Saturday, March 20, 2010

Comparison Photo of the Week, Sharon and Bo Derek, "The Fearless Vampire Killers" online and More

Here is the photo comparsion of the week:

Don't you think that American professional volleyball player, sports announcer, fashion model and actress Gabrielle Reece looks like Sharon in this advertisement?


Sharon and Bo Derek?


From the 1967 movie 'Don't Make Waves' with Tony Curtis. The slowmotion, long blonde hair and gold bikini inspired the movie '10' ten years later with Bo Derek.


Has anyone else heard this.  I can see it in the videos below that they are comparible in the sense that Tony Curtis looks at Sharon much like Dudley Moore looked at Bo.

http://abesauer.com/2010/03/19/heres-sharon-tate-on-a-trampoline/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5y9AX4Yznk
John Derek back in his heydays.

Another thing that Bo and Sharon have in common is that they were both photographed by John Derek (Bo's late husband).

Here is a person who I am in total agreement over Sharon.  He says:
This is a film (The Fearless Vampire Killers) by Roman Polanski. Most film buffs are well aware of his history and the history of his late wife and co-star, Sharon Tate. This upload is meant to illustrate that Art (in this case film art) stands on its own. It is separate from the history and person who creates it. What happened to Sharon Tate was horrible. But, Sharon Tate “is” a beautiful actress, and her performance here is excellent. This celebrates that fact. *now a word for those who watch just to comment on what happened to her. You may not be intelligent enough to realize it. But these comments about her death is an assault not on me (the uploader) but on Sharon Tate. She deserves to be remembered for her life NOT HER DEATH. Those who continuously mention her murderers are just fans( of the Killers), who love the sick horror of what happened to her. *I’m also aware that these comments are coming from a very small group of people here on youtube. (usually the same person on different accounts) I hope this does not distract you too much, or lessen your enjoyment of this wonderful film. Enjoy.


This comes from his site where he has apparently uploaded the film "The Fearless Vampire Killers" :

http://www.hostoke.com/art/the-fearless-vampire-killers-part-1/

Shelley Berman today.

Also, as you know I have been trying to contact people who knew Sharon from time to time.  Sometimes it is hard to say who knew her in the Sixties and who didn't?  She and Roman definitely met a lot of people.  So I asked Shelley Berman, who is a comedian, writer, teacher, and actor who is now 84 if by chance he knew Sharon.  He replied kindly, "I regret I did not know Sharon Tate, except by her talent and her horrible death, in our very neighborhood (Hollywood)."  Thanks to Mr. Berman for mentioning Sharon's talent.  I'll let you know what else I find in the future. 

Friday, March 19, 2010

Photo of the Week, Ebay Items Discussed and Some Great News!

Here is the photo of the week:



Also, here are some very rare Sharon items on ebay for a heads up to fans and collectors:

A rare Italian poster for "Don't Make Waves".

http://cgi.ebay.it/PIANO-PIANO-NON-TAGITARE-CURTIS-CARDINALE-SHARON-TATE_W0QQitemZ190381269248QQcmdZViewItemQQptZFilm_Stranieri?hash=item2c539ba100

 
And Diana Ross and the Supremes met Sharon and Roman? Yes!  There are two photos from the original negatives on ebay now:

The famous trio.

http://cgi.ebay.es/OUTSTANDING-SHARON-TATE-DIANA-ROSS-PHOTO-FROM-NEG-1_W0QQitemZ360244057207QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item53e0381477

And I have been interviewing a couple of people about Sharon and will be thrilled to share what they say when I am done.  Wish me luck because I am trying to contact more who knew her. ;)

I hope everyone has a great weekend.

Human Bondage: Casino Royale


[Apropos of nothing, except maybe that Greg at Cinema Styles mentioned James Bond earlier this week, The Cooler offers the following review, written upon the film’s release in the author’s pre-blog era.]

Casino Royale is the 21st James Bond movie, starring the sixth James Bond: the blond-haired, blue-eyed Daniel Craig. Whether it’s the best Bond movie depends entirely on what you expect from these films. Packed with exhaustive action sequences, yet free of Q’s trademark gadgetry (and free of Q, for that matter), Casino Royale has infused the Bond series with grit and brute force while removing some of the lighthearted shtick in an effort to modernize it for these adrenaline-addicted times.

Trouble is, in ensuring that Bond is tough enough to stand shoulder to shoulder with another popular J.B., 24’s Jack Bauer, he loses a little of his Bondness, at least for those who swear by the Sean Connery years best remembered for the character’s swagger and finesse (Goldfinger, perhaps the most celebrated Bond film, includes an extensive golf sequence, for crying out loud). But since traditional Bond enthusiasts probably will never get over the Connery era, there’s a strong argument to be made for a live-or-let-die effort to capture a new audience before the whole series gets lost in an Octopussy’s garden of tired retreads.

Yet the crucial question remains: without the gadgets, without the babes with sexually suggestive names and without dark hair and dark eyes, can Bond still be Bond? The answer provided by Casino Royale is yes. I think. Because even without the aforementioned trademarks, we still have the tailored suits, and we still have the babes (Eva Green and Caterina Murino) and in Craig we have something far more reminiscent of Connery’s Bond than dark hair and dark eyes: effortless cool.

Craig is a brilliant Bond, his blue eyes piercing the night, his chiseled frame packing a wallop; it’s enough to make this Steve McQueen fan wish that Craig had been tagged for a Bullitt remake. Craig’s initial selection drew controversy, but there’s no question that producers landed the proper man for the job. Pierce Brosnan, the previous Bond, looked and talked the part all too well. He was as plastic as a Ken doll. Craig plays the role like someone with a chip on his shoulder, a “fuck you” to his gait. And for the first time since…since…well, maybe just for the first time, Bond feels kind of like a guy with real human emotions.

Never fear, Bond fanatics, there’s still plenty of disbelief to suspend: punishing fistfights that could have ended in seconds if one of the men used his gun; machinegun-riddled sequences in which Bond dances through the bullets; double-crosses ad nauseam; and a stylish though senseless brawl on a crane that demonstrates 007 doesn’t understand what it means to have someone cornered.

But who cares. The locales are exotic, the chemistry between Craig and Green is steamy and the attitude is pissed off. The pacing is irregular (at 144 minutes it’s overlong and still rushes the final act almost beyond comprehension) but the mood is right. And so finally there’s reason to be optimistic about the Bond series’ future – not because we can’t imagine it getting worse, but because Casino Royale makes Bond worth watching again.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Debra Tate's New Blog, Another Star of the 1960s passes, Sharon as an Avatar? and More on Polanski

Debra Tate has started her own Blog called Tate Foundation.  It has video links, biographies of Sharon, her mother Doris, and sister Patti.  It will have more included in the future and it has a link to The Doris Tate Crime Victims Foundation.  Here is the link:


http://tatefoundation.com/?q=node/8

Another star of the 1960s passed away, Actor Fess Parker.  He is best known as TV's Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone.  He and Sharon are both noted for doing public service announcements for the NRA on the conservation side of that group.  Other stars included: Ed Ames, Walter Brennan, Slim Pickens, and on the lighter side funny accents from Sebastion Cabot and Ricardo Montalban.

I decided to do this fun thing. You can go to this site and make yourself into an avatar just like the ones in James Cameron's film:

http://www.avatarizeyourself.com/
She looks just as beautiful as a blue person ;)

I uploaded Sharon to see what she would look like ;)  Please go to this link and her eyes move but give it a minute to upload...

http://www.avatarizeyourself.com/?mId=35546560.2

If you can't see it let me know and I'll email it to you. :)

Here is Roman discussing "Rosemary's Baby" and his great loss of Sharon:

http://www.amctv.com/videos/smso/?bcpid=353549892&bclid=1740033355&bctid=909829177

New Update on the Polanski case:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/19/movies/19polanski.html

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Article Continued Nouvelle Starlet, 10 Sexiest Redheads for St Patrick's Day, How to get that "Valley of the Dolls" Hair and More

Article from yesterday continued:

Cover of the magazine this article came out of.

