An interesting take on "where Bogart was" at that point in time.
For my part, (and this will tie into my response to a post below), I WISH that Bogart had made a Hitchcock film, if only because I'm among those who, indeed, enjoyed Bogart.
Funny thing: early in "The Big Sleep," Bogart affects a "silly stage gay" persona that leads to a surprise twist: he uses the characterization to seduce a book store clerk(then-sultry Dorothy Malone) in yet another "buried" reference to sexual reality. (It seems pretty clear to me that the two enjoy a "mid-afternoon quickie," but 1946 audiences were given no conclusive clue.
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Openly gay "Rope" star Farley Granger says that HE believes Stewart had no thought whatsoever that Rupert was gay, because Stewart couldn't conceive of BEING gay..and so, as a matter of performance, Stewart isn't.
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This strikes me as an interesting place to take up, albeit briefly, the stardom of Jimmy Stewart in general.
You'll find that posts at imdb find James Stewartand "miscast for Rope" and "too old for Vertigo" and "too old for Grace Kelly in Rear Window." It seems that the only James Stewart Hitchocck role to pass muster is his Dr. Ben McKenna in "The Man Who Knew Too Much," in which Stewart is playing a rather staid and square married man with a child.
That said, Hitchocck seems to have really WANTED Stewart for "Rear Window," "The Man Who Knew Too Much" and "Vertigo." There is no mention of other actors being offered those three roles -- not even Cary Grant, who could have played the first two of them.
So part of the issue, I think, is that MODERN young audiences simply don't get Jimmy Stewart and his very special kind of American stardom.
Guys like Cary Grant, William Holden, Rock Hudson were "conventionally handsome" and could take off their shirts for beefcake scenes. At a certain point in time, "stringbean Jimmy" could not do beefcake(his brief shirtless moment in "Rear Window" on the rubdown table gets laughs)...and Stewart had a spectacularly EMOTIONAL approach to his work, not as "manly" as, say...ha...Rock Hudson.
This emerges in "Rope" when Stewart has his final showdown with the two young killers...Stewart really delivers on a rage that is "near breakdown." It is great acting of a sort...but the guy just wasn't too "cool," and I think modern audiences have a lot of trouble with the "Jimmy Stewart persona."
And yet: Clint Eastwood was asked if John Wayne was his role model, and Eastwood said, "actually I prefer James Stewart", which makes sense, given Stewart's penchant for rage in his Hitchcock films (I can see EASTWOOD as the righteous papa in "Man Who Knew Too Much") and Stewart's famous "Anthony Mann westerns of the 50's" in which Stewart could simultaneously bawl like a baby and beat the living hell out of male opponents.
A very weird career.
Hitchcock tried to get William Holden, but for the wrong roles: Guy in "Strangers on a Train," Sam in "The Trouble With Harry." I think if Hitch had offered Holden, say "Rear Window" or "The Man Who Knew Too Much," Holden might have said "yes" and Hitch would have had yet another Hitchcock hero. (Holden would have been fine for "North by Northwest," but Grant was just a bit better.)
Though critics hold James Stewart as one of the greatest actors of all time(Cary Grant said that Stewart was Brando before Brando was Brando), I think perhaps Hitchcock worked with him so much because he wasn't tempermental, Lew Wasserman ran him, and...he was indeed a big box office star in the 50's.
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I suppose this all begs the question as to whether James Stewart was miscast in "Rope." Others would have been better cast(Fredric March is a fine choice, and HE was a name in '48; Hitchcock had wanted him for "Spellbound," I've read), but Stewart is who we've got.
And I think he rather makes the movie his own. Stewart seems EMINENTLY well-cast as a smart-ass to me; his lugubrious way of speaking and ornery way of looking at people was always off-putting to me. This works for Rupert just fine -- we WANT this jerk to get his emotional comeuppance.
Or as Farley Granger said, "Stewart couldn't really come to grips with the fact that he was playing a heavy in this movie."
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Going out where I came in: I think Bogart could have pulled it off. "In a Lonely Place" and "Beat the Devil" say its so.
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