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Anne of the Thousand Days

Anne of the Thousand Days is a 1969 British period historical drama film based on the life of Anne Boleyn, directed by Charles Jarrott and produced by Hal B. Wallis. The screenplay by Bridget Boland and John Hale is an adaptation of the 1948 play of the same name by Maxwell Anderson.

Anne of the Thousand Days
Original theatrical poster
Directed byCharles Jarrott
Screenplay byBridget Boland
John Hale
Story byRichard Sokolove
Based onAnne of the Thousand Days
by Maxwell Anderson
Produced byHal B. Wallis
StarringRichard Burton
Geneviève Bujold
Irene Papas
Anthony Quayle
John Colicos
CinematographyArthur Ibbetson
Edited byRichard Marden
Music byGeorges Delerue
Production
company
Hal Wallis Productions
Distributed byThe Rank Organisation (UK)
Universal Pictures (US)
Release dates
  • 18 December 1969 (1969-12-18) (United States)
  • 23 February 1970 (1970-02-23) (United Kingdom)
Running time
145 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$4.5 million[1]
Box office$6,134,264 (US/Canada rentals)[2] or $15-20 million (world gross)[1]

The film stars Richard Burton as King Henry VIII and Canadian actress Geneviève Bujold as Anne Boleyn. Irene Papas plays Catherine of Aragon, Anthony Quayle plays Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, and John Colicos plays Thomas Cromwell. Others in the cast include Michael Hordern, Katharine Blake, Peter Jeffrey, Joseph O'Conor, William Squire, Vernon Dobtcheff, Denis Quilley, Esmond Knight, and T. P. McKenna, who later played Henry VIII in Monarch. Burton's wife Elizabeth Taylor makes a brief, uncredited appearance.

Despite receiving some negative reviews[3] and mixed reviews from The New York Times[4] and Pauline Kael,[5] the film was nominated for 10 Academy Awards and won the award for best costumes. Geneviève Bujold's portrayal of Anne, her first in an English language film, was very highly praised, even by Time magazine, which otherwise skewered the movie.[6] According to the Academy Awards exposé Inside Oscar, an expensive advertising campaign was mounted by Universal Studios that included serving champagne and filet mignon to members of the Academy following each screening.[7]

Plot edit

In London, 1536, Henry VIII considers whether or not he should sign the warrant for the execution of his second wife, Anne Boleyn.

Nine years earlier, Henry has a problem: he reveals his dissatisfaction with his wife Catherine of Aragon. He is enjoying a discreet affair with Mary Boleyn, a daughter of one of his courtiers, Sir Thomas Boleyn; but the king is bored with her too. At a court ball, he notices Mary's 18-year-old sister Anne, who has returned from her education in France. She is engaged to the son of the Earl of Northumberland, and they have received their parents' permission to marry. The king, however, is enraptured with Anne's beauty and orders Cardinal Wolsey, his Lord Chancellor, to break the engagement.

When news of this decision is carried to Anne, she reacts furiously. She blames the cardinal and the king for ruining her happiness. When Henry makes a rather clumsy attempt to seduce her, Anne bluntly informs him how she finds him.

Henry brings her back to court with him, and she continues to resist his advances out of a mixture of repulsion for Henry and her lingering anger over her broken engagement. However, she becomes intoxicated with the power that the king's love gives her. Using this power, she continually undermines Cardinal Wolsey, who initially sees Anne as a passing love interest for the king.

When Henry again presses Anne to become his mistress, she repeats that she never will give birth to an illegitimate child. Desperate to have a son, Henry suddenly comes up with the idea of marrying Anne in Catherine's place. Anne is stunned, but she agrees. Wolsey begs the king to abandon the idea because of the political consequences of divorcing Catherine. Henry refuses to listen.

When Wolsey fails to persuade the pope to give Henry his divorce, Anne points out this failing to an enraged Henry. Wolsey is dismissed from office, and his magnificent palace in London is given as a present to Anne, who realizes she has finally fallen in love with Henry. They sleep together, and after discovering that she is pregnant, they secretly are married. Anne is given a splendid coronation, but the people jeer at her in disgust.

