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Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There

  • 2003
  • Unrated
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
8.3/10
506
YOUR RATING
Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There (2003)
DocumentaryHistoryMusic

Interviews and archival footage are used to tell the story of post-war Broadway through the 1960s.Interviews and archival footage are used to tell the story of post-war Broadway through the 1960s.Interviews and archival footage are used to tell the story of post-war Broadway through the 1960s.

  • Director
    • Rick McKay
  • Writer
    • Rick McKay
  • Stars
    • Edie Adams
    • Bea Arthur
    • Elizabeth Ashley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.3/10
    506
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rick McKay
    • Writer
      • Rick McKay
    • Stars
      • Edie Adams
      • Bea Arthur
      • Elizabeth Ashley
    • 37User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 11 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos40

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    Top cast99+

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    Edie Adams
    Edie Adams
    • Self
    Bea Arthur
    Bea Arthur
    • Self
    Elizabeth Ashley
    Elizabeth Ashley
    • Self
    Alec Baldwin
    Alec Baldwin
    • Self
    Kaye Ballard
    Kaye Ballard
    • Self
    Betsy Blair
    Betsy Blair
    • Self
    Tom Bosley
    Tom Bosley
    • Self
    Carol Burnett
    Carol Burnett
    • Self
    Kitty Carlisle
    Kitty Carlisle
    • Self
    • (as Kitty Carlisle Hart)
    Carol Channing
    Carol Channing
    • Self
    Betty Comden
    Betty Comden
    • Self
    Barbara Cook
    Barbara Cook
    • Self
    Carole Cook
    Carole Cook
    • Self
    Hume Cronyn
    Hume Cronyn
    • Self
    Arlene Dahl
    Arlene Dahl
    • Self
    Charles Durning
    Charles Durning
    • Self
    Fred Ebb
    Fred Ebb
    • Self
    Nanette Fabray
    Nanette Fabray
    • Self
    • Director
      • Rick McKay
    • Writer
      • Rick McKay
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    8.3506
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    Featured reviews

    drsd2kill

    HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

    Rick McKay's film is amazing. Instead of following a predetermined script and asking the same old questions to the legends who were luckily still with us at the time they were interviewed, Rick asked the kind of open-ended questions that let us get to know about the performers and their experiences in a far more comprehensive way. I wished the film would never end, and it still feels like it needs an extra hour or two. The bonus features including the commentary track take several hours to get through and are all top notch. If you felt the recent PBS documentary left a lot to be desired - ESPECIALLY in regards to regular plays - then THIS is the film for you!
    vonthurnundtaxis

    DVD is amazing

    I saw this film in New York in June and loved it then and I just saw a press screener of the DVD - it is amazing what the filmmaker has done. In addition to being incredibly entertaining as a film, this is destined to be an invaluable historic reference. There are dozens of interviews with actors giving us a first person account of Broadway's Golden Age by those who were there, creating it.

    The DVD has at leat 30 minutes of interviews with the cast of the upcoming (I hope soon) "Next Generation" including: Betty Buckley, Jason Alexander, Doug Sills, John Barrowman, Cady Huffman and Daisy Eagan. There are also deleted scenes, one has Marian Seldes on Katharine Cornell - I cannot imagine how this was not in the original film. The movie could have been twice as long and still held up. It's also fun to see the alternate ending on the DVD and the red carpet footage of the NY and LA openings. This is not a rental, you will want to own it and watch it when you want to be entertained, or inspired, or moved, or laugh. This film is incredible.
    10Kappie-1

    Deserves a 10!!!

    I don't know if it is possible to comment again about this movie, but I must try! I just noticed that some people voted "1" or "2" for this wonderful work about 100 Broadway legends telling their stories. I can only postulate: 1) The voters have the wrong film, they are thinking of something else with the word "Broadway" in it, or 2) They thought "1" was the best vote that could be given.

    This excellent, exquisite movie deserves a "10"!!!!!

    The subject matter is fascinating, the actors candid and captivating, and the editing puts it all together in a most enjoyable way. What would seem a daunting task turns out beautifully in the hands of accomplished interviewer and filmmaker Rick Mckay.

    10! 10! 10!
    8trpdean

    Very entertaining, often informative,

    This is really an enjoyable film - essentially excerpts from interviews with many of the acting stars (plus Sondheim and Prince) on Broadway from 1945 to 1970.

    It is gently shaped in chapters such as the actors' first feelings on arrival in New York, how they got by, how they learned of available parts, what they liked to do after the show, how Broadway has changed. Many of the interviews contain fascinating and humorous anecdotes - told well by obvious experts at the game.

