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Daytime is for gamblers, in Vegas and Monte Carlo and Macao, and in a small, nameless Western town. And in the evening we're off to boarding school. If you've never seen A Big Hand For A Little Lady (1966) or Goodbye Mr. Chips (1939), set your DVR. Enjoy!
5:30am -- MGM Parade Show #17 (1955) Cyd Charisse and Ann Miller perform in a clip from "The Kissing Bandit"; George Murphy introduces a clip from "Diane." Hosted by George Murphy. BW-26 mins, TV-G
George Murphy was awarded an honorary Oscar in 1951 for "his services in interpreting the film industry to the country at large".
6:00am -- Private Screenings: Mitchum/Russell (1996) Co-stars and lifelong friends Robert Mitchum and Jane Russell recall their careers with host Robert Osborne. Cast: Robert Osborne, Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell BW-31 mins, TV-G
Mitchum and Russell made two films together, His Kind Of Women (1951) and Macao (1952).
6:45am -- The Las Vegas Story (1952) When newlyweds visit Las Vegas, the wife's shady past comes to the surface. Cast: Jane Russell, Victor Mature, Vincent Price, Hoagy Carmichael Dir: Robert Stevenson BW-88 mins, TV-PG
The night before the Las Vegas premier of "The Las Vegas Story," Jane and her husband, Robert Waterfield, got into a fight in which he slugged her in the face several times. The next morning, Jane's face was swollen and black and blue. RKO executives didn't want to cancel the premier and Jane appeared at the festivities with a severely swollen and bruised face. A story was given to the press that the intense windstorm the night before slammed an open car door into her face. Despite the believable story, a Newsweek magazine blurb hinted at the actual truth.
8:15am -- Meet Me In Las Vegas (1956) A ballerina becomes a gambler's lucky charm. Cast: Dan Dailey, Cyd Charisse, Agnes Moorehead, Lili Daryas Dir: Roy Rowland C-112 mins, TV-G
Nominated for an Oscar for Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture -- George Stoll and Johnny Green
"You Got Looks" (music by Nicholas Brodszky, lyrics by Sammy Cahn), sung by Lena Horne, was cut from the film. Horne made it a staple of her nightclub act for the rest of the decade.
10:15am -- Any Number Can Play (1949) The owner of a gambling casino tries to win back his estranged wife and child. Cast: Clark Gable, Alexis Smith, Wendell Corey, Audrey Totter Dir: Mervyn LeRoy BW-103 mins, TV-PG
There were two different (usually uncredited) character actors named William O'Brien - William H. O'Brien and William J. O'Brien - and they both appear in this film (uncredited) as gamblers.
12:15pm -- All Through The Night (1942) A criminal gang turns patriotic to track down a Nazi spy ring. Cast: Humphrey Bogart, Conrad Veidt, Kaaren Verne, Jane Darwell Dir: Vincent Sherman BW-107 mins, TV-PG
George Raft and Olivia de Havilland were originally assigned to the film in 1941, but Raft turned the role down. As with High Sierra (1941) and The Maltese Falcon (1941), Humphrey Bogart benefited from Raft's refusals.
2:15pm -- The Great Sinner (1949) A young man succumbs to gambling fever. Cast: Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Melvyn Douglas, Walter Huston Dir: Robert Siodmak BW-110 mins, TV-PG
Walter Huston's next to last film.
4:15pm -- Macao (1952) A man on the run in the Far East is mistaken for an undercover cop. Cast: Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell, William Bendix, Thomas Gomez Dir: Josef von Sternberg BW-81 mins, TV-PG
Gloria Grahame did not want to be in this movie; Howard Hughes admitted that he never saw her previous performance opposite Humphrey Bogart in the film In a Lonely Place (1950), which is today unanimously considered among her finest performances. When Grahame asked to be loaned out to make George Stevens's A Place in the Sun (1951), Hughes turned down her request and forced her to make this movie (she reportedly dryly told her then-husband and uncredited director Nicholas Ray, who she was in the process of divorcing, that she wouldn't ask for alimony if he could get her out of this movie). Grahame later stated that she intentionally over-acted out of hatred for Hughes.
