11 March 2013

TWENTY FOR MONDAY: THE WORST ACTING OSCARS

To what I assume is the surprise of nobody whatsoever, I here present a sequel to last week's list. It is shorter, because I see no reason not to err on the side of niceness: I have said enough shit about the Academy to last me for years, so I think merely citing the five worst winners in each acting category will do just fine.


The Five Worst "Best Actress" Oscar Winners
(Skip to: Actor | Supporting Actress | Supporting Actor)

5. Katharine Hepburn, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967)
The most extreme case in Oscar history of "the right people winning awards for the wrong movies", only one of the four Oscars given to Katherine the Great (for The Lion in Winter) was attached to a performance that could plausibly described as one of her best. Of the other three, the worst by far was as the liberal wife in Stanley Kramer's airless social studies chamber drama, a performance that won largely as a present for outliving Spencer Tracy, and surely not because the voters saw something awards-worthy in her collection of moist-eyed, admiring looks, and her ability to tremble on cue.

4. Shirley Booth, Come Back, Little Sheba (1952)
A rocky stage-to-screen transfer made significantly worse by the leading lady's inability to comprehend the difference between the two media. Blowsy and manic, full of over-determined, fussy gestures that play like somebody who'd heard of the Method but didn't actually know what it consisted of, Booth lumbers through the movie as more a parody of the slow-witted housewife she's playing than as an honest attempt to bring her to life, and her big stabs at emotional outbursts are so studied and shrill as to be worse than embarrassing melodrama.

3. Sally Field, Places in the Heart (1984)
Conventional wisdom holds that it was the "you really like me!" speech at the Oscars that cost Field so much industry respect in '85; could it not also be that she won for such a shrill part in such a chintzy movie, and everybody just wanted to forget about it all as quickly as possible? An attempt at a similar kind of strong, self-reliant woman to the one that won Field her first Oscar for the fine work she did in Norma Rae, but this time undone by a tacky screenplay and the actress's unflagging tendency to substitute clenched expressions and declamatory line readings for psychological shading.

2. Loretta Young, The Farmer's Daughter (1947)
Yumpin' yiminy. Ethnic humor has a secure, if unlovable place in Hollywood history - the career of John Ford would be unthinkable without it - but did they really need to toss a statue at Young's outlandish Swedish cartoon in a movie that plays like Mr. Smith Goes to Washington as rewritten by Eugene O'Neill and Preston Sturges on a mutual absinthe bender? Even in a somewhat rickety set of nominees, there were only better choices than this failure to create a plausible character or sell the movie's broad comedy.

1. Mary Pickford, Coquette (1928-'29)
To be fair, a lot of the things we slam for being "bad" Oscar winners are more like "not-good"; not up to any standard we'd like to associate with American film's highest honor, but also more mediocre and forgettable than truly poor. Such is the case with nearly every performance criticised in this post. But oh, dearie me, not with 36-year-old Pickford's gargoylish turn as a daffy teen ingenue with a flutey voice and hypnotically garish physical carriage, a worst-case-imaginable scenario for the kind of performance silent icons give in their very first sound performance. Largely disliked and regarded as a career win even in 1929, it's almost bad enough to be captivating - a real actress, one of the most popular of the era, really thought that this was the proper manner in which to play anything resembling human behavior, and that is horribly fascinating, in the way that it's hard not to stare at a really gruesome car accident. The film is a dodgy bit of business throughout, but nothing that Pickford does at any moment fails to make it much worse than it had to be.


The Five Worst "Best Actor" Oscar Winners
(Skip to: Actress | Supporting Actress | Supporting Actor)

5. Roberto Benigni, Life Is Beautiful (1998)
A movie for which I have a rather intense and cold dislike; not only for Benigni's crude clowning and not only for the jaw-dropping ineffectiveness of same in the second-half concentration camp scenes, though certainly those things do not help. Frankly, the first half is not better, though it is considerably less tasteless: syrupy, pre-ordained magical realist romance that serves to give Benigni's unfunny riff on silent comedians so much airtime that if you're even marginally unsympathetic to Italy's national love of desperately wacky clowns, by the 30-minute mark Beningini's one-note-fits-all mugging will have started to feel a bit like a war crime itself.

4. Warner Baxter, In Old Arizona (1928-'29)
Ah, the second Academy Awards; the year when out of seven winners, four absolutely sucked, one is lost, and one might as well be. Baxter's not nearly as ripe as Pickford, but his plastered expression is just as achingly typical of the wrong kind of early sound performance, saddled with an unstable approach to ethnicity and a script whose artificial grubbiness was not at all friendly to an actor who was much, much better in his sophisticated roles than in his everyman ones. Soapy and bland.

