Sunday, March 8, 2009

Spencer Tracy in The Last Hurrah


When it comes to Spencer Tracy, “the ultimate actor’s actor” is less a figure of speech than a matter of consensus. He was the favorite screen performer of legions of colleagues including Clark Gable, Katharine Hepburn, Humphrey Bogart, James Cagney, and Richard Widmark, and Sir Laurence Olivier claimed, “I’ve learned more about acting from watching Tracy than in any other way.” He was a truck salesman’s son from Milwaukee who, by his own account, flunked out of 15 or more grammar schools and considered the hallmarks of his profession to be “Know your lines, show up on time, and don’t bump into the furniture.” Yet he possessed an instinct for the nuances of screen acting that most performers can only envy.


Unlike Olivier, his technique was invisible; unlike Cagney and Bogart, he had no trademark mannerisms. “There’s nothing to imitate except his genius,” Cagney proclaimed, “and that can’t be mimicked.” His greatest talent was his ability to listen, not as an actor awaiting his cue, but as an inhabitant of the scene, absorbing information as it’s offered and responding with an immaculate air of spontaneity. “Effortless” is too glib a descriptor for Tracy’s style: it’s not that he appears to do nothing; it’s that he appears to do nothing planned. His reactions feel motivated not by plot necessity but by situational urgency.


Ironically, it’s that very naturalism which tends to keep him eclipsed in the pantheon of stars. As Cagney notes, a Tracy impression would consist of little more than intelligence and reserve—hardly nightclub fodder—and this may have cost him a personality cult. Hindsight being a sentimental bird, it’s likely that he’s best remembered for his nine pairings with Katharine Hepburn, grounding her New England dithering with his Midwestern pragmatism. Though he was always a great deal more than her foil, Tracy’s gifts were in fullest flower elsewhere—as the lynch mob survivor in Fury (1936), the Colonial militia leader in Northwest Passage (1940), the concentration camp escapee in The Seventh Cross (1944), the one-armed stranger in Bad Day at Black Rock (1955), and perhaps above all, the bare knuckle politician in The Last Hurrah (1958).


The latter film is fascinating to watch during election season, as we are reminded just how much of campaigning is political theater. We don’t need director John Ford or screenwriter Frank Nugent to tell us that charisma counts for more than policy on the stump, but seeing a veteran actor take on the role of statesman affords a sense of balance in times when the inverse dominates the airwaves—and shows how actorly control (or calculated lack of it) undergirds every discerning campaign.


Adapted from Edwin O’Connor’s novel of the same name, The Last Hurrah marked Tracy’s first and only pairing with Ford since the star’s debut feature, Up the River (1930). He plays Frank Skeffington, a populist Irish-American mayor making a last bid for reelection, eschewing modern office-seeking methods for the same cocktail of speeches, rallies, and personal appearances that worked so well in the past—and with the same steadfast crew of Runyonesque ward heelers, portrayed by character actors extraordinaire (and fellow members of Tracy’s “Irish Mafia”) Pat O’Brien, James Gleason, and Edward Brophy. Skeffington knows the days of the old-style candidate are numbered, but the slum-born mayor seeks one final victory for self-made politicians against the city’s moneyed elite and the callow law school grads they endorse.


The superficially guileless star is an ideal choice for Skeffington, as shrewd a politico as Tracy was an actor. Skeffington works every angle clandestinely, listening with rapt attention, charming and manipulating all while feigning transparency—in both men’s discharge of their duties, five or six things are always happening beneath the surface. Most scenes consist of Tracy entering a room and effectuating a desired outcome, and the actor uses every aspect of his mien to make this plausible. His attentive eyes are always reading the crowd—sometimes literally, when his irises shift in thought as he contemplates his next move. Even the tilt of his head is communicative: bowed slightly, doubling his chin, to show sympathy or condescension (the latter sometimes taking the pose of the former), or even righteousness depending on the angle. Whimsy and melancholy coalesce in his tone as he speaks confidingly of his methods, punctuating his cadence with redolent pauses (“I speak in fight arenas…armories…street corners…anywhere I can gather a crowd…I even kiss babies!”) He finds the sly comedy in a scene where he blackmails a foe by making the man’s feckless son city fire commissioner. Overplaying by perhaps 10 percent so his aide will catch his drift, Tracy grandstands about “men of daring” and emphasizes the absurdity of words like “big red car,” nodding appreciatively at the fireman’s helmet as the young stooge laps it up. He affects the faintest brogue in the company of Irish constituents, and places his hand on the shoulders of those who need extra persuasion. But as he’s seducing them, he’s seducing the audience. However we feel about Frank Skeffington, Spencer Tracy knows how to win votes.


