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Wikipedia

Lili

Lili is a 1953 American film released by MGM. It stars Leslie Caron as a touchingly naïve French girl whose emotional relationship with a carnival puppeteer is conducted through the medium of four puppets. The film won the Academy Award for Best Original Score,[2] and was also entered in the 1953 Cannes Film Festival.[3] It was later adapted for the stage under the title Carnival! (1961).

Lili
Directed byCharles Walters
Written byHelen Deutsch
Paul Gallico (story Love of Seven Dolls)
Produced byEdwin H. Knopf
StarringLeslie Caron
Mel Ferrer
Jean-Pierre Aumont
Zsa Zsa Gabor
CinematographyRobert H. Planck
Edited byFerris Webster
Music byBronisław Kaper
Gerald Fried (uncredited)
Production
company
Distributed byLoew's, Inc.
Release date
  • March 10, 1953 (1953-03-10)
Running time
81 minutes
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,353,000[1]
Box office$5,393,000[1]

Lili's screenplay, written by Helen Deutsch, was based on a short story and treatment titled "The Seven Souls of Clement O'Reilly" written by Paul Gallico, which in turn was based upon "The Man Who Hated People," a short story by Gallico that appeared in the October 28, 1950 issue of The Saturday Evening Post.[4] After the film's success, Gallico expanded his story into a 1954 novella entitled Love of Seven Dolls.

Plot edit

 
Leslie Caron as Lili

Naive country girl Lili arrives in a provincial town in hopes of locating an old friend of her late father, only to find that he has died. A local shopkeeper offers her employment, then tries to take advantage of her. She is rescued by a handsome, smooth-talking, womanizing carnival magician, Marc, whose stage name is Marcus the Magnificent. Lili is infatuated with him and follows him to the carnival, where on learning that she is 16, he helps her get a job as waitress. Lili is fired on her first night when she spends her time watching the magic act instead of waiting tables. When Lili consults the magician for advice, he tells her to go back to where she came from. Homeless and heartbroken, she contemplates suicide, unaware that she is being watched by the carnival's puppeteer Paul. He strikes up a conversation with her through his puppets—a brash red-haired boy named Carrot Top, a sly fox, Reynardo, a vain ballerina, Marguerite, and a cowardly giant, Golo. Soon, a large group of carnival workers is enthralled watching Lili's interaction with the puppets, as she is seemingly unaware that there is a puppeteer behind the curtain. Afterwards, Paul and his partner Jacquot offer Lili a job in the act, talking with the puppets. She accepts, and her natural manner of interacting with the puppets becomes the most valuable part of the act.

Paul was once a well-known dancer, but suffered a leg injury in World War II. He regards the puppet show as far inferior to his old career, which embitters him. Lili refers to him as "the Angry Man". Although he falls in love with Lili, he can only express his feelings through the puppets. Fearing rejection due to his physical impairment, he keeps his distance by being unpleasant to her. Lili continues to dream about the handsome magician, wishing to replace his assistant Rosalie.

Soon, Marcus receives an offer to perform at the local casino and decides to leave the carnival, to the joy of Rosalie, who announces to everyone that she is his wife. Lili is heartbroken and innocently invites Marc to her trailer. His lecherous plans are interrupted by Paul, and he leaves. When Lili finds Marc's wedding ring in the seat cushions and tries to chase him, Paul stops her, calls her a fool, and slaps her.

Two impresarios from Paris who have been scouting the show come to see Paul and Jacquot. They recognize Paul as the former dancer and tell him that his act with Lili and the puppets is ingenious. Paul is ecstatic about this and the offer, but Jacquot tells the agents that they will have to let them know. He then tells Paul that Lili is leaving.

