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Anne of the Thousand Days

 
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Anne of the Thousand Days

  • Director: Charles Jarrott
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Historical Film
  • Movie Type: Marriage Drama, Period Film
  • Themes: Crowned Heads, Crumbling Marriages, Arranged Marriages
  • Main Cast: Richard Burton, Geneviève Bujold, Irene Papas, Anthony Quayle, John Colicos
  • Release Year: 1969
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 145 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

Anne of the Thousand Days is the belated film adaptation of Maxwell Anderson's 1948 stage play. The story concentrates on the romance between Britain's King Henry VIII (Richard Burton) and his ill-fated second wife Anne Boleyn (Genevieve Bujold). After holding out for marriage rather than an illegitimate union, Anne marries Henry after he sheds himself of Katherine of Aragon -- causing a rift between the Crown and the Church in the process. Anne's inability to produce a male heir leads Henry to look about for other suitable mates. Henry's sinister right-hand man Cromwell (John Colicos) arranges for Anne to be condemned on a charge of adultery. She is beheaded, while Henry disconsolately sits in Windsor Castle, regretting this callous example of political expediency. Richard Burton is ideally cast in Anne of the Thousand Days, but it is Genevieve Bujold who delivers the best, most complex performance in the film. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

In this 1969 historical drama, Genevieve Bujold not only dons the costumes of Anne Boleyn, the doomed second wife of Henry VIII, but also her personal qualities. Bujold is Boleyn, with beauty enough to attract a king and guile enough to win him before she loses her head to the treachery of court politics. Bujold accents her portrayal with just enough tenacity to reveal something of the strong-willed child she would bear, Elizabeth I. Richard Burton ably portrays a ranting Henry obsessed with shedding his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, in order to bed Boleyn and sire a male heir. Director Charles Jarrott's adaptation of the 1948 Maxwell Anderson play of the same name moves at an engrossing pace as it reveals the intrigue and scheming that led to Henry's divorce, his founding of the Church of England, and his eventual rejection of Boley. The rustle and swirl of stunning period robes and gowns seasons the film with authenticity and atmosphere. Anthony Quayle brings appropriate gravitas to his role as the powerful statesman and cleric Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, and John Colicos infuses his character, Thomas Cromwell, with the kind of sly deceit that Cromwell appears to have used in dooming Boleyn. With her austere looks, Irene Papas is well cast as Catherine of Aragon. ~ Mike Cummings, All Movie Guide

Cast

Michael Hordern - Thomas Boleyn; Katherine Blake - Elizabeth Boleyn; Peter Jeffrey - Norfolk; Joseph O'Conor - Fisher; William Squire - Thomas More; Valeiie Gearon - Mary Boleyn; Vernon Dobtcheff - Mendoza; Gary Bond - Mark Smeaton; Terence Wilton - Lord Harry Percy; Denis Quilley - Weston; Esmond Knight - Kingston; T.P. McKenna - Norris; Michael Johnson - George Boleyn; Marne Maitland - Compeggio; Nora Swinburne - Lady Kingston; June C. Ellis - Bess; Cyril Luckham - Prior Houghton; Brook Williams - Brereton; Lesley Paterson - Jane Seymour; Kynaston Reeves - Willoughby; Amanda Jane Smythe - Baby Elizabeth; Nicola Pagett - Princess Mary; Kate Burton - Serving Maid; Liza Todd Burton - Beggar Maid; Elizabeth Taylor - Courtesan

Credit

Richard McWhorter - Associate Producer, Mary Skeaping - Choreography, Margaret Furse - Costume Designer, Simon Relph - First Assistant Director, Charles Jarrott - Director, Richard Marden - Editor, Georges Delerue - Composer (Music Score), Ron Berkeley - Makeup, Tom Smith - Makeup, Paul Wilson - Camera Operator, Maurice Carter - Production Designer, Lionel Couch - Production Designer, Arthur Ibbetson - Cinematographer, Hal B. Wallis - Producer, Peter Howitt - Set Designer, Patrick McLoughlin - Set Designer, John Aldred - Sound/Sound Designer, Richard Sokolove - Screen Story, Bridget Boland - Screenwriter, John Hale - Screenwriter, Maxwell Anderson - Play Author

