She couldn’t forgive Bette Davis writing to Streep saying she was a worthy successor. Marlene Dietrich spent her last days writing Ugly and Pig on photos of Streep. Did they simply know that Streep could do what they couldn’t? They acted cartoonishly. Streep was steeped in realism.
Katharine Hepburn is mostly forgotten with anyone under aged 60. Meryl Streep will still be an institution 100 years from now.
by Anonymous | reply 1 | May 8, 2025 5:30 AM |
Kate was a well known bulldagger dyke. Meryl probably turned down Hepburn's quavery advances early on in her career... and thus the vow for vengeful anihilation was made.
by Anonymous | reply 2 | May 8, 2025 5:32 AM |
Katharine, herself, wasn't even close to the being the most memorable Golden Age Actress. Nevermind her four Oscars.
by Anonymous | reply 3 | May 8, 2025 5:37 AM |
She was never close to The Being.
by Anonymous | reply 4 | May 8, 2025 5:40 AM |
Meryl wouldn't lick her dry crusty twat.
by Anonymous | reply 5 | May 8, 2025 6:05 AM |
When they were nominated against each other for the Oscar it was Kate who won, so she had the last laugh.
by Anonymous | reply 6 | May 8, 2025 7:15 AM |
Hepburn’s criticism was pretty mild. She said the same thing (tick, tick, tick) about her niece’s performance in Guess Who’s Coming to Diner.
She said Glenn Close had no business walking around barefoot on stage with those “big, ugly feet.”
Harmless bitchiness.
They’re both legends. There is no need to pit one against the other because one doesn’t appeal to you.
by Anonymous | reply 7 | May 8, 2025 1:39 PM |
Hepburn played the same character her entire career. Jealousy. Pure and simple. Her range ran the gamut from A to B.
Also, I love Dietrich but she was rather ugly, really.
by Anonymous | reply 8 | May 8, 2025 1:55 PM |
If there EVER was an actress of whom "tick tick tick" could be said, it was K. Hepburn.
by Anonymous | reply 9 | May 8, 2025 1:57 PM |
I'm with R7. This is stupid. They both have their positives and negatives. They also have a lot in common. Example: both are impressively proficient at their craft but wildly overrated. Both also have undeserved Academy Awards.
by Anonymous | reply 10 | May 8, 2025 2:14 PM |
OP- I don't care what this dues paying member of DAUGHTERS OF BILITIS has or had to say about Meryl Streep
by Anonymous | reply 11 | May 8, 2025 2:19 PM |
Katharine Hepburn was a snob. Katharine Hepburn spent enormous energy maintaining her fake persona, so much for so long she believed it was true.
by Anonymous | reply 12 | May 8, 2025 2:25 PM |
Oh, Kate.
Her whole shtick as an actress can pretty much be reduced to this long-ago SNL skit with Martin Short as her distant cousin who worked a hot dog cart.
by Anonymous | reply 13 | May 8, 2025 2:27 PM |
I do wonder which Streep movies besides Prada we’ll be watching in thirty years. Her dramatic films are already mostly forgotten.
by Anonymous | reply 14 | May 8, 2025 2:33 PM |
Not even comparable. Hepburn and Dietrich (and Davis) were all from an entirely different era of acting, style and technique-wise. Not to mention what audiences wanted/liked. And what worked for the screen then.
And Streep...realism? LOL!
by Anonymous | reply 15 | May 8, 2025 2:39 PM |
Death Becomes Her could have just a little staying power for all of its camp.
But you’re right R14, overall. Most younger movie fans would never opt to sit through the entirety of Sophie’s Choice or Out Of Africa (with Meryl as its white colonizer heroine)
by Anonymous | reply 16 | May 8, 2025 2:42 PM |
R1 is dangerously delusional! Someone call a doctor!
by Anonymous | reply 17 | May 8, 2025 2:51 PM |
Streep, Hepburn, Davis, etc -- they'll all be remembered in the same breath many years from now. Celebrities don't stay current; only the contemporary ones have real fans. And fans all die. As do the stars and the memories.
by Anonymous | reply 18 | May 8, 2025 2:54 PM |
So true, R18. A young person listening to me talk about Madonna would be equivalent to my ‘80s teenage self listening to an old person talking about Dinah Shore.
by Anonymous | reply 19 | May 8, 2025 2:59 PM |
[quote] A young person listening to me talk about Madonna would be equivalent to my ‘80s teenage self listening to an old person talking about Dinah Shore.
So many here don't understand that. We're further from Madonna's debut in 1982ish than we were from the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941 at the time Madonna debuted.
by Anonymous | reply 20 | May 8, 2025 3:28 PM |
[quote] Marlene Dietrich spent her last days writing Ugly and Pig on photos of Streep.
This made me laugh out loud. I could totally see Marlene doing that, drunk in bed in Paris.
by Anonymous | reply 21 | May 8, 2025 3:47 PM |
Hepburn, Dietrich, Davis, Crawford, Gable, Cooper, Bogart, John Wayne, etc., were all Golden Age superstars whose larger than life personae shown through with every performance and movie audiences ate it up. If ever they played against type, as Gable had done as a song & dance man in Idiot's Delight, it usually flopped with their fans.
Respected actors like Paul Muni and Fredric March were known for their versatility and ability to disappear in their roles, but in doing so, they never developed a superstar persona like their peers above.
Meryl Streep is like the Paul Muni of actresses. She disappears in her roles, but could one actually describe the Meryl Streep movie star persona? You can impersonate Hepburn, Davis, Bogart, but Meryl Streep? I think that bugged a lot of Old Hollywood types who bristled at her being hailed as the best of her generation. But I do find much of her earlier performances to be very technical and studied, so maybe Hepburn's criticism was valid.
by Anonymous | reply 22 | May 8, 2025 4:09 PM |
Davis had more range than Hepburn. And Davis wasn't afraid of looking absolutely hideous if the part called for it. Baby Jane, for example. No other major actress of that era would've dared to look and act as grotesque as Davis did in that role.
by Anonymous | reply 23 | May 8, 2025 4:48 PM |
And Stanwyck didn’t care how many people called her a dyke when she went from western to western in the 1950s.