Months later, Anne gives birth to a daughter: Princess Elizabeth. Henry is displeased because he wanted a son, and their marital relationship begins to cool. His attentions are soon diverted to Lady Jane Seymour, one of Anne's maids. Once she discovers this liaison, Anne banishes Jane from court.

During a row over Sir Thomas More's opposition to Anne's queenship, Anne refuses to sleep with her husband unless More is put to death. More is executed, but Anne's subsequent pregnancy ends with a stillborn boy.

Henry demands that his new minister Thomas Cromwell find a way to get rid of Anne. Cromwell tortures a servant in her household into confessing to adultery with the queen; he then arrests four other courtiers who are also accused of being Anne's lovers. Anne is taken to the Tower and placed under arrest. When she is told that she has been accused of adultery, Anne laughs until she sees her brother being brought into the Tower and learns he faces the same accusation.

At Anne's trial, she manages to cross-question Mark Smeaton, the tortured servant who finally admits that the charges against Anne are lies. Henry makes an appearance, then visits Anne in her chambers that night. He offers her freedom if she will agree to annul their marriage and make their daughter illegitimate. Anne refuses, saying that she would rather die than betray their daughter. Henry slaps her and tells her that her disobedience will mean her death.

Henry decides to execute Anne. A few days later, Anne is taken to the scaffold and beheaded by a French swordsman. Henry rides off to marry Jane Seymour, and their young daughter, Elizabeth, toddles alone in the garden as she hears the cannon firing to announce her mother's death.

Cast edit

Elizabeth Taylor has an uncredited cameo appearance as a masked courtesan who interrupts Queen Catherine's prayers. Kate Burton makes her acting debut as a maid.

Background and production edit

The play Anne of the Thousand Days, the film's basis, was first enacted on Broadway in the Shubert Theatre on 8 December 1948; staged by H.C. Potter, with Rex Harrison and Joyce Redman as Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn respectively, running 288 performances; Harrison won a Tony Award for his performance.

Cinematically, Anne of the Thousand Days took 20 years to reach the screen because its themes – adultery, illegitimacy, incest – were then unacceptable to the U.S. motion picture production code. The film was made on such locations as Penshurst Place and Hever Castle,[8] and at Pinewood and Shepperton Studios. Hever Castle was one of the main settings for the film; it was also the childhood home of Anne Boleyn.[9]

British actress Olivia Hussey was the first choice for the role of Anne Boleyn.[10] When producer Hal B. Wallis first met Hussey in New York in November 1967 at a party for her then upcoming film Romeo and Juliet (1968), he offered her the title role. In addition, he also offered her to star with John Wayne in True Grit (1969). In her 2019 memoir, Hussey stated that she had "mumbled something about being interested in Anne of the Thousand Days” but added that she "couldn’t see herself with Wayne". She claims that this "adolescent and opinionated" remark inevitably ended her professional relationship with Wallis, and he immediately withdrew his offer from her. "It had taken me less than a minute to talk my way out of it" Hussey stated.[11]

Maxwell Anderson employed blank verse for parts of his play, but most examples of this were removed from the screenplay. One blank verse episode that was retained was Anne's soliloquy in the Tower of London. The opening of the play was changed, with Thomas Cromwell's telling Henry VIII the outcome of the trial and Henry's recalling his marriage to Anne rather than Anne's speaking first and then Henry's remembering in flashback.[12]