Similar Movies

Becket; Lady Jane; A Man for All Seasons; The Private Life of Henry VIII; The Six Wives of Henry VIII; Henry VIII and His Six Wives; Mary, Queen of Scots; Queen Margot; Marie Tudor; The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc; Jeanne La Pucelle: Les Prisons
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American Theater Guide: Anne of the Thousand Days
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Anne of the Thousand Days (1948), a verse drama by Maxwell Anderson. [ Shubert Theatre, 288 perf.] Henry VIII (Rex Harrison) is tired of both his wife, Queen Catherine, and his mistress, Mary Boleyn. He lusts after Mary's younger sister, Anne (Joyce Redman), so he decides he will divorce Catherine and marry Anne, even if he must split with the Church of Rome to do so. At first, however, his most stubborn opponent is not the Church, but Anne herself. She would marry Percy, Earl of Northumberland (Robert Duke), so the determined Henry callously forces Percy to marry someone else. Percy dies shortly after the marriage, and though Anne blames Henry for his death, she nevertheless finds herself falling in love with the king. The marriage begins happily enough. Only when Anne gives birth to a daughter does Henry's love sour. Deciding another queen would more likely give him a male heir, Henry confronts Anne with the choice of exile or death. So that her baby, Elizabeth, may someday sit on the English throne, Anne elects to die. When she is dead Henry realizes that his feelings for her still run deep. “It would have been easier,” he muses, “to forget you living than to forget you dead.” Critics were divided about the merits of the blank verse drama produced by the Playwrights' Company, though the majority sided with the Sun, which hailed it as “a robust and vivid play.” That New York's critics liked it at all surprised many, for in tryouts Anne of the Thousand Days had been written off as a hopeless failure.

Wikipedia: Anne of the Thousand Days
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Anne of the Thousand Days

Original movie poster
Directed by Charles Jarrott
Produced by Hal B. Wallis
Written by Bridget Boland
John Hale
Starring Richard Burton
Geneviève Bujold
Anthony Quayle
John Colicos
Irene Papas
Music by Georges Delerue
Cinematography Arthur Ibbetson, BSC
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) United States 18 December 1969
United Kingdom 23 February 1970
Running time 145 min

Anne of the Thousand Days is a 1969 costume drama made by Hal Wallis Productions and distributed by Universal Pictures. It was directed by Charles Jarrott and produced by Hal B. Wallis. The film tells the story of Anne Boleyn. The screenplay is an adaptation by Bridget Boland, John Hale and Richard Sokolove of the 1948 play by Maxwell Anderson; Anderson's blank verse format was retained for only portions of the screenplay, such as Anne's soliloquy in the Tower of London.

The film stars Richard Burton as King Henry VIII and Genevieve Bujold as Anne Boleyn. Irene Papas plays Catherine of Aragon. Others in the cast include Anthony Quayle, John Colicos, Michael Hordern, Katharine Blake, Peter Jeffrey, Joseph O'Conor, William Squire, Vernon Dobtcheff, Denis Quilley, Esmond Knight and T.P. McKenna. Elizabeth Taylor makes a brief, uncredited appearance.

Despite receiving some negative reviews[1] and a mixed, but complimentary review from the New York Times[2], the film was nominated for ten Academy Awards and won the award for best costumes. Genevieve Bujold's portrayal of Anne, her first in an English-speaking film, was, however, very highly praised, even by Time Magazine, which otherwise skewered the movie. [3] According to the Academy Awards exposé Inside Oscar, an expensive advertising campaign was mounted by Universal Studios that included serving champagne and filet mignon to members of the Academy following each screening[4].

