Showing posts with label The Aristocats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Aristocats. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Every Disney Hero Has a Voice ~ Eva Gabor Duchess & Bianca


Every Disney Hero Has a Voice

The Aristocats

Duchess Shared A Voice with The Rescuers ~ Bianca

Eva Gabor

Duchess & Bianca

February 11th, 1919 – July 4th, 1995

 

Éva Gábor (11 February 1919 – 4 July 1995) was a Hungarian-born American socialite and actress. She was widely known for her role on the 1965 to 1971 television sitcom, Green Acres as Lisa Douglas, the wife of Eddie Albert's character, Oliver Wendell Douglas. She portrayed Duchess in the 1970 Disney film The Aristocats, and Miss Bianca in Disney's The Rescuers and The Rescuers Down Under. Gábor had success as an actress in film, Broadway and television; she was also successful in business, marketing wigs, clothing, and beauty products. Her older sisters, Zsa Zsa Gabor and Magda Gabor, were also American actresses and socialites.

Biography


Early life & career


Born in Budapest of Jewish descent, Gábor was the third and last daughter of Vilmos Gábor (1884–1962), a soldier, and Jolie Gábor (1894–1997), a jeweler. She was the first Gábor sister to emigrate to the United States. She moved with her first husband, a Swedish osteopath, Eric V. Drimmer in 1939, shortly after they married in London. Her first movie role was in the United States, a bit part in Forced Landing at Paramount Pictures. She acted in movies and on the stage throughout the 1950s.

During the 1950s, she appeared in several "A"-movies including The Last Time I Saw Paris, starring Elizabeth Taylor, and Artists and Models, which featured Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. These roles were again bit parts. In 1953 she was given her own television talk show, The Eva Gabor Show. It ran for one season (1953–54).

Throughout the rest of the 1950s and early 1960s, she appeared on television and in movies. She appeared in one episode of the TV series Justice, and was on the game show What's My Line?, as the "mystery challenger". Her film appearances during this era included a remake of My Man Godfrey, Gigi, and It Started with a Kiss.

A 2007 article in the American magazine Vanity Fair called Gábor "a game performer with a wholesome, even cheerful sensuality that can undercut the Continental sophistication that was supposedly her calling card—she can come across like Sally Field doing a party impression of Marlene Dietrich. You can see the effort. She was probably at her best on television in Green Acres, playing a cross between Gracie Allen and herself."

Green Acres


In 1965, Gábor began the role for which she is best-remembered, Lisa Douglas, whose attorney husband (Oliver Wendell Douglas, played by Eddie Albert), decides to leave the city. They buy and run a farm in a rural community, forcing Lisa to leave her beloved New York City, in the Paul Henning situation comedy-sitcom Green Acres, which aired on CBS.

Gábor's role of Lisa was that of a rich, somewhat spoiled, and pampered socialite, who disapproves of farm life. However, she learns to live with it, trying to become a cook and a good housewife, while Oliver runs the farm. Lisa has a great deal of love for her chickens, naming one Henrietta and another Alice. She does not appear in casual clothing, always wearing glamorous, designer frocks around the farm. She does dress more circumspectly, however, when appearing in public with her husband. She constitutes the polite interface with the local "personalities", whose backward ways usually provoke Oliver to anger or petty frustration. Green Acres was located in Hooterville, the same scenery for Petticoat Junction (1963–1970) and would occasionally crossovers with its sister sitcom.

Proving to be a ratings hit, staying in the top twenty for its first four seasons, Green Acres as was its other sister show, The Beverly Hillbillies, was itself cancelled in 1971 owing to the CBS network's "rural purge", an attempt to attract a younger viewer demographic; most viewers of the series were at least 40 years old.

Later years


Gábor did voice-over work for Disney movies, providing the European-accented voices of Duchess in The Aristocats, Miss Bianca in The Rescuers and The Rescuers Down Under, and the Queen of Time in the Sanrio film, Nutcracker Fantasy.

From 1983–84 she reunited with Albert on Broadway as Olga in You Can't Take It with You.

Gabor toured post-Communist Hungary on an episode of Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous after a forty year absence.


Businesses


In 1972, Gábor launched the Eva Gabor fashion collection; the clothes were the work of Luis Estevez, a Cuban-born, Coty-award-winning fashion designer.