In a scene so pregnant with mawkish potential that perhaps only Ford and Tracy could make it work, Skeffington takes his nephew (Jeffrey Hunter) to an alleyway on skid row. “The Castle of Dramore,” a harp-laced Irish lullaby, plays on the soundtrack as a baby cries out from a second story apartment. Fedora cocked, Tracy climbs two steps of the fire escape, gazes up in the direction of the wailing and intones, “I was born here, Adam.” We’re inclined to read the screen as we would a book, the flow of time moving in a rightward, downward course, so Tracy’s gaze into the space beyond the northwest corner of the frame intimates he’s staring into his own past—the cries harking back to a time when his forum was not city hall but a ramshackle tenement. He strikes a match to show Hunter where he carved his initials on a wooden post, above those of the girl who would become his late wife. With most of his face shaded by the fedora, he has only the wrinkled smile illuminated by the tinder stick to express his feelings, and he manages a look of reverie and pain that sails past craft into the realm of the sublime.


Even when Tracy is shot from behind—shoulders square, hands concealed—he conveys intent. But despite its laid-back effect, it’s quite a busy performance; he’s forever pacing and coming to rest, modulating his rich, protean voice not just in volume and speed but in hardness. In his first scene with Hunter, he speaks almost continuously for three and a half minutes of politics as “the greatest spectator sport in the country today.” We are too entranced to be distracted by (and indeed we’re hardly are aware of) the blocking: Skeffington lights a cigarette, takes a seat, rises and walks to the window, doubles back and reclaims his chair, stubs out the cigarette, stands, picks a match from the floor, returns to the window, turns around, pitches the match (on the verbal cue “Last hoo-rah”), and thrusts his hand in his pocket. In his unassuming way, he makes even elaborate stage business seem organic.


But most of all there’s the face, creased from a lifetime of battles, with an easy smile borne of confidence in his skill and sparkling, searching eyes. And in keeping with the plaintive tone of The Last Hurrah, as we canvass the latter-day denizens of Hollywood and Washington, we can permit ourselves the slightest pangs of nostalgia. Mister, we could use a man like Spencer Tracy again.


Wednesday, January 28, 2009

As the world holds its breath...


Presenting...the 2008 Golden Steve Awards.

Far and away the most coveted of motion picture accolades, Golden Steves are frequently described as the Oscars without the politics. Impervious to bribery, unreceptive to ballyhoo, disgusted by sentiment and riddled with integrity, this committee of one might legitimately be termed “fair-mindedness incarnate.” Over 100 of the year’s most acclaimed features were screened prior to the compilation of this ballot. First, a few caveats:

1) Owing to a lifelong suspicion of prime numbers, each category (save Best Animated Feature) is comprised of six nominees, not five.
2) Several of the works under scrutiny received international distribution before January 1, 2008. However, they were unavailable to American audiences and thus ineligible for Golden Steve consideration until now.
3) This list is in no way connected with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences—a fact that should be apparent from its acumen. Please look elsewhere for Oscar predictions.

And now, the worthy honorees:

Best Picture
The Edge of Heaven
Gomorrah
Happy-Go-Lucky
Let the Right One In
My Winnipeg
The Wrestler

Best Director
Fatih Akin, The Edge of Heaven
Tomas Alfredson, Let the Right One In
Darren Aronofsky, The Wrestler
Matteo Garrone, Gomorrah
Mike Leigh, Happy-Go-Lucky
Guy Maddin, My Winnipeg

Best Actor
Michael Fassbender, Hunger
Brendan Gleeson, In Bruges
Richard Jenkins, The Visitor
Frank Langella, Frost/Nixon
Sean Penn, Milk
Mickey Rourke, The Wrestler

Best Actress
Anne Hathaway, Rachel Getting Married
Sally Hawkins, Happy-Go-Lucky
Maria Heiskanen, Everlasting Moments
Melissa Leo, Frozen River
Kristin Scott Thomas, I've Loved You So Long
Michelle Williams, Wendy and Lucy

Best Supporting Actor
Michel Blanc, The Witnesses
Josh Brolin, Milk
Philip Seymour Hoffman, Doubt
Heath Ledger, The Dark Knight
Eddie Marsan, Happy-Go-Lucky
Michael Shannon, Revolutionary Road

