Page, Geraldine
International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
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2001
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Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information)
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PAGE, Geraldine
Nationality: American. Born: Kirksville, Missouri, 22 November 1924. Education: Attended the Goodman Theatre Dramatic School, Chicago; also studied acting with Uta Hagen. Family: Married 1) Alexander Schneider, 1956 (divorced); 2) the actor Rip Torn; daughter: Angelica; twin sons: Anthony and Jonathan. Career: Actress in Lake Zurich, Illinois, summer theater, four summers; also with Woodstock, Illinois, repertory company for two years; worked in
New York for International Thread Company while acting off-Broadway; 1947—film debut in Out of the Night ; 1951—leading role in Summer and Smoke in New York, repeated in film version in 1961; film contract with Charles K. Feldman; 1953—Broadway debut in Mid-Summer ; first featured film role in Hondo ; later stage work includes roles in Sweet Bird of Youth, 1959, Strange Interlude, 1963, Three Sisters, 1964, Clothes for a Summer Hotel, 1980 and Agnes of God, 1982. Awards: Best Supporting Actress, British Academy, for Interiors, 1978; Oscar for Best Actress, for The Trip to Bountiful, 1985. Died: Of a heart attack, in New York City, 13 June 1987.
Films as Actress:
- 1947
Out of the Night
- 1953
Hondo (Farrow) (as Angie Lowe); Taxi (Ratoff) (as Florence Albert)
- 1961
Summer and Smoke (Glenville) (as Alma Winemiller)
- 1962
Sweet Bird of Youth (Brooks) (as Alexandra Del Lago)
- 1963
Toys in the Attic (Hill) (as Carrie Berniers)
- 1964
Dear Heart (Delbert Mann) (as Elvie Johnson)
- 1966
Monday's Child (Nilsson); You're a Big Boy Now (Coppola) (as Margery Chanticleer)
- 1967
The Happiest Millionaire (Tokar) (as Mrs. Duke)
- 1968
What Ever Happened to Aunt Alice? (Katzin) (as Mrs. Clair Marrable)
- 1969
"A Christmas Memory" ep. of Trilogy (Perry—for TV) (as the Woman)
- 1971
The Beguiled (Siegel) (as Martha); J. W. Coop (Robertson) (as Mama)
- 1972
Pete 'n' Tillie (Ritt) (as Gertrude)
- 1973
Happy as the Grass Was Green (Hazel's People ) (Davis) (as Anna Witmer)
- 1974
Live Again, Die Again (Colla—for TV)
- 1975
Day of the Locust (Schlesinger) (as Big Sister)
- 1976
Nasty Habits (Hogg) (as Walburga)
- 1977
The Rescuers (Reitherman, Lounsbery, and Stevens—animation) (as voice of Mme. Medusa); Something for Joey (Antonio—for TV); The Three Sisters (Bogart) (as Olga)
- 1978
Interiors (Allen) (as Eve)
- 1981
Honky Tonk Freeway (Schlesinger) (as Sister Mary Clarise); Harry's War (Merrill) (as Beverley)
- 1982
I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can (Hofsiss) (as Jean Martin)
- 1984
The Pope of Greenwich Village (Rosenberg) (as Mrs. Ritter); The Parade (Hit Parade ) (Hunt); The Dollmaker (Petrie—for TV)
- 1985
White Nights (Hackford) (as Anne Wyatt); The Trip to Bountiful (Masterson) (as Mrs. Carrie Watts); The Bride (Roddam) (as Mrs. Baumann); Flanagan (Goldstein) (as Mama)
- 1986
My Little Girl (Kaiserman) (as Grandmother Molly); Nazi Hunter: The Beate Klarsfield Story (Nazi Hunter: The Search for Klaus Barbie ) (Lindsay-Hogg); Native Son (Freedman) (as Peggy)
Publications
By PAGE: article—
Interview in Actors in Acting: Performing in Theatre and Film Today, by Joanmarie Kalter, New York, 1979.
On PAGE: articles—
Current Biography 1953, New York, 1953.
Eyles, Allen, "Geraldine Page," in Focus on Film (London), Spring 1973.
Obituary in New York Times, 15 June 1987.
Obituary in Variety (New York), 17 June 1987.
Film Dope (Nottingham), April 1994.
* * *
An exponent of the Method style of acting, Geraldine Page was best known as a stage performer, particularly for her work in the plays of Tennessee Williams. Her performances in the film versions of Summer and Smoke, as a shy spinster hopelessly in love with her neighbor, and Sweet Bird of Youth, as an aging movie star suffering from a nervous breakdown, established her as a successful and important actress and indicated the wide range of her acting abilities.
In 1953, Page was brought to Hollywood to play opposite John Wayne in Hondo as Angie Lowe, a homesteader with child, abandoned by her husband. Warner Brothers executives were unimpressed with her despite an Oscar nomination; she was not offered another Hollywood film until the 1960s. After the two Tennessee Williams roles, she became somewhat typecast as a spinster or neurotic, as evidenced by her characters in Toys in the Attic, Dear Heart, and You're a Big Boy Now. Her eccentric image was pushed to its sinister extreme, epitomizing evil behind a sweet facade, in such films as The Beguiled and Whatever Happened to Aunt Alice?, while her comic abilities were showcased in Pete 'n' Tillie (notably her frustration when police demand to know her real age).
Woody Allen used the accumulated resonance of her desperately vulnerable character roles when he cast her as the self-pitying wife and overbearing mother of Interiors, a woman whose well-ordered existence is shattered by her husband's desire for a divorce. Life becomes a strain: a spilled drop of wine at her birthday celebration provides an exquisite moment for Page to eloquently communicate long suffering.
Her stage career continued to be her prime focus, working both on and off Broadway, and accepting only occasional television parts and movie roles. In 1984, Page was awarded a seventh Oscar nomination for The Pope of Greenwich Village, the record for actresses who had yet to win.
The following year, the losing streak was ended with her glorious performance in The Trip to Bountiful as Mrs. Carrie Watts, an aging widow now living in a two-room Houston apartment with her son and overbearing daughter-in-law. Aware her time is near, Mrs. Watts is anxious to make one last trip to Bountiful, the place of her youth. As a woman coping with the sorrows and frustrations of old age dependency, Page brilliantly communicates Mrs. Watts' tendency for self-dramatization: she will make it to Bountiful if she has to walk the last 12 miles from Harrison. The emotional journey Mrs. Watts takes on this trip allows Page to use effectively the sense memory skills of her Method background: upon her arrival at the homestead, her simple statement "I'm home" is accompanied by a facial expression that magnificently encompasses both the joy of arrival and a sadness over those not present.
—Doug Tomlinson
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Quetzalcoatl y los mitos fundadores de Mesoamérica
Magazine article from: The Americas; 7/1/2006; ; 700+ words
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Newspaper article from: Taos News (Taos, NM); 9/17/2009; 700+ words
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Magazine article from: The Review of Contemporary Fiction; 6/22/1997; ; 700+ words
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Magazine article from: Reason; 12/1/2006; ; 700+ words
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Daniel Pinchbeck. 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Utopian Studies; 3/22/2008; ; 700+ words
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Sovereign win to Tasmanians: Melbourne yacht Helsal II got the gun, but Hobart's Quetzalcoatl took IRC honours in the 33rd west coaster race and also won the sovereign series.
Magazine article from: Offshore Yachting; 2/1/2006; ; 700+ words
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The return of Quetzalcoatl.
Magazine article from: Thrasher; 3/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...the story of an ancient god called Quetzalcoatl, who was tricked into drunkeness by...After all, it was the anniversary of Quetzalcoatl's birth, and the god was often depicted...wear strange beards. The Return of Quetzalcoatl? Read on and decide for yourself...
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Lit scenester predicts apocalypse: Quetzalcoatl told him!(2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: New York; 5/8/2006; ; 545 words
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2012: The Return of the Quetzalcoatl
Magazine article from: The Village Voice; 5/3/2006; ; 559 words
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Aurora's Ballet Folklorico Quetzalcoatl to perform at Paramount
Newspaper article from: Beacon News, The (Aurora, IL); 9/20/2007; ; 617 words
; ...via film; novelists through a book. But Ballet Folklorico Quetzalcoatl, the nationally recognized dance troupe from Aurora, uses...expresses a story from Mexican culture. Ballet Folklorico Quetzalcoatl will perform on Saturday, Sept. 22, at the Paramount Theatre...
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Quetzalcoatl
Book article from: Myths and Legends of the World
Quetzalcoatl For thousands of years, Quetzalcoatl was one of the most important figures in the traditional...Mesoamerica. As deity, culture hero, or legendary ruler, Quetzalcoatl appeared in some of the region's most powerful and enduring...
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Tezcatlipoca
Book article from: Myths and Legends of the World
...Tezcatlipoca's ultimate trick was one he played on his fellow god Quetzalcoatl. After introducing Quetzalcoatl to drunkenness and other vices, he used his mirror to show Quetzalcoatl how weak and degraded he had become. Quetzalcoatl fled the world...
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Pre-Colombian Civilization
Dictionary entry from: New Dictionary of the History of Ideas
...a plethora of gods. They included creation gods such as Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent, who was also the wind god; Huehueteotl...merchants) and lineage gods. For example, the pocheta chose Quetzalcoatl — god of creation and the bearer of culture, and...
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Aztec
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of U.S. Economic History
...the Sun, reaches a height of 216 feet (66 meters). Their chief god was Quetzalcoatl, who represented the forces of good and light. According to legend Quetzalcoatl would return one day from over the sea. This belief at first worked in the...
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Montezuma II
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...1519. Fearing that they were emissaries of the Aztec god Quetzalcoatl, whose return was believed to be imminent, and following...deliverer from Aztec control. Montezuma himself refused to fight Quetzalcoatl emissaries and invited Cort é s into the capital...
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