Showing posts with label Nancy Reagan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nancy Reagan. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

TV Tuesday: Monarchy - The Royal Family At Work, Episode 1 (2007)

 
Monarchy: The Royal Family At Work - 2007

Welcome to Royal Week on the blog.  This week we'll have posts featuring stories taken from the pages of the royal history books.  To begin things on this TV Tuesday, the first episode of 2007's "Monarchy: The Royal Family At Work" launches us off in true royal fashion.  In this documentary series, Queen Elizabeth II and members of her family are followed by cameras for a year to present a unique look at how the monarchy works and changes with the times.

This particular episode highlights the state visit that Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip made to the United States in 2007.


We start things off at Buckingham Palace, where Her Majesty is running late.  She's due to pose for celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz, and her outfit has caused a delay.

When the Queen is informed that the photographer wants some changes, she curtly replies, "I'm not changing anything.  It was enough to dress up like this, thank you very much."


When Annie Leibovitz asks for alterations to her outfit during the actual sitting, the Queen gives off an unamused look.


Things smooth over, and the photographer and her subject get more at ease as the session goes on.





In Washington D.C., the White House is abuzz with plans for the upcoming state visit from the Queen and Prince Philip.  First Lady Laura Bush talks about some of the preparations and her remembrances of being a guest at Buckingham Palace.

Of course, the big question on everybody's mind is whether or not the president's dog Barney will be able to meet Her Majesty.  (He does.)




Laura Bush takes us on a mini tour of upstairs quarters in the White House.  One of the stops is The Queen's Bedroom, where the Queen stayed as a guest during previous visits to the White House.  Mrs. Bush also points out a mirror that was given by the Queen in 1951.

Back in London, the Queen is busily preparing for her trip to America, and this includes chats with the prime minister as well as hosting a reception for prominent Americans living in London.




On the eve of her departure, the Queen hosts a special dinner for a limited selection of VIPs.  The evening ends with a private tour of The Queen's Gallery with its owner.


The state visit begins and among highlights of the trip is the Kentucky Derby.  The Queen and Prince Philip watch the proceedings with a keen interest.


The official part of the visit commences with a welcome ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House.

An amusing moment comes when President Bush mistakenly says that the Queen had visited the USA in 1776.  The two smile at each other and move on with the ceremony.

Mistakes aside, the visit promises to be hugely successful.  The Queen, Prince Philip, and the Bushes wave to the gathered crowds from the White House balcony.



While the Queen and Prince Philip go on with their program, the White House is readying for the state dinner.  (Here you'll note a place setting for the Countess of Airlie.  Born in New Jersey, USA, as Virginia Fortune Ryan, the countess married Lord Airlie, who was Lord Chamberlain for a time, and eventually became a senior lady of the bedchamber to the Queen.)


At last it's time for the main event: the state dinner.  President and Mrs. Bush await the arrival of the Queen and Prince Philip at the North Portico.


Soon they arrive, and both couples pose for photographs for the gathered members of the press.


The speeches are given and enthusiastic applause rings out when it comes time to toast.  (If you look directly in front of Prince Philip, you'll see a lady wearing a tiara.  This is the Countess of Airlie mentioned earlier.)

The state dinner is also a time for meeting old friends.  Former first lady Nancy Reagan is in attendance, and even gives a short interview.

By the end of the visit, everyone is all smiles, and enormously relieved that everything has gone off alright.

And that's it for The Monarchy: The Royal Family At Work.  The entire series is highly entertaining and enormously informative.  You get a real sense of the duty and dedication that the British royal family brings to their public engagements.  It's very highly recommended.






The DVD includes a lot of unused footage as a bonus feature.  At a return engagement hosted by the Queen at the British Ambassador's Residence in Washington D.C., Her Majesty got to meet some more old friends: President George H.W. Bush and his wife, Barbara.  A very funny moment comes during the Queen's toast, where she references President Bush's earlier "1776" gaff.  "Mr. President, I wondered whether I should start this toast saying, 'When I was here in 1776...'" she begins as laughter erupts from the attendees.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.