5:45pm -- A Big Hand for the Little Lady (1966) A pioneer woman replaces her ailing husband in a poker game after he loses most of their money. Cast: Henry Fonda, Joanne Woodward, Jason Robards Jr., Paul Ford Dir: Fielder Cook C-95 mins, TV-G
This film provides the final screen appearance of comedian Chester Conklin, who had appeared in about 300 movies from 1913.
7:30pm -- Now Playing March (2010) TV-PG
What's On Tonight: TCM PRIME TIME FEATURE: LIFE IN BOARDING SCHOOL
8:00pm -- The Browning Version (1950) On the eve of retirement, a bitter schoolteacher searches for some hope in his life. Cast: Michael Redgrave, Jean Kent, Nigel Patrick, Brian Smith Dir: Anthony Asquith BW-90 mins, TV-PG
Director Anthony Asquith's father was Prime Minister Herbert Henry Asquith, who - as Home Secretary - signed the warrant to arrest Oscar Wilde. It was Wilde's trial and subsequent imprisonment that sent a chill over England's gay and creative community for the next sixty years. When playwright/screenwriter Terrence Rattigan met Asquith for the first time, he recalled being profoundly aware of who the director's father was. Rattigan had the misfortune to come of age as a gay man in the 1930s, when homosexual relationships between consenting males in England was still a prosecutable offense with jail sentences of up to two years at hard labor. Even with a great deal of self-censorship, critics and audiences found the hints of homosexuality in Rattigan's first play ("First Episode") shocking. Any homo-erotic reference in a play's subject material was enough to halt its production by the Lord Chamberlain of England. The best Rattigan could do (until well into the 1960s) was to veil his own sensibilities and create dramas critiquing the heterosexual norms of his day. In Crocker-Harris's after-dinner monologue to Hunter, the reference to "two kinds of love" is as close as the playwright ever comes to naming the love that dare not speak it's name, even in 1951 England.
10:00pm -- Goodbye Mr. Chips (1939) A cold-hearted teacher becomes the school favorite when he's thawed by a beautiful young woman. Cast: Robert Donat, Greer Garson, Terry Kilburn, John Mills Dir: Sam Wood BW-114 mins, TV-PG
Won an Oscar for Best Actor in a Leading Role -- Robert Donat
Nominated for Oscars for Best Actress in a Leading Role -- Greer Garson, Best Director -- Sam Wood, Best Film Editing -- Charles Frend, Best Sound, Recording -- A.W. Watkins (Denham SSD), Best Writing, Screenplay -- Eric Maschwitz, R.C. Sherriff and Claudine West, and Best Picture
34-year-old Robert Donat ages 63 years (1870-1933) over the course of the film. He remarked: "As soon as I put the mustache on, I felt the part, even if I did look like a great Airedale come out of a puddle."
12:00am -- A Yank At Eton (1942) An American playboy is sent to a British boarding school to learn discipline. Cast: Mickey Rooney, Edmund Gwenn, Ian Hunter, Freddie Bartholomew Dir: Norman Taurog BW-88 mins, TV-G
This is a remake of A Yank At Oxford (1938), starring Robert Taylor.
2:00am -- Kitten With a Whip (1964) A delinquent escapes from reform school and holds a politician hostage. Cast: Ann-Margret, John Forsythe, Peter Brown, Patricia Barry Dir: Douglas Heyes BW-83 mins
The Tijuana motel sequence at the end actually takes place in the old Bates Motel set from Psycho on the Universal back lot.
3:30am -- Caged (1950) A young innocent fights to survive the harsh life in a women's prison. Cast: Eleanor Parker, Agnes Moorehead, Ellen Corby, Hope Emerson Dir: John Cromwell BW-97 mins, TV-PG
Nominated for Oscars for Best Actress in a Leading Role -- Eleanor Parker, Best Actress in a Supporting Role -- Hope Emerson, and Best Writing, Story and Screenplay -- Virginia Kellogg and Bernard C. Schoenfeld
In order to do research for the film, Virginia Kellogg pulled some strings to incarcerate herself in a woman's prison. What she wrote once she was out was not so much a screenplay, but a kind of almanac of everything she witnessed while in prison. Warner Bros. then got their screenwriters to make a screenplay out of it.
5:15am -- Short Film: Booked For Safekeeping (1960) In this short documentary, police officers are trained in the assistance and management of mentally ill and confused persons. BW-32 mins, TV-14
Produced in New Orleans by filmmaker George C. Stoney using real New Orleans police officers as actors.
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