Showing posts with label Cloris Leachman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cloris Leachman. Show all posts

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Mary Haines’ House in “The Women”

by HOOKEDONHOUSES on MARCH 28, 2010

The Women remake 2008 DVD cover

The original 1939 version of The Women is a classic. It’s so campy and over the top that I always get a kick out f it. There were several “gimmicks” to the movie. For one thing, there wasn’t a single man in it. For another, it was filmed in black and white except for a lengthy fashion-show scene that they shot in color.

Writer and Director Diane English says she always thought it should be remade for contemporary audiences “because women have changed so much since then.” In 2008, she did just that, with a version that features actresses like Meg Ryan, Debra Messing, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Annette Bening.

Meg Ryan's house-The Women

The tagline for the original was “It’s All About the Men.” But Diane believed that women have many more interests than just the opposite sex these days, so she says she “wanted to weave in issues of female empowerment, body image, and self-esteem.” She wrote the first draft in 1995, but it was stuck in development for over a decade.

Maybe that’s why the movie felt a little stale when it finally did come out? After shows like “Sex and the City” and the “Real Housewives” series on Bravo, The Women seemed dated, almost like it was actually made in ’95.

entry hall

Meg Ryan plays good-girl-done-wrong Mary Haines, and her traditional red-brick house held my interest more than the movie itself.

Here’s a shot of the living room during a party Mary threw for a large group of women. She supposedly did all the cooking for it herself “because I think people appreciate it.” Considering the size of the party, I had a hard time believing she did everything herself, but whatever.

living room-mantel

Mary’s Kitchen:

Mary Haines kitchen 1

I really liked the kitchen with the stained wood backsplash and the open shelves. The fabulous Cloris Leachman plays Mary’s housekeeper and was one of my favorite characters in the movie.

kitchen 2

Meg Ryan is one of my favorite rom-com actresses, but she just didn’t look like herself in this movie. I watched her in the 2001 movie Kate & Leopold yesterday (photos of her NYC apartment in that one coming soon!) and was surprised by the difference.

kitchen 3

Ryan’s first acting job was playing Candice Bergen’s daughter in the George Cukor filmRich and Famous. Bergen played her mother again in The Women.

Diane English wrote the TV show “Murphy Brown” in the 1990s, which turned Bergen into a sitcom star.

kitchen 4

The brass and hunter green in the kitchen seemed like a bit of a ’90s flashback to me. Was that to show that the kitchen had been around a long time and wasn’t too trendy? Or is it a sign of trends to come?

kitchen 6

I’m a little puzzled by the TV on the counter, too. Wouldn’t that make it hard to open the cabinet doors above it? You may recall that they used that TV to show us part of a Dove commercial. Dove products were also shown on the bathroom counter in one scene.

kitchen 7

kitchen 8

The Powder Room:

powder room

Stephen’s Study:

study

It felt like many of these rooms, including Stephen’s study, were part of the real house and not sets. Some of the rooms felt a little empty–not as staged and “decorated” as you’d expect from a movie like this.

Master Bedroom and Bath:

Mary Haines bedroom-The women

Linda, who writes about movie sets at Silver Screen Surroundings, points out that the bed looks small for a master bedroom.

She also notes that the arched window in the bathroom matches the one on the exterior of the house. She believes this scene was filmed in the actual house (you can see more photos and information about the movie in her post):

master bath

Decorating for Christmas:

fireplace-decorated for Cmas

I thought this room looked so pretty when they were decorating it for the holidays. The painted mantel is gorgeous.

The Screened Porch on the Side:

side with screened porch

This may be one of my favorite parts of the house–the screened porch. I wish they showed us an inside view!

screened porch

A lot of the movie was filmed in Massachusetts (Georgetown and Boston). I believe that’s where this house is located, as well, but I couldn’t confirm it. If anyone knows for sure, let me know.

exterior side

Clare Boothe Luce wrote the original play as a poison-pen letter to all the catty, back-biting women she had met in New York City society. It was a smash hit on Broadway.

Clare Booth Luce

It was made into a movie in 1939 with MGM’s biggest female stars who were under contract with the studio at the time. Joan Crawford was one of them. She didn’t want to play the role of mistress Crystal Allen, but it turned out to be a great career move for her.