Lili takes the wedding ring to Marc and tells him that every little girl has to wake up from her girlish dreams. She has decided to leave the carnival. On her way out, she is stopped by the voices of Carrot Top and Reynardo, who ask her to take them with her. As they embrace her, she finds they are shaking. She remembers somebody is behind the curtain and pulls it away to see Paul. Instead of telling her how he feels, he tells her of the agents' offer. She confronts him about the difference between his real self, seemingly incapable of love, and his puppets. Paul tells her he is the puppets, a creature of many facets and many flaws. He concludes by telling her, "This is business." "Not any more," retorts Lili, who walks away.

Walking out of town, she imagines that the puppets, now life-sized, have joined her. As she dances with each puppet in turn, they all turn into Paul. Coming back to reality, Lili runs back to the carnival and into Paul's arms. They kiss passionately as the puppets applaud.

Cast edit

Production edit

Puppets edit

Walton and O'Rourke, famous in puppeteering circles, made the puppets. They mostly worked in cabarets and did not appear on television. Lili is among the few known filmed records of their work which also includes the Walter Lantz cartoon and live action short film, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit: Puppet Show (1936).[5]

Walton and O'Rourke manipulated Marguerite and Reynardo, George Latshaw was responsible for Carrot Top, and Wolo Von Trutzschler handled Golo the Giant.[6] Burr Tillstrom was approached to create puppets for the film, but turned it down.[7]

Music edit

The score was composed by Bronisław Kaper and conducted by Hans Sommer, with orchestrations by Robert Franklyn and Skip Martin. Kaper's music received the Oscar for "Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture."

Lyrics for the song "Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo" were written by Helen Deutsch for her previously published short story "Song of Love". Kaper's setting of the song was performed by Caron and Mel Ferrer in the film; the performance was released on record and reached number 30 in the American charts.[8]

Four excerpts from the score were first issued by MGM Records at the time of the film's release. The complete score was issued on CD in 2005, on Film Score Monthly records.

Responses and box-office edit

The New York Times included it in its 2004 Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made,[9] as did Angie Errigo and Jo Berry in a 2005 compilation of Chick Flicks: Movies Women Love.[10]

Bosley Crowther, reviewing the film at its opening, had nothing but praise for the movie, rejoicing that "at last Leslie Caron's simplicity and freshness...have been captured again in the film." He showered other encomia on Caron, calling her "elfin", "winsome", the "focus of warmth and appeal", praising her "charm, grace, beauty, and vitality." He said screenwriter Helen Deutsch had "put together a frankly fanciful romance with clarity, humor, and lack of guile," and admires the choreographer, sets, music, and title song.[11]

The film was not universally liked, though; Pauline Kael called it a "sickly whimsy" and referred to Mel Ferrer's "narcissistic, masochistic smiles."[12]

According to MGM records, the film earned $2,210,000 in the U.S. and Canada and $3,183,000 overseas, resulting in a profit of $1,878,000, making it MGM's most popular musical of the year.[1]

Awards and nominations edit

Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
Academy Awards Best Director Charles Walters Nominated [13]
Best Actress Leslie Caron Nominated
Best Screenplay Helen Deutsch Nominated
Best Art Direction – Color Art Direction: Cedric Gibbons and Paul Groesse;
Set Decoration: Edwin B. Willis and Arthur Krams
Nominated
Best Cinematography – Color Robert Planck Nominated
Best Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Bronisław Kaper Won
British Academy Film Awards Best Film from any Source Nominated [14]
Best Foreign Actress Leslie Caron Won
Cannes Film Festival Grand Prix Charles Walters Nominated [15]
International Award – Entertainment Film Won
Special Mention For the charming acting Won
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Charles Walters Nominated [16]
Golden Globe Awards Best Screenplay Helen Deutsch Won [17]
National Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films 5th Place [18]
Writers Guild of America Awards Best Written American Musical Helen Deutsch Won [19]

Source text and sequel edit

The Man Who Hated People (short story) edit

The Man Who Hated People appeared in the October 28, 1950 issue of The Saturday Evening Post.[20] It is lighter in tone than other versions of the story. In particular, the abuse heaped by the puppeteer on the innocent "girl" is emotional and verbal. Unlike the novel The Love of Seven Dolls, the short story does not even hint at physical or sexual abuse.

