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Category: September 21, 2008 - September 27, 2008

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Charles Champlin on Paul Newman



Paul_newman_lat_2000_2
Photograph by Bruce Gilbert / For The Times

Paul Newman, Westport, Conn., April 2000

Hot, Sexy and (Almost) 70


He's played a rogue's gallery of rascals throughout his 38-year movie career, but somehow, with Paul Newman in the role, they can't help but become heroes. How does he do that?



Dec. 18, 1994

By Charles Champlin
Times' arts editor emeritus

Above the mantelpiece of the huge field-stone fireplace in the converted barn on Paul Newman's Connecticut acres hangs a grand and garish poster of Buffalo Bill on horseback. It was a set decoration in the showman's office in Robert Altman's film "Buffalo Bill and the Indians," in which Newman starred in 1976.

"Immediately after the film was over I hustled the picture out of there," Newman remarked a few days ago. "About four months later I got a note from Altman, saying he'd wanted the picture himself. I said, 'Bob, that's the only heroic guy I've ever been seen as, and I made up my mind I was gonna stick that thing up.' "

It is true that while Newman has always borne a close resemblance to a Greek god, and at the age of 69 still does (showing almost no signs of wear and care), he has played an inordinate number of what one writer called "flawed rakes." ("I would take ownership of the phrase," Newman says admiringly.)

Newman certainly has been seen as good and perhaps heroic figures. His Rocky Graziano in "Somebody Up There Likes Me" in 1956 established him indisputably as a movie star, but most of his good guy roles fade before the lingering luminescence of the rascal or worse he was in, for examples, "Hud," "Hombre," "The Hustler," "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," "Sweet Bird of Youth, "Cool Hand Luke," the alcoholic, burnt-out lawyer who finds redemption in "The Verdict" and more recently the comically villainous business executive in the Coen brothers' "The Hudsucker Proxy."

The paradox is that Newman, more than almost any actor of his long generation, somehow can't help being attractive and sympathetic even when by all that is good and holy he shouldn't be. In "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," both he and Robert Redford were in the great tradition of lovable rogues, and when their law-breaking pasts caught up with them in a hail of Bolivian gunfire, there was no satisfying sense that justice had been properly done, only a glum regret that there wouldn't be a sequel.

Newman once complained that in one of his nastiest roles, as the callously insensitive Hud, he tried to be as unsympathetic as he could, hoping the audience would leave, as he told an English interviewer, with "loathing and disgust; instead we created a folk hero."

In "Cool Hand Luke" in 1967, he was the epitome of the '60s anti-hero, free-spirited and defiantly, fatally self-destructive. He was not by definition a tragic figure, yet he invested his prankster with a kind of tragic nobility that heightened the indictment of an oppressive justice system.

*

It is a glorious fall day in the Connecticut countryside, the sky cloudless, a brisk breeze stripping the last leaves from the trees. Newman does not much like interviews, except insofar as he can talk about Hollywood, movies generally, societal matters, practically anything except Paul Newman. This morning, he says, he is lethargic with anger over the election two days before. It is a "damn-both-your-houses" anger.

"Loyalty to party, loyalty to the whole community, they've been replaced by deification of the individual. That's why Congress couldn't get anything done. No one would get behind anybody else because everybody wanted authorship. I can only assume or hope that the Republicans will learn from this and be cohesive enough to get something done.

"There are two things that make me sweat: live television and government."

But to the business at hand, and Newman is now back again at the business of being a flawed rake in need of redemption in Robert Benton's "Nobody's Fool," set in small-town Upstate New York and based on a novel by Richard Russo.

The film is a kind of socially realistic fable, charming and offbeat, in which Newman plays a construction worker who has abandoned wife and now-grown son, boards with one of his grade-school teachers (Jessica Tandy in her last, fine role), drinks a tad too much, plays cards with his luckless lawyer, flirts a little (avoiding any threat of commitment) and is generally the charming wastrel he ever was. The film opens on Christmas Day in New York and Los Angeles, for Oscar consideration, naturally, and will go wide in February.

He likes the film a lot, which is not invariably true of actors contemplating the vehicle in which they have worked. "It has a human dimension, which is getting to be rare in films these days," Newman said, sitting in the barn, which is a few yards down the yard from his house and contains a projection room and a small kitchen and is filled with family photographs and mementos of his racing activities.