by Anonymous | reply 24 | May 8, 2025 6:16 PM |
Stars are stars for a particular aspect, Streep like Daniel Day Lewis is a star because of her 'acting' and the preparation/research/technique she utilizes is what makes her a star. Like Day Lewis, inevitably the press done on Streep before every film she is promoting invariably touches on her acting. The acting in and of itself becomes the 'star' quality. I would contend that watching Streep act is as hypnotic and appealing to the viewer as Bogart, Monroe or Grant's lauded charisma, you can't take your eyes off of her. Whether or not her performances are realistic or emotionally effective to audiences to another story, but her 'acting' is hypnotic in and of itself.
by Anonymous | reply 26 | May 8, 2025 6:29 PM |
Thank you R24. Stanwyck beats them all as far I'm concerned. But the real difference between Streep and Hepburn is the ability to dive into the character and create a different person. I love Hepburn, but it is always- really- what would such and such be liked if they were Hepburn. Davis and Streep have far more in common because Davis could get down and dirty in her roles. I agree with R22 that Streep is very much like Paul Muni. R1 if your generation forgets Hepburn then your generation is full of idiots. You see there were movies made before 1980. They may act different but they can still create art. Perhaps your generation doesn't care enough about anything to invest the time to really watch great films by Davis, Hepburn, and Stanwyck. But Streep- who be remembered a100 years from now- according to you-watched and studied all of them. And we still talk about Chaplin, Gish, Buster Keaton- and they are way over 100 years ago.
by Anonymous | reply 27 | May 8, 2025 6:29 PM |
I don’t know if this sister of SAPPHO is hated Meryl Streep but I do know she disliked Jane Fonda.
by Anonymous | reply 28 | May 8, 2025 7:17 PM |
I like her sister Audrey better. And I think Audrey is more known now than Kate is.
by Anonymous | reply 29 | May 8, 2025 7:25 PM |
R8, Hepburn acknowledged this multiple times in the few interviews she gave. She never held herself up as a great actress. (“A dessert, not the meat and potatoes of a production.”) She over praised Tracy but she wasn’t wrong about him coming off as more authentic.
*rant below not directed at r8* She helped Angela Lansbury land State of the Union and she went out of her way to highlight Judy Holliday‘s talent in Adam’s Rib because she was not a sure thing for the movie version of Born Yesterday the year before it was made. She also praised Vanessa Redgrave endlessly.
She was prickly, but she was also kind and generous. I think a lot of people here don’t realize the discipline, need for privacy and loyalty she learned from her upbringing. She was an atheist, but she loved humanity and would always stop on the side of the road to help someone with a flat tire. Can you see Meryl Streep doing that? Maybe, she seems like a very nice lady too.
by Anonymous | reply 30 | May 8, 2025 7:44 PM |
Spence once humiliated me at a dinner party by telling me to, “take that feather out of your ass while you’re at it!”
It hurt, but he was right and I would suggest that many on this thread do the same.
by Anonymous | reply 31 | May 8, 2025 7:47 PM |
Kate made one great film. Her performance in “The Lion In Winter” is the perfect fit for her detached demeanor.
Her performances in Long Day’s Journey and Bringing Up Baby were also very fine.
She’s merely serviceable in the rest.
Davis made several great films: All About Eve, Now Voyager, Of Human Bondage, Baby Jane, Dark Victory. I’m not a Davis fan, per se. But she delivered time and again.
Stanwyck is the greatest film actress. In my opinion, of course. She straddled westerns, noir, dramas, romantic comedies,, silents, suspense (Sorry Wrong Number, a great one — but The Locked Door is better, suspense wise. And a lot more fun), even sang a bit (Lady if Burlesque, Ball of Fire). She’d have been perfect for Mildred Pierce, as she was for Meet John Doe, Miracle Woman, . Double Indemnity, Ladies of Leisure, Stella Dallas, Baby Face and The Lady Eve. The last two are absolute perfection. And I’ll go to my grave saying she was robbed when she wasn’t cast in On Golden Pond. She would have been spectacular— none of Kate’s hammy blathering. The slap alone. And she’d have won her competitive Oscar.
Leigh was very, very good. Waterloo Bridge is really something. And, of course, Streetcar.
Garland remains supremely underrated as an actress. Check out The Clock, Fir Me And My Gal, and A Star is Born.
Signoret, Page, Maggie Smith were brilliant. Ingrid Bergman was a very, very fine actress.
But Katherine? Give me Audrey Hepburn before Kate.
Streep is staggering. I’d rank her alongside Stanwyck. I wouldn’t put Kate Hepburn near any of the women I mentioned.
Streep’s greatest role is Sophie’s Choice. But what she does in Bridges of Madison County is some of her best work. The film is terribly marred by the conceit of her kids discovering who she was. But she’s really terrific.
A Cry In The Dark, Kramer, Prada, Iron Lady (there’s a scene where she’s caught talking to her husband, long dead, and the subtlety in her eyes is brilliant), Silkwood, Africa, Postcards. It’s an embarrassment of riches.
by Anonymous | reply 32 | May 8, 2025 9:12 PM |
Whatever.
by Anonymous | reply 33 | May 8, 2025 9:15 PM |
Bette Davis could out act all the chicks in this thread.
by Anonymous | reply 34 | May 8, 2025 9:19 PM |
Bette was very versatile in her movie roles, r34, but she couldn't do comedy to save her life.
by Anonymous | reply 35 | May 8, 2025 9:33 PM |
Some people would call All About Eve a comedy and Bette ruled supreme with that performance.
by Anonymous | reply 36 | May 8, 2025 9:43 PM |
Streep hasn't been interesting since Prada. She impersonates her roles now, it's all "Great Lady of Acting" schtick. She let the hype get to her. And it turned off audiences. Iron Lady and Julia Child are dramatic Tracey Ullman sketches. Don't even get me started on making Florence Jenkins an unsung hero. Talk about not even getting the joke. Most of her acclaim was due to a general laziness from critics and Hollywood who have never been keen on casting AARP actresses in lead roles.
Hepburn may not be the best actress, but she knew how to pace herself and how to milk her icon status. She was a beloved icon and still winning oscars in her 70's. You were never told to accept her the way you were with Streep. I also found a classiness to her in how she handled things.
Meryl meanwhile is on camera giving the finger to the audience at an SNL anniversary special and showing up as a part of an entourage to the Grammys last year for no reason and engaging in showmances with Martin Short. She's plunging into stunts, something Dunaway has too much class to even do.
by Anonymous | reply 37 | May 8, 2025 10:05 PM |
[quote]Some people would call All About Eve a comedy
And most people would call it a dramedy, r36.
by Anonymous | reply 38 | May 8, 2025 10:08 PM |
[quote]I also found a classiness to her in how she handled things.