Wednesday, May 26, 2021

It's A Big Country: An American Anthology (1951)

 
It's A Big Country: An American Anthology - 1951

Coming up next we have 1951's "It's A Big Country: An American Anthology", a celebration of America featuring the people that make America great.  Ordinary citizens are portrayed in eight episodes which prove that we're all in this together, and a little tolerance and understanding of each other can ensure that there's room enough for all.

The film's cast includes Ethel Barrymore, Keefe Brasselle, Gary Cooper, Nancy Reagan, Van Johnson, Gene Kelly, Janet Leigh, Marjorie Main, Frederic March, George Murphy, William Powell, S.Z. Sakall, Lewis Stone, James Whitmore, Keenan Wynn, Leon Ames, and Louis Calhern.

In the first episode, a professor and another passenger are traveling across the country by train.  The passenger says, "What a country.  Just a great country!  Yes, sir, this is the greatest country in the world.  Sure we got our problems, but we’ll lick ‘em.  Me, I’m just a guy who loves America."  The professor asks, "Which America?" and proceeds to tell the man that America is constantly changing and gives him a few examples to illustrate his point.



In the second episode, Mrs. Riordan of Boston reads in the newspaper that the U.S. Census has just been completed.  She's a bit puzzled, because...she's never been counted.  She wants to be included as she's not sure that she'll live to the next census.

She goes to the newspaper office and asks the managing editor if he can help her.  He's very encouraging and takes down all her information.  Satisfied, Mrs. Riordan returns home.

The newspaperman sends one of his reporters to pose as a census taker.  Mrs. Riordan knows that he's not affiliated with the government and sends him packing, deeply disappointed.



Well, the newspapermen take up Mrs. Riordan's cause.  They telephone Washington and eventually get the White House involved.  An official census taker arrives at Mrs. Riordan's home and makes sure that she gets counted.




The next episode is a salute to African Americans and all the ways they make our country great.  We start out with the military.


We also meet some sports stars, including baseball great Jackie Robinson and track star Jesse Owens.



"The American Empress of Song" Marian Anderson, Ethel Waters, and trumpet great Louis Armstrong are just some of the many faces we know from the entertainment world.


We also meet the 1946 American Mother of the Year, and acknowledge the works of such luminaries as George Washington Carver.



The fourth episode revolves around Hungarian paprika manufacturer Stefan Szabo, who only wants his daughters to marry Hungarians and under no circumstances are they supposed to associate with Greeks.  "For five hundred years, maybe even a thousand, Hungarians are hating Greeks.  Could it be for no reason?" he asks.



Well, his eldest daughter, Rosa, does the unthinkable and falls in love with a Greek.  Icarus Xenophon is the owner of an ice cream parlor.  The two are attracted to each other the moment they lay eyes on one another.  And they secretly get married.


And when Stefan finds out that his daughter is married to a Greek, he's furious and instantly goes for a confrontation.

Then, it's up to Rosa and Icarus to win Stefan over and let him know that a little diversity never hurt anyone.

The next episode features a mother whose son died in the Korean War.  When her son's friend comes to call on her, she's initially happy, but then she puts up a wall when she realizes he's Jewish.

Her son's friend reads a letter that her son wrote.  That letter tears down all the walls this mother has put up.

By the end of their time together, she's very grateful that he came to visit her, and she's wishing that he could spend even more time there.  She promises to write to his mother and let him know what a fine young man she raised.



For the next episode, we journey over to Texas, where Gary Cooper sets us straight about some of the misconceptions surrounding the Lone Star State.  For a man of very few words, Coop is surprising loquacious when it comes to defending the great state of Texas.

He clears up the record on oil wells.  "The way people talk, you’d think the landscape was just one darn oil well after another.  ‘Course, we got a few little old oil wells, but, uh, folks got to fill their cigarette lighters, oil their harness, slick their hair down, little things like that.  But to hear folks talk, you’d think all you had to do to strike oil was to poke your finger in the ground."

"I met an Easterner from Kansas City the other day, and he was talkin’ about the size of our ranches here in Texas.  Said he heard of a fella whose gate was one hundred miles from his front door and was thinkin’ about movin’ back further so he wouldn’t be annoyed by passing vehicles and peddlers.  Now, that’s just plumb loco.  Why, I bet you it’s not over ninety-three miles as the crow flies.  And I know what I’m talkin’ about.  How come folks exaggerate so darn much?  It just burns me up."

And he keeps the good stuff coming.  "You know what?  A travelin’ salesman who’s been all over tarnation told me the prettiest girls he ever did see was raised right here in Texas.  Now that man just don’t know what he’s talkin’ about."

With a wink, he adds, "Down here we pick ‘em for their cookin’, not their lookin’.  Don’t any of ‘em wear anything but Levi’s and plaid shirts.  Why, you wouldn’t even know they was females unless one of ‘em up and told ya."



We visit religious America in the next episode.  A new minister has come to the church that the president frequents when he is in Washington.  The minister uses his platform to tailor his messages directly to the president, seemingly ignoring the rest of the congregants.  The trouble is: after five weeks, the president has yet to attend a service.


He gets an earful of truth when his sexton tells him that it's wrong to preach to just one man and ignore the rest of the congregation.  The messages are going over their heads, and he's not too sure the president would enjoy them either.

The minister gets up at the next opportunity and asks the congregation's forgiveness.  He promises to be available to all, because that is what a good minister should do.  Afterwards, he's approached by a secret service man who tells him that the president slipped in the back door when he began his message and wants to shake his hand.  The president wishes to tell him what a wonderful message he gave.



And finally, our last episode takes us to the schoolroom, where Miss Coleman (played here by future US First Lady Nancy Reagan) is teaching division to her students.


One of her students, the son of an immigrant family, is having trouble at school because of his vision.  When Miss Coleman sends a note home saying the boy needs glasses, his father dismisses her as a meddling busybody.

He goes personally the next day to see Miss Coleman and tells her that the boy won't be getting glasses under any circumstances.

The boy's mother, however, realizes that her son needs the glasses and secretly takes him to get them.  With Miss Coleman, the three of them make a pact not to show the boy's father.

When the boy takes off his glasses and is seriously injured in an accident, the boy's father is made to see just how handicapped his son is without them.


Eventually though, he lets his son know that glasses are okay, and even gets a pair for himself, resulting in smiles all around.




"Yes, it’s a big, wonderful country.  Proud of its past, strong in its present, and confident in its future," says the narrator.  He goes on to say, "America, a land where from each mountainside freedom rings.  America, the beautiful.  America, one nation indivisible.  America, land of the free and home of the brave."

Cast rundown:

I love how the film introduces its cast.  "With the following citizens:".  Well, let's get to them!

Ethel Barrymore - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Ethel Barrymore.....................................Mrs. Riordan

Keefe Brasselle - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Keefe Brasselle.......................................Sgt. Maxie Klein

Gary Cooper - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Gary Cooper...........................................The Texan

Nancy Reagan - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Nancy Reagan........................................Miss Coleman (as Nancy Davis)

Van Johnson - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Van Johnson...........................................Rev. Adam Burch

Gene Kelly - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Gene Kelly.............................................Icarus Xenophon

Janet Leigh - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Janet Leigh............................................Rosa Szabo

Marjorie Main - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Marjorie Main.........................................Mrs. Wrenley

Fredric March - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Fredric March.........................................Joe Esposito

George Murphy - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   George Murphy.......................................Mr. Callaghan

William Powell - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   William Powell........................................Professor

S.Z. Sakall - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   S.Z. Sakall.............................................Stefan Szabo

Lewis Stone - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Lewis Stone...........................................Church Sexton

James Whitmore - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   James Whitmore.....................................Mr. Stacey

Keenan Wynn - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Keenan Wynn.........................................Michael Fischer

Leon Ames - It's A Big Country: An American Anthology
   Leon Ames.............................................Secret Service Man

   Louis Calhern.........................................Narrator (voice only)

And that's it for It's A Big Country: An American Anthology.  I love these kinds of films.  They make you proud to be an American by showing what's best about this country.  Van Johnson is shown in the film with scars on his face.  He received them after a car accident which resulted in him being thrown through the car's windshield.  He usually wore heavy makeup to hide them.  However, in this film, he chose to let them be visible.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.