The film "has patience, it has courage; it's content to let things unfold in whatever human ways they unfold, without worrying about the clock in the cutting room," Newman says, pausing between words, trying, as is his custom, to say just what he means.

"The thrust of the film is the development of the characters. It's about a guy becoming accessible. Where a guy's going to go emotionally is less predictable than when you have a very strong plot line--a man's gotta get the money by a certain time, that kind of thing."

Jessica Tandy was already ailing with cancer when she made "Nobody's Fool." "She seemed fragile," he says sadly, "but she was a big presence. There was as always something patrician about her attitude, and she never gave any outward indication of whatever turmoil was going on. She was tranquilizing for all of us."

On the making of the film: "I keep thinking nostalgia ain't what it used to be, but it is. I remember when you had a stable of actors at a studio and you started with the first scene, and then you shot the second scene, and then you shot the third scene, and finally on the last day of shooting you shot the last scene.

"Now you shoot the last scene the week after you've started, and people get shuffled in and out because they've only got nine days and everything is out of sequence. And how the film comes together in some semblance of emotional buildup is something of a puzzle. You go on instinct a lot. You take the plan, the script, and eliminate the organization and maybe it works better that way."

The miracle of good film acting is that, even when it is done in sequence, as it almost never is any more, the performance is a mosaic of very small shards, most only a few seconds long. Yet if it works, the portrayal not only has a beginning, a middle and an end (ideally of rising interest and impact), it also has a naturalness and a seeming spontaneity that never suggests an actor has been acting.

Newman, trudging through the snow in the fictional North Bath, N.Y. (actually Beacon, N.Y., near the Hudson River), is indubitably Paul Newman, and a welcome sight, too; but he has become Sully Sullivan, a man with a troubled past and a problematic future which are all Sullivan's. The actor's identity, although not his presence, has disappeared within the creation. The process is what makes superstars, and Newman, who has been at it for 40 years, remains one of the handful.

He and his wife, Joanne Woodward, whom he met in 1953, had the great luck of coming on-stream as actors in a rich time for the theater and, even more excitingly, in the first years of live television, when everything seemed possible, or at least worth trying.

Newman, having been a radio gunner on a Navy torpedo bomber in World War II, had returned to graduate from Kenyon College and took another year realizing he had no heart for the family clothing business in Cleveland. He did summer stock in Illinois, attended the Yale Drama School and then tackled Broadway, making a strong first impression in 1953 in William Inge's "Picnic."

"There was such terrific writing being done: Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller, Albee, Inge. And live television was uncovered ground, unexplored territory," Newman remembers. "And however crude the shows were by today's standards, that whole era of kitchen-sink drama, which replaced the Group Theater stuff, was just beginning to open up. Paddy Chayefsky was writing, a whole lot of great guys."

But, being live television, it meant there were no second chances. "I remember I was doing an Army drama and I had nine changes and no time to do any of them. I heard my cue and still didn't have my pants zipped. I buttoned the top button and ran into the set. The officer was Jim Gregory, a wonderful actor, and he saw right away that my fly was unzipped and my shirt was sticking out. I said 'Sir!' and tried to hold my hands in front of my pants. He'd never saluted me, but he did now, so I had to salute him back, revealing my difficulties." Newman laughed. "Wicked."

He did a musical version of "Our Town," one of NBC's first color transmissions, with Frank Sinatra as the stage manager and Eva Marie Saint as Newman's co-star. "It's a great piece of Americana, but I'll tell you something: I'm not much of a singer, and they wanted me to harmonize and somewhere I lost the harmony and never found it again. But you couldn't retape it; it was all there."

In 1971 the Newmans bought a 1739 farmhouse in exurban Connecticut as a summer house. They had lived in a variety of houses in California (22 in their years there, Newman estimates) and they have a New York apartment. But the Connecticut place, with a small but fishable river running behind it, pleased them increasingly. Newman dreaded the possibility of a glassy modern house being built on the greensward across the river and sought to buy some acreage from the woman who owned the estate. The owner said she would only sell the whole property, and several years later she was ready.

