Golden Age executives would laugh Timothee Chalamet out of the room. An androgynous, gay baiting, devoid of masculinity actor would be unfathomable. You needed looks or talent or both but you needed at least one. Times have certainly changed. Now It seems like pretty much anyone can become famous. Are there any other actors today who probably wouldn’t happen in the old days of Hollywood?
Today’s actors who could never happen in the Golden Age of Hollywood.
by Anonymous | reply 219 | October 16, 2021 3:53 PM |
1930s-40s Timothee Chalamet would have been cast as hotel bellhops or telegram delivery boys.
by Anonymous | reply 1 | October 7, 2021 1:35 PM |
Billy Porter
Laverne Cox
by Anonymous | reply 2 | October 7, 2021 1:48 PM |
Lena Dunham
by Anonymous | reply 3 | October 7, 2021 2:22 PM |
Most non-White actors, OP, would not make it by the narrow standards of the "Golden Age of Hollywood".
by Anonymous | reply 4 | October 7, 2021 2:50 PM |
Ahem.
by Anonymous | reply 5 | October 7, 2021 3:02 PM |
Brie Larson
by Anonymous | reply 6 | October 7, 2021 3:07 PM |
I get that people fetishize the things they associate with themselves but holy hell, you people are utterly insane when it comes to this golden age of hollywood crap. On the rare occasion I've been forced to watch a piece of one of these movies (and I can only stomach pieces), I always come away baffled that anyone looks at those "performances" as acting. No talent. The dialogue revolving around words no one has ever used in that way. Reactions that make absolutely no sense. And above all the absolutely, stunningly blinding utter whiteness of it all.
I tried to watch Guess Who's Coming to Dinner for a class in college and had three reactions: 1) Did Katherine Hepburn have a stroke? 2) Why is Spencer Tracy clearly drunk and no one saying anything? and 3) On what planet would a doctor who is apparently considered one of the best in his field in the entire world give some not-even-a-college-graduate chippy the time of day, let alone go home to her boring, ordinary family and tolerate them going over him as if they're doing him the favor? I'm 40 and I admit I grew up very sheltered (in a Jack and Jill type black family), but watching that load of bs and realizing that that was considered a reasonable plot at all put the spectre of how bad racism truly was. I hate that movie.
Anyway, the golden age of hollywood sucked.
by Anonymous | reply 7 | October 7, 2021 3:19 PM |
Op, the effete, untalented wet rag Leslie Howard was cast as Scarlet O’Hara real love in Gone With The Wind. Maybe you should see more older movies, there are many other examples.
by Anonymous | reply 8 | October 7, 2021 3:26 PM |
Isn't Timothee the modern day Anthony Perkins?
by Anonymous | reply 9 | October 7, 2021 3:33 PM |
LOL
I have to give credit for the inventive ways various trolls who hate specific celebrities have to start stealth threads.
I mean, why be obvious like the Janet troll when you can slip a hate thread in without raising suspicion - I admit I got sucked into this thread thinking it would be interesting.
by Anonymous | reply 10 | October 7, 2021 3:44 PM |
I could see Timothee Chalamet in Farley Granger or Montgomery Clift roles.
by Anonymous | reply 11 | October 7, 2021 3:50 PM |
Timothee still wouldn't have fucked you during the golden age of movies and I assume you were in you early 20s back then OP
by Anonymous | reply 12 | October 7, 2021 3:56 PM |
R2 I disagree about Billy Porter. He would’ve loved shucking and jiving for America. He might’ve even had a bigger career because he would’ve gotten leading man roles, too because no one would’ve known he was gay because he would’ve had to hide it and butch it up.
by Anonymous | reply 13 | October 7, 2021 3:59 PM |
R10 who even uses “LOL” these days?
by Anonymous | reply 14 | October 7, 2021 4:05 PM |
This is the stupidest thread idea for some time.
Of course standards and tastes are different now. OP, do you think Golden Age stars John Hodiak and June Allyson and Sonja Henie would have been headline stars today? Do you think they somehow would deserve to be?
by Anonymous | reply 15 | October 7, 2021 4:07 PM |
[quote] [R10] who even uses “LOL” these days?
You're totally on the wrong forum, hon.
by Anonymous | reply 16 | October 7, 2021 4:08 PM |
r7 is an intellectually torpid pretentious twat.
by Anonymous | reply 17 | October 7, 2021 4:09 PM |
I am, R16.
by Anonymous | reply 18 | October 7, 2021 4:10 PM |
[quote] I could see Timothee Chalamet in Farley Granger or Montgomery Clift roles.
It’s not about his acting, it’s about his physicality. Hollywood didn’t cast skinny cute boy-men as leads back then. The men looked like mature men even if they were young. On the rare occasions you do see someone twinky in an old movie it looks jarring.
by Anonymous | reply 19 | October 7, 2021 4:14 PM |
[quote]Hollywood didn’t cast skinny cute boy-men as leads back then.
No, just fat cute boy-men, like Mickey Rooney.
by Anonymous | reply 20 | October 7, 2021 4:21 PM |
What about Lon McCallister? He was basically a twink.
by Anonymous | reply 21 | October 7, 2021 4:24 PM |
Huge Golden Age box office stars who would not make it today (thank God):
Shirley Temple
Dick Powell
Jeanette MacDonald
Gene Autry
Mickey Rooney
Bob Hope
Esther Williams
Mary Pickford
Rin-Tin-Tin
by Anonymous | reply 22 | October 7, 2021 4:28 PM |
[quote]And above all the absolutely, stunningly blinding utter whiteness of it all.
Bless your little racist socks, R7. Yes, it was all horrid pap, and every last celluloid of it should be burnt. And as for black critics who respect and adore it: those Uncle Toms should be tarred and feathered!
by Anonymous | reply 23 | October 7, 2021 4:33 PM |
G is today's Marjorie Main
by Anonymous | reply 24 | October 7, 2021 4:41 PM |
George Burns) You don't have a date?
Rita Hayworth) It's true, the studio has built me into such a glamour girl, every man thinks my datebook must be full, so I don't get asked out. I tell you it's depressing.