Katharine Hepburn was the Holy Grail for Datalounge eldergays: A mid-century New England WASP. Bigger than God and Jesus put together.
by Anonymous | reply 39 | May 8, 2025 10:10 PM |
She was a lecherous hag as she got older, it wouldn't shock me if she made a play for Meryl.
by Anonymous | reply 40 | May 8, 2025 10:28 PM |
R21
After a few glasses of Champagne she was on a roll. She read tons of Newspapers and magazines and after she scribbled her "comments on them she stuffed them in an evnvelope and sent it to her daughter.
BTW.Even tough she hated Liz because of some overlapping of lovers, she called everybody she still knew in Hollywood and told them to show up for Taylors AIDS charitys.
by Anonymous | reply 41 | May 8, 2025 11:31 PM |
My favorite Kate movie is SUMMERTIME. She was very touching and vulnerable as the lonely spinster looking for love in Venice. No mannerisms or high handed soliloquies, just acting.
by Anonymous | reply 42 | May 8, 2025 11:35 PM |
r41 Dietrich had a vicious sense of humor. She also hated fraus. She could've been on DL.
by Anonymous | reply 43 | May 8, 2025 11:47 PM |
Hepburn's best film is actually "Alice Adams." She's also excellent in "Long Day's Journey into Night," "Bringing Up Baby," and "Adam's Rib."
She's too mannered in "The Lion in Winter."
by Anonymous | reply 44 | May 8, 2025 11:53 PM |
Let's not forget Kate in The Philadelphia Story, a truly iconic performance.
Not yet mentioned but also unforgettable in Little Women, Holiday, Woman of the Year, The African Queen, Adam's Rib, Pat & Mike and Desk Set.
by Anonymous | reply 45 | May 8, 2025 11:57 PM |
The biggest problem with Streep is that so many of her movies have not aged well. Even when she's terrific, the films themselves often become less and less interesting as time moves on. She's so enjoyable in "Julie and Julia," but the parts with Julie are almost unwatchable.
Of her films, the ones i predict people will still likely watch in the future are: "Sophie's Choice," "Silkwood," "Ironweed," "The Devil Wears Prada," and "Adaptation."
But several of the others, even when she delivers superb performances, just are not very watchable now: "The French Lieutenant's Woman," "Out of Africa," "The River Wild," "Kramer vs. Kramer," "Music of the Heart," "The Iron Lady." "Postcards from the Edge" is still fun to watch, and she has a few superb moments in it, but she's miscast--she was too old for the part, and she just never seems like the sort of person who would ever have substance abuse issues.
by Anonymous | reply 46 | May 9, 2025 12:01 AM |
[quote]"Postcards from the Edge" is still fun to watch, and she has a few superb moments in it, but she's miscast--she was too old for the part, and she just never seems like the sort of person who would ever have substance abuse issues.
That's what I've always thought. She was 50 and looked it, her character was supposed to be about a decade younger. And you just can't picture Meryl as a junkie.
Shirley Maclaine, however, was perfect.
by Anonymous | reply 47 | May 9, 2025 12:07 AM |
Sorry I meant she was 40 and looked 50, she looked too old.
by Anonymous | reply 48 | May 9, 2025 12:07 AM |
I know Mike Nichols was done with Melanie Griffith after Working Girl, but I think she would have been great as Suzanne Vale. She was age appropriate and nobody would have a hard time believing her as a recovering addict/daughter of a movie star. In her lane, Griffith was quite good.
by Anonymous | reply 49 | May 9, 2025 12:44 AM |
R46 I’m glad you mentioned “Ironweed.” It may make the list of the ten most depressing movies ever made, but I love it—I also love the novel and the others in the Albany cycle. Nicholson is, of course, the core of the movie, but Streep does fine work, especially in the scene in which she runs into friends from her debutante days and tries to explain herself by saying she’s been touring Europe, playing classical piano concerts. It’s hilarious and heartbreaking at the same time. And Streep draws in the ghosts of days at Vassar to show the devastation of Helen.
by Anonymous | reply 50 | May 9, 2025 1:27 AM |
I don't care what this lifelong subscriber to THE LADDER has or had to say about our dear Mary Louise Streep.
by Anonymous | reply 52 | May 9, 2025 5:41 AM |
[quote]r49 I think Melanie Griffith would have been great as Suzanne Vale. She was age appropriate and nobody would have a hard time believing her as a recovering addict/daughter of a movie star.
I simply don't like try-hard Jamie Lee Curtis... but when I was reading that novel I imagined her in the role.
by Anonymous | reply 53 | May 9, 2025 5:55 AM |
Ya know. Mike Nichols directed Postcards right after directing Working Girl. How much of the movie Suzanne Vail was Carrie Fisher? and how much of it was based on Nichols' experience having just directed Melanie Griffith?
The Gene Hackman character might have been based on Nichols himself.
by Anonymous | reply 54 | May 9, 2025 9:24 AM |
From 1938 to 1940, Katharine Hepburn went trough what was the most pivotal phase of her career – being declared box office poison, leaving Hollywood and moving back east, finally making it big on Broadway and then returning triumphantly, very much on her own terms, to making films.
During this period, she made only three films – Bringing Up Baby, Holiday and The Philadelphia Story – in retrospect, one of the most remarkable hat tricks pulled by any actor from Hollywood Golden Age. All these films were romantic comedies, in all of them she played privileged New England heiresses who looked and sounded like Katharine Hepburn – or, as people like to say, she “played a version of herself” (well, not exactly, but never mind). They all costarred Cary Grant, two of them were directed by George Cukor, her go-to collaborator.
Yet – Susan Vance, Linda Seton and Tracy Lord are three distinctively different characters. They look differently (ok, it has something to do with the fact that these films were made in three studios - RKO, Columbia and MGM – but still). Each has her own speech pattern, disposition and posture. But more significant – they had vastly diverse takes on Life, motivations and approaches. Put these three in the same room and they will have nothing to do with each other.
The main purpose of acting is not necessarily to show of the skills (which too often translate to “being chameleon-like”) of the actor but to best serve the character one is playing in the context of the vehicle one is in. And Hepburn did just this, brilliantly, in these three films as she did in Little Women, Alice Adams, quite a few of her films with Tracy, The African Queen, Summertime, Suddenly Last Summer and Long Day’s Journey into Night. And if it pleases you – The Lion in Winter.
