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Our Town

  • TV Movie
  • 2003
  • PG
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
539
YOUR RATING
Our Town (2003)
DramaFamilyRomance

Thornton Wilder's classic play on Grover's Corners, a fictional small town and its story taking place between 1901 and 1913, dealing with themes as life, death and the everyday routine of it... Read allThornton Wilder's classic play on Grover's Corners, a fictional small town and its story taking place between 1901 and 1913, dealing with themes as life, death and the everyday routine of its many residents, all followed and detailed by the Stage Manager.Thornton Wilder's classic play on Grover's Corners, a fictional small town and its story taking place between 1901 and 1913, dealing with themes as life, death and the everyday routine of its many residents, all followed and detailed by the Stage Manager.

  • Director
    • James Naughton
  • Writer
    • Thornton Wilder
  • Stars
    • Jayne Atkinson
    • Wendy Barrie-Wilson
    • Reathel Bean
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    539
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • James Naughton
    • Writer
      • Thornton Wilder
    • Stars
      • Jayne Atkinson
      • Wendy Barrie-Wilson
      • Reathel Bean
    • 18User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 6 nominations total

    Photos15

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    Top Cast23

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    Jayne Atkinson
    Jayne Atkinson
    • Mrs. Gibbs
    Wendy Barrie-Wilson
    • Woman in Balcony
    Reathel Bean
    • Man in Auditorium
    John Braden
    • Professor Willard
    Tom Brennan
    • Joe Stoddard
    Kieran Campion
    Kieran Campion
    • Baseball Player
    Patch Darragh
    Patch Darragh
    • Baseball Player
    Frank Converse
    Frank Converse
    • Dr. Gibbs
    Jane Curtin
    Jane Curtin
    • Mrs. Webb
    Jeffrey DeMunn
    Jeffrey DeMunn
    • Mr. Webb
    Mia Dillon
    Mia Dillon
    • Mrs. Soames
    Conor Donovan
    Conor Donovan
    • Wally Webb
    Ben Fox
    • George Gibbs
    Kristen Hahn
    Kristen Hahn
    • Rebecca Gibbs
    Carter Jackson
    • Sam Craig
    Maggie Lacey
    Maggie Lacey
    • Emily Webb
    Stephen Mendillo
    Stephen Mendillo
    • Constable Warren
    Paul Newman
    Paul Newman
    • Stage Manager
    • Director
      • James Naughton
    • Writer
      • Thornton Wilder
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    7.7539
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    Featured reviews

    10NormanThePig

    An Amazing Revisualization

    I first read "Our Town" in tenth grade. I knew there was something amazing about it, but I couldn't understand, see, or find it. I made it my mission to find out.

    Over the years, I have seen literally hundreds of productions of "Our Town," always in hopes of discovering the beauty that it possesses...somewhere.

    And here it is. Finally.

    This very contemporary, very recent production of "Our Town" is a stunning revisualization of this, Thornton Wilder's greatest work.

    The thematic material of "Our Town" is often misunderstood as a look at the ordinariness of daily life and how tedious the mundane is, but this is a short-sighted claim to Wilder's writing, as he provides much more depth and texture than that.

    It is biting yet sweet. It is sarcastic yet humbly honest. It is contemporary yet nostalgiac. In "Our Town," life is beautifully tragic, woefully joyous, and endearingly boring.

    The acting here is top-notch, as the starring roles are filled by such seasoned veterans as Paul Newman, Jayne Atkinson, and more. Newman especially shines as one who is amused, terrified, and bored with this small provincial place over which he seems to be a kind of non-active deity. Emily's final farewell to Grover's Corners is especially beautiful.

    The real wonder of this production is that it is apparent that the production team pulled together to create a solid, collaberative, cohesive piece of theatre that would reach people of all ages, colors, and creeds. All aspects of the production have come together beautifully to create this amazingly convincing work of theatre.

    Furthermore, this televised version is a wonderfully rendering of the original stage production. The camera never feels obtrusive, it never feels out of place or foreign. We feel like the audience, not like the camera. We are being led on a tour.

    Perhaps it is Thornton's (and the Stage Manager's) brilliant tour-guide-like presentation that makes this work so superbly on camera as well as stage.