Gracie Allen) Aw, cheer up Rita, maybe that isn't the reason at all. Maybe it's your looks.
by Anonymous | reply 25 | October 7, 2021 4:42 PM |
[quote]And above all the absolutely, stunningly blinding utter whiteness of it all.
And what would you expect? White men invented the technology and created the industry. They created Hollywood.
by Anonymous | reply 26 | October 7, 2021 4:44 PM |
OP, there were plenty of crappy actors in the golden age. I don't even like Timothee but I'd take him over, say, Mickey Rooney any day
This is another "Everything was better in MY day" thread from the eldergays
by Anonymous | reply 27 | October 7, 2021 4:45 PM |
R19, Chalmet doesn't really play traditional leading man roles, though
by Anonymous | reply 28 | October 7, 2021 4:46 PM |
I'm fixated on R7's using Guess Who's Coming to Dinner as an example of the Golden Age of Hollywood.
by Anonymous | reply 29 | October 7, 2021 4:46 PM |
James Dean acting was whiny and he had an anus mouth.
That's no more different than Ratboy Timootay in 2021.
by Anonymous | reply 30 | October 7, 2021 4:47 PM |
^ I truly don't comprehend why James Dean is so much more well known and revered than Montgomery Clift outside of dying while he was young and arguably pretty. The guy was in three movies! Marilyn Monroe, who also gets the deifying treatment, was in over a decade of films.
by Anonymous | reply 31 | October 7, 2021 4:49 PM |
[quote]OP, there were plenty of crappy actors in the golden age. I don't even like Timothee but I'd take him over, say, Mickey Rooney any day
You are so wrong about that.
Micky Rooney was an excellent young actor. Highly regarded. Excellent in dramas (The Human Comedy) and sensational in his musical numbers with Judy Garland.
by Anonymous | reply 32 | October 7, 2021 4:54 PM |
Leslie Howard
Danny Kaye
Van Johnson
Mickey Rooney
What's so Golden about these actors?
by Anonymous | reply 33 | October 7, 2021 4:55 PM |
Chalamet would have had his name changed to something like Timothy Marlowe. The studio would have put him in teenager roles at first, and he would have basically stayed in the juvenile roles until he was pushing 30. At that point he would have segued into Farley Granger types of parts, the studio would have beefed him up a little and given him shoulder pads to make him look less whispy.
Roddy McDowell had Chalamet's body type but he was a much better actor. Well, so was Granger, to be honest.
by Anonymous | reply 34 | October 7, 2021 4:59 PM |
Melissa McCarthy. Don’t recall any fat women in the “Golden Age”.
by Anonymous | reply 35 | October 7, 2021 5:05 PM |
Timothee IS Cornelius in the Planet of the Apes.
by Anonymous | reply 36 | October 7, 2021 5:07 PM |
r35, although pretty much forgotten today, Marie Dressler was one of the biggest stars of the early 30s:
by Anonymous | reply 37 | October 7, 2021 5:09 PM |
Not a Chalamet fan because he can only play himself and he's a narcissist... BUT Rudolph Valentino was said to have a whiff of a "feminine style" and it didn't hurt his career either. And was Charlie Chaplin masculine? I think not.
by Anonymous | reply 38 | October 7, 2021 5:15 PM |
If Jimmy Stewart could be a movie star back then, Chalamet might have succeeded as well. I happen to despise both of them.
by Anonymous | reply 39 | October 7, 2021 5:20 PM |
There were but not a lot, r35. Marie Dressler, Hattie McDaniel, I guess Kate Smith would count. There were character actresses who played small roles, often billed as "fat woman."
There were a few men like Raymond Burr, Sydney Greenstreet, Laird Cregar, and William Conrad.
by Anonymous | reply 40 | October 7, 2021 5:22 PM |
Dwayne Johnson
Lady Gaga
by Anonymous | reply 41 | October 7, 2021 5:44 PM |
[quote]Dwayne Johnson
Mike Mazurki!
[quote]Lady Gaga
She'd be one of those gimmicky character actresses who played exotic characters, like Maria Ouspenskaya.
by Anonymous | reply 42 | October 7, 2021 5:48 PM |
[quote] 1930s-40s Timothee Chalamet would have been cast as hotel bellhops or telegram delivery boys
He would have been hot as a bellhop.
by Anonymous | reply 43 | October 7, 2021 5:49 PM |
Remember in "Radioland Murders" when they had 250-pound, 6-foot-2 Scott Michael Campbell as the bellhop? What a mess. Bellhops are twinks! This is scientific fact!
by Anonymous | reply 44 | October 7, 2021 5:51 PM |
The comparison of Timothee Chalamet to Roddy McDowell is spot-on. Another Golden Age analogue for him would be Tony Perkins.
by Anonymous | reply 45 | October 7, 2021 5:56 PM |
Gracie Allen) You know Marie, Tootsie is at the end of a seven day beauty treatment, afterwich she'll look just like you
Tootsie Sagwell) Then you and I can swap beauty secrets
Marie MacDonald) Let's not swap, I'll just tell you what I know
by Anonymous | reply 46 | October 7, 2021 7:09 PM |
Lady Gaga would have been a telephone operator in several Warner Bros. movies in the early 30s.
by Anonymous | reply 47 | October 7, 2021 7:16 PM |
Chalamet might have had a solid career back in the day, because people forget that men were not expected to be as muscular and beefed up as they are now. The comparisons to Monty Clift, Roddy McDowell, and Tony Perkins are apt.
by Anonymous | reply 48 | October 7, 2021 8:02 PM |
I don't think Ryan Gosling would make it during the Golden Age of Hollywood. He's basically ugly.
by Anonymous | reply 49 | October 7, 2021 8:07 PM |
There were male stars uglier than Ryan Gosling in the Golden Age of Hollywood, like Humphrey Bogart and Edward G. Robinson and George Raft.
by Anonymous | reply 50 | October 7, 2021 8:15 PM |
Jack Palance.
by Anonymous | reply 51 | October 7, 2021 8:21 PM |
Bogart has more presence in his ugly nose than Gosling does in his entire body. It's not so much a question of looks as it is charisma and vibe.
by Anonymous | reply 52 | October 7, 2021 10:00 PM |
R26 don't understand why people don't get this. Hollywood was founded by Jews from Europe, they can cast and hire whoever they damn well please. Don't watch it if you don't like it, in fact it's precisely the reason I can't stand most Hollywood films. But I'm not going to accuse execs of racism over it, I'll just do the logical thing and watch a foreign film or pick up a hobby.
by Anonymous | reply 53 | October 7, 2021 10:31 PM |
Jessica Lange would have been Barbara Stanwick, basically, so she'd fit right in.