Historical accuracy edit

  • Historians dispute King Henry VIII's paternity of one or both of Mary Boleyn's children. Henry VIII: The King and His Court by Alison Weir questions the paternity of Henry Carey;[13] Dr. G. W. Bernard (The King's Reformation) and Joanna Denny (Anne Boleyn: A New Life of England's Tragic Queen) argue that Henry VIII was their father.
  • Anne Boleyn might not have been 18 years old in 1527; her birth date is unrecorded. Most historians today believe that she was in her early to mid 20s in 1527.
  • There is no proof that Henry VIII ordered the breaking of Henry Percy and Anne Boleyn's engagement because he wanted Anne for himself. Percy's family, the Northumberlands, were one of the leading families in the North of England, and they always wanted Henry Percy to marry Mary Talbot, a rich heiress from the same region, and not a girl from a comparatively lower status family. They might have asked for the king's and Cardinal Wolsey's intervention when the engagement was made public. In fact, in order to have no impediment for Henry VIII's and Anne's marriage, all parties always denied that any engagement had taken place.
  • Most histories of the period say nothing about Anne's pressuring Henry to have More executed.
  • Catherine of Aragon's daughter, Mary, was not present at the time of Catherine's final illness and death; they were being kept apart forcibly.
  • Catherine of Aragon's depiction by Irene Papas was wrong in terms of appearance; it is well documented that the queen had auburn hair and a very pale complexion, and that she had become fat by the time she was in her middle thirties. Papas was chosen as she has a stereotypical Mediterranean appearance, matching false popular assumptions on how a 'Spanish' noble would look.[citation needed] The same goes for Jane Seymour: here depicted as a brunette, she was in fact a blonde.
  • The meeting between Anne and Henry shortly before her execution is fictional, and even if such a meeting had taken place, some details of their discussion are implausible. Anne's marriage was annulled anyway, and she never was offered a deal that would have given her her freedom. Elizabeth and Mary were both declared illegitimate, but were nevertheless in the line of succession, but not until after Anne's death. Thus, at that point, the chance of Elizabeth's inheriting the crown must have seemed small.
  • Henry did not intervene in Anne's trial; she was disallowed the right to question the witnesses against her. She and the king met last at a joust the day before her arrest.
  • Anne of the Thousand Days depicts Anne as innocent of the charges laid against her, and this is considered historically correct in the biographies by Eric W. Ives, Retha Warnicke, Joanna Denny, and David Starkey, which all assert her innocence of adultery, incest, and witchcraft.

Reception edit

The film received mixed reviews from critics, as most commonly they considered the plot dull and plodding. Beyond the story itself, the performances of Geneviève Bujold, Richard Burton, and Irene Papas were met with universal acclaim, especially that of Bujold. Bujold remains the only actress to have been nominated for an Oscar for playing Anne Boleyn.

The film was one of the more popular movies of 1970 at the British box office.[14]

Accolades edit

Awards[15][16] Category Nominee Result
42nd Academy Awards Best Picture Hal B. Wallis Nominated
Best Actor in a Leading Role Richard Burton Nominated
Best Actress in a Leading Role Geneviève Bujold Nominated
Best Actor in a Supporting Role Anthony Quayle Nominated
Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium Bridget Boland
John Hale
Richard Sokolove
Nominated
Best Art Direction - Set Decoration Maurice Carter
Lionel Couch
Patrick McLoughlin
Nominated
Best Cinematography Arthur Ibbetson Nominated
Best Costume Design Margaret Furse Won
Best Music, Original Score for a Motion Picture (not a Musical) Georges Delerue Nominated
Best Sound John Aldred Nominated
27th Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Drama Hal B. Wallis Won
Best Director - Motion Picture Charles Jarrott Won
Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama Richard Burton Nominated
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama Geneviève Bujold Won
Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture Anthony Quayle Nominated
Best Screenplay Bridget Boland
John Hale
Richard Sokolove
Won
Best Original Score Georges Delerue Nominated
24th British Academy Film Awards Best Art Direction Maurice Carter Nominated
Best Costume Design Margaret Furse Nominated
1970 American Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film – Dramatic Richard Marden Nominated
1970 Writers Guild of America Awards Best Adapted Screenplay Bridget Boland
John Hale
Nominated