3. Spencer Tracy, Captains Courageous (1937)
There doesn't seem to be much middle ground with Tracy: either you regard him as one of the steadiest and strongest actors of a generation or you emphatically don't. Barring one or two exceptions here and there, I'm cozily in the latter camp, and his mangled Portuguese accent (Christ, with the ethnic roles already!), and the unchecked smugness of his allegedly humble, uneducated fisherman turns an already shady prop character in a wheezy coming of age story into a straight-up joke, to the extreme misfortune of the film around him.

2. George Arliss, Disraeli (1929-'30)
A history-making performance: the first time somebody won an Oscar for playing a real-life figure. In this case, Arliss has the bravery to depict the 19th Century Prime Minister as a antropoid lizard. There's something immensely off-putting about Arliss's limitations in this role, veering with little color between a stab at political insight that verges on cackling monstrousness - and he's the film's hero - or a tendency towards adopting a pose and moving as little as possible, including his jaw when he's speaking. Later sound performances would work out better for the actor, when his inclination towards whispery line reading wouldn't meet up against the limitations of 1929 sound recording technology.

1. Cliff Robertson, Charly (1968)
An extraordinarily shallow sketch of mental retardation as the state of talking slow and being really really sad that you can't read. It's hard to say whether it's more boring or offensive, mostly because it goes so far into the red on both counts: there is absolutely nothing that Robertson does that goes beyond what any given high school drama student would pull out if you instructed him to play a mentally handicapped man. With al kinds of noble sensitivity, of course, though what passed as sensitive in '68 is not very much like what passes for sensitive in 2013.


The Five Worst "Best Supporting Actress" Oscar Winners
(Skip to: Actress | Actor | Supporting Actor)

5. Estelle Parsons, Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
There is undoubtedly more to this performance than what feels like a ten-minute scene of ostensibly comic screaming in terror; but not by much. A one-note performance that feels like it was rewarded solely because the Academy was too spooked to reward the movie in any more important major categories.

4. Miyoshi Umeki, Sayonara (1957)
Truly and uniquely inexplicable. The number of unwritten Academy rules that had to be overlooked for this performance by a non-American in her first English-language film to be nominated, let alone to win, is enough to make you assume that there must have been something really spectacular to catch their attention back in '57. But no, it's a totally anonymous performance of a functional role that smacks of condescending PC racism: "oh, let's throw an Oscar to an Asian", and clearly any old Asian would do.

3. Olympia Dukakis, Moonstruck (1987)
Every cranky, world-weary sitcom mother with an acid tongue ever, only since this one was in a movie, and portrayed by a an inexplicably well-respected actress, they decided to give her a statue. There's no meaningful difference between Dukakis's Rose Castorini and Estelle Getty's contemporaneous Sophia Petrillo on The Golden Girls except that weekly exposure on a sitcom made the latter figure significantly more likable.

2. Josephine Hull, Harvey (1950)
Did somebody mention well-regarded stage actresses with somewhat lousy film careers winning Oscars for playing grating exaggerations of wacky old women? Because Hull's utterly superficial turn as Jimmy Stewart's shouty aunt threatens, frequently, to single-handedly sink a charming trifle of a movie that already had some issues negotiating the trip from Broadway to Hollywood, with her coarse, gruesomely flightly glosses on "comic" neuroticism.

1. Gale Sondergaard, Anthony Adverse (1936)
This much is true, at least: Sondergaard, the first winner in this category's existence, was a supporting player and not a movie star. And that, by and large, was for good reason, never more obviously displayed than here in her very first movie performance as a tedious adventure movie villainess, all vamping and cheap exoticism, with absolutely nothing that resembles "acting" in any way more meaningful than posing for a still photograph qualifies as performance. Humiliatingly unpersuasive in any register beyond the one where she's meant to look sexy.


The Five Worst "Best Supporting Actor" Oscar Winners
(Skip to: Actress | Actor | Supporting Actress)

5. John Houseman, The Paper Chase (1973)
Many people won Oscars for the first performance; few did it at the age of 71. And that says it all, really: Houseman wasn't an actor, but a tremendously important stage producer, and this award (and really, this role), was nothing but a thank you from a grateful industry. Which is sweet, but we typically do and I think ought to expect more from our Oscar winners than the ability to stand in front of the camera and deliver poppy dialogue in an angry tone, which is the one and only thing this "performance" consists of.

4. Michael Caine, The Cider House Rules (1999)
One of the most inconsistent great actors in film history not only took the Oscar out of the hands of two of the most-deserving nominees this category saw in the whole of the 1990s, he did it with one of the most treacly, surface-level performances of his career. All sentiment and no character, he was part of this category's habit in this era of drifiting to a performance with a good catchphrase, insofar as the "Princes of Maine" bit counts as "good".

