R.I.P Liz Taylor

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  • JayBee74
    Hall Of Fame
    • Jul 2002
    • 22989

    #16
    Re: R.I.P Liz Taylor

    Originally posted by SPTO
    Like I said on Twitter, I was never a big fan but she was a legend. My favorite movie she was in is GIANT.

    R.I.P.
    Talk about star power-Liz, Rock Hudson and James Dean.

    As I was growing up I considered Liz a goddess.

    Comment

    • goh
      Banned
      • Aug 2003
      • 20755

      #17
      Re: R.I.P Liz Taylor

      I've only seen her in Reflections in a Golden Eye and a Simpsons episode. I guess I can say I enjoyed every performance of hers I saw.

      Comment

      • KingV2k3
        Senior Circuit
        • May 2003
        • 5881

        #18
        Re: R.I.P Liz Taylor

        Originally posted by trobinson97
        R.I.P.

        Can't say I've seen much of work to be honest, and that kind of surprises me.
        IMHO, "Giant" is great..."Butterfield 8" is even greater...but the way she shreds through "Whatever Happened to Virginia Wolfe" is awe insipiring...

        I imagine that AMC and TCM will be booting these up in the forseeable future...

        RIP to the original child star to superstar / tabloid queen...

        Comment

        • SPTO
          binging
          • Feb 2003
          • 68046

          #19
          Re: R.I.P Liz Taylor

          Originally posted by KingV2k3
          IMHO, "Giant" is great..."Butterfield 8" is even greater...but the way she shreds through "Whatever Happened to Virginia Wolfe" is awe insipiring...

          I imagine that AMC and TCM will be booting these up in the forseeable future...

          RIP to the original child star to superstar / tabloid queen...
          You are correct, don't count on AMC to do those things anymore as they've switched to a more general film lover channel rather than what TCM does. Anyways TCM has a 24 hr tribute on Sunday April 10th. Here's the schedule:

          6 a.m. - Lassie Come Home (1943), with Roddy McDowall and Edmund Gwenn; directed by Fred M. Wilcox.
          7:30 a.m. - National Velvet (1944), with Mickey Rooney, Anne Revere and Angela Lansbury; directed by Clarence Brown.
          10 a.m. - Conspirator (1952), with Robert Taylor and Robert Flemyng; directed by Victor Saville.
          11:30 a.m. - Father of the Bride (1950), with Spencer Tracy, Billie Burke, Joan Bennett and Don Taylor; directed by Vincente Minnelli.
          1:15 a.m. - Father's Little Dividend (1951), with Spencer Tracy, Billie Burke, Joan Bennett and Don Taylor; directed by Vincente Minnelli.
          2:45 p.m. - Raintree County (1957), with Montgomery Clift, Eva Marie Saint, Lee Marvin, Rod Taylor and Agnes Moorehead; directed by Edward Dmytryk.
          6 p.m. - Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958), with Paul Newman and Burl Ives; directed by Richard Brooks.
          8 p.m. - Butterfield 8 (1960), with Laurence Harvey and Eddie Fisher; directed by Daniel Mann.
          10 p.m. - Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), with Richard Burton, George Segal and Sandy Dennis; directed by Mike Nichols.
          12:30 a.m. - Giant (1956), with James Dean and Rock Hudson; directed by George Stevens.
          4 a.m. - Ivanhoe (1952), with Robert Taylor and Joan Fontaine; directed by Richard Thorpe.
          Member of the Official OS Bills Backers Club

          "Baseball is the most important thing that doesn't matter at all" - Robert B. Parker

          Comment

          • KingV2k3
            Senior Circuit
            • May 2003
            • 5881

            #20
            Re: R.I.P Liz Taylor

            Thanks for the lineup, SPTO!

            Looks like 6PM to 4AM is "prime time", IMHO...

            Getcha popcorn ready!

            Comment

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