The Entertainer
July. 25,1960Archie Rice, an old-time British vaudeville performer sinking into final defeat, schemes to stay in show business.
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Reviews
Best movie of this year hands down!
Boring, long, and too preachy.
I was totally surprised at how great this film.You could feel your paranoia rise as the film went on and as you gradually learned the details of the real situation.
The movie really just wants to entertain people.
Laurence Olivier reinvented himself in The Entertainer and set to work with the angry young turks of British theatre and film. A new generation of talent like John Osbourne and Tony Richardson who would had regarded Olivier as yesterday's man as this film introduces Albert Finney and Alan Bates, the next generation of great actors.Legend has it that Olivier initially dismissed the new generation of left wing playwrights that emerged in the 1950s. When Olivier was directing The Prince and the Showgirl, Arthur Miller then married to Marilyn Monroe showed up in London and wanted to see the plays by these young up and coming talent. Olivier accompanied Miller to the theatre and after the show asked Osbourne to write something for him, the result was The Entertainer.Olivier plays washed up music hall comedian Archie Rice. He was never as funny as his father. He has evaded paying his taxes for twenty years, an undischarged bankrupt who has not paid his co-workers and worse of all, he is not making his audience laugh.Set during the time of the Suez crisis, the moment Britain realised they were no longer a world power. Archie's son who is in the army is kidnapped out in Egypt. He is in a loveless marriage with second wife Phoebe and as ever he has a wandering eye and at the moment shacked up with the runner up of the Miss Great Britain contest. Archie hopes her family will bankroll his next production.Archie's family wants him to move to Canada to start a new life in the hotel business, but Archie clings on to that next big break that will never come his way. Like Britain, Archie is decaying and in decline, unable to afford the bills.The film has an outstanding performance from Olivier. Despite the plaudits and the Oscar, Olivier knows he is fighting for his legacy by showing the new generation that he still has what it takes to blow everyone off the screen. The film was shot on location Morecambe and Blackpool, two seaside resorts in Lancashire that were still experiencing the glory days in the early 1960s when this film was made. I used to work near the Winter Gardens in Blackpool in the late 1990s, at which time the resort were experiencing mainly day visitors and some of the old backstreet hotels were now residences for people on social security. At least it was in better shape than Morecambe, an area my work also covered. That was in need of the last rites.
THE ENTERTAINER is another kitchen sink drama based on a play by John Osborne. It's of note thanks to a towering central performance from an against-type and all but unrecognisable Laurence Olivier playing a seedy, sleazy end-of-pier music hall entertainer in the dying days of the industry. Olivier's character is completely horrid but also oddly enthralling; much like a train or car wreck you can't help but watch to see what unfolds.The film is bolstered by the usual effective performances from the supporting cast members, all of whom are naturalistic and engaging in their various parts. The black and white photography brings out the coastal locations quite neatly and the film has an undercurrent of suspense that builds to a fittingly downbeat climax. For a '70s version of the same story, try Reg Varney in THE BEST PAIR OF LEGS IN THE BUSINESS.
So wrote John Osborne in his Note to the First Edition of his play "The Entertainer" published in 1957.It was intended as a metaphor for the decline of this country as both a colonial and world power which was hastened by Eden's ill - judged invasion of the Canal - Zone of Egypt in response to Col.Nasser's closing of the Suez Canal itself. Written in response to Olivier's request for a play to"turn away from a trivial voguish theatre slanted to please the upper middle class" it initially caused Osborne some doubt about casting the theatrical knight in a play where criticism of the Government's handling of the Suez crisis was implicit."It seemed as dangerous as exposing the Royal Family to politics". Archie Rice is a second - rate Music Hall comedian,a "stand - up" in that awful modern phrase.In the years before television became omnivorous a comic could tour the country for decades with what was essentially the same act,a situation that would be familiar to both him and his father who had been a headliner in his day,a position Archie had never and would never occupy. In contrast to the orthodox theatre,Music Hall depended on the flow of action and response across the footlights,the audience forming a symbiotic relationship with the performer rather than passively watching an immutable series of events take place on the stage.In "The Entertainer" this difference is realised by setting Rice's stage performances between sequences involving his family and other events in his "real" life. Osborne was a huge fan of Max Miller although he always denied Rice was based on him."I loved Max because he embodied a kind of theatre I admired most.His method was danger....danger he might go too far". Archie Rice was no Max Miller,he was crude and loud where Miller was querulous and childishly innocent. The possibility that Olivier may once have been a daring actor has probably never occurred to an audience brought up on his mainly underwhelming movie performances from the last 30 or so years. To see him rage against the machine in "The Entertainer" will be a salutary experience,I promise. Rice is a stubborn,prejudiced,bathetic,vain and superficial man He is a would - be serial adulterer,a seducer of impressionable girls and an opportunist.But for all these shortcomings he is a human being. He and his family squabble and fuss and try to ignore the outside world until it forces itself on them when the son is killed at Suez. As Archie Rice he bellows at the Balcony,shouts at his family,schmoozes a beauty contestant to get access to her rich mothers purse strings. It is a bravura show,and one that has come to be recognised as his signature performance away from the Bard. Olivier displays the manic energy of the man "Born in a Trunk" who has known no other life,indeed fears any other kind of life. However,"The Entertainer" is by no means a one - man - show. The Rice Family are played as a true ensemble with the dynamics immediately recognisable to anyone who has shared a home with siblings and parents.The great Roger Livesey has dignity and authority as Archie's father,the former headliner with a reputation in the profession his son can never aspire to.He vainly tries to keep his brood together as everything descends into chaos. There is a brief appearance by Miss Shirley Anne Field,daughter of the great British Music Hall comedian Sid Field,a small irony in itself. Miss Field,a woman of unusual beauty and talent,seemed about to embark on a glittering movie career especially after appearing opposite Steve McQueen in "The War Lover",but it didn't happen.It is one of the many small tragedies of the British Cinema. The late Thora Hird plays her mother,the woman Rice wants to back his show "Rock 'n'Roll Newd Look".She rarely played a totally sympathetic part and it is a tribute to her strength of purpose and sense of self that she became a genuine Brtitish Institution. But the movie is now remembered as Olivier's "The Entertainer" rather than Osborne's,and the image that remains in the mind's eye is Snowdon's iconic photograph of the actor with his little grey bowler,bow tie and crumpled jacket,his face a horror mask of manic laughter.
Archie Rice, the fifty-something vaudeville man at the center of the action, has seen better days. He is relegated to play almost empty houses in a seaside resort of England where he lives with his second wife, Phoebe, his father Billy, and retired vaudevillian, and grown children. Archie has an eye for good looking women, the younger, the better. Archie Rice is a pathetic figure who lives in a world of his own, always scheming about who to involve for one of his new shows, that no one seems to care about.Jean Rice, the young daughter living in London, comes home for a visit and she is horrified when she finds out what his father has turned out to be. Jean sees what Archie is doing to Phoebe when he sees his father kissing a much younger woman in a local restaurant. Archie has been trying to convince her parents about the talents Tina doesn't have, in order to take money from them to produce his new venture, which is only an idea in his wild imagination.Tragedy strikes when young Mick Rice, who we had seen earlier as he goes to fight in the Suez conflict, is first reported being taken prisoner and eventually killed. While Phoebe goes to pieces, Archie keeps doing what he only knows what to do. His final speech to an empty theater, but directed to his daughter Jean, reveals the soul of this troubled man.Tony Richardson made a great impression with his second directorial job. He was attuned to the work of John Osborne, one of England's best playwrights of the fifties and sixties that revolutionized the theater. Mr. Richardson is helped by the crisp black and white cinematography by Oswald Morris, who looks as sharp today as when the film was released.The main reason for watching "The Entertainment" is Laurence Olivier. He completely dominates the action and makes us see how pathetic his Archie Rice is. Mr. Olivier knew this man, having been connected to the theater all his life. No one could have done a better job than him in baring his soul for all of us to see. Laurence Olivier shows a tender side in his scenes with Tina, the young woman who has captured his fancy, and who is so young, she could be his own daughter.The rest of the cast is perfection. Roger Livesey, is seen as Archie's father, Billy Rice, a man that has seen a lot during his lifetime and now lives with a son that he knows is up to no good. Brenda DeBanzie is fine as Phoebe, a woman of a certain age that is losing Archie. Joan Plowright was Jean, the young daughter. Also in minor roles some actors that will go to stardom in their own right, Alan Bates, Albert Finney, and Daniel Massey, who died much too young. "The Entertainer" is a fine film that shows the talents of Laurence Olivier and Tony Richardson.