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Saturday, May 26, 2018

CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF 1958 film with Paul Newman and Elizabeth ...
src: c8.alamy.com

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is a 1958 American drama film directed by Richard Brooks. It is based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name by Tennessee Williams adapted by Richard Brooks and James Poe. One of the top-ten box office hits of 1958, the film stars Elizabeth Taylor, Paul Newman, and Burl Ives.


Video Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958 film)



Plot

Late one night, a drunken Brick Pollitt (Paul Newman) is out trying to recapture his glory days of high school sports by leaping hurdles on a track field, dreaming about his moments as a youthful athlete. Unexpectedly, he falls and breaks his leg, leaving him dependent on a crutch. Brick, along with his wife, Maggie "the Cat" (Elizabeth Taylor), are seen the next day visiting his family's estate in eastern Mississippi, there to celebrate Big Daddy's (Burl Ives) 65th birthday.

Depressed, Brick has spent the last few years drinking, while resisting the affections of his wife, who taunts him about the inheritance of Big Daddy's wealth. This has resulted in an obviously tempestuous marriage--there are speculations as to why Maggie does not yet have a child while Brick's brother Gooper (Jack Carson) and his wife Mae (Madeleine Sherwood) have a whole pack of children.

Big Daddy and Big Mama (Judith Anderson) arrive home from the hospital via their private aeroplane and are greeted by Gooper and his wife--and all their kids--along with Maggie. Despite the efforts of Mae, Gooper and their kids to draw his attention to them, Big Daddy has eyes only for Maggie. The news is that Big Daddy is not dying from cancer. However, the doctor later meets privately with first Gooper and then Brick where he divulges that it is a deception. Big Daddy has inoperable cancer and will likely be dead within a year, and the truth is being kept from him. Brick later confides in Maggie with the truth about Big Daddy's health, and she is heartbroken. Maggie wants Brick to take an interest in his father--for both selfish and unselfish reasons, but Brick stubbornly refuses.

As the party winds down for the night, Big Daddy meets with Brick in his room and reveals that he is fed up with his alcoholic son's behavior, demanding to know why he is so stubborn. At one point Maggie joins them and reveals what happened a few years ago on the night Brick's best friend and football teammate Skipper committed suicide. Maggie was jealous of Skipper because he had more of Brick's time, and says that Skip was lost without Brick at his side. She decided to ruin their relationship "by any means necessary", intending to seduce Skipper and put the lie to his loyalty to her husband. However, Maggie ran away without completing the plan. Brick had blamed Maggie for Skipper's death, but actually blames himself for not helping Skipper when he repeatedly phoned Brick in a hysterical state.

After an argument, Brick lets it slip that Big Daddy will die from cancer and that this birthday will be his last. Shaken, Big Daddy retreats to the basement. Meanwhile, Gooper, who is a lawyer, and his wife argue with Big Mama about the family's cotton business and Big Daddy's will. Brick descends into the basement, a labyrinth of antiques and family possessions hidden away. He and Big Daddy confront each other before a large cut-out of Brick in his glory days as an athlete, and ultimately reach a reconciliation of sorts.

The rest of the family begins to crumble under pressure, with Big Mama stepping up as a strong figure. Maggie says that she'd like to give Big Daddy her birthday present: the announcement of her being pregnant. After the jealous Mae calls Maggie a liar, Big Daddy and Brick defend her, even though Brick knows the statement is untrue and Big Daddy thinks the statement may be untrue. Even Gooper finds himself admitting, "That girl's got life in her, alright." Maggie and Brick reconcile, and the two kiss, with the implication that they will possibly make Maggie's "lie" become "truth".