The story opens in a New York City television studio where Milly, a "sweet-faced girl with [a] slightly harassed expression," is about to make her farewell appearance on the Peter and Panda show.

Peter and Panda are part of an ensemble of puppets; they are a leprechaun and a panda respectively; other puppets include Arthur, a "raffish crocodile;" Mme Robineau, a French lady "of indeterminate age with dyed hair;" Doctor Henderson, a penguin; and Mr Tootenheimer, a toymaker. They are all operated by a single puppeteer, named Crake Villeridge. Despite being a puppet show, it has, like the real-life Kukla, Fran and Ollie TV show, a huge audience of all ages. Also like Kukla, Fran and Ollie, there is no script: "it's all ad-libbed". (In fact, the illustration included with the story features the actual stage used for Kukla, Fran and Ollie.) At the end of the show, "millions watching felt a sense of loss as though a family close to them were breaking up."

Milly has been with the show two years, and, as in other versions of the story, she interacts in a spontaneous way directly with the personae of the puppets. In a flashback, during her audition, she had met and talked to the puppets before meeting any human being. Not realizing that this encounter was her audition, she is surprised when a station representative meets her and tells her "Your performance this afternoon came closest to what [Mr Villeridge] wants." She says "But it actually wasn't a performance", and is told "Exactly. The first time you start giving a performance, you're through."

Villeridge, we learn, is French Canadian, and had once been headed for a serious career as a hockey player. In an accident, two men "skated over the side of his face," ending his hockey career, and seriously and permanently disfiguring him.

She soon learns that Villeridge is emotionally an abuser. She loves the on-air performances, loves the puppets and their personalities, and finds Mr Tootenheimer, the wise old toymaker, particularly comforting, but she hates Villeridge and what he does to her in rehearsal and after the show. He shouts at her, demeans her, criticizes everything she has done, and humiliates her in front of the staff. When she meets a nice man named Fred Archer and believes she is "a little in love" with him, she decides she can no longer stand Villeridge and his tyrannical ways. She announces that she is marrying Archer and gives notice.

After her farewell show, she changes into her street dress. She waits for everyone else to leave the studio, afraid of encountering Villeridge, who "might be waiting for her with one last attack." As she leaves, she hears the voice of Arthur, the puppet, who says, "I stayed behind. Milly, take me with you." Soon she is talking to Arthur and the other puppets. Mr Tootenheimer, the "old philosopher", explains to her that every man is composed of many things, and that the puppets represent aspects of Villeridge's real personality:

And if a man who has been cut and scarred and is ashamed of his appearance, who loved you from the first time his eyes rested upon your face, could be a brutal fool, believing that if you could be made to love all of the things he really was, you would never again recoil from the things he seemed to be.

Millie cries "Crake! Crake! come to me." They embrace, and Milly decides to say goodbye to "the outside world—reality—Fred Archer" and live with Villeridge and his created "Never-Never Land of the mind."

Love of Seven Dolls edit

"In Paris in the spring of our times, a young girl was about to throw herself into the Seine." Thus opens the novella from which the film Lili and the musical Carnival was drawn.

The Paul Gallico short story from which Lili was adapted was published in expanded form in 1954 as Love of Seven Dolls, a 125-page novella. The New York Times review of the book opens "Those audiences still making their way to see Lili may now read the book from which this motion picture was adapted." The original short story was clearly based on the popular television puppet show Kukla, Fran and Ollie, as it takes place in a television studio (not a carnival as in the film and book), and has many characters based on the Kuklapolitans. The novella was more mystical and magic than the short story. Brettonais from the village of Plouha..."Wretched though she was, some of the mystery of that mysterious land still clung to her...the gravity of her glance, the innocence and primitive mind...there were dark corners of Celtic brooding...a little scarecrow."

