




I forgot she was briefly a character in that movie.Gypsi DeYoung in THE SCARLETT O'HARA WAR (1980)
I can't see her without seeing Ruth DeWitt Bukater from TITANIC (1997).Frances Fisher in BEFORE THE LAUGHTER (1991)
I honestly thought Rachel York looked pretty good as a TV movie-of-the-week version of "Lucy".Rachel York in LUCY (2003)
I've yet to see this movie (might never see it), but I don't think Kidman looks like Lucy at all. I've never found her attractive anyway.Nicole Kidman in BEING THE RICARDOS (2021)
She was quite attractive in her youth, but I don't think she aged very well. Those cigarettes eventually caught up with her and she aged prematurely.Every one of these portrayals miss the obvious: Lucille was gorgeous
I don't think she aged very well. Those cigarettes eventually caught up with her and she aged prematurely.
You said the truth of it here. Lucy hid behind makeup and camera tricks to disguise her age. Maybe that's why she was always referred to as a "girl" on her shows?Off camera, sure. Even as far back as the late 40s, candid pictures show Lucy looking prematurely aged. Cigarettes and the California sun took their toll on her. On camera, she could almost always drop 10 to 15 years with heavy makeup and good lighting. It wasn't until she was in her 70s that she could no longer maintain the illusion of late middle age.
Aside from I LOVE LUCY and THE LUCY-DESI COMEDY HOUR, Lucy Ricardo has two other canonical appearances: THE DANNY THOMAS SHOW and THE ANN SOTHERN SHOW (both 1959).
Ann's show was one of the oddly mild series of the era that were more situation than comedy, which isn't disguised at all by the heavy canned laughter. Lucille looked rather matronly in the episode and, whenever faced with weak material, tended to be too pushy with her comedy; she's downright grating at times. On the plus side, Ann & Lucille had good on screen chemistry.
THE DANNY THOMAS SHOW episode is better, although not as good as the earlier crossover on the LUCY-DESI show. The episode also contains a surprisingly important key to the Ricardo's relationship. We find out here that Ricky loved Lucy because of her eccentricities not in spite of them. For all of his fiery exasperation about her schemes, he liked the excitement she brought to their marriage. That's sweet -- and maybe kind of kinky.
how different Lucy Ricardo is away from the apartment of the country house.
Based on the new Lou Perlman doc on Netflix the time is now. They stick to filling him with pearls of wisdom from his book but how long can that restraint last? It’s pretty convincing, they have come along way since Mr. Ed.How long before A.I. celebrity voices start confessing to sex crimes and rococo political assassination plots?
Historical accounts often filtered through the recollection of men are notoriously unreliable. There is that great television interview where the male host is out in the audience and Lucy keeps telling to him to stop pawing the female audience members. She’s insistent but not mean. I’m sure she got it wrong sometimes, we all do, but she seems pretty authentic to me. Ahistorical one dimensional portraits of female stars whether a white wash or hatchet job are the dullest.
Dismissing an account because it's coming from men is no better then dismissing women for asserting control on their show.I doubt Lucy was perfect. Control is usually the issue for a lot of women of that era. Even when they had it they didn’t. So aggressively asserting it often became the only way they could exercise their power. Historical accounts often filtered through the recollection of men are notoriously unreliable. There is that great television interview where the male host is out in the audience and Lucy keeps telling to him to stop pawing the female audience members. She’s insistent but not mean. I’m sure she got it wrong sometimes, we all do, but she seems pretty authentic to me. Ahistorical one dimensional portraits of female stars whether a white wash or hatchet job are the dullest.