    All in all, this mounting of "Our Town" surely does Thornton Wilder justice, as it brilliantly achieves what all great theatre should aspire to do: it emotes; it teaches; it explains; it examines; and it humanizes. Do not miss this for anything.
    10oldbob39

    Paul Newman in a role written for him!

    I've seen 'Our Town' on stage several times, dating back 50-some years to my small high school. I've seen it once on the small screen with Hal Holbrook, and including (I believe) John Houseman. But this is the best I have seen, and Paul Newman deserves a majority of the credit for this. He's about my age and I have watched him turn from the handsome, virile, often rebellious leading man to an old character actor. But this time he owns the stage. In live stage, I have never seen facial expression used really effectively: I've always been too far away from the actors. I don't recall Holbrook doing much in this area: I recall a rather straight narrative style that time. Newman is extraordinary. The expressions and the timing added a quality I don't ever recall seeing. The camera closed in appropriately and effectively. And for the first time I saw the Stage Manager turn from the simple travelogue narrator he appears at the opening to an identity at the closing moments I had never recognized before.

    (I'm trying to be cautious and not spoil the end. Is it possible to spoil it? Hasn't everyone who enjoys American stage already seen 'Our Town', like me, enough times they can almost speak the dialogue of that final scene along with the characters?)

    The play is so familiar that the sparse set comes naturally. This production actually used an item or two that I don't recall from earlier ones, but it still seems right. I was much impressed by the lighting, pulling the action up out of the overall darkness. Some things worked less well, I thought. George and Emily aged, and this was harder to do when the camera could zoom in and show their faces. With no makeup changes, they were left with dialogue and voice to convince the viewer, as I didn't feel movements showed the aging effectively. The same applied to the two sets of parents. Nonetheless, when Emily held the stage in the last scene, she still made it one of the most moving moments in theater.

    I am intrigued by the critical response to 'Our Town'. Early reviews seem to be enthusiastic, but some critics since seem to consider it too light, too trivial, to be listed among the great ones like Williams's and Miller's works. But aren't we talking here about the universal themes of life? Isn't that serious enough?

    Find a copy of it if you can. It's one of Paul Newman's great moments.
    10jrhpax

    A classic of a classic

    I've seen and read "Our Town" so many times that I thought to myself, "Why bother with this one?" It turned out that this is by far the best version of "Our Town" I've ever seen. Paul Newman was a magnificent stage manager. Maggie Lacey and Ben Fox were superb as Emily and George; I doubt that anyone's ever played them better. The ending was so movingly staged and acted that I was reduced to a blubbering idiot with tears rolling down my face. This is as good as it gets for "Our Town," and at last I understand why it's a classic.
    8Dr. Ed-2

    Now and then New England accents...

    mar this adaptation of the great Thornton Wilder play about mutability and one man (town's) place in the universe. Paul Newman, Jane Curtin, and Jayne Atkinson fare best. Jeffrey DeMunn is a little too "actorish," and the young leads lack spark and pale when compared to the luminous performance of William Holden and Martha Scott in the 1940 film. Not bad, but not great either. No two accents are alike (considering this is a turn-of-the-century New England town)---even among families. If you can't do accents, why bother?
    10gelman@attglobal.net

    Paul Newman at his best

    I've seen "Our Town" countless times with many excellent actors filling the role of stage manager/narrator. Paul Newman's performance easily tops them all. Although the TV version of Thornton Wilder's famous play lacks the spatial dimensions that are afforded by a stage, the story here is told in segments that are easily accommodated on a TV screen. This is Newman's "Our Town" to a degree that exceeds every other performance of the play that I've ever seen. And, since this is among the best acting jobs that Newman has ever done in his long career, that's just fine. I saw it with my wife and adult daughter (who also loved it) and commented that Newman is still a "mighty good-looking" guy.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      In this production Paul Newman played the stage manager. In the 1955 production which aired on Producers' Showcase (1954), Paul Newman played George Gibbs and Frank Sinatra played the stage manager.
    • Quotes

      Emily: Does anybody realize what life is while they're living it - every, every minute?

      Stage Manager: No. Saints and poets, maybe. They do some.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: Bruce Almighty/The In-Laws/Our Town (2003)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 24, 2003 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official PBS/Masterpiece Theatre website
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Booth Theatre - 222 West 45th Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Line by Line Productions
      • Westport Country Playhouse
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h(120 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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