Mae West (TV Movie 1982) Poster

(1982 TV Movie)

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6/10
Mae Historians Will Be Disappointed
LaughingTigerIMDb28 May 2020
If you're one of those people who is going to watch this to obtain information about Mae West and be entertained, then this film will suffice. Child actor? Married? In jail? Anyone who knows little about Mae West will find these key tidbits about her interesting.

But for those that know this and more about Mae, you'll be disappointed to see so many things left out. Sure the budget of the film only allowed so many actors, and so many sets, but Mae West had a brother and sister, a second serious love that she married named Guido Deiro. Jim Timony was certainly a main man of hers, and their rumored romantic relationship only actually lasted a short time. Frank Wallace came back to haunt her and Timony for several years looking for money after Mae struck gold in the business. Dragging her to court every few years may have been the reason of her failed film career as it interrupted her life for several years. But this film focuses mostly on the short-term romance between Jim and Mae.

This film shouldn't be counted out for accuracy. In fact, so many small things were obviously researched incredibly well. Examples: Mae's green and pink dress that she wore as a child actor. Mae's obtainment of her own personal silk underwear and sidebar friendship while incarcerated. Mae's determination to help give direction pointers in Night After Night, and George Raft's quote about her performance "she stole everything but the cameras". And eerily, Ann Jillian's ability to belt out a number with Mae's signature salty timbered voice.

As this review is written in 2020, it is hard to believe that it hasn't been since 1982 (four years after Mae West's death) that a biopic hasn't been recreated. Until a new film is made, if you can tolerate some dated technology and old-style methods of filmmaking of this originally made-for-TV film, then it's not bad to get your Mae information and learn a more about her.
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7/10
Tastefully Done
mainstreet-6253928 August 2022
A beautiful and colorful portrayal of this iconic celeb, who did so much more than I ever knew. Watching this film taught me quite a bit and I am amazed at Mae's talent and straight up approach to the biz. She put a lot of folks in their place and was really funny. This was captured well from Ann Jillian and she had great timing in this role; nicely done. Amazing singing or soundtrack as well

All the cast was great, just hoed they would have "went there" or shall I say deeper with some issues of sex, drugs, drink, corruption etc... but I think it aired on T. V. at first. Cheers to all involved, great costumes as well.
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7/10
When she's good, she's fabulous!
mark.waltz4 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Besides possibly Bette Midler, I can't think of anyone better to play Mae West in the 70's or 80's than Ann Jillian. Prior to that, only Mae West could play Mae West, and no one else outside of her and those two had what it took. Even made up as her in the same years "Best Little WH", Dolly Parton was playing Dolly. While the narrative is a bit all over the place, it's pretty well written in spite of hopping around from one year to earlier and back and forth in an inconsistent manner. The film starts with her being arrested for obscenity, flashing back to her youth and then her early days in vaudeville, finally taking her to Hollywood and how she upsets the status quo in regards to the production code. Along the way, she has a romance with handsome James Brolin but fails to mention to him that she's been married even though she hasn't seen her husband in years. Not much plotwise outside of her upsetting the moral majority, get completely beloved by the general public who enjoyed the subtlety of her insinuations in her own written dialogue.

Sexy without being vulgar and alluring without showing flesh, Jillian is one of the great nearly forgotten stars of her era, having gone from Broadway to TV to an occasional movie, and always commanding every moment she's on screen. She gets to sing, clown and be dramatic, greatly supported by Roddy McDowall as a female impersonator who aides her in creating her image. Piper Laurie is only seen briefly as her mother, having already played Carrie's mother and Judy Garland's mother prior to this. Recreations of some of her great scenes and her dealing with a drunk W. C. Fields are other highlights, but that's what the film is mostly all about. Highlights, not story. Jillian makes it worth watching though, very deserving of her Emmy nomination. She's really the whole show.
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Ann Jillian as
petershelleyau17 December 2002
Mae West was a singer/actress/writer who was imprisoned for 10 days in 1926 for corrupting the morals of youth in her Broadway show Sex, transfered to Hollywood in the 1930's but was done in by the Hays Office Censors, and had a triumphant return to Broadway in the 1940's.

Jillian is far more attractive than the real Mae, with a shot of her lying on her bed in her negligee after she is fired from Paramount more recalling Jean Harlow, and though she uses Mae's famous intonation, Jillian loses it when she yells. Jillian's singing is jazzy/blues which only sounds impressive in her Broadway comeback with `Frankie and Johnny', but her costumes by Jean-Pierre Dorleac are a mix of the Gay nineties period clothes with low cut bosom - a black shimmery dress with jewelled collar and straps to her bust is particularly striking. Jillian is certainly likeable but in a way the Mae voice limits her performance to an impersonation, which is ironic since Mae herself was thought of as a female impersonator. Jillian's femininity is never in doubt so we also lose the suggestion of androgyny. What perhaps would have been more interesting would have been to cast an actress who approximates Mae's height at 5 feet - perhaps Patty Duke? - which makes her sex goddess persona all the more intriguing.

Jillian also doesn't make Mae's lines funny eg the famous diamonds bit from Night after Night, and even her being introduced to Reverend Cox from the Production Code gets a laugh from someone's look at Mae rather than her eye response. However Jillian has moments - a closeup reaction to her manager/lover Jim Timiny (James Brolin) telling her she lied to him about her marriage, and her sobbing as she kisses him when he returns to her.

