Showing posts with label Sophia Loren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sophia Loren. Show all posts

Thursday, October 26, 2023

The 31 Last Living Stars of the Golden Age of Hollywood

A little over a week ago, actress Piper Laurie passed away.  Laurie was best-known as an actress for two films, both of which got her Academy Award nominations: as Paul Newman's love interest in The Hustler and as Sissy Spacek's domineering mother in Carrie.  Laurie had worked in movies since the 1950's, and had starred opposite everyone from Ronald Reagan to Jimmy Durante to Rock Hudson.  She was one of the only living people that had been submitted for the 1999 TV special AFI 100 Years...100 Stars's ballot.

Laurie's death means that another figure from the Golden Age of Hollywood (roughly from the 1920's through 1959, though that date varies greatly depending on who you ask) had passed away.  In recent years stars such as Kirk Douglas, Rhonda Fleming, Sidney Poitier, & earlier this year Gina Lollobrigida have died, giving us very few actors who are connected to this era, which is one of the primary points-of-conversation on this blog and is the frame-of-reference when you refer to something as "Old Hollywood."

So I decided to do some sleuthing, and understand exactly how many "stars" are left from Classical Hollywood.  The definition is hard to clarify, to be fair.  I've heard everyone from Elizabeth Taylor to Lauren Bacall to Olivia de Havilland being called the "last living star" of Classical Hollywood when they died, and still there are other figures from the era that seem like they would make the grade.  So I decided to make a definition, and see how many were left.

Our definition below, for the actors & actresses I have highlighted, is pretty simple.  We're using 1959 as the cutoff, and so each of these actors either A) got above-the-line billing in at least three Hollywood studio, feature-length, live-action films in 1959 (or earlier) or B) were listed on the AFI's 100 Years...100 Stars ballot (which now only consists of six living actresses).  By my count (and I could've missed someone-the comments are there for a reason), this includes just 31 actors.  I have listed them below.

Before we get into the list, I want to call out perhaps my biggest learning here.  This list runs the gamut from Oscar-winnings actors who are pretty much universally-known to anyone that talks about Old Hollywood to actresses that basically just played love interests in a couple of films and never took off in their careers.  What's remarkable though, is when I started to look at the lists of stars that they had played opposite.  I listed the names below, and I was drawn to two things.  One, for the next few years (and only for the next few years, as the youngest of these performers is 86), we still have a real connection to the Hollywood of lore.  These actors stood on soundstages with Bette Davis, with Fred Astaire, with Marilyn Monroe...icons that make up the foundation of Hollywood.  And not just as extras-they were their peers and love interests and costars.  And so for a brief time, we're still allowed at least a glimpse into that world.

The other thing that I noticed was that so many of the films they starred with with these actors are not well-known.  I list north of 100 movies below, many of them I'd never heard of starring the most famous actors of all-time.  It's a humbling moment to see so many movies, many forgotten to time, left to discover, knowing that I'll never get to all of them.  It's a good reminder that for all of these stars, including Piper Laurie, though they won't be with us forever, they will always be with us as long as there are movies to be seen.

Honorable Mention #1: If we use 1959 as the cutoff for the "Golden Age," we run into a lot of actors that are in a grey area.  First is getting hung up on the title of "Star." All 31 of the below actors were either proper headliners in at least three studio films on or before 1959 (or were in the AFI Stars ballot).  This means that there are a few living actors who were either character actors, supporting stars, or who weren't yet getting major roles in the 1950's (but were definitely a part of the era, sometimes in crucial or even Oscar-cited parts) that won't be on the list.  This is not a conclusive list, but some actors that meet that criteria include: Lee Grant, Earl Holliman, Patrick Wayne, Marion Ross, James Hong, Ann Robinson, Russ Tamblyn, Ursula Andress, Richard Beymer, Diane Baker, Connie Stevens, Jill St. John, France Nuyen, & Dolores Hart.

Honorable Mention #2: On the flip side, there are actors who are indisputably stars in movies or TV in the years that followed, some of the biggest stars of New Hollywood who were definitely working in movies during the 1950's...but weren't headlining films yet.  They have their connections to the era, but just miss the cut from this list, in some cases by a few years.  This would include Clint Eastwood, Tippi Hedren, Gena Rowlands, Barbara Eden, Julie Newmar, Fabian, Tina Louise, & George Hamilton.

Honorable Mention #3: This list only includes people who appeared in films in 1959 or earlier.  There are several actors (Jane Fonda, Warren Beatty, Robert Duvall, Paula Prentiss, & Nancy Kwan all come to mind) who made their screen debuts in the early 1960's, which is why they aren't listed at all here, but are generally associated with the Golden Age because they did star with a number of famous actors of that era in the period before New Hollywood started later that decade.

Honorable Mention #4: Finally, this list is focused on Golden Age stars in Hollywood.  We have a few actors like Glynis Johns, Brigitte Bardot, & Claudia Cardinale who would eventually become crucial names in movies, even starring in some Hollywood films...but not in the 1950's.  As a result, you're not going to see names of actors not largely associated with American cinema prior to this, since the whole "Old Hollywood Glamour" thing has a geographic definition.

Editor's Note from John: All of these actors were living as of October 26th, 2023.  However, I have noted the death date of some of these performers below if they have since passed and you are finding this article years after-the-fact, specifically the age they died.  I am not updating the other stars ages in real time (you know how to do math, and their birth dates are living).  All other parts of the write-up remain as is.

And with that, it's time to see stars!

Carroll Baker

Age: 92 (May 28th, 1931)
Screen Debut: Easy to Love (1953)
Best Known For: Her proto-Lolita work in Elia Kazan's Baby Doll
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: She was nominated for Best Actress for Baby Doll, losing to Ingrid Bergman's comeback role in Anastasia
Famous Costars: I thought it'd be fun to do a smattering of each of these living names connections to lost legends, proving how we still have not only stars of this era, but links to some of its biggest icons (I'm only listing deceased actors here-though of course many of these actors, including Baker, starred alongside each other during this time frame).  With Baker you have James Dean, Elizabeth Taylor, & Rock Hudson (Giant), Gregory Peck & Charlton Heston (The Big Country), Jimmy Stewart (Cheyenne Autumn), and Clark Gable (But Not for Me)
Are They Still Acting?: No.  We're going to focus primarily on film with final roles here, given this is a film article, but if they're still acting in TV I'll call that out.  Baker hasn't worked in decades-her last film was The Game with Michael Douglas & Sean Penn.

Claire Bloom

Age: 92 (February 15th, 1931)
Screen Debut: The Blind Goddess (1948)
Best Known For: The stage.  Bloom is probably a questionable inclusion here if I'm skipping Glynis Johns, to be honest.  She did work regularly in the 1950's & 60's, but in British cinema, not in American pictures as often (though she was in them).  In American film, her best known work was as Cliff Robertson's love interest in Charly.
AFI Nominee?: The reason I'm including her is that she is one of only six living stars from the AFI's "100 Years, 100 Stars" list, which automatically got you into this compendium.
Oscar Nominations: No Oscar nominations, though she was given a CBE in 2013 (why they didn't just trot out the "Dame" is anyone's guess, and should be rectified immediately.
Famous Costars: Charlie Chaplin & Buster Keaton (Limelight), James Mason (The Man Between), Richard Burton (Alexander the Great, Look Back in Anger, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold), Laurence Olivier (Richard III, Clash of the Titans), Paul Newman & Edward G. Robinson (The Outrage), and Charles Boyer & Charlton Heston (The Buccaneer)
Are They Still Acting?: Yes.  She had a small role in the 2019 miniseries Summer of Rockets with Toby Stephens & Timothy Spall.

