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Richard Beymer and Joanne Woodward |
THE STRIPPER (1963). Director: Franklin J. Schaffner. Based on the stage play "A Loss of Roses" by William Inge.
Along with her associates in a traveling magic act, Lila Green (Joanne Woodward) comes to the town where she lived as a child, but then is stranded when her boyfriend, Ricky (Robert Webber), runs off to greener pastures with all of their cash. Lila gets a room with a widow, Helen (Claire Trevor), who was her neighbor years ago, and who has a grown son named Kenny (Richard Beymer). Kenny and Lila develop an undeniable attraction to one another, but considering the age difference -- Woodward was eight years older than Beymer -- and everything else, Lila is afraid of being hurt and lonely once again. Then Ricky comes back into her life with a proposition ...
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Claire Trevor and Richard Beymer |
The Stripper is a lovely and absorbing film with three excellent lead performances. Although never considered a great beauty as such, Woodward [
From the Terrace] has never looked better and she is excellent as Lila. (Marilyn Monroe, who was superb in the film adaptation of Inge's
Bus Stop and was four years older than Woodward, might have been considered for this role had she not died tragically the previous year.) Beymer [
Five Finger Exercise] gives a sensitive and intelligent performance as well, and Trevor [
The Velvet Touch] is as adept as ever. Webber makes a very effective slime ball, and others in the cast include Gypsy Rose Lee and the odd Louis Nye as his associates (neither of them are especially memorable) and Carol Lynley, who makes a nice impression as a neighbor who has a crush on Beymer. Michael J. Pollard brings his own brand of quirkiness as a strange buddy of Kenny's who seems to have a thing for Lila but gets nowhere with her. The film could have used more scenes depicting the growing relationship between Kenny and Lila, but otherwise this is a very good movie.
Verdict: Strong cast and interesting situations add up to a memorable picture. ***1/2.
Can't believe I have never seen this one. Have heard and read about it for years, but now have to seek it out. Woodward is marvelous in everything; my favorite of course is Three Faces of Eve. Beymer was adorable.
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I found this on youtube, I believe, in a not-bad print, and I highly recommended it.
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