"You get two appraisals made and I'll get two made and we'll add 'em up and divide by four and I'll write you a check," Newman said, and did. He had a footbridge built over the river, the Aspetuck, after a tussle with the township over how high the 100-year high-water mark was. It links the two properties, and the summer house is now the guest house. At the edge of the lawn of the guest house stands a large tombstone Newman gave the children one Christmas, carved with the names of all the deceased family pets, cats, dogs, horses and birds.

The salad dressing that was the beginning of the Newman's Own charitable enterprise was first made in the barn, in what had once been the stables. "I'm not sure what the Food and Drug Administration would have said if they'd known that," Newman said, grinning.

Newman's Own, launched in 1982 on an initial investment of $20,000 and administered by Ursula Hotchner, the wife of writer A. E. Hotchner, who co-founded the company with Newman, has through this summer donated $60 million in profits to something like 400 charitable causes here and abroad.

The product line, which has expanded beyond salad dressing to include popcorn and spaghetti sauces, recently expanded again with the formation of Newman's Own Second Generation organic pretzels, made by a California subsidiary launched by Newman's daughter Nell.

Newman's Own is not only sending millions to good causes, it is also creating jobs. "We've got two plants here that make the spaghetti sauce, plus one in Europe, plus one in Australia," Newman says, "and we've got two bottlers for the salad dressing. You know our slogan: 'Shameless exploitation in pursuit of the common good.' "

Last summer at a fund-raiser for the first Hole in the Wall Gang summer camp for children with life-threatening diseases at Ashford, Conn., Newman himself played Sneezy in a very special version of "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." Hotchner wrote the adaptation, which was narrated by Joan Rivers. "Melanie (Griffith) took the red-eye in from the coast to be in it," Newman says. She shared a dual Wicked Queen role with dancer Ann Reinking.

Critic Gene Shalit was Grumpy, Tony Randall was Happy and Hotchner himself played Bashful. David Letterman made a surprise appearance. "I was the only one in the cast who didn't know he was going to be there," Newman says. "You could have driven a railroad car through my mouth. It was a lot of talent for a 225-seat house. We called it the longest run in Ashford history."

There are four more camps open or under construction, in New York State, Florida, France and Ireland. "But they're not the major preoccupation of the company. We scatter the profits all over the 50 states."

To his regret, Newman has had to end his career as a race driver. "I'm just a little long in the tooth for it anymore," he says. An enthusiasm fired by his role in "Winning" in 1969, Newman found that competitive driving energized his whole life and made the spaces between films not only bearable but enjoyable. "I just like winning," he once told an English reporter. "I despise that primal urge in myself, but it's really all there is." Woodward, however, who hated the Angst when he was off at the races, made him a pillow that reads, "Winning isn't everything; it's how you played the game."

He will continue to co-sponsor his racing team, however, in partnership with Chicago businessman Carl Haas. They imported British driver Nigel Mansell, who was the Indy car driver of the year in 1993.

"But we didn't win a race, not a single race, this year," Newman says. Mansell decided to abandon Indy cars to go back to the Formula One cars that compete on the Grand Prix circuit. "Michael Andretti is coming to race with us, and Paul Tracy."

Newman, who has proved himself a first-rate director with "Rachel, Rachel," "The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds" and "The Glass Menagerie," all starring his wife, has been developing another project he would like to direct. But, he says, it's not easy.

"Getting something accomplished now seems to depend more on the concept of banking than it does on the concept of literature, or the screenplay. And that's a tough kind of situation because you can't gather yourself up and get momentum. You can't say it's done and let's get on with it. They say wait a minute. You keep waiting for any number of people to say yes. This guy says yes, but that guy's gotta say yes and this guy's gotta say yes and that guy's gotta say yes, and if anybody gets left out of the loop, including the guy who takes care of the weather reports, then it's hard to put it together."

He worries about the difficulty of finding the human dimension in scripts and films. He is also uneasy about the violence.

" 'Pulp Fiction' is marvelously inventive and eccentric. But I don't know what to do with the violence anymore. I mean, there's a difference between the cartoon violence in 'Slap Shot' (the film about minor league hockey Newman did in 1977), for instance, which was violent but truly in a cartoon sense. But it's one thing to make fun of guys who are slugging each other on the ice, and another thing to use comedy to ameliorate the brutality of a guy getting his head blown off.