Ann Blyth

Age: 95 (August 16th, 1928)
Screen Debut: Chip off the Old Block (1944)
Best Known For: Playing Joan Crawford's spoiled daughter Veda in Mildred Pierce
AFI Nominee?: Yes, Blyth is one of the six living actresses still left from the AFI list
Oscar Nominations: Blyth was cited for one Oscar, for her work in Mildred Pierce, but lost to Anne Revere in National Velvet.
Famous Costars: Blyth is so famous for her supporting role in Mildred Pierce that it's frequently forgotten she had a career in the early-1950's as a proper leading lady.  She starred opposite not just Crawford but Mickey Rooney (Killer McCoy), Charles Boyer (A Woman's Vengeance), William Powell (Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid, Bing Crosby (Top o' the Morning), Claudette Colbert (Thunder on the Hill), Gregory Peck (The World in His Arms), & Paul Newman (The Helen Morgan Story)
Are They Still Acting?: No-Blyth's last film was The Helen Morgan Story, for some reason quitting pictures before she turned 30, and her last television appearance was opposite Angela Lansbury on Murder, She Wrote in 1985.

Pat Boone

Age: 89 (June 1st, 1934)
Screen Debut: Bernardine (1957)
Best Known For: Boone is far more famous today as a singer than as an actor.  In the late-1950's, he was a serious rival to Elvis Presley as the most popular singer of the era.  Some of his hits included "April Love," "Love Letters in the Sand," and "Ain't That a Shame,"...none of which have had the lasting pop culture impact of Presley, proving that every era gets their Jessica Simpson.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: Never nominated for an Oscar or a Golden Globe, though Boone is currently 0-for-6 at the Grammys.
Famous Costars: Janet Gaynor (Bernardine), James Mason & Arlene Dahl (Journey to the Center of the Earth), Bobby Darin & Alice Faye (State Fair), Tony Curtis & Debbie Reynolds (Goodbye Charlie), 
Are They Still Acting?: If we're being honest, the thing that Boone is best-known for is not music or film, but for his religious & political beliefs.  The actor is a devout evangelical Christian, staging rallies for school prayer as far-back as the 1960's.  He is famously homophobic, and is actively involved in Republican politics, campaigning for figures like Donald Trump, Ernie Fletcher, & Mike Huckabee.

Leslie Caron

Age: 92 (July 1st, 1931)
Screen Debut: An American in Paris (1951)
Best Known For: Probably Gigi?  Honestly, Caron was a major star in movie musicals in the 1950's, so she might just be famous without needing a qualifier, but if there's a movie, it's Gigi.
AFI Nominee?: The cutoff needing your screen debut to be before 1950 means that Caron, who surely would've been a lock for inclusion otherwise, didn't get cited on the ballot.
Oscar Nominations: She received two-one for Lili which she lost to Audrey Hepburn in Roman Holiday (it's a movie I love, and I was shocked to find recently I'm by myself on that front) and then ten years later was a presumed frontrunner for The L-Shaped Room, but missed to Patricia Neal in Hud.
Famous Costars: The only living person to have danced with both Gene Kelly (An American in Paris) and Fred Astaire (Daddy Long Legs) onscreen.  In addition to those two, she also costarred with Maurice Chevalier (Gigi), Henry Fonda (The Man Who Understood Women), Charles Boyer (Fanny, A Very Special Favor), & Cary Grant (Father Goose)
Are They Still Acting?: Yes, though not steadily-her most recent film was a voiceover work in a British adaptation of A Christmas Carol.

Joan Collins

Age: 90 (May 23rd, 1933)
Screen Debut: Lady Godiva Rides Again (1951)
Best Known For: Her turn as Alexis Carrington in the 1980's soap opera Dynasty.  She also was a tabloid staple for decades along with her late sister, novelist Jackie Collins.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No, though she won a Golden Globe and was nominated for an Emmy Award for her work on Dynasty.
Famous Costars: Bette Davis (The Virgin Queen), Richard Burton (Sea Wife), Jayne Mansfield (The Wayward Bus), Harry Belafonte, Dorothy Dandridge, & Joan Fontaine (Island in the Sun), Paul Newman (Rally Round the Flag, Boys!), Edward G. Robinson (Seven Thieves), and Bing Crosby & Bob Hope (The Road to Hong Kong)
Are They Still Acting?: Yes.  She made a guest spot in 2019 on Hawaii Five-O, and has done quite a bit of theater in recent years, including one-woman shows as herself.

Kathryn Crosby

Age: 90 (November 25th, 1933 - September 20th, 2024)
Screen Debut: So This is Love (1953)
Best Known For: Crosby's screen name wasn't actually Crosby (or at least it wasn't for the bulk of her acting career)-she was billed as Kathryn Grant for most of her acting career (if you're googling her, she's Crosby on Wikipedia & Grant on IMDB/Letterboxd...we're going with Crosby as her name because that's what she prefers).  As a result, she's best known as Bing Crosby's second wife; the couple remained married for twenty years, until the actor's death in 1977.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No
Famous Costars: Ginger Rogers & William Holden (Forever Female), Bob Hope & Joan Fontaine (Casanova's Big Night), Jimmy Stewart & Grace Kelly (Rear Window), Ginger Rogers (again) & Edward G. Robinson (Tight Spot), Anthony Quinn (The Wild Party), Jack Lemmon (Operation Mad Ball), Tab Hunter (Gunman's Walk), & Jimmy Stewart (Anatomy of a Murder)
Are They Still Acting?: Crosby largely retired from acting after her marriage, though she randomly appeared in the 2010 independent comedy Queen of the Lot.

Audrey Dalton

Age: 89 (January 21st, 1934)
Screen Debut: My Cousin Rachel (1952)
Best Known For: I don't know that Dalton is super well-known for anything today.  This happens sometimes, and will for stars today too-where someone gets regular work leading forgettable pictures, or getting prominent supporting work in movies, but as a star she doesn't click with pop culture at large.   But she definitely led 3+ films in the 1950's, so she qualified for this list (I'll happily take recommendations of how to familiarize myself with her in the comments, as she's the one star totally unknown to me before I wrote this).
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No
Famous Costars: Richard Burton & Olivia de Havilland (My Cousin Rachel), Clifton Webb & Barbara Stanwyck (Titanic), Bob Hope & Joan Fontaine (Casanova's Big Night), Rita Hayworth & Burt Lancaster (Separate Tables), & Lana Turner (The Prodigal)
Are They Still Acting?: No-Dalton retired in 1978, appearing on Police Woman with oddly enough the next star on this list.