Contents

Background and production

The play Anne of the Thousand Days, the film's basis, was first enacted on Broadway in the Shubert Theatre on 8 December 1948; staged by H. C. Potter, with Rex Harrison and Joyce Redman as Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, running 288 performances; Harrison won a Tony Award for his performance.

Cinematically, Anne of the Thousand Days took twenty years to film because its themes — adultery, illegitimacy, incest — were then unacceptable to the U.S. motion picture production code. The film was made in London and Pinewood and Shepperton Studios.

Plot

The film begins in 1527 when Henry VIII (Richard Burton) reveals his dissatisfaction with his wife, Catherine of Aragon (Irene Papas). He is currently enjoying a discreet affair with Mary Boleyn, a daughter of Sir Thomas Boleyn who is one of his courtiers; but the King is bored with her too. At a court ball, he notices Mary's 18-year-old sister Anne (Genevieve Bujold), who has just returned from her education in France. She is engaged to the son of the Earl of Northumberland and they have achieved their parents' permission to marry. The King, however, is enraptured with Anne's beauty and orders his Lord Chancellor, Cardinal Wolsey, to break up the engagement.

When news of this decision is carried to Anne, she reacts furiously. She blames the Cardinal and the King for ruining her happiness. When Henry makes a rather clumsy attempt to seduce her, Anne bluntly informs him that she finds him "spoiled, vengeful and bloody. You make love as you eat — with a great deal of noise and no subtlety."

Henry brings her back to Court with him, whilst she continues to resist his advances out of a mixture of repugnance for Henry and her lingering anger over her broken engagement. However, she becomes intoxicated with the power that the King's love gives her. "Power is as exciting as love," she tells her brother George Boleyn, "and who has more of it than the king?" Using this power, she continually undermines Cardinal Wolsey (Anthony Quayle), who at first sees Anne as just a passing love interest for the King.

When Henry again presses Anne to become his mistress, she repeats that she will never give birth to a child who is illegitimate. Desperate to have a son, Henry suddenly comes up with the idea of marrying Anne in Catherine's place. Anne is stunned, but she agrees. Wolsey begs the King to abandon the idea because of the political consequences of divorcing Catherine. Henry refuses to listen.

When Wolsey fails to persuade the Pope to give Henry his divorce, Anne points out this failing to an enraged Henry. Wolsey is dismissed from office and his magnificent palace in London is given as a present to Anne. In this splendor, Anne realizes that she has finally fallen in love with Henry. They sleep together and, after discovering that she is pregnant, they are secretly married. Anne is given a splendid coronation, but the people jeer at her in disgust as "the king's whore">

Months later, Anne gives birth to a daughter: Princess Elizabeth. Henry is disgusted since he was expecting a boy, and their marriage begins to cool. His attention soon travels to Lady Jane Seymour, one of Anne's maids. Once she discovers this liaison, Anne banishes Jane from court. "She has the face of a simpering sheep," she informs Henry, "and the manners, but not the morals. I don't want her near me."

During a row over Sir Thomas More's opposition to Anne's queenship, Anne refuses to sleep with her husband unless More is put to death. "It's his blood, or else it's my blood and Elizabeth's!" she cries hysterically. More is put to death, but Anne's subsequent pregnancy ends as a result of a stillborn boy.

Henry demands that his new minister, Thomas Cromwell, find a way to get rid of Anne. Cromwell tortures a servant in her household into confessing to adultery with the Queen; he then arrests four other courtiers who are also accused of being Anne's lovers. Anne is taken to the Tower and placed under arrest. When she is told that she has been accused of adultery, she laughs. "I thought you were serious!" she says, before being informed that it is deadly serious. When she sees her brother being brought into the Tower, Anne asks why he has been arrested. "He too is accused of being your lover," mutters her embarrassed uncle. Anne's face shudders with horror before she whispers, "Incest?... Oh God help me, the King is mad. I am doomed."

At Anne's trial, she manages to cross-question Mark Smeaton, the tortured servant who finally admits that the charges against Anne are lies. Henry makes an appearance, before visiting Anne in her chambers that night. He offers her freedom if she will agree to annul their marriage and make their daughter illegitimate. Anne refuses, saying that she would rather die than betray their daughter. Henry slaps her before telling her that her disobedience will mean her death.

A few days later, Anne is taken to the scaffold and beheaded by a French swordsman. Henry rides off to marry Jane Seymour and the film's final shot is of their young daughter, Elizabeth (Amanda Jane Smythe), toddling alone in the garden as she hears the cannon firing to announce her mother's death.

Historical accuracy

  • Historians dispute King Henry VIII's paternity of one or both of Mary Boleyn's children. Henry VIII: The King and His Court, by Alison Weir, questions the paternity of Henry Carey; [5] Dr. G.W. Bernard (The King's Reformation) and Joanna Denny (Anne Boleyn: A New Life of England's Tragic Queen) argue that Henry VIII was their father.
  • Anne Boleyn might not have been eighteen years old in 1527; her birth date is unrecorded.
  • Most histories of the period say nothing about Anne pressurising Henry to have More executed.
  • The meeting between Anne and Henry shortly before her execution is fictional, and even if such a meeting had taken place, some details of their discussion are implausible. Anne's marriage was annulled anyway, and she was never offered a deal which would have given her her freedom. Elizabeth and Mary were both declared illegitimate, but were nevertheless in the line of succession. At that point the chances of Elizabeth inheriting the crown probably seemed rather low.
  • Henry did not intervene in Anne's trial; she was disallowed the right to question the witnesses against her. She and the King met last at a joust the day before her arrest.
  • Anne of the Thousand Days depicts Anne as innocent of the charges; considered historically correct, per the biographies by Eric W. Ives, Retha Warnicke, Joanna Denny, and Tudor historian David Starkey which all state her innocence of adultery, incest, and witchcraft.

Awards

Awards [6]
1970 Oscars Won Best Costume Design (Margaret Furse)
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Actor in a Leading Role - Richard Burton
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Actress in a Leading Role - Genevieve Bujold
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Actor in a Supporting Role - Anthony Quayle
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Art Direction-Set Decoration (Maurice Carter, Lionel Couch, Patrick McLoughlin)
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Cinematography (Arthur Ibbetson)
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Music, Original Score for a Motion Picture (not a Musical) (Georges Delerue)
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Picture - Hal B. Wallis
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Sound - John Aldred
1970 Oscars Nominated Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium (John Hale, Bridget Boland, Richard Sokolove)
1970 Golden Globes Won Best Motion Picture Actress - Drama - Geneviève Bujold
1970 Golden Globes Won Best Motion Picture - Drama
1970 Golden Globes Won Best Director - Motion Picture - Charles Jarrott
1970 Golden Globes Won Best Screenplay - John Hale, Bridget Boland, Richard Sokolove
1970 Golden Globes Nominated Best Motion Picture Actor - Drama - Richard Burton
1970 Golden Globes Nominated Best Supporting Actor - Anthony Quayle
1970 Golden Globes Nominated Best Original Score - Georges Delerue
1971 BAFTA Nominated Best Art Direction - Maurice Carter
1971 BAFTA Nominated Best Costume Design - Margaret Furse

External links

Anne of the Thousand Days at the Internet Movie Database

References

  1. ^ "Anne of the Thousand Days seems to have been made for one person: the Queen of England," Time Magazine
  2. ^ http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?_r=1&res=9907EFDA1F39EF34BC4951DFB766838B669EDE&oref=slogin
  3. ^ http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,878191,00.html
  4. ^ Inside Oscar, Mason Wiley and Damien Boa, Ballantine Books (1986) pg. 434
  5. ^ Weir. Henry VIII: The King and His Court. pp. 216. 
  6. ^ "NY Times: Anne of the Thousand Days". NY Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/2542/Anne-of-the-Thousand-Days/awards. Retrieved 2008-12-27. 

 
 

 

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Anne of the Thousand Days" Read more

 

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