Maps Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958 film)



Cast

  • Elizabeth Taylor as Margaret "Maggie/Maggie the Cat" Pollitt
  • Paul Newman as Brick Pollitt
  • Burl Ives as Harvey "Big Daddy" Pollitt
  • Judith Anderson as Ida "Big Mama" Pollitt
  • Jack Carson as Cooper "Gooper" Pollitt
  • Madeleine Sherwood as Mae Flynn "Sister Woman" Pollitt
  • Larry Gates as Dr. Baugh
  • Vaughn Taylor as Deacon Davis

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof images Cat on a Hot Tin Roof: Playing Cat ...
src: images4.fanpop.com


Production notes

The original stage production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof opened on Broadway March 24, 1955, with Ives and Sherwood in the roles they subsequently played in the movie. Ben Gazzara played Brick in the stage production and rejected the film role as did Elvis Presley. Athlete turned film star Floyd Simmons also tested for the role.

Lana Turner and Grace Kelly were both considered for the part of Maggie before the role went to Taylor.

Production began on March 12, 1958, and by March 19, Taylor had contracted a virus which kept her off the shoot. On March 21, she canceled plans to fly with her husband Mike Todd to New York, where he was to be honored the following day by the New York Friars' Club. The plane crashed, and all passengers, including Todd, were killed. Beset with grief, Taylor remained off the film until April 14, 1958, at which time she returned to the set in a much thinner and weaker condition.


The actress Elizabeth Taylor in a scene from the film
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Music and soundtrack

The music score, "Love Theme from Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," was composed by Charles Wolcott in 1958. He was an accomplished music composer, having worked for Paul Whiteman, Benny Goodman, Rudy Vallee and George Burns and Gracie Allen. From 1934 to 1944, he worked at Walt Disney Studios. In 1950, he transferred to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) Studios where he became the general music director and composed the theme for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. The remaining songs on the soundtrack are composed by a variety of artists such as Andre Previn, Daniel Decatur Emmett and Ludwig van Beethoven.

Song list

  • "Lost in a Summer Night" by André Previn and Milton Raskin
  • "Nice Layout" by André Previn
  • "Love Theme from Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" by Charles Wolcott
  • "Dixie" by Daniel Decatur Emmett, played by the children on various instruments
  • "Skina Marinka", adapted by Marguerite Lamkin, sung by the children
  • "I'll Be a Sunbeam" by E.O. Excell, sung by the children
  • "Boom, Boom and It Makes Me Crazy", adapted by Marguerite Lamkin, sung by the children
  • "Kermit Returns" by André Previn
  • "Fourth Movement, Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67" by Ludwig van Beethoven, played on a radio
  • "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow", traditional, sung by the family
  • "Some Folks" by Stephen Foster, played on a phonograph
  • "Soothe My Lonely Heart" by Jeff Alexander

1958, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof: Film, 1950s | The Red List
src: theredlist.com


Reception

Tennessee Williams was reportedly unhappy with the screenplay, which removed almost all of the homosexual themes and revised the third act section to include a lengthy scene of reconciliation between Brick and Big Daddy. Paul Newman, the film's star, had also stated his disappointment with the adaptation. The Hays Code limited Brick's portrayal of sexual desire for Skipper, and diminished the original play's critique of homophobia and sexism. Williams so disliked the toned-down film adaptation of his play that he told people in the queue, "This movie will set the industry back 50 years. Go home!"

Despite this, the film was highly acclaimed by critics and audiences alike and it received six Oscar nominations for Best Picture, Best Actor (Newman), Best Actress (Taylor), Best Director (Brooks), Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium, and Best Cinematography, Color (William Daniels). Cat may have been too controversial for the Academy voters; the film eventually didn't win any Oscars and the Best Picture award went to Gigi, another Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer production, that year. Ives won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for The Big Country at the same ceremony.


Cat On A Hot Tin Roof
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Box office

According to MGM records the film earned $7,660,000 in the US and Canada and $3,625,000 elsewhere resulting in a profit of $2,428,000.


Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958) - MUBI
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See also

  • List of American films of 1958
  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1984 film)

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Movie Wallpapers
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References


Kaepernick on a Hot Tin Roof? Did self-censorship constrain ...
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External links

  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof on IMDb
  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at AllMovie
  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at the American Film Institute Catalog
  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Box Office Mojo
  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Rotten Tomatoes

Source of article : Wikipedia