Angie Dickinson

Age: 92 (September 30th, 1931)
Screen Debut: Lucky Me (1954)
Best Known For: Dickinson was a sex symbol star of the 1960's, but a modern one in the mold of Jane Fonda & Faye Dunaway, rather than the more exaggerated looks of Marilyn Monroe or Jayne Mansfield, with her most famous film being in the original Ocean's 11.  In the 1970's, she was a huge star on television playing Pepper Anderson on NBC's Police Woman.  She also had a high-profile marriage at the peak of both of their fame with singer Burt Bacharach.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No Oscar nominations, but she won two Golden Globes and was nominated for three Emmy Awards, most of these for Police Woman.
Famous Costars: Doris Day (Lucky Me), Robert Mitchum (Man with the Gun), Randolph Scott (Shoot-Out at Medicine Bend), James Mason (Cry Terror!), John Wayne & Dean Martin (Rio Bravo), Richard Burton (The Bramble Bush), The Rat Pack-Frank Dean, & Sammy (Ocean's 11), Maurice Chevalier (Jessica), Troy Donahue (Captain Newman, MD), Marlon Brando (The Chase), & Kirk Douglas (Cast a Giant Shadow)
Are They Still Acting?: Dickinson quit acting in 2009, her last TV movie being Mending Fences, while her last theatrical film being Elvis Has Left the Building with Kim Basinger.

Peggy Dow

Age: 95 (March 18th, 1928)
Screen Debut: Undertow (1949)
Best Known For: She played the main nurse (who is in love with her doctor) in the Oscar-nominated Jimmy Stewart classic Harvey.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: None
Famous Costars: In addition to Stewart, she also acted opposite Rock Hudson (Undertow), Ida Lupino (Woman in Hiding), Dick Powell (You Can Never Tell), Dana Andrews and Dorothy McGuire (I Want You)
Are They Still Acting?: No-of all of these actors I believe that Dow has had the longest period of inactivity, retiring in 1952 when she married her husband Walter Helmerich III (a wealthy oilman), and has devoted her life to philanthropy, specifically around funding libraries & literacy-related causes.

Felicia Farr

Age: 91 (October 4th, 1932)
Screen Debut: Big House, USA (1955)
Best Known For: I hate to say it this way, but similar to Kathryn Crosby, what Farr is best-known for today is her celebrity marriage.  Farr was married for almost fifty years to screen legend Jack Lemmon, with whom she occasionally worked.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No
Famous Costars: Glenn Ford & Ernest Borgnine (Jubal), Joel McCrea (The Last Texan), Andy Griffith (Onionhead), Dean Martin (Kiss Me, Stupid), & Walter Matthau (Kotch, Charley Varrick), 
Are They Still Acting?: After a decade away from film, she made a random independent film called Loser's Crown in 2014. The last studio film where she didn't play herself was 1986's That's Life! with her husband Jack Lemmon & Julie Andrews.

Mitzi Gaynor

Age: 93 (September 4th, 1931 - October 17th, 2024)
Screen Debut: My Blue Heaven (1950)
Best Known For: Her big claim-to-fame was as Nellie Forbush in the Rodgers & Hammerstein smash hit South Pacific.  If you follow this blog closely, you'll know that she was one of our Stars of the Month during its first season.
AFI Nominee?: Yes, Gaynor was one of the six actresses cited by the American Film Institute.
Oscar Nominations: Weirdly no, but she was nominated for Best Actress at the Golden Globes for South Pacific, and I have to assume she was pretty close.
Famous Costars: Betty Grable (My Blue Heaven), Marilyn Monroe & Ethel Merman (There's No Business Like Show Business), Bing Crosby (Anything Goes), Frank Sinatra (The Joker is Wild), Gene Kelly (Les Girls), and David Niven (Happy Anniversary)
Are They Still Acting?: Gaynor still does public appearances and interviews (and did decades of television specials-the Beatles took second billing to her when they performed on The Ed Sullivan Show), but her last studio film was 1963's For Love or Money with Kirk Douglas.

Claude Jarman, Jr.

Age: 89 (September 27th, 1934 - January 12th, 2025)
Screen Debut: The Yearling (1946)
Best Known For: Jarman is best-known for his work in the 1946 Best Picture nominee The Yearling, where he plays Gregory Peck's son Jody
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: He was not nominated for an Oscar, but he is one of just a handful of living winners of the Juvenile Oscar statue, which he won for The Yearling.
Famous Costars: Gregory Peck & Jane Wyman (The Yearling), Van Johnson & June Allyson (High Barbaree), Gloria Grahame (Roughshod), Pal (aka the original "Lassie") & Jeanette MacDonald (The Sun Comes Up), John Wayne & Maureen O'Hara (Rio Grande), Arlene Dahl (The Outriders), Randolph Scott (Hangman's Knot), & Fred MacMurray (Fair Wind to Java)
Are They Still Acting?: No-he gave up acting in the mid-1950's, only returning briefly for the TV miniseries Centennial, though he helped to run the San Francisco International Film Festival for a number of years & just published his memoirs a few years back (also, every person on this list should have a memoir if they don't already, pretty please!).

Shirley Jones

Age: 89 (March 31st 1934)
Screen Debut: Oklahoma! (1955)
Best Known For: Jones is probably known to most as Shirley Partridge, the lead of The Partridge Family, which ran for four seasons on ABC and was a pop culture phenomenon.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: Not only is Jones an Oscar nominee for Elmer Gantry, but she won for her work.  Thanks to her song "I Think I Love You," on The Partridge Family, she is one of only four performers (along with Frank Sinatra, Cher, & Barbra Streisand) to win an acting Oscar and have a #1 Billboard hit.
Famous Costars: James Cagney (Never Steal Anything Small), Burt Lancaster & Jean Simmons (Elme Gantry), Jimmy Stewart (Two Rode Together), Glenn Ford (The Courtship of Eddie's Father), Marlon Brando & David Niven (Bedtime Story), and Jimmy Stewart (again) & Henry Fonda (The Cheyenne Social Club)
Are They Still Acting?: Not super regularly, but Jones still makes the odd film or television cameo, usually playing some version of her star persona.

June Lockhart

Age: 98 (June 25th, 1925)
Screen Debut: A Christmas Carol (1938)
Best Known For: Lockhart has had literally almost a 90-year career, starting in film in the 1930's, but she's more famous for her work in television, where she played Ruth Martin on Lassie and Maureen Robinson in Lost in Space.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: She never received an Academy Award nomination, but Lockhart did win a Tony Award for the play For Love or Money and was nominated for two Emmy Awards in the 1950's.
Famous Costars: Bette Davis & Charles Boyer (All This, and Heaven Too), Ingrid Bergman (Adam Has Four Sons), Gary Cooper (Sergeant York), Judy Garland (Meet Me in St. Louis), Lana Turner (Keep Your Powder Dry), Richard Widmark (Time Limit), and Orson Welles (Butterfly)
Are They Still Acting?: No, Lockhart appears to be retired now, revising her role from Lost in Space (as an alien) for the Netflix remake for her final role.

Sophia Loren

Age: 89 (September 20th, 1934)
Screen Debut: Hearts at Sea (1950)
Best Known For: There are a lot of actors on this list that were famous in their day, and there's a lot of debate over who would actually count as the "Last Living Golden Age Star," given that many of these people were only somewhat famous in their day (this is a literal definition of the name more than a subjective one), and others, like the next actress on this list, were more stars of the New Hollywood era.  All this is to say, as long as Sophia Loren is still alive, the question objectively has an answer-Loren is synonymous with Old Hollywood through her decades of fame in the same way all of the late famous costars I've listed throughout this article are.  "I worked with Sophia Loren" carries the same weight as "I worked with Clark Gable" or "I worked with Joan Crawford."
AFI Nominee?: Not only was she nominated, but she is the only living person to have actually been selected for the list, Ranked #21 between Lauren Bacall & Jean Harlow.  Loren has also been one of our Saturdays with the Stars in our second season.
Oscar Nominations: She won for Best Actress in 1961 for Two Women, but lost for Marriage Italian Style to Julie Andrews in Mary Poppins.  She also won an Honorary Academy Award in 1991 for lifetime achievement.
Famous Costars: A lot of her best work is in Italian, but in terms of Hollywood stars we've got Alan Ladd (Boy on a Dolphin), Frank Sinatra (The Pride and the Passion), Cary Grant (The Pride and the Passion, Houseboat), John Wayne (Legend of the Lost), William Holden (The Key), Tab Hunter (That Kind of Woman), Clark Gable (It Started in Naples), Peter Sellers (The Millionairess), Charlton Heston (El Cid) & Marlon Brando (A Countess from Hong Kong)
Are They Still Acting?: Yes-as recently as 2020 she was in the running for an Oscar nomination (in my opinion, she deserved one) for The Life Ahead.

Shirley MacLaine

Age: 89 (April 24th, 1934)
Screen Debut: The Trouble with Harry (1955)-it is such a Shirley MacLaine mic drop move to have your screen debut as the lead in an Alfred Hitchcock movie.
Best Known For: MacLaine, like Loren, is one of those stars you don't need a qualifier for-she's just a movie star, full-stop.  Depending on your age it could be anything from The Apartment to Terms of Endearment to Steel Magnolias to Downton Abbey, but you've heard of her if you know anything about cinema.  She's also my favorite actress of all time.
AFI Nominee?: No-her debut was too late, otherwise she would've undoubtedly been an option.  But she was also one of our Saturdays with the Stars during our third season (the third and final person on this list we've profiled to date).
Oscar Nominations: Definitely-MacLaine has been cited for six Oscars, winning for 1983's Terms of Endearment, and also was nominated for Some Came Running, The Apartment, Irma la Douce, The Turning Point, and for directing the documentary film The Other Half of the Sky
Famous Costars: Theres a LOT, but I'll give you a smattering with David Niven (Around the World in 80 Days, Ask Any Girl), Frank Sinatra & Dean Martin (many films, but probably best in Some Came Running), Anthony Quinn (Hot Spell), Jack Lemmon (The Apartment, Irma la Douce), Audrey Hepburn (The Children's Hour), Robert Mitchum (Two for the Seesaw), Ingrid Bergman & Rex Harrison (The Yellow Rolls-Royce), Gene Kelly & Paul Newman (amongst others, in What a Way to Go!), & Anne Bancroft (The Turning Point)
Are They Still Acting?: Yes, MacLaine still acts regularly, appearing in American Dreamer and Only Murders in the Building in 2022 alone.

Vera Miles

Age: 94 (August 23rd, 1929)
Screen Debut: When Millie Goes Marching Home (1950)
Best Known For: Miles is best-known for playing Lila Crane, Janet Leigh's sister in Alfred Hitchcock's classic thriller Psycho.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No nominations, despite appearing in a number of well-known classics.
Famous Costars: Lloyd Bridges (Pride of the Blue Grass), Joel McCrea (Wichita), John Wayne (The Searchers, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, The Green Berets, Hellfighters), Joan Crawford (Autumn Leaves), Henry Fonda (The Wrong Man), Bob Hope (Beau James), Jimmy Stewart (The FBI Story, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance), & James Garner (One Little Indian)
Are They Still Acting?: No-Miles retired in 1995 after the flop psychosexual thriller Separate Lives.  The woman who worked alongside Alfred Hitchcock, John Ford, Robert Wise, & Walt Disney appears to have ended her career in a movie starring Jim Belushi.

Colleen Miller

Age: 90 (November 10th, 1932)
Screen Debut: The Last Vegas Story (1952)
Best Known For: Miller was one of the many contract stars of the 1950's during the end of the studio system that the studio couldn't quite make work as a leading lady during the beginning of television, despite getting to play opposite some big stars & largely getting above-the-line parts.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No nominations
Famous Costars: Jane Russell (The Las Vegas Story), Rory Calhoun & Walter Brennan (Four Guns to the Border), Tony Curtis (The Purple Mask, The Rawhide Years), Orson Welles (Man in the Shadow), & Audie Murphy (Gunfight at the Comanche Creek)
Are They Still Acting?: No-Miler retired entirely from acting in 1972 with a brief cameo in the 1972 comedy Stand Up and Be Counted with Jacqueline Bisset & Steve Lawrence.

Terry Moore

Age: 94 (January 7th, 1929)
Screen Debut: Maryland (1940)
Best Known For: A former child actor, Moore was most-noted for her work in the Oscar-winning 1952 stage adaptation of Come Back, Little Sheba.  She also was involved romantically with Howard Hughes, and may have actually committed bigamy by being secretly married to him while also wedding three other men (where is THAT biopic?).
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: Moore was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for Come Back, Little Sheba, but lost the statue to Gloria Grahame.
Famous Costars: Cary Grant (The Howards of Virginia), Rita Hayworth (My Gal Sal), Laurel & Hardy (A-Haunting We Will Go), Claudette Colbert & Jennifer Jones (Since You Went Away), Judy Garland (The Clock), Jimmy Durante (The Great Rupert), Mickey Rooney (He's a Cockeyed Wonder), Tyrone Power (King of the Khyber Rifles), Fred Astaire (Daddy Long Legs), Lana Turner (Peyton Place), and Linda Darnell & Lon Chaney, Jr. (Black Spurs)
Are They Still Acting?: She still takes bit parts in movies and television, including a 2014 guest spot on the Emmy-winning HBO series True Detective.

Rita Moreno

Age: 92 (December 11th, 1931)
Screen Debut: So Young, So Bad (1950)
Best Known For: Moreno is an icon of the stage & screen, winner of the Kennedy Center & Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Awards.  Her best-known screen work, though, is as the original Maria in the 1961 Best Picture winner West Side Story.
AFI Nominee?: Yes, she is one of the remaining six, and by-far the most active.
Oscar Nominations: Moreno was nominated for one Oscar in her career, for West Side Story, but at least the Academy had the good sense to give her the statue for it.
Famous Costars: Gene Kelly & Debbie Reynolds (Singin' in the Rain), Gary Cooper & Susan Hayward (Garden of Evil), Tyrone Power (Untamed), Deborah Kerr & Yul Brynner (The King & I), Geraldine Page (Summer and Smoke), and Marlon Brando (The Night of the Following Day)
Are They Still Acting?: Yep!  Moreno made 80 for Brady earlier this year with Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, & Sally Field.