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Haber, Joyce (30 January 1972). "Presenting the exclusive, reclusive Hal Wallis". The Los Angeles Times. p. 15.
  2. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1970", Variety, 6 January 1971 p 11
  3. ^ "Anne of the Thousand Days seems to have been made for one person: the Queen of England", Time Magazine
  4. ^ Canby, Vincent (21 January 1970). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on 8 October 2013.
  5. ^ "Pauline Kael". www.geocities.ws.
  6. ^ . Time. 2 February 1970. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  7. ^ Inside Oscar, Mason Wiley and Damien Boa, Ballantine Books (1986) pg. 434
  8. ^ "Anne of the Thousand Days (1969) - IMDb" – via www.imdb.com.
  9. ^ Kent Film Office. "Kent Film Office Anne of the Thousand Days Film Focus".
  10. ^ Groucho. "Groucho Reviews: Interview: Olivia Hussey—Romeo and Juliet". Groucho Reviews. Retrieved 1 October 2008.
  11. ^ Hussey, Olivia (31 July 2018). The girl on the balcony : Olivia Hussey finds life after Romeo & Juliet (First Kensington hardcoverition ed.). pp. 84–85. ISBN 978-1496717078.
  12. ^ Anne of the Thousand Days, Google books, accessed 15 April 2012
  13. ^ Weir. Henry VIII: The King and His Court. p. 216.
  14. ^ Harper, Sue (2011). British Film Culture in the 1970s: The Boundaries of Pleasure: The Boundaries of Pleasure. Edinburgh University Press. p. 269. ISBN 9780748654260.
  15. ^ "The 42nd Academy Awards (1970) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  16. ^ . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2012. Archived from the original on 18 October 2012. Retrieved 27 December 2008.