    To illustrate the interviews, the director has found much rare footage of screen tests, audio or video recordings of the plays, photographs of New York at different periods, playbills, posters that are shown as the audio interview proceeds. He has done a wonderful job.

    About five years ago, I (finally) obtained cable television. When I saw there existed a one hour program called "Inside the Actor's Studio", I thought it would be rather like this film - hour long interviews with everyone from Uta Hagen to Celeste Holm, from Hume Cronyn to Frank Langella. To my surprise, the program instead consists of interviews with those spoken about each evening on "Entertainment Tonight" or "Access Hollywood".

    I do have a question about the title. I am not at all sure that I would call the period 1945-1970 the "golden age" rather than simply the second half of a golden age that began at the end of World War I. Certainly the period 1919-1945 was as extraordinary as the later quarter century. Imagine the earlier quarter century and the premieres in the U.S. of plays and revues from Eugene O'Neill, Jerome Kern, Rodgers & Hart, George M. Cohan, Oscar Hammerstein (I), Flo Ziegfeld, Sidney Howard, George White, George Carroll, Maxwell Anderson, Robert Sherwood, Lawrence Stallings, Marc Connelly, George S. Kaufman, Clifford Odets, Marc Blitzstein, Cole Porter, Sidney Kingsley, Moss Hart.

    I also have the feeling that the period 1919-1945 was a more "international" period on Broadway than the later period. I would guess that productions (often American premieres) were far more common in this period than the later quarter century: of Chekhov and Hauptmann, Schnitzler and Grillparzer, Anouilh and Claudel, Gorky and Sudermann, Hoffmansthal and Shaw, Pinero and Coward and Lonsdale and Strindberg and Ibsen and Cocteau and Genet and Pirandello.

    There's something to be said for the assumption that the New York audience would delight in dramas set far away in different cultures - and that the New York directors, set designers, musicians and actors could well handle them. Imagine the first reactions of an audience in the 1920s, 1930s or 1940s to the first productions of The Weavers or Arms and the Man, Three Sisters or Enemy of the People.

    Moroever, if the director does choose to make a (necessarily different form of) movie about the earlier period - we can learn far more about other legends such as Eva LeGallienne, the Lunts, the Barrymores, Helen Hayes, Katherine Cornell, Ziegfeld, Rose, Belasco, the making of Showboat, etc.

    (Yet of course I understand why the director limited the film to the later period - i) the film is guided by his enthusiasm and he was born after World War II, ii) those from the earlier period are mostly dead - this is primarily an interview program, iii) the audience is more likely to remember later plays and musicals, and iv) the audience is more likely to respond to more recently written and staged plays and musicals).

    I was pleased to see the plaudits to Laurette Taylor. If he were alive and interviewed, the director would have heard Lawrence Olivier echo those in this film, since he has written himself (in either "Confessions of an Actor" or "On Acting") that her performance in The Glass Menagerie was the greatest acting performance he had ever seen. (He also wrote that the best 'Hamlet' he'd ever seen was not by an Englishman, but by John Barrymore on Broadway).
    bschneid76

    Truly Inspirational

    I was fortunate to view this at the NYC premiere. I was in total awe. After shaking hands with Kitty Carlisle Hart and saying Hi to the most recently departed Fay Wray, I was just amazed. It was an experience I will never ever forget. I also saw Miss Celeste Holm, Tommy Tune, Chita Rivera. It was totally wonderful! The film was excellent. I wanted to just sit there for hours and hours listening to what the actors and actresses had to say. Their stories were fascinating. Which is what a Documentary should be. Telling the story about what life was like. Giving the "Inside Scoop" I hope I will be able to see the sequel to it. Anyone who says this film is Amateurish obviously overlooks the fact that this film will be a classic and should receive an Oscar Nomination, if not the Oscar for best Documentary. Anyone guy who can go and interview over a hundred stars, has to be amazing.

    Go and buy this DVD!!!! It is worth every Penny!

    More like this

    Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age
    8.0
    Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Elaine Stritch's collaboration with Rick McKay on this film lead to her one-woman show "Elaine Stritch At Liberty" being filmed for television.
    • Quotes

      Gwen Verdon: Now they tell me that it was The Golden Age of Broadway, but when you're that involved with it, you don't know you're in The Golden Age. And after I left the stage, I immediately started playing everybody's mother in movies!

    • Connections
      Edited from General Foods 25th Anniversary Show: A Salute to Rodgers and Hammerstein (1954)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 23, 2003 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Broadway
    • Filming locations
      • Cork, County Cork, Ireland
    • Production company
      • Second Act Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $353,580
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $16,524
      • Jun 13, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $353,580
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 51m(111 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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