One of the best. She's one I'll miss.
by Anonymous | reply 1 | September 27, 2024 1:17 PM |
So young.
by Anonymous | reply 2 | September 27, 2024 1:18 PM |
Oh wow, this one hurts. But what a life! And what a legacy!
by Anonymous | reply 3 | September 27, 2024 1:19 PM |
RIP. I adore her in everything.
by Anonymous | reply 4 | September 27, 2024 1:20 PM |
So sad to hear. She will be missed.
by Anonymous | reply 5 | September 27, 2024 1:21 PM |
I saw her live in London for Lettice and Lovage (Peter Shaffer play) back in 1987 and will never forget how good she was! Maggie played a National Trust museum tour guide who was also a pathological liar.
Very few actresses get to inhabit such a delicious Older Woman role as Maggie did during Downton Abbey.
Rest in peace Maggie and it was a true pleasure to have you here with us for all these years!
by Anonymous | reply 6 | September 27, 2024 1:21 PM |
ASSASSIN!
by Anonymous | reply 7 | September 27, 2024 1:24 PM |
This news hit me hard. I'm devastated. This fucking sucks. She was such a legend.
by Anonymous | reply 8 | September 27, 2024 1:24 PM |
I am sorry about this in the way you're sorry about the death of somebody you don't actually know. She became such a part of the culture especially because of Potter and Downton.
She was either shy or what you'd call difficult or maybe just tricky... from what I've seen of her being interviewed she suffered no fools, took few prisons and relished being a contrarian. She was almost worse than being bad mannered, because you understood behind her prickliness was an intelligent reason for it. The Downton box set interview:
by Anonymous | reply 9 | September 27, 2024 1:25 PM |
RIP, Dame Maggie. A legend’s legend.
by Anonymous | reply 10 | September 27, 2024 1:27 PM |
Bowers!
by Anonymous | reply 11 | September 27, 2024 1:28 PM |
Have Paul Lynde’s whereabouts been confirmed?
by Anonymous | reply 12 | September 27, 2024 1:28 PM |
Can I have her stuff?
by Anonymous | reply 13 | September 27, 2024 1:32 PM |
She was Bubba Higgins' teacher.
by Anonymous | reply 14 | September 27, 2024 1:33 PM |
Inevitable-hope dump is next.
by Anonymous | reply 15 | September 27, 2024 1:33 PM |
That's going to be a star studded memorial!
by Anonymous | reply 16 | September 27, 2024 1:34 PM |
You better hope Dump is next.
by Anonymous | reply 17 | September 27, 2024 1:35 PM |
The role I immediately identify her with is Dora Charleston in Murder by Death.
by Anonymous | reply 18 | September 27, 2024 1:35 PM |
I will watch Evil under the Sun in her honor tonight!
by Anonymous | reply 19 | September 27, 2024 1:37 PM |
For some bizarre reason, I was slightly surprised to read this, even though she was 89. I sort of thought Maggie was one of those celebs who'd make it to 100. RIP.
by Anonymous | reply 20 | September 27, 2024 1:37 PM |
Like Hugh, she fell on Flanders Field.
by Anonymous | reply 21 | September 27, 2024 1:38 PM |
I absolutely loved her in everything I saw her in. I will miss her in any future Downton projects if there are any. I'm going to watch several of her movies over this dreadful weather weekend here in Virginia.
by Anonymous | reply 22 | September 27, 2024 1:39 PM |
But, Jean, Jean, you’re young and alive!!
by Anonymous | reply 23 | September 27, 2024 1:39 PM |
Great actress.
by Anonymous | reply 24 | September 27, 2024 1:40 PM |
And run if you will, to the top of the hill,
Come into my arms bonnie Jean
by Anonymous | reply 25 | September 27, 2024 1:44 PM |
I was just watching an interview with her earlier this week. (Recorded a few years ago)
She was amazing. Very sad to hear of her passing, but what a life. And she essentially worked up till the end.
by Anonymous | reply 26 | September 27, 2024 1:45 PM |
Unsung Maggie Smith performance as an embittered lesbian sparring with an imperious Bette Davis in Death on the Nile.
Love them both.
by Anonymous | reply 27 | September 27, 2024 1:45 PM |
[quote] I will miss her in any future Downton projects if there are any.
She could only have appeared in flashbacks or as a ghost, since the character is already dead.
by Anonymous | reply 28 | September 27, 2024 1:46 PM |
Damn this story caused Datalounge to timeout.
by Anonymous | reply 29 | September 27, 2024 1:47 PM |
Loved her. I saw her in Three Tall Women and she was magnificent. She was always at Wimbledon (usually enjoying the women’s final) and when she wasn’t there this year, I wondered if she was ill.
by Anonymous | reply 31 | September 27, 2024 1:47 PM |
I LOVED her in Lettice and Lovage. Saw it 3 times, laughed my ass off every time. Heaven.
by Anonymous | reply 32 | September 27, 2024 1:50 PM |
Her Gosford Park character. “ Difficult colour... green.”
by Anonymous | reply 33 | September 27, 2024 1:59 PM |
Will rewatch Miss Jean Brodie this weekend and remember her genius.
by Anonymous | reply 34 | September 27, 2024 2:00 PM |
Poor Charlotte!
by Anonymous | reply 35 | September 27, 2024 2:00 PM |
Really? What star studs will be there?
by Anonymous | reply 36 | September 27, 2024 2:01 PM |
I know she would have never suffered me gladly and when a little boy went up to her and asked if she could really turn herself into a cat she replied 'Oh pull yourself together!' it does make me as sad as one can be for someone you don't know. A very gifted individual who has brought me as well as so many others great joy. I saw her on Broadway in Lettice as well. And if you haven't seen it yet there is a snippet of her in Hay Fever on you tube. She is perfection. If only that famous production had been taped in its entirety.
by Anonymous | reply 37 | September 27, 2024 2:03 PM |
[quote]Her Gosford Park character. “Difficult colour... green.”
Bought marmalade? Oh dear, I call that very feeble.
by Anonymous | reply 38 | September 27, 2024 2:07 PM |
A class act, truly.
Naturally beautiful, elegant, witty, cunning, and talented.
by Anonymous | reply 39 | September 27, 2024 2:07 PM |
"It must be hard to know when to throw in the towel."
by Anonymous | reply 40 | September 27, 2024 2:09 PM |
I'm sorry to read this. I hope TCM shows some of older movies. I loved her in The First Wives' Club as Gunilla. I only know her from that movie and Downton Abbey.
by Anonymous | reply 41 | September 27, 2024 2:11 PM |
All my retired friends love to quote her famous Downton line: "What is a 'weekend'?"
by Anonymous | reply 42 | September 27, 2024 2:11 PM |
Has the auction of her things been announced by the family, yet?
by Anonymous | reply 43 | September 27, 2024 2:11 PM |
RIP. I’ll miss her a lot. There goes the Downton Abbey franchise!
by Anonymous | reply 44 | September 27, 2024 2:13 PM |
Rest In Peace. You were great.
by Anonymous | reply 45 | September 27, 2024 2:16 PM |
This thread seems to be the one with the most replies so far. Of course we have like 10 different ones out there.
by Anonymous | reply 47 | September 27, 2024 2:25 PM |
"Tea With The Dames" looks quite funny and I had no idea it existed until I saw the obituary posts on twitter. Might watch it tonight in memory of her.
by Anonymous | reply 48 | September 27, 2024 2:25 PM |
She was in her Prime!
by Anonymous | reply 49 | September 27, 2024 2:26 PM |
Well, shit. This is rotten news.
by Anonymous | reply 50 | September 27, 2024 2:29 PM |
I've always had a soft spot in my heart for her happiness with her second husband Beverly Cross. He wrote Half a Sixpence the film of which I loved as a boy. Though very uneven today it contains some very beautiful scenes. And he wrote the English version of Boeing Boeing which I saw 3 times with Mark Ryland. Who thought a 60s sex farce could be done so wonderfully today?
by Anonymous | reply 51 | September 27, 2024 2:29 PM |
I could have taken a suite at the Ritz!
by Anonymous | reply 52 | September 27, 2024 2:29 PM |
The stress of Brexit killed her. And that little Lolita Assassin Sandy!
by Anonymous | reply 54 | September 27, 2024 2:40 PM |
"Family" sketch from The Carol Burnett Show featuring Maggie:
by Anonymous | reply 55 | September 27, 2024 2:41 PM |
Maggie Smith Remembered By ‘Harry Potter’ Star Daniel Radcliffe: “One Of The Most Talented Women To Ever Live”:
by Anonymous | reply 56 | September 27, 2024 2:55 PM |
Oh man, this sucks.
by Anonymous | reply 57 | September 27, 2024 3:03 PM |
Awww loved her in movies.
It’s gonna hurt when Judi Dench goes
by Anonymous | reply 58 | September 27, 2024 3:05 PM |
I saw The Miracle Club a few weeks ago. A mild film, but she was great as ever.
by Anonymous | reply 59 | September 27, 2024 3:06 PM |
Does she get the opening or the close in the Oscars' dead march?
by Anonymous | reply 60 | September 27, 2024 3:09 PM |
They haven't put the most famous person at the close in years, r60.
by Anonymous | reply 61 | September 27, 2024 3:12 PM |
Miss Jean Brodie better get the last word at the Oscars or I riot.
by Anonymous | reply 62 | September 27, 2024 3:13 PM |
They wrote her lines in DA, but she delivered them like no other, I liked seeing her.
by Anonymous | reply 63 | September 27, 2024 3:13 PM |
"Harry Potter" isn't even mentioned until the ninth paragraph in her NY Times obituary. That's an impressive feat in itself—and speaks to breadth and depth of her career.
by Anonymous | reply 64 | September 27, 2024 3:13 PM |
She'll get last place in TCM Remembers 2024.
by Anonymous | reply 65 | September 27, 2024 3:14 PM |
Divine in Gosford Park.
"Now THAT you can keep to yourself."
The shot is of her hand and Kelly Macdonald's face but you can feel her force.
by Anonymous | reply 66 | September 27, 2024 3:18 PM |
She's hilarious as herself in "Tea with the Dames"/"Nothing Like a Dame." Spoken with her usual flawless timing:
Eileen Atkins:“I think actors who play Antony always feel it’s Cleopatra’s play because it’s a better part. At least that’s what Alan Bates told me.”
Maggie Smith:“That’s because he wanted to play Cleopatra.”