Marriages


The three Gábor sisters were known for their numerous marriages. Eva Gábor was married 5 times:

  • Eric Valdemar Drimmer, a Swedish-born masseur turned osteopath and psychologist, whose patients included Greta Garbo and Signe Hasso. They married in London in June 1939 and divorced in Los Angeles, California, on 25 February 1942 (it was finalized on 6 March); Gabor claimed cruelty, saying, "I wanted to have babies and lead a simple family life but my husband objected to my having children". They had no children.
  • Charles Isaacs, an American investment broker. They married on 27 September 1943 and were divorced on 2 April 1949. They had no children.
  • John Elbert Williams, M.D., a plastic surgeon. They married on 8 April 1956 and were divorced on 20 March 1957. They had no children.
  • Richard Brown, a textile manufacturer, who later became a writer and director. They married at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, on 4 October 1959 and were divorced in Santa Monica, California, in June 1973. During this marriage, Gábor was "pistolwhipped" (January 1965) by thieves who took and sold her diamond wedding ring. They had no children.
  • Frank Gard Jameson, Sr., an aerospace executive and former vice president of Rockwell International. They married in the Vivien Webb Chapel of The Webb School of California, in Claremont, California, on 21 September 1973; they were divorced in 1983. By this marriage Gabor became stepmother to four Jameson children.

Gábor also had affairs with Frank Sinatra, Glenn Ford, and Tyrone Power.

Death


Gábor died in Los Angeles on 4 July 1995 due to respiratory failure and pneumonia, following a fall in the bathtub. The fall occurred in Mexico, where she had been on vacation.

Although the youngest of the three sisters, she was the first to die, and she also predeceased her mother. Her mother, Jolie, died on 1 April 1997, and her sister, Magda, died on 6 June 1997. As of 2012, Zsa Zsa Gabor is still living.

Interment


Gábor is interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Westwood, Los Angeles, California. She is buried near Eddie Albert, who died on 26 May 2005 (age 99).

Stage work


Plays
Opening Date
Closing Date
Title
Role
Theatre
24 January 1950
14 July 1951
The Happy Time
Mignonette
Plymouth
26 March 1956
31 March 1956
Little Glass Clock
Gabrielle
John Golden
31 January 1958
8 February 1958
Present Laughter
Joanna Lyppiatt
Belasco
18 March 1963
9 November 1963
Tovarich
Tatiana
Broadway
Majestic
Winter Garden
4 April 1983
1 January 1984
You Can't Take It with You
Olga
Plymouth
Royale

Select filmography


  • Forced Landing (1941)
  • New York Town (1941)
  • Pacific Blackout (1941)
  • Star Spangled Rhythm (1942)
  • A Royal Scandal (1945)
  • The Mad Magician (1954)
  • The Last Time I Saw Paris (1954)
  • Captain Kidd and the Slave Girl (1954)
  • Artists and Models (1955)
  • My Man Godfrey (1957)
  • The Truth About Women (1957)
  • Don't Go Near the Water (1957)
  • Gigi (1958)
  • It Started with a Kiss (1959)
  • A New Kind of Love (1963)
  • Youngblood Hawke (1964)
  • The Aristocats (1970) (voice)
  • The Rescuers (1977) (voice)
  • Nutcracker Fantasy (1979) (voice)
  • The Jetsons Meet the Flintstones (1987) (voice)
  • The Princess Academy (1987)
  • The Rescuers Down Under (1990) (voice)

Television work


  • The Eva Gabor Show (1953–54)
  • Justice (1954–55; 2 episodes: "The Blackmailer", "The Intruder")
  • What's My Line? (17 Nov 1957) Season No. 9, Episode No. 12 (overall episode #389) as Mystery Guest
  • Five Fingers (1959; episode: "Station Break")
  • Harrigan and Son (1960–61), two appearances as "Lillian Lovely"
  • Green Acres (1965–71) as Lisa Douglas
  • Here's Lucy (1968; 1st season, episode No. 7, as "Eva Von Gronyitz")
  • Wake Me When the War Is Over (1969)
  • Match Game (1973–82; recurring panelist)
  • Ellery Queen (1976 episode: "The Adventure of the Blunt Instrument")
  • The Edge of Night (cast member, 1983)
  • Return to Green Acres as Lisa Douglas (1990)
  • The Legend of the Beverly Hillbillies (1993; as herself)




http://en.wikipedia.org


Friday, December 2, 2011

It's film Strip Friday! ~ The Aristocats

It’s Film Strip Friday!