Gallico's book is far darker in tone. In the book, the girl's nickname is Mouche ("fly") rather than Lili. The puppeteer is named Michel Peyrot, stage name Capitaine Coq, rather than Paul Berthalet.

The puppeteer's assistant is a "primitive" Senegalese man named Golo, rather than the movie's amiable Frenchman, Jacquot. He shares with Mouche a sense of primitive magic, and with her believes in the reality of the puppets.

The first four puppets she meets correspond closely to those in the film and are a youth named Carrot Top; a fox, Reynardo; a vain girl, Gigi; and a "huge, tousle-headed, hideous, yet pathetic-looking giant" Alifanfaron. The latter two are named "Marguerite" and "Golo" in the movie (i.e. the name of the puppeteer's assistant in the book becomes the name of a puppet in the movie). The book includes three additional puppets: Dr. Duclos, a penguin who wears a pince-nez and is a dignified academic; Madame Muscat, "the concierge", who constantly warns Mouche that the others are "a bad lot"; and Monsieur Nicholas, "a maker and mender of toys" with steel-rimmed spectacles, stocking cap, and leather apron.

The core of both book and movie is the childlike innocence of Mouche/Lili and her conviction that she is interacting directly with the puppets themselves, which have some kind of existence separate from the puppeteer. This separation is explicit in the book. It says that Golo was "childlike...but in the primitive fashion backed by the dark lore of his race" and looked upon the puppets "as living, breathing creatures", but "the belief in the separate existence of these little people was even more basic with Mouche for it was a necessity to her and a refuge from the storms of life with which she had been unable to cope."

In the movie, the puppeteer, Paul Berthalet, is gruff, unhappy, and emotionally distant. Although Lili refers to him as "the Angry Man", he is not very cruel or menacing. His bitterness is explained by his identity as a former ballet dancer, disabled by a leg injury and "reduced" to the role of puppeteer.

Gallico's Peyrot, however, is more vicious. No ballet dancer, he was "bred out of the gutters of Paris" and by the age of fifteen was "a little savage practiced in all the cruel arts and swindles of the street fairs and cheap carnivals." He has "the look of a satyr." "Throughout his life no one had ever been kind to him, or gentle, and he paid back the world in like. Wholly cynical, he had no regard for man, woman, child, or God ... He would, if he could, have corrupted the whole world."

In both book and movie, Mouche/Lili is tempted by a superficial attraction to a handsome man—an acrobat named Balotte in the book, the magician Marc in the movie—but returns to the puppeteer. In the movie, Marc's relation with Lili is exploitative. In the book, however, Peyrot is the exploitative and abusive one, and the relationship with BalottMouche "passed in that moment over the last threshold from child to womanhood" and knew "the catalyst that could save him. It was herself." She tells Peyrot "Michel...I love you. I will never leave you." Peyrot does not respond, but he weeps; Mouche holds his "transfigured" head and knows "they were the tears of a man...who, emerging from the long nightmare, would be made forever whole by love." If this is a happy ending, it is not the simple happy ending of the movie.

Reviewing the book on its publication, Andrea Parke says Gallico creates "magic...when he writes the sequences with Mouche and the puppets." But "when he writes the love story of Mouche as the ill-treated plaything of the puppet master, the story loses its magic. The mawkish realism of the passages has an aura of bathos that is not only unreal but unmoving."

