Lauren Bacall Movies
Following study at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and subsequent stage and modeling experience, legendary actress
Lauren Bacall gained nationwide attention by posing for a 1943 cover of Harper's Bazaar magazine. This photo prompted film director
Howard Hawks to put her under personal contract, wanting to "create" a movie star from fresh, raw material.
For her screen debut,
Hawks cast
Bacall opposite
Humphrey Bogart in
To Have and Have Not (1944). The young actress was so nervous that she walked around with her chin pressed against her collarbone to keep from shaking. As a result, she had to glance upward every time she spoke, an affectation which came across as sexy and alluring, earning
Bacall the nickname "The Look." She also spoke in a deep, throaty manner, effectively obscuring the fact that she was only 19-years-old. Thanks to the diligence of
Hawks and his crew -- and the actress' unique delivery of such lines as "If you want anything, just whistle..." --
Bacall found herself lauded as the most sensational newcomer of 1944. She also found herself in love with
Humphrey Bogart, whom she subsequently married.
Bogie and
Bacall co-starred in three more films, which increased the actress' popularity, but also led critics to suggest that she was incapable of carrying a picture on her own.
Bacall's disappointing solo turn in
Confidential Agent (1945) seemed to confirm this, but the actress was a quick study and good listener, and before long she was turning in first-rate performances in such films as Young Man With a Horn (1950) and
How to Marry a Millionaire (1953).
Bogart's death in 1957 after a long and painful bout with cancer left
Bacall personally devastated, though, in the tradition of her show-must-go-on husband, she continued to perform to the best of her ability in films such as
Designing Woman (1957) and
The Gift of Love (1958). In the late '60s, after
Bacall's second marriage to another hard-case actor,
Jason Robards Jr., she received only a handful of negligible film roles and all but dropped out of moviemaking. In 1970,
Bacall made a triumphant comeback in the stage production Applause, a musical adaptation of
All About Eve, in which she played grand dame Margo Channing, a role originally played by
Bette Davis in the film version.
Her sultry-vixen persona long in the past,
Bacall spent the '70s playing variations on her worldly, resourceful Applause role, sometimes merely being decorative (
Murder on the Orient Express, 1974), but most often delivering class-A performances (
The Shootist, 1976). After playing the quasi-autobiographical part of a legendary, outspoken Broadway actress in 1981's
The Fan, she spent the next ten years portraying
Lauren Bacall -- and no one did it better. In 1993,
Bacall proved once more that she was a superb actress and not merely a "professional personality" in the made-for-cable film
The Portrait, in which she and her
Designing Woman co-star
Gregory Peck played a still-amorous elderly couple.
During the filming of
The Mirror Has Two Faces (1996),
Bacall traveled to France to accept a special César Award for her lifetime achievement in film. For her role in
Mirror, which cast her as
Barbra Streisand's mother,
Bacall earned a Golden Globe award and an Oscar nomination. She continued to work on a number of projects into the next decade, including
Diamonds, in which she appeared alongside
Kirk Douglas, with whom she last co-starred in the 1950 romantic drama
Young Man with a Horn.
In the new century she worked twice with internationally respected filmmaker Lars von Trier, appearing in Dogville and Manderlay. She was in the Nicole Kidman film Birth, and appeared in the documentary Cameraman: The Life and Work of Jack Cardiff. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi