The Stanford Theatre

20th Anniversary Festival

The restored Stanford Theatre opened on December 8, 1989. Since then we have presented nearly 1700 different titles. This calendar offers our top 64 box office favorites.

On December 8, 1989, the 64-year-old Stanford Theatre began a new phase of its life, after a two-year renovation combining seismic upgrades with restoration of the original decor. For the past 20 years the Stanford Theatre Foundation has been bringing back the movie-going experience of Hollywood's Golden Age.

We celebrate our twentieth anniversary by presnting our 76 top box office hits (omitting 12 films shown recently in our September Hitchcock festival).

Certain names appear over and over: Alfred Hitchcock 16 times, Cary Grant 12, Jimmy Stewart 8, Audrey Hepburn 7, Humphrey Bogart 7, Vincente Minelli 7, Billy Wilder 6, Frank Capra 5, Fred Astaire 5, Katherin Hepburn 4, George Cukor 4, Ernst Lubitsch 3, Ronald Colman 3.

In the Golden Age of the movies, the public attended extravagant picture palaces (like the Stanford Theatre) where they enjoyed the shared pleasure of watching larger than life images of their favorite stars. For some people watching movies may be a purely intellectual experience, but for many of us it is often just a question of spending time with our (imaginary) extended family.


Tickets for the double feature are $7.00 for adults, $5.00 for seniors (65 and over) and young people (18 and under). Gift Certificates worth four general admissions can be purchased for $24. You can always enjoy the Mighty Wurlitzer theatre organ before and after the 7:30 show. Our Gallery offers exhibits of original posters and other items. Please note that cell phones and food (other than candy, popcorn, and drinks) are not allowed in the theatre.


The Stanford Theatre is dedicated to bringing back the movie-going experience of Hollywood's Golden Age. Great classic films were not made to be watched on a video screen in your living room. They depend on a larger-than-life image, and the shared reactions of a real audience.

The Stanford Theatre first opened in June of 1925. For decades nearly every important Hollywood picture played there on its first release. The people of Palo Alto saw them all for the very first time in this theatre.

In 1987 the Packard Foundation bought the theatre and restored it to its original condition. It quickly became America's most popular classic movie house. More people saw Casablanca there on its 50th anniverary in 1992 than at any other theatre in America.

The non-profit Stanford Theatre Foundation is dedicated to the preservation and public exhibition of films from the Golden Age of Hollywood.


Note: This is an unofficial posting of the Stanford Theatre schedules, from published information. This site is in no way connected with the Stanford Theatre nor the Stanford Theatre Foundation. Please check out the official site at http://www.stanfordtheatre.org in case this schedule isn't quite up-to-date! Programs are subject to change. For information, call (650) 324-3700.


(Showtimes in parentheses are for the Saturday and Sunday screenings.)


November 1 — 2:
"Welcome to Shangri-La!"
Lost Horizon (1937) (3:00), 7:30
d Frank Capra. w Robert Riskin, from the novel by James Hilton. ph Joseph Walker. m Dmitri Tiomkin. Columbia. 118 min.

Ronald Colman, Jane Wyatt, John Howard, Edward Everett Horton, Margo, Thomas Mitchell, Isabel Jewell, H. B. Warner, Sam Jaffe, Hugh Buckler, David Torrence.

Frank Capra's celebrated tale of Shangri-La, a remote community in the Himalayas where civilization is nurtured far from the violent world. Based on James Hilton's novel, this is one of the most memorable experiences offered by Hollywood's Golden Age.

"Had the High Lama been able to scour the whole world for a man to carry on his vision of Shangri-La, he would have selected Ronald Colman, beautiful of face and soul, sensitive to the fragile and gentle, responsive both to poetic visions and hard intellect" - Frank Capra

first played at the Stanford Theatre Feb 16, 1990; last played Nov 2007

Random Harvest (1942) 5:10, 9:40
d Mervyn LeRoy. w Claudine West, George Froeschel and Arthur Wimperis, based on the novel by James Hilton. ph Joseph Ruttenberg. m Herbert Stothart. MGM. 126 min.

Ronald Colman, Greer Garson, Philip Dorn, Susan Peters, Henry Travers, Reginald Owen, Margaret Wycherly, Bramwell Fletcher, Arthur Margetson.

One of Hollywood's great romances, about a WW I soldier suffering from amnesia. He marries a music hall dancer, but suddenly remembers his past life.

This film, based on a James Hilton novel which seems almost to have been written with Ronald Colman in mind, was enormously popular in its time.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Mar 14, 1943; last played Jul 2006


November 3 — 5:
"I don't want to win awards. Give me pictures that end with a kiss and black ink on the books."
The Bad and the Beautiful (1952) 7:30
d Vincente Minnelli. w Charles Schnee. ph Robert Surtees. m David Raksin. MGM. 118 min.

Lana Turner, Kirk Douglas, Gloria Grahame, Walter Pidgeon, Dick Powell, Barry Sullivan, Gilbert Roland, Leo G. Carroll, Vanessa Brown, Paul Stewart.

In perhaps the greatest movie ever made about Hollywood (it won five Oscars), a brilliant but egomaniacal producer (Douglas) asks three of his protegés to work again with him, but they cannot forgive him for the price they had to pay for their success. David Raksin's musical score is one of the best ever composed for a Hollywood film.

last played Aug 2008

"Nobody important, really, just a movie writer with a couple B pictures to his credit. The poor dope. He always wanted a pool. Well, in the end he got himself a pool. Only the price turned out to be a little too high."
Sunset Boulevard (1950) 5:30, 9:40
d Billy Wilder. w Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder, D. M. Marshman, Jr. ph John F. Seitz. m Franz Waxman. Paramount. 110 min.

Gloria Swanson, William Holden, Erich von Stroheim, Fred Clark, Nancy Olson, Jack Webb, Lloyd Gough, Franklyn Farnum, Larry Blake, Charles Dayton, Cecil B. DeMille, H. B. Warner, Anna Q. Nilsson, Buster Keaton, Hedda Hopper, Ray Evans, Jay Livingston.

