Marcia Tucker Movies

- 2003
- Add French & Saunders: The Ingenue Years to QueueAdd French & Saunders: The Ingenue Years to top of Queue
This collection of material from the BBC sketch comedy program French & Saunders focuses on the show's earliest episodes, from the late '80s. The duo's signature film and TV parodies are in short supply, although Dawn French does essay the role of Elizabeth Taylor as Maggie the Cat in a send-up of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Jennifer Saunders, meanwhile, performs a parodic show tune in the guise of Doris Day. Much of the rest of the material focuses on music and dance, from a deadpan Pet Shop Boys impersonation to a mock awards show in which a decrepit Ginger Rogers is forced to dance, despite her wheelchair, with a phalanx of Solid Gold-style dancers. As a framing device, French and Saunders parody girl groups of the ages, from flappers to hippies. The comedians also get their digs in at conceptual art, safer sex, Liza Minnelli, and the foibles of British schoolgirls. Additional performers include comedy duo Raw Sex. Those with sharp ears will also notice a joke about June Whitfield, the British actress who would go on to appear with Saunders in Absolutely Fabulous. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi
- Starring:
- Dawn French, Jennifer Saunders, (more)

- 2002
- Add Art City, Vol. 3: A Ruling Passion to QueueAdd Art City, Vol. 3: A Ruling Passion to top of Queue
The makers of Art City, Vol. 3: A Ruling Passion features interviews with modern artists talking about their inspirations and the motifs present throughout their bodies of work. The filmmakers sit down with artists as diverse as Ed Ruscha, Louise Bourgeois, and Michael Ray Charles. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
- Starring:
- Dave Hickey, Marcia Tucker, (more)
Art City, Vol. 2: Simplicity documents the studios and work habits of numerous modern artists including Robert Williams, Joan Snyder, and Richard Tuttle. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
- Starring:
- Richard Tuttle, Agnes Martin, (more)
Enjoy this spoof on art museums as directors are interviewed by Battock to give their opinions on how their museums are reaching their communities. ~ Rovi