Vin Diesel and all those muscle bound superhero actors would not work at all, except for Chris Evans because he's not bulky and he also looks a bit like someone from the golden age of Hollywood.
I might revisit this thread later. As of yet, I'm undecided but the topic is good, OP.
by Anonymous | reply 54 | October 7, 2021 10:39 PM |
R47, actually Lady Gaga would’ve been cast as the manicurist in The Women were not for the fact that the make up was a little expensive.
by Anonymous | reply 55 | October 7, 2021 10:56 PM |
R24
More like Marjorie Main horse in "The Women"
by Anonymous | reply 56 | October 7, 2021 11:57 PM |
R55
You are totally right: Stephanie does look like the EA 5th av. manicurist.
by Anonymous | reply 57 | October 8, 2021 12:01 AM |
[quote] Bogart has more presence in his ugly nose than Gosling does in his entire body. It's not so much a question of looks as it is charisma and vibe.
Fine. But then you're contradicting r49, who implied it was all about looks, and I don't think that's true.
by Anonymous | reply 58 | October 8, 2021 12:03 AM |
Some of you have this strange and inaccurate idea that Golden Age Hollywood was only about perfect faces. It was not: as shown in the posts above, there were indeed several huge stars who were not technically beautiful or who had non-standard body shapes, from Marie Dressler to Wallace Beery to Mickey Rooney to Spencer Tracy to Humphrey Bogart to June Allyson.
The idea that they all had to look like Robert Taylor and Rita Hayworth has been fully and thoroughly disproved, yet some of you for some reason keep arguing as if it were true.
by Anonymous | reply 59 | October 8, 2021 12:09 AM |
[quote]Isn't Timothee the modern day Anthony Perkins?
No, that would be Andrew Garfield. Timothee would've been more of a Richard O'Sullivan type (the actor who played Liz Taylor's little brother in 'Cleopatra')
by Anonymous | reply 60 | October 8, 2021 12:10 AM |
I watch my old movies and cringe at what a bad actress I was. I guess back then it was all about the glamour
by Anonymous | reply 61 | October 8, 2021 1:21 AM |
As older than dirt some of us DLers are even we weren't going to the movies during the Golden age of Hollywood. We hadn't been born yet. Strange but true.
by Anonymous | reply 62 | October 8, 2021 1:31 AM |
I could see Farley Granger IN Timothee.
But not in one of Granger's roles.
by Anonymous | reply 63 | October 8, 2021 1:40 AM |
Farley was a top?
by Anonymous | reply 64 | October 8, 2021 1:42 AM |
R28, what are traditional leading roles nowadays, do they exist??
by Anonymous | reply 65 | October 8, 2021 9:30 AM |
Denzel Washington & Viola Davis.
Though Octavia Spencer would have snapped up a lot of Hattie McDaniel's parts.
by Anonymous | reply 66 | October 8, 2021 9:57 AM |
Now the top movies are largely just banal superhero stuff. The state of the movie industry is depressing. Plus, actors lack class and that elusive quality they had in the era before social media made everyone a narcissistic bore.
by Anonymous | reply 67 | October 8, 2021 10:21 AM |
R67 We agree.
by Anonymous | reply 68 | October 8, 2021 10:50 AM |
[quote]Hollywood was founded by Jews from Europe...in fact it's precisely the reason I can't stand most Hollywood films.
Huh.
by Anonymous | reply 69 | October 8, 2021 12:16 PM |
Perkins and McDowell were cute/hot...Timotee is not.
by Anonymous | reply 70 | October 8, 2021 3:22 PM |
You're just blind, r70.
by Anonymous | reply 71 | October 8, 2021 3:27 PM |
R26, r23, it may be true, but that doesn’t make it right.
by Anonymous | reply 72 | October 8, 2021 3:39 PM |
R69 what I meant to say was that the white men casting nothing but white men in all racial roles is why I can't stand most old Hollywood films. Obviously modern films are different but it takes me out of a film when an Italian is playing a native American or Mikey Rooney is playing a Japanese man. I have nothing against Jewish men producing directing and casting films.
by Anonymous | reply 73 | October 8, 2021 5:14 PM |
I can totally see Tyler Hoechlin in a Golden Age movie - a pretty boy like Robert Taylor.
by Anonymous | reply 74 | October 8, 2021 5:16 PM |
I think some actors like Chris Pine and James Marsden might have been even more successful in the "golden age." The studios would have known what to do with them. They can sing a little, so they'd stick them in more musicals.
by Anonymous | reply 75 | October 8, 2021 5:52 PM |
Jessica Lange had nothing like the range of Stanwyck, who literally played everything.
John Hodiak was never a "star". he was a contract player, mostly featured in B-pictures who wound up in supporting roles. he died rather young.
by Anonymous | reply 76 | October 8, 2021 6:49 PM |
Jennifer Aniston.
She’d have ripped apart by movie studios for her looks.
by Anonymous | reply 77 | October 8, 2021 6:53 PM |
Marsden actually has a really good voice, best shown up thus far in "Hairspray".
Ann Sothern was great as "Maisie" and she had a really good voice. Try watching her tv version of "Lady in the Dark" - quite excellent in all respects
Robert Taylor for some reason doesn't look all that handsome to me; he's a pretty bad actor, and supposedly that didn't matter because of his looks, but I just don't see him as being all that -- now Errol Flynn certainly was great looking, and he had presence, could act in those heroic and action role well enough. Even Bette Davis, who didn't think he could act that well, later saw one of his films and finally said that he was a better actor than she gave him credit for at the time.