A young Hollywood writer reluctantly allows himself to be kept by a demented silent movie queen in her decaying mansion.

The picture is saturated with ironic authenticity. A genuine silent film idol, Gloria Swanson, gives the uncanny impression that she might almost be playing herself in the role of the pathetically grandiose Norma Desmond. The great silent director Erich von Stroheim plays her butler and former director; they even watch part of a silent film, Queen Kelly, they made together in real life. Buster Keaton and other personalities from the silent era are guests at her mansion. Cecil B. DeMille, the director of real Swanson silent films, still inhabits the sound stage at Paramount, the studio where Swanson (and Norma Desmond) made their biggest pictures. DeMille's scenes were filmed on location at the soundstage where he was directing his latest epic, Samson and Delilah. And, of course, this story of a struggling Hollywood screenwriter is directed by a great Hollywood screenwriter.

This complex film required music that was an equal partner in its bitter and ironic portrayal of Hollywood. Waxman responded with his greatest masterpiece, which won the Academy Award.

In 1989 Sunset Boulevard was selected by the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress in its first group of 25 landmark American films.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Mar 29, 1951; last played Aug 2009


November 6 — 7:
Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961) (3:20), 7:30
d Blake Edwards. w George Axelrod, from the novel by Truman Capote. ph Franz Planer. m Henry Mancini. Paramount. 115 min.

Audrey Hepburn, George Peppard, Patricia Neal, Buddy Ebsen, Martin Balsam, John McGiver, Mickey Rooney.

Charmingly degenerate and enormously popular fairy tale about madcap Holly Golightly, who lives on the money men give her but finds a soulmate in the "kept" writer living in the apartment above. Her rendition of "Moon River" (Hepburn's own voice) helped it win the Academy Award as Best Song.

For those who may disapprove of Mickey Rooney's racial caricature of Mr. Yunioshi, we offer this quotation from his autobiography: "I was downright ashamed of my role."

first played at the Stanford Theatre Oct 31, 1961; last played Jul 2008

"I hope we have a lot of boys, and we can name them all after you!"
Charade (1963) 5:25, 9:35
d Stanley Donen. w Peter Stone, from the story The Unsuspecting Wife by Peter Stone and Marc Behm. ph Charles Lang, jr.. m Henry Mancini. Universal-International. 113 min.

Cary Grant, Audrey Hepburn, Walter Matthau, James Coburn, George Kennedy, Ned Glass, Jacques Marin, Paul Bonifas, Dominique Minot.

A woman (Audrey Hepburn) returns from a trip to discover her home has been ransacked, her husband has been murdered, and the killers are now after her. Cary Grant is the mystery man who shows up to assist her, but can she trust him?

Audrey Hepburn's only movie with Cary Grant was this Hitchcock-inspired blend of suspense, comedy, and romance, made in Paris.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Oct 3, 1992; last played Jun 2008


November 8 — 9:
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947) (3:45), 7:30
d Joseph L. Mankiewicz. w Philip Dunne, from the novel by R. A. Dick. ph Charles Lang. m Bernard Herrmann. Twentieth Century-Fox. 104 min.

Gene Tierney, Rex Harrison, George Sanders, Edna Best, Vanessa Brown, Anna Lee, Robert Coote, Natalie Wood, Isobel Elsom.

Hollywood's most fathomlessly romantic fantasy, with Gene Tierney as a young widow who rents a house on the English coast and is romanced by the ghost of a dashing sea captain (Rex Harrison) who once lived there. Bernard Herrmann wrote some of the most beautiful music ever heard on a Hollywood soundtrack.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Sep 19, 1990; last played Nov 2006

Topper (1937) 5:40, 9:25
d Norman Z. McLeod. w Jack Jevne, Eric Hatch, Eddie Moran, from the novel The Jovial Ghosts by Thorne Smith. ph Norbert Brodine. MGM. 97 min.

Constance Bennett, Cary Grant, Roland Young, Billie Burke, Alan Mowbray, Eugene Pallette, Arthur Lake, Hedda Hopper, Virginia Sale, Theodore Von Eltz, J. Farrell McDonald, Elaine Shepard.

In this delightful fantasy, Topper, a stuffy banker, is haunted by the jovial ghosts of his recently deceased clients (Grant and Bennett).

"Much fun; a sophisticated fantasy... they return as elegant ectoplasmic pranksters and drive banker Cosmo Topper to happy distraction." Pauline Kael

"For those who don't know why Constance Bennett was a big movie star, her provocative, teasing Marion Kirby should provide the answer." Pauline Kael
first played at the Stanford Theatre Sep 9, 1937; last played Apr 2007
November 10 — 12:
"So they call me Concentration Camp Erhardt!"
To Be or Not To Be (1942) 7:30
d Ernst Lubitsch. w Edwin Justus Meyer, story by Ernst Lubitsch & Melchior Lengyel. ph Rudolph Maté. m Werner Heymann. United Artists. 99 min.

Jack Benny, Carole Lombard, Robert Stack, Stanley Ridges, Felix Bressart, Lionel Atwill, Sig Rumann, Tom Dugan, Charles Halton.

Carole Lombard's last and greatest film, about a troupe of ham actors in the Polish underground, trying to save Warsaw from Hitler.

Lombard's tragic death shortly after the completion of this extraodinary film may have been the greatest single loss ever suffered by Hollywood. Imagine what films there might have been (Lombard was younger than Katharine Hepburn)!

first played at the Stanford Theatre May 7, 1942; last played Sep 2005

Ninotchka (1939) 5:30, 9:20
d Ernst Lubitsch. w Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder, Walter Reisch, from a story by Melchior Lengyel. ph William Daniels. m Werner Heymann. MGM. 110 min.

Greta Garbo, Melvyn Douglas, Sig Rumann, Alexander Granach, Felix Bressart, Ina Claire, Bela Lugosi.