Sharon Tate: Nouvelle Starlet by Eve Golden from Films of the Golden Age, Fall 1997

Next came her most famous project.  'Valley of the Dolls' (1967) was based on an enjoyably trashy Jacqueline Susann novel, and more than lived up to its source.  The story of three Hollywood starlets, it has become a classic of unintentional camp comedy.  The most vigorous scenery-chewing was handled by Patty Duke (as a drugged out Judy Garland manque) and Susan Hayward (in a role vacated by a drugged out Judy Garland).  Sharon turned in a surprisingly touching performance as Jennifer North, a sexpot turned "nudie" actress who kills herself on discovering she has breast cancer.

Inside pages.

No one was more surprised than Sharon when she got the role.  "Since the book was a runaway bestseller, I was sure the leading roles would go to big name stars," she said in late 1967. "You know, like Natalie Wood or somebody like that.  But, I was just thrilled to get the role.  I liked Jennifer as I read the book.  I think she is the most sympathetic girl in the group.  She's sweet, unspoiled and unselfish.  She doesn't mean anyone any harm, and yet terrible things keep happening to her."

Sharon could have been describing herself.  Everyone in Hollywood remarked about how "sweet, unspoiled and unselfish" Sharon was, how un-Hollywood.  Roman Polanski himself said, "When I first met Sharon, I expected her to be nothing more than just another beautiful and not to bright American girl.  But she surprised me--she turned out to be rather remarkable.  In a way she was naive.   But she also had this tremendous unaffectedness and sense of decency and loyalty that really impressed people.  She never bad mouthed anyone and was completely free of any of the neurotic ambition which one usually associates with actresses."


Sharon worked hard on 'Valley of the Dolls'.  "I learned a great deal about acting in this film," she told the Sunday News, "particularly in my scenes with Lee Grant...She knows what acting is all about and everything she does, from little mannerisms to delivering her lines, is pure professionalism."  The film was widely panned when it opened, but Sharon got away with less critical fire than most of her co-stars.  Discussing the nudity in this film and her project with Polanski, she told a reporter in 1967 that "if it's important to the story that I appear nude, then by all means, I'll do it."  Speaking of how an inherently shy girl could perform nude for film-goers, she said that "I've made movies and appeared on television but I have never appeared on the stage and I don't know if I ever will.  Live audiences frighten me to death. I'm afraid of the Broadway stage."

She and Polanski were back in London for Christmas '67. They finally married on January 20, 1968, honeymooning in the Swiss Alps.  Sharon had been out for marriage since the two met, though Polanski admitted that "She never asked me, never said a word about it.  So finally I said, 'I'm sure you would like to get married,' and she said she would.  So I said, 'We'll get married then,' and we did.  By that time I wasn't nervous about it at all."


Polanski almost immediately began having affairs, according to his biographers.  They returned to the U. S., where Sharon cooled her heels in California, looking over various offers, while Polanski was in New York filming 'Rosemary's Baby' (1968).  With an eye for future projects together, Sharon and Polanski bought back her contract with Martin Ransohoff and Filmways.

'The Wrecking Crew' (1969) was the fourth (and last) film starring Dean Martin as the James Bond-like Matt Helm.  A pretty dreadful film even by the standards of most groovy spy capers of the time, it benefited from Martin's amiabley laid-back personality and Sharon's superb turn as his klutzy, near-sighted assistant.  While Elke Sommer and Tina Louise filled the sexpot roles, Sharon provided comic relief.  Inexpertly "helping" Martin track down international gold smugglers, Sharon showed real promise as a comedienne, proving to be the most memorable woman in an otherwise unmemorable film.  Only one scene sticks in the mind, and for the wrong reason: Martin passes a bloody corpse and tells Sharon, "that could have been you," to which she replies, "never-never, never, never."