Legacy edit

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

References edit

  1. ^ a b c The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  2. ^ . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-10-18. Retrieved 2008-12-21.
  3. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Lili". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-01-22.
  4. ^ The screen credits refer only to "a story by Paul Gallico"; Contemporary Authors Online, Thomson Gale, 2005 specifically says that it was adapted from "The Man Who Hated People".
  5. ^ Klein, Tom. "Oswald Strings a Treasure, 1936". Cartoon Research, Walter Lantz Archive. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
  6. ^ puptcrit archive 2003-06-11 at the Wayback Machine The team of Walton and O'Rourke and their puppets
  7. ^ Gomavitz, Lewis. "Kukla's Director". The Kuklapolitan Website (Interview). Retrieved 2016-06-10. But the movie went on to be made and it was a good movie, called 'Lili.'
  8. ^ Kendall, Lukas (2005). Bronislau Kaper. "Lili". Film Score Monthly (CD insert notes). Culver City, California, U.S.A. 8 (15): 4.
  9. ^ The New York Times Guide to the Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made. St. Martin's Press. 2004. ISBN 0-312-32611-4.
  10. ^ Errigo, Angie; Jo Berry (2005). Chick Flicks: Movies Women Love. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. ISBN 0-7528-6832-2.
  11. ^ New York Times, Mar 11, 1953, p. 36: "'Lili,' With Leslie Caron, Jean Pierre Aumont, Mel Ferrer, Receives Local Premiere"
  12. ^ Kael, Pauline (1985). 5001 Nights at the Movies. New York: Henry Holt and Company. p. 422. ISBN 978-0-8050-1367-2.
  13. ^ . Oscars.org (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences). Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved May 31, 2015.
  14. ^ "BAFTA Awards: Film in 1954". BAFTA. 1954. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  15. ^ "1953 - Le Jury, Les Prix". cannes-fest.com. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  16. ^ "6th DGA Awards". Directors Guild of America Awards. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  17. ^ "Lili – Golden Globes". HFPA. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  18. ^ "1953 Award Winners". National Board of Review. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
  19. ^ "wga awards". Wga.org. Archived from the original on 2012-12-05. Retrieved 2010-06-06.
  20. ^ Gallico, Paul (1950), The Man Who Hated People, The Saturday Evening Post, October 28, 1950, 223(18) p. 22
  21. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs Nominees" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-07-30.

External links edit

lili, other, uses, disambiguation, 1953, american, film, released, stars, leslie, caron, touchingly, naïve, french, girl, whose, emotional, relationship, with, carnival, puppeteer, conducted, through, medium, four, puppets, film, academy, award, best, original. For other uses see Lili disambiguation Lili is a 1953 American film released by MGM It stars Leslie Caron as a touchingly naive French girl whose emotional relationship with a carnival puppeteer is conducted through the medium of four puppets The film won the Academy Award for Best Original Score 2 and was also entered in the 1953 Cannes Film Festival 3 It was later adapted for the stage under the title Carnival 1961 LiliDirected byCharles WaltersWritten byHelen DeutschPaul Gallico story Love of Seven Dolls Produced byEdwin H KnopfStarringLeslie CaronMel FerrerJean Pierre AumontZsa Zsa GaborCinematographyRobert H PlanckEdited byFerris WebsterMusic byBronislaw KaperGerald Fried uncredited ProductioncompanyMetro Goldwyn MayerDistributed byLoew s Inc Release dateMarch 10 1953 1953 03 10 Running time81 minutesLanguageEnglishBudget 1 353 000 1 Box office 5 393 000 1 Lili s screenplay written by Helen Deutsch was based on a short story and treatment titled The Seven Souls of Clement O Reilly written by Paul Gallico which in turn was based upon The Man Who Hated People a short story by Gallico that appeared in the October 28 1950 issue of The Saturday Evening Post 4 After the film s success Gallico expanded his story into a 1954 novella entitled Love of Seven Dolls Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Puppets 3 2 Music 4 Responses and box office 4 1 Awards and nominations 5 Source text and sequel 5 1 The Man Who Hated People short story 5 2 Love of Seven Dolls 6 Legacy 7 References 8 External linksPlot edit nbsp Leslie Caron as LiliNaive country girl Lili arrives in a provincial town in hopes of locating an old friend of her late father only to find that he has died A local shopkeeper offers her employment then tries to take advantage of her She is rescued by a handsome smