Hi Joe,
I thought she had been blacklisted, but didn't follow her career. I
also thought it was just part of the discussion, and was NOT making a
political comment. I was being curious. IMO, my comment had nothing
to do with Toochis' remarks, and very rarely do.
Andrea
On Mar 25, 2009, at 12:52 PM, Joseph Bonelli wrote:
Hi, Andrea, et. al., from Joe B in NOLA
As you've brought up the most controversial moment from Vanessa
Redgrave's career, I think that the story needs to be posted.
Here's the story-- albeit in a not-completely-objective article:
http://www.super70s.com/super70s/Movies/1977/Redgrave_Zionism_Speech.asp
Whether or not one agrees with Redgrave's politics on the matter of
a Palestinian homeland, the facts are clear: Vanessa did not make a
"nasty comment about Jews." She decried the demonstrations outside.
I remember the show vividly and the story, though not objectively,
reports what was said accurately.
Joe
PS-- Once again, I repeat Toochis' admonishment to drop political
discussions on MOPO. I agree and only posted this to get the facts
down in reference to the Redgrave Oscar speech.
Joe
--- On Wed, 3/25/09, Andrea Kanter <eccen...@mac.com> wrote:
From: Andrea Kanter <eccen...@mac.com>
Subject: [MOPO] Vanessa Redgrave
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Date: Wednesday, March 25, 2009, 9:01 AM
From: ANDREA KANTER <andreakan...@mac.com>
Date: March 25, 2009 8:17:20 AM EDT
To: David Kusumoto <davidmkusum...@hotmail.com>
Cc: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: Re: [MOPO] OT: The Ravishing/Stunning Vanessa Redgrave
I worked the Academy Awards 'satellite' at Studio 54 in the late
70's. The awards were simulcast there. One of the Redgrave
sisters made a nasty remark about Jews during her camera-time that
silenced Studio 54 and, I assume, the room she was in in
Hollywood. After that, I rarely saw her. I believe it was
Vanessa. Does anyone know?
Andrea
On Mar 25, 2009, at 5:08 AM, David Kusumoto wrote:
** Every once in awhile, I'll read a news story that sends me off
looking in wildly different directions, researching names and back-
stories, etc.
** Well, the other day, in the aftermath of the tragic death of
Natasha Richardson, I started thinking of her mother, Vanessa
Redgrave. The day before Natasha died, we coincidentally sat down
to re-watch Vanessa's 2007 performance in "Atonement," the
wonderful film adaptation of Ian McEwan's 2001 British novel that
covers the impact of a childhood lie on three people from its
beginnings in 1935 -- to the present day. She's only in the last
10 minutes, but she steals the picture with her horrifying
confession.
** Most Generation X'ers, Y'ers and New Millennials know little to
nothing about Vanessa Redgrave -- who since the 1970s, has been
relegated to supporting character roles in films -- occasionally
broken up by a lead role on stage, e.g., her recent appearance in
the short-run Broadway adaptation of Joan Didion's "The Year of
Magical Thinking," a memoir which won the National Book Award that
covers Didion's clinical observations and detachment -- dealing
with the sudden loss of husband John Gregory Dunne and the
impending loss of her daughter Quintana -- in a horrific span of
about 18 months.
** Paging through Vanessa's life, I was reminded what a ravishing
beauty she was, a stunning actress who made a big splash in art
films like "Blow-Up," "Morgan!" and "Isadora" -- the latter two
for which she received Academy Award nominations for Best
Actress. But the image of Vanessa that sticks in my head is NOT
the one more commonly seen in Antonioni's "Blow Up." No, it's the
image of a naked Vanessa on the very affordable one-sheet from
from the lesser-known film directed by Karel Reisz, "Isadora,"
later edited and re-titled, "The Loves of Isadora," the bio-pic
about dancer Isadora Duncan. (Which almost eerily -- and
coincidentally -- also offered this week by Bruce Hershenson,
closing later tonight on his website.)
** I've always been curious about the origin of the photo used on
that poster because it's not in the film (though the free-love
sexual behavior of her character is on full display). Well,
yesterday, I read an AP story about a photo to be auctioned March
30th by Sotheby's purporting to be the earliest known image of
lower Manhattan. The photo is dull and unremarkable. But while
browsing the sale, I came across the same PHOTO of Vanessa
Redgrave (age 30) that was used on the "Isadora" one-sheet --
struck from the original 1967 negative shot by photographer Victor
Skrebneski.
** Below is the web-hosted image of the poster on Bruce's
website. Below that -- is the absolutely stunning (to me)
original black-and-white image of Vanessa being offered by
Sotheby's. Equally stunning? Sotheby's has tagged a pre-sale
estimate on this photo of $8,000-$12,000.
http://auctions.emovieposter.com/Bidding.taf?_function=detail&Auction_uid1=1353787
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