggest — when it was still taboo affect his drinking, drug taking, and ultimate downward spiral?
The homophobia of the time, which intensified nationally just as Clift’s career was beginning in the late 1940s and early ’50s, certainly exerted pressure on Clift. A serious relationship with choreographer Jerome Robbins in the ’40s threatened both their careers when Robbins was blackmailed into testifying before the House Un-American Activities Committee hearings regarding communists and other “subversives” in Washington and the entertainment community. I would be hesitant, though, to cast Clift as a “sad young man,” “self-loathing homosexual,” or fit him into any other category into which gay men were sorted from the 1950s to ’70s. Alcoholism affects everyone, and in the postwar period heavy drinking was routine across the board. By the time Clift’s drinking became full-blown alcoholism, it was impossible to disentangle from his devastating car accident, the prescription painkillers he needed at the time, and his professional fear regarding the damage done to his face. In the latter part of his career, his drinking and drug taking were so dominant in his life that he couldn’t function without them. Paradoxically, at the point when he worked with unsupportive or openly hostile homophobic producers and directors, the drugs and drinking sustained him as much as they destroyed him.

You write about the fan magazines of the 1950s that frequently used sexually suggestive headlines such as “Who Is Monty Kidding?” How well known was the truth about Clift’s sexuality during that era?
Clift worked in a period when fan magazines were challenged by scandal magazines, each promising “the truth” about stars’ private lives. Ironically, even the scandal rags did not want any “truth” firmly established because that would rob them of the chance to repeatedly tantalize readers with the next promised exposé. Biographical information suggests that people who worked with Clift always “knew” in exact proportion to what they wanted to know. Fans likewise. Everyone minimized the complexity of Clift’s emotional relationships — with men, older women, young women — in order to maintain the image of the actor that appealed to them most.


MONTGOMERY CLIFT 2 X390 (FAIR USE) | ADVOCATE.COM
Clift with Elizabeth Taylor in A Place in the Sun

A recent article in Newsweek suggests audiences can’t accept gay actors as romantic leading men when we know the truth about their real-life sexuality and uses Rock Hudson as an example. How do you think this applies to Clift, who had such intense chemistry on-screen with Elizabeth Taylor and other actresses?
When audiences think they know something about an actor’s personal sexuality it becomes available as a touchstone to spectators watching a performance but is never mandatory. People judging a performance often appreciate it most the more it varies from what we think we know about the performer — casting against type, nice people playing psychos, beautiful actresses playing ugly. If we think of Clift as an actor, then his persuasiveness as a romantic lead opposite Taylor, Olivia de Havilland, or Jennifer Jones increases our appreciation of his skill as he seems to become inseparable from the role.

Another issue is history itself. As new generations are introduced to Clift and Hudson, they often react to the performers without knowing any biographical information about them. They are also less invested in “the truth” than those who experienced a change in their perception through revelations and the exposure of secrets. The freer sexuality of Brando or Dean, for instance, has not come to dominate their images.

How do you think Clift’s career would have progressed if he hadn’t been in the auto accident in 1956?
Although the accident had a major effect on him psychologically and physically as well as having an effect on audiences and their reading of his performances in relation to the accident, I believe his alcoholism would have continued and that his career would have been much the same. His drinking affected his work on the set of From Here to Eternity, which was shot in 1953, well before the accident. In the three-year break he took after that film his face began to show the puffiness and aging effects of alcohol abuse. When he returned to film for Raintree County in 1957, people would have been surprised by how he had aged if they hadn’t had the accident to blame it on.


MONTGOMERY CLIFT 3 X390 (GETTY) | ADVOCATE.COM
Clift in 1961's Judgment at Nuremberg

How do you think Clift would have fared personally and professionally if he began his career today, with the intrusion of the Internet and paparazzi?
The intrusion of the media today is offset by the openness of some gay performers — though not romantic leading men just yet. As Tom Cruise’s career shows, it is possible to withstand rumors and media speculation if you have the power and the will to do so. Because Clift was never as closeted as Rock Hudson, I don’t believe he would fight terribly hard to maintain the illusion of offscreen heterosexuality. He might be more likely to take a Keanu Reeves approach, where the actor neither courts nor tries to dispel the fantasies of any fan. In several roles in the severely repressive 1950s he even courted audiences to read his characters — and maybe himself — as gay in the casually flirtatious scenes in Red River, the rejection of heterosexual relationships in I Confess, Suddenly, Last Summer, and Freud, the material on gay Army life that acts as a subtext throughout From Here to Eternity, and the relationship with Frank Sinatra’s character in the film.

Why does Clift continue to hold such a fascination for film buffs 44 years after his death?
Clift was a brilliant actor. His performances often seem completely natural and effortless. His complex performances of masculinity in films such as Red River, From Here to Eternity, The Misfits, A Place in the Sun, and The Heiress appeal to gay men and women as well as heterosexual men and women. Fans find in Clift everything from a romantic icon or sexual fantasy figure to a model of courage, commitment, and integrity. His characters are often simultaneously stoic and vulnerable, lithe, stubborn, and funny.

Watch Clift in a scene from From Here to Eternity below:



2.8.10

2.7.10

Compact. "The young people's digest".- jul 1957

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La revista para gente joven Compact ("The young peole's Digest) dedicaba su portada de Julio de 1957 a Montgomery Clift. El titular del reportaje era "He has Hollywood baffled"(Él ha desconcertado a Hollywood), lo cuál no era una novedad pero un año después de su accidente de coche, Monty Clift seguía siendo un enigma para Hollywood.

2.6.10

Motion Picture.- 1950

Portada de la revista Motion Picture de 1950. Desconozco de qué mes y cuál era el reportaje que ofrecía sobre Monty. En la portada aparece Ava Gardner.

2.5.10

Movie Fan.- mayo 1950

En este número de mayo/junio de 1950 de la revista Movie Fan, aparecía el nombre de Montgomery Clift en la portada anunciando un reportaje del interior (aunque el título del mismo no se menciona). En una portada enteramente dedicada a Betty Grable, hay un pequeño apartado donde se nombra a 5 actores y en primer lugar a Montgomery Clift.

Éstos son los datos de la revista:

(English text)
A vintage movie magazine titled MOVIE FAN (May-June 950). In this magazine you will find the following: Betty Grable (cover) and much more.

(THE BEVERLY S. WITHAM COLLECTION)-BEVERLY IS A NATIVE OF VERMONT SHE STARTING COLLECTING MOVIE MAGAZINES WHEN SHE WAS 10 YEARS OLD IN 1930 SHE WOULD TAKE A BUS INTO TOWN ONCE A MONTH AND SHE WOULD BUY EVERY SINGLE MOVIE MAGAZINE THAT WAS AT THE NEWSTAND FOR THAT MONTH.HER PASSION WAS THE WESTERN ERA OF WHICH ROY ROGERS WAS HER HERO.WHEN SHE MOVED TO CONNECTICUT AS A TEEN SHE CONTINUED TO BUY UP ANY AND ALL MOVIE MAGAZINES EACH MONTH.SHE WOULD OFTEN FREQUENT THE STATE THEATRE IN HARTFORD,CONN. WHERE SHE STARTED ACQUIRING MANY AUTOGRAPHS.DURING THAT TIME SHE ONCE CONDUCTED THE SAMMY KAYE ORCHESTRA ON STAGE(THERE.THERE DOES EXIST A PHOTO OF THAT MOMENT)SHE HAS TOLD HER DAUGHTER LINDA THAT SELLING THIS COLLECTION OF 160 MOVIE MAGAZINES FROM THE LATE 1920'S TO THE EARLY 1940'S WAS HER ULTIMATE SACRAFICE BUT FEELS IT IS TIME TO DO SO THANKS FOR READING

THESE MAGAZINES WERE AQUIRED THRU HER DAUGTHER LINDA AND CONSIST OF BETWEEN 400 MOVIE MAGAZINES ALL FROM THE LATE 1930'S TO THE EARLY 1960'S I HAVE AQUIRED THE COLLECTION AND WILL BE LISTING THEM ON EBAY OVER THE NEXT FEW DAYS PLEASE DON'T MISS OUT ON THIS ONE OF A KIND COLLECTION THANKS.