External links edit

anne, thousand, days, 1969, british, period, historical, drama, film, based, life, anne, boleyn, directed, charles, jarrott, produced, wallis, screenplay, bridget, boland, john, hale, adaptation, 1948, play, same, name, maxwell, anderson, original, theatrical,. Anne of the Thousand Days is a 1969 British period historical drama film based on the life of Anne Boleyn directed by Charles Jarrott and produced by Hal B Wallis The screenplay by Bridget Boland and John Hale is an adaptation of the 1948 play of the same name by Maxwell Anderson Anne of the Thousand DaysOriginal theatrical posterDirected byCharles JarrottScreenplay byBridget BolandJohn HaleStory byRichard SokoloveBased onAnne of the Thousand Days by Maxwell AndersonProduced byHal B WallisStarringRichard BurtonGenevieve BujoldIrene PapasAnthony QuayleJohn ColicosCinematographyArthur IbbetsonEdited byRichard MardenMusic byGeorges DelerueProductioncompanyHal Wallis ProductionsDistributed byThe Rank Organisation UK Universal Pictures US Release dates18 December 1969 1969 12 18 United States 23 February 1970 1970 02 23 United Kingdom Running time145 minutesCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishBudget 4 5 million 1 Box office 6 134 264 US Canada rentals 2 or 15 20 million world gross 1 The film stars Richard Burton as King Henry VIII and Canadian actress Genevieve Bujold as Anne Boleyn Irene Papas plays Catherine of Aragon Anthony Quayle plays Cardinal Thomas Wolsey and John Colicos plays Thomas Cromwell Others in the cast include Michael Hordern Katharine Blake Peter Jeffrey Joseph O Conor William Squire Vernon Dobtcheff Denis Quilley Esmond Knight and T P McKenna who later played Henry VIII in Monarch Burton s wife Elizabeth Taylor makes a brief uncredited appearance Despite receiving some negative reviews 3 and mixed reviews from The New York Times 4 and Pauline Kael 5 the film was nominated for 10 Academy Awards and won the award for best costumes Genevieve Bujold s portrayal of Anne her first in an English language film was very highly praised even by Time magazine which otherwise skewered the movie 6 According to the Academy Awards expose Inside Oscar an expensive advertising campaign was mounted by Universal Studios that included serving champagne and filet mignon to members of the Academy following each screening 7 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Background and production 4 Historical accuracy 5 Reception 6 Accolades 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksPlot editIn London 1536 Henry VIII considers whether or not he should sign the warrant for the execution of his second wife Anne Boleyn Nine years earlier Henry has a problem he reveals his dissatisfaction with his wife Catherine of Aragon He is enjoying a discreet affair with Mary Boleyn a daughter of one of his courtiers Sir Thomas Boleyn but the king is bored with her too At a court ball he notices Mary s 18 year old sister Anne who has returned from her education in France She is engaged to the son of the Earl of Northumberland and they have received their parents permission to marry The king however is enraptured with Anne s beauty and orders Cardinal Wolsey his Lord Chancellor to break the engagement When news of this decision is carried to Anne she reacts furiously She blames the cardinal and the king for ruining her happiness When Henry makes a rather clumsy attempt to seduce her Anne bluntly informs him how she finds him Henry brings her back to court with him and she continues to resist his advances out of a mixture of repulsion for Henry and her lingering anger over her broken engagement However she becomes intoxicated with the power that the king s love gives her Using this power she continually undermines Cardinal Wolsey who initially sees Anne as a passing love interest for the king When Henry again presses Anne to become his mistress she repeats that she never will give birth to an illegitimate child Desperate to have a son Henry suddenly comes up with the idea of marrying Anne in Catherine s place Anne is stunned but she agrees Wolsey begs the king to abandon the idea because of the political consequences of divorcing Catherine Henry refuses to listen When Wolsey fails to persuade the pope to give Henry his divorce Anne points out this failing to an enraged Henry Wolsey is dismissed from office and his magnificent palace in London is given as a present to Anne who realizes she has finally fallen in love with Henry They sleep together and after discovering that she is pregnant they secretly are married Anne is given a splendid coronation but the people jeer at her in disgust Months later Anne gives birth to a daughter Princess Elizabeth Henry is displeased because he wanted a son and their marital relationship begins to cool His attentions are soon diverted to Lady Jane Seymour one of Anne s maids Once she discovers this liaison Anne banishes Jane from court During a row over Sir Thomas More s opposition to Anne s queenship Anne refuses to sleep with her husband unless More is put to death More is executed but Anne s subsequent pregnancy ends with a stillborn boy Henry demands that his new minister Thomas Cromwell find a way to get rid of Anne Cromwell tortures a servant in her household into confessing to adultery with the queen he then arrests four other courtiers who are