My Cousin Rachel


09:05 am - 10:45 am, Thursday, December 11 on FX Movie Channel HD (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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About the attraction between an enigmatic woman and a vengeful young man.

1952 English Stereo
Drama Romance Wealth

Cast & Crew
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Olivia De Havilland (Actor) .. Rachel Sangalletti Ashley
Richard Burton (Actor) .. Philip Ashley
Audrey Dalton (Actor) .. Louise Kendall
Ronald Squire (Actor) .. Nicholas 'Nick' Kendall
George Dolenz (Actor) .. Rainaldi, Rachel's Lawyer
John Sutton (Actor) .. Ambrose Ashley
Tudor Owen (Actor) .. Seecombe
J. M. Kerrigan (Actor) .. Rev. Pascoe
Margaret Brewster (Actor) .. Mrs. Pascoe
Alma Lawton (Actor) .. Mary Pascoe
Ola Lorraine (Actor) .. Pascoe Child
Kathleen Mason (Actor) .. Pascoe Child
Earl Robie (Actor) .. Philip at Age 5
Argentina Brunetti (Actor) .. Signora
Mario Siletti (Actor) .. Caretaker
Lumsden Hare (Actor) .. Tamblyn
Trevor Ward (Actor) .. Lewin
Victor Wood (Actor) .. Foreman
George Plues (Actor) .. Coachman
Bruce Payne (Actor) .. Groom
James Fairfax (Actor) .. Servant
Oreste Seragnoli (Actor) .. Servant
Nicholas Koster (Actor) .. Philip at Age 10
Robin Camp (Actor) .. Philip at Age 15