A Bolshevik special envoy (Greta Garbo) is sent to Paris to bring back three wayward comrades, who have become charmed by the freedom of the decadent west.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Dec 17, 1939; last played Sep 2005


November 13 — 14:
"If you lose a son, you can always get another, but there's only one Maltese Falcon."
The Maltese Falcon (1941) (3:30), 7:30
d/w John Huston, from the novel by Dashiell Hammett. ph Arthur Edeson. m Adolph Deutsch. Warner Bros. 101 min.

Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Gladys George, Peter Lorre, Barton MacLaine, Lee Patrick, Sydney Greenstreet, Ward Bond, Jerome Cowan, Elisha Cook, Jr., James Burke, Murray Alper, John Hamilton, Emory Parnell, Walter Huston.

Sam Spade joins in the quest for that priceless black statue– the stuff that dreams are made of.

Widely regarded as the archetype of the film noir genre, this film established Bogart as a star of the first rank.

"Humphrey Bogart's most exciting role was Sam Spade, that ambiguous mixture of avarice and honor, sexuality and fear, who gave new dimensions to the detective genre." Pauline Kael

first played at the Stanford Theatre Jan 29, 1942; last played Dec 2008

"Last week, death came to sit upon the throne of America's Kubla Khan – last week, as it must to all men, death came to Charles Foster Kane."
Citizen Kane (1941) 5:20, 9:20
d Orson Welles. w Herman J. Mankiewicz, Orson Welles. ph Gregg Toland. m Bernard Herrmann. RKO. 119 min.

Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Dorothy Comingore, Everett Sloane, Ray Collins, George Coulouris, Agnes Moorehead, Paul Stewart, Ruth Warrick, Erskine Sanford, Harry Shannon, William Alland, Fortunio Bonanova.

Though not voted Best Picture of 1941 (it was nominated), Citizen Kane consistently appears at the top of lists of the best films of all time.

Bernard Herrmann's very first film score contributes more than its share to the success of this revolutionary film. Welles allowed Herrmann ample time for composition, and he sometimes cut the film to match the music.

first played in Palo Alto at the Mayfield Theatre Dec 7, 1941; dare we speculate that that Citizen Kane was denied entry to Palo Alto's premier movie theatre through the influence of William Randolph Hearst?

last played June 2009


November 15 — 16:
"Heaven doesn't always make the right men kings!"
The Prisoner of Zenda (1937) (3:50), 7:30
d John Cromwell. w John L. Balderston, Wills Root & Donald Ogeden Stewart, based on the novel by Anthony Hope and the play by Edward Rose. ph James Wong Howe. m Alfred Newman. Selznick International. 101 min.

Ronald Colman, Madeleine Carroll, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Mary Astor, C. Aubrey Smith, Raymond Massey, David Niven, Byron Foulger, Montagu Love.

An Englishman on vacation in Ruritania helps defeat a rebel plot by impersonating the local king, who is his exact double. He presides at the coronation of the absent king, foils the king's enemies, romances the king's intended, but, true to his code of honor, departs in the end.

This splendid adventure story, with spectacular duels between Colman and Fairbanks, is one of the great treasures of the cinema, and one of the most entertaining films ever made.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Dec 26, 1937; last played Sep 2007

"A toast, seńores: To California, where a man can only marry, raise fat children, and watch his vineyards grow."
The Mark of Zorro (1940) 5:45, 9:25
d Rouben Mamoulian. w John Taintor Foote, Garrett Fort, Bess Meredith. ph Arthur Miller. m Alfred Newman. 20th Century-Fox. 94 min.

Tyrone Power, Basil Rathbone, Gail Sondergaard, J. Edward Bromberg, Linda Darnell, Eugene Pallette, Montagu Love, Janet Beecher, Robert Lowery.

In this very successful sound version of the Fairbanks silent film, Tyrone Power, the consummate romantic swashbuckler, is a perfect Diego de Vega, cowardly fop by day, but dashing sword-fighting avenger by night.

Director Rouben Mamoulian showed that it is possible to create a remake of a great classic worthy of the original. This feat is remarkably rare.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Nov 27, 1940; last played Aug 2009


November 17 — 19:
Foreign Correspondent (1940) 7:30
d Alfred Hitchcock. w Charles Bennett, Joan Harrison, James Hilton, and Robert Benchley, from the novel Personal History by Vincent Sheean. ph Rudolph Maté. m Alfred Newman. United Artists. 120 min.

Joel McCrea, Laraine Day, Herbert Marshall, Albert Basserman, Edmund Gwenn, George Sanders, Eduardo Cianelli, Robert Benchley, Harry Davenport, Martin Kosleck, Barbara Pepper, Eddie Conrad, Charles Wagenheim.

Another four-star Hitchcock masterpiece, with an American reporter stumbling upon a Nazi espionage ring. The film contains a remarkable series of set-pieces, including the Dutch windmill rotating backwards.

"The picture was pure fantasy, and as you know, in my fantasies, plausability is not allowed to rear its ugly head." Alfred Hitchcock

Hitchcock passes Joel McCrea on the street.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Oct 27, 1940; last played Feb 2008

"What is time? The Swiss manufacture it. The French hoard it. Italians squander it. Americans say it is money. Hindus say it does not exist. Do you know what I say? I say time is a crook."
Beat the Devil (1954) 5:50, 9:40
d John Huston. w John Huston & Truman Capote, from the novel by James Helvick. ph Oswald Morris. m Franco Mannino. Santana-Romulus/United Artists. 93 min.

Humphrey Bogart, Jennifer Jones, Gina Lollobrigida. Robert Morley, Peter Lorre, Edward Underdown, Ivor Barnard, Bernard Lee, Marco Tulli, Mario Perroni, Alex Pochet, Aldo Silvani, Giulio Donnini, Saro Urzi, Juan de Landa, Manuel Serano, Mimo Poli.

A cast of unconventional characters seeks an elusive plot of land in Africa, which supposedly contains uranium. This "screwball noir" (shot on location in Italy) was neglected on its first release but now is regarded as a cult classic.