also accused of being Anne s lovers Anne is taken to the Tower and placed under arrest When she is told that she has been accused of adultery Anne laughs until she sees her brother being brought into the Tower and learns he faces the same accusation At Anne s trial she manages to cross question Mark Smeaton the tortured servant who finally admits that the charges against Anne are lies Henry makes an appearance then visits Anne in her chambers that night He offers her freedom if she will agree to annul their marriage and make their daughter illegitimate Anne refuses saying that she would rather die than betray their daughter Henry slaps her and tells her that her disobedience will mean her death Henry decides to execute Anne A few days later Anne is taken to the scaffold and beheaded by a French swordsman Henry rides off to marry Jane Seymour and their young daughter Elizabeth toddles alone in the garden as she hears the cannon firing to announce her mother s death Cast editRichard Burton as King Henry VIII Genevieve Bujold as Anne Boleyn Irene Papas as Queen Catherine of Aragon Anthony Quayle as Cardinal Thomas Wolsey John Colicos as Thomas Cromwell Michael Hordern as Thomas Boleyn Katharine Blake as Elizabeth Boleyn Valerie Gearon as Mary Boleyn Michael Johnson as George Boleyn Peter Jeffrey as Thomas Howard 3rd Duke of Norfolk Joseph O Conor as Bishop Fisher William Squire as Sir Thomas More Esmond Knight as Sir William Kingston Nora Swinburne as Lady Kingston Vernon Dobtcheff as Mendoza Brook Williams as Sir William Brereton Gary Bond as Mark Smeaton T P McKenna as Sir Henry Norris Denis Quilley as Sir Francis Weston Terence Wilton as Lord Percy Lesley Paterson as Jane Seymour Nicola Pagett as Princess Mary June Ellis as Bess Kynaston Reeves as Willoughby Marne Maitland as Cardinal Campeggio Cyril Luckham as Prior Houghton Amanda Jane Smythe as Princess Elizabeth Elizabeth Taylor has an uncredited cameo appearance as a masked courtesan who interrupts Queen Catherine s prayers Kate Burton makes her acting debut as a maid Background and production editThe play Anne of the Thousand Days the film s basis was first enacted on Broadway in the Shubert Theatre on 8 December 1948 staged by H C Potter with Rex Harrison and Joyce Redman as Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn respectively running 288 performances Harrison won a Tony Award for his performance Cinematically Anne of the Thousand Days took 20 years to reach the screen because its themes adultery illegitimacy incest were then unacceptable to the U S motion picture production code The film was made on such locations as Penshurst Place and Hever Castle 8 and at Pinewood and Shepperton Studios Hever Castle was one of the main settings for the film it was also the childhood home of Anne Boleyn 9 British actress Olivia Hussey was the first choice for the role of Anne Boleyn 10 When producer Hal B Wallis first met Hussey in New York in November 1967 at a party for her then upcoming film Romeo and Juliet 1968 he offered her the title role In addition he also offered her to star with John Wayne in True Grit 1969 In her 2019 memoir Hussey stated that she had mumbled something about being interested in Anne of the Thousand Days but added that she couldn t see herself with Wayne She claims that this adolescent and opinionated remark inevitably ended her professional relationship with Wallis and he immediately withdrew his offer from her It had taken me less than a minute to talk my way out of it Hussey stated 11 Maxwell Anderson employed blank verse for parts of his play but most examples of this were removed from the screenplay One blank verse episode that was retained was Anne s soliloquy in the Tower of London The opening of the play was changed with Thomas Cromwell s telling Henry VIII the outcome of the trial and Henry s recalling his marriage to Anne rather than Anne s speaking first and then Henry s remembering in flashback 12 Historical accuracy editHistorians dispute King Henry VIII s paternity of one or both of Mary Boleyn s children Henry VIII The King and His Court by Alison Weir questions the paternity of Henry Carey 13 Dr G W Bernard The King s Reformation and Joanna Denny Anne Boleyn A New Life of England s Tragic Queen argue that Henry VIII was their father Anne Boleyn might not have been 18 years old in 1527 her birth date is unrecorded Most historians today believe that she was in her early to mid 20s in 1527 There is no proof that Henry VIII ordered the breaking of Henry Percy and Anne Boleyn s engagement because he wanted Anne for himself Percy s family the Northumberlands were one of the leading families in the North of England and they always wanted Henry Percy to marry Mary Talbot a rich heiress from the same region and not a girl from a comparatively lower status family They might have asked for the king s and Cardinal Wolsey s intervention when the engagement was made public In fact in order to have no impediment for Henry VIII s and Anne s marriage all parties always denied that any engagement had taken place Most histories of the period say nothing about Anne s pressuring Henry to have More executed Catherine of Aragon s daughter Mary was not present at the time of Catherine s final illness and death they were being kept apart forcibly Catherine of Aragon s depiction by Irene Papas was wrong