Jennifer Aniston's looks are highly over-rated. The really pretty one on "Friends" was Courtney Cox and the talented one was Lisa Kudrow. Pretty crappy show -- just saw some episodes here and there.
Mickey Rooney didn't age well, and his casting in "Breakfast at Tiffany's" was a horrible decision, but he was very cute when he was younger, and he fucked some of the biggest female stars (and lesser known starlets) during his youth, including the widow of the head of the studio, Norma Shearer.
by Anonymous | reply 78 | October 8, 2021 7:12 PM |
Robert Taylor's best performance is probably Undercurrent (1946), where he plays the villain terrorizing Katharine Hepburn.
by Anonymous | reply 79 | October 8, 2021 7:22 PM |
Katharine Hepburn probably deserved being bullied around sometimes. Didn't Spencer Tracy, before they became "friends" once say about Hepburn that she talked like she "had a feather in her ass"?
by Anonymous | reply 80 | October 8, 2021 7:30 PM |
1930s-1940s Bradley Cooper would have been typecast as a hotel desk clerk, ringing the bell for Timothee Chalamet.
by Anonymous | reply 81 | October 8, 2021 7:44 PM |
Taylor’s best performance and one of Hepburn’s worst.
by Anonymous | reply 82 | October 8, 2021 7:49 PM |
LOL is better than the hehehehe ???? Thats just creepy !
by Anonymous | reply 83 | October 8, 2021 8:07 PM |
‘Despise‘ R39? What a strange choice of word for actors you don’t like. What’s to despise? James Stewart is one of the all-time great male stars. He had Republican views but he also was a hero in the war against the Nazis. I happen to think that’s more important than whatever politically incorrect language he may have used. And Chalamet is at the start of his career and seems fairly inoffensive. Save ‘despise’ for bad people.
by Anonymous | reply 84 | October 8, 2021 8:45 PM |
Old movies (1920's-50"s) were so poorly acted, it's actually comical. Katherine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Joan Crawford were all so hideously ugly and robotic, I can't imagine how they were ever cast in anything. Eldergays live in a fantasy world about old actors, which has nothing to do with reality. None of the old school actors except maybe Marilyn, Liz, Cary Grant, and Marlon Brando would make it today. Sorry, I guess the truth hurts.
by Anonymous | reply 85 | October 8, 2021 8:47 PM |
I can’t take people like r85 seriously.
by Anonymous | reply 86 | October 8, 2021 10:10 PM |
R86, don’t take the bait.
by Anonymous | reply 87 | October 8, 2021 10:23 PM |
[Quote] Golden Age executives would laugh Timothee Chalamet out of the room. An androgynous, gay baiting, devoid of masculinity actor would be unfathomable.
Quite.
by Anonymous | reply 88 | October 8, 2021 10:51 PM |
[Quote] On what planet would a doctor who is apparently considered one of the best in his field in the entire world give some not-even-a-college-graduate chippy the time of day, let alone go home to her boring, ordinary family and tolerate them going over him as if they're doing him the favor?
Why would Sidney Poitier (or Harry Belafonte) think White Is Right?
by Anonymous | reply 89 | October 8, 2021 10:53 PM |
This is an interesting subject but goes either way. Some concepts of beauty vary with time. Jennifer Aniston would never have made it earlier in the century but Olivia de Havilland baffles me (ugly, short and histrionic). Norma Sheridan looks ludicrous. Bette Davis, Katherine Hepbrun, stanwick, Streep, Grace Kelly, Ingrid Bergman, Dunaway and Michelle Pfeiffer would always be stars, whatever the time.
by Anonymous | reply 90 | October 9, 2021 12:16 AM |
And Cate Blantchett
by Anonymous | reply 91 | October 9, 2021 12:18 AM |
Jean Harlow is not beautiful by today's standards. Mae West was thick bodied. Star quality shines through.
by Anonymous | reply 92 | October 9, 2021 12:18 AM |
[quote]Norma Sheridan looks ludicrous.
She couldn't hold a candle to me!
by Anonymous | reply 93 | October 9, 2021 12:46 AM |
Hamish Linklator
by Anonymous | reply 94 | October 9, 2021 12:48 AM |
Was Ann Sheridan lesbeterian?
by Anonymous | reply 95 | October 9, 2021 1:00 AM |
R92 If Reese and Aniston can be considered beautiful, Jean Harlow would be considered beautiful. If you changed her hair and makeup, especially her eyebrows, to today’s look, she’d fit in.
by Anonymous | reply 96 | October 9, 2021 1:08 AM |
R96, i am r90 dissing Jennifer Aniston, but Reese whatever her name does not compare. She is neither beautiful nor talented nor has star presence. She’s been very lucky and clever, both main factors in this discussion. I also suspect she threatens people with her chin.
by Anonymous | reply 97 | October 9, 2021 1:31 AM |
By the same logic, JenAn and Witherspoon could be made 30s glamour gals.
by Anonymous | reply 98 | October 9, 2021 1:32 AM |
Reese is great in ELECTION. If you can't see that, you're a dunce.
by Anonymous | reply 99 | October 9, 2021 1:32 AM |
R99 Reese is great in Legally Blonde, which is one of my guilty pleasures. Luke Wilson was so fuckable.
by Anonymous | reply 100 | October 9, 2021 2:36 AM |
Nearly all of them, I'm sure there are some exceptions but I can't think of them right now.
I'm talking about the actors that are Gen X and after.
by Anonymous | reply 101 | October 9, 2021 2:40 AM |
Harlow wasn’t a great beauty by any standard. But she photographed well and she had a divine figure.
by Anonymous | reply 102 | October 9, 2021 2:46 AM |
That Sandra Bulldyke someone or other. Leading ladies were not made to look like lesbians in those days.
by Anonymous | reply 103 | October 9, 2021 3:22 AM |
Golden-Age movie stars could walk in heels gracefully, Miss Roberts.
by Anonymous | reply 104 | October 9, 2021 4:37 AM |
Jessica Lange could not sustain a movie career, so why would she be a success in the past? She has a strange affect.
