Harlow (film)
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Harlow is the title of two competing biographical films released through Paramount Pictures and the foreign film distributor Magna Pictures, both released in 1965 and portraying the life of actress Jean Harlow. The Paramount version starred Carroll Baker in title role, while the Magna release starred Carol Lynley.
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[edit] Magna version
Filmed in black-and-white electronovision (a photographic technique relegated to television by 1965), the Magna version was released five weeks before Paramount's with a more limited release. Directed by television veteran Alex Segal, the film was made with a very low budget, serving as a second feature at most theaters. While Carol Lynley was arguably the better Harlow, being closer to Jean Harlow's actual age than Baker, the film's contrived plot and poor budget prevented it from gaining as much attention as Paramount's big budget version.
In the film, Efrem Zimbalist Jr's character, William Mansfield, is based on William Powell, who the real Harlow was about to marry before dying. That part of Harlow's life was entirely ignored by the Paramount feature. Another notable aspect of the Magna production of Harlow is the fact that it marked Ginger Rogers' last film appearance before her retirement (a role Judy Garland was originally cast for).
Harlow | |
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Directed by | Gordon M. Douglas |
Produced by | Joseph E. Levine |
Written by | Arthur Landau (book) Irving Shulman (book John Michael Hayes |
Starring | Carroll Baker Red Buttons Angela Lansbury Kipp Hamilton |
Music by | Neal Hefti |
Cinematography | Joseph Ruttenberg |
Editing by | Frank Bracht Archie Marshek |
Distributed by | Paramount |
Release date(s) | June 23, 1965 |
Running time | 125 min. |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
[edit] Paramount version
Based in part on Rebel Without a Cause writer Irving Shulman's pulp biography, Paramount's Harlow was a melodramatic look at the life of Jean Harlow (portrayed by Carroll Baker), focusing on her failed marriages. The widescreen technicolor film, produced by Joseph E. Levine, was made on a $2.5 million budget and featured a wide-reaching publicity campaign. Upon release, however, the film failed critically and commercially, making roughly one million dollars at the box office.
[edit] Plot
The film opens with Harlow as a struggling extra and bit actress dealing with her greedy stepfather Marino (Raf Vallone) and oblivious mother "Mama Jean" (Angela Lansbury, only six years older than Carroll Baker). With the help of Arthur Landau (Red Buttons), she rises to fame and gains the unwanted attention of the Howard Hughes-inspired Richard Manley (Leslie Nielsen). She then marries Paul Bern (Peter Lawford), an absentee husband who kills himself some time after the marriage. His death, combined with the stress of her career leads Harlow on an odyssey of failed relationships and alcoholism, culminating in her death of pneumonia at the age of twenty-six.
In real life, Harlow died of uremic poisoning due to nephritis (inflammation of the kidney).
[edit] Cast
Magna | Paramount | |
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Actor | Role | Actor |
Carol Lynley | Jean Harlow | Carroll Baker |
Ginger Rogers | Mama Jean Bello | Angela Lansbury |
Barry Sullivan | Marino Bello | Raf Vallone |
Hurd Hatfield | Paul Bern | Peter Lawford |
not featured | Arthur Landau (agent) | Red Buttons |
Efrem Zimbalist Jr | William Mansfield | not featured |
not featured | Richard Manley | Leslie Nielsen |
[edit] External links
- Harlow (Paramount release) at the Internet Movie Database
- Harlow (Magna release) at the Internet Movie Database