She did OK.
by Anonymous | reply 55 | May 10, 2025 11:46 AM |
I’m not sure why some of you think Streep’s legacy will last 100 years from now. Most people have never even seen Sophie’s Choice. For instance, on Letterboxd it only has about 7k user reviews. The film of hers most people have seen is Mamma Mia! (which has 278k reviews). If she’s remembered at all, it’ll be as a mediocre singer.
Meryl Streep is similar to Whitney Houston. Impressive in her day but with a mostly mediocre, disposable catalogue. For all of her so-called hits, Houston will be remembered for her performance of the national anthem. She hit a lot of impressive notes in a lot of not very memorable songs. The same is true of Streep.
by Anonymous | reply 56 | May 10, 2025 7:15 PM |
[quote] Meryl Streep is similar to Whitney Houston.
And they both agreed: CRACK is WHACK!!
by Anonymous | reply 57 | May 10, 2025 7:20 PM |
Kate and Meryl have one thing in common, and that is that they are both nauseatingly overrated.
by Anonymous | reply 58 | May 10, 2025 7:27 PM |
[quote] Meryl Streep is similar to Whitney Houston. Impressive in her day but with a mostly mediocre, disposable catalogue. For all of her so-called hits, Houston will be remembered for her performance of the national anthem. She hit a lot of impressive notes in a lot of not very memorable songs. The same is true of Streep.
This is a perfect comparison, and I agree. Whitney's discography is mediocre; most people only remember "I Will Always Love You" and her rendition of The National Anthem. She was always a singles artist celebrated for her vocal prowess but never known for delivering a classic album that stood the test of time.
The same is true with Meryl. Most people remember the accents, mimicry, makeup transformations, and technical aspects of her performances, while the movies are never celebrated as classics. I would say her legacy will be similar to Laurence Olivier's, but Olivier did a ton of theater along with films, which cemented him as one of the greatest actors of his generation. His film legacy is mostly forgotten.
by Anonymous | reply 59 | May 11, 2025 9:01 AM |
[quote] Katharine Hepburn is mostly forgotten with anyone under aged 60. Meryl Streep will still be an institution 100 years from now.
Yeah, right. What products of pre-1926 popular culture do you regularly consume? And you’re right. Streep is huge among the under-30s.
by Anonymous | reply 60 | May 11, 2025 9:29 AM |
I dare any of you to sit through Out of Africa.
by Anonymous | reply 61 | May 11, 2025 9:32 AM |
Streep is truly the Helen Hayes of out age. One of the immortals!
by Anonymous | reply 62 | May 11, 2025 9:39 AM |
And the average American has no idea who Helen Hayes is.
All fame is fleeting.
by Anonymous | reply 63 | May 11, 2025 9:47 AM |
If you’re an actor who wants to be remembered, you need to be just good enough to be chosen by a director for a great film. In 50 years more people will probably be familiar with Kim Novak’s acting than with Streep’s because Novak was cast in Vertigo.
by Anonymous | reply 64 | May 11, 2025 10:40 AM |
[quote] cs. I would say her legacy will be similar to Laurence Olivier's, but Olivier did a ton of theater along with films, which cemented him as one of the greatest actors of his generation. His film legacy is mostly forgotten.
Olivier was also a bit of a ham who couldn’t do a foreign accent at all
by Anonymous | reply 65 | May 11, 2025 11:24 AM |
R59, that’s EVERYONE’S problem.
by Anonymous | reply 66 | May 11, 2025 11:52 AM |
R55: Tracy Lord was from Mainline Philly, where Hepburn got her speech pattern while attending Bryn Mawr, so not New England. She's presented as having a connection to Quakerism. Her roles in Holiday and Philadelphia Story are actually pretty similar.
by Anonymous | reply 67 | May 11, 2025 12:45 PM |
Kate often had a distracted quality when acting… as if still fixated on the various razzle dazzle starlet muffs she’d cleaned out with her tongue the night before.
by Anonymous | reply 68 | May 11, 2025 10:51 PM |
Kate cleaned out her BFF Laura Harding's muff for 70 years.
by Anonymous | reply 69 | May 11, 2025 11:36 PM |
I don't think Hepburn hated Streep, but I do think Hepburn was bitchy which is a bad look for people at end of life. She probably was jealous that Meryl was picking up Oscar nominations so quickly and threatened to surpass her in nominations.
By virtue of how many films she appeared in over multiple decades, Streep will be remembered the same as Hepburn and Davis. Even if it's primarily for The Devil Wears Prada, people will continue to watch Death Becomes Her, Kramer v. Kramer, and other films in her canon.
I do think no one will ever be as popular as these women, or have as much longevity, because the movie industry is rapidly falling apart. This is due to streaming, videogames, cartoons, and Marvel/DCU films that are completely forgettable.
by Anonymous | reply 70 | May 11, 2025 11:43 PM |
Kramer v. Kramer was basically a Lifetime movie before Lifetime movies were a thing. All That Jazz should've won Best Picture instead of that shitfest.
by Anonymous | reply 71 | May 11, 2025 11:49 PM |
Streep will outlive Hepburn because: 1) her films are in color 2) she never used the fake mid-Atlantic accent. Hepburn was great in her time, but her films will always feel much more dated than Streep's.
by Anonymous | reply 72 | May 11, 2025 11:56 PM |
Hepburn had a ton more range compared to Davis, Hepburn was excellent in theatre, including Shakespeare and was superb in comedy. Davis never had comedic chops and never did anything of Hepburn's quality on stage.
by Anonymous | reply 73 | May 12, 2025 12:37 AM |
Of actresses from the second half of the 20th century it will probably be Our Faye who will be best remembered as she appeared in multiple landmark films: Bonnie and Clyde, Chinatown, Network
by Anonymous | reply 74 | May 12, 2025 12:54 AM |
Ms Hepburn was quite fond of me and wisely predicted I would be a star. Meryl was too homely Ms Hepburn's eclectic tastes.
by Anonymous | reply 75 | May 12, 2025 1:03 AM |
Faye and Meryl will both be remembered for playing lady bosses in Network and The Devil Wears Prada.
by Anonymous | reply 76 | May 12, 2025 1:06 AM |
[quote]R70 I don't think Hepburn hated Streep, but I do think Hepburn was bitchy which is a bad look for people at end of life.
Jane Fonda has frequently said that Hepburn did not like her, and flat out told her so the first time they met.
The old bat was something of a cunt - probably because she grew up with great (white) privilege and was never told no.
by Anonymous | reply 77 | May 12, 2025 1:10 AM |
And how do you think Streep grew up? She got a PR agent after graduating Yale, which is almost unheard of for any rising actress. Not even Sigourney Weaver, who came from more wealth and privilege did that.