MOST OF THESE MOVIE MAGAZINES LOOK GREAT WITH VERY CLEAN COVERS AND MOST HAVE WHITE PGS.SOME DO HAVE FLAWS AND THEY WILL BE LISTED IN EACH SEPERATE LISTING THANKS

SPECIAL DEAL GOING ON WITH THIS BEVERLY S. WITHAM COLLECTION BUY 10 OR MORE USING THE BUY IT NOW FEATURE GET FREE SHIPPING(YOU MUST LIVE IN THE U.S FOR THIS DEAL TO APPLY)ITEMS MUST BE FROM THE BEVERLY S. WITHAM COLLECTION THANKS

SPECIAL DEAL WITH THESE BEVERELY S.WITHAM MAGAZINES FOR THE OUT OF U.S. RESIDENTS IF YOU BUY MORE THEN ONE OF THESE USING THE BUY IT NOW FEATURE IT WOULD ONLY BE $2.00 FOR SHIPPING ON EACH ADDITIONAL ITEM THANKS

12.4.10

Cinémonde.- abril 1952

Portada de la revista francesa Cinémonde dedicada a la pareja cinematográfica estelar del momento: Liz y Monty, que acababan de protagonizar A place in the sun (Un lugar en el sol, 1951).

1.4.10

Bonnes Soirées.- 1 abril 1962

Portada de esta revista francesa con Ina Duscha en la portada. Se publicó tal día como hoy (hace 48 años). En su interior un reportaje sobre Montgomery Clift (4 páginas + fotos).

18.3.10

GQ’s 50 Most Stylish Leading Men of the Last Half Century!

La revista GQ ha elaborado este mes la Lista de los 50 actores con más estilo de la segunda mitad del pasado siglo. Montgomery Clift no podía faltar y esto es lo que destacan de él:

(English Text)

Montgomery Clift

As director John Huston once put it, Montgomery Clift "always held something back." He wasn't one of those what-you-see-is-what-you-get types. But there were a few things about him you could be sure of. He was tough without being macho. He was one of the first guys on the scene to get all moody (here's the guy Dean learned his game from). And his bad luck offscreen left him tortured as hell. But while his sensitive, anti-Wayne act kept you guessing, his style couldn't have been more clear: classic, clean, and American. Simply put, few folks ever looked as sharp as Monty with a slicked-back pompadour, a white oxford, and a pair of worn-in khakis.—ANDREW RICHDALE

* Proof that good style isn't always about the bells and whistles: an understated—but well-fitting—oxford of any shade is just as dashing today as it was in the '50s.

2.3.10

Movie Life.- marzo 1950

Portada de la revista Movie Life dedicada a A Place in the sun (Un lugar en el sol 1951) donde aparece un dibujo caracterizando una escena de la película en el lago. Con el título "Liz and Monty on location" se refiere al rodaje de dicha escena en parajes naturales.

A place in the sun se rodó en octubre de 1949. Antes de concluir la filmación de interiores en los estudios de la Paramount en Hollywood, se filmó durante dos semanas en el lago Cascade de Nevada y en el lago Tahoe. La película tardó cuatro meses en finalizar (en Navidad aún rodaban) y en marzo la película se estaría montando. No se estrenó hasta el 28 de agosto de 1951, es decir, un año después.

26.2.10

Ciné-Tele Revue.- 26 feb 1960

Revista francesa que dedica su portada a Elizabeth Taylor y tiene en su interior un reportaje sobre la película Suddenly, last summer (De repente el último verano) que se había estrenado en diciembre de1959.