3. Walter Brennan, Come and Get It (1936)
Another bit of jaw-dropping ethnic caricature, as Brennan tries to wrap his extremely distinctive voice around a comic strip Swede, and fails epically. It's actually a pretty solid Western melodrama in all the ways that matter, but Brennan's odious comic relief is a ghastly nightmare even by the standards of the decade where such figures reached their absolute, all-time nadir. The great character actor, winning this category's first-ever award, was never worse.

2. George Chakiris, West Side Story (1961)
In a film unaccountably plagued by poor casting choices, none backfired more spectacularly than the Greek-American's vibrantly horrible embodiment of Latino clichés, barking out his lines in a self-consciously fiery tone that makes even Natalie Wood's famously ill-judged performance seem toned down and clever. There's a heightened quality to musical acting, of course, but the messy, bellowing work Chakiris turns in isn't "heightened", it's just plain gaudy.

1. John Mills, Ryan's Daughter (1970)
The only winning performance that even slightly gives Mary Pickford's Coquette freak show a run for its money as the worst. It starts with a gimmick that announces much too proudly its own possibilities for being turned into something broad and tacky - the mute village idiot - and Mills proceeds to live down to the basest possibilities of the role in every way imaginable and several that he had to invent just for the occasion. The sepulchral 206-minute film needs every scrap of vitality it can manage to find, but the exaggerated awfulness of whatever Mills is up to here isn't exactly memorable in ways that work to the film's benefit.

15 comments:

  1. Any "Worst Oscar Winners List" that DOESN'T include Louise Rainer's ghastly performance in The Great Ziegfeld should be called into question.

    However, given that I mildly enjoyed The Great Ziegfeld, you can call my own judgment into question, so we're even.

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  2. I'm not in a position to call anybody's mild enjoyment of Ziegfeld into question, as it happens - a long, boring movie, but with enough bits I enjoy that I can't write it off. But Rainer's performance was, literally, my #6. And her other win was #11, at the point that I was still thinking of making this a collection of Top Tens.

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  3. First of all: Luise Rainer was amazing in The Great Ziegfeld and even better in The Good Earth :-)


    That said, I disagree with most of your choices. Most of them would not make my "best list" (except Josephine Hull) but they would fall into the "middle to bottom" section, not the worst but also not truly great. Still, a great read!

    For fun, my choices (but they all change constantly):

    Actress
    - Mary Pickford, Coquette
    - Sandra Bullock, The Blind Side
    - Elizabeth Taylor, Butterfield 8
    - Jessica Lange, Blue Sky
    - Joan Fontaine, Suspicion

    Actor
    - Cliff Robertson, Charly
    - Roberto Benigni, Life is Beautiful
    - Gary Cooper, Seargent York
    - Tom Hannks, Forrest Gump
    - Tom Hanks, Philadelphia

    Supporting Actress
    - Gloria Grahame, The Bad and the Beautiful
    - Ingrid Bergman, Murder on the Orient Express
    - Shelley Winters, A Patch of Blue
    - Mary Astor, The Great Lie
    - Lee Grant, Shampoo

    Supporting Actor
    - Michael Caine, The Cider House Rules
    - Walter Brennan, Kentucky
    - Frank Sinatra, From Here to Eternity
    - George Chakiris, West Side Story
    - Done Ameche, Cocoon

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  4. Based on your list, it appears that the Academy of the 30s and 40s rewarded American actors taking on ethnic roles, no matter how poorly acted, in a way similar to how the Academy of the second half of the century rewarded actors for taking on mentally handicapped or disabled roles (Billy Bob Slingblade, Al Pacino ), no matter how well or poorly acted. Both are horrible decisions.

    Also, in hindsight the "acting" of Roberto Benigni in , is so much easier to despise than it was at time. He nerve should have been nominated, much less won, but at the time I could never decide if Benigni was just so, so horrible at acting or if he was just punished by being in such a horrible, horrible movie. I had trouble determining if his mugging and clownishness was a result of his acting or based on the script and the direction of the movie (of course, Benigni was involved in all three, so fuck him thrice I suppose). Could another actor have added a sense of darkness or meloncholy as he feigned humor and comedy to protect his son from the horrors of the concentration camp? Possibly, but the movie also did not seem to have the opportunities to demonstrate such depth (also on Benigni). It was all about a man whose sheer will could protect his son from tragedy. I cannot imagine any actor could save that train-wreck of a movie.