Don Murray

Age: 94 (July 31st, 1929 - February 2nd, 2024)
Screen Debut: Bus Stop (1956)
Best Known For: Murray is best-known today for his role in the film Bus Stop, which is generally considered to be the movie where Marilyn Monroe "proved she could act" (anyone paying attention beforehand would've already known that she could act).
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: Murray is that rare guy who got nominated on his first film, getting a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for Bus Stop but losing to Anthony Quinn.
Famous Costars: Marilyn Monroe (Bus Stop), James Cagney (Shake Hands with the Devil), Alan Ladd (One Foot in Hell), Charles Laughton & Gene Tierney (Advise & Consent), Steve McQueen & Lee Remick (Baby the Rain Must Fall), Janet Leigh & Broderick Crawford (Kid Rodelo), and Roddy McDowall & Ricardo Montalban (Conquest of the Planet of the Apes)
Are They Still Acting?: Yes, Murray still works, and had a principle role on the 2017 reboot of Twin Peaks.

Kim Novak

Age: 90 (February 13th, 1933)
Screen Debut: The French Line (1953)
Best Known For: Kim Novak started her career as a potential copycat to Marilyn Monroe, but she is best known as her antithesis, an icy blonde goddess in Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo, frequently name-checked as the greatest movie ever made.
AFI Nominee?: Similar to Shirley MacLaine & Leslie Caron, she definitely would have been an option here, but her film debut was too late.
Oscar Nominations: Novak received Golden Globe & BAFTA nominations in her career, but the closest she got to an Oscar nomination was as a frequent presenter.
Famous Costars: Fred MacMurray (Pushover), William Holden (Picnic), Frank Sinatra (The Man with the Golden Arm, Pal Joey), Tyrone Power (The Eddy Duchin Story), Rita Hayworth (Pal Joey), Jimmy Stewart (Bell, Book, and Candle, Vertigo), Fredric March (Middle of the Night), Kirk Douglas (Strangers When We Meet), Jack Lemmon & Fred Astaire (The Notorious Landlady), James Garner & Tony Randall (Boys' Night Out), Dean Martin (Kiss Me, Stupid), and Rock Hudson, Angela Lansbury, & Elizabeth Taylor (The Mirror Crack'd)
Are They Still Acting?: No.  Novak quit acting after the 1991 mystery-drama Liebestraum, but in recent years she has done a number of public appearances, including presenting at the Oscars & the Cannes Film Festival.

Margaret O'Brien

Age: 86 (January 15th, 1937)
Screen Debut: Babes on Broadway (1941)
Best Known For: O'Brien was a child star throughout the 1940's, but is best-known for her work in the seminal Christmas classic Meet Me in St. Louis (which given my neighbor's holiday decorations are already out, some of you have started to put up already).
AFI Nominee?: Yes, O'Brien is the youngest-living nominee on that list and our last of the AFI contenders.
Oscar Nominations: O'Brien never won a competitive Academy Award, but like Claude Jarman, she was given a Juvenile Academy Award statue for Meet Me in St. Louis.
Famous Costars: James Cagney & Ann Sothern (You, John James!), Greer Garson (Madame Curie), Orson Welles & Joan Fontaine (Jane Eyre), Charles Laughton (The Canterville Ghost), Judy Garland (Meet Me in St. Louis), June Allyson & Jimmy Durante (Music for Millions), Edward G. Robinson (Our Vines Have Tender Grapes), & Anthony Quinn (Heller in Pink Tights)
Are They Still Acting?: She is still making movies, including apparently a 2017 low-budget Saw ripoff.  Yes, Margaret O'Brien, Queen of TCM, Oscar winner, and onetime America's Sweetheart is one of the stars of a film called Halloween Pussy Trap Kill! Kill!.

Nancy Olson

Age: 95 (July 14th, 1928)
Screen Debut: Canadian Pacific (1949)
Best Known For: Olson had two big roles in Hollywood, the first being as the oblivious Betty Schaefer in Sunset Boulevard and the second as the love interest Betsy Carlisle in The Absent-Minded Professor & Son of Flubber.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: Olson received an Academy Award nomination for Sunset Boulevard, only her second movie, but lost to Josephine Hull in Harvey.
Famous Costars: Randolph Scott (Canadian Pacific), Gloria Swanson & William Holden (Sunset Boulevard...she starred quite regularly after this with Holden), Bing Crosby (Mr. Music), John Wayne (Big Jim McLain), Jane Wyman (So Big, Pollyanna), Fred MacMurray (The Absent-Minded Professor, Son of Flubber), Glenn Ford (Smith!), and Charlton Heston & Myrna Loy (Airport 1975)
Are They Still Acting?: Olson made a rare film appearance for some reason in the 2014 sex comedy Dumbbells, her first role in 17 years after the more appropriate epitaph to her career revisiting her work in Flubber, in the remake with Robin Williams

Debra Paget

Age: 90 (August 19th, 1933)
Screen Debut: Cry of the City (1948)
Best Known For: You see her every Easter as Lilia in The Ten Commandments, her most successful film, a movie so well-known she managed to get higher-billing on Love Me Tender later that year than (checks notes) Elvis Presley.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No, but more glaring she also doesn't have a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, which feels like a miss given some of her bigger-known roles.
Famous Costars: Loretta Young & Van Johnson (Mother is a Freshman), Edward G. Robinson & Susan Hayward (House of Strangers), Jimmy Stewart (Broken Arrow), Jeanne Crain & Myrna Loy (Belles on Their Toes), James Mason & Janet Leigh (Prince Valiant), Victor Mature, Susan Hayward, & Anne Bancroft (Demetrius and the Gladiators), Robert Taylor (The Last Hunt), Charlton Heston & Yul Brynner (The Ten Commandments), Elvis Presley (Love Me Tender), Joseph Cotten & George Sanders (From the Earth to the Moon), and Vincent Price & Lon Chaney, Jr. (The Haunted Palace)
Are They Still Acting?: Paget retired from film in the early 1960's, doing her final film (Roger Corman's The Haunted Palace) in 1963 and doing her final television appearance soon after.  Instead, she became a born-again Christian and became involved with the Trinity Broadcasting Network.

Janis Paige

Age: 101 (September 16th, 1922 - June 2nd, 2024)
Screen Debut: Bathing Beauty (1944)
Best Known For: Paige was in the original run of The Pajama Game (which also launched Shirley MacLaine's career), which made her a household name (even getting the cover of Esquire), though she lost out on the film role.  Instead, for film you recognize her from a number of different musicals, playing the similar "prominent supporting role" that actresses like Betty Garrett & Ann Miller also did during the Golden Age.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: She definitely should've been for her scene-stealing role in Silk Stockings (rent it-she's incredible), but alas, Oscar didn't knock.
Famous Costars: Esther Williams (Bathing Beauty), Paul Henreid (Of Human Bondage), Jane Wyman (Cheyenne), Bette Davis (Winter Meeting), Fred Astaire & Cyd Charisse (Silk Stockings), Doris Day & David Niven (Please Don't Eat the Daisies), Bob Hope & Lana Turner (Bachelor in Paradise),  Joan Crawford (The Caretakers), & Henry Fonda (Welcome to Hard Times)
Are They Still Acting?: Paige's last film was the direct-to-video thrillers Natural Causes, but in 2001 her voice had been so damaged from decades of singing that she basically had to retire.