The Aristocats

Release Date December 24th, 1970

 

SYNOPSIS:

          French opera singer Madame Bonfamille's will is read and her greedy Butler Edgar is beside himself upon hearing that she has left ALL her riches to her pedigreed cat Duchess. He catnaps the fluffy feline, taking her out of Paris and into the country where not a meow can be heard. Now it's up to her newfound friends, smart alley cat Thomas O'Malley and Roquefort the mouse to come to the rescue, helping Duchess return home and get what rightfully belongs to her.

FUN FACTS:

       The Aristocats is a 1970 American animated feature produced and released by Walt Disney Productions in 1970 and stars Eva Gabor and Phil Harris, with Roddy Maude-Roxby as Edgar the butler, the villain of the story. The twentieth animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series, the film is based on a story by Tom McGowan and Tom Rowe, and revolves around a family of aristocratic cats, and how an alley cat acquaintance helps them after a butler has kidnapped them to gain his mistress' fortune which was meant to go to them. It was originally released to theaters by Buena Vista Distribution on December 11, 1970. The title is a pun on the word aristocrats.

          The film is noted for being the last film to be approved by Walt Disney himself, as he died in late 1966, before the film was released. It garnered positive reviews and was a box office success. Disney Studios began production of a sequel, The Aristocats II, in December 2005, set to release in 2007, but production was cancelled in early 2006.

Plot


          In Paris, France, in 1910, a mother cat named Duchess and her three kittens, Marie, Berlioz, and Toulouse, live in the mansion of retired opera singer Madame Adelaide Bonfamille, along with her English butler Edgar. She early on settles her will with her lawyer Georges Hautecourt, an aged, eccentric old friend of hers, stating that she wishes for her fortune to be left to her cats, who will retain it until their deaths, upon which her fortune will revert to Edgar. Edgar hears this from his own room and is unwilling to wait for the cats to die naturally before he inherits Madame Adelaide's fortune, and plots to remove the cats from a position of inheritance.

          He sedates the cats by putting sleeping pills into the cats' food and then heads out into the countryside to drown them in a creek. However, two hound dogs, named Napoleon and Lafayette, attack him. Edgar escapes, leaving behind his umbrella, hat, the cats' bed-basket, and the sidecar of his motorcycle. The cats are unharmed, but stranded in the countryside, while Madame Adelaide, Roquefort the mouse, and Frou-Frou the horse discover their absence. In the morning, Duchess meets an alley cat named Thomas O'Malley, who offers to guide her and the kittens to Paris.

          They have a struggle returning to the city, briefly hitchhiking on the back of a milk cart before being chased off by the driver. Marie subsequently falls into a river and is saved by O'Malley. They then meet a pair of English geese, Amelia and Abigail Gabble, who are on a tour of France. The group head off, marching like geese, until they reach Paris and come across the girls' drunken Uncle Waldo. Abigail and Amelia then depart to take Waldo home.

          Travelling across the rooftops of the city, the cats meet Scat Cat and his band, close friends to O'Malley, who perform the song Ev'rybody Wants to Be a Cat. After the band has departed and the kittens lie in bed, O'Malley and Duchess spend the evening on a nearby rooftop and talk, while the kittens listen at a windowsill. The subject of their conversation is the question of whether Duchess may stay and marry Thomas. Eventually, she turns him down, largely out of loyalty to Madame Adelaide. Edgar, meanwhile, retrieves his sidecar, umbrella, and hat from Napoleon and Layafette with some difficulty, knowing that it's the only evidence that could incriminate him.

          The cats make it back to the mansion, whereupon O'Malley departs sadly. Edgar sees Duchess and Kittens coming and captures them, places them in a sack and briefly hides them in an oven. The cats tell Roquefort to pursue O'Malley and get help. He does so, whereupon O'Malley races back to the mansion, ordering Roquefort to find Scat Cat and his gang. Edgar places the cats in a trunk which he plans to send to Timbuktu, Africa. O'Malley, Scat Cat and his gang, and Frou-Frou all fight Edgar, while Roquefort frees Duchess and the kittens. In the end, Edgar is tipped into the trunk, locked inside, and sent to Timbuktu himself.