RIP
by Anonymous | reply 67 | September 27, 2024 3:22 PM |
I just watched Tea With the Dames about 2 weeks ago; I think it’s on Prime.
What, no mention of her role as Rod Taylor’s long-suffering secretary in the schlockfest “The VIPs”? A true bad movie we love.
by Anonymous | reply 68 | September 27, 2024 3:26 PM |
Dames is a great documentary.
by Anonymous | reply 69 | September 27, 2024 3:28 PM |
It's (a little) interesting that in the headlines, Downton seems to be main reference point more frequently than Potter or Oscar winner.
by Anonymous | reply 70 | September 27, 2024 3:31 PM |
by Anonymous | reply 71 | September 27, 2024 3:35 PM |
Remembering Maggie Smith: A Career In Photos:
by Anonymous | reply 72 | September 27, 2024 3:35 PM |
[quote] It’s gonna hurt when Judi Dench goes
Nah, Tracey Ullman will just take her place.
by Anonymous | reply 73 | September 27, 2024 3:36 PM |
[quote]What, no mention of her role as Rod Taylor’s long-suffering secretary in the schlockfest “The VIPs”?
The BBC instant obituary makes a point of Richard Burton admitting she stole most scenes, and in scenes with him it was 'grand larceny.'
by Anonymous | reply 74 | September 27, 2024 3:37 PM |
Is there a silver lining in this for dear little Imelda Staunton?
by Anonymous | reply 75 | September 27, 2024 3:37 PM |
[quote]Is there a silver lining in this for dear little Imelda Staunton?
That's Dame Imelda, if you please...
by Anonymous | reply 76 | September 27, 2024 3:39 PM |
“For those who like that sort of thing, that is the sort of thing they like.”
by Anonymous | reply 77 | September 27, 2024 3:40 PM |
They'll all start dropping like flies, this lot.
by Anonymous | reply 78 | September 27, 2024 3:40 PM |
Off topic but at r53, can anybody confirm my guess that Smith and Burnett are wearing Bob Mackie?
God, I miss 60s and 70s style weekly variety shows.
by Anonymous | reply 79 | September 27, 2024 3:40 PM |
She'll always be Mother Superior from Sister Act to me. That's the role I associate with her.
Second place- old Wendy from Hook.
RIP to an acting legend.
by Anonymous | reply 80 | September 27, 2024 3:43 PM |
‘Downton Abbey’ Cast, Creators Pay Tribute to Maggie Smith: “One of the Greatest Actors of Our Time”:
by Anonymous | reply 81 | September 27, 2024 3:44 PM |
Will she be cgi in the downton Abbey reboot?
by Anonymous | reply 82 | September 27, 2024 3:50 PM |
She was wonderful in The Pumpkin Eater 1964 with Anne Bancroft
by Anonymous | reply 83 | September 27, 2024 3:50 PM |
[quote] loved her in The First Wives' Club as Gunilla.
"Fork!"
by Anonymous | reply 84 | September 27, 2024 4:01 PM |
Her son played Flint in Black Sails!
by Anonymous | reply 85 | September 27, 2024 4:04 PM |
She was always fun on talk shows as well
by Anonymous | reply 86 | September 27, 2024 4:04 PM |
Noooo!
I was just watching her a few days ago. Another great one, gone.
by Anonymous | reply 87 | September 27, 2024 4:06 PM |
Susan Dey?
by Anonymous | reply 88 | September 27, 2024 4:31 PM |
r88 Crickets, as usual
by Anonymous | reply 89 | September 27, 2024 4:32 PM |
She was wonderful in Private Lives.
I'll always cherish the withering look I got from her.
by Anonymous | reply 90 | September 27, 2024 4:37 PM |
She had a hot ass but she couldn't live forever.
by Anonymous | reply 91 | September 27, 2024 4:54 PM |
Her karaoke to Hall & Oates "Private Eyes" was hilarious
by Anonymous | reply 92 | September 27, 2024 4:58 PM |
Has TCM remembered her yet? I was hoping she would be on the cruise and I could see her bikini bod. Alas, ‘twas not to be.
by Anonymous | reply 94 | September 27, 2024 5:12 PM |
She is legitimately iconic. I can't think of a television character as beloved for being haughty, and occasionally wicked, as Violet Crawley, Dowager Countess of Grantham. And this followed her star turn as the Dowager Countless of Trentham in "Gosford Park." Brilliant!
RIP, Dame Maggie Smith
by Anonymous | reply 95 | September 27, 2024 5:13 PM |
Oh Maggie you couldn't have tried anymore.
by Anonymous | reply 96 | September 27, 2024 5:16 PM |
“Maggie Smith was a great woman and a brilliant actress. I still can’t believe I was lucky enough to work with the ‘one-of-a-kind,’” the 68-year-old wrote on Instagram. “My heartfelt condolences go out to the family … RIP.”
by Anonymous | reply 97 | September 27, 2024 5:27 PM |
Went to the shop earlier and they were playing Harry Potter music. Sad to think all four of these actors are gone now. The early 00s really does feel like a long time ago.
by Anonymous | reply 98 | September 27, 2024 5:32 PM |
I bet she dropped dead just so she wouldn't have to do Sister Act 3.
by Anonymous | reply 99 | September 27, 2024 5:34 PM |
[Quote] She is legitimately iconic.
Much better than being illegitimately iconic.
by Anonymous | reply 100 | September 27, 2024 5:39 PM |
Oh, no! What did she die of?
by Anonymous | reply 101 | September 27, 2024 5:40 PM |
[quote]Oh, no! What did she die of?
She was taken out by a Zamboni...
by Anonymous | reply 102 | September 27, 2024 5:44 PM |
R101 Autoerotic asphyxiation.
by Anonymous | reply 103 | September 27, 2024 5:44 PM |
Always loved her work.
I love this story that Sir Ian McKellen told on The Graham Norton show about her:
by Anonymous | reply 104 | September 27, 2024 5:48 PM |
[quote] Much better than being illegitimately iconic.
The illegitimately iconic take just as legitimate icons under the laws of intestate succession. Still, it is more socially desirable to be legitimately iconic.
by Anonymous | reply 106 | September 27, 2024 5:56 PM |
The Millionairess
Part 1
by Anonymous | reply 107 | September 27, 2024 6:02 PM |
Predictions for the next two celebrity deaths- Stockard Channing and Michael Caine
by Anonymous | reply 108 | September 27, 2024 6:05 PM |
R101 Put a poisoned sugar cube in her tea, sent to her by Judi Dench.
by Anonymous | reply 109 | September 27, 2024 6:07 PM |
R101, she finally cracked the Downton box set.
by Anonymous | reply 110 | September 27, 2024 6:09 PM |
by Anonymous | reply 112 | September 27, 2024 6:18 PM |
Loved in the 1st Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, too.
by Anonymous | reply 113 | September 27, 2024 6:19 PM |
r108 I actually just heard that Stockard Channing is not doing well.
by Anonymous | reply 114 | September 27, 2024 6:20 PM |
[quote] Oh, no! What did she die of?
Sickle cell anemia, Rose.
by Anonymous | reply 116 | September 27, 2024 7:04 PM |
Her appearance really changed dramatically in the era after Lettice and Lovage. That must have been the onset of her eye issue. (Graves syndrome?)
In clips from the 1990 Tonys she looks relatively young and normal.
A few years later, in Sister Act, she looks considerably older and different.
by Anonymous | reply 118 | September 27, 2024 7:06 PM |
I saw her at the Ahmanson in L.A. in 1971 in Noel Coward's [italic]Design for Living[/italic], with Robert Stephens and Denholm Elliott, a thoroughly enjoyable production. There's a pic of the production among the several at the link.
by Anonymous | reply 119 | September 27, 2024 7:07 PM |
Oh no- one of the greatest ever. Deaths of the famous usually don’t get to me very much obviously because I never knew them. But from time to time, yes. This is one of those times- on stage and on film utterly brilliant, real, and always on the mark whether comedy or drama. And off- on chat shows and interviews, humble, down to earth, fiercely intelligent without a hint of vanity.
by Anonymous | reply 120 | September 27, 2024 7:08 PM |
"Sarcasm is the lowest form of wit"
"What is a Weekend"
Thank You Dowager Countess, you were totally cool.
by Anonymous | reply 121 | September 27, 2024 7:11 PM |
Smith in one of best performances in 1987s The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne
The movie directed by Jack Clayton is a phenomenal piece of work . . .Maggie Smith and Wendy Hiller are magnificent together-Pauline Kael
by Anonymous | reply 123 | September 27, 2024 7:35 PM |
R79, they’re definitely both wearing Mackie. And I’ve seen his sketches for two other Maggie costumes on the Burnett show (including her hilarious appearance as a British tart at a boat christening, with Carol as QEII.)
by Anonymous | reply 124 | September 27, 2024 7:35 PM |
RIP
by Anonymous | reply 126 | September 27, 2024 7:40 PM |
Channel 5 in the UK cancelled its planned programmes to run with a 90 minute ready made tribute.
[quote]Bought marmalade? Oh dear, I call that very feeble.
Julian Fellowes was one of the talking heads and said Maggie asked him about this line as she didn't understand it. Fellowes explained that an aunt had told him you could tell a poorly run household if they ran out of home made jams and preserves. Maggie replied "Oh I've got it" and delivered the line.
[quote]Her Gosford Park character. “ Difficult colour... green.”
Fellowes said this was improvised by Maggie after the scripted dialogue with Claudie Blakley.
by Anonymous | reply 127 | September 27, 2024 7:40 PM |
Maggie has a lead Oscar alongside 4 Emmys
by Anonymous | reply 129 | September 27, 2024 7:51 PM |
Sorry R130 I was writing that in response to R128 before I realized I was being silly.
by Anonymous | reply 131 | September 27, 2024 7:56 PM |
R123. Thank you for remembering Judith Hearne. I recorded off cable on VHS decades ago then transferred it to DVD. Maggie was brilliant and heartbreaking.
by Anonymous | reply 132 | September 27, 2024 8:08 PM |
I highly recommend a very entertaining documentary titled 'Tea With The Dames' which stars Eileen Atkins, Judy Dench, Joan Plowright and Maggie Smith. Just the 4 of them discussing their careers and such.
I watched it on IFC a few years ago. Loved it.