"It succeeded in some original (and perhaps dangerously marginal) way by finding a style of its own." Pauline Kael

last played Nov 2008


November 20 — 21:
Top Hat (1935) (3:45), 7:30
d Mark Sandrich. w Dwight Taylor, Allan Scott. ph David Abel. m Irving Berlin. RKO. 99 min.

Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Edward Everett Horton, Erik Rhodes, Eric Blore, Helen Broderick.

In their most popular film together (set in London and Venice), Ginger mistakes Fred for the husband of her best friend. In addition to the unforgettable dances, sensational score, and brilliant comedy script, Top Hat is notable for its gorgeous Art Deco sets.

World wide, Top Hat was the second most popular film in 1935. All five Irving Berlin songs became top hits and remain standards to this day: "Cheek to Cheek", "Isn't This a Lovely Day (to be Caught in the Rain)", "Top Hat, White Tie, and Tails", "No Strings", and "The Piccolino".

first played at the Stanford Theatre Oct 2, 1935; last played July 2008

"Porter!"
The Gay Divorcee (1934) 5:35, 9:20
d Mark Sandrich. w George Marion, Jr., Dorothy Yost, Edward Kaufman. ph David Abel. md Max Steiner. RKO. 107 min.

Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Edward Everett Horton, Alice Brady, Erik Rhodes, Eric Blore, Lillian Miles, Betty Grable.

The first film made specially for Fred and Ginger (it was their second film together) was a tremendous box office success. It was based on Cole Porter's 1932 Broadway musical, but kept only one original song, Night and Day. A new song, The Continental, won the first Oscar ever given for Best Song.

Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers perform their first true romantic dance to Night and Day. To call it a dance of seduction could give entirely the wrong impression, but that is nonetheless what it is. Although Ginger had begun as a Charleston dancer in Texas, she had an innate understanding of the dramatic and emotional richness of the new style Astaire was creating.

The script is bright and fast-paced, and several supporting actors (Eric Blore, Edward Everett Horton, Erik Rhodes) would return in future films as a kind of Astaire-Rogers stock company.

Songs: Night and Day, music and lyrics by Cole Porter; Let's K-nock K-nees and Don't Let It Bother You, music and lyrics by Mack Gordon and Harry Revel; A Needle in a Haystack and The Continental, music and lyrics by Con Conrad and Herb Magidson.

All in all, The Gay Divorcee remains after more than 70 years one of the very best musical pictures ever made.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Nov 11, 1934; last played June 2009


November 22 — 23:
"My mother thanks you, my father thanks you, my sister thanks you, and I thank you."
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) (3:15), 7:30
d Michael Curtiz. w Robert Buckner & Edmund Joseph. ph James Wong Howe. m Heinz Roemheld. Warner Bros. 126 min.

James Cagney, Joan Leslie, Walter Huston, Rosemary de Camp, Richard Whorf, George Tobias, Jeanne Cagney, Irene Manning, S. Z. Sakall, George Barbier, Frances Langford, Walter Catlett, Eddie Foy, Jr.

The life and music of George M. Cohan, portrayed by Jimmy Cagney in his greatest role. Upon seeing Cagney's performance in this film, Cohan himself exclaimed: "My God, what an act to follow!"

This was Jimmy Cagney's favorite of all his films. He was often typecast as a gangster, but his rare appearances as a dancer reveal him as second only to Astaire in the 1930s.

"He is so cocky and sure a dancer that you feel yourself grinning with pleasure at his movements. It's quite possible that he has more electricity than Cohan himself had." Pauline Kael

first played at the Stanford Theatre Mar 1, 1943; last played July 2009

Swing Time (1936) 5:35, 9:50
d George Stevens. w Howard Lindsay, Allan Scott. ph David Abel. m Jerome Kern. RKO. 105 min.

Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Victor Moore, Helen Broderick, Eric Blore, Betty Furness, George Metaxa.

The slim plot, with Fred as a professional dancer (and gambler) and Ginger as a dance instructor, provides a vehicle for the most sublime dancing ever recorded on film. If you could spend just three minutes of your life in a movie theatre, a good choice might be to watch Fred and Ginger dancing Pick Yourself Up in Swing Time.

Because of the dances, and Ginger's fine performance, some regard this as the greatest of the ten Astaire-Rogers pictures; it was Ginger's favorite.

The classic songs by Jerome Kern and Dorothy Fields include The Way You Look Tonight (which won an Oscar for Best Song), A Fine Romance, Pick Yourself Up, Never Gonna Dance, and Bojangles of Harlem.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Oct 18, 1936; last played Aug 2009


November 24 — 26:
My Man Godfrey (1937) 7:30
d Gregory La Cava. w Morrie Ryskind, Eric Hatch. ph Ted Tetzlaff. m Charles Previn. Universal. 95 min.

William Powell, Carole Lombard, Alice Brady, Gail Patrick, Jean Dixon, Eugene Pallette, Alan Mowbray, Mischa Auer, Robert Light, Pat Flaherty, Franklin Pangborn, Grady Sutton.

A leading candidate for Hollywood's greatest screwball comedy, with spoiled Park Avenue brat Carole Lombard hiring "forgotten man" Godfrey (William Powell) as butler and then falling for him.

Beautiful print from the UCLA Film Archive, made from the original camera negative, which had been thought to be lost. Before restoration, this famous film had been available only in very inferior 16mm prints.

"Likable and well-paced even at its silliest... this film has a sleek and silvery Art Deco look." Pauline Kael

first played at the Stanford Theatre Oct 11, 1936; last played Aug 2008

The Thin Man (1934) 5:50, 9:15
d W. S. Van Dyke II. w Albert Hackett & Frances Goodrich, based on the novel by Dashiell Hammett. ph James Wong Howe. m William Axt. MGM. 93 min.

William Powell, Myrna Loy, Maureen O'Sullivan, Nat Pendleton, Minna Gombell, Edward Ellis, Porter Hall, Henry Wadsworth, William Henry, Harold Huber, Cesar Romero, Natalie Moorhead, Edward Brophy, Clay Clement, Asta.