Éstos son los datos de la revista:

Título: Ciné-Tele Revue
Ejemplar: nº 9
Fecha de edición: 26/02/1960 (tal día como hoy, hace 50 años)


2.2.10

Photoplay.- feb 1950

Revista de cine que en su edición australiana de febrero de 1950 ofrecía un interesante reportaje sobre Montgomery Clift titulado "Tall, Dark and Different" (Alto, Moreno y Diferente).

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Datos de la revista:

(English Text)

Australian edition of "PHOTOPLAY" magazine, and very rare. Has a beautiful colour shot of Esther Williams on the cover. Dated February 1950. 72 pages.

Other features:
Humphrey Bogart gives some career advice to John Derek.
"Who will be your favourites for 1949?"
MONTGOMERY CLIFT is "Tall, Dark And Different"
Esther Williamns "Mermaid In Waiting"
Hymie Fink - Diary Of A Hollywood Photographer
Betty Grable "Blonde Bonanza"
Glenn Ford, wife Eleanor Powell and son Peter in 1950.
Lana Turner "Aboard The Snuffy" in the Bahamas.
June Allyson by Dick Powell.
Get together of stars for a Wanda Hendrix party (Ann Blyth, Mona Freeman, Edith Head, Vanessa Brown, Mary Hatcher).
The house that Zachary Scott built.
Sheila Graham names 12 great ladies of the screen.
Joan Crawford & Jane Wyman model Photoplay fashions.

29.1.10

Photoplay.- edición Australia (enero 1951)

Edición australiana de la revista Photoplay de enero de 1951 con un reportaje dedicado a Montgomery Clift titulado "Restless Rebel" (El rebelde inquieto) y firmado por Joseph Steele. La fotografía de Monty sentado en el sofá es bastante desconocida.



Datos de la revista:

(English text)
Australian edition of "PHOTOPLAY" magazine, and very rare. Has a very nice colour shot of Esther Williams on the cover. Dated January 1951. 68 pages.

Other features
Hawaiian lullaby by Ben Gage (husband of Esther Williams)
Hollywood divorces aren't my fault, by Louella Parsons;
Lana Turner is back with a new life
History of "The Hollywood Figure" (lots of cheesecake)
Peter Lawford
4 page list of current actors, their marriage record, home life facts, community service and honors
6 very cute pics of Liza Minnelli as a pint-sized ballerina;
Lewis Milestone, the director of "Kangaroo"
"It Was A Dream Of A Party" - with Rock Hudson, Vera Ellen, Douglas Sirk, Allene Roberts, Joan Evans, Johnny Sands, Barbara Lawrence & Robert Stack, David Brian.
MONTGOMERY CLIFT is a "Restless Rebel" (5 cool pics).
Gorgeous evening gowns modelled by Vera Ellen.
Deborah Kerr, Lauren Bacall, Barbara Lawrence & Virginia Mayo.

27.1.10

Picture Show.- 1952

Montgomery Clift Picture Show 1952 Magazine Cover Photo UK

18.1.10

Ciné Revue.- 1950

En el número 6 de esta revista, estaba por tanto empezando a editarse, aparecen Olivia de Havilland en la portada y Montgomery Clift en la contraportada. Acababa de estrenarse The Heiress (La heredera, 1949) y Monty era ya un estrella en todo el mundo.

10.1.10

Screen Hits Annual 1950

A vintage movie magazine titled SCREEN HITS ANNUAL (1950). In this magazine you will find the following:

* ELIZABETH TAYLOR (COVER+)

* MONTGOMERY CLIFT (COVER+)

* June Allyson (cover+), Alan Ladd (cover+), Lucille Ball & Bob Hope "Fancy pants" (back cover+), much more.

Harry Crampton Collection. Crampton was a graphic artist, with a keen eye for beauty, who became a movie press agent in the early years of film. In 2006 he passed away in Toronto. Crampton was an avid colletor of vintage Hollywood magazines. He loved the 1920's and 1930's era and always dressed to the "hilt" adorned in attire from that era. Harry Crampton was extremely friendly to all who knew him and passionate about both his collection and Hollywood stars. These magazines were aquired thru a colse friend of Harry Crampton.

