My current Top 5

My current Top 5

9/15/2013

Best Actress 1949 - The resolution

After having watched and reviewed all five nominated performances, it's time to pick the winner!



What’s on the screen is a strangely peculiar performance that offers occasional moments of grace and love but mostly lacks all of the qualities that would usually be expected from an Oscar-nominated piece of work. Still, Loretta Young’s distinctive screen presence and her ability to radiate warmth and kindness leave a maybe not lasting but often satisfying impression.



                     
Jeanne Crain's performance might be able to carry the movie and give Pinky a distinct personality but her boundaries as an actress are too visible during many scenes even if her own approach to the part managed to overcome any negative consequences. But overall, she lacked too many nuances and too much depth to be truly outstanding.



3. Susan Hayward in My Foolish Heart

Susan Hayward played Eloise with her usual confidence but lacked the youthful fervor and also the opportunities to give more dimension to her role. It’s a mixed performance that is saved in parts by the bookend scenes and her later quiet displays of overwhelming grief and anguish.



2. Deborah Kerr in Edward, my Son

There are various problems in this characterisation and the script it is based on but Deborah Kerr still made the transformation of Evelyn completely believable and gave a moving, occasionally heartbreaking and intriguing performance that maybe could have achieved more but still came to life with haunting reality.




Towering above her competition, Olivia de Havilland not only avoided any failure in this part but actively exceeded her accomplishments by exploring the different aspects and motivations of Catherine Sloper and filling them with logic and reason, delivering an outstanding portrayal of desperation, hope, regret, hate and fear that stands among the finest this category has ever seen.



3 comments:

Michael Patison said...

Do you have any ideas whatsoever on alternate performances for this year. It's just so weak. I personally really, really like A Letter to Three Wives and would nominate all 3 ladies, with Linda Darnell as my supporting win, and Ann Sothern and Jeanne Crain in lead. Crain isn't great by any means in it, but she's better than in her nominated role this year. Hepburn in Adam's Rib seems to be another one, and Ginger Rogers' final role with Fred Astaire in The Barkleys of Broadway might be another, albeit sentimental, option.

Louis Morgan said...

No surprise here, but de Havilland's amazing so there was no need for one.

Allen said...

I'm excited to see de Havilland! I've heard nothing but great things. Not so excited to see the rest of the nominees though...