I also agree with Streep's dramas not holding up well at all, and they're barely even seen on TV. Bridges was a HUGE deal in the mid 90's, but now it's all but forgotten. Sophie's Choice is considered one of the greatest performances ever given by an actress, but it's been ages since it's been aired on TV (except maybe for a TCM academy award month once go around). For all the hoopla over how great a dramatic actress she is, her two movies that have legs are comedies (Death Becomes Her and Prada)
She's already been bested in Best Actress trophies. Frances McDormand has three for Best Actress (along with a fourth for producing) so she's tied with Hepburn with the most oscars, and second in Best Actress trophies. It took ages for Streep to win her second Best Actress oscar, and even then it was with the help of Harvey Weinstein. She's now in her longest drought for nominations since her career started.
Hate on Kate all you want, but it's not going to be Streep who will best her record.
by Anonymous | reply 78 | May 12, 2025 1:23 AM |
Streep does have a record number of Oscar nominations, though, which must mean something...
by Anonymous | reply 79 | May 12, 2025 1:38 AM |
Who cares if Meryl got a PR person? They all do. It's weird how much Datalounge is obsessed with denigrating her accomplishments.
Of her films, my favorites are The Deer Hunter, The Devil Wears Prada, Death Becomes Her, Defending Your Life, and It's Complicated, which even Quentin Tarantino loves. Movie goers love her.
by Anonymous | reply 80 | May 12, 2025 2:14 AM |
How Katherine Hepburn got as far as she did is a mystery to me. She has one of the most irritating voices I've ever heard.
by Anonymous | reply 81 | May 12, 2025 3:40 AM |
[quote]r81 How Katherine Hepburn got as far as she did is a mystery to me. She has one of the most irritating voices I've ever heard.
Her sister Audrey was an even bigger star, and helped her through some tough times.
Goddamn nepo baby.
by Anonymous | reply 82 | May 12, 2025 3:52 AM |
[quote] Who cares if Meryl got a PR person? They all do. It's weird how much Datalounge is obsessed with denigrating her accomplishments.
It seems weird to you because you don’t know how to read. It wasn’t a criticism. It was a refutation of a factual claim In another post.
by Anonymous | reply 84 | May 12, 2025 5:55 AM |
Happy 118th birthday, Kate.
by Anonymous | reply 85 | May 12, 2025 6:08 AM |
Kate was originally offered the role of Alexis on DYNASTY. It’s tragic she declined doing the show.
by Anonymous | reply 86 | May 12, 2025 7:24 AM |
R73: You're delusional. Hepburn couldn't play unsympathetic parts like Davis did and was unwilling to look grotesque. Hepburn plays flinty upper middle class New England women and does as much with them as a anyone could.
Streep had a supporting role in Deer Hunter. John Savage is more memorable in that film. Kramer v. Kramer is a notch up from Lifetime, but no classic. It's based on a rather slight, popular novel which usually is the easiest thing to adapt for film---a screenwriter has more latitude to develop character and scenes.
It's difficult to know what will be remembered from her ear--the blockbusters like Star Wars and the more recent franchises may linger longer in imagination, although they are a mixed bag. Still, I doubt that Harrison Ford and others who have done well in these genres will be remembered as a great actor.
by Anonymous | reply 87 | May 12, 2025 11:26 AM |
[quote]It's difficult to know what will be remembered from her ear
Perhaps that particularly grainy, greenish lump of wax.
by Anonymous | reply 88 | May 12, 2025 11:33 AM |
It also should be noted that Hepburn's senility was ongoing for longer than usually realized. She became accusatory and paranoid, always with that tone of hers. And she'd be okay and suddenly go off.
Bacall, a lifelong friend, quit visiting her because of how she got the treatment later in Hepburn's life. Hepburn accused her of theft or something.
by Anonymous | reply 89 | May 12, 2025 11:48 AM |
TRUE, R88
by Anonymous | reply 90 | May 12, 2025 2:43 PM |
Meant R89.
by Anonymous | reply 91 | May 12, 2025 3:00 PM |
I think Hepburn in Long Days Journey into Night is one of the great screen performances.
by Anonymous | reply 92 | May 12, 2025 3:37 PM |
Hepburn lacked tact. Not everyone was deserving of her forthrightness and rudeness.
by Anonymous | reply 93 | May 12, 2025 4:08 PM |
Both Hepburn and Davis would be fun to have drinks with but after a few hours they’d be exhausting to be around. Especially Hepburn, with her big mouth.
by Anonymous | reply 94 | May 12, 2025 4:26 PM |
R29- Rose you made the funniest comment on this thread LOL.
by Anonymous | reply 95 | May 12, 2025 4:32 PM |
r89 She stole my Arby's Winter Tulip Tumblers! The nerve of that woman.
by Anonymous | reply 96 | May 12, 2025 6:14 PM |
People write the most stupid things in books.
by Anonymous | reply 97 | May 12, 2025 6:55 PM |
I thought Katherine Hepburn was someone who died about a hundred years ago.
by Anonymous | reply 98 | May 12, 2025 7:12 PM |
Off topic, but I hate that the Hepburn-Tracy love affair bullshit hasn't been exposed yet. It's widely known she was a lesbian and he was gay and they bearded for each other.
I never cared for her much - she didn't have that much range and seemed like an aloof, preachy old money bitch.
by Anonymous | reply 99 | May 12, 2025 7:13 PM |
Rosie Greer also loathed The Rock
by Anonymous | reply 100 | May 12, 2025 7:16 PM |
Out of Africa, Sophie's Choice, The French Lieutenant's Woman, Still of the Night, Ironweed, She-Devil, One True Think, Music of the Heart, Suffragette, The Iron Lady, Florence Foster Jenkins, Plenty Still of the Night, The Post, Falling in Love, Marvin's Room, Heartburn, Ricki and the Flash, August: Osage County, Julie & Julia, Dancing at Lughnasa, Kramer vs. Kramer, Mamma Mia! . . . are best forgotten and are.
by Anonymous | reply 101 | May 12, 2025 7:39 PM |
R99 I don't understand how they "bearded" for each other when the affair wasn't publicly acknowledged until around 1990 when Katherine's autobiography was released.
by Anonymous | reply 102 | May 12, 2025 8:17 PM |
^ It was well know for decades. Closet case writer Garson Kanin outed them as a couple in his 1971 book.
by Anonymous | reply 103 | May 12, 2025 9:22 PM |
Famous Kath[bold]a[/bold]rines:
Hepburn, Ross, Houghton, McPhee-Foster
Famous Kath[bold]e[/bold]rines:
Helmond, Heigl, Jackson, Kelly Lang
by Anonymous | reply 104 | May 12, 2025 9:27 PM |
R103 I don't think the general publ8c knew about it when it was going on, which would be the purpose of bearding.