She seemed determined to downplay her eyebatting, clothes-shedding past.  For most of 'The Wrecking Crew', her hair was hidden in a hat, her eyes behind glasses and her figure in a high-buttoned dress.  Only in one scene does she let down her hair, put on a micro-mini and impolitely shake her backside in Martin's (and our) face.  "I don't think I'm a sexpot at all," Sharon said.  "Honestly, I think I'm just normal."  Sharon even pointed out her own flaws to one reporter, including three facial scars.  "I suffered the big scar," she said, "when I fell on a piece of corrugated tin when I was five.  I wouldn't dream of having the scar removed.  I am very proud of it. It's me."  Her ambition she added, was to become "a light comedienne in the Carole Lombard style" (Lombard, whether or not Sharon knew it, also had a facial scar and, of course, both met premature ends).

Sharon discovered she was pregnant in December 1968.  In the spring of 1969, while she still had her girlish figure, she flew to Rome and filmed her last project, the frantic comedy '12 + 1'.  Co-starring with Orson Welles, Vittorio Gassman and Vittorio De Sica, Sharon played Pat, a gold-digging American girl who, with the rest of the cast, winds up chasing an antique chair (supposedly stuffed with a fortune) through Europe. Filmed in Italian and dubbed in English, '12 + 1' bombed when it opened in May, 1970.


Early in 1969, she and Polanski rented 10050 Cielo Drive in Benedict Canyon from agent Rudi Altobelli for $5,000 a month.  It became an open house to Sharon's and Roman's friends. The couple went to London in the early summer of 1969, where she dubbed '12 + 1' and he worked on various projects.  She sailed back in mid-July to await the baby's birth, while Roman, to her dismay, stayed in London.  Friends of Polanski's, Voytech Frokowski and Abigail Folger, were staying over at the Cielo house, and Sharon invited her own ex-boyfriend, Jay Sebring, to keep her company the night of August 8-9.  Nearly everyone in Hollywood later claimed that Sharon had also invited them over as well, but that they'd all happily had other plans.  Sometime that night, Sharon and her houseguests and a passerby were murdered by four followers of cult leader Charles Manson.  Sharon--wearing a Pucci print mini-dress--was buried with her baby son, posthumously named Paul.  Los Angeles was thrown into a panic until the killers were finally arrested and sentenced to death (a fate overturned by the brief abolishment of capital punishment).  Roman Polanski himself suffered further personal setbacks, fleeing from the U. S. in 1977 to avoid charges of statutory rape.

So, that is how Sharon Tate is remembered: the most famous victim of a band of murderous hippies.  The night of the killings is replayed over and over again, while Sharon's promising career (except for the lurid 'Valley of the Dolls') is pretty much forgotten.

To me, here are the top ten redheads (of course, including Sharon ;) of filmdom for St. Patrick's Day:

"Once in his life, every man is entitled to fall madly in love with a gorgeous redhead." -- Lucille Ball

10.  Lindsay Lohan

9.  Nicole Kidman

8.  Isla Fisher

7.  Amy Adams

6. Christina Hendricks (Psst: TV's hottest redhead, 34, is actually *gasp!* a natural blonde. Considering she's been dying her hair since age 10, we thought we'd give her a pass.)



5.  Emma Stone

4.  Rita Hayworth

3.  Ann Margret

2.  Julianne Moore

1. Sharon Tate (So it's actually a wig, no one has ever worn a red wig better than our Sharon :)

I found a magazine that had a way to get that "Valley of the Dolls" updo hairstyle:

Better Homes and Gardens August 2008:

This ad for Pantene reminded me of that updo that Sharon had in "Valley of the Dolls."  I suppose other of the same type of products could work just as well.

Maria Menounos says: "use Volume shampoo and conditioner, then spray Root Lifter on damp sections."

"use Velcro rollers to get that wave."  They look like good, big size rollers too.