It seems truly incredible that The Thin Man was made in only 12 days, but it is even harder to imagine that it could ever lose its position as Hollywood's all-time favorite sophisticated detective movie, or that there could ever be another screen marriage as perfect as Nick and Nora's.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Jun 22, 1934; last played Mar 2006


November 27 — 28:
"Tell me, what do you do – besides lure men to their doom on the Twentieth Century Limited?"
North by Northwest (1959) (3:00), 7:30
d Alfred Hitchcock. w Ernest Lehman. ph Robert Burks. m Bernard Herrmann. MGM. 136 min.

Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint, James Mason, Jessi Royce Landis, Leo G. Carroll, Philip Ober, Joseph Hutchinson, Martin Landau, Adam Williams, Edward Platt, Robert Ellenstein, Les Tremayne.

In Hitchcock's most successful blending of romance and suspense, and one of Hollywood's most enduring classics, mild-mannered advertising executive Cary Grant answers the wrong page one afternoon and finds himself embroiled with spies, murderers, the FBI, and Eva Marie Saint — which only gives Hitchcock the chance to display some of his most extravagant fantasies, such as the crop dusting scene and the Mt. Rushmore climax.

"Cinema, approached in this way, becomes a truly abstract art, like music... It's obvious that the fantasy of the absurd is a key ingredient in your film-making formula." François Truffaut

"The fact is I practice absurdity quite religiously." Hitchcock

"Since that [crop-dusting] scene doesn't move the action forward, it's the kind of concept that would simply never occur to a screenwriter; only a director could dream up an idea like that." Truffaut

Hitchcock appears crossing the street.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Jan 24, 1990; last played Mar 2008

To Catch a Thief (1955) 5:35, 10:00
d Alfred Hitchcock. w John Michael Hayes. ph Robert Burks. m Lyn Murray. Paramount. 103 min.

Cary Grant, Grace Kelly, Jessie Royce Landis, John Williams, Charles Vanel, Brigitte Auber, Jean Martinelli, Georgette Anys, Roland Lessaffre, René Blancard.

Cary Grant plays a retired cat-burglar who is suspected of a series of jewel thefts committed by a copy-cat.

More romantic comedy than suspense thriller, the film was made on location on the French Riviera, where Grace Kelly met Prince Rainier.

"Grace Kelly actually looks alive, and she's sexier than she is in anything else." Pauline Kael

"Sex on the screen should be suspenseful, I feel. If sex is too blatant or obvious, there's no suspense." Hitchcock

Hitchcock's cameo appearance is on a bus, next to Cary Grant.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Sep 14, 1955; last played June 2009


November 29 — 30:
Three Coins in the Fountain (1954) (3:15), 7:30
d Jean Negulesco. w John Patrick. ph Milton Krasner. m Victor Young. 20th Century-Fox. 102 min.

Clifton Webb, Louis Jourdan, Dorothy McGuire, Jean Peters, Maggie McNamara, Rossano Brazzi.

In one of the best remembered films of the 1950's, three American women find romance while working in Rome. This was Hollywood's first Cinemascope movie made on location in a romantic foreign setting. It made the Fountain of Trevi a prime destination for a whole generation of American tourists. The title tune (sung by Frank Sinatra) won the Oscar for Best Song of 1954.

first played at the Stanford Theatre June 26, 1954; last played Aug 2007

Love in the Afternoon (1957) 5:10, 9:25
d Billy Wilder. w Billy Wilder, I. A. L. Diamond. ph William Mellor. m Franz Waxman. Allied Artists. 130 min.

Gary Cooper, Audrey Hepburn, Maurice Chevalier, John McGiver.

In Paris an American businessman (Cooper) hires a private detective (Chevalier) to investigate an enchanting young cello student (Hepburn), who happens to be the detective's daughter.

This picture seems inspired by the memory of the great Ernst Lubitsch, for whom Wilder had written two screenplays (Ninotchka and Bluebeard's Eighth Wife).

first played at the Stanford Theatre Jul 21, 1957; last played Aug 2006


December 1 — 3:
"Fasten your seat belts... it's going to be a bumpy ride."
All About Eve (1950) 7:30

w/d Joseph L. Mankiewicz. ph Milton Krasner. m Alfred Newman. 20th Century-Fox. 138 min.

Bette Davis, George Sanders, Anne Baxter, Celeste Holm, Thelma Ritter, Gary Merrill, Hugh Marlowe, Gregory Ratoff, Marilyn Monroe, Barbara Bates, Walter Hampden.

Hollywood's devastating revenge against the "legitimate" stage, in which Broadway star Margo Channing (Bette Davis) is pursued by the cunningly obsequious Eve Harrington (Anne Baxter) under the eye of caustic drama critic Addison De Witt (George Sanders).

Six Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director, hardly do justice to one of the most popular films of all time.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Nov 12, 1950; last played Aug 2008

"It was mid-afternoon, and it's funny, I can still remember the smell of honeysuckle all along that block. I felt like a million. There was no way in all this world I could have known that murder sometimes can smell like honeysuckle."
Double Indemnity (1944) 5:30, 10:00
d Billy Wilder. w Billy Wilder & Raymond Chandler, from the novel by James M. Cain. ph John F. Seitz. m Miklós Rózsa. Paramount. 106 min.

Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward G. Robinson, Tom Powers, Porter Hall, Jean Heather, Byron Barr, Richard Gaines, Fortunio Bonanova, John Philliber.

A suburban housewife (Stanwyck) ensnares an insurance salesman (MacMurray) into helping murder her husband for the insurance money.

This seminal masterpiece of the film noir genre was perfectly supported by a revolutionary Rózsa score that pulsates with bitter harmonic clashes. Edward G. Robinson's performance as the sympathetic insurance fraud investigator is especially memorable. Wilder defied studio conventions by shooting much of the film in locations around L.A., and the exteriors of the Glendale train station, a Melrose Avenue supermarket, and a Spanish stucco house in the Los Feliz Hills provide a fascinating glimpse of the city as it looked in the 40's.