Eva Marie Saint

Age: 99 (July 4th, 1924)
Screen Debut: On the Waterfront (1954)
Best Known For: Saint is the star of two of the biggest classics of the 1950's, the Best Picture-winning On the Waterfront and Alfred Hitchcock's seminal thriller North by Northwest
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: Yes, Saint was nominated for her screen debut in On the Waterfront, and won the Best Supporting Actress statue for it.
Famous Costars: Marlon Brando (On the Waterfront), Bob Hope (That Certain Feeling, Cancel My Reservation), Montgomery Clift & Elizabeth Taylor (Raintree County), Cary Grant & James Mason (North by Northwest), Paul Newman (Exodus), James Garner (36 Hours, Grand Prix), Elizabeth Taylor (again) & Richard Burton (The Sandpiper), and Gregory Peck (The Stalking Moon)
Are They Still Acting?: No-while Saint has made some public appearances in the past few years (including presenting Best Costume Design to Phantom Thread in 2018 at the Oscars), her final film was Winter's Tale in 2014 with Colin Farrell.

Mamie van Doren

Age: 92 (February 6th, 1931)
Screen Debut: Footlight Varieties (1951)
Best Known For: Being the last surviving member of the Three M's.  During the 1950's, as a reaction to the success of Marilyn Monroe, studios hired about a dozen other buxom blonde actresses that tried to duplicate her success (the only one who got there was Kim Novak, who as we mentioned above, was the opposite of Monroe in terms of eventual star persona).  Van Doren's position (along with Jayne Mansfield) as one of the better known Monroe copycats was used as a punchline in Pulp Fiction.
AFI Nominee?: No
Oscar Nominations: No
Famous Costars: Liberace (Footlight Varieties), Tony Curtis (The All American), Rhonda Fleming (Yankee Pasha), Piper Laurie (Ain't Misbehavin'), Anne Bancroft (The Girl in Black Stockings), Clark Gable & Doris Day (Teacher's Pet), Mickey Rooney (The Big Operator, The Private Lives of Adam and Eve), and Jayne Mansfield (The Las Vegas Hillbillys)
Are They Still Acting?: Van Doren transitioned largely to cabaret acts & stage shows talking about her time as a headliner in Hollywood, with her last theatrically-released film being 2002's college sex comedy Slackers with Jason Schwartzman & Devon Sawa.

Robert Wagner

Age: 93 (February 10th, 1930)
Screen Debut: The Frogmen (1951)
Best Known For: Onscreen, Wagner is probably best-remembered by modern audiences as Number Two from the Austin Powers franchise, while offscreen, he is most famous for his romantic relationship with the late Natalie Wood, with many accusing him of knowing more about her drowning than he has let on.
AFI Nominee?: No-Wagner missed the ballot by one year.  Otherwise given his longtime career as a leading man, he surely would've been the last-living male actor on the list.
Oscar Nominations: Wagner was never cited for an Oscar, but he did have an Emmy nomination & six Golden Globe citations.
Famous Costars: Dana Andrews (The Frogmen), Claudette Colbert (Let's Make It Legal), Susan Hayward (With a Song in My Heart), James Cagney (What Price Glory?), Clifton Webb & Barbara Stanwyck (Titanic), James Mason & Janet Leigh (Prince Valiant), Robert Mitchum (The Hunters), Bing Crosby & Debbie Reynolds (Say One for Me), Natalie Wood (All the Fine Young Cannibals), Steve McQueen (The War Lover), Peter Sellers (The Pink Panther), and Paul Newman (Harper)
Are They Still Acting?: Wagner still acts, though not as frequently as he once did.  His most recent role was What Happened to Monday with Glenn Close & Willem Dafoe (I'd never heard of it either).

Joanne Woodward

Age: 93 (February 27th, 1930)
Screen Debut: Count Three and Pray (1955)
Best Known For: Woodward is an accomplished actress as we'll get into in a second, but in terms of the public consciousness, she is best-known as one-half of Classical Hollywood's most enduring romance (give or take Bogie & Bacall) due to her 50-year marriage to actor Paul Newman.
AFI Nominee?: No, again a surefire option if it weren't for the 1950 cutoff.
Oscar Nominations: Woodward is one of the more decorated actresses on this list when it comes to the Academy.  She won a Best Actress statue for 1957's The Three Faces of Eve (almost thirty years before her husband would win for The Color of Money), and she would be nominated for 1968's Rachel, Rachel, 1971's Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams, and 1990's Mr. and Mrs. Bridge, losing to Katharine Hepburn (The Lion in Winter) & Barbra Streisand (Funny Girl), Jane Fonda (Klute), and Kathy Bates (Misery), respectively.
Famous Costars: She costarred with Paul Newman in 16 movies, but in addition to him there are Tony Randall (No Down Payment), Orson Welles (The Long, Hot Summer), Marlon Brando & Anna Magnani (The Fugitive Kind), Sidney Poitier & Diahann Carroll (Paris Blues), Henry Fonda (A Big Hand for the Little Lady), Sean Connery (A Fine Madness), Anthony Perkins (WUSA), & Sylvia Sidney (Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams)
Are They Still Acting?: Woodward was diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease in 2007, and has largely retreated from public life since.

Saturday, November 13, 2021

A Countess from Hong Kong (1967)

Film: A Countess from Hong Kong (1967)
Stars: Marlon Brando, Sophia Loren, Sydney Chaplin, Tippi Hedren
Director: Charlie Chaplin
Oscar History: No nominations
Snap Judgment Ranking: 2/5 stars

Each month, as part of our 2021 Saturdays with the Stars series, we highlight a different one Alfred Hitchcock's Leading Ladies.  This month, our focus is on Tippi Hedren-click here to learn more about Ms. Hedren (and why I picked her), and click here for other Saturdays with the Stars articles.

Last week we talked about Tippi Hedren both in Marnie and in general her tumultuous relationship with our director-of-the-year Alfred Hitchcock.  Hedren's career after Marnie was rough, though, as she was under contract to Hitchcock (whom she refused to work with again), and who had final say in what films she was able to do, and he supposedly turned down several pictures that Hedren was interested in making.  She was finally released from her contract with Hitchcock & Universal in 1966, but her career has lost all of its momentum.  How do you follow up working with Hitchcock in two of his last great pictures?  Apparently, by appearing opposite the rare filmmaker who could rival Hitchcock's legend and track record on his final picture.  Yes, the first movie that Tippi Hedren made after working with her most iconic director was in the final film made by Silent Era genius Charlie Chaplin, A Countess from Hong Kong.

(Spoilers Ahead) The movie is about Ogden Mears (Brando), a wealthy man nominated to be the next US Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, who visits a brothel that includes Natascha (Loren), a Russian countess who is now penniless after the Russian Revolution.  On his voyage back to America, he realizes that Natascha has stowed away on this ship in his cabin, with hopes of arriving in the United States and starting a new life.  Initially reluctant, he eventually acquiesces to hiding her, even marrying her off to his valet, who then becomes quite amorous toward his new fake bride.  When Ogden's wife Martha (Hedren) arrives on the ship in Hawaii, he must choose-will he stay with his wife, with whom he has an in-name-only marriage that is meant to further his political career, or will he chase after this new woman that he has fallen in love with (even if it could be the downfall of his career)?  Only someone watching their first movie wouldn't know where Ogden's allegiances end up.

A Countess from Hong Kong is regarded as more curiosity than actual discussed film today.  Chaplin hadn't directed a film in ten years at the time, and that movie had been a critical flop.  Countess would suffer the same fate, and though Chaplin would continue to tinker with scripts & ideas for the next year before his death in 1977, this was his his final film.  It's easy to see why critics & the public didn't respond to this.  While some of the comic bits play better with a bit of nostalgia (you can see the classic Chaplin eye for sight comedy in the way that Loren is continually stuffed into a bathroom every time someone comes to the door), he had not modernized his comic styling & it didn't play as well so far-removed from the Silent Era.  It didn't help that Brando & Loren have no chemistry together.  Both have very naturalistic acting styles, so I'm not saying this couldn't have worked, but Brando always struggled with comedy, and Loren doesn't have enough character to pick up the slack.  All-in-all, this is the kind of movie you'd forget pretty quickly if there weren't so many legends involved (Chaplin, for what it's worth, is only onscreen for a brief minute, as are his three daughters).

Hedren is also in the film for a short while.  According to Hedren, she later said that she felt Chaplin tricked her to say yes to the picture, promising a bigger part in the pitch, to which she said she would've done it just to say she'd have worked with Chaplin.  She's good in the movie, but it is indeed a cameo despite her high billing, and it would be a footnote of her filmmaking lexicon were it not for Chaplin, Brando, & Loren's involvement.  This would also be arguably the last time that Hedren would work with an "important" director for decades, and in terms of making a film with such prominent billing, it'd be the last time ever.  That didn't mean she didn't work though, and next week we're going to talk about a film that she spent the better part of a decade trying to make, whose subject would lead Hedren to her true passion-in-life.

Saturday, February 06, 2021

No Globes? No SAG? No Problem!

Doesn't that feel good?  After the longest awards season drought in recent memory, we officially received the nominations for the Golden Globes & SAG Awards this week.  I know there was a lot of confusion (Jared Leto? Corden but no Streep?), and always some anger (no one is ever happy with awards, but with someone whose personal Top 5 matched with 80% of the Best Drama category at the Globes, I am pretty pumped about HFPA this year), but in general it's nice to have some normalcy & to have awards season raging while winter gets colder & my ability to get vaccinated continues to be a shifting goalpost.

One of our favorite traditions on the blog is every year we do our annual "No Globe/No SAG/No Problem" article.  While the Globes & SAG Awards are a good barometer for the Oscars, they are not always right-on if you use them solely as a predictions tool (it'd be more interesting for all of us if we just used them as an award but since we don't I'm going to keep writing this article).  Every year since 2006, the Academy has chosen at least one name that was not nominated at the Globes/SAG.  Below are the lucky ones from the last decade:

2019: Florence Pugh
2018: Marina de Tavira & Yalitza Aparicio
2017: Lesley Manville
2016: Michael Shannon
2015: Charlotte Rampling, Tom Hardy, & Mark Ruffalo
2014: Bradley Cooper, Marion Cotillard, & Laura Dern
2013: Jonah Hill
2012: Quvenzhane Wallis, Emmanuelle Riva, & Jacki Weaver
2011: Gary Oldman & Max von Sydow
2010: Javier Bardem

As you can see, a few trends emerge.  Oscar likes to over-reward its Best Picture nominees, or at least films that are already a lock for another acting nomination (movies voters are already watching anyway).  They tend to gravitate in recent years toward actors who are well-liked and "Oscar-bound" in terms of their career trajectory, but haven't been nominated yet (Rampling, Manville, Hardy, Oldman).  And they generally don't invite films that are getting their sole nomination (Rampling being the exception on that front).

This year, I have slightly more names than usual, though ultimately I don't think we'll have more than 1-2 contenders emerge.  There are three reasons for that.  The first is trying to understand the gap-the Oscar nominations aren't for another month, so if a film does catch on in that time frame, we won't know it.  In a normal year most of the narratives would be baked even for films that hadn't been released yet, but trying to gage what's factoring into the awards is tough because of box office (our second reason).  Box office isn't really a component this year (even a film like The Croods: A New Age which has done surprisingly well at the box office given the pandemic are not making headlines for their grosses), so movies that might have been helped by being well-loved by audiences (such as News of the World) don't have that luxury, and can't use that as a way to be the "crowdpleaser" nomination this year. The problem is I can't really feel out what's replacing "box office" as a normal Oscar factor (if anything is at all), and so I find the race is looser as a result.

The third is that I haven't seen all of these movies.  The 2021 releases are difficult to track down (though I was lucky to catch The Father at a festival screening), and most came out during the last week (when I had a busy work week).  For example, I'm not listing someone like Denzel Washington in The Little Things because he seems to have no buzz (and it might not be that kind of a performance), even though the enthusiasm for Jared Leto's work combined with Oscar's longtime love of Washington makes him an "on-paper" kind of person who could show up here.  I am listing, however, 15 actors below that I do think should keep their dance cards open, and like I said, at least one or two of them are going to join a select group who skipped the whole awards season...and still ended up with an Oscar nomination on their shelf.

Honorable Mention: A couple of names I want to throw out here.  Zendaya (Malcolm & Marie) and Stanley Tucci (Supernova) both have buzzy projects that went nowhere with HFPA/SAG.  It's possible these were too late-breaking & Oscar will catch the buzz, or it's also possible their studios botched the releases and they go home empty-handed.  LaKeith Stanfield is the lead role in Judas the Black Messiah, and if that's a Best Picture nominee he could make it (he's the sort of actor who is going to get a nomination at some point), but all of the buzz is on Daniel Kaluuya so I'm not feeling it too big this year.  And finally, while she somehow missed at the Globes (the biggest shock of the week for me, even over the Leto citation) and the SAG Awards, Meryl Streep should never be entirely counted out for an Oscar nomination.  She has (just once) gotten into the Oscars without a citation for either (1987's Ironweed), and the fifth slot in Best Actress is a true free-for-all...I would be stunned if she got it at this point, but to dismiss her chances even after all of this would be foolishness.

10. Tom Hanks (News of the World)

For Him: Hanks is a beloved star, one whom the Academy finally welcomed back last year.  I said up-top that films that are in the hunt for Best Picture or another acting prize tend to do well here, and with Helena Zengal nominated twice, and this being the kind of classy (but accessible) movie that AMPAS likes to fill up its Best Picture field with (even if they don't nominate it for Best Director), I wouldn't count him out.  All of the fields have roughly 4 nominees that feel locked, and one truly open fifth slot, so there's room.
Against Him: No film, in my opinion, is hurt more by a lack of box office than News of the World.  In a dour year, its message of hope & unlikely families would have been a surprise hit at the box office (for my money), and as a result there would've been more demand for the movie to get nominated here.  Without it, I don't know if Hanks (in a role he could do in his sleep, even if he's watchable as ever) really needs a nomination over someone like a Steven Yeun or Gary Oldman, who are in movies that are likely to be bigger deals with Oscar.  Plus, Hanks has a weirdly long history of being in prestige projects where other actors got nominated but he didn't (this would be the tenth such instance of this happening).