"Flip hair, spray, flip back and smooth."  Hope this helps for those of you who want to look like Sharon. ;)

A new interview with Ewan McGregor on Polanski and his own films:

http://www.dailytitan.com/2010/03/mcgregor-on-roles-iconic-director/

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Sharon Tate Article Nouvelle Starlet and Kerstien Matondang's Coppertone Ad

Here is another article from my collection that I hope you enjoy:

From: Films of the Golden Age, Fall 1997

Sharon Tate - Nouvelle Starlet

By Eve Golden

In the late 1960s, she was one of the most promising starlets in Hollywood.  Breathtakingly beautiful, hard-working and genuinely well liked, Sharon Tate had a future easily as bright as other newcomers like Raquel Welch, Faye Dunaway and Candice Bergen.  But a handful of lunatics changed all that, and Sharon became better known as one of the decade's most famous murder victims.  She only made nine films, but Sharon had been on her way to becoming one of the industry's brightest stars as the 1970s dawned.

She was born in Dallas, Texas, on January 24, 1943, the daughter of Major Paul Tate and his wife, Doris.  Already a beauty at six months, she won the Miss Tiny Tot contest.  Sharon and her two younger sisters had adventurous childhoods: their father, working with Army Intelligence, spent much of the 1950s moving his family from Dallas to Tacoma, Houston, El Paso and San Francisco.  In 1959, when Sharon was 16, they moved to Verona, Italy, where she attended high school and quickly became multi-lingual.
 
It was in Italy that she also began mulling over an acting career.  Richard Beymer was making a film near Sharon's school, and introduced the teenager to his agent.  Nothing came of this, but Beymer had put a flea in her ear.  She came back to the U. S. in 1963 and began seriously looking for work.  "I was shy and bashful when I reached Hollywood," she said in 1965.  "I only had enough money to get by and I hitch-hiked a ride on a truck to the office of an agent whose name I had."
 
An audition for the TV series 'Petticoat Junction' didn't pan out, but her test was seen by Martin Ransohoff of Filmways Productions.  Impressed, he put her under a seven-year contract and set out to "develop" her in the old-fashioned Hollywood manner.  Ransohoff sent Sharon to New York's Actor's Studio, and to classes in dancing, singing, body-building and modeling.  "I'm sure the three years I spent in training to be an actress will pay off," Sharon told The New York News in 1966.
 
By that time, she had also gotten her first few jobs.  She can be briefly glimpsed guesting on 'Mr. Ed' and as secretary Janet Trego, Mr. Drysdale's secretary, in a few episodes of 'The Beverly Hillbillies.'  She did commericials, including one for cigarettes which nearly did her in: "The commericial required many takes," Sharon recalled. "Just when they were ready fro the final one, I passed out from taking too many puffs on my first attempt at smoking."
 
Ransohoff helped get her small roles in 'Separate Beds' (1963), 'The Americanization of Emily' (1964), and 'The Sandpiper' (1965), to help her get accustomed to filming.  Her first major role was in the dreadful, pretentious British-made thriller from 1965, 'Eye of the Devil', also known as '13'.  The film starred David Niven and Deborah Kerr as a middle-aged couple living in a chateau.  Sharon was thrilled to be in such company, even in a less than sterling project.  She portrayed Odile, a spooky local girl who wanders about looking creepy and uttering ominous  lines.  No one got much of a chance to act in this film, and it made no real impact on the budding starlet's career.

Sharon Tate was an odd duck in the swinging Hollywood of the mid-1960s.  Strictly brought-up, she was sweet and innocent in a town that was neither.  One actor called her "one of the toughest lays in town.  Strictly a one-man woman."  She reportedly had an unhappy relationship with a French actor for two years, then was briefly engaged to her hairstylist, Jay Sebring. The two broke up, but remained friends.  Then, at a London party in 1966, she met Roman Polanski.
 
The 33-year-old director and actor was already famous for his dark films 'Knife in the Water' (1962), and 'Repulsion' (1965).  He also had quite a reputation: one ex-girlfriend described him as "the quintessential male chauvinist pig.  He treats women like objects, like toys, like his latest pet car.  It can be fun to share his limelight for a while, but ultimately it becomes boring."  Ransohoff loaned Sharon to Polanski for his horror comedy film 'The Fearless Vampire Killers (1967).  Sharon and Polanski became involved, despite their obvious cultural differences.  He himself later said, "It took the longest time for me to get her to go to bed with me.  She was not someone who went easily to bed with a man."  They moved in together in Belgravia, London, and Sharon learned to love London's Swinging '60s scene:  "There are so many talented young people with fantastic, original ideas here," she said in 1967.  "...The Mod Look, the long, straight hair for girls and long hair for boys, mini skirts...it all started here and eventually got to America.  Americans are too inhibited but they are slowly coming around to realizing what a swinging world we live in."  But the fast Polanski crowd was too swinging even for her.  According to Mia Farrow, Sharon experimented with pot and LSD, but never really got into drugs.
 