in terms of appearance it is well documented that the queen had auburn hair and a very pale complexion and that she had become fat by the time she was in her middle thirties Papas was chosen as she has a stereotypical Mediterranean appearance matching false popular assumptions on how a Spanish noble would look citation needed The same goes for Jane Seymour here depicted as a brunette she was in fact a blonde The meeting between Anne and Henry shortly before her execution is fictional and even if such a meeting had taken place some details of their discussion are implausible Anne s marriage was annulled anyway and she never was offered a deal that would have given her her freedom Elizabeth and Mary were both declared illegitimate but were nevertheless in the line of succession but not until after Anne s death Thus at that point the chance of Elizabeth s inheriting the crown must have seemed small Henry did not intervene in Anne s trial she was disallowed the right to question the witnesses against her She and the king met last at a joust the day before her arrest Anne of the Thousand Days depicts Anne as innocent of the charges laid against her and this is considered historically correct in the biographies by Eric W Ives Retha Warnicke Joanna Denny and David Starkey which all assert her innocence of adultery incest and witchcraft Reception editThe film received mixed reviews from critics as most commonly they considered the plot dull and plodding Beyond the story itself the performances of Genevieve Bujold Richard Burton and Irene Papas were met with universal acclaim especially that of Bujold Bujold remains the only actress to have been nominated for an Oscar for playing Anne Boleyn The film was one of the more popular movies of 1970 at the British box office 14 Accolades editAwards 15 16 Category Nominee Result42nd Academy Awards Best Picture Hal B Wallis NominatedBest Actor in a Leading Role Richard Burton NominatedBest Actress in a Leading Role Genevieve Bujold NominatedBest Actor in a Supporting Role Anthony Quayle NominatedBest Writing Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium Bridget BolandJohn HaleRichard Sokolove NominatedBest Art Direction Set Decoration Maurice CarterLionel CouchPatrick McLoughlin NominatedBest Cinematography Arthur Ibbetson NominatedBest Costume Design Margaret Furse WonBest Music Original Score for a Motion Picture not a Musical Georges Delerue NominatedBest Sound John Aldred Nominated27th Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture Drama Hal B Wallis WonBest Director Motion Picture Charles Jarrott WonBest Actor Motion Picture Drama Richard Burton NominatedBest Actress in a Motion Picture Drama Genevieve Bujold WonBest Supporting Actor Motion Picture Anthony Quayle NominatedBest Screenplay Bridget BolandJohn HaleRichard Sokolove WonBest Original Score Georges Delerue Nominated24th British Academy Film Awards Best Art Direction Maurice Carter NominatedBest Costume Design Margaret Furse Nominated1970 American Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Dramatic Richard Marden Nominated1970 Writers Guild of America Awards Best Adapted Screenplay Bridget BolandJohn Hale NominatedSee also editThe Other Boleyn Girl The Other Boleyn Girl 2003 film The Other Boleyn Girl 2008 film Wolf Hall Wolf Hall miniseries References edit a b Haber Joyce 30 January 1972 Presenting the exclusive reclusive Hal Wallis The Los Angeles Times p 15 Big Rental Films of 1970 Variety 6 January 1971 p 11 Anne of the Thousand Days seems to have been made for one person the Queen of England Time Magazine Canby Vincent 21 January 1970 Screen A Royal Battle of the Sexes Anne of 1 000 Days Bows at Plaza Burton Cast as Henry Miss Bujold Stars The New York Times Archived from the original on 8 October 2013 Pauline Kael www geocities ws Cinema The Lion in Autumn Time 2 February 1970 Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Inside Oscar Mason Wiley and Damien Boa Ballantine Books 1986 pg 434 Anne of the Thousand Days 1969 IMDb via www imdb com Kent Film Office Kent Film Office Anne of the Thousand Days Film Focus Groucho Groucho Reviews Interview Olivia Hussey Romeo and Juliet Groucho Reviews Retrieved 1 October 2008 Hussey Olivia 31 July 2018 The girl on the balcony Olivia Hussey finds life after Romeo amp Juliet First Kensington hardcoverition ed pp 84 85 ISBN 978 1496717078 Anne of the Thousand Days Google books accessed 15 April 2012 Weir Henry VIII The King and His Court p 216 Harper Sue 2011 British Film Culture in the 1970s The Boundaries of Pleasure The Boundaries of Pleasure Edinburgh University Press p 269 ISBN 9780748654260 The 42nd Academy Awards 1970 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved 26 August 2011 NY Times Anne of the Thousand Days Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2012 Archived from the original on 18 October 2012 Retrieved 27 December 2008 External links editAnne of the Thousand Days at IMDb Anne of the Thousand Days at the British Film Institute better source needed Anne of the Thousand Days at the TCM Movie Database Anne of the Thousand Days at AllMovie Anne of the Thousand Days at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anne of the Thousand Days amp oldid 1180484301, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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