Anyway, here is a clip:
by Anonymous | reply 133 | September 27, 2024 8:34 PM |
Truly one of a kind. And we'll never see her likes again.
by Anonymous | reply 134 | September 27, 2024 8:35 PM |
I’m amazed I’ve seen as many of her films when looking at her IMDb today. I haven’t seen Quartet with Alan Bates yet, which is on Tubi, which I will this weekend. What a career. Seven decades. Two Oscars, four Emmys, one Tony. The Mount Rushmore of acting. Such a phenomenal actress and presence in every medium. Thank you Dame Maggie for the hours and hours of your genius you gave us all.
by Anonymous | reply 135 | September 27, 2024 8:46 PM |
Another vote for JUDITH HEARNE. Plus she's lovely in the 1974 film LOVE AND PAIN AND THE WHOLE DAMN THING, though you have to put up with Timothy Bottoms' annoying character.
by Anonymous | reply 137 | September 27, 2024 9:10 PM |
A body is kinda 'done' around age 87. You can live past that, but it's on borrowed time and not very pretty.
by Anonymous | reply 138 | September 27, 2024 9:16 PM |
Some 20 years ago, Maggie Smith and Judi Dench appeared in a play called The Breath of Life, by David Hare. A friend asked me...."Do you want to go to London to see Maggie Smith and Judi Dench in the new Hare?" What I heard was...."Do you want to go to London to see Maggie Smith and Judi Dench in the new Hair?". I still smile when thinking about the two of them singing that score, especially the idea of Maggie Smith singing Black Boys Are Delicious. God rest ye, Maggie Smith, and thank you for the years and years of brilliant performances.
by Anonymous | reply 139 | September 27, 2024 9:17 PM |
Of course she had to die but I never really thought it would happen.
by Anonymous | reply 140 | September 27, 2024 9:22 PM |
Watch Maggie Smith’s Best Acting Performance in ‘The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
by Anonymous | reply 141 | September 27, 2024 9:32 PM |
[quote]Seven decades. Two Oscars, four Emmys, one Tony. The Mount Rushmore of acting.
She won 5 movie BAFTAs but never a TV BAFTA or an Olivier.
by Anonymous | reply 142 | September 27, 2024 9:44 PM |
Even the King and his Tart have left condolences!
by Anonymous | reply 143 | September 27, 2024 9:46 PM |
That’s a shame
by Anonymous | reply 144 | September 27, 2024 9:48 PM |
2002 Nominee Oscar Best Actress in a Supporting Role Gosford Park
1987 Nominee Oscar Best Actress in a Supporting Role A Room with a View
1979 Winner Oscar Best Actress in a Supporting Role California Suite
1973 Nominee Oscar Best Actress in a Leading Role Travels with My Aunt
1970 Winner Oscar Best Actress in a Leading Role The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
1966 Nominee Oscar Best Actress in a Supporting Role Othello
by Anonymous | reply 145 | September 27, 2024 9:52 PM |
Maggie’s TPOMJB Oscar win as the audience cries out in a bit of shock. Smith was working on the London stage as her name was read. Released in the winter of early 1969, the film wasn’t a box office champ, but Smith defied the odds that usually goes against early in the year films, and went on to win her first Oscar more than a year later. Also helping her win was the fact she performed on stage in Los Angeles during the voting period, and LA based voters loved her to death. Still one of the top five wins in the lead actress category.
by Anonymous | reply 146 | September 27, 2024 10:02 PM |
She worked with Rod Taylor twice — in “The V.I.P.s” and “Young Cassidy,” and they had an affair which she remembered wistfully with great fondness for the rest of her life.
by Anonymous | reply 147 | September 27, 2024 10:13 PM |
Maybe Julian Fellowes will finally stop with the Downton Abbey movies.
by Anonymous | reply 148 | September 27, 2024 10:16 PM |
Her character is DEAD, R148. and Maggie was unlikely to play a young version in a prequel.
by Anonymous | reply 149 | September 27, 2024 10:23 PM |
r139 I saw them in that play too. Dench was unwilling to do the Broadway transfer as she felt her part was not as well received as Smith’s. It was a very slight play though I’d have happily paid to see both ladies read the phone book.
It was an absolute treat to see them on stage together.
by Anonymous | reply 150 | September 27, 2024 10:32 PM |
by Anonymous | reply 151 | September 27, 2024 10:36 PM |
[quote] Maybe Julian Fellowes will finally stop with the Downton Abbey movies.
They're already well into the process of making the third one.
by Anonymous | reply 153 | September 27, 2024 10:46 PM |
Apparently her Hedda didn't quite work out well...
by Anonymous | reply 154 | September 27, 2024 10:48 PM |
She never sucked MY cock!
by Anonymous | reply 155 | September 27, 2024 11:04 PM |
She learned how to do black comedy from Kenneth Williams. They were close friends.
by Anonymous | reply 156 | September 27, 2024 11:08 PM |
I'm going to watch a Maggie Smith movie tonight. It's a nice thing, if you have to die, to die such that most people think it's a shame and remember you well.
by Anonymous | reply 157 | September 27, 2024 11:09 PM |
She was wonderful, she embodied the cliché that she elevated everything she was in. I love Murder by Death, but her delivery in the scene of the dead naked body (above) is something else and an example what she could do. In Death on the Nile she had a minor role and against Bette Davis, and again it is remarkable how she does so much with so little.
I find a bit sad that she was now mostly known by Harry Potter and Downton (she says as much in the Graham Norton interview where she admits never seeing Downton) but it is good younger generations at least had contact with her and that she consistently worked till the end.
Goodbye Daphne!
by Anonymous | reply 158 | September 27, 2024 11:22 PM |
Will there be a GoFundMe page for her funeral ?
by Anonymous | reply 159 | September 27, 2024 11:23 PM |
I quite liked Quartet, R135. Billy Connolly in particular gives a great performance in that film.
by Anonymous | reply 160 | September 27, 2024 11:34 PM |
Kinda surprised Joan Plowright outlived her.
by Anonymous | reply 162 | September 27, 2024 11:50 PM |
Did they though, r162?
by Anonymous | reply 163 | September 27, 2024 11:55 PM |
Critic’s Appreciation: Maggie Smith, Mistress of Scintillating Wit and Withering Disdain:
by Anonymous | reply 164 | September 27, 2024 11:56 PM |
by Anonymous | reply 165 | September 28, 2024 12:05 AM |
So young...
by Anonymous | reply 166 | September 28, 2024 12:08 AM |
Great article, r164, tks, i particularly like his “a balance of decorum with mischief “. Also., the writer is gay, isn’t he.
by Anonymous | reply 167 | September 28, 2024 12:15 AM |
The British papers are mostly using photos from Harry Potter and Downton for their front pages. No Miss Jean Brodie.
by Anonymous | reply 168 | September 28, 2024 12:36 AM |
She had a haughty ass, but she couldn’t live forever.
by Anonymous | reply 169 | September 28, 2024 12:46 AM |
Has Carol Burnett commented ? She and Smith adored each other.
by Anonymous | reply 170 | September 28, 2024 12:53 AM |
Was Carol in her snatch too, like she was in Julie's?
by Anonymous | reply 171 | September 28, 2024 12:54 AM |
I’m more interested if Judi Dench has commented since she and Maggie were besties.
by Anonymous | reply 172 | September 28, 2024 12:55 AM |
Alice Ghostley and Maggie Smith were very close friends for years. Maggie even asked Alice to accept her Jean Brodie oscar.
by Anonymous | reply 173 | September 28, 2024 12:58 AM |
[quote]The British papers are mostly using photos from Harry Potter and Downton for their front pages
No different than Alec Guiness being reduced largely Star Wars, when his career was so much more.
by Anonymous | reply 174 | September 28, 2024 1:00 AM |
Their bodies of work aren't going to disappear. Of course they're going to be remembered by their more recent successes by people of a certain age.
by Anonymous | reply 175 | September 28, 2024 1:30 AM |
How did she die?
by Anonymous | reply 176 | September 28, 2024 1:53 AM |
[quote] How did she die?
Raising hands.
by Anonymous | reply 177 | September 28, 2024 2:06 AM |
Alice Ghostley and Maggie Smith weren't just close friends, they were roommates when both were starring in the ensemble cast of the Broadway musical revue Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1956, a yearly revue that featured young unknown talent. I believe Paul Lynde was also in the cast and you can plainly see and hear how the three of them adopted each other's take and timing in their comic voices and approach.
Eartha Kitt, Carol Lawrence, Jane Connell, Virginia Martin, Tiger Haynes, Ronny Graham and Robert Clary were also alumni of the revue in various years.
by Anonymous | reply 179 | September 28, 2024 2:12 AM |
[quote]Apparently her Hedda didn't quite work out well...
The director, Ingmar Bergman, was very unhappy with the production, but Smith won her second Evening Standard Award for Best Actress, and the NYT reviewer who went to London to see it gave the production and Smith an unqualified rave review.
by Anonymous | reply 180 | September 28, 2024 2:19 AM |
Just finished watching Evil Under the Sun, and now it's rolling right into Death On the Nile. She's so fucking funny.
by Anonymous | reply 181 | September 28, 2024 2:28 AM |
Assassin!!!!!!
by Anonymous | reply 183 | September 28, 2024 2:40 AM |
Is there anyone here who doesn't believe she ad libbed: "Difficult color, green."???
by Anonymous | reply 184 | September 28, 2024 2:41 AM |
Wasn't there some level of improv on Altman's films, r184?
by Anonymous | reply 185 | September 28, 2024 2:49 AM |
Harold Clurman, the Group Theatre and Broadway director who later became a critic, wrote that Smith's Hedda was "the most vivid I can remember. Her Hedda is an exposed nerve."
by Anonymous | reply 186 | September 28, 2024 2:50 AM |
Maggie mentions Mackie and "those crazy clothes", Della/ R79, R124.
by Anonymous | reply 187 | September 28, 2024 2:51 AM |
“Assassin…!!!”
by Anonymous | reply 188 | September 28, 2024 2:52 AM |
Very sad news. I just re-watched "California Suite." She is excellent in it.
by Anonymous | reply 189 | September 28, 2024 2:59 AM |
I cried this morning when I saw the news. I fee so fortunate to have seen her onstage as well as in films. Absolutely one of the all-time greats. Her presence was palpable. I loved how she could be completely over the top during a speech and then respond to the next line with a simple raise of an eyebrow -and top herself. She really knew her craft.