"Every turn and twist is exactly calculated and achieves its effect with the simplest of means; this shrewd, smoothly tawdry thriller is one of the high points of 40s films." Pauline Kael

Print from the UCLA Film Archive, preserved from a nitrate fine grain master positive, with funding by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Oct 25, 1944; last played Feb 2007


December 4 — 5:
"Like everywhere else, most people in Paris get married, but not all. There are some who will not marry, and some who do not marry. But in Paris, those who will not marry are usually men, and those who do not marry are usually women."
Gigi (1958) (3:35), 7:30
d Vincente Minnelli. w Alan Jay Lerner, from the novel by Colette. ph Joseph Ruttenberg. m Frederick Loewe. des Cecil Beaton MGM. 116 min.

Leslie Caron, Maurice Chevalier, Louis Jourdan, Hermione Gingold, Eva Gabor, Isabel Jeans.

Colette's original story (about the education of a courtesan) was softened somewhat to stress the emotional development of a charming but mischievous girl on the verge of womanhood. Three of the principal creators of My Fair Lady (Lerner, Loewe, and Beaton) helped Minnelli make Gigi one of the most successful musicals in history. It won nine Oscars (including Best Picture and Best Director), which was at the time the largest number ever awarded to a single film.

Gigi is a film that benefits enormously from being seen on the big screen and with the original magnetic stereophonic sound track.

first played at the Stanford Theatre July 20, 1990; last played July 2009

"Marble Arch 5101"
The Reluctant Debutante (1958) 5:40, 9:25
d Vincente Minelli. w William Douglas Home, from his play. ph Joseph Ruttenberg. md Eddie Warner. MGM. 96 min.

Rex Harrison, Kay Kendall, Sandra Dee, Peter Myers, Angela Lansbury, John Saxon, Diane Clare.

During the debutante season, the teen-aged American daughter (Sandra Dee) of an upper-class British father (Rex Harrison) comes to London to visit her now remarried father. Her new stepmother (Kay Kendall) insists on presenting her to society.

Vincente Minelli directed many Hollywood classics, including Meet Me in St Louis, An American in Paris, and Gigi. While virtually unknown to the public, The Reluctant Debutante has always been treasured by Minelli fans for its extraordinary humanity, style, and humor.

This great comic gem is practically unknown-- except here at the Stanford Theatre! Regular patrons will recognize that we have already programmed this film as a second feature on eleven occasions, in an effort to introduce it to the public, which may be unaware of its existence. In fact, you might say that it is a cult favorite at the Stanford.

first played at the Stanford Theatre July 20, 1990; last played July 2008


December 6 — 7:
An American in Paris (1951) (3:40), 7:30
d Vincente Minnelli. w Alan Jay Lerner. ph Alfred Gilks & John Alton. m George and Ira Gershwin. MGM. 113 min.

Gene Kelly, Leslie Caron, Oscar Levant, Georges Guetary, Nina Foch.

American painter Jerry Mulligan (Kelly) pursues Parisian gamine Lise Bouvier (Caron). Best Picture of 1951 and six other Oscars. The famous ballet (inspired by Renoir, Rousseau, Toulouse-Lautrec, and other French painters) is one of the greatest artistic creations in the cinema.

last played Jan 2007

Father of the Bride (1950) 5:45, 9:35
d Vincente Minnelli. w Frances Goodrich & Albert Hackett, from the novel by Edward Streeter. ph John Alton. m Adolph Deutsch. MGM. 92 min.

Spencer Tracy, Joan Bennett, Elizabeth Taylor, Don Taylor, Billie Burke, Moroni Olsen, Leo G. Carroll, Taylor Holmes, Melville Cooper.

Stanley T. Banks (Tracy) comes to terms with the marriage of his daughter Kay (Taylor). You may have seen the remake, but there is just no substitute for the genuine article. The tremendous success of this film, which Minnelli completed in one month, demonstrated beyond any doubt that his genius was not limited to musicals.

"The American domestic comedy par excellence." Halliwell

first played at the Stanford Theatre Jul 13, 1950; last played July 2008


December 8 — 10:
"Meet me in St. Louis, Louis, meet me at the fair..."
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) 7:30
d Vincente Minnelli. w Irving Brecher & Fred F. Finklehoff, from stories by Sally Benson. ph George Folsey. songs Hugh Martin & Ralph Blane MGM. 113 min.

Judy Garland, Margaret O'Brien, Mary Astor, Lucille Bremer, Tom Drake, June Lockhart, Marjorie Main, Leon Ames, Harry Davenport, Joan Carroll, Chill Wills.

A year in the life of of the Smith family at 5135 Kensington Avenue in St. Louis, leading up to the 1904 World's Fair; based on a series of New Yorker stories by Sally Benson.

One of the very greatest films Hollywood ever made, Meet Me in St. Louis established Minnelli as the undisputed master of of the film musical. He directed the film with a warm nostalgic glow that is never saccharine. The film also made Judy Garland, who had her best role since Dorothy, a major adult star. It was the biggest box office success of MGM's first 20 years, and it remains one of the most universally loved films ever made.

Minnelli often identified the "Halloween" episode as his favorite sequence among all his films, and the performance of seven-year-old Margaret O'Brien as the troubled younger sister "Tootie" stands out as one of the true miracles in the history of the cinema.

Songs include: The Boy Next Door, The Trolley Song, Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Mar 11, 1945; last played July 2009

"We're off to see..."
The Wizard of Oz (1939) 5:35, 9:35
d Victor Fleming & King Vidor. w Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, Edgar Allan Wolfe, from the book by L. Frank Baum. ph Harold Rosson. songs E. Y. Harburg & Harold Arlen. MGM. 102 min.

Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, Bert Lahr, Margaret Hamilton, Billie Burke, Charley Grapewin, Clara Blandick.