Best Supporting Actress
Penelope Cruz, Vicki Cristina Barcelona
Viola Davis, Doubt
Rosemarie DeWitt, Rachel Getting Married
Ann Savage, My Winnipeg
Hanna Schygulla, The Edge of Heaven
Marisa Tomei, The Wrestler

Best Screenplay--Adapted
The Class (Francois Begaudeau, Robin Campillo, Laurent Cantet)
Doubt (John Patrick Shanley)
Everlasting Moments (Niklas Radstrom, Jan Troell, Agneta Ulfsater-Troell)
Frost/Nixon (Peter Morgan)
Gomorrah (Maurizio Braucci, Ugo Chiti, Gianni Di Gregorio, Matteo Garrone, Massimo Gaudioso, Roberto Saviano)
Let the Right One In (John Ajvide Lindqvist)

Best Screenplay--Original
The Edge of Heaven (Fatih Akin)
Happy-Go-Lucky (Mike Leigh)
Milk (Dustin Lance Black)
My Winnipeg (Guy Maddin, George Toles)
Synechdoche, New York (Charlie Kaufman)
The Wrestler (Robert Siegel)

Best Animated Feature
Chicago 10 (Brett Morgen)
$9.99 (Tatia Rosenthal)
WALL-E (Andrew Stanton)
Waltz With Bashir (Ari Folman)

Best Non-Fiction Film
Bigger, Stronger, Faster (Chris Bell)
Chris and Don: A Love Story (Tina Mascara and Guido Santi)
Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father (Kurt Kuenne)
Encounters at the End of the World (Werner Herzog)
Trouble the Water (Carl Deal and Tia Lessin)
Up the Yangtze (Yung Chang)

Best Foreign Language Film
The Class (Laurent Cantet)
The Edge of Heaven (Fatih Akin)
Everlasting Moments (Jan Troell)
Gomorrah (Matteo Garrone)
Let the Right One In (Tomas Alfredson)
Revanche (Gotz Spielmann)

Best Original Song
"Dracula's Lament," Forgetting Sarah Marshall (Jason Segel)
"Little Person," Synecdoche, New York (Charlie Kaufman, Jon Brion)
"Once in a Lifetime," Cadillac Records (Ian Dench, Amanda Ghost, Beyonce Knowles)
"Trouble the Water," Trouble the Water (Kimberly Rivers Roberts)
"Up to Our Nex," Rachel Getting Married (Robyn Hitchcock)
"The Wrestler," The Wrestler (Bruce Springsteen)


Sunday, November 9, 2008

2007 Golden Steves


Best Picture
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
No Country for Old Men
Once
There Will Be Blood
Zodiac

Best Director
Paul Thomas Anderson, There Will Be Blood
John Carney, Once
Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, Fargo
David Fincher, Zodiac
Cristian Mungiu, 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
Julian Schnabel, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly

Best Actor
Mathieu Amalric, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Don Cheadle, Talk to Me
Daniel Day-Lewis, There Will Be Blood
Philip Seymour Hoffman, Before the Devil Knows You're Dead
Tommy Lee Jones, In the Valley of Elah
Frank Langella, Starting Out in the Evening

Best Actress
Amy Adams, Enchanted
Julie Christie, Away From Her
Marion Cotillard, La Vie En Rose
Laura Linney, The Savages
Anamaria Marinca, 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
Carice van Houten, Black Book

Best Supporting Actor
Javier Bardem, No Country for Old Men
Robert Downey Jr., Zodiac
Albert Finney, Before the Devil Knows You're Dead
Philip Seymour Hoffman, Charlie Wilson's War
Kene Holliday, Great World of Sound
Tom Wilkinson, Michael Clayton

Best Supporting Actress
Cate Blanchett, I'm Not There
Taraji P. Henson, Talk to Me
Samantha Morton, Control
Saoirse Ronan, Atonement
Amy Ryan, Gone Baby Gone
Tilda Swinton, Michael Clayton

Monday, October 27, 2008

Gone are the Days...


Whenever a star of Paul Newman’s rank and goodwill passes on, the words “end of an era” can be expected to ricochet from corner to bereaved corner—a bromide to stave off the challenge of articulating loss in a meaningful way. But in this case the platitude carries rather more weight, because Newman’s departure sounds the death knell for that endangered species, the great actor-movie star. For over half a century Newman occupied the center of a Venn diagram whose overlap has grown sliver-thin, until at last he appeared to be the linchpin holding the two circles together.