Joan Crawford-The Women

Eva Mendes played the part of Crystal in the remake but was fairly toothless compared to Crawford’s maneater:

Eva Mendes as Crystal Allen

Norma Shearer was perfectly cast in the role of good-girl-done-wrong Mary Haines. She had a great house in the original movie, too. Let’s take a look at it while we’re at it!

The Women original-Mary Haines' dining rm

Rosalind Russell played Sylvia Fowler, and it was her first comedic role. Her next movie was the classic screwball comedy His Girl Friday with Cary Grant, one of my all-time favorites. I’ve seen it so many times, I could probably recite it from memory…

I love the corner window seat at the base of Mary’s stairs. The windows are lined with open shelves:

The Women original-Mary Haines' stairs

In the play, there was a lesbian character that didn’t make it into the original movie. Diane English revived the character and developed Alex more thoroughly for the remake (played by Jada Pinkett Smith).

Mary’s kitchen in the original:

The Women original-Mary Haines-kitchen

A lot of the action in the original took place in a spa where the women gathered to gossip:

The Women-original movie-spa

Did you like the remake as well as the original? What did you think of Mary Haines’ house–past and present?

4/10 UPDATE: I found the real house that the 2008 version of The Women was filmed in. To see the photos and compare the real interiors to how they appeared in the movie, click here.

Visit my TV/Movie Houses page for more, including other Meg Ryan movies like You’ve Got Mail and Sleepless in Seattle.

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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

“Spanglish:” Two Houses & a Restaurant

by HOOKEDONHOUSES on SEPTEMBER 27, 2009

spanglish-dvdWelcome to Movie Monday, when I feature the sets from our favorite films. The Adam Sandler-Tea Leoni movie Spanglish came out in 2004, and it featured two memorable houses–their main residence and the Malibu beach house that they rent for the summer. Sandler’s character, a chef named John Clasky, runs a charming little restaurant that adds even more eye candy in the film.

The story is about a Mexican immigrant named Flor (played by Paz Vega, who, like her character, doesn’t speak English). She goes to work at John and Deborah’s house, and the challenges go far beyond the language barrier.

John and Deborah’s House:

spanglish-house-exterior

I got kind of irritated because they never showed the entire exterior of the house. This is the most they ever gave us.

spanglish-house-exterior-deborah

The entry:

spanglish-entry

spanglish-house-staircase

I love that they have a Foosball table in the middle of this room:

spanglish-hurt-nose

The backyard pool:

spanglish-pool

The back of the house:

spanglish-house-back

Kitchen:

spanglish-kit2

spanglish-kitchen1

spanglish-kitchen-liv-rm

spanglish-fetch

Looking into the breakfast room:

spanglish-breakfast-room-overview

spanglish-breakfast-rm2

spanglish-breakfast-rm3

spanglish-liv-rm

The living room:

spanglish-living-rm2

spanglish-living-rm3

Cloris Leachman plays the grandmother. She’s fabulous, as usual.

spanglish-living-rm4

spanglish-living-rm

vlcsnap-353947

The upstairs landing features a great photo wall:

spanglish-upstairs-hall

John (Adam Sandler) in the master bedroom:

spanglish-mbr1

spanglish-mbr2

From the deleted scenes on the DVD, there was one scene that took place in the Master Bedroom that gave us a couple of new views of the room and shows the entire fireplace wall:

spanglish-mbr3

spanglish-mbr4

John’s Restaurant:

restaurant-ext

restaurant-fireplace

restaurant-kitchen

John takes Flor to see his restaurant:

restaurant-night

The Malibu Beach House:

malibu-house-exterior

They rent a beach house in Malibu for the summer. Again, we don’t get a good look at the exterior–this is the only (fleeting) shot of it:

malibu-living-rm

The tiny kitchen has blue and white diamond tiles on the walls:

malibu-kitchen

malibu-doors

malibu-hall

malibu-bedroom1

The paneled game room:

malibu-game-room

malibu-fireplace

The deck at night, looking into the family room:

malibu-night-deck

Flor’s daughter Cristina sits on the beach behind the house:

malibu-back

The living room opens to reveal this wonderful water view from the deck:

malibu-view

Writer and director James L. Brooks says, “The movie was based on the idea that decency can be sexy.”

(Thanks to everyone who requested Spanglish on my Facebook page!)

Visit my TV/Movie Houses page for links to all of the onscreen houses I’ve featured, from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off to Jane Eyre.

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