    Regardless, Benigni was and is horrible, but the movie was even worse. Those are too many words spent on a horrible actor and a horrible movie, but I just hated that movie so, so much. It is just so pathetic that the Academy is evidently so moved by schmaltz that crap like Life is Beautiful can sway them so easily.

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  5. Is Chakiris's performance widely-acknowledged as bad? Cause I kind of like it. He certainly comes off well next to Richard Beymer, I think.

    As far as Spencer Tracy goes, I hope his performance in Fury is one of your exceptions.

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  6. Walter Brennan's three wins are a result of his being president of the Screen Extras Guild. At the time, extras were able to vote. He later requested no one vote for him. I am not sure if he had anything to do with the rule change.

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  7. For trivia's sake, Paper Chase wasn't Houseman's first on-screen work, as he had played an admiral in Seven Days in May a decade earlier. But Oscar voters' motives may have been just as you say, but Houseman lived off that performance for the rest of his life so it must have struck some kind of nerve.

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  8. Fritz- "Middle to bottom" describes the vast, vast majority of the winners to me, even more than in Best Picture. A whole lot of more-or-less mediocre work but very little that I'd actually call BAD acting. Really, only Pickford, Mills, and maybe Sondergaard and Young are so unholy dreadful as all that.

    By which I mean, I don't even necessarily agree with my picks, except insofar as they're all comfortably and irrevocably in the 25 or 30 performances in each category that I really wouldn't mind living without.

    Thanks for sharing your picks! The only one out of the 20 I'd seriously disagree with is Sinatra, and several of them were in my #6-#10 slots, especially Fontaine and Winters.

    Surly Duff- The movie as a whole is, aye, worse than the performance, but it gets you going and coming: because it's such an all-round ego trip of a thing, it couldn't have any other performance, and showing that performance off is a big part of what it's doing. One of these days, I'm bound to go off on my Life Is Beautiful rant, which is surprisingly bitter given that the film is now 15 years old. But God, do I ever dislike it.

    Franklin- I don't know that it's "widely" regarded as bad, but I know it's not especially well-loved. I have a special problem with almost all of the acting in that movie, though, so I might just be deranged.

    And that is, indeed, my very favorite Spencer Tracy performance.

    David- I'd never heard any of that. Thanks for sharing!

    Samuel- Not having seen Seven Days in May, I will defer to your wisdom. My impression is that he just had a little cameo in that movie, and I silently elided it.

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  9. you lost me with Olympia Dukakis.

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  10. Is it just me or was 1987 a weird year when it came to Best Supporting Actress? I get the complaint about Dukakis, but no one seemed an obvious winner, unless you went with an unusual pick.

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  11. I haven't seen 2 of the 5, but now that you've called my attention to it, that really is a very peculiar collection. Not Best Actress '75 peculiar, but you're right, they would have all been more or less unsatisfying winners.

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  12. I'm really tickled about how emphatically I disagree with your #3-#5 of Best Actresses. Although Sally is the weakest, I'm honestly shocked you think so little of Shirley and Kate. Shirley, I understand it's an unusual turn but other than being a role that isn't built on moments I've never been able to indict Kate's work in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner and not just because I love her. I suspect, though, you're not a fan of the film she's in which would make sense in that regard.

    But I'm also EMPHATICALLY overjoyed at your choice of Chakiris. I love the film and don't mind half the casting issues others do (I think Beymer is effective, Wood is charming and Tamblyn is my best in show) but George's Bernardo grates on me so very much.

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  13. To steal a word, I emphatically dislike Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, which certainly doesn't help Kate out at all. And I usually love her, too - just rewatched Holiday last week, confirmed that it's one of the best female performances of the '30s, contemptible shame it's not one of the films everybody has seen and talks about - but never less than when she's with Spencer Tracy, whom I also emphatically dislike, and I think their parings tend to strip away all the things I like best about her in everything else. Adam's Rib excepted. And Woman of the Year until that nightmare of a final scene.

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  14. See, information like this is why I love when you do posts like this. I think by now I'm generally familiar with your tastes on contemporary films and actors but I've no idea what you think of older films and actors. But if I recall, you're not a fan of Stanley Kramer on the whole, right?

    On Spence, I'd like him less if he wasn't affiliated with Kate, I'd say that. He's easily the least of her constant collaborators (directors or actors) when opposite her, although I think he's great when he's much more on point when he's not in a film with her.

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  15. I finished watching Coquette and wonder if it would have worked better as a silent film rather than Pickford's sound debut. It certainly played better w/the mute on (though it didn't make the film that much better).

    Then again, each time Pickford got an Oscar, it was connected to a ghastly appearance.

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