One of the most beloved films of Hollywood's Golden Age, The Wizard of Oz continues to enchant adiences more than 60 years after its premiere. You haven't really been to Oz until you've seen it on our big screen in glorious Technicolor, with an audience.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Sep 3, 1939; last played Dec 2008


December 11 — 12:
"Rome, by all means, Rome. I will cherish my visit here in memory as long as I live."
Roman Holiday (1953) (3:15), 7:30
d William Wyler. w Ian McLellan Hunter (Dalton Trumbo), John Dighton. ph Franz Planer, Henri Alekan. Paramount. 118 min.

Gregory Peck, Audrey Hepburn, Eddie Albert, Hartley Power, Harcourt Williams.

A young princess on a European goodwill tour escapes her guardians for 24 hours of freedom in Rome with an American reporter (Gregory Peck).

The whole world fell in love with Audrey Hepburn in her first Hollywood role. The film received a total of ten Oscar nominations and Audrey was voted Best Actress.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Sep 20, 1953; last played Aug 2009

"And there was a man of no particular title who took care of a small pool in the garden for a goldfish named George."
Sabrina (1954) 5:25, 9:40
d Billy Wilder. w Billy Wilder, Samuel Taylor, & Ernest Lehman, from the play Sabrina Fair by Samuel Taylor. ph Charles Lang, Jr. m Frederick Hollander. Paramount. 113 min.

Humphrey Bogart, William Holden, Audrey Hepburn, Walter Hampden, John Williams, Martha Hyer, Joan Vohs, Marcel Dalio, Marcel Hillaire, Nella Walker, Francis X. Bushman, Ellen Corbey.

In this wonderfully romantic picture Audrey Hepburn plays Sabrina, the chauffeur's daughter on a Long Island estate. She loves the playboy son (Holden) of her father's boss, but his stuffy elder brother (Bogart) surprises everyone in the end.

Bogart was not happy while making this film, but we are grateful that he did it. Over the past ten years, Sabrina has been the number three box office favorite at the Stanford Theatre, exceeded only by Casablanca and Gone With the Wind

Isn't it Romantic is the theme song of the Stanford Theatre.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Nov 20, 1958; last played Dec 2008


December 13 — 14:
My Fair Lady (1964) (2:00), 7:30
d George Cukor. w Alan Jay Lerner, from the play Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw. ph Harry Stradling. m Frederick Loewe. Warner Bros. 175 min.

Rex Harrison, Audrey Hepburn, Stanley Holloway, Wilfrid Hyde White, Gladys Cooper, Jeremy Britt, Theodore Bikel, Isobel Elson, Mona Washbourne, Walter Burke.

The film version of My Fair Lady (Best Picture of 1964) came nearly a decade after the Broadway musical. In the meantime, Lerner and Loewe created the music for Gigi. Although Audrey Hepburn had played Gigi on Broadway in 1952, she turned down the role in the 1958 film. Many people in 1964 thought that Julie Andrews should have played Eliza (as she did on Broadway). It may be a little hard to accept Audrey as a guttersnipe in the early scenes, but future generations will surely be grateful to rediscover in this film the most authentic fair lady of our age. The world will be grateful that Cukor's film preserves Rex Harrison in one of the great performances of the twentieth century.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Sep 8, 1990; last played Aug 2009


December 15 — 17:
Funny Face (1957) 7:30
d Stanley Donen. w Leonard Gershe, from his play Wedding Day. ph Ray June. Paramount. 103 min.

Fred Astaire, Audrey Hepburn, Kay Thompson, Michael Auclair, Robert Flemyng.

Audrey Hepburn plays a Greenwich Village bohemian who goes to Paris as model for fashion photographer Fred Astaire. The Astaire role was based on Richard Avedon, whose own involvement as a consultant helped give the film its remarkable visual style.

Funny Face was originally a 1927 musical play, starring Astaire and his sister Adele, with music by Gershwin. The film has a totally different story line but does retain six Gershwin songs (two from another show). Audrey sings in her own charming voice, unlike My Fair Lady, where her singing is dubbed.

The film was made on location in Paris, which is celebrated in the wonderfully exuberant "Bonjour Paris", written by Roger Edens and Leonard Gershe.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Dec 30, 1990; last played Jul 2007

The Band Wagon (1953) 5:25, 9:25
d Vincente Minnelli. w Betty Comden & Adolph Green. ph Harry Jackson & George Folsey. songs Howard Dietz and Arthur Schwartz. MGM. 112 min.

Fred Astaire, Cyd Charisse, Jack Buchanan, Oscar Levant, Nanette Fabray, James Mitchell.

Ex song-and-dance man Tony Hunter (Astaire) makes a comeback. From the opening note of the overture to the final "Made in Hollywood, USA", The Band Wagon offers two of the most entertaining hours ever manufactured in Culver City (the actual location of MGM).

The Band Wagon was a 1931 Broadway show, starring Fred Astaire and his sister Adele. The 1953 movie keeps three songs, but does not follow the original story.

Songs include: By Myself, Shine on Your Shoes, That's Entertainment, Dancing in the Dark, I Love Louisa, I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plans, Triplets, New Sun in the Sky, Louisiana Hayride.

last played Jul 2008


December 18 — 19:
"With the coming of the Second World War, many eyes in imprisoned Europe turned hopefully, or desperately, toward the freedom of the Americas. Lisbon became the great embarkation point. But not everybody could get to Lisbon directly; and so, a tortuous, round-about refugee trail sprang up: Paris to Marseilles, across the Mediterranean to Oran, then by train, or auto, or foot, across the rim of Africa to Casablanca in French Morocco. Here the fortunate ones, through money, or influence, or luck, might obtain exit visas and scurry to Lisbon, and from Lisbon to the New World. But the others wait in Casablanca... and wait... and wait... and wait."
Casablanca (1942) (3:30), 7:30
d Michael Curtiz. w Julius J. Epstein, Philip G. Epstein, Howard Koch, from the play Everybody Comes to Rick's by Murray Burnett & Joan Alison. m Max Steiner. ph Arthur Edeson. Warner Bros. 102 min.

Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Paul Henreid, Claude Rains, Konrad Veidt, Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre, S. Z. Sakall, Madeline Le Beau, Dooley Wilson, Joy Page, John Qualen, Leonid Kinsky, Helmut Dantine, Curt Bois, Marcel Dalio, Corinna Mura, Ludwig Stossel, Ilka Gruning, Charles La Torre, Frank Puglia, Dan Seymour.

As time goes by, it becomes increasingly unlikely that anyone will ever make a movie better than Casablanca. On its 50th anniversary in 1992, more people saw Casablanca at the Stanford Theatre than anywhere else in the world.

"Of all the movie theatres in all the towns in all the world, they walk into ours."

first played at the Stanford Theatre Feb 24, 1943; last played June 2009

"It's all right, Tracy. We all go a little haywire at times – and if we don't, maybe we ought to."
The Philadelphia Story (1940) 5:25, 9:25
d George Cukor. w Donald Ogden Stewart & Waldo Salt, from the play by Philip Barry. ph Joseph Ruttenberg. m Franz Waxman. MGM. 112 min.

Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, James Stewart, Ruth Hussey, John Howard, Roland Young, John Halliday, Mary Nash, Virginia Weidler, John Howard, Henry Daniell.

The society marriage of Tracy Samantha Lord and C. K. Dexter Haven ended in divorce. Tracy is about to marry "man of the people" George Kittredge, when Spy Magazine sends a couple of reporters to cover the wedding.

Philip Barry wrote the play specially for Katharine Hepburn. After its successful Broadway run she sold the play to MGM, retaining the right to select the director and cast.

Jimmy Stewart won the Oscar as Best Actor of 1940 for his performance as reporter Macauley Connor.

This wonderful picture ranks as one of the supreme treasures of Hollywood's golden age. The Stanford Theatre brings it back at least once a year – always to enthusiastic crowds. It never grows old!

first played at the Stanford Theatre Feb 9, 1941; last played July 2009


December 20 — 23:
"I want your opinion, your honest opinion."
The Shop Around the Corner (1940) (3:55), 7:30
d Ernst Lubitsch. w Samuel Raphaelson, from the play by Nikolaus Laszlo. ph William Daniels. m Werner Heymann. MGM. 97 min.

James Stewart, Margaret Sullavan, Frank Morgan, Joseph Schildkraut, Sara Haden, Felix Bressart, William Tracy.

In the days before Christmas. a new sales clerk (Margaret Sullavan) is hired by a Budapest shop. She and the manager (Jimmy Stewart) have a stressful relationship on the job, unaware that they have been conducting a romance as pen pals who have never met in person.

"Among the greatest of films... The cafe conversation may be the best meeting in American Film." David Thomson
"One of the most beautifully acted and paced romantic comedies ever made." Pauline Kael
"Never did I make a picture in which the atmosphere and the characters were truer than in this picture." Ernst Lubitsch

first played at the Stanford Theatre Feb 4, 1940; last played Dec 2008

Miracle on 34th Street (1947) 5:45, 9:20
d George Seaton. w George Seaton, story by Valentine Davies. ph Charles Clarke, Lloyd Ahern. m Cyril Mockridge. 20th Century-Fox. 94 min.

Edmund Gwenn, Maureen O'Hara, Natalie Wood, John Payne, Gene Lockhart, Porter Hall, William Frawley, Jerome Cowan, Thelma Ritter.

One of America's most beloved Christmas movies. A Santa Claus working at Macy's department store, a kindly gentleman who calls himself Kris Kringle, has everyone believing in Santa Claus, exept for one little girl.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Jul 13, 1947; last played Dec 2006


December 24:
"All you can take with you is that which you've given away."
It's a Wonderful Life (1946) 9:00
d Frank Capra. w Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett, Frank Capra, based on the short story The Greatest Gift by Philip Van Doren Stern. ph Joseph Walker, Joseph Biroc. m Dimitri Tiomkin. Liberty. 129 min.

James Stewart, Donna Reed, Lionel Barrymore, Thomas Mitchell, Henry Travers, Beulah Bondi, Frank Faylen, Ward Bond, Gloria Grahame, H. B. Warner, Frank Albertson, Samuel S. Hinds, Mary Treen.

The traditional Christmas Eve screening of what Frank Capra modestly called "the greatest movie anybody ever made." Advance tickets are recommended. Every Christmas Eve more than 1000 people watch George Bailey's Odyssey at The Stanford Theatre. It's our most important tradition.

first played at the Stanford Theatre Apr 27, 1947; last played Dec 2008


December 25 — 26:
"Tara. I want to go home to Tara."
Gone With the Wind (1939) (2:00), 7:30
d Victor Fleming (and George Cukor, Sam Wood). w Sidney Howard and others, from the novel by Margaret Mitchell. ph Ernest Haller, Ray Rennahan. m Max Steiner. Selznick International. 221 min.

Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Olivia de Havilland, Leslie Howard, Thomas Mitchell, Barbara O'Neil, Hattie McDaniel, Butterfly McQueen, Victor Jory, Evelyn Keyes, Ann Rutherford, Laura Hope Crews, Harry Davenport, Jane Darwell, Ona Munson, Ward Bond.

Everyone knows the famous names and the drama that "made" Gone With the Wind. Let's therefore mention a couple who get less attention: production designer William Cameron Menzies, who conceived the look of the movie and story-boarded most of it; and Jack Cosgrove, who painted matte backgrounds on glass for effects scenes. Their art is all through the picture and testifies to Selznick's command of detail and painstaking craft– old-fashioned movie-making, to say nothing of magic. There's one other name: Technicolor, a system that came of age with Gone With the Wind. Many in Hollywood doubted color (notably Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer). But after Gone With the Wind, and the enforced economizing of war, color became irresistable. Later on, Technicolor was abandoned for other systems supposedly truer to life. Today we regret the lost, painterly passion of Technicolor and its durability, for the new color systems fade, while Technicolor still burns.

A great film epic deserves to be seen in a theatre of epic proportions.

first played at the Stanford Theatre May 3, 1940; last played Apr 2009