2.1.10

Hollywood Yearbook 1950


En este anuario de 1949 (publicado en enero de 1950), con la simpática June Allyson en la portada, hay un reportaje de Montgomery Clift titulado "A new kind of dream guy" ("Un nuevo tipo de chico de ensueño" sería su traducción) que recoge unas fantásticas fotos de Monty acreditando su condición de chico ideal:

La foto del desayuno tomada por Kubrick de 1949, la de las admiradoras de 1948, una escena de The Heiress y la foto que sirvió de portada a la biografía de Patricia Bosworth tomada también por Kubrick en 1949.

22.12.09

Movie Teen.- dic 1949


Entre 1949 y 1950, Monty fue portada y protagonista de multitud de reportajes de revistas de cine. De hecho, me ha llamado la atención, la cantidad de revistas juveniles y de cine que proliferaban en esta época. No todas eran de calidad, muchas enfocadas a un público juvenil como he comentado y más cercanas al fenómeno fan que a la crítica cinematográfica.

Ésta que nos ocupa es un buen ejemplo de ello dado el nombre de la revista, Movie Teen, y el reportaje de portada The boys you should not date!. De todas maneras, Monty Clift sale irresistiblemente atractivo y prometedor.

Este número salió en diciembre de 1949. Monty acababa de estrenar The Heiress y se encontraba rodando A place in the sun.

Éstos son los datos de la revista:

(English text):

This is a December 1949 issue of MOVIE TEEN magazine with a cover of Montgomery Clift on it. Also has a 4 page article and a photo of him sitting in a movie theater with several adoring teen girls around him. Has a one page short article and photo of Kirk Douglas, Glen Ford, Ann Blyth, and John Derek with 1 page articles written each by Frank Sinatra and Susan Hayworth, both with a photo. Has other articles on pimples, dating, etc, the usual teen stuff but in a simpler time. Lots of ads.

A Vintage Magazine titled "MOVIE TEEN"(dec 1949). In this magazine you will find the folowwing Montgomery Clift (cover +).

Harry Crampton Collection. Harry was a graphic artist, with a keen ey for beauty, who became a movie press agent in the early years of film. In 2006he passed away in Torornto, Canada. He was in his late 8's
in his late 80's although nobody really knew how old he actually was. harry was an avid collector of vintage Hollywood magazines. He loved the 1920's and 1930's era and always dressed to the "hilt" adorned in attre from that era. Including appropiate hats, canes and colorful multi piece suits complete with suspenders and shoes to match, though he lived in Canada's most pretentious art district "Yorkville" harry would turn heads wherever he went in part because of his excesive cologne use. Harry Crampton was extremely friendly to all who knew him and passionate about both his collection and Hollywood stars. His unique specialness is missed by his friends and neighbors. He would be happy to know that his collection is being shared with other Hollywood collectors. Where the items can bring new life and beauty to their coleections.

These magazines were acqui
red thru a close friend of harry Crampton who was his next door neighnor. He was given the entire collection of almost 1,200 magazines and books 70% of the collection is from the 1920's-1940's.

19.12.09

2.12.09

Photoplay.- Dic 1950

Revista de cine que en su número de diciembre de 1950 dedicaba la portada a la simpática June Allyson y en su interior ofrecía un reportaje sobre A place in the sun (Un lugar en el sol, 1951), titulado "Échale un vistazo" con 16 fotos en blanco y negro. Aunque no tengo el reportaje cabe suponer que hablaría del rodaje y probablemente cotillearía sobre la pareja formada por Liz Monty. La película aún se estaba rodando y no se estrenaría hasta el 28 de agosto de 1951.

Éstos son los datos de la revista:

(English text)

Vintage Movie Magazine Photoplay December 1950 with June Allyson on the cover.
Issue Includes: Dick Powell and June Allyson “I was there” (2 page color pic + 4 b/w pix), Marlon Brando “That mad man Marlon” (Color pinup + 1 b/w pic).