          Madame Adelaide's will is rewritten to exclude Edgar and include O'Malley. She starts a charity foundation providing a home for all of Paris' stray cats. The grand opening thereof, to which most of the major characters come, features Scat Cat's band, who perform a reprise of Ev'rybody Wants to Be a Cat.

Production


          This film was the last one to be approved by Walt Disney himself, and the first one produced after his death in 1966. The film took four years to produce, at a budget of $4,000,000. Five of Disney's legendary "Nine Old Men" worked on it, including the Disney crew that had been working 25 years on average.

Cast


·         Phil Harris as Thomas O'Malley (full name: Abraham de Lacy Giuseppe Casey Thomas O'Malley the Alley Cat) - The main protagonist. A friendly alley cat who finds Duchess and her kittens stranded in the woods and befriends them, becoming a father figure to the kittens and falling in love with Duchess.

·         Eva Gabor as Duchess the White Cat - Madame Adelaide's cat and mother of three kittens. She is the deuterogamist who falls in love with Thomas and is forced to choose her life at home or a life with Thomas. Robie Lester provided her singing voice.

·         Roddy Maude-Roxby as Edgar - Madame Adelaide's butler and the main antagonist of the film. He hopes to get rid of the cats in order to inherit Adelaide's fortune.

·         Scatman Crothers as Scat Cat - Thomas's best friend and leader of a group of music-loving alley cats. Plays the trumpet.

·         Gary Dubin as Toulouse - the oldest kitten, he aspires to meet a tough alley cat and adores Thomas as a father figure. He acts very tough at times and often gets into Marie's and Berlioz's nerves.

·         Liz English as Marie - the middle kitten. Not only is she very bossy at times, but she also believes that by being female, she is the best of the three kittens. She, like Toulouse, grows to love Thomas like a father.

·         Dean Clark as Berlioz - the youngest kitten. He is somewhat timid and shy. Like Toulouse and Marie, he grows to love Thomas like a father.

·         Sterling Holloway as Roquefort the Mouse - a friend of the cats. He attempts to find them after they are catnapped, but is unsuccessful.

·         Paul Winchell as Shun Gon the Chinese Cat - a member of Scat Cat's gang. Plays the piano and drums that are made out of pots.

·         Lord Tim Hudson as Hit Cat the English Cat - a member of Scat Cat's gang. Plays acoustic guitar.

·         Vito Scotti as Peppo the Italian Cat - a member of Scat Cat's gang. Plays the accordion.

·         Thurl Ravenscroft as Billy Boss the Russian Cat - a member of Scat Cat's gang. Plays cello bass guitar.

·         Pat Buttram as Napoleon the Bloodhound - a farm dog who attacks Edgar when he intrudes in the farm, unknowingly saving the lives of Duchess and her kittens. Napoleon insists, whenever cohort Lafayette makes a suggestion, that he is in charge – then proceeds to adopt Lafayette's suggestion as his own.

·         George Lindsey as Lafayette the Basset Hound - a farm dog and Napoleon's companion. He sometimes proves to be smarter than Napoleon, despite Napoleon staunchly insisting that he is the leader of the farm dogs.

·         Hermione Baddeley as Madame Adelaide Bonfamille - a former opera singer and owner of Duchess and her kittens.

·         Charles Lane as Georges Hautecourt the Lawyer - a senile but lively old man who denies his old age and even refuses to accept Edgar's offer of using the elevator instead of the long staircase, resulting in brief chaos.

·         Nancy Kulp as Frou-Frou the Horse - Roquefort's companion and who plays a part in subduing Edgar. Ruth Buzzi provided her singing voice.

·         Monica Evans as Abigail Gabble - a goose who finds the cats and tries to help them get home.

·         Carole Shelley as Amelia Gabble - Abigail's twin sister.

·         Bill Thompson as Uncle Waldo - the drunk uncle of Amelia and Abigail. (his final role)

·         Peter Renaday - French Milkman the Driver/Le Petit Cafe Cook/Truck Movers (uncredited)

·         Maurice Chevalier - Singer

Release


          The Aristocats was re-released to theaters on December 19, 1980 and April 10, 1987. It was released on VHS in Europe on January 1, 1990. It was first released on VHS in North America in the Masterpiece Collection series on April 24, 1996 and DVD on April 4, 2000 in the Golden Classic Collection line. The Aristocats had its Gold Collection disc quietly discontinued in 2006. A new single-disc Special Edition DVD (previously announced as a 2-Disc set) was released on February 5, 2008.

Reception


          Based on 18 reviews, the film has a 67% rating at Rotten Tomatoes with an average rating of 6/10. While this is rather low for a Disney animated feature, it still classifies it as "fresh". Of the reviews, 12 gave it fresh and only 6 gave it rotten.

          The film was nominated for AFI's 10 top 10 in the "Animation" genre.

Soundtrack


  1. "The Aristocats" – Maurice Chevalier. This title song from the film was written by Robert & Richard Sherman at the end of the eight year tenure working for Walt Disney Productions. Actor and singer Maurice Chevalier came out of retirement to sing this song for the motion picture's soundtrack, convinced by a demo version where Richard Sherman imitated him. (Robert Sherman also stated that Chevalier's recording is Chevalier imitating Richard Sherman imitating Chevalier.) He recorded it in English as well as in French translation ("Naturellement - les Aristocats!"). It would be his last work before his death in 1972.
  2. "Pourquoi?" - A deleted song sung by Hermione Baddeley as Madame Bonfamille, who sings about her love for the cats while harmonizing with a recording of her own voice on a 78-RPM. Marie, voiced by Robie Lester, interrupts the song twice by asking her "Purr-quoi?", to which she replies "Because I am with you." The song, introduced by its writer Richard M. Sherman, is featured among the extras in the 2008 Special Edition DVD.
  3. "Scales and Arpeggios" - Liz English, Gary Dubin, Dean Clark, Robie Lester-
  4. "Thomas O'Malley Cat" – Phil Harris.
  5. "Ev'rybody Wants to Be a Cat" – Phil Harris, Scatman Crothers, Thurl Ravenscroft, Vito Scotti, Paul Winchell. This song is sung by Scatman Crothers as Scat Cat, with all the other members of his polytechnic jazz band. It was also released as a now rare 45 rpm single, in a version sung only by Phil Harris, which lacks the cartoon voices of the common release. The soundtrack CD released in 1996 contains an edited version of the song. The lines sung by "Chinese Cat", voiced by Paul Winchell, now seen as politically incorrect, are removed. However, they are still in the song as featured in the DVD release.
  6. "She Never Felt Alone" - Another deleted song, this number features a reprise of "Pourquoi?" sung by Robie Lester on her own with different lyrics, explaining why Madame loves her and the kittens. Lester's piano-and-voice demo is featured among the DVD extras, within the same section as "Pourquoi?".
  7. "Ev'rybody Wants to Be a Cat (reprise)" - Phil Harris, Scatman Crothers, Thurl Ravenscroft, Vito Scotti, Paul Winchell, Ruth Buzzi, Bill Thompson. A reprise featuring all of the animal characters in the film.

          On Classic Disney: 60 Years of Musical Magic, this includes "Thomas O'Malley Cat" on the purple disc and "Ev'rybody Wants to Be a Cat" on the orange disc. On Disney's Greatest Hits, this includes "Ev'rybody Wants to Be a Cat" on the red disc.

Direct-to-video sequel


          The Aristocats II was supposed to be a direct-to-video sequel to this film. It was scheduled to be released in 2007, but the production was canceled in early 2006 after Disney acquired Pixar and canceled all projects not related to a consumer product line.

International versions


          In Italy the title was translated to Gli Aristogatti. Most of the characters maintained their original names but Thomas O'Malley that was renamed Romeo, Er mejo der Colosseo ("The best of Colosseum" in Romanesco), and changed its origin from Ireland to Italy.




http://en.wikipedia.org





My Christmas book, An Angel Remembers 25 Voices of Christmas is out!!

You can find for all formats at
and for the Nook at
It soon will be up at other sites such as Amazon