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Olivia De Havilland (Actor) .. Rachel Sangalletti Ashley
Born: July 01, 1916
Birthplace: Tokyo, Japan
Trivia: Born in Japan to a British patent attorney and his actress wife, Olivia de Havilland succumbed to the lure of Thespis while attending high school in Los Gatos, CA, where she played Hermia in an amateur production of A Midsummer Night's Dream. The older sister of actress Joan Fontaine, de Havilland was spotted by famed director Max Reinhardt, who cast her in his legendary Hollywood Bowl production of the play. This led to her part in the Warner Bros. film adaptation of Midsummer in 1935, and being signed to a long-term contract wiht the company. Considering herself a classical actress, de Havilland tried to refuse the traditional ingenue roles offered her by the studio, which countered by telling her she'd be ruined in Hollywood if she didn't cooperate. Loaned out to David O. Selznick, de Havilland played Melanie Hamilton in Gone With the Wind (1939), earning an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress in the process. Although she didn't come out on top that year, she would later win two Best Actress Oscars, the first for 1946's To Each His Own, and then again for 1949's The Heiress. De Havilland also made news when she sued Warner Bros. for extending her seven-year contract by tacking on the months she'd been on suspension for refusing to take a part. The actress spent three long years off the screen, but she ultimately won her case, and the "De Havilland Law," as it would become known, effectively destroyed the studios' ability to virtually enslave their contractees by unfairly extending their contract time. After completing The Heiress, de Havilland spent several years on Broadway, cutting down her subsequent film appearances to approximately one per year. In 1955, she moved to France with her second husband, Paris Match editor Pierre Galante; she later recalled her Paris years with the semiautobiographical Every Frenchman Has One. De Havilland showed up in a brace of profitable fading-star horror films in the '60s: Lady in a Cage (1964) and Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1965), in which she replaced Joan Crawford. During the next decade, she appeared in a number of TV productions and in such all-star film efforts as Airport '77 (1977) and The Swarm (1978). After a number of TV appearances (if not always starring roles) in the '80s, de Havilland once more found herself in the limelight in 1989, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of Gone With the Wind. As one of the only surviving stars from this film, she was much sought after for interviews and reminiscences, but graciously refused almost every request.
Richard Burton (Actor) .. Philip Ashley
Born: November 10, 1925
Died: August 05, 1984
Birthplace: Pontrhydyfen, Wales
Trivia: The 12th of 13 children of a Welsh miner, actor Richard Burton left his humble environs by winning a scholarship to Oxford. Blessed with a thrillingly theatrical voice, Burton took to the stage, and, by 1949, had been tagged as one of Britain's most promising newcomers. Director Philip Dunne, who later helmed several of Burton's Hollywood films, would recall viewing a 1949 London staging of The Lady's Not for Burning and watching in awe as star John Gielgud was eclipsed by juvenile lead Richard Burton: "He 'took' the stage and kept a firm grip on it during every one of his brief appearances." A few years after his film debut in The Last Days of Dolwyn (1949), the actor was signed by 20th Century Fox, which had hopes of turning him into the new Lawrence Olivier -- although Burton was not quite able to grip films as well as he did the stage. Aside from The Robe (1953), most of Burton's Fox films were disappointments, and the actor was unable to shake his to-the-rafters theatricality for the smaller scope of the camera lens. Still, he was handsome and self-assured, so Burton was permitted a standard-issue 1950s spectacle, Alexander the Great (1956). His own film greatness would not manifest itself until he played the dirt-under-the-nails role of Jimmy Porter in Look Back in Anger (1959). In this, he spoke the vernacular of regular human beings -- rather than that of high-priced, affected Hollywood screenwriters -- and delivered a jolting performance as a working-class man trapped by the system and his own personal demons. Following a well-received Broadway run in the musical Camelot, Burton was signed in 1961 to replace Stephen Boyd on the benighted film spectacular Cleopatra (1963). It probably isn't necessary to elaborate on what happened next, but the result was that Burton suddenly found himself an international celebrity, not for his acting, but for his tempestuous romance with co-star Elizabeth Taylor. A hot property at last, Burton apparently signed every long-term contract thrust in front of him, while television networks found themselves besieged with requests for screenings of such earlier Burton film "triumphs" as Prince of Players (1955) and The Rains of Ranchipur (1956). In the midst of the initial wave of notoriety, Burton appeared in a Broadway modern-dress version of Hamlet directed by John Gielgud, which played to standing-room-only crowds who were less interested in the melancholy Dane than in possibly catching a glimpse of the Lovely Liz. Amidst choice film work like Becket (1964) and The Spy Who Came in From the Cold (1966), Burton was also contractually obligated to appear with Taylor in such high-priced kitsch as The V.I.P.s, (1963) The Sandpiper (1965), and Boom! (1968). A few of the Burton/Taylor vehicles were excellent -- notably Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (she won an Oscar; he didn't, but should have) -- but the circus of publicity began to erode the public's ability to take Burton seriously. It became even harder when the couple divorced, remarried, and broke up again. Moreover, Burton was bound by contract to appear in such bland cinematic enterprises as Candy (1968), Villain (1971), The Assassination of Trotsky (1972), The Klansman (1974), and that rancid masterpiece Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977). So low had Burton's reputation sunk that when he delivered an Oscar-caliber performance in Equus (1977), it was hailed as a "comeback," even though the actor had never left. (Once again he lost the Oscar, this time to Richard Dreyfuss.) Burton managed to recapture his old performing fire in his last moviemaking years, offering up one of his best performances in his final picture, 1984 (1984). He died later that year.
