Brigid Bazlen Movies
Brigid Bazlen only ever made three movies, but because two of them -- King of Kings and How the West Was Won -- remain perennially popular early-'60s blockbusters, she is seen quite regularly in those parts by millions of viewers every year. Bazlen was dubbed "the next Elizabeth Taylor" when she was all of 15 years old, by which time she had nearly a decade under her belt as a professional actress. The daughter of Arthur Bazlen, a retail chain executive, and Maggie Daly, a newspaper columnist from Chicago, her aunts were the performing Daly Sisters, Maureen, Kay, and Sheila. Brigid Bazlen was first discovered at the age of seven, when she was seen by an executive from NBC while waiting for the school bus in front of her house. At the time, the network was in the process of casting a then-groundbreaking soap opera called Hawkins Falls, to be produced in Chicago, and this man asked to test her for the role of the daughter of the principal couple, played by Maurice Copeland and Bernadine Flynn. Her mother initially refused but later relented and allowed the girl to have a walk-on part -- she tested so well with the sponsors and audiences that she became a regular on the show for two seasons; on surviving kinescopes, even at that age, Bazlen looks hauntingly beautiful and beguiling in the role. After Hawkins Falls was cancelled two years later, Bazlen became the star of a children's program called The Blue Fairy, broadcast by WGN of Chicago, which won a Peabody Award in 1958. By that time, columnist Hedda Hopper had declared her "the Celtic Alice in Wonderland," and work was hers for the asking. Paddy Chayefsky wanted her for his Broadway play The Dybbuk of Woodlawn (which her mother declined) and Otto Preminger asked for her in a role in his planned shooting of Exodus, while Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein wanted her for a co-starring role with Mary Martin in a theatrical production, The Sound of Music. All of those offers were turned down by her mother, but the now-14-year-old Bazlen was cast by producer David Susskind in the live network drama Too Young to Go Steady. At five-foot-four and weighing 87 pounds, with haunting dark amber eyes, she was a precociously attractive teenager, which is how Bazlen came to enter into movies, at age 16, when she was cast as Salome in Samuel Bronston's production of King of Kings. The choice was probably not a wise one, for although there were some good elements in the movie, expecting the 16-year-old Bazlen to make a mark in a role as significant as that was absurd and her work was ridiculed in many critical circles (and in his memoirs by composer Miklos Rozsa, who had to score her dance sequence), along with many other aspects of the film. Bazlen's movie career seemed to sputter at that point, possibly also due to an ineffectual campaign by MGM to promote her as "the new American Bardot." In 1962, she was cast as the temptress daughter of river pirate Walter Brennan in How the West Was Won and that same year finally moved up to co-starring status, alongside Steve McQueen, in The Honeymoon Machine, a caper comedy. Bazlen never made another movie but frequently appeared on stage in Chicago until 1966, when she married singer Jean-Paul Vignon and gave up performing. The couple later divorced after having one child, Marguerite Vignon. Her mother later said that Bazlen had lost interest in acting as she grew older. The former actress died of cancer in 1989, several years after moving to Seattle, WA. ~ Bruce Eder, RoviFilmed in panoramic Cinerama, this star-studded, epic Western adventure is a true cinematic classic. Three legendary directors (Henry Hathaway, John Ford, and George Marshall) combine their skills to tell the story of three families and their travels from the Erie Canal to California between 1839 and 1889. Spencer Tracy narrates the film, which cost an estimated 15 million dollars to complete. In the first segment, "The Rivers," pioneer Zebulon Prescott (Karl Malden) sets out to settle in the West with his wife (Agnes Moorehead) and their four children. Along with other settlers and river pirates, they run into mountain man Linus Rawlings (James Stewart), who sells animal hides. The Prescotts try to raft down the Ohio River in a raft, but only daughters Lilith (Debbie Reynolds) and Eve (Carroll Baker) survive. Eve and Linus get married, while Lilith continues on. In the second segment, "The Plains," Lilith ends up singing in a saloon in St. Louis, but she really wants to head west in a wagon train led by Roger Morgan (Robert Preston). Along the way, she's accompanied by the roguish gambler Cleve Van Valen (Gregory Peck), who claims he can protect her. After he saves her life during an Indian attack, they get married and move to San Francisco. In the third segment, "The Civil War," Eve and Linus' son, Zeb (George Peppard), fights for the Union. After he's forced to kill his Confederate friend, he returns home and gives the family farm to his brother. In the fourth segment, "The Railroads," Zeb fights with his railroad boss (Richard Widmark), who wants to cut straight through Indian territory. Zeb's co-worker Jethro (Henry Fonda) refuses to cut through the land, so he quits and moves to the mountains. After the railway camp is destroyed, Zeb heads for the mountains to visit him. In the fifth segment, "The Outlaws," Lilith is an old widow traveling from California to Arizona to stay with her nephew Zeb on his ranch. However, he has to fight a gang of desperadoes first. How the West Was Won garnered three Oscars, for screenplay, film editing, and sound production. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi
- Starring:
- James Stewart, Henry Fonda, (more)
One major film star referred to director Nicholas Ray as a "loser," because of Ray's alleged willingness to let his more temperamental actors walk all over him. Evidently, Ray had a very compliant and cooperative cast in King of Kings, inasmuch as the film emerged as one of the most disciplined Biblical epics ever made. Jeffrey Hunter is cast as Jesus Christ, delivering a wholly credible performance in this most taxing of roles (never mind the wags who referred to the film as "I Was a Teenage Jesus"). Siobhan McKenna is a radiant if somewhat overaged Mary; Hurd Hatfield offers a properly preening Pontius Pilate; Rip Torn portrays Judas more for the tragedy than the treachery; Robert Ryan (a personal favorite of Ray's) is one of the best John the Baptists you're ever likely to see; and Harry Guardino convincingly interprets Barabbas as a firebrand political extremist. The only false note in the casting is the MGM-dictated selection of teenaged Brigid Bazlen as Salome. The best aspect of the film is its handling of the days after the Resurrection; the "Jesus sightings" are offered as secondhand information, so as to retain some of the mystery inherent in the Scriptures. King of Kings was previously filmed in 1927 by Cecil B. DeMille, with a middle-aged H.B. Warner as Jesus. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
- Starring:
- Jeffrey Hunter, Hurd Hatfield, (more)
Just a few years before The Great Escape would catapult Steve McQueen to stardom, the charismatic actor played the lead, Lt. Fergie Howard, in this light romantic farce involving the computers on a Navy ship. Lt. Howard is playing poker on the good ship El Mira when he gets a brilliant idea. Why not use the ship's computer "Max" to figure out where the ball will land on a roulette wheel? After the ship docks near Venice, he and Ensign Beau Gillaim (Jack Mullaney), along with navy scientist Jason Eldridge (Jim Hutton) check out the casino there. Then they set up the ship's computer to receive incoming signals from the results at the roulette wheel, planning on it to predict which numbers will come up next. Trouble lies ahead when Admiral Fitch (Dean Jagger) intercepts the signals and assumes that the fleet is about to be attacked. While the subsequent chaos reigns, the women (Paula Prentiss and Brigid Bazlen) in these men's lives get involved. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
- Starring:
- Steve McQueen, Brigid Bazlen, (more)