Movie stars reflect their time. Audiences adopt them and decide who is a star.
Ryan Gosling had plastic surgery. So did Saoirse Ronan. I can’t think of a single movie star under 40 who is good. It’s all about branding now.
by Anonymous | reply 105 | October 9, 2021 4:52 AM |
She looked the part at least. Like Julia Roberts and Michelle Pfieffer, They looked the part. Demi Moore doesn't look like a movie star. Neither does Sandra Bullock.
by Anonymous | reply 106 | October 9, 2021 4:57 AM |
[Quote] Jessica Lange could not sustain a movie career
Any actor would love to have had Lange's unsustainable career in the 80s and 90s.
I'm not the Lange Loon, but I do acknowledge facts and reality.
by Anonymous | reply 107 | October 9, 2021 4:59 AM |
[Quote] Demi Moore doesn't look like a movie star.
Get the fuck out of here.
This is the definition of a movie star:
by Anonymous | reply 108 | October 9, 2021 5:04 AM |
"people fetishize"
R7 You are slightly off in the use of fetishize.
by Anonymous | reply 109 | October 9, 2021 5:05 AM |
R107 Nor does Melissa McCarthy of Jennifer Hudson
by Anonymous | reply 110 | October 9, 2021 5:06 AM |
Adam Driver
by Anonymous | reply 111 | October 9, 2021 5:07 AM |
R98 I think there are less aesthetic issues with Jean’s face than there are with Reese and Aniston.
Aniston wouldn’t be a 1930’s glamour girl with that nose.
by Anonymous | reply 112 | October 9, 2021 5:09 AM |
Demi Moore does not look like a traditional movie star. I think she's beautiful but not like i could plug her into everything. I noticed her career stalled when Julia Roberts was ascending. You can't plug a Demi Moore in. You can plug a young nubile ingenue into anything. Especially if the world just fell in love with her. And the world was in love with Julia Roberts for 10 years.
by Anonymous | reply 113 | October 9, 2021 5:14 AM |
I think Demi would have fit right into the actresses of the 1940’s.
by Anonymous | reply 114 | October 9, 2021 5:16 AM |
R112, Barbara Stanwyck was no beauty.
by Anonymous | reply 115 | October 9, 2021 5:27 AM |
Demi and Julia were at their peak fame as movie stars at exactly the same time, the 1990s: Pretty Woman was released six months prior to Ghost.
Agree with r114: Demi would have been totally at home in the film noir of the 1940s.
by Anonymous | reply 116 | October 9, 2021 5:29 AM |
I don't think I ever viewed Moore as an ingenue. She always registered as butch or best friend. She was not a princess Julia Roberts type Ever.
by Anonymous | reply 117 | October 9, 2021 5:35 AM |
I feel like Julia would have been able to be a vaudeville or early silent film star with her looks.
Some of those old stars were kinda ugly. Eva Tanguay was absolutely hideous but she was really popular. I guess we have Miley Cyrus.
by Anonymous | reply 118 | October 9, 2021 5:58 AM |
No actress inn 20 years looks quite like a movie star as Julia Roberts. Lawrence is a bit rough for plug in heroine.
by Anonymous | reply 119 | October 9, 2021 6:02 AM |
Speaking of all this, when DID Hollywood stars have to meet harsh beauty criteria? Because a lot of vaudeville and silent film stars were kind of ugly now that I think about it.
Theda Bada was ugly too. Almost scary.
And then you’ve got Clara Bow and Louise Brooks who I would consider attractive.
by Anonymous | reply 120 | October 9, 2021 6:03 AM |
Clara Bow's entire thing was personality. She was vivacious and sexy.
by Anonymous | reply 121 | October 9, 2021 6:05 AM |
R121 Well I agree with that and I think Clara was pretty. She made sense being popular.
But someone like Theda Bara is scary looking and she was considered very sexy.
by Anonymous | reply 122 | October 9, 2021 6:07 AM |
I think only a handful of actresses are box office stars like a Julia Roberts. They are all in the Golden Age. In the modern era not one comes close.
by Anonymous | reply 123 | October 9, 2021 6:07 AM |
I think Charlize Theron would have been considered beautiful even in the past.
by Anonymous | reply 124 | October 9, 2021 6:10 AM |
Owen Wilson
by Anonymous | reply 125 | October 9, 2021 6:14 AM |
Being pretty is not enough. They needed some kind of moxie or sparkle.
by Anonymous | reply 126 | October 9, 2021 6:46 AM |
Julia would be hideous in the old hair styles.
by Anonymous | reply 127 | October 9, 2021 6:48 AM |
Julia Roberts would NOT have had the looks for Hollywood 30s to 50s. Even her her prime.
by Anonymous | reply 128 | October 9, 2021 7:01 AM |
^Even in her prime.
by Anonymous | reply 129 | October 9, 2021 7:02 AM |
Demi Moore in her prime could have fit right into the 1940s as a leading lady star.
by Anonymous | reply 130 | October 9, 2021 7:05 AM |
Julia was gorgeous s a young star. You are full of shit.
by Anonymous | reply 131 | October 9, 2021 7:06 AM |
Julia has old movie start beauty. Not Demi.
by Anonymous | reply 132 | October 9, 2021 7:08 AM |
Amy Schumer
by Anonymous | reply 133 | October 9, 2021 7:13 AM |
R90 Norma Sheridan?
Really?
Are you paid by this Lucille LeSueur harlot?
by Anonymous | reply 134 | October 9, 2021 10:08 AM |
The actors of the so-called Golden Age of Hollywood were not actors, they were cartoon characters. No one spoke like that. Even Bette Davis admitted this.
by Anonymous | reply 135 | October 9, 2021 11:14 AM |
Marie Dressler!
by Anonymous | reply 136 | October 9, 2021 1:04 PM |
Sean Young could have been a film noir actress.
by Anonymous | reply 137 | October 9, 2021 6:05 PM |
Sean Young, quite beautiful and also very good in comedy.
by Anonymous | reply 138 | October 9, 2021 6:13 PM |
As a golden age actress (de Havilland? I'm not sure) once said, some actors would have been far better off under the old studio system. Sure, they're free to build their own careers nowadays, but perhaps they're ill-equipped to do so.
A beautiful woman like Sean Young, Sharon Stone, or Jessica Lange would have had an army of producers and especially, writers creating properties for them, to showcase their specific talents (comic, musical, pure eye candy, etc.) to best advantage. The actors would have succeeded, the films would have succeeded, and they would have built a loyal audience, as a result. That's how it worked for de Havilland and her peers.
by Anonymous | reply 139 | October 9, 2021 7:17 PM |
Sure, whatever.
by Anonymous | reply 140 | October 9, 2021 7:23 PM |
Sandra Bullock
by Anonymous | reply 141 | October 9, 2021 7:43 PM |
R139, The studios also owned the movie theaters, so they had effective control of the distribution and exhibition of their own films. An untested starlet could be put in movie after movie, going from walk-on parts to supporting roles until she built up an audience willing to pay to see her headline a picture.
by Anonymous | reply 142 | October 9, 2021 7:48 PM |
If only.
by Anonymous | reply 143 | October 9, 2021 7:57 PM |
If those women had their same personalities, they would not succeed in the studio system. They all were unbankable, difficult and blamed others for their failures.
by Anonymous | reply 144 | October 9, 2021 8:00 PM |
R142 That's how I started, and I ended up owning the studio
by Anonymous | reply 145 | October 9, 2021 8:13 PM |
R30 R31
Dean may have only starred in three movies but he did a substantial amount of television work, which you probably haven’t even bothered to watch.
by Anonymous | reply 146 | October 10, 2021 2:10 AM |
Bullshit. Chalamet could have been Roddy McDowell or any number of exotic star boys.
by Anonymous | reply 147 | October 10, 2021 2:13 AM |
Julia Roberts huge mouth, low eyebrows, large nose and lopsided face would not have worked in Golden Age Hollywood.
by Anonymous | reply 148 | October 10, 2021 2:21 AM |
R148 isn't she supposed to be the dame of the current crop? She does look good on a large screen. I don't know if its standard "old" Hollywood beauty but i do see the extra special there.
by Anonymous | reply 149 | October 10, 2021 2:25 AM |
Just like Gene Tierney's overbite didn't work?
by Anonymous | reply 150 | October 10, 2021 2:28 AM |
R149 She looks perfectly fine for the modern era. But that's not a 1930-to-1950s Hollywood face.
R150 Overbite or not, THIS is a Golden Age Hollywood face:
by Anonymous | reply 151 | October 10, 2021 2:32 AM |
I think Chalomet could have slotted into a juvenile (Monty Clift type) role in his twenties and then graduated into Robert Taylor stuff.
So many golden age stars shouldn't have made it either. While when I look back, they were all good looking, but compared to their contemporaries, not so much in some cases. Jean Arthur. Irene Dunne for example. Hard mouths. A dowdy vibe.
I find neither one attractive on film but I've seen candids of them when I'm like - who is that? And it's Jean Arthur or Irene Dunne. Their mouths messed them up on celluloid more than in person. Norma Shearer actually had a modeling contract before getting into films. There's such a huge gap sometimes between what is good looking vis a vis real life people and what is good looking vis a vis other stars. I've seen chorus line photos of a young Barbara Stanwyk where I'm like - wow, she's exceptionally pretty. It wasn't just her talent that got her attention. But then put her in Hwood and she needs the acting edge to stay afloat, whereas on Broadway her looks also gave her an edge. In Hwood her looks barely got her in the door.
Bette Davis. Come now. She was a successful Broadway ingenue and if she weren't considered good looking nobody would have signed her to a film contract. Sensational figure (petite, great rack, great waist, great legs, good proportions photogenitically). Huge eyes. Cheekbones. Jawline. Her nose was not as refined as many movie stars' and neither was her mouth. But when she was signed, she, Carole Lombard and Constance Bennet were considered interchangeable facially. Articles were done on it. She was smart and figured out early that the "actress" niche was where her best chance stood of becoming a star.
by Anonymous | reply 155 | October 10, 2021 2:42 AM |
It's not very believable that this old drunk is incredulous at Bette Davis' good looks.
by Anonymous | reply 156 | October 10, 2021 2:45 AM |
R153 The camera loved Davis and Stanwyck. You are confusing beauty with the physical requirements of that era. Davis and Stanwyck had big expressive faces that worked under the extreme closeups of the day. They could convey paragraphs of script with just the look in their eyes.
by Anonymous | reply 157 | October 10, 2021 2:56 AM |
Two very wrong concepts in this thread. That Chalemet wouldn't have been accepted in old Hollywood because he's physically wrong, is just stupid. Secondly, that somehow the talent in old Hollywood was greater (or far worse) than what we have today, is just stupid too. Timothee Chalemet is very, very talented. And so was Anthony Perkins. And so was William Holden, who played the geeky teenager when he was starting out.
by Anonymous | reply 158 | October 10, 2021 2:58 AM |
And Mickey Rooney was an eyesore!
by Anonymous | reply 159 | October 10, 2021 3:00 AM |
Man Chalamet is not that talented. Please stop.
by Anonymous | reply 160 | October 10, 2021 3:05 AM |
Please stop yourself.
by Anonymous | reply 161 | October 10, 2021 3:15 AM |
Who are these people who keep saying that he is so hot? And why? An underfed, one-note actor.
by Anonymous | reply 162 | October 10, 2021 3:17 AM |
[quote]It's not very believable that this old drunk is incredulous at Bette Davis' good looks.
And yet when Bette Davis is in a scene she's the one we're observing. All eyes are on her, on every move and expression she makes.
by Anonymous | reply 164 | October 10, 2021 3:21 AM |
R164 Not when I'm on-screen with her.
by Anonymous | reply 166 | October 10, 2021 7:16 AM |
[quote]Movie stars reflect their time. Audiences adopt them and decide who is a star.
This is not true r105
At a certain point in time it became Hollywood shoving people at the public, putting one or two actors in everything whether we liked them or not. Gosling was one of those actors, so was Bradley Cooper.
Hollywood became so low risk they just won't look for real talent in writing or acting.
by Anonymous | reply 168 | October 10, 2021 2:59 PM |
r119 Roberts is all teeth and hair with beady eyes and no figure.
While hair was very important in the Golden Age, so was a more womanly figure and no one had big horse teeth.
by Anonymous | reply 169 | October 10, 2021 3:04 PM |
Maggie Gyllenhaal in the silent picture days. Her looks just scream roaring 20's.
by Anonymous | reply 170 | October 10, 2021 3:09 PM |
Interesting, R168. Not sure I completely agree, but you are correct re: Ryan Gosling.
The powers that be determined that he would be a leading man and worked strenuously to do so (including that whole "Hey girl," sexy meme from years ago that felt incredibly manufactured). The reality is that he is yet another critically praised actor who doesn't connect with wide audiences in any meaningful way. For every LA LA LAND, he's headlined some epic (and forgotten) bombs, like the BLADE RUNNER reboot and FIRST MAN.
I do find him (unconventionally) attractive and talented but I think most audiences don't care for him.
by Anonymous | reply 171 | October 10, 2021 4:02 PM |
My parents were always comparing contemporary stars (Circa 1970s and ‘80s, Dustin Hoffman etc.) to Lana and Ava and even Linda Darnell and Yvonne DeCarlo and Arlene Dahl. Same with men: Ty Power and Guy Madison and Rock Hudson. Stars were scouted based on their looks, then groomed. No comparison to the modern system.
by Anonymous | reply 172 | October 10, 2021 4:07 PM |
According to this source, the Ryan "Hey Girl" started with... a guy. (Back around 2010!)
Then JEZEBEL hopped on board. Big surprise.
I def think Ryan's people had a hand in it, regardless. It's been years since I've seen one of these.
by Anonymous | reply 173 | October 10, 2021 4:07 PM |
R170, he looks scream UGLAY.
by Anonymous | reply 174 | October 10, 2021 4:25 PM |
I would even add Jude Law to that list r171. I remember him coming out of nowhere then, being everywhere only to fizzle out because the public wasn't interested.
Some people won't want to admit it but Julia was also part of the "shoved in our faces" campaign to make us love her. Her first big movies were Mystic Pizza then Steel Magnolia's. Steel Magnolia's was a huge movie but not because of Julia, if some other girl had played that part it would not have diminished the movie but it gave the studio a reason to keep pushing her and was followed by even more popular Pretty Woman. Legit hits, she lived on that popularity for a long long long time. Because it was followed by :
Flatliners
Sleeping With The Enemy
Dying Young
Hook
The Pelican Brief
I Love Trouble
Ready To Wear
Something To Talk About
Mary Reilly
A string of just okay to meh to just plain bad.
She got a lot of chances and it looked like no effort by the studios to develop better talent. She's not trash but she not so good that she deserved to be the only game in town.
by Anonymous | reply 175 | October 10, 2021 4:44 PM |
Butch Julia.
Never noticed that she can/could be somewhat androgynous. She looks like a young boy.
by Anonymous | reply 176 | October 10, 2021 4:49 PM |
Was it Chris Rock who called out Jude Law for being so over-exposed in some many films, with most of them tanking at the box-office, when he hosted the Oscars? Mr. Law did not look amused, and I don't think the joke went over very well, even though it was rather true.
by Anonymous | reply 177 | October 10, 2021 5:58 PM |
Mind you, I didn't mind Jude Law exposing himself, and he's actually a talented actor, but it's not like the public was demanding to see him star in films.
by Anonymous | reply 178 | October 10, 2021 6:00 PM |
Chris Rock hosted the 2005 Oscarcast, and Jude Law had starred in five movies in 2004 - leading roles in I ❤ Huckabees, Alfie, Closer, Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, and a supporting role in The Aviator - only the last was moderately successful, all the others bombed.
by Anonymous | reply 179 | October 10, 2021 6:14 PM |
George Clooney had the looks for classic Hollywood. Daniel Craig could have been a bad guy in 1930s flicks.
by Anonymous | reply 180 | October 10, 2021 6:35 PM |
R177, Minutes later, an obviously angry Sean Penn came on to present and put Chris Rock in his place with a few choice remarks.
by Anonymous | reply 181 | October 10, 2021 6:44 PM |
Jimmy Cagney was a bad guy, except when he wasn't.
by Anonymous | reply 182 | October 10, 2021 6:55 PM |
Chalamet = Sabu
by Anonymous | reply 183 | October 10, 2021 6:57 PM |
R182, Jimmy Cagney was hardly a handsome man.
by Anonymous | reply 184 | October 10, 2021 7:19 PM |
Kathleen Turner, back in the 1980s especially, looked like an old-style Hollywood goddess.
by Anonymous | reply 185 | October 10, 2021 7:37 PM |
[Quote] Jimmy Cagney was hardly a handsome man.
Neither is Daniel Craig. Bogart wasn't handsome in his Hollywood years either.
by Anonymous | reply 186 | October 10, 2021 7:37 PM |
1940s Timothee Chalamet would have been one of the background Bowery Boys. He would have been called "Lenny" or "Morrie."
by Anonymous | reply 187 | October 10, 2021 7:47 PM |
Craig isn't traditionally handsome, but he is sexy and has a very fit bod, which he hasn't been afraid to expose on occasion. But yes, he'd be a bad guy in the studio system. Maybe a sexy bad guy, too.
by Anonymous | reply 188 | October 10, 2021 7:50 PM |
Would Billy Zane be a leading man?
by Anonymous | reply 189 | October 10, 2021 7:55 PM |
Daniel Craig is definitely handsome.
by Anonymous | reply 190 | October 10, 2021 9:29 PM |
R189, I envision a studio trying to make Billy Zane a star in the 40s (he'd be billed as William Zane) but soon dropping to B pictures and eventually Z pictures in the 50s like Attack of the Monster Earthworms.
by Anonymous | reply 191 | October 10, 2021 9:35 PM |
Our current actors of color probably wouldn't have fared well back then.
by Anonymous | reply 192 | October 10, 2021 9:40 PM |
[Quote] Our current actors of color probably wouldn't have fared well back then.