I think they loved each other, even if they may have had other things going on.
by Anonymous | reply 105 | May 12, 2025 10:16 PM |
Basically, they both liked the pole AND the hole.
by Anonymous | reply 106 | May 12, 2025 11:27 PM |
Don't think so, R106. At least not Heppy.
by Anonymous | reply 107 | May 12, 2025 11:34 PM |
R14 is dangerously delusional!
by Anonymous | reply 108 | May 12, 2025 11:38 PM |
r87, what role of Kate's would she have been asked or required to look grotesque and refused to go there?
by Anonymous | reply 109 | May 13, 2025 1:02 AM |
Why would Spencer Tracy need a beard when he was married with two kids?
"Closet Case" Garson Kanin had a decades long affair with actress Marian Seldes during and after his even longer marriage to Ruth Gordon.
by Anonymous | reply 110 | May 13, 2025 1:08 AM |
TCM showed a bunch of Hepburn movies today. She's terrible in Mary of Scotland.
by Anonymous | reply 111 | May 13, 2025 1:10 AM |
[quote]R106 Basically, they both liked the pole AND the hole.
[quote]R107 Don't think so. At least not Heppy.
Well, she had a long affair with (horse hung) Howard Hughes, and almost married Hollywood lothario Leland Hayward before Maggie Sullavan got her manic depressive claws in him. So until she got menopausal and dried shut, I think Kate liked dick alright (?)
by Anonymous | reply 112 | May 13, 2025 1:29 AM |
Meryl and Kate both seem to inspire endless fascination and bitching. No one cares for example to discuss the films of Frances McDormand or Susan Sarandon because they are just not that interesting.
by Anonymous | reply 113 | May 13, 2025 1:47 AM |
R112 = delusional
by Anonymous | reply 114 | May 13, 2025 10:53 AM |
[quote]r77 The old bat was something of a cunt - probably because she grew up with great (white) privilege and was never told no.
[quote]R78 And how do you think Streep grew up?
M’s privileged upbringing never lead her to yell at a crew in this degrading manner:
by Anonymous | reply 115 | May 13, 2025 8:16 PM |
Kate yells at the crew (and Dick's producers) but she actually becomes quite charming with her demands. As someone who's been around a lot of star types for decades, this is nothing.
by Anonymous | reply 116 | May 13, 2025 8:22 PM |
[quote]R116 Kate yells at the crew (and Dick's producers) but she actually becomes quite charming with her demands.
People with borderline personality do this; it’s called splitting.
by Anonymous | reply 117 | May 13, 2025 8:33 PM |
Other than broken down alky Spencer Tracey, was there anyone on the planet this uppity, snobby bitch did like?
Just yesterday, "Stage Door" was on TCM. Afterwards, I went on-line and discovered Hepburn and Ginger Rogers clashed horns while filming it.
by Anonymous | reply 119 | May 13, 2025 8:36 PM |
Stanwyck didn't get along with Hepburn, or she got super pissed at her once - Heppy walked on the set of one of Stany's 1930s movies like she owned the place and started chatting with the director before a scene.
by Anonymous | reply 120 | May 13, 2025 9:17 PM |
[quote]R118 Kate at least gave us "Coco".
Are we supposed to give THANKS for even worse singing than we got in the movie MAME ? ?
by Anonymous | reply 121 | May 13, 2025 9:40 PM |
In that clip @ R118 she reminds me more of Rose Kennedy the matriarch of the Kennedy family than Coco Chanel
by Anonymous | reply 122 | May 13, 2025 9:56 PM |
R120 Barbara was all business on the film set. No diva behavior from her, nor did she tolerate any from others.
by Anonymous | reply 123 | May 14, 2025 1:13 AM |
I don’t think Kate fancied herself a great singer
Meryl on the other hand pretends she is…….
by Anonymous | reply 124 | May 14, 2025 1:48 AM |
Meryl is THE actress of her generation! Fuck that lesbo
by Anonymous | reply 125 | May 14, 2025 1:52 AM |
Meryl is looking pretty good compared to monster lesbian Kate.
by Anonymous | reply 127 | May 14, 2025 2:42 AM |
I wonder if there was ever talk at MGM about reteaming Hepburn with Jimmy Stewart after The Philadelphia Story.
by Anonymous | reply 128 | May 14, 2025 3:04 AM |
[quote]r119 Other than broken down alky Spencer Tracy, was there anyone on the planet this uppity, snobby bitch did like?
Well, she liked George Cukor because he rented her one of the three guesthouses on his property, cheaply and long term. It was 9191 St. Ives Drive. Tracy lived there before Hepburn, and she herself moved out in 1978.
Cukor was heartbroken that she didn't really keep in touch after she didn't need his house anymore. She's already screwed him over by agreeing to be in TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT (1972) then pulling out at the last minute, endangering the project. So he shouldn't have been all that surprised.
by Anonymous | reply 131 | May 14, 2025 3:55 AM |
[Quote] Meryl is looking pretty good compared to monster lesbian Kate.
Not sure what you mean Hepburn has been dead for over two decades and hasn't made a film in over 30 years. Yet a number of films that she made over half a century ago the lion in Winter, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, The African Queen, Bringing up Baby, The Philadelphia Story are still discussed today as is she.
Streep really didn't have chemistry with her leading men that Hepburn had with Spencer Tracy, Humphrey Bogart, Jimmy, Stewart, Cary Grant, Spencer Tracy and Peter O'Toole
Will Meryl Streep have a biography?
by Anonymous | reply 132 | May 14, 2025 4:40 AM |
After receiving her AFI Award in 2004 Meryl threw some subtle shade disguised within her usual shtick of humility , giving Kate 3rd billing after a B-movie actress/TV clown and a charming but bit twee and limited star personality.
“I felt like I’d butted in line in front of Lucille Ball, Audrey Hepburn, Katharine Hepburn,” Streep said. “Hello? How did this happen?”
by Anonymous | reply 133 | May 14, 2025 7:19 AM |
I thought Hepburn left Travels With My Aunt because everyone finally realized and mutually agreed she couldn't be made up to look young enough for the flashback scenes. Maggie Smith barely made them work.