In honor of this being Datalounge, I will close by saying how absolutely fucking hot her son Toby Stephens is.
by Anonymous | reply 190 | September 28, 2024 3:04 AM |
One of my favorite scenes of hers, outside Murder By Death. She was a powerful and fully equal character.
by Anonymous | reply 191 | September 28, 2024 3:05 AM |
Maggie, OH, MAGGIE!!
by Anonymous | reply 192 | September 28, 2024 3:05 AM |
Thank you, r187
by Anonymous | reply 193 | September 28, 2024 3:07 AM |
I was fortunate enough to see her in Private Lives and Lettice and Lovage.
by Anonymous | reply 194 | September 28, 2024 3:08 AM |
Empress of timing and delivery. RIP Dame Maggie ❤️
by Anonymous | reply 195 | September 28, 2024 4:22 AM |
I guess I'd have to see the whole of Lettice and Lovage to understand the fuss.
(I trust those who shared a rave but didn't quite get the gist from the Tony clip.)
by Anonymous | reply 196 | September 28, 2024 4:26 AM |
Here's a clip from the opening of the play -gives you a much better sense of it.
by Anonymous | reply 197 | September 28, 2024 4:32 AM |
[quote]Alice Ghostley and Maggie Smith weren't just close friends, they were roommates when both were starring in the ensemble cast of the Broadway musical revue Leonard Sillman's New Faces of 1956, a yearly revue that featured young unknown talent. I believe Paul Lynde was also in the cast and you can plainly see and hear how the three of them adopted each other's take and timing in their comic voices and approach.
Damn it, with those connections, you'd think the producers of "Bewitched" would've thought to invite Maggie on to play Endora and Arthur's sister, Espirita (who had absolutely no patience for either one of them). Talk about a lost opportunity!
by Anonymous | reply 198 | September 28, 2024 5:30 AM |
She would have been way too young for their sister. I would love to have seen her as cousin Serena!
by Anonymous | reply 199 | September 28, 2024 5:36 AM |
She had great successes in three of Peter Schaffer's early one act comedies in the 1960s, but Schaffer didn't write another comedy until "Lettice & Lovage," almost 25 years later. When that play was published, Schaffer dedicated it, "For Maggie, who incarnates comedy with love."
by Anonymous | reply 200 | September 28, 2024 5:46 AM |
Love this story Shirley Maclaine told about Maggie and the Oscars.
by Anonymous | reply 201 | September 28, 2024 5:47 AM |
She’s a better actress than Judi Dench, I reckon.
by Anonymous | reply 202 | September 28, 2024 6:39 AM |
Saw her in London in "Private Lives" (twice in a two-week stay), "The Way of the World" (with Joan Plowright), "A Delicate Balance" (with Eileen Atkins), "Lady in the Van," and "Hedda Gabler" (she was brilliant). And by sheer luck I found I had booked a Christmas trip to London in the '70s which just happened to coincide with a large-scale holiday production of Maggie as "Peter Pan." In the latter, she played it straight, as written, and only once injected a taste of the adult, campy humor she was so brilliant with. Also caught her on Broadway in "Night and Day" and "Lettice and Lovage." Her performance in the "Jean Brodie" film deserves an annual Oscar. She was the greatest.
By the way, Alice Ghostley was in "New Faces of '52" (with Paul Lynde) and Maggie was in "New Faces of '56." I recall that they were both part of a Merv Griffin tribute to "New Faces" along with Lynde and Eartha Kitt. On that show Maggie mentioned what a huge impression the little-seen film version of "New Faces" (of '52) had made on her and other London performers.
by Anonymous | reply 203 | September 28, 2024 6:47 AM |
R162, I'm surprised, too. When I watched "Tea With the Dames" several years ago, I assumed Plowright would be the first of those 4 Dames to go, given that she was several years older than the others. And yet, Plowright is on track to hit 95 in a few weeks.
by Anonymous | reply 204 | September 28, 2024 7:32 AM |
R147 I thought Rod Taylor was gay. Did she write/talk about their affair?
by Anonymous | reply 205 | September 28, 2024 8:18 AM |
R107, it's interesting to see Maggie Smith in that production from 1972 with Tom Baker, just before he became arguably the best Doctor Who of all time.
by Anonymous | reply 206 | September 28, 2024 8:25 AM |
From director Mike Newall's Guardian article
[quote]he will for ever be Miss Jean Brodie and in that role perfectly revealed what was impressive about teachers for young people, but what was also secret about them. But she was a far bigger and more important figure in British culture than that. In Downton Abbey she showed how much could be revealed about a character in the smallest of details, like noticing when her breakfast tray was brought into this magnificent bedroom that the marmalade had been shop-bought. The wonderful barbed aside, she was brilliant at those.
NO, NO, NO.
Honestly, can't these people distinguish between two different characters?
by Anonymous | reply 207 | September 28, 2024 8:33 AM |
[quote]Kinda surprised Joan Plowright outlived her.
I'm surprised that Liza outlived her.
by Anonymous | reply 208 | September 28, 2024 9:00 AM |
The breakfast tray was in Gosford. The Grauniad strikes again.
by Anonymous | reply 209 | September 28, 2024 12:44 PM |
There were at least a few consecutive years in the late 1970s when Dame Maggie became a resident actor with Canada's Stratford Theatre Festival, preforming in an enormous range of characters in rep in each of those seasons. Shakespeare's Titania, Rosalind, Cleopatra, Chekhov's Masha, The Guardsman, The Way of the World, etc.
Hard to imagine but I wonder if the better film and London stage offers had dried up for a while or if it was a move to raise her young sons in a more placid environment. Or maybe she saw the opportunity as a last chance to play those classic leads before she outgrew them. I never saw her there but the photos of her that exist of some of those performances are magnificent.
Stratford was very fortunate to get her.
by Anonymous | reply 210 | September 28, 2024 1:35 PM |
Smith’s first husband Robert Stephens terrorised a generation of British kids as the creepy Abner Brown in The Box Of Delights
by Anonymous | reply 211 | September 28, 2024 2:20 PM |
Stratford is an internationally respected Shakespearean Festival but it was establishing itself in the seventies.
"Smith foundered a bit in the early 1970s, making choices that were too big and doing triple takes when a double take would have sufficed; she always had a weakness for comic slapstick. But she renewed herself on stage in seasons at Stratford in Canada from 1976 to 1980, playing Rosalind and Cleopatra and many other roles she didn’t quite have the nerve to try for London audiences and critics."
by Anonymous | reply 212 | September 28, 2024 2:26 PM |
On returning to Canada to receive an award in conjunction with the Toronto International Film Festival in 2012:
“Is it very, very, very sort of grand?” she queries.
“I mean, is there time for me not to go if I find it all too intimidating?”
Assured that it’s not too big, that she can’t back out and that everyone there will be celebrating the four glorious years in the 1970s when she sprinkled her particular brand of stardust on Stratford, she gulps some wine and reconciles herself to going.
“But it’s terrifying,” she says in a little-girl whisper. “Why? Because it was such a vivid and clear time in my head and probably the most important years of my whole career.”
That’s no idle boast. Back in 1975, Robin Phillips, the newly appointed artistic director of Stratford, swept Smith away from the Royal Alexandra Theatre, where she was appearing in Private Lives, for a weekend of snow, solitude and creative suggestion on the shores of Lake Huron.
“It was wonderful,” she recalls. “I’d never seen such snow. I’d never known such peace. I didn’t want to leave.”
At that point, Smith was a highly regarded comedienne onstage and screen, but some critics felt she was starting to fall into certain patterns of sameness. She thought so too.
Phillips offered the antidote: classical repertory at Stratford. With comic roles you’d expect her to play, like Millimant in The Way of theWorld, balanced by parts she never thought she’d do in her lifetime, like Cleopatra in Antony and Cleopatra.
“I thought it was absurd, ridiculous and I told Robin so. But of course, I had said the same thing when Larry (Olivier) asked me to play Desdemona to his Othello. In both cases, I came around.”
And everyone was glad she did. The work was stunning, the world’s critics lined up to pay their respects and the Church Restaurant was packed every night with the likes of Lauren Bacall and Rudolf Nureyev.
“I’m glad all that happened for the festival’s sake, but for me it was the work, always the work, that came first,” insists Smith.
And by those standards, many Stratford-watchers feel 1977 was the finest of the quartet of years Smith spent there (1976, ’77, ’79 and ’80).
Her Virgin Queen Hippolyta paired superbly with her gossamer Titania in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, but that only set the stage for her radiant Rosalind in As You Like It, a production still remembered with awe by anyone who saw it.
Smith bounds back into the past, remembering humourous stories from her Stratford years, like the time when “poor Brian (Bedford) had so many understudies onstage with him in Richard III that he couldn’t tell who was who and finally screamed out, ‘Who’s Surrey now?’”
And one of her happiest tales is told at her own expense regarding the role she can now admit was her least beloved at Stratford: Lady Macbeth.
“Opening night of the Scottish play, my letter was handed to me the wrong way around. The props were always fantastic there and it was written in this kind of medieval mad Germanic writing.
“There wasn’t a prayer you could have read it upside down. Mercifully, I knew it. If I hadn’t, I would have had to turn it right side up, which would have truly brought the house down in quite the wrong way.”
And this gem, unrelated: "But Smith isn’t quite sure what she feels about the issue of a higher power at this point in her existence. “I know there is something out there and like most people, I tend to believe in it more when things go bad. But I’m not like Shirley MacLaine, who probably believes we were past lovers in another life.”
by Anonymous | reply 213 | September 28, 2024 2:31 PM |
I must say, Smith is probably the only actress who never came up on Andrew Lloyd Webber's "lists" of actresses he offered the role of 'Norma Desmond' to in the 1990s. Who knows - she may have been very good in the role at the age of 60.
by Anonymous | reply 214 | September 28, 2024 2:36 PM |
She got out just in time-Trump will in able Putin to take Europe.
by Anonymous | reply 215 | September 28, 2024 2:37 PM |
Maybe she couldn't sing? Then again, that wasn't an issue in New York.
by Anonymous | reply 216 | September 28, 2024 2:37 PM |
I was told this story by a wonderful production stage manager named Mitch Erickson who did several plays with Smith:
Mitch was PSM on Lettice and Lovage on Broadway. The theater next door was housing a raucous all-Black jukebox musical which not only could be heard at the theater where Lettice and Lovage was playing (the Ethel Barrymore) but it was causing it to vibrate. Mitch and his team, at Smith’s urging, sought to address this situation and found the solution would be hanging thick black drapes to cushion the sound. Smith was at her dressing room table when Mitch arrived with her half-hour call and added “By the way it’s OK, now, Maggie, we’ve dealt with the sound issue by hanging some blacks.” And without skipping a beat Smith cooed “Oh, thank you, my darling, but did you really need to have gone quite THAT far?”
by Anonymous | reply 217 | September 28, 2024 2:38 PM |
Lots of Stratford productions in full on YouTube, and they're very much worth your time.
by Anonymous | reply 218 | September 28, 2024 2:42 PM |
R205 / I used to wonder if Taylor was gay too based on his spotty marital record, but I gather he was very much not. To my knowledge, neither actor wrote or spoke publicly about the affair, which evidently lasted for some time.