Elizabeth Taylor, Montgomery Clift and Shelley Winters “A Place in the Sun: Sneak Peek” (16 b/w pix)

Dan Dailey “Lost- their Blue Heaven” (large b/w pic + 1 b/w pic), Ann Miller “Glad hands” (8 b/w pix), “Pinups of 1951” (1 color pic of each): Virginia Mayo, Debra Paget, Shelley Winters, Ava Gardner, Vera Ellen, Lana Turner, Rita Hayworth, Betty Grable, Jane Russell, Ann Sheridan “Where will they go from here?” (1 color pic of each of the following): Sally Forrest, Peggy Dow, Mercedes McCambridge, Howard Keel, Tony Curtis (1 b/w pic of each), Jean Hagen, Piper Laurie, Nancy Davis. Movie Ads/Celebrity Endorsement Ads: Two Weeks with Love (Jane Powell, Ricardo Montalban), Breakthrough (David Brian, John Agar), All About Eve (Bette Davis), Virginia Mayo for Jergens Lotion, Ann Blyth and Craig Stevens for Lux Soap. Misc Pix throughout: Claudette Colbert, Sally Forrest and Howard Keel, Tony Curtis, Peggy Lee, Marlon Brando and Nancy Davis, David Wayne, Jeff Chandler, Piper Laurie and Hugh O’Brian, June Allyson and Dick Powell, Dorothy Lamour and Esther Williams, Shirley Temple, Van Heflin and Robert Mitchum, Kirk Douglas, Esther Williams and Arlene Dahl, Irene Dunne, Jane Russell, Judy Garland, William Holden, Scott Brady, Joan Crawford, Anne Baxter, Betty Hutton, Larry Parks, Jeanne Crain, rod Cameron, Mitzi Gaynor, Mona Freeman, Faith Domergue, Penny Singleton, Lois Butler, Gene Nelson, John Derek, Shelley Winters, terry moore, Hugh Marlowe, Betty Grable, Howard Duff, Ginger Rogers, Errol Flynn and Patrice Wymore, Esther Williams, Nancy Olson, Ella Rains, Ann Blyth.
Su carrera comprende 17 títulos entre 1948 y 1966. Trabajó con los grandes directores (Hawks, Hitchcock, Stevens, Zinnemann, Kazan, Huston, Wyler) y las grandes estrellas (Lancaster, Marilyn Monroe, Katherine Hepburn, Brando, Wayne, Elizabeth Taylor especialmente) de entonces.
Su carrera comprende 17 títulos entre 1948 y 1966. Trabajó con los grandes directores (Hawks, Hitchcock, Stevens, Zinnemann, Kazan, Huston, Wyler) y las grandes estrellas (Lancaster, Marilyn Monroe, Katherine Hepburn, Brando, Wayne, Elizabeth Taylor especialmente) de entonces.
Su carrera comprende 17 títulos entre 1948 y 1966. Trabajó con los grandes directores (Hawks, Hitchcock, Stevens, Zinnemann, Kazan, Huston, Wyler) y las grandes estrellas (Lancaster, Marilyn Monroe, Katherine Hepburn, Brando, Wayne, Elizabeth Taylor especialmente) de entonces.
The Right Profile
Lyric
Say, where did I see this guy?
In red river?
Or a place in the sun?
Maybe the misfits?
Or from here to eternity?

Everybody say, is he all right?
And everybody say, whats he like?
Everybody say, he sure looks funny.
Thats...Montgomery Clift, honey!

New York, New York, New York, 42nd street
Hustlers rustle and pimps pimp the beat
Monty Clift is recognized at dawn
He aint got no shoes and his clothes are torn

I see a car smashed at night
Cut the applause and dim the light
Monty's face is broken on a wheel
Is he alive? can he still feel?

Everybody say, is he all right?
And everybody say, whats he like?
Everybody say, he sure looks funny.
Thats...Montgomery Clift, honey!

Nembutol numbs it all
But I prefer alcohol

He said go out and get me my old movie stills
Go out and get me another roll of pills
There I go again shaking, but I aint got the chills