And I wouldn't hold it against Kate that she didn't befriend lots of other actors. For most of Meryl's career, until recently it seems, she didn't either.
by Anonymous | reply 134 | May 14, 2025 1:10 PM |
Kate was a bossy, nagging pain in the ass. Bette would've been more fun to go out and have drinks with. She had a bawdy sense of humor.
by Anonymous | reply 135 | May 14, 2025 1:15 PM |
That’s just your opinion that Streep didn’t have chemistry either her costars. Most would disagree. And most people today have seen Meryl’s movies over Kate’s.
by Anonymous | reply 136 | May 14, 2025 1:25 PM |
^ with
by Anonymous | reply 137 | May 14, 2025 1:25 PM |
R131, David Ehrenstein told us that Hepburn pursued a young actress in Travels with My Aunt, and she was so freaked out that Katharine HAD to leave the movie.
by Anonymous | reply 138 | May 14, 2025 1:33 PM |
Cindy Williams was the young actress in Travels With My Aunt.
by Anonymous | reply 139 | May 14, 2025 1:51 PM |
The original actress left too. Her last name was Bang.
by Anonymous | reply 140 | May 14, 2025 2:06 PM |
I love the idea of elderly bull dagger Kate telling young, adorable Shirley Feeny that she's "going to make my pinky all stinky"
by Anonymous | reply 142 | May 14, 2025 4:39 PM |
I never heard the story about Stanwyck and Hepburn before. The thought of those two bulldaggers getting into a fight is hilarious.
by Anonymous | reply 143 | May 14, 2025 4:43 PM |
I can only imagine how Kate pronounced the word “cunnilingus” 😉
by Anonymous | reply 144 | May 14, 2025 4:50 PM |
R136 did you see Silkwood, Out of Africa, Falling in Love, Heartburn? She seemed to be in a different movie from Kurt Russell, Robert Redford, Robert De Niro and Jack Nicholson
by Anonymous | reply 145 | May 14, 2025 5:51 PM |
Brando was an odd character R146 That's what made them interesting and stars. That plus talent. Hepburn and Brando were unique
by Anonymous | reply 147 | May 14, 2025 6:21 PM |
R145, no one has sat through Falling in Love. Without Falling Asleep, that is.
by Anonymous | reply 148 | May 14, 2025 6:28 PM |
The CIA used to threaten inmates at Guantanamo Bay who wouldn’t co-operate under interrogation with either a screening of Falling in Love or waterboarding. All but a few chose waterboarding.
by Anonymous | reply 149 | May 14, 2025 6:31 PM |
I love that in their list of forgettable Streep films, R101 includes Still of the Night twice. So shady.
by Anonymous | reply 150 | May 14, 2025 6:32 PM |
Hepburn ran the bathwater that Tracy shit in.
by Anonymous | reply 152 | May 14, 2025 6:51 PM |
[Quote] I love that in their list of forgettable Streep films, [R101] includes Still of the Night twice. So shady.
Bless your heart R150 So I'll subtract 1 and add Let Them All Talk, Into the Woods, A Prairie Home Companion, Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again, Don't Look Up, It's Complicated, The River Wild, The House of Spirits, Lion for Lambs, Before and After, The Manchurian Candidate (2004). Prime, Dark Matter, The Giver . . .
by Anonymous | reply 153 | May 14, 2025 7:01 PM |
Damn R150, R153 just bodied your old geezer ass
by Anonymous | reply 154 | May 14, 2025 7:05 PM |
Both Hepburn and Stanwyck were tennis players, I’d love to see them play to the death. Though Stanwyck hired Eleanor Tennent (later the coach of Maureen Connelly) to train her, she was still the scrappy Brooklyn girl with the accent to prove it. Hepburn had that upper crusty must play tennis background. I see it 2-6 6-4 6-2 Stanwyck!
by Anonymous | reply 155 | May 14, 2025 7:11 PM |
Hepburn also had forgettable films. It happens over a 50 year career. You’re lucky if you have ten good films and they both do. Lighten up.
by Anonymous | reply 156 | May 14, 2025 7:13 PM |
Variety
'Sophie's Choice is a handsome, doggedly faithful and astoundingly tedious adaptation of William Styron's best-seller.'
I found it convoluted and unwatchable
by Anonymous | reply 158 | May 14, 2025 7:51 PM |
That section of the brilliant Cavett interview at r146 tells you everything you need to know about what made Hepburn Hepburn. And what made a star a star back then. Every young actor/artist needs to watch that.
by Anonymous | reply 159 | May 14, 2025 7:52 PM |
Bette Davis's Cavett interview is the best. She was so quick-witted, intelligent and funny.
by Anonymous | reply 160 | May 14, 2025 7:53 PM |
A person doesn't have to act like Taylor Swift. Person could learn and no need to sit up on their seats and act like teenagers
by Anonymous | reply 161 | May 14, 2025 8:08 PM |
What are you talking about, R154? I’m applauding R101 / R153?
Read the room.
by Anonymous | reply 162 | May 14, 2025 8:15 PM |
I saw both the Hepburn and Davis Dick Cavett interviews when they were originally on, re-watched them recently. Davis was a frumpy mess, and honest, funny, real person. Hepburn, on the other hand, struck me as a full of herself, pretentious phony.
by Anonymous | reply 163 | May 14, 2025 8:27 PM |
Kate had so many uncomfortable, chilly edges it’s too bad she never played an outright villain. Like Elizabeth Báthory or some such creature.
Stars were so careful about preserving their image back then, though. Unless it was a sacrifice for the War Effort - like DRAGON SEED.
by Anonymous | reply 164 | May 14, 2025 9:24 PM |
I wouldn't call Bette frumpy, she looked pretty chic for the early 70s. Here's the full interview, she was so sharp.
by Anonymous | reply 165 | May 14, 2025 9:36 PM |
[quote]R158 'Sophie's Choice is a handsome, doggedly faithful and astoundingly tedious adaptation of William Styron's best-seller.'
It’s interesting that the author imagined Ursula Andress in this part while writing it. (Though of course it would not have been the Andress of 1982.)
by Anonymous | reply 166 | May 14, 2025 9:42 PM |
R132 brings up a point I hadn't thought about -- Hepburn had great chemistry with many of her male co-stars, among them the best actors of their generation.