I heard about it from two separate sources who heard about it from the Dame’s own lips. Always put a smile on her face, so I gather it was quite passionate.
by Anonymous | reply 219 | September 28, 2024 2:57 PM |
Of all the tributes I’m certain r178 that the one coming from Emma Watson will cheer Maggie the most. It’s always gratifying when one acting talent recognises a peer.
by Anonymous | reply 220 | September 28, 2024 3:25 PM |
I saw her do Lady Bracknell in London. That production also had Richard E Grant in the cast who for reasons he could not fathom was always referred to by Smith as Richard He Can’t. The guy seemed a bit hurt when I saw him interviewed at the time.
I also knew someone who was her make up artist on the film The Secret Garden and he got on very well with her but he did say woe betide anyone she took against.
by Anonymous | reply 221 | September 28, 2024 3:31 PM |
[quote]Of all the tributes I’m certain [R178] that the one coming from Emma Watson will cheer Maggie the most.
Maggie is beyond being 'cheered'. She's dead, Dame Judi.
by Anonymous | reply 222 | September 28, 2024 3:39 PM |
[quote]The intensity of Rod and Maggie’s on-screen relationship led several people who worked on the film to conclude that they were really falling in love.
by Anonymous | reply 223 | September 28, 2024 3:57 PM |
Last night, in tribute, I finally caught up to A PRIVATE FUNCTION, which is a delightful movie, and in which she is sensational.
by Anonymous | reply 224 | September 28, 2024 4:04 PM |
I was looking at a list of her body of work. Good lord, she seemed to have worked with EVERYBODY.
What an astonishing career.
I am definitely going to binge watch some of her films this weekend.
by Anonymous | reply 225 | September 28, 2024 4:44 PM |
[quote]Maybe she couldn't sing?
You be the judge.
by Anonymous | reply 228 | September 28, 2024 5:40 PM |
Watched Gosford Park to celebrate her life this morning. It not my favorite movie but she is, of course, fabulous in it.
by Anonymous | reply 230 | September 28, 2024 6:58 PM |
R221 - Richard E Grant in his own words
[quote]This was my worst acting experience of all time, because I was tortured by (co-star) Maggie Smith the entire time. We’d worked together previously on film Suddenly Last Summer, a Tennessee Williams play, with Rob Lowe and Natasha Richardson, and we all got on well. But Maggie was unhappy with the production, and I became the scapegoat, her victim. I’m still amazed that anyone can be so inventive in the ways they can demolish you, but she did. She’s a brilliant actress, but she has a history of doing this. I was told by someone that every single job she’s ever done, she’s done it to someone. And I suffered six months of it. I couldn’t resign because then I’d regard it as a terrible failure, and that she had won, but I often wished that they’d fire me. After the first three months, I no longer gave a fuck, and finally started to enjoy myself. But before that, well, it was just horrible. Urgh!
by Anonymous | reply 231 | September 28, 2024 7:03 PM |
Richard Grant was also in Gosford Park as a nasty footman.
by Anonymous | reply 232 | September 28, 2024 7:08 PM |
89 is a good run. Amazing she lived that long, she smoked like a chimney for decades.
by Anonymous | reply 233 | September 28, 2024 7:09 PM |
I read that Richard E. Grant and Maggie feuded again when he was on Downton Abbey.
by Anonymous | reply 234 | September 28, 2024 7:19 PM |
I didn't know Maggie smoked. I knew Glenda did and she lived to 87
by Anonymous | reply 235 | September 28, 2024 8:08 PM |
I fucking hate R13 and his flaccidity. R13, I’d tell you to go fuck yourself but we both know you’re too fat and lazy to do so.
by Anonymous | reply 237 | September 28, 2024 8:20 PM |
I thought Geraldine McEwan was actually better cast than her in Lettice and Lovage in London. When Smith played Lettice there would be no doubt at the end iof Act 1 that she’d be alright. With the birdlike, vulnerable and meek portrayal by McEwan you weren’t as sure. I far preferred McEwan in that role. And in A Delicate Balance Elaine Stritch OWNED that role in that production on Broadway. In the West End version Smith was very good but she just wasn’t that woman. Stritch was.
by Anonymous | reply 238 | September 28, 2024 8:21 PM |
The reason Plowright is “still alive” is because Satan doesn’t want the competition.
by Anonymous | reply 239 | September 28, 2024 8:25 PM |
R239 is that you, Vivien? Loved you in Streetcar!
by Anonymous | reply 240 | September 28, 2024 8:28 PM |
And she was also very good in Three Tall Women in London but I thought Marian Seldes had a connection to the material that Smith just didn’t have.
by Anonymous | reply 241 | September 28, 2024 8:31 PM |
Travels with my Aunt is kinda fun.
by Anonymous | reply 242 | September 28, 2024 8:34 PM |
[quote]We’d worked together previously on film Suddenly Last Summer, a Tennessee Williams play, with Rob Lowe and Natasha Richardson, and we all got on well. But Maggie was unhappy with the production, and I became the scapegoat, her victim.
Interesting to read Rob Lowe's tweet:
Saddened to hear Dame Maggie Smith has passed. I had the unforgettable experience of working with her; sharing a two-shot was like being paired with a lion. She could eat anyone alive, and often did. But funny, and great company. And suffered no fools. We will never see another. God speed, Ms. Smith!
by Anonymous | reply 243 | September 28, 2024 8:34 PM |
I loved her work but R231's post does not surprise me.
Emotionally complicated person onscreen is clearly going to be as emotionally complicated off screen.
by Anonymous | reply 244 | September 28, 2024 8:37 PM |
Really r238 McEwan’s whole career was a Smith rip-off done badly. I too saw her in Lettice and Lovage - missed Smith and Tyzack by a week. I recall McEwan’s Jean Brodie on tv here in the UK back around 1977/78. More of the same Smith-lite - mannerisms and speech.
by Anonymous | reply 245 | September 28, 2024 9:09 PM |
R245, other than Marple, Geraldine McEwan's most famous roles are Robin Hood, Prince Of Thieves, Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit and The Magdalene Sisters.
3 roles that range from unhinged to sadistic, not the kind of thing Smith was known for.
by Anonymous | reply 246 | September 28, 2024 9:17 PM |
We watched California Suite in her honor last night—she’s very good in a terrible movie. And, curious about the obviously drugged or drunk child actress who played Jane Fonda’s daughter, I discovered DL icon Dana Plato.
by Anonymous | reply 247 | September 28, 2024 9:29 PM |
Too bad Maggie Smith never played Lucia or Miss Mapp.
by Anonymous | reply 248 | September 28, 2024 9:33 PM |
r242=Shirley Feeney
by Anonymous | reply 249 | September 28, 2024 9:33 PM |
Wonder who will get the prime slot in the In Memorium this year at the oscars? Gena Rowlands, Donald Sutherland, Maggie Smith are all worthy contenders.
by Anonymous | reply 250 | September 28, 2024 9:40 PM |
Depends who dies when. But Sutherland will probably get the prime slot. Sexism.
by Anonymous | reply 251 | September 28, 2024 9:43 PM |
[quote]In Memorium
Oh, dear.
by Anonymous | reply 252 | September 28, 2024 10:22 PM |
Wow! First Maggie Thatcher and now Maggie Smith. Since they _do_ come in threes, I hope the baby in the Simpsons is keeping safe.
by Anonymous | reply 253 | September 28, 2024 10:27 PM |
In memorandum?
by Anonymous | reply 254 | September 28, 2024 10:34 PM |
R247 CS is hilarious and a great comfort food type film. I even laugh out loud still at the Cosby Pryor segment after many viewings and I loathe Cosby. Obviously the Caine Smith segment was best, and she really deserved that second Oscar.
by Anonymous | reply 255 | September 28, 2024 10:49 PM |
I'm fascinated by the Richard Grant quote and sincerely wonder what Maggie specifically did to him onstage (or maybe off?) to throw him so badly. Maybe I'm naive.....
by Anonymous | reply 256 | September 29, 2024 1:24 AM |
The "raucous Black jukebox musical" to which r217 referred was Ain't MIsbehavin'.
by Anonymous | reply 257 | September 29, 2024 1:27 AM |
Tracey Ullman said that a friend of hers who worked on Downton said that Maggie told the producers to write her a death scene after they asked how they could better accommodate her on the show. Mags had a good sense of humor.
by Anonymous | reply 258 | September 29, 2024 1:31 AM |
No matter how demanding she may have been of her colleagues, she was always well-worth it. She literally made every project she appeared in better.
by Anonymous | reply 259 | September 29, 2024 1:59 AM |
I was wrong. The "raucous Black Broadway jukebox (sic) musical" playing next door to Lettice & Lovage was apparently the short-lived Truly Blessed, a bio of Mahalia Jackson. Nevertheless, the blacks were hung.
by Anonymous | reply 260 | September 29, 2024 2:27 AM |
"Glenn Close isn't an actress - she's an address."- Maggie
Ouch.
by Anonymous | reply 261 | September 29, 2024 2:28 AM |
Maggie was right about Glenn
by Anonymous | reply 262 | September 29, 2024 2:32 AM |
[quote] I'm surprised that Liza outlived her.
YOU’RE shurprished?! I’M shurprished!
by Anonymous | reply 263 | September 29, 2024 2:50 AM |
I'm surprised Liza outlived Judy's uterus.
by Anonymous | reply 264 | September 29, 2024 2:55 AM |
Maggie was never a bankable star like Bette Midler. I'm sure Maggie was jealous that Bette was a leading lady and big box-office star.
by Anonymous | reply 267 | September 29, 2024 3:18 AM |
Maggie Smith's best line (even better than "What's a weekend?" from Downton Abbey):
From "Tea With Mussolini (1999):" Ahh, the Americans, they've even managed to ruin ice cream."