9. Charles Dance (Mank)

For Him: Like I said up-top, when we see someone sneak in last minute, they're doing so for a film that A) is a Best Picture contender & likely looking at additional acting nominations and B) is a veteran actor whom the Academy has never gotten around to nominating.  Charles Dance fits both those descriptions like a glove.  He's playing a real-life figure in a key role in his film, and in a movie full of supporting actor turns, he's the one that's clearly meant to stand out (if you watch the trailers or pay attention to star billing).
Against Him: It's a smaller part, and probably needs 1-2 more scenes to make it an easy sell for Oscar. It's also hard to tell how wild the industry is about Mank.  The Globes loved it, SAG nearly forgot about it, and audiences have been mixed on its cold approach.  Oscar is going to have to love it for something like this to happen (though I can't quite shake Alan Alda in The Aviator, the most similar doppelganger for Dance to cling toward).

8. Kingsley Ben-Adir (One Night in Miami)

For Him: Like Dance, Ben-Adir's biggest asset is that he's in a big-deal movie.  If One Night in Miami is a hit with AMPAS (and it could well be), they may be finding a way to nominate it outside of Leslie Odom, Jr.  Ben-Adir got plaudits from people who saw the movie, and many considered him the best-in-show of the film.  Plus playing a real-life figure never hurt any actor.
Against Him: It's an introverted part, and Ben-Adir might suffer from reverse category fraud a bit.  He's not as famous as Odom is, but he's still "the lead" while the two have roughly commensurate runtimes...will Oscar voters really put him here while they're putting Odom in supporting?  Part of me thinks they should have tried to convince us that all four actors were supporting, though that could have led to category splitting...I think this isn't showy enough to land in a lead category, but if they like the movie I could be wrong (hence him on this list).

7. David Strathairn (Nomadland)

For Him: We continue with another actor from a major Best Picture contender whom so far has been ignored by the televised awards.  I put David Strathairn higher than the other two for a pair of reasons.  First, he's been nominated before, so I know Oscar likes him.  Second, and more important, he has no internal competition (he does, but no one famous enough to get in here).  If you want to honor Nomadland beyond Zhao & McDormand, he's your best bet, and the film has many acolytes (it's the kind that's going to get a lot of #1 placements on nominations ballots for Best Picture).
Against Him: It's a small role, smaller in stature to the film than even Dance's, and it's not showy at all. It's good (he's always good), but Oscar rarely goes for this kind of small-arch, inward role, particularly if others haven't noticed it first.  While Supporting Actor has a lot of directions it could go, this would be an unusual fifth slot nomination.

6. Mads Mikkelsen (Another Round)

For Him: Occasionally (Cotillard, Riva, Bardem) in the past decade we've seen a performer from a major foreign-language film get into this race without any precursors, and I do think that's possible here.  Mikkelsen is well-known to Hollywood, and has been in English-language productions for the past decade.  This is a big, plum part, and it's a surprisingly smart movie; even if you see it without a lot of expectations, it's going to surprise you & you'll enjoy it.  I can't shake the idea that this is the sort of performance that if enough Academy members see it, he gets in.
Against Him: Will enough see it?  Again, box office plays a part here-will the Academy reach for the foreign-language drinking drama as they're trapped in their house with their families?  Mikkelsen is not a previous nominee like Cotillard or Bardem, so while he's well-known he's not an Academy favorite.

5. Delroy Lindo (Da 5 Bloods)

For Him: He won the NYFCC award (always a good indicator for the Oscar), and is getting best-in-career style nominations for the film.  Oscar likes to honor long-working character actors when they get their moment-in-the-sun, and Best Actor is fluid enough (only Hopkins, Boseman, & Ahmed feel truly safe) that a new name or two sneaking in isn't without question.  The Academy went all-in for the last Spike Lee movie.
Against Him: The SAG snub is baffling.  HFPA might've just not liked the movie, but SAG nominated it for Cast and Boseman, yet they snubbed Lindo (who has the best performance in the film).  I don't really know what's happening here, but the consensus seems to be that the industry isn't feeling Da 5 Bloods, and if that's the case Boseman might be the only contender from the film other than Lee in writing...leaving Lindo out of the running for someone like Steven Yeun (in a movie they seem more inclined toward).

4. Mark Rylance or Frank Langella (The Trial of the Chicago 7)

For Him: I'm aware the tie is a cheat here, but mostly I can't figure out quite how to read Chicago 7, which seems like the early frontrunner to take Best Picture at the Oscars this year.  If that's the case, it's possible someone other than Sacha Baron Cohen will get into this field, but I don't know who as the cast is massive (Eddie Redmayne or Jeremy Strong aren't crazy suggestions either).  Rylance & Langella are previous Oscar nominees in big, intense parts in the movie, and if they want to give the movie a dual nomination they're the two most-likely to benefit from such a move from Oscar.
Against Him: Dual nominations in the same category aren't as popular as they were a few decades ago, and it's possible that these two both split their votes with each other or that Academy voters feel that honoring Baron Cohen is enough of a nod to the movie as they need to give.

3. Paul Raci (Sound of Metal)

For Him: He won every critical prize known to man, and he's in a film that is getting attention for Best Actor (and honestly feels like an outside shot at Best Picture).  His role isn't a co-lead, but it is sizable, and he gets his Oscar-bait clip (his final moments onscreen).  Plus, this is the kind of role Oscar has gone for in the past with a character actor who has his moment in the sun.
Against Him: The lack of a SAG nomination hurts (a lot).  Raci was never going to be famous enough for the Globes, but the SAG Awards will honor actors who haven't been favorites before with the Academy.  That he missed there makes me wonder if televised awards bodies aren't sold on the film beyond Ahmed, or if they are capable of noticing a relatively obscure character actor (who isn't as famous or ubiquitous as Laurie Metcalf or JK Simmons who went this route in recent years).

2. Ellen Burstyn (Pieces of a Woman)

For Her: She's an Oscars icon, and she's in a film that's getting attention (albeit not for her).  She'd also be the oldest nominee ever (a hook!), and she has one scene late in the movie that is such a "nominate this!" moment that it's difficult to see Oscar voters watching it & not suddenly taking notice of what she's doing.  Supporting Actress, especially for the final nomination, is very influx.
Against Her: Her big scene in the movie comes quite late in an intense movie (how many AMPAS voters skip the rest of the film after the first twenty minutes?), and while it's not a small part historically (there have been smaller ones cited in recent years), one wonders if we've entered a world where a performance this short can compete with co-leads like Maria Bakalova or Helena Zengal.

1. Sophia Loren (The Life Ahead)

For Her: She's an Oscar-winning legend who came out of retirement to do this part.  While it isn't in contention in other categories like many above this, Loren doesn't really need that-she's the attraction here.  And while McDormand/Davis/Mulligan have locked down the first three slots, Vanessa Kirby doesn't feel "solid" to me considering the nature of her film (and the Burstyn snubs), and Best Actress has arguably the loosest fifth slot of the acting fields: Amy Adams, Michelle Pfeiffer, & Andra Day all could get into this field as the last nominee, but none of them feel like sure, or even solid bets based on super-late release dates (no buzz) or questionable reviews (Adams).  All of this is to say that I'd probably still predict Loren (at least as of today) for that final nomination slot as she could surprise.
Against Her: The SAG Awards snub stings, as they tend to favor their legends a bit more than others.  Loren is hurt this year by not being able to show up at red carpets...that Old Hollywood glamour would've made her not just a surefire nominee (we want her to come!) but a threat for the win, in my opinion.  Without that top-of-mind, I wonder if she's become out-of-sight for Oscar voters.