Thursday, August 14, 2025

Who Should Have Won Best Actress-1941

 

1941 was a big year for “ WTF won” due, mainly, to Citizen Kane not winning in almost every category and I do agree but I am going to talk about Best Actress because this is the year Joan Fontaine won over her sister, Olivia De Havilland. I can’t stand Joan Fontaine. As an actress, she is good, but the actress is a self righteous snot who portrays herself as  someone who always took the high road but she didn’t. I can’t stand say this because I read her autobiography and I just wanted to bitch slap her. I worked with someone like her and she was good at portraying a caring person but they are clearly narcissistic. These 2 sisters are famous for their hatred of one another and their competitive natures came out big time this year. Olivia was the expected winner so it was an upset when Fontaine won and as she made her way to the podium, Olivia stood to congratulate her but Fontaine snubbed her as she headed up to claim her Oscar. Needless to say, you know I won’t be choosing her as the winner, in my book.

1. BARBARA STANWYCK IN BALL OF FIRE


I easily could have gone with Bette Davis for her brilliant performance in “ The Little Foxes” but as I kept thinking about the roles, I felt that Stanwyck’s performance in this film and in “The Lady Eve” were stellar and much more nuanced in her role as a gangster’s moll who holds up in a place where the cops could not find her, a group of old professors except for a bewildered and innocent man, Gary Cooper, who, also, lives there. He went to her club to learn the slang of the day since he is writing a book on slang terms not knowing that she is in with a big mobster. As she stays within those walls, her hard heart begins to soften for the elderly men and she begins to feel something more for Cooper when in comes her Mobster boyfriend. Stanwyck can play a hardened gal but also a softened girl and she makes it believable. She was the best in this film and in “The Lady Eve” which she was equally excellent but wasn’t nominated for that role opposite Henry Fonda. 

2. IRENE DUNNE FOR PENNY SERENADE

Irene Dunne is one of the best actresses to never have won an Oscar and she was nominated many times but, strangely, not for this tear jerker Romance film  co-starring Cary Grant who plays her husband. The 2 meet in Japan, marry and are happy to learn she is pregnant but before you can say, uh-oh, an earthquake hits and she loses the baby. They move back to California and, at the suggestion of their friend, they decide to adopt. There are some humorous moments like when they have no idea how to change a diaper but also some gut wrenching scenes that showcases Grant’s acting ability as much as Dunne’s. She was so good in this film and helped evolve her character into substance creating a melodrama that I really enjoy watching.

3. JOAN FONTAINE IN SUSPICION


Yes, Joan won for her role in Suspicion  directed by Alfred Hitchcock and, don’t get me wrong, she is good as the wife of potential killer, Cary Grant but she didn’t deserve the Oscar as the nervous wife of cad, Cary Grant who can’t seem to hold down any job. In fact, I think Hitchcock should be recognized for his ability to make this actress look good in her role here and in “Rebecca”. Here, she goes against rich daddy and marries schemer, Cary Grant who, annoyingly, calls her monkey face. As time goes on, she believes her husband could be a murderer and becomes more on edge wondering when he will make his strike against her. The film is good despite the ending but, it was the time of the studios who had the last say, so I can forgive their oversight. I love Cary Grant who always delivers and Fontaine was able to capture a very nervous woman who just needs a good bitch slap.

Have you seen these films? Do you agree or would you pick someone different? 

17 comments:

  1. Hi again, Birgit!

    I didn't realize that Joan Fontaine wasn't a particularly nice person, dear friend. Thanks for telling the True Hollywood Story. I have always enjoyed Joan's work as well as that of her sister Olivia.

    I love the cleverly constructed scene in Ball Of Fire (1941) in which Barbara Stanwyck reveals her feelings and comes on to Gary Cooper. The part where she stacks books in order to smooch him is priceless and perfectly executed (after numerous rehearsals, no doubt) as is their fall. Great stuff!

    The manner in which Cary Grant delivered his lines in Penny Serenade has me excited to see it for the first time. I agree with you about Grant. He always delivered, and that scene from Suspicion offers further evidence of it. While I like the underrated Irene Dunne and the acting of Joan Fontaine, it is Barb Stanwyck who won me over for her handling of that challenging scene in Ball Of Fire, especially when she mutters "Too tall" and grabs the books. A great movie moment!

    Please take good care of yourself and my buddy Harley until we meet again, dear friend BB!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yeah, just read her own autobiography and you can tell how insufferable she is. I do like watching her movies and, of course, Olivia’s, but she didn’t deserve the Oscar. Yes, tht Yum, yum scene is a good one. I am usually not one for sappy stories especially with children, but Penny is an exception.

      Delete
  2. I'm afraid I've not seen any of those.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I know…they are older flicks

      Delete
  3. Hi Birgit I thought your tennis champion was magnificent..I watched all her matches and enjoyed them all….one to watch for the future
    So hot again here today melting on the sofa watching the tennis! Xxxx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, she surprised everyone and I don’t watch tennis!