Also starring Cher...
by Anonymous | reply 268 | September 29, 2024 3:18 AM |
[quote]I'm sure Maggie was jealous that Bette was a leading lady and big box-office star
Maggie never forgave Bette for stealing Jinxed away from her.
by Anonymous | reply 269 | September 29, 2024 3:24 AM |
It was just before Christmas, 2007 and I was doing some shopping in Peter Jones, Sloane Square. The lady in front of me at the till was struggling as her debit card would not register. Suddenly she burst into tears. "Are you OK?" I asked. "Maybe I could pay, and you can pay me back," I said. "Oh, thank you, young man. That's very kind," she said. Next attempt, though, her card worked. I paid too and she waited for me. She clearly wanted someone to talk to. "I'm sorry to be so emotional," she said. "But I've just been diagnosed with breast cancer this morning." I asked where she was being treated and she said, The Royal Marsden. I said that my partner (Vikki and I were not married then) was being treated there too, having been diagnosed earlier that year. I told her that the people at the @royalmarsdenNHS were the best. She thanked me for the reassurance, and we both smiled and went on our way, she a little calmer, me buoyed being being called 'young man'. That was my encounter with #DameMaggieSmith. RIP lovely woman and wonderful actor.
by Anonymous | reply 270 | September 29, 2024 3:27 AM |
I wonder how she and Cher got along on the set of Tea with Mussolini? They seem super friendly with one another in this red carpet pic.
by Anonymous | reply 271 | September 29, 2024 3:30 AM |
Our Saturday night La Jolla Dinner and a Movie Club watched "The Prime of Miss Jane Brodie& Tea with Mussolini"
I never saw "Miss Jane Brodie movie" but I saw Tea with Mussolini several times (which I loved)
Tomorrow is California Suite, The VIP's and Ladies in Lavender.
It may be "Maggie Smith Week" & my neighbor's son is flying in from NYC, has connections to get us Maggie Smith Broadway& West End plays on film.
by Anonymous | reply 272 | September 29, 2024 4:09 AM |
[quote] "Glenn Close isn't an actress - she's an address."- Maggie
Huh?
by Anonymous | reply 273 | September 29, 2024 4:36 AM |
Maggie knows not to fuck with Cher.
by Anonymous | reply 274 | September 29, 2024 4:36 AM |
Jean Brodie, not Jane Brodie, phillywhore
by Anonymous | reply 275 | September 29, 2024 4:49 AM |
I really enjoyed “Ladies in Lavender”, r272
by Anonymous | reply 276 | September 29, 2024 6:14 AM |
I think the first time I saw Maggie Smith was in high school English class in the 1990's when our teacher showed us "Clash of the Titans" as part of our Greek Mythology unit. As a burgeoning gay teen I was more taken with Harry Hamlin's nipples, but I liked the scene when the head of Maggie's statue comes crashing down and threatens Sian Phillips:
by Anonymous | reply 277 | September 29, 2024 6:22 AM |
Maggie was nominated 5 times for the BAFTA TV award - she lost to Coral Browne, Thora Hird TWICE, Helen Mirren and Monica Dolan
And she was nominated 6 times for the Olivier award - she lost to Elizabeth Quinn, Michael Gambon, Judi Dench, Griff Rhys Jones, Zpe Wanamaker and Janie Dee.
by Anonymous | reply 278 | September 29, 2024 8:30 AM |
Watching Maggie Smith chew up the scenery in this famous scene, one wonders how this very young actress (Pamela Franklin) keeps right up with her. She must have had balls of steel.
by Anonymous | reply 279 | September 29, 2024 8:47 AM |
R279 wonderful clip, thanks for the reminder. I always thought Pamela deserved a Supporting nomination for her performance, for that scene alone.
by Anonymous | reply 280 | September 29, 2024 10:10 AM |
Will her memoirs come out eventually?
by Anonymous | reply 281 | September 29, 2024 12:42 PM |
WHET Pamela Franklin? I know she made at least a few more films as a young woman but then what? Is she still with us?
by Anonymous | reply 282 | September 29, 2024 1:38 PM |
R272 see Prime of Miss Jean Brodie first. It’s the most essential Maggie viewing. It’s on YouTube.
by Anonymous | reply 283 | September 29, 2024 2:21 PM |
[quote]I read that Richard E. Grant and Maggie feuded again when he was on Downton Abbey.
Two co-stars feuding while working on a project together ? Unheard of, in the history of Hollywood. Where did this rumor start ?
by Anonymous | reply 284 | September 29, 2024 2:22 PM |
So, looked her up and Pamela Franklin is still with us at age 74.
After JEAN BRODIE she made a lot of mediocre to crappy films, often horror movies, as well as lots of US TV guest appearances (including a pilot spin-off of Green Acres!), all of which typecast her as unhireable for quality film projects.
But she married happily and had two sons and owned and ran a bookstore in LA, so...for those who like that sort of thing, that's the sort of thing they like.
by Anonymous | reply 285 | September 29, 2024 2:54 PM |
Is Pamela Franklin any relation to that other fine, fine actress Bonnie Franklin ?
by Anonymous | reply 287 | September 29, 2024 3:05 PM |
Or the Franklin Mint? Also top quality.
by Anonymous | reply 288 | September 29, 2024 3:14 PM |
[quote]"Glenn Close isn't an actress - she's an address."- Maggie
In the UK, a close is another word for a road. Maybe that's what she meant.
by Anonymous | reply 289 | September 29, 2024 3:36 PM |
Rumor has it that Pamela is the sister of Aretha.
by Anonymous | reply 290 | September 29, 2024 3:46 PM |
True R290 - Aretha Anderson has bigger tits than her sister
by Anonymous | reply 291 | September 29, 2024 5:06 PM |
Why is this on my mind? I felt rather sad over this news for a full day, which surprised me. My own aging I guess. Weird place in life, watching them go and being at a point where you know you are among them.
by Anonymous | reply 292 | September 29, 2024 5:10 PM |
I think one critic called her character in "A Private Function" a "provincial Lady Macbeth,"
by Anonymous | reply 295 | September 29, 2024 5:44 PM |
I mean, Maggie's characters WERE largely nellie prisspots and fussbudgets - lonely spinsters who nonetheless judged the actions and appearances of others and found them deeply lacking.
As such, she's clearly the patron saint of Datalounge, and we should have her very countenance etched on a wall or made into a religious icon.
by Anonymous | reply 296 | September 29, 2024 6:22 PM |
R296, i think her acting parts had a lot more range than that but i fully agree that she should be one of the patron saints of Datalounge, especially considering her apparent gratuitous bullying of Richard E Grant of all people.
by Anonymous | reply 297 | September 29, 2024 6:47 PM |
[quote]Is Pamela Franklin any relation to that other fine, fine actress Bonnie Franklin ?
I was wondering whether she's related to Pamelyn Ferdin.
by Anonymous | reply 298 | September 29, 2024 6:53 PM |
Of the British acting Dames born in the 1930s I'd say Maggie is just behind Judi in industry acclaim, and just behind Judi and Julie Andrews on fame and recognisability.
I expect the BBC will promote Vanessa Redgrave's death as "Call The Midwife star" even though she only does those increasingly awful voiceovers.
1933: Sian Phillips
1934: Judi Dench
1934: Maggie Smith
1934: Eileen Atkins
1935: Julie Andrews
1936: Glenda Jackson
1937: Vanessa Redgrave
1938: Diana Rigg
by Anonymous | reply 299 | September 29, 2024 7:03 PM |
R297 I was joking and exaggerating, of course - she did have a great range - but she WAS known for that kind of role, so clearly she is our Queen!
by Anonymous | reply 300 | September 29, 2024 7:10 PM |
Judi only has half an Oscar!
by Anonymous | reply 301 | September 29, 2024 7:47 PM |
Maggie-Two Oscars, four Emmys, one Tony.
Glenda-Two Oscars, three Emmys, one Tony.
Vanessa-One Oscar, two Emmys, one Tony.
Helen-One Oscar, five Emmys, one Tony.
Judi-One Oscar and one Tony.
I’m not including Baftas, globes, etc in this just major industry awards. And Judi is dwarfed by the first the three and even Helen Mirren acclaim wise.
by Anonymous | reply 302 | September 29, 2024 8:03 PM |
I'd say because of Downton and Harry Potter alone, Maggie is far better known and recognized than Judi Dench and even Julie Andrews at this point in time.
Julie hasn't done anything in years that would cause a teenager to recognize her now if she confronted her at Walmart. Whereas Maggie.........
by Anonymous | reply 303 | September 29, 2024 8:10 PM |
Julie still has Mary Poppins and S of M.
by Anonymous | reply 304 | September 29, 2024 8:12 PM |
And I guess Julie had the "Princess Diaries" to appeal to post-millennials, but it was hard to compete with the "Harry Potter" franchise in its prime....
by Anonymous | reply 305 | September 29, 2024 8:25 PM |
Of course her finest role was Miss... Collins.
by Anonymous | reply 306 | September 29, 2024 8:27 PM |
[quote]Maggie is just behind Judi in industry acclaim, and just behind Judi and Julie Andrews on fame and recognizability.
Maggie, Vanessa and Glenda were the premier British actresses of the 70's. In terms of acclaim and worldwide notoriety, they were pretty much the gold standard for UK actresses' careers. Julie and Audrey Hepburn were a decade prior.
Judi's fame didn't come until the 90's and that was largely do to Glenda Jackson retiring. Judi got Goldeneye because Glenda turned it down. Helen Mirren's success started to grow at the same time as well.
I know Judi was the same age, but I don't put her alongside her peers, who were more groundbreaking. Judi was a late in life success.
by Anonymous | reply 307 | September 29, 2024 8:30 PM |
She was ready to move on. So am I with this thread.
by Anonymous | reply 308 | September 29, 2024 8:35 PM |
R308 Go with God, Crispy.
by Anonymous | reply 309 | September 29, 2024 8:44 PM |
Thanks, hun.
by Anonymous | reply 310 | September 29, 2024 8:47 PM |
[quote]Maggie-Two Oscars, four Emmys, one Tony.
Barbra Streisand-Two Oscars, four Emmys, one Tony, ten Grammys
by Anonymous | reply 311 | September 29, 2024 8:49 PM |
Okay, you win r311. Barbra Streisand is our great British actress.
by Anonymous | reply 312 | September 29, 2024 8:51 PM |
*greatest
by Anonymous | reply 313 | September 29, 2024 8:51 PM |
Quite an impressive list at R299. I think the british actresses far surpass any list of American counterparts.
What greats would succeed them? Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet, Helena Bonham Carter? They don't have equivalent stage credits, though.
