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Idols of the Odeons

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This book provides an extensive overview of the British actors who achieved their greatest stardom during the 1950s. This was a transitional period for the British cinema, when the major studios fa...
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  • 20 April 2020
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Idols of the Odeons examines British film stardom in the post-war era, a time when Hollywood movies were increasingly supplanting the Pinewood/Elstree studio system. The book encompasses the careers of sixteen actors, including Stanley Baker, Diana Dors, Norman Wisdom, Hattie Jacques, Peter Finch and Peter Sellers. Such extremely diverse careers provide the opportunity to explore overlooked films, in addition to examining how the term ‘star’ could apply to a stalwart leading man, a Variety comic, a self-created ‘Vamp’ and a character actor. Above all, this is a book that celebrates, with idiosyncratic humour and warmth, how these actors accomplished much of their best work during the transitional period between the Rank/ABPC roster of stars and the US domination of the British film industry.
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Price: £85.00
Pages: 344
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 20 April 2020
ISBN: 9781526147035
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, Film history, theory or criticism, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / 20th Century, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Entertainment & Performing Arts, Individual actors and performers, Films, cinema

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Andrew Roberts is an independent scholar

Introduction
Senior leads: meet the chaps
Jack Hawkins: ‘stand by, number one’
John Mills: ‘do push off, there’s a good chap’
Kenneth More: hawling like a brooligan
Younger leading men
Stanley Baker: the British Brando?
Laurence Harvey: the talented Mr. Skikne
Leading ladies
Sylvia Syms: never your typical ‘nice blonde’
Britain’s bad blonde: the one and only Diana Dors
The comics
Norman Wisdom: ‘Mr. Grimsdale!’
Terry-Thomas and Leslie Phillips: a tale of two cads
Ladies and gentlemen of character
Sidney James: Jo’burg’s favourite cockney
James Robertson Justice: ‘what’s the bleeding time?’
Not to be crossed: Margaret Rutherford
Hattie Jacques: matron and mistress of misrule
The art of screen acting
Peter Finch: the ‘actor’s actor?’
Peter Sellers: ‘there used to be a me but I had him surgically removed’
Conclusion
Index