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Blythe Danner in I'll See You in My Dreams. |
If Blythe Danner had come into movies in the thirties instead of the seventies, she would have been a star. In
Lovin’ Molly (1974) and
Hearts of the West (1975), she was as elegant as Claudette Colbert, as funny-sexy as Jean Arthur (and with something like Arthur’s cracked alto) ,
as quicksilver as Margaret Sullavan, and a transcendent beauty. And, as her performances on the PBS series
Theater in America, as Nina in
The Sea Gull and Alma in Tennessee Williams’
The Eccentricities of a Nightingale, demonstrated, she had the talent of a young Katharine
Hepburn. But though she’s had – and continues to have – a triumphant career as a stage actress, and though, early on, she played leading roles in some TV
movies (she was remarkable in
A Love Affair: The Eleanor and Lou Gehrig Story and especially
Too Far to Go, based on some John Updike
stories), this summer’s
I’ll See You in My Dreams is her first starring role since
Lovin’ Molly. She’s shown up in a lot of films in between,
sometimes giving performances of glowing intelligence in bum roles (
Brighton Beach Memoirs), sometimes lighting up a whole picture in a supporting
part (
The Last Kiss, where she played the role of the middle-aged woman terrified of growing older that Stefania Sandrelli had created in the
Italian version). But only now, at seventy-two – and still a stunning camera subject – has she landed a film role that really seems to acknowledge what she
is: America’s greatest living actress.