The teleplay by E. Arthur Kean first presents Mae as a brunette child star, pushed by her stage-mother Matilda (Piper Laurie), and when Jillian appears, her Mae seems more the dancer than singer. However she gets tips on style from drag queen Rene Valentine (Roddy McDowell) who encourages her to suggest rather than flaunt her sex appeal, use double entendre and innuendo, and become a blonde as it makes her face look thinner. Mae's secret marriage is arranged to legitimise her promiscuity, with what could be seen as feminism ahead of her time, perhaps a reaction to her father's brutishness. We also see Mae admiring body builders on the beach as a sign of what is to come after the end of the treatment.

Apart from the use of lines associated with Mae used out of context, Kean supplies funny ones of his own - `When a knife thrower gives you something, you don't turn it down', and `I went over (the script) with a microscope to find my part'. Director Lee Philips uses Mae looking into a mirror for flashback up till her trial, returning when she pushes a powder puff into the mirror, quick editing for narrative jumps, Mae seen in spiro-view, a Cary Grant sound-alike for She Done Him Wrong, and a WC Fields double for My Little Chickadee.
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4/10
Ann is great
BandSAboutMovies27 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
At the age of ten, I had a huge crush on Ann Jillian even if I had no idea why I felt that way.

Now I do and I still have that crush.

Directed by Lee Phillips (The Spell, Sweet Hostage) and written by E. Arthur Kean, this has Jillian as Mae West and takes you through enough of her career to see how she went head-first against small-minded censors. Jillian is great in it and has several performances of West's songs, too.

James Brolin is Jim Timothy, her manager and former love interest, while Roddy McDowall plays her co-writer Rena Valentine - based on Julian Eltinge - and Piper Laurie is West's mother Matilda. I wouldn't depend on this film for factual accuracy, but if you'd like to see JIllian pretty much put on a one woman show, it'll definitely deliver on that. The costumes are pretty great, too.
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9/10
Ann Jillian was completely memorable as Mae West.
philyon-229 June 2002
I can only say that when I saw this movie on Showtime I completely enjoyed it. Then, in the months that followed, when I would be flipping through the channels looking for something to kill a little time, I'd stop when I came upon Mae West. I'd think to watch it for a few minutes and go on. Inevitably I would watch it through to the end once again. I must have seen the last half or two-thirds of this movie twenty times or more and I never tired of seeing it again.

If I could find it on DVD or VHS I'd likely watch it twenty more times. I can't really say why but the story, the casting and the acting, mainly Ann Jillian made it memorable and endlessly enjoyable.
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8/10
Roddy McDowall's character
PourRire27 March 2007
RODDY McDOWALL'S character Rene Valentine was based on the legendary stage and film star JULIAN ELTINGE, and not the drag queen that is mentioned above. Mr. Eltinge was quite influential in creating the sexy style and alluring mannerisms that became Ms. West's trademarks in the long run. Before she was tutored by him, she was nothing more than a raucous singer that had little style. The costume she wears in the scene at the vaudeville theater, after working with him, is based on factual information researched by Costume Desinger, JEAN-PIERRE DORLEAC, who was nominated for an Emmy for the film. The same goes for all the other costumes in the film.
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Fact more Entertaining than Fiction
mickie249 May 2004
Miss Ann Jillian is a fine actress and comes off quite well in her portrayal of the legendary Mae West. She looks great in the gowns, feathers and furs, and gives enough of a well crafted impression of the character to keep her performance from being a parody.

All the cast does a fine job here. I do feel however that fault lies with shortcomings in the writing department. Fact is most often more entertaining than fiction. One case in point is 'The Mighty Barnum' which came out in the 1930's. The most interesting person of his day was so poorly portrayed by the script men that it is almost painful to watch! This is unfortunately the fate of many a Hollywood biographical film.

This film does have what it takes to stand on it's own but misses the mark because the writers left out some of the very best of what made Mae West so interesting as a performer and as a truly fascinating person in her private off screen life. There was just so much more to Mae West than was depicted here. Miss West was a shrewd woman and a true professional. She usually got what she wanted in life by whatever means whether fair or as it was sometimes, foul! She kept gangsters as friends and could wrap the studio big shots around her bejeweled little pinkie!

James Brolin is a Hollywood hunk and a fine actor also.Unfortunately, as James Timony he is sorely miscast. Mr. Timony was an overweight round faced man who in the early years was perhaps a passing romantic interest but the truth is he was more Miss West's manager and business partner than anything else. It would have been great stuff to see what really went on. Miss West would see to it that the jealous Mr. Timony was kept occupied with some sort of business doings while on the sly she dropped her room key into the pocket of one of the muscle boys in her nightclub act! A good writer could have had a hayday with that! And most of all, it was true!

Some films of this sort, and I feel this is one, are so often flawed from the point of historical accuracy. But....with all the efforts of a fine cast it is ....Entertaining? Yes! Worth seeing? Indeed!

Perhaps only the true West fans will pick out the errors in an otherwise well done television movie. If you haven't seen it, watch for it. And if like me, a true devote' of the great Mae West, you've just got to not miss seeing it.
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