"It's certainly the theater of the senses now, as compared to the theater of the mind. They escalate the sensory impact of films now, the noise of them, the violence of them, the sensuality of them, and where will it end? In the Westerns of the '30s, the sheriff shot the villain at the finish. Now he's not even remotely right unless he has 88 corpses at the beginning of the picture, just to show that he has the proper intentions. It's a score card: Sheriff, 344 bad guys; bad guys, 12 good guys; a few offside penalties."

Newman is fascinated by the possibility of sequels. "You know, you get hold of a character you like and you say, 'Why don't we go back and take a look at what he's doing 25 years later, as in 'The Color of Money.' "

Stewart Stern wrote "Rachel, Rachel," with Woodward as a spinster schoolteacher in a New England town, and it won four Oscar nominations, for best picture and for Stern, Woodward and Estelle Parsons.

"So Stewart and I tried to write this sequel. Stewart and his wife live in Seattle. Joanne and I went up to see them a while ago. He's a docent at the zoo and he's got his own gorilla. Did you ever try to feed a 400-pound gorilla with a spoon?"

Stern, Newman says, wrote two wonderful scenes for a sequel. In one, Woodward is taking a ballet class with several other middle-aged women. A friend comes to the door of the classroom and mimes to Woodward, "Your mother's dead." (Mother was always a problem.) In the next scene, back at the house awaiting the undertaker, Woodward's sister says, "You take care of the dog; I'll take care of mother." Stewart and Newman even imagined a denouement in Africa. "Wonderful, wonderful idea," Newman says, "but we could just never finish it."

Maybe, Newman says wryly, "It's in the nature of us old birds to complain about the generation that follows us. But you can't have good theater without good audiences, just as you can't have good literature or good pictures without good audiences, and I don't know where the audiences are now.

"I think there are just two straight plays on Broadway. Many of the theaters are dark. But you've got all these wide-eyed kids coming out of Yale, Juilliard, Northwestern, and now the Actors Studio has a course at the New School. What the hell are they all going to do?"

Newman, like all serious and dedicated actors, lives to work at his craft. Enjoyable as the life of a country squire is and satisfying as the good works are that Newman's Own makes possible, there is nothing like a good part, like Sully in "Nobody's Fool."

"There's a lot of humor in it," Newman says. "I hope it comes through."*

Movie revivals -- Devil in a Blue Dress

Coming soon to a theater near you...


Devil_blue_dress

Above, "Devil in a Blue Dress."


Jan. 13, 2009, 8 p.m. Ramo Auditorium at Caltech.

"Devil in a Blue Dress," with discussion afterward. Frank Capra Film Series. Free.

Paul Newman, 1925-2008

Jan. 30, 1958
Los Angeles

Update: This was an entry I did in January for the 50th wedding anniversary of Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman. I'm reposting it after learning that Newman has died.

Recognize these young movie stars? I read about lots of Hollywood marriages as I go through the old papers--and even more Hollywood divorces. So as Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward celebrate their 50th anniversary, I thought I'd run a few pictures from the early days.

 

1958_0130_newman_woodward

1958_0130_newman_hopper_3

 

Paul_newman_j_woodward_1958_0314_fi
Los Angeles Times file photograph

Woodward and Newman in "The Long, Hot Summer," 1958.

Paul_newman_j_woodward_1958_1128_fi
Los Angeles Times file photo

Newman (reviewing the script of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys") and Woodward at home, November 1958.

Paul_newman_j_woodward_1960_0712_fi
Los Angeles Times file photo

Newman and Woodward--isn't this a great picture? (Even though it's unidentified). A reader tells me this is a scene in "From the Terrace."

Paul_newman_j_woodward_1962_0410_la
Photograph by the Los Angeles Times

Woodward and Newman arrive for the 1962 Academy Awards, when he was a nominee for his role in "The Hustler."

Paul_newman_j_woodward_1962_0716_ro
Photograph by R.O. Oliver / Los Angeles Times

Woodward and Newman at the funeral of Jerry Wald, producer of "The Long, Hot Summer," 1962.