Audrey Dalton (Actor) .. Louise Kendall
Born: January 21, 1934
Trivia: After a forgettable film debut in 1952's My Cousin Rachel, Irish leading lady Audrey Dalton was "introduced" with a blitz of publicity in The Girls of Pleasure Island (1953). Of the three toothsome heroines in this harmless sex farce (the others were Joan Elan and Dorothy Bromley), Audrey was the only one to go on to any kind of lasting career, perhaps due to her solid training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. She later appeared in the The Monster That Challenged the World (1957) or Mister Sardonicus (1961), but was more successful on her many TV guest appearances of the 1960s.
Ronald Squire (Actor) .. Nicholas 'Nick' Kendall
Born: January 01, 1886
Died: November 16, 1958
Trivia: The son of a British army colonel, actor Ronald Squire attending Wellington College and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. He first appeared on stage in 1909 in a provincial production of An Englishman's Home, which was transferred to London the following year. A charter member of the Liverpool Repertory, Squire appeared in everything from Shaw to Barrie. He made his first New York appearance in 1917's Gambler's All. Turning producer in the mid 1920s, Squire continued his London career into the late '40s, and also toured in Blithe Spirit and While the Sun Shines. After his 1934 film bow, Culver settled into smug, self-important comedy roles along the lines of American actor Fred Clark. Loyal to the Mother Country, Ronald Squire made few films for US consumption; the few exceptions included No Highway in the Sky (1951) My Cousin Rachel (1952), Around the World in 80 Days and Count Your Blessings (1958) -- all Hollywood-financed films lensed in England and Europe.
George Dolenz (Actor) .. Rainaldi, Rachel's Lawyer
Born: January 05, 1907
Died: February 08, 1963
Trivia: European leading man George Dolenz came to Hollywood at the outbreak of World War II. The master of several dialects, Dolenz generally essayed urbane continental roles like Baron Sergei in Abbott and Costello's In Society (1944). He could also effectively play Latin American types (the mysterious Cortega in the 1953 Martin and Lewis vehicle Scared Stiff) and period-picture noblemen (Emperor Thodosius in 1954's Sign of the Pagan). Fans of 1950s television will remember Dolenz for his two-year starring stint on the weekly-series version of The Count of Monte Cristo (1955-56). George Dolenz was the father of actor/musician Micky Dolenz, a member of the "pre-fab" rock group The Monkees.
John Sutton (Actor) .. Ambrose Ashley
Born: October 22, 1908
Tudor Owen (Actor) .. Seecombe
Born: January 01, 1896
Died: January 01, 1978
J. M. Kerrigan (Actor) .. Rev. Pascoe
Born: December 16, 1887
Died: April 29, 1964
Trivia: Irish actor J. M. Kerrigan was a stalwart of Dublin's Abbey Players, though from time to time he'd make the crossing to America to appear in such films as Little Old New York (1923) and Song O' My Heart (1930) (His film debut was 1916's Food of Love). Kerrigan settled in Hollywood permanently in 1935 when he was brought from Ireland with several other Abbey performers to appear in John Ford's The Informer. Kerrigan was given a generous amount of screen time as the barfly who befriends the suddenly wealthy Victor McLaglen, then drops his "pal" like a hot potato when the money runs out. Not all of Kerrigan's subsequent Hollywood performances were this meaty, and in fact the actor did a lot of day-player work, sometimes showing up for only one or two scenes. It was in one of these minor roles that J. M. Kerrigan shone in Gone with the Wind (1939), playing Johnny Gallegher, the seemingly jovial mill owner who whips his convict labor into "cooperation."
Margaret Brewster (Actor) .. Mrs. Pascoe
Alma Lawton (Actor) .. Mary Pascoe
Born: August 17, 1896
Ola Lorraine (Actor) .. Pascoe Child
Kathleen Mason (Actor) .. Pascoe Child
Earl Robie (Actor) .. Philip at Age 5
Argentina Brunetti (Actor) .. Signora
Born: January 01, 1907
Died: December 20, 2005
Mario Siletti (Actor) .. Caretaker
Born: January 01, 1903
Died: January 01, 1964
Lumsden Hare (Actor) .. Tamblyn
Born: April 27, 1875
Died: August 28, 1964
Trivia: Despite his Irish background, no one could play the typical British gentleman, or gentleman's gentleman, better than Lumsden Hare. There was definitely something aristocratic about the erect, dignified 6'1" Hare, who played the Prince Regent in The House of Rothschild (1934) and the King of Sweden in Cardinal Richelieu (1935), not to mention countless military officers, doctors, and lawyers. A leading man in his younger days to Ethel Barrymore, Maude Adams, Nance O'Neil, and Maxine Elliott, Hare made his screen debut, as F. Lumsden Hare, in 1916 and continued to mix film with Broadway appearances through the 1920s. Relocating to Hollywood after the changeover to sound, Hare became one of the era's busiest, and finest, character actors, appearing in hundreds of film and television roles until his retirement in 1960.
Trevor Ward (Actor) .. Lewin
Victor Wood (Actor) .. Foreman
Born: February 01, 1946
Died: January 01, 1958
Birthplace: Buhi, Camarines Sur, Philippines
Trivia: Was known as Tom Jones of the Philippines after he became a singing sensation in the 1970s. Titled as the Jukebox King of Philippines for selling 34 gold and platinum certified records overall. Moved to the United States in the late 1970s where he co-owned four gas stations and was also into the real estate business. Managed a million dollar restaurant named Palm Plaza in the United States. Ran for Senate of the Philippines during the 2007 Philippine general election but lost. Is a member of the Iglesia ni Cristo church.
George Plues (Actor) .. Coachman
Born: January 01, 1894
Died: January 01, 1953
Bruce Payne (Actor) .. Groom
Born: November 22, 1958
James Fairfax (Actor) .. Servant
Born: January 01, 1896
Died: January 01, 1961
Oreste Seragnoli (Actor) .. Servant
Nicholas Koster (Actor) .. Philip at Age 10
Robin Camp (Actor) .. Philip at Age 15

Before / After
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