Sharon's only film with Polanski turned out to be something of a disappointment.  Visually, it was stunning, capturing a vision of 19th century Eastern Europe in the dead of winter.  But the performers were given little to do.  'Vampire Killers' veered between bad sitcom dialogue and gory thrills, and never seemed to quite settle on a style. Sharon, in a red wig, looked beautiful and somewhat detached.  The film did not do well in the U.S., and Polanski tried to help it along by shooting nudes of Sharon for the March 1967 issue of Playboy.  Aside from raising questions of taste, this did nothing.
 
Sharon's first real U. S. exposure came with MGM's big-budget beach comedy 'Don't Make Waves' (1967), starring Tony Curtis.  Sharon had a small but showy role as Malibu, a sky-diving beach bunny whom Curtis steals from her body-building boyfriend.  The film wasn't up to much, but critics noted Sharon's combination of beauty and deadpan humor.  She, however, did not share their enthusiasm.

"It's a terrible movie," she accuarately noted before it had even been released, then admitted that "sometimes I say things I shouldn't.  I guess I'm too outspoken."

To be continued tomorrow...

I don't think Sharon's films were that bad.  At least she showed potential especially in comedic roles.

Her venture into the 'Valley of the Dolls' and more will be discussed in the article tomorrow.

 
I noted Kerstien Matondang's great video site yesterday and today she told me she has added another.  This time it is with Sharon's voice and images doing a Coppertone ad for when she made 'Don't Make Waves.'  Please be sure to comment on it and tell Kerstien what you think?  Here is the link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SLf-HaeuVqo

Monday, March 15, 2010

Polanski's Wife to Appear on TV Show in Poland, Gary Oldman Will Never Appear as Manson for the sake of Sharon's family, and new Art Work for sale on Sharon and More

Emmanelle Seigner will appear on TV Show in Poland:
 
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gKxzlQtDOTP2PKYRVYRgEC2zieWwD9EF27VO0

Polanski's wife says their worst moments are over

WARSAW, Poland — The wife of Roman Polanski says she believes the 32-year-old sexual abuse case against her husband will be finished soon.

French actress and singer Emmanuelle Seigner, 43, is to appear in a TVN24 interview in Poland on Monday and the station ran some clips before its broadcast.

The 76-year-old Polanski was arrested in September on a U.S. arrest warrant and is under house arrest in the couple's house in Gstaad, Switzerland, pending an extradition decision.
 
Seigner says their life is "not ideal" but is "good" because Polanski can see their two children, Morgane and Elvis.

She says she believes the matter will be "solved and over pretty soon" and that the "toughest moments are behind us."

The singer is in Poland to promote a new album.

Hit the link above for more photos of Emanuelle singing.
 
Actor Gary Oldman was recently asked what roles he has turned down through the years and he said:

"Well, I was once asked to play Charles Manson but I wouldn’t do it as courtesy to the Tate family. I was also asked to play Adolf Hitler but neither did I do that."

I wonder if he knows the Tates?  Or just didn't want to do it out of respect for the family?

For the rest of the interview go here:

http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx?articleId=558134&publicationSubCategoryId=70


Here is a Sharon Tate Art Piece for sale online:

http://www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=42041920&ref=sr_gallery_11&&ga_search_query=art&ga_search_type=all&ga_page=&includes%5B%5D=tags

Great Sharon Artist Kerstien Matondang has added some new art of Sharon around her boarder on her You Tube Site:

http://www.youtube.com/user/accedo98#p/a/f/0/IEOLaIHYpos

Be sure to check out her latest video of Actress Romy Schneider (just click on the link above).  I wonder if Romy ever met Sharon?