Actress Marsha Hunt, discovered at 17, made 54 films before being blacklisted. She became a pioneering celebrity activist, working with Eleanor Roosevelt for UN causes, and continues her adv... Read allActress Marsha Hunt, discovered at 17, made 54 films before being blacklisted. She became a pioneering celebrity activist, working with Eleanor Roosevelt for UN causes, and continues her advocacy at 96.Actress Marsha Hunt, discovered at 17, made 54 films before being blacklisted. She became a pioneering celebrity activist, working with Eleanor Roosevelt for UN causes, and continues her advocacy at 96.
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Alvah Bessie
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- (archive footage)
Gary Cooper
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Eric Johnston
- Self - MPAA
- (archive footage)
John Howard Lawson
- Self
- (archive footage)
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Featured reviews
A thousand thanks to Roger Memos and his team for creating this fire documentary. It is a story I did not know and it is a fascinating one!
Excellent documentary about a wonderful woman and her Hollywood career before, during, and after The Blacklist. Inspirational.
A loving and revealing documentary about an extraordinary woman, this shows Ms. Hunt to be, among other things, a good actress, a fierce advocate of human rights, and a survivor of Hollywood's golden age with amazing recall. Generous with film clips and interviews of other survivors we're pleased to meet (Norman Corwin, Norman Lloyd, Walter Bernstein, Margaret O'Brien), it chronicles how she was blacklisted and not only survived it, but was motivated to become a force for good, in so many ways, notably as a hardworking UN functionary. It's also a sweet love story: After a brief first marriage (and they stayed civil and even worked with each other later), she met a perfect mate, the screenwriter Robert Presnell, and really did live happily ever after. She's such a force of nature that we're kind of left wondering what aspects of her we're not seeing, but what we do see is lovely and impressive and inspiring. Really, after watching this, you may be motivated to go out and volunteer for something.
If you're a fan of TCM, you might know Marsha Hunt as a lovely, charming, and very talented young actress of the '30's and '40's (Pride and Prejudice, The Human Comedy, Cry Havoc), and you may well wonder why she never quite attained the "household name" status of some of her contemporaries. This engrossing documentary shows how she never left the movie business, but the movie business shamefully left her. (Like me, you may never again think quite as highly of Humphrey Bogart and John Huston.)
Fortunately, in some ways, the movies' loss was the world's gain, as she turned her attentions to many serious causes - hunger, homelessness, promoting greater understanding and cooperation in the world through the United Nations - while continuing to work as an actress on the stage. Eleanor Roosevelt became a friend and mentor over the years, and the documentary has comments from many well-known admirers attesting to Marsha's eloquence and persuasiveness on behalf of good causes.
The screening we saw was attended by Miss Hunt herself, 100 years young, and still recalling a trip she made with Jean Harlow and Robert Taylor to meet FDR in 1937 on behalf of what would become the March of Dimes. Living history.
This film should be essential viewing for anyone interested in Golden Age Hollywood and equally important as inspiration to lead a deeply fulfilling life.
10sccates
I knew little of Marsha Hunt other than the few films I had seen her in - then I was informed of this fascinating documentary and I became aware of what a truly admirable trailblazer she was. The really wonderful thing is that Marsha is still with us and was very much a part of working with Roger C. Memos and his crew o f telling her story. My admiration of this lovely lady is boundless and I think this film is both informative and extremely compelling viewing. Talk about MUST-SEE -- this is definitely in that category!
Did you know
- GoofsUnholy Partners (1941) is shown as being from 1944.
- ConnectionsFeatures College Holiday (1936)
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- $125,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 41 minutes
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