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poster of The Entertainer
Rating: 6.115/10 by 48 users

The Entertainer (1960)

Archie Rice, an old-time British vaudeville performer sinking into final defeat, schemes to stay in show business.

Directing:
  • Tony Richardson
  • Peter Yates
  • Roy Millichip
  • Maggie Unsworth
  • Michael Stevenson
  • Honor Blair
Writing:
  • John Osborne
  • Nigel Kneale
  • John Osborne
Stars:
Release Date: Mon, Jul 25, 1960

Rating: 6.115/10 by 48 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 36 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: beauty contest, based on play or musical, dysfunctional family, bankruptcy, music hall, seaside town, kitchen sink realism, vaudeville performer, british new wave, suez crisis

Alan Bates
Frank Rice
Thora Hird
Mrs. Ada Lapford
Geoffrey Toone
Harold Hubbard
MacDonald Hobley
McDonald Hobley (as McDonald Hobley)
Max Bacon
Charlie Klein
George Doonan
Eddie Trimmer
James Culliford
Cobber Carson
Gilbert Davis
Brother Bill
Hope Jackman
Morecambe Mother
Tony Selby
Teddy Boy (uncredited)
Nigel Davenport
Theatre Manager (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

Certainly, Laurence Olivier is superb in this drama, but he is surrounded by a superior supporting cast that lend huge poignancy to this story. He is "Archie Rice", a seaside entertainer who has long since passed his use-by date. His quick witted, slightly risqué and smutty humour no longer amuses the theatre audiences who now require much greater sophistication. He can't adapt though - it's in his blood. As he desperately tries to stay one step ahead of the bailiffs and the taxman, he puts his nearest and dearest through a maelstrom of emotions and trauma. It doesn't help his wife "Phoebe" (Brenda de Banzie) that he is also a bit of a womaniser - usually with younger girls, too. His long suffering kids "Jean" (Joan Plowright) and "Frank" (Alan Bates) try to keep things running as they struggle to make ends meet and stay cohesive as a family. Add to these four, a sparing but super contribution from Roger Livesey as his father - another man who made his living treading the boards back in the day, and what we have here is a telling look at a man who just no longer belongs. Olivier, the actor, turns his hand to stand-up, tap dancing, singing - all standard skills that anyone making a living this way would have needed; and he does it really well. None of the theatrical, method style he is so often famed (and criticised) for. Indeed, I think this is the most natural I have ever seen him on film. He seems to be rejoicing in the role - and that's contagious to watch. It's not a bundle of laughs, we are given plenty of opportunity to dislike this rather selfish, narcissist - especially when he is with the excellent Plowright and de Banzie. Although there is an inevitability to the conclusion, I still felt for this family reaching a crossroads, ill-equipped to fit into a society they didn't recognise nor really want to embrace.


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