Perhaps not in the strictest literal sense—we still have Peter O’Toole, Kirk Douglas, and a handful of holdovers, not forgetting the movie stars who’ve long since relinquished their great actor status (De Niro, Dustin Hoffman, etc). But mostly when discussing great actors and movie stars, we’re contrasting general practitioners and specialists. They have different qualifications, different customers. Some can inhabit both realms, but almost never at the same time.

A movie star is, of course, a performer who connects with a mass audience, and whose vehicles (as they tend to be called) generate consistently high returns at the box office. “Great actor” is harder to characterize, so I bow to two examples of the species. Michael Caine frequently points out a difference in approach: Movie stars tailor their parts to fit their personalities, while actors undergo image modification to suit the demands of each role. George C. Scott, one of cinema’s finest actors, looked for “a joy of performing,” which I take to mean a euphoric immersion in the skin and psyche of another person, regardless of that person’s temperament. By these and any other standards, then, Newman was a great actor.

Yet all the time he was eschewing vanity and altering his image, he was working in the mainstream and grossing bloody fortunes. How did he pull it off? Can it be ascribed to universal viewer identification, or to an arsenal of allegiance and good faith so vast that audiences would follow him anywhere? Frankly I reject both propositions. Looking over his body of work, I’m hard pressed to cite one character with whom I “identify.” Outlaws, hustlers and alcoholics are not generically relatable types. Like Cool Hand Luke, Newman never pandered for acceptance; that he secured it even in these roles signals a spellbinding internal commitment, an absolute authenticity. But moreover, it owes to an intricacy of construction underscored by an avowal of weakness. (This, if anywhere, is where recognition comes into play.) Despite our tendency to conflate pop cultural icons, Luke is not Dirty Harry, and the crucial difference lies in Luke’s vulnerability. A sublime scene with his mother (Jo Van Fleet) resonates with muted acknowledgment of failure and forgiveness, and his subsequent response to her death consolidates audience sympathy through sheer refusal to solicit it.

If The Verdict contains Newman’s finest performance, as I believe it does, it’s because Frank Galvin stands as his richest reservoir of flawed humanity. A scene where he consoles a client by phone, his tranquil tones facilitated by the liquor without which he’d lack the stability to speak, is a master sketch of desperation channeled into reassurance. His portrayal is so delicately mounted that the unknown contents of his cup in the last scene make no real difference. If it holds whiskey he’s still earned his redemption; if it’s coffee he’s no less prone to relapse. Which of today’s stars could project such equivocality?

My aim is not to disparage the cluster of contemporary headliners. But as I write these words the supreme movie star (in terms of bankability) is Will Smith, and the divergence there is marked. Each July moviegoers line up to watch Smith battle aliens or robots, and come December they pay to see him grapple with poverty and persecution. But what’s really at stake here? A working definition of the movie star as proffered by Caine, Smith exhibits overriding confidence in the face of inevitably outmatched adversity. Clooney and the rest of the latter-day Rat Pack, irrespective of forays into Oscar country, offer viewers the same thing John Wayne once guaranteed: Affirmation that no hardships are too messy to work themselves out in roughly the time it takes the human bladder to process a large soda from the snack bar.

I find myself especially rankled by the recurring submission of Tom Hanks as Newman’s heir apparent—the matinee idol with the stroke of genius. There’s no denying the man’s talent, but at the same time, his much-lauded humility confounds any hope of transcendence. Old Tom is always there, peeking out from behind his character to remind us he loves his wife and kids. His potentially image-altering turn as the contract killer in Road to Perdition was hamstrung by unseemly decorum. One need only witness his scenes with a blood-chilling Newman to note the disparity. And Hanks’s rollicking Charlie Wilson is drunk under the table by his obvious antecedent, Newman’s debauched governor Earl Long in Blaze. Newman cavorts with wild abandon, convinces you of his insatiable, innumerable hungers; Hanks’s portrayal suggests that Forrest has fallen in with a bad crowd and forgotten everything Mama used to tell him.

Great actors still exist, make no mistake. Daniel Day-Lewis, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jeff Bridges and a few other stalwarts keep moviegoing bearable, and once in a while a riveting turn seeps into the homogenous Hollywood harvest, like Heath Ledger’s Brando-esque tour de force in The Dark Knight. But, Paul, you natural born world-shaker, when you left you took the current from the mainstream. “End of an era” has never seemed more apt.