Streep may be the better actor, but her chemistry with her co-stars? Zip. Can't think of any movie where you would say that it was a strong, believable relationship. And who were her co-stars? Many of them also great actors, but none of them are ever paired with Streep in memory the way a Tracy, Grant, or Stewart etc are with Hepburn.
by Anonymous | reply 167 | May 14, 2025 10:32 PM |
Two words - Kevin Kline
by Anonymous | reply 168 | May 14, 2025 11:22 PM |
What are you going on about? Streep had chemistry with Clint Eastwood, Robert Redford, Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin, Robert DeNiro, Jack Nicholson, Dustin Hoffman and just about every actor she worked with. I'm sorry if it didn't meet your old timey standards but the movies she starred in would not have been successful without chemistry between her and other actors.
by Anonymous | reply 169 | May 14, 2025 11:23 PM |
Robert Redford? HA!
by Anonymous | reply 170 | May 14, 2025 11:27 PM |
She and Hoffman had no chemistry whatsoever in Kramer vs Kramer. They weren't convincing as a married couple even a couple who was going through a divorce.
by Anonymous | reply 171 | May 14, 2025 11:45 PM |
Kramer versus Kramer was a shit soap opera but everybody loved it and cried while I was in agony watching this garbage.
By the way I just watched Love Story on Blu-Ray because it came with To Catch a thief. I hadn't seen it in decades and it was as awful as I remembered it. It wasn't any better and it wasn't any worse. Just the same roadkill.
by Anonymous | reply 172 | May 14, 2025 11:52 PM |
Clint Eastwood and Jack Nicholson?! Just because she fucked them doesn't mean there was any on-screen chemistry with her leading men.
by Anonymous | reply 173 | May 14, 2025 11:53 PM |
I still can't believe she won an Oscar for The Iron Lady. That was a total drag queen performance.
by Anonymous | reply 174 | May 14, 2025 11:55 PM |
Redford is a cipher. Just a mass of towheaded hair and a tan. Like the George Brent of his time.
by Anonymous | reply 175 | May 15, 2025 12:28 AM |
[quote]R167 …a point I hadn't thought about -- Hepburn had great chemistry with many of her male co-stars
Because she sucked them off in the RKO parking lot!
EVERYONE knew what a lewd, calculating whore she was. And the directors (including Dorothy Arzner) got in line, too!
by Anonymous | reply 176 | May 15, 2025 12:28 AM |
Kate wasn't sucking cock, she was licking out pussies.
by Anonymous | reply 177 | May 15, 2025 12:40 AM |
Ohhh, Spencah, don’t be such a boah. Perform cunnahlingas on me. Amongst the calla lilies….
by Anonymous | reply 178 | May 15, 2025 12:47 AM |
R1, you think Streep will be remembered 100 years from now? You're delusional.
R3, Hepburn is AFI's number-one actress on the list of Greatest Female Stars of the Golden Age. So you're full of shit as well.
by Anonymous | reply 179 | May 15, 2025 2:24 AM |
And, R3, "never mind" is two words.
by Anonymous | reply 180 | May 15, 2025 2:26 AM |
Oh brother. Unless you are over elderly, people don't know who Katharine Hepburn is. People on the street would be stumped to name one of her movies or even recognize her in a picture.
And in 100 years, I don't think people on the planet will be thinking of either of these two. They'll be thinking how do I survive another day of 125 degree temperatures.
by Anonymous | reply 181 | May 15, 2025 3:17 AM |
[Quote] Because she sucked them off in the RKO parking lot!
R176 even if that were true that doesn't mean that they would have 'onscreen' chemistry. There are examples of people who couldn't stand one another off screen and yet they had on screen chemistry.
by Anonymous | reply 182 | May 15, 2025 3:28 AM |
Most everyone is forgotten.
Even Monroe, Elvis, Audrey Hepburn and James Dean-it will be as if they never existed just like us.
It seems the only ones who are remembered and we are dealing with only a few thousand years here which isn't much are certain kings and queens, politicians and artists.
by Anonymous | reply 183 | May 15, 2025 3:49 AM |
[quote]R179 You think Streep will be remembered 100 years from now? You're delusional.
Whether ANYONE will be here in a hundred years to remember ANYONE is very much up for debate.
by Anonymous | reply 184 | May 15, 2025 6:06 AM |
Ppl remember Beethoven, Mozart, paintings and a few presidents.
by Anonymous | reply 185 | May 15, 2025 7:10 AM |
Katharine Hepburn in a 1991 interview with Phil Donahue
by Anonymous | reply 188 | May 15, 2025 8:43 AM |
Audrey Hepburn should have been forgotten 30 years ago
by Anonymous | reply 189 | May 15, 2025 10:24 AM |
R189 = Emma Thompson
by Anonymous | reply 190 | May 15, 2025 10:33 AM |
The insane hyperbole in this thread. Good god.
Some facts, if you still care about facts and not just wild "pronouncements:"
Hepburn is still remembered today. We're talking about her, aren't we?
The average Gen Z does not know of Hepburn. The average Gen Z barely knows of Streep. But not all Gen Zs are average, many are film buffs, like every other generation, including [italic]yours[/italic]. Unless you're over 70 you probably never bought a ticket at a theater to see a new Hepburn film--you sought out her films decades later because you're a film buff, too. Conversely. I'm Gen X and if I walked into a neighborhood sports bar and started spouting off about Katharine Hepburn movies, I'd be met with blank stares by the 50 somethings. It's not a generational difference but a cultural one.
Both Hepburn and Streep will "be remembered" 100 years ago. "Widely remembered?" No, of course not. Like today, interest will vary from person to person. "Well remembered?" Probably not, people won't be rattling off quotes about "calla lilies" or an assistant not named Emily because most people wouldn't understand the context of those lines.
But culture mavens, nostalgia lovers, and, yes, film buffs will still be talking of them 100 years from now,
Have you heard of Mary Pickford? Do you know who she was? I'm not asking you to name a film she was in or quote a line she said.
Okay, that was a joke. She appeared predominantly in silent films of course.
But you knew that, didn't you? You got the joke. Because you know who Mary Pickford is, or was, even if you've never seen a single film of hers.
They'll be remembered. Believe it.
by Anonymous | reply 191 | May 15, 2025 2:07 PM |
Neither of them will be as well remembered as Angie Dickinson, mark my words!
by Anonymous | reply 192 | May 15, 2025 2:42 PM |
I hope when I grow up, people still remember me!
by Anonymous | reply 193 | May 15, 2025 2:47 PM |