I think Brad Pitt would do just fine.
by Anonymous | reply 193 | October 10, 2021 9:45 PM |
R192 Penelope Cruz as a Lupe Valez type. Certainly Benicio Del Toro and Edward James Olmos in 1960s westerns.
by Anonymous | reply 194 | October 10, 2021 9:50 PM |
R187 Maybe even “raghead”— but in a joshing way.
by Anonymous | reply 195 | October 11, 2021 6:36 AM |
Daniel Craig is handsome.
I mean how did Spencer Tracy become a leading man? I guess because he was seldom a conventional romantic lead. He was opposite Loretta Young in "A Man's Castle" where he was borderline abusive. Then he was in "Libeled Lady" where he had none of the charm Gable would have brought to the part of the incorrigible newspaperman.
I see Tracy as a solid character man still can't figure out how he got leading man chops. Maybe he just got to be lead playing priests and stuff.
by Anonymous | reply 196 | October 11, 2021 3:06 PM |
Brad Pitt would have done just fine in the 1950s onward, when it kind of shifted from men to boys in leads (although there were still classic leading men). Not so sure about the 1930s.
by Anonymous | reply 197 | October 11, 2021 3:07 PM |
Tracy seemed to be more of a leading man with Hepburn. They have amazing onscreen chemistry.
by Anonymous | reply 198 | October 11, 2021 5:08 PM |
I wonder if Jason Momoa could have played Jon Hall sort of roles - without the long hair, of course.
by Anonymous | reply 199 | October 11, 2021 5:35 PM |
True R198 but their first film together was in 1942. He was one of MGM's major leading men throughout the thirties - the other two were Gable and William Powell. Obviously others but those were the top three.
by Anonymous | reply 200 | October 11, 2021 10:30 PM |
Robert Montgomery was quite a big star at MGM during the 1930s too, though I think some of his acting style hasn't aged that well. Spencer Tracy won two consecutive Oscars in the late 30s, so he was up there too, along with character leading star Wallace Beery.
by Anonymous | reply 201 | October 11, 2021 10:45 PM |
George Raft?
by Anonymous | reply 202 | October 11, 2021 11:32 PM |
George Raft I believe was mainly at Warner Brothers, known for gangster films and Busby Berkeley musicals in the 1930s.
by Anonymous | reply 203 | October 12, 2021 12:58 AM |
All post-2000 S.A.G. members, perhaps?
by Anonymous | reply 204 | October 12, 2021 1:56 AM |
[quote]I see Tracy as a solid character man still can't figure out how he got leading man chops. Maybe he just got to be lead playing priests and stuff.
See r196 there's this thing called acting and some people are really really good at it and that makes people want to watch them no matter what they look like.
by Anonymous | reply 205 | October 12, 2021 2:08 AM |
Watched Tracy in "Tortilla Flat" and he was pretty bad, terrible accent. Of course, his character was pretty hateful. The usually wonderful John Garfield was miscast. The best performances were Hedy Lamarr (surprisingly) and not surprisingly, but very differently than his usual roles, Frank Morgan. Oh, his dogs, including the one who played Toto in "Wizard of Oz" are pretty terrific too. The movie play pretty badly nowadays though.
by Anonymous | reply 206 | October 12, 2021 2:27 AM |
I went on an MGM watching binge a year or so ago, on youtube, so came across some lesser known Tracys. And that's characteristic. A lot of times he was pretty hateful. Maybe he was supposed to be in Tortilla Flats (didn't see it) but he didn't have charm.
by Anonymous | reply 207 | October 14, 2021 9:33 PM |
Spencer Tracy in "Fury" was unforgettable.
by Anonymous | reply 208 | October 14, 2021 10:43 PM |
Ezra Miller or Adam Driver. The latter may have been successful in horror films but not as a leading man.
by Anonymous | reply 209 | October 15, 2021 12:49 AM |
Ethan Hawke and Cillian Murphy - I don't see their faces in a Golden Age movie.
by Anonymous | reply 210 | October 15, 2021 4:02 AM |
I could see Josh Hartnett in old westerns.
by Anonymous | reply 211 | October 15, 2021 4:03 AM |
What about Keanu? Could he have made it in Old Hollywood? Maybe with a haircut.
by Anonymous | reply 212 | October 15, 2021 4:05 AM |
Perhaps in Robert Taylor roles. He couldn't act too well either. Taylor doesn't seem so handsome like they all go on about him though.
by Anonymous | reply 213 | October 15, 2021 4:44 AM |
I can see Josh Hartnett as a teen sidekick like Dan in "The Lone Ranger" but that's about it.
by Anonymous | reply 214 | October 15, 2021 4:59 AM |
I could see Ezra Miller playing Laurence Harvey parts.
by Anonymous | reply 215 | October 15, 2021 6:25 AM |
R213, Robert Taylor's looks faded dramatically. Being a three pack a day smoker didn't help.
by Anonymous | reply 216 | October 15, 2021 6:27 AM |
Ethan Hawke looks EXACTLY like an old Hollywood movie star.
by Anonymous | reply 217 | October 16, 2021 3:01 AM |
R170, her looks scream radio.
R172, I actually think your parents were corrects, around the 70s a lot of the major leading men were not particularly good looking: Jack Nicholson, Dustin Hoffman, Al Pacino, Gene Hachman, even De Niro isn’t typically handsome. I guess it was an exceptional moment in time, different from before and after (think of the 90s with the emergence of Boyish looking guys as Di Caprio, Pitt, Reeves).
by Anonymous | reply 218 | October 16, 2021 12:12 PM |
Awkwafina
by Anonymous | reply 219 | October 16, 2021 3:53 PM |