Paul_newman_j_woodward_1969_0415_fi
Photograph by Fitzgerald Whitney / Los Angeles Times

Newman and Woodward arrive for the 1969 Academy Awards,  when "Rachel, Rachel" (produced by Newman) was a contender for best picture and Woodward was nominated for best actress.

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Los Angeles history -- Valley dining

I loved going to the Samoa House as a youngster growing up in the Valley in
the '60s.  The rib dinners were great.  I loved the blue cheese salad
dressing.  I recall there were several different rib dinners and the prices
were probably about 4 or 5 dollars per.  On Ventura Boulevard also was Jean's
Blue Room for French food and the Aware Inn for "New Age" cooking of the
'60s.  Their salad dressing was sold in stores.  My grandmother's favorite
was the Pump Room, named after the famous Chicago restaurant where she grew
up.  The ceiling of the Samoa House had a series of huge rectangular fans
that would move slowly overhead.  If anyone has an old menu, I would be
thrilled and transported!  And, yes, the Kings Arms and Queens Arms were
special-occasion places like the Sportsman's Lodge and the trout ponds.

Carl West
'68 Grant Hi

Vin Scully is the best in the business, September 27, 1968



1968_september_27_ads



"Whiskey river, don't run dry...."


1968_september_27_sportsBy Keith Thursby
Times Staff Writer
Vin Scully's fans include his competitors in the broadcast booth.
Dick Enberg had just signed a deal to become the Angels' lead broadcaster, a job he would hold through most of the 1970s. In a story by The Times' Ross Newhan, Enberg went to great lengths to praise the longtime voice of the Dodgers.
"Vin Scully is the best in the business," Enberg said. "He has showed us all how a game should be called. ... I am also not ashamed to say that I have applied some of his techniques to my coverage of football. I expect that I will apply some to baseball."
Generations of Southern Californians grew up listening to Scully and the Dodgers. Enberg became a media presence in the 1960s broadcasting games on radio and TV with UCLA basketball, the Rams and then the Angels.
I listened to a lot more Angel games than Dodger games during the '60s and '70s. Enberg had to suffer through a lot of bad teams while in Anaheim, even during the Nolan Ryan years. Watching Ryan pitch was a treat. Watching Rudi Meoli at shortstop was no thrill. But Enberg kept a listener entertained. Maybe he discussed the town the Angels were visiting or a book he had read. And when Don Drysdale joined Enberg in the Angels' booth, their chemistry helped lighten many a long game.
Enberg certainly was no carbon copy of Scully, but he clearly thought about what made Scully so special.
"Basically, Vin is an intelligent man and never takes himself for granted," Enberg said. "He prepares well and is patient with his good pieces of information. ... He also describes the scene as it is happening rather than in the past tense. He knows how to use the crowd and this is an important facet which I have tried to follow in football.
"Baseball provides you with air time that isn't available in other sports. It provides the announcer with time to be a teacher, and too few announcers take advantage of it. Scully does it with subtlety. He's not talking down to his fans but he's teaching them on a low-key level. He's putting them into the game. He's whetting their anticipation."

Leading defense attorney dies; Dodgers win against Cubs, September 27, 1958

LeCompte Davis dies at 95

Prominent attorney represented the McNamara brothers in The Times bombing and Alexander Pantages in his famous sexual assault case. 

1958_september_27_tiger
Stewart Granger in "Harry Black and the Tiger."

 
1954_september_16_davis 1933_november_14_lecompte_davis

LeCompte Davis, left, with Frank Bryson in a 1933 embezzlement case.


LeCompte Davis was the member of the defense team, which also included Clarence Darrow and Joseph Scott, who announced to Judge Walter Bordwell that James and John McNamara had decided to withdraw their pleas of not guilty in the 1910 Times bombing and the bombing of the Llewellyn Iron Works. In collaboration with Jerry Giesler, Davis also defended theater executive Alexander Pantages against charges that he raped Eunice Pringle in one of the most notorious Los Angeles cases of the late 1920s and early 1930s. 

At left, Tom Cameron's 1954 recollections of Davis' tactics in the courtroom.

Recommended reading: W.W. Robinson's "Lawyers of Los Angeles." 
1958_september_27_page

James Stewart breaks the sound barrier



1958_september_27_sports

Dodgers and Cubs split doubleheader

Continue reading »

Movie revivals -- The Cross and the Switchblade

Coming soon to a theater near you...