      Delete
  4. Not familiar with these three. I always enjoy the factoids you throw in. Hope today is a healthy day.
    Sandra sandracox.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I’ve had a great week off but I did walk too much yesterday but, that’s ok, it was nice talking with my brother.

      Delete
  5. Hi Birgit,

    Suspicion is a mess of a film, at least for a Hitchcock movie. Joan is fine but while I’m sure he did everything he requested of him Cary Grant is just so woefully miscast he throws the picture off. In a role that needs someone like George Sanders or Basil Rathbone to really work you never feel a bit of menace coming from Cary. Nevertheless, Joan shouldn’t have won here, “Letter from an Unknown Woman” (1948) is where she should have picked up her prize.

    I’m not much of a fan of “Penny Serenade” I’m afraid. The one time I made it through I thought it was cloying beyond belief even though the performances were good. I’m on the fence with Irene Dunne, I’ve seen all her films and she is usually charming and often funny (however I hated her in “I Remember Mama” almost as much as I hated the movie) but as with Fontaine for you I cannot get out of my head Judy Lewis’s description of Irene in her autobiography “Uncommon Knowledge”. Irene was Judy’s mother Loretta Young’s best friend and Judy commented a couple of times that the sparkling humorous woman on the screen bore no resemblance to the frosty, distant sanctimonious person she knew. I always think of that when I see her now and so the “acting” she’s doing always strikes me a bit more.

    Even though my vote would go to Bette Davis for “The Little Foxes” (she slays) of the nominated actresses I wouldn’t have been upset if Barbara Stanwyck had won. She was the most versatile of all the Golden Age megastar actresses because of her ability to relax into her comedic roles in a way that none of the others could. That’s not to say that the others couldn’t play comedy, most could but it was always extremely specific to their personas (except Rosalind Russell but then she was always a bit more studied in her dramatic work) whereas Missy Stanwyck had an easier relatable touch. You would think with three successful films this year (Meet John Doe along with Ball & Lady Eve) it would have gotten her the mojo needed but that where being independent with non-exclusive contracts at a couple of studios bit her. Not being one of any studios permanent stars they would throw their block voting power behind the people under contract with an eye to future earnings and Barbara ended up empty-handed. She’s a delight in “Ball of Fire” though.

    As I said my vote would be for Bette of those competing but in an open field my choice is Ida Lupino in “Ladies in Retirement.” The film is a moody chiller set in the Victorian Era English countryside with Ida a hard article housekeeper/companion who slowly unravels as she becomes desperate to provide for her two mad sisters (Elsa Lanchester & Edith Barrett). She brilliant and had two other big hits that year (“High Sierra” and “The Sea Wolf”) and it STILL wasn’t enough to land her a nomination, which she incredibly never received!!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Now, I have not seen Ida Lupino in this film and must see it now since you feel she deserved the Oscar. I marked the movie down and will see where I can find it to watch for free. Bette was so good in that film and, I believe, she did her own makeup as well or am I wrong? Ask me next week and I might choose her over Barbara.
      Yes, Irene did deserve an Oscar but not for Penny which, strangely, I really like. I am usually hurling my cookies very such melodrama especially when it involves kids, but I like this film…I still dumbfounded myself…lol. I don’t think I would have liked Irene Dunne either because she was religious but religious judgemental like whatsherface. I never had any desire to see I Remember Mamma because it sounds as boring as dirt. I will watch it one day but, not yet. I do believe Dunne has more talent than Loretta had.
      As for Cary Grant, if Hitchcock would have had his way and Grant would have been the killer, I think the whole film would make much more sense but the studio didn’t want their star to be an evil boy so, the film goes awry.

      Delete
  6. I don't think I've seen Penny Serenade, although it looks familiar. I've seen both the Stanwyck films you mentioned. Wasn't the professor one remade a few years later? As a musical? So, instead of slang, the professor was studying contemporary popular music.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You are right, it stars Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo and is called, “A Star Is Born.”

      Delete
  7. I haven't seen any of these so I can't say, but now I need a synopsis of Joan's autobiography lol

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, her book is called “No Bed of Roses”…..self righteous and sanctimonious.

      Delete
  8. I remember reading about the feud between Olivia and Joan and always preferred Olivia, myself. Didn't know Joan was such a bitch, though! Barbara Stanwyck is a favourite. She could act any role well. I've seen the first and third movies, not the second.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I worked with someone for over 7 years who people thought was so nice, but she was controlling, self-righteous, believes she is never wrong, narcissistic..ughhh. When I read Fontaine’s autobiography, it was my co-worker all over but Fontaine is rich and very competitive.
      Penny Serenade is sappy and there is a kid involved which are 2 things that I don’t like but, for some reason, I really enjoy this film.

      Delete
  9. Always thought Olivia was classy, but this story clinches the thought.

    ReplyDelete