What if we through some Australians in? Judy Davis, Cate Blanchett, Nicole, who else?
by Anonymous | reply 314 | September 29, 2024 8:59 PM |
Richard E. Grant (in Downton Abbey) played the art dealer who had a crush on Cora. He pinged, IMO, and his character was supposed to be straight (I think). I can see Maggie bullying him. I agree that she wouldn't have had the balls to pick on someone like Cher.
by Anonymous | reply 315 | September 29, 2024 9:25 PM |
[quote] Judi got Goldeneye because Glenda turned it down.
Whoever was responsible for this TV ad obviously didn't get the memo about that.
by Anonymous | reply 316 | September 29, 2024 9:28 PM |
A post in a recently revived Maggie Smith thread mentioned her performance in THE PRIME OF MISS JANE PITTMAN. What other irreverent alterations might one propose to her filmography? THE LONELY PASSION OF JUDITH KRANTZ? HARRY DEAN STANTON AND THE CHAMBER OF SECRETS?
by Anonymous | reply 317 | September 29, 2024 9:30 PM |
Vanessa should have done a Bond with her ex Timothy Dalton.
by Anonymous | reply 318 | September 29, 2024 9:44 PM |
Bette Davis and Maggie Smith looked so much alike they could've been mother and daughter.
Perhaps Bette would've preferred having Maggie as her daughter instead of that cunt BD.
by Anonymous | reply 319 | September 29, 2024 9:52 PM |
[quote]Maggie, Vanessa and Glenda were the premier British actresses of the 70's. In terms of acclaim and worldwide notoriety, they were pretty much the gold standard for UK actresses' careers.
Worldwide notoriety? What did they do to make themselves notorious?
by Anonymous | reply 320 | September 29, 2024 10:09 PM |
Yes and no on Judi's fame. She was an acclaimed stage actress in the UK by the 90s. She says in Dames it was Mrs. Brown that started her film career (and then broader fame) and that what was before didn't add up to much. If you haven't seen Dames, stream it. If you have, see it again. It's moving, hilarious, charming and real by turns. Worth your time.
by Anonymous | reply 321 | September 29, 2024 10:11 PM |
Vanessa Redgrave was pretty much the definition of worldwide notoriety in the late '70s/early '80s.
by Anonymous | reply 322 | September 29, 2024 10:19 PM |
Were Julie Christie, Lynn Redgrave and Charlotte Rampling considered runners-up?
by Anonymous | reply 323 | September 29, 2024 11:10 PM |
Was she implying that Close is a harlot? Is Close a known strumpet?
by Anonymous | reply 324 | September 29, 2024 11:14 PM |
Apparently Billie Whitelaw had a beef with Smith too. Whitelaw appeared with Olivier in Othello onstage but was replaced by Smith in the movie version. She wasn't too happy about it and called Maggie "a first-class cow".
by Anonymous | reply 326 | September 30, 2024 12:18 AM |
Billie.....who?
by Anonymous | reply 327 | September 30, 2024 12:21 AM |
I thought it was Judi Dench's stage comeback, first in London and then on Broadway, in AMY'S VIEW in 1997, which was semi-autobiographical, and David Hare wrote expressly for her, that brought Dench back from the mire and lazy comfort of that British sitcom AS TIME GOES BY, she did for 10 seasons with her husband.
Though, admittedly, being a stage performance, millions of people didn't see her in the Hare play, but the acclaim undoubtedly brought everyone important in the British film industry and even Hollywood to catch her luminous and unforgettable performance and remind them of her talent. And I think that's what ultimately spurred her big comeback in films. MRS. BROWN, TEA WITH MUSSOLINI, SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE, THE SHIPPING NEWS, and the Bond films all quickly followed in the space of a few years.
by Anonymous | reply 328 | September 30, 2024 12:34 AM |
Dench's first Bond film—Goldeneye—came out in 1995.
by Anonymous | reply 329 | September 30, 2024 12:37 AM |
R328 AS TIME GOES BY wasn't with her husband. You're thinking of A FINE ROMANCE.
by Anonymous | reply 330 | September 30, 2024 12:38 AM |
Oooops, you're right. But nevertheless, the sitcoms really sidelined her for a long time.
by Anonymous | reply 331 | September 30, 2024 12:40 AM |
Nearly 350 posts and no mention (I don't think, so apologies if I missed it) of Smith in Alan Bennett's funny/sad monologue Bed Among the Lentils? Here, a gift from me to all of you, for when you have 45 minutes or so. (Also, has anyone checked on Alan Bennett lately?)
by Anonymous | reply 332 | September 30, 2024 12:46 AM |
I've been obsessed with 'Prime' since I saw it in 1969, mostly because I looked a lot like Pamela Franklin's 'Sandy'. When it came out on DVD with a commentary some years ago, I rented it from Netflix and watched it.
The commentary was by director Ronald Neame, who was about 100 at the time, and Pamela Franklin. She was living 'under the radar' and hadn't worked professionally in a long time, since she married and had children.
Franklin talked about her career in the 1970s, and her decision to quit the business was based a lot on being treated shabbily by some director or AD. He called her 'the girl', and she felt very disrespected.
She said that she did visit Maggie Smith backstage when Smith was appearing in a play in LA.
by Anonymous | reply 333 | September 30, 2024 12:53 AM |
R326, you make it sound as if Smith waltzed in and filmed OTHELLO after poor Whitelaw had done it onstage. In fact, they alternated in the part onstage opposite Olivier, and I'm pretty sure Smith opened the show.
by Anonymous | reply 334 | September 30, 2024 1:53 AM |
Yes, Smith played Desdemona when the production opened in 1964, then Whitelaw took over the part in 1965.
by Anonymous | reply 335 | September 30, 2024 2:00 AM |
She & Dench had a ongoing tetchy routine about Judi's cut "postcards scene" in "A Room with a View."
"You've been going on about that for years!"
by Anonymous | reply 336 | September 30, 2024 2:34 AM |
Unrelated to her passing (since it was scheduled well before that), "Murder By Death" will be on TCM in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
by Anonymous | reply 337 | September 30, 2024 2:42 AM |
The first time I saw Dench was in A Room With a View. Her name was familiar to me because I knew she'd done the London Cabaret.
by Anonymous | reply 338 | September 30, 2024 2:44 AM |
R292 & R299, yes, it feels like we are coming to the end of an acting era with Maggie Smith's departure.
Many of the great British actresses born in the 1930's are now really getting up there in age -- Judi Dench, Eileen Atkins, Siân Phillips, Vanessa Redgrave, Claire Bloom, etc.
DL fave Siân Phillips recently appeared in the newest season of 'Doctor Who'.
by Anonymous | reply 339 | September 30, 2024 7:01 AM |
[quote]it feels like we are coming to the end of an acting era with Maggie Smith's departure.
Maggie Smith deserved more than another shitty "DEAD TO ME" headline.
by Anonymous | reply 340 | September 30, 2024 7:05 AM |
R340, it's a sock puppet troll favourite, so they push the tawdry line as part of their overall desire to set the tone for DL. It goes hand in hand with hating younger people and trans folks.
by Anonymous | reply 341 | September 30, 2024 7:11 AM |
R340, I don't mind the title of the thread, but I do think there should be more replies here. In the old days of DL, this thread would be at 600 replies by now.
by Anonymous | reply 342 | September 30, 2024 7:18 AM |
Said sock puppets and social media drove them away, r342.
by Anonymous | reply 343 | September 30, 2024 8:09 AM |
[quote]Judi's fame didn't come until the 90's and that was largely do to Glenda Jackson retiring. Judi got Goldeneye because Glenda turned it down. Helen Mirren's success started to grow at the same time as well.
[quote]Yes and no on Judi's fame. She was an acclaimed stage actress in the UK by the 90s. She says in Dames it was Mrs. Brown that started her film career (and then broader fame) and that what was before didn't add up to much. If you haven't seen Dames, stream it. If you have, see it again. It's moving, hilarious, charming and real by turns. Worth your time.
[quote]I thought it was Judi Dench's stage comeback, first in London and then on Broadway, in AMY'S VIEW in 1997, which was semi-autobiographical, and David Hare wrote expressly for her, that brought Dench back from the mire and lazy comfort of that British sitcom AS TIME GOES BY, she did for 10 seasons with her husband.
FACT CHECK: Judi Dench didn't appear in AS TIME GOES BY with her husband, the late Michael Williams. Dench and Williams starred together in the award winning A FINE ROMANCE (1981 to 1984) and AS TIME GOES BY ran from 1992 to 2005, with Dench and Geoffrey Palmer.
Before Mrs Brown Judi Dench had won 3 film BAFTAs (including beating Maggie for A Room With A View) 3 TV BAFTAs and 6 Oliviers. In Britain at least she was a household name for years - performing in comedies, dramas, musicals and classics.
After Mrs Brown Judi got 6 Oscar nominations in 10 years, she was elevated from cameo to starring role in Bond, dominating Skyfall, and had huge box office hits alongside Maggie with Best Exotic Marigold Hotel.
In terms of public consciousness Julie Andrews is Maria Von Trapp AND Mary Poppins which people will be aware of even if they haven't watched them in ages. Maggie has Harry Potter, Downtown Abbey, the Poirots, Sister Act, all popular and regularly repeated performances.
Vanessa Redgrave has an Oscar but in terms of public consciousness is probably best known for the car journey in Mission Impossible.
[quote]Were Julie Christie, Lynn Redgrave and Charlotte Rampling considered runners-up?
They are all born in the 1940s, alongside Helen Mirren, Brenda Blethyn, Joanna Lumley, Penelope Wilton and Rula Lenska.
by Anonymous | reply 344 | September 30, 2024 8:09 AM |
[quote]Judi Dench had won 3 film BAFTAs (including beating Maggie for A Room With A View)
Smith won the BAFTA for Best Actress in a Leading Role for “A Room with a View.”
by Anonymous | reply 345 | September 30, 2024 8:35 AM |
Oh yes, so she did R345. FACT CHECK COMPLETED
by Anonymous | reply 346 | September 30, 2024 8:44 AM |
Sian is about to tour in a Rattigan double bill. I hope it comes to the West End.
by Anonymous | reply 347 | September 30, 2024 10:10 AM |
She was great. A very talented actress and in the few interviews I saw her in, she was always plain speaking. There was no fakeness with her.
She'll be missed!
by Anonymous | reply 348 | September 30, 2024 10:12 AM |
Btw Sian filmed a 30 minute lesbian drama called Time And Again a few years ago which is forever being shown by BBC Wales. She moves into a care home to find the woman in the next room is her former lesbian lover back when mutual bean flicking was disapproved of.
by Anonymous | reply 349 | September 30, 2024 10:17 AM |
R328 what mire? Dench is the most acclaimed actress of London's theatre scene, ever. She even won both the Olivier (British Tony) for both Drama AND Musical in the same year (1995)!
While she had largely supporting parts in movies prior to Mrs Brown (1997), she was very respected in the UK for years based on her theatre and TV work. Mrs Brown was actually filmed for the BBC as a TV movie until a certain Hollywood producer saw it and decided to promote it worldwide as a cinema release.
Here's Judi and her boobs sending in the clowns in 1995:
by Anonymous | reply 350 | September 30, 2024 11:47 AM |
R332 thank you! I would say that's one of her best performances, so well written and poignant
by Anonymous | reply 351 | September 30, 2024 12:04 PM |
Could I just point out that Dame Judi Dench is not dead to me, so stop eulogizing on Mag's thread.
by Anonymous | reply 352 | September 30, 2024 12:40 PM |
[quote][R340], it's a sock puppet troll favourite, so they push the tawdry line as part of their overall desire to set the tone for DL. It goes hand in hand with hating younger people and trans folks.
No, r341, it's merely a DL tradition. LoL, it has nothing to do with victimization.
by Anonymous | reply 353 | September 30, 2024 5:15 PM |
Sure, Jan.
by Anonymous | reply 354 | September 30, 2024 5:48 PM |
The RIP troll was here long before this Dead to Me shit.
by Anonymous | reply 355 | September 30, 2024 5:49 PM |
The "Dead To Me is so Disrespectful and Tacky" troll is truly the prissiest of nellie prisspots.
by Anonymous | reply 356 | September 30, 2024 6:12 PM |
Maggie Smith was a proud gay man 🙇♂️
by Anonymous | reply 357 | September 30, 2024 6:33 PM |
If The Lonely Passion Of Judith Hearne had come out in 1986 or 1989 Mags would have been Oscar nominated. She was wonderful.
What other performances were overlooked for awards?
by Anonymous | reply 358 | September 30, 2024 6:50 PM |
It's a pleasure to block your repetitive filth again. 🚫
by Anonymous | reply 359 | September 30, 2024 7:24 PM |
Maggie copied the accent of that queen she was living with decades ago. She never spoke like that before.
by Anonymous | reply 360 | September 30, 2024 7:35 PM |
I remember years ago on an earlier board, it was refered to as "...no longer shpping the pig." as in Piggly Wiggly. I like that much better.
by Anonymous | reply 362 | September 30, 2024 8:02 PM |
R345 what a strange line-up of winners that was—and rando nominees.
by Anonymous | reply 363 | September 30, 2024 8:14 PM |
In the old DL days, it was always "What was on his/her ipod?"
by Anonymous | reply 364 | September 30, 2024 8:21 PM |
[quote]In the old DL days, it was always "What was on his/her ipod?"
It still pops up.
by Anonymous | reply 365 | September 30, 2024 8:28 PM |
[quote][R345] what a strange line-up of winners that was—and rando nominees.
The BAFTAs always prioritised British films and actors. Denholm Elliot was nominated for A Room With A View but lost to Ray McAnally (pronounced Mack-Anne-Alley, not Mc-Anally) having won the 3 previous years for Trading Places, A Private Function and Defence Of The Realm.
Denzel Washington has never been nominated for a BAFTA - in 1988 he got his first Oscar nomination for Cry Freedom as Steve Biko, that year BAFTA nominated John Thaw as best supporting actor for The Evil Politician Who Loved Apartheid.
by Anonymous | reply 366 | September 30, 2024 8:43 PM |
O that’s not what I meant. Their choices of lead bs supporting are inconsistent. Room wins best picture, but not adapted screenplay—and HBC and DDL are left out. More of that … American films, well woody, did fine.
by Anonymous | reply 367 | September 30, 2024 9:06 PM |
She was private, lonely and could be very, very mean. But onstage, she was never less than luminous. And she knew all of it.
by Anonymous | reply 368 | September 30, 2024 10:40 PM |
"Maggie Smith deserved more than another shitty "DEAD TO ME" headline."
Au contraire! A "DEAD TO ME" headline is Datalounge's highest honor. It denotes a person who was known and beloved.
by Anonymous | reply 369 | September 30, 2024 11:44 PM |
It’s the Dame Commander of the DL, for actresses not of ill-repute.
by Anonymous | reply 370 | September 30, 2024 11:46 PM |
[quote]for actresses not of ill-repute
She had a very healthy repute.
by Anonymous | reply 371 | October 1, 2024 12:20 AM |
Like I said….
by Anonymous | reply 372 | October 1, 2024 12:23 AM |
She wasn't very, very mean, r368. She was simply smarter than everyone else in the room.
by Anonymous | reply 373 | October 1, 2024 2:06 AM |
R347, it's great that Siân Phillips is still acting at 91. I wish she could play Livia again in some new series about Ancient Rome.
by Anonymous | reply 374 | October 1, 2024 6:29 AM |
In addition to the fabulous Dame Judi, let's not forget the equally fabulous Dame Eileen Atkins.
I recently saw her on Wicked Little Letters. Long may she continue!
by Anonymous | reply 375 | October 1, 2024 12:42 PM |
There was an "In Memoriam" card for Maggie before and after Sunday night's PBS Masterpiece Mystery telecast of "Moonflower Murders." Naturally it featured her in costume as the Dowager Countess from Downton.
by Anonymous | reply 376 | October 1, 2024 2:39 PM |
Wrong link, r377.
That’s the Judi/Bond trailer again
by Anonymous | reply 378 | October 1, 2024 6:39 PM |
Judi Dench has her dirty paws all over this otherwise fine thread, r378
by Anonymous | reply 379 | October 1, 2024 7:29 PM |
Recent interview with Maggie and Kathleen Turner who met when they were in neighbouring theatres in London when they were doing Lady In The Van and The Graduate and became good friends.
by Anonymous | reply 380 | October 1, 2024 10:19 PM |
Apologies to anyone triggered by the word rosebud.
ROSEBUD 🔴
by Anonymous | reply 381 | October 1, 2024 10:20 PM |
Who gets triggered by a sled?
by Anonymous | reply 382 | October 1, 2024 10:29 PM |
The 2009 film, "From Time to Time" is also another worthwhile Maggie Smith film. Also stars Alex Etel, Pauline Collins, Hugh Bonneville, Carice Van Houten, Timothy Spall & Dominic West.
Written & directed by Julian Fellowes:
by Anonymous | reply 383 | October 2, 2024 6:33 AM |
I wasn’t a minute into this thread before I picked up on Judy’s Stench
by Anonymous | reply 384 | October 2, 2024 11:38 AM |
Has anyone seen Keeping Mum, where Maggie plays a serial killer?
by Anonymous | reply 385 | October 2, 2024 11:44 AM |
No, how wonderfully delicious!
by Anonymous | reply 386 | October 2, 2024 11:55 AM |
Competitive-Oscar winner AND instant-coffee shill! And not afraid of a little caffeine, it would seem!
by Anonymous | reply 387 | October 2, 2024 2:59 PM |
But what about the FLAVAH!!!???
by Anonymous | reply 388 | October 2, 2024 3:04 PM |
Watching Tea with the Dames, I sort of picked up the impression from Maggie that Laurence Olivier was very difficult, but that she couldn't reveal just what kind of impossible prick he was in front of widow Joan P.
by Anonymous | reply 389 | October 2, 2024 9:18 PM |
It's pretty well established that Olivier was threatened by Smith's tremendous talent. I don't think that they worked together again until (of all things) CLASH OF THE TITANS.
by Anonymous | reply 390 | October 3, 2024 1:51 AM |
R390, yes, screenwriter Beverley Cross (Maggie's husband) wrote her rivalry with Olivier into the story in the form of the feud between Thetis & Zeus.
by Anonymous | reply 391 | October 3, 2024 4:34 AM |
[quote]I’m still amazed that anyone can be so inventive in the ways they can demolish you, but she did. She’s a brilliant actress, but she has a history of doing this. I was told by someone that every single job she’s ever done, she’s done it to someone
The BBC repeated There's Nothing Like A Dame this weekend and there's a moment where Smith turns on a photographer who is on the set taking photos. She is vicious towards him. Totally unnecessary.
by Anonymous | reply 392 | October 14, 2024 6:45 PM |
I saw that too, R392 and agree, she was unnecessarily hard on him. The griping on the settee was also unnecessary. She strikes me as a very tricky personality to deal with. Yet it couldn't have been too bad, because she worked to the end.
by Anonymous | reply 393 | October 14, 2024 8:27 PM |
[quote]R392 there's a moment where Smith turns on a photographer who is on the set taking photos. She is vicious towards him. Totally unnecessary.
probably he had rejected her, sexually.
all the big stars are like this.
by Anonymous | reply 394 | October 14, 2024 8:33 PM |
I don't think Richard E. Grant was far off when he said she could sometimes be difficult to work with.
by Anonymous | reply 395 | October 14, 2024 8:40 PM |
She single-handedly destroyed Vivien Leigh’s career, just to revenge herself on Sir Laurence.
Joan Plowright was in a position to help yet said nothing, afraid the voracious Smith would remember it was SHE who was married to Olivier now, not Leigh.
by Anonymous | reply 396 | October 14, 2024 8:50 PM |
What on earth are you talking about, R396? Leigh's career was already drying up in the 60s. Smith would never have been in the position in those days to ruin her career.
by Anonymous | reply 397 | October 14, 2024 10:05 PM |
Lol R396 she didn't work with Olivier until after he'd split with Vivien
by Anonymous | reply 398 | October 14, 2024 10:32 PM |
Vivien Leigh wrecked her own career with her batshit insanity.
by Anonymous | reply 399 | October 14, 2024 10:45 PM |
Oh, it was Maggie, alright. The fact that she was able to cover her tracks so effectively is only further proof of her cunning.
by Anonymous | reply 400 | October 14, 2024 10:47 PM |
I think this is the first time I've ever read that Maggie Smith had anything to do with the downfall of Vivien Leigh's career.
Spill the tea if you have more to share. I'm intrigued.
by Anonymous | reply 401 | October 14, 2024 10:58 PM |
Not just the death of Vivien’s career, but her very death, itself!
by Anonymous | reply 402 | October 14, 2024 11:17 PM |
Short video of Helen Mirren speaking about Maggie's legacy and calling her one of the greatest actresses of the past century:
by Anonymous | reply 403 | October 15, 2024 6:13 AM |