1970_cross

Above, "The Cross and the Switchblade," 1970.


Sept. 27, 2008, 10 p.m. Silent Movie Theatre. Tickets $10.

"The Cross and the Switchblade," Pat Boone and Erik Estrada.

Europe at brink of war, September 26, 1938

Diplomats race to prevent fighting

Czechoslovakia destroys bridges along its border to hinder German invasion.

1938_september_26_gable
"Too Hot to Handle," with Clark Gable and Myrna Loy.
1938_september_26_cover
Times staff artist Harlan Kirby draws  a Page 1 map of the way Hitler proposes to divide Czechoslovakia. Kirby provided some of the dazzling maps The Times published during World War II.

President Roosevelt appeals to Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and Czech President Edward Benes to negotiatiate instead of going to war ... France puts 1.5 million men at the Maginot Line ... Confessional Churches in Germany pray for peace ... And Fletcher Bowron prepares to take office as Los Angeles mayor.
1938_september_26_bowron

Douglas tests DC-4

1938_september_26_hitler

London prepares to evacuate

Los Angeles history -- Nuestro Pueblo visits the Witch House

1938_september_26_nuestro


516 Walden Ave. in Beverly Hills in 1938, above, and via Google maps' street view.

View Larger Map

Movie revivals -- Bonnie and Clyde

Coming soon to a theater near you...


1967_bonnie_clyde

Above, "Bonnie and Clyde,"1967.


Sept. 26, 2008, 7:30 p.m. Silent Movie Theatre. Tickets $10.

"Bonnie and Clyde," with "A Night in Heaven" at 10:15 p.m..

Texas teenager arrested in death plot, September 25, 1958

Houston girl held in plan to kill family

Teenager is in custody on charges of shooting her brother to death. She tells police she was unable to carry out plot to murder her parents.



1958_september_25_defiant_ones_2   

Coming soon: "The Defiant Ones" with Sidney Poitier and Tony Curtis.

1958_september_25_humphries

Above, Diana Day Humphries, 16, breaks into tears as she meets her mother at a Houston jail.

Diana was a brilliant teenager, a 16-year-old Houston high school senior with an IQ of 142. One of her teachers said she was "destined for success" and that was true until the day she decided to kill her family.

She stayed home from school with an upset stomach that day. Diana watched TV in the den and held a loaded .22 rifle as she waited for everyone to come home: her 14-year-old brother, Robert; her mother, an airlines clerk; and her father, a retired Navy seaman.

"I lay in bed and planned how I was going to kill us all. I wanted to kill everyone quickly so that we wouldn't have to suffer anymore... I wasn't mad at anybody. I don't know why I did it," she said. "I wasn't mad at anybody."

Diana told police: "It seemed that everyone was always tired; that we were always getting up, going to work and school, coming home, eating, cooking meals, washing dishes and going to bed and getting up again."

She shot her brother when he came home from school. "He fell forward into the den and his books dropped," Diana said. "I put another bullet into the gun as quick as I could because I didn't know if he was dead and I didn't want him to suffer.

"So I shot him again in the back of his head."

Next, Diana planned to kill her mother.

"She drove up in her car and came up the walk," Diana said. "I saw then that there was no way that I could shoot Mother without her seeing me.... So I yelled at her not to come in the house, that I didn't want her to see Robert. I started crying and told Mother that I had shot Robert and that I was going to shoot us all but I couldn't shoot her."

Diana was given a psychological examination that showed she was "very disturbed" but extremely bright. She was held without charges, according to the Associated Press.

Unfortunately, there are no further details about this tragic case. It's hard to understand why there weren't follow-up stories. But apparently there were none.   

Update: J.R. Gonzales, my history blog counterpart at the Houston Chronicle, says Diana was committed to a mental hospital in 1959.

Movie revivals -- Glass Wall


Coming soon to a theater near you...

1953_april_03_glass_wall

Above, "The Glass Wall" and "Jack McCall, Desperado," 1953.


Sept. 26, 2008, 7:30 p.m. UCLA Hammer Museum Billy Wilder Theater.
Tickets $10.

 

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