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In the spirit of the interminable political season, when several shopworn presidential candidates are being refashioned, buffed, rebranded and peddled as a fresh bill of goods, I have similarly returned from the wilderness -- sans beard, by the way -- to reintroduce myself to my devoted
reading public. Uh,
Let the Conversation Begin.
At the risk of singling her out -- there's enough disappointment, disgust
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and outright enmity to go around, after all -- Hillary Clinton, a known quantity laden with baggage (carpet baggage?), can't convincingly pull off her own extreme makeover. She doesn't possess the political and social instincts of her husband. Or the chameleon-like talents of a truly great actress like Barbara Stanwyck, who eluded typecasting and pigeonholing over the years and whose would-be centenary is being celebrated this year. (She died in 1990.) Although Ms. Clinton is undoubtedly busy, dividing her
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time between senatorial duties and a nationwide campaign, she might benefit in terms of believability from one or more of the offerings being screened (
here and
here) in recognition of Ms. Stanwyck's singular contribution to American film. In the course of her career, Stanwyck delivered a host of indelible performances, most notably those in
The Lady Eve and
Double Indemnity, that stand as a collective testament to her defining traits of consummate professionalism and brilliant
versatility. When Stanwyck hesitated in
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taking on the role of Phyllis Dietrichson,
Indemnity's scheming
femme fatale, thinking she had perhaps moved on from such disreputable characters, director/co-writer Billy Wilder reportedly confronted her: "Are you an actress or a mouse?" She was an actress. She is Phyllis. She's every woman. Yet there's no one like her. She deserves a happy 100th.
I wonder if the junior senator from New York would accept a campaign contribution in the form of movie tickets.