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Katharine Hepburn (1907–2003)

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Actress Katharine Houghton Hepburn was born in Hartford, Connecticut on November 8, 1907. She attended the Oxford School for Girls and Bryn Mawr College. Hepburn wrote The Making of the African Queen and Me: Stories of My Life. She is one of America's best known actresses, and earned four Academy vis mere Awards. (Bowker Author Biography) vis mindre
Image credit: Studio publicity photograph, ca. 1941, MGM

Værker af Katharine Hepburn

Associated Works

The African Queen [1951 film] (1951) — Actor — 295 eksemplarer
The Philadelphia Story [1940 film] (1940) — Actor — 292 eksemplarer
The Lion in Winter [1968 film] (1968) — Actor — 231 eksemplarer
Bringing Up Baby [1938 film] (1938) 215 eksemplarer
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner [1967 film] (1967) — Actor — 168 eksemplarer
On Golden Pond [1981 film] (1981) — Actor — 162 eksemplarer
Desk Set [1957 film] (1957) — Actor — 130 eksemplarer
Adam's Rib [1949 film] (1949) — Actor — 125 eksemplarer
Rooster Cogburn [1975 film] (1975) 104 eksemplarer
Holiday [1938 film] (1938) — Actor — 98 eksemplarer
Woman of the Year [1942 film] (1942) — Actor — 81 eksemplarer
Suddenly, Last Summer [1959 film] (1959) — Actor — 79 eksemplarer
Little Women [1933 film] (1933) — Actor — 59 eksemplarer
Stage Door [1937 film] (1937) 49 eksemplarer
Summertime [1955 film] (1955) — Actor — 48 eksemplarer
Pat and Mike [1952 film] (1952) — Actor — 46 eksemplarer
Stage Door Canteen [1943 film] (2004) 34 eksemplarer
State of the Union [1948 film] (1948) 24 eksemplarer
Mary of Scotland [1936 film] (1936) — Actor — 23 eksemplarer
Keeper of the Flame [1942 film] (1991) 22 eksemplarer
The Rainmaker [1956 film] (1956) — Actor — 21 eksemplarer
Sylvia Scarlett [1935 film] (1935) 20 eksemplarer
One Christmas [1994 TV movie] (1999) — Actor — 19 eksemplarer
Alice Adams [1935 film] (2003) 18 eksemplarer
Tracy & Hepburn: The Definitive Collection (2011) — Actor — 18 eksemplarer
Love Affair [1994 film] (1994) 16 eksemplarer
The Little Minister [1934 film] (2011) 13 eksemplarer
The Trojan Women [1971 film] (1971) — Actor — 10 eksemplarer
A Bill of Divorcement [1932 film] (1932) 10 eksemplarer
The Corn is Green [1979 TV film] (1979) 9 eksemplarer
Undercurrent [1946 film] (1946) — Actor — 9 eksemplarer
Dragon Seed [1944 film] (2000) — Actor — 8 eksemplarer
Without Love [1945 film] (1946) — Actor — 8 eksemplarer
Christopher Strong [1933 film] (1933) — Actor — 8 eksemplarer
The Sea of Grass [1947 film] (2011) — Actor — 8 eksemplarer
The Glass Menagerie [1973 film] (2003) — Actor — 8 eksemplarer
Classic Comedies Collection (2005) — Actor — 7 eksemplarer
Morning Glory [1933 film] (1933) 6 eksemplarer
MGM: When the Lion Roars [1992 documentary] (1993) — Actor — 6 eksemplarer
Song Of Love [1947 film] (2011) 6 eksemplarer
A Delicate Balance [1973 film] (1973) — Actor — 6 eksemplarer
Quality Street [1937 film] (2011) 6 eksemplarer
Love Among the Ruins [1975 TV movie] (1975) — Actor — 4 eksemplarer
Coco: Original 1970 Broadway Cast Recording — Performer — 4 eksemplarer
Break of Hearts [1934 film] (2011) 4 eksemplarer
Mrs. Delafield Wants to Marry [1986 TV movie] (2005) — Actor — 4 eksemplarer
Olly Olly Oxen Free [1978 Film] (1978) — Actress — 3 eksemplarer
A Woman Rebels [1936 film] (1936) — Cast — 2 eksemplarer
Spitfire [1934 film] (1991) 2 eksemplarer
Stage Door Canteen / Private Buckaroo — Actor — 2 eksemplarer
The Madwoman of Chaillot [1969 film] (2011) — Actor — 2 eksemplarer
Grace Quigley [1984 film] (1985) — Actor — 2 eksemplarer
Traditional European Tales [sound recording] (1986) — Fortæller — 1 eksemplar
The Big Parade of Comedy [1964 film] (2003) — Actor — 1 eksemplar

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One of my favorite small venues for an intimate, unique concert experience is The Kate—short for The Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts Center—in Old Saybrook, Connecticut, a 285-seat theater with outstanding acoustics that hosts multi-genre entertainment in a historic building dating back to 1911 that once served as both theater and Town Hall. In 2013, my wife and I had the great pleasure of seeing Jefferson Airplane alum Marty Balin rock out at The Kate. More recently, we swayed in our seats to the cool Delta blues of Tab Benoit. On each occasion, prior to the show, we explored the photographs and memorabilia on display in the Katharine Hepburn Museum on the lower level, dedicated to the life and achievements of an iconic individual who was certainly one of greatest actors of her generation.
Hepburn was a little girl when she first stayed at her affluent family’s summer home in the tony Fenwick section of Old Saybrook, just a year after the opening of the then newly constructed Town Hall that today bears her name. She later dubbed the area “paradise,” returning frequently over the course of her long life and eventually retiring to her mansion in Fenwick overlooking the water, where she spent her final years until her death at 96 in 2003. The newly restored performing arts center named in her honor opened six years later, with the blessings of the Hepburn family and her estate.
One of the eye-catching attractions in the museum includes an exhibit behind glass showcasing Hepburn’s performance with co-star Humphrey Bogart in the celebrated 1951 film, The African Queen, that features a copy of the 1987 memoir credited to her whimsically entitled The Making of the African Queen: Or How I went to Africa With Bogart, Bacall and Huston and almost lost my mind. I turned to my wife and asked her to add this book to my Christmas list.
Now, full disclosure: I am a huge Bogie fan (my wife less so!). I recently read and reviewed the thick biography Bogart, by A.M. Sperber & Eric Lax, and in the process screened twenty of his films in roughly chronological order. My wife sat in on some of these, including The African Queen, certainly her favorite of the bunch. If I had to pick five of the finest Bogie films of all time, that would certainly make the list. Often denied the recognition that was his due, he won his sole Oscar for his role here. A magnificent performer, in this case Bogart benefited not only from his repeat collaboration with the immensely talented director John Huston, but also by starring opposite the inimitable Kate Hepburn.
For those who are unfamiliar with the film (what planet are you from?), The African Queen, based on the C. S. Forester novel of the same name, is the story of the unlikely alliance and later romantic relationship between the staid, puritanical British missionary and “spinster” (a term suitable to the times) Rose Sayers (Hepburn) and the gin-soaked Canadian Charlie Allnut (Bogart), skipper of the riverboat African Queen, set in German East Africa (present-day Tanzania) at the outbreak of World War I. After aggression by German forces leaves Rose stranded, she is taken onboard by Allnut. In a classic journey motif that brilliantly courts elements of drama, adventure, comedy, and romance, the film follows this mismatched duo as they conspire to arm the African Queen with explosives and pilot it on a mission to torpedo a German gunboat. Those who watch the movie for the first time will be especially struck by the superlative performances of both Bogie and Hepburn, two middle-aged stars who not only complement one another beautifully but turn out an unexpected on-screen chemistry that has the audience emotionally involved, rooting for their romance and their cause. It is a tribute to their mutual talents that the two successfully communicated palpable on-screen passion to audiences of the time who must have been struck by the stark disparity between the movie posters depicting Bogie as a muscular he-man and Hepburn as a kind of Rita Hayworth twin—something neither the scrawny Bogart nor the aging Hepburn live up to in the Technicolor print. But even more so because those same 1951 audiences were well acquainted with the real-life 51-year-old Bogart’s marriage to the beautiful 27-year-old starlet Lauren (real name Betty) Bacall, born of an on-set romance when she was just 19.
Katharine Hepburn had a long career in Hollywood marked by dramatic ebbs and flows. While she was nominated for an Academy Award twelve times and set a record for winning the Best Actress Oscar four times, more than once her star power waned, and at one point she was even widely considered “box office poison.” Her offscreen persona was both unconventional and eccentric. She defied contemporary expectations of how a woman and a movie star should behave: shunning celebrity, sparring with the press, expressing unpopular political opinions, wearing trousers at a time that was unacceptable for ladies, fiercely guarding her privacy, and stubbornly clinging to an independent lifestyle. She was pilloried as boyish, and accused of lesbianism at a time when that was a vicious expletive, but she evolved into a twentieth century cultural icon. Divorced at a young age, she once dated Howard Hughes, but spent nearly three decades in a relationship with the married, alcoholic Spencer Tracy, with whom she costarred in nine films. Rumors of liaisons with other women still linger. Perhaps no other female figure cut a groove in Hollywood as deep as Kate Hepburn did.
Hepburn’s book, The Making of the African Queen, showed up under the tree last Christmas morning—the original hardcover first edition, for that matter—and I basically inhaled it over the next couple of days. It’s an easy read. Hepburn gets the byline but it’s clear pretty early on that the “narrative” is actually comprised of excerpts from interviews she sat for, strung together to give the appearance of a book-length chronicle. But no matter. Those familiar with Kate’s distinctive voice and the cadence of her signature Transatlantic accent will start to hear her pronouncing each syllable of the text in your head as you go along. That quality is comforting. But it is nevertheless plagued by features that should make you crazy: it’s anecdotal, it’s uneven, it’s conversational, it’s meandering, and maddingly it reveals only what Hepburn is willing to share. In short, if this were any other book about any other subject related by any other person, you would grow not only annoyed but fully exasperated. But somehow, unexpectedly, it turns out to be nothing less than a delight!
If The African Queen is a cinema adventure, aspects of the film production were a real-life one. Unusual for its time, bulky Technicolor cameras were transported to on-location shoots in Uganda and Congo, nations today that then were still under colonial rule. The heat was oppressive, and danger seemed to lurk everywhere, but fears of lions and crocodiles were trumped by smaller but fiercer army ants and mosquitoes, a host of water-borne pathogens, as well as an existential horror of leeches. Tough guy Bogie was miserable from start to finish, but Hepburn reveled in the moment, savoring the exotic flora and fauna, and bursting with excitement. Still, almost everyone—including Kate—fell terribly ill at least some of the time with dysentery and a variety of other jungle maladies. At one point Hepburn was vomiting between takes into a bucket placed off-screen. The running joke was that the only two who never got sick were Bogie and director Huston, because they eschewed the local water and only drank Scotch!
Huston went to Africa hoping to “out-Hemingway” Hemingway in big game hunting, but his safari chasing herds of elephants turned into a lone antelope instead. He seemed to do better with Kate. The book does not openly admit to an affair, but the intimacy between them leaps off the page. Hepburn proves affable through every paragraph, although sometimes less than heroic. Readers will wince when upon first arrival in Africa she instantly flies into a fit of rage that has her evict a staff member from an assigned hotel room that to her mind rightly should belong to a VIP of her caliber! And while she is especially kind, almost to a fault, to every African recruited to serve her in various capacities, there is a patronizing tone in her recollections that can’t help but make us a bit uncomfortable today. Still, you cannot detect even a hint of racism. You get the feeling that she genuinely liked people of all stations of life, but could be unrepentantly condescending towards those who did not, like her, walk among the stars. Yet, warts and all—and these are certainly apparent—Kate comes off today, long after her passing, as likeable as she did to those who knew her in her times. And what times those must have been!
This book is pure entertainment, with the added bonus of forty-five wonderful behind-the-scenes photographs that readers may linger upon far longer than the pages of text. For those who loved the film as I do, the candid moments that are captured of Bogie, Hepburn, and Huston are precious relics of classic Hollywood that stir the heart and the soul. If you are a fan, carve out the time and read The Making of the African Queen. But more importantly, screen The African Queen again. Then you will truly know what I mean.

A link to The Kate: The Kate
A link to the The African Queen on IMDB: IMDB: The African Queen
My review of the Bogart bio: Review of: Bogart, by A.M. Sperber & Eric Lax

NOTE: My top five Bogie films: Casablanca, The Maltese Falcon, Treasure of the Sierra Madre, The African Queen, The Caine Mutiny—but there are so many, it’s difficult to choose…

Review of: The Making of the African Queen: Or How I went to Africa With Bogart, Bacall and Huston and almost lost my mind, by Katharine Hepburn – Regarp Book Blog https://regarp.com/2023/08/12/review-of-the-making-of-the-african-queen-or-how-i...
… (mere)
 
Markeret
Garp83 | 14 andre anmeldelser | Aug 12, 2023 |
More than 35 years after making “The African Queen” with Humphrey Bogart, Katherine Hepburn wrote about the experience in “The Making of The African Queen” (1987).

The short book, full of photographs (not movie stills), is loaded with charm. In a few, well-chosen words, Hepburn captures the personalities of those involved in making the movie, including director John Huston and producer Sam Spiegel. Her descriptions are often blunt, but never more so than when writing about herself. She calls herself an "old fusspot" at one point and says she "looked like a very freckled female impersonator."

About Bogart she says, "To put it simply: There was no bunk about Bogie. He was a man." As for Lauren Bacall, who does not appear in the film, Hepburn describes how effective she is working behind the scenes. She regards Huston as a genius despite what often seemed to her a lackadaisical attitude about the movie.

The adventure of making the movie in Africa almost rivals the adventure in the movie itself. At one point the African Queen sinks. Army ants stream through the middle of Hepburn's hut. She gets very sick, as do many others who drink the bottled water. Those who stick with alcohol do fine.

"Technical problems galore and no chairs — no dressings rooms — no toilet — hot ginger ale and fruit juice and beer — the problem of sending out lunch for forty people," she writes. Complete sentences are not a high priority for Hepburn.

Anyone who loves this movie would love this book.
… (mere)
½
 
Markeret
hardlyhardy | 14 andre anmeldelser | May 11, 2023 |
Very interesting. Came to understand a lot about her personality/character--very proud, frank, selfish, but now admits it, so I admire her for that. Has some good insight into Hollywood then and her life, and people she met. Great actress
 
Markeret
JMigotsky | 20 andre anmeldelser | Jan 27, 2023 |
One thing I can say about Katharine Hepburn: she clearly didn't employ a ghost writer for her memoirs. For better or worse, Me: Stories of My Life is written in her voice: brisk, disarming, high-handed, New-England-patrician, with prose that veers off into sentence fragments at times. I have to imagine that some of the incidents she recounts here came across much better when told in person, with voices and body language over the dinner table, than they do in print—the whole section about going with a guy to pick up a car in Italy, told inexplicably in script format, fell very flat. But when Hepburn's style works, it works very well, as when she recounts the circumstances of her beloved older brother's death by suicide, something which clearly hurt and bewildered her so many decades later.

Lavishly illustrated with candid photos and snapshots taken on the sets of Hepburn's films; also includes a Welsh currant cake recipe and the fact that Hepburn's vocabulary included the phrase "tough titty."
… (mere)
½
 
Markeret
siriaeve | 20 andre anmeldelser | Dec 23, 2022 |

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Værker
19
Also by
72
Medlemmer
2,765
Popularitet
#9,276
Vurdering
3.9
Anmeldelser
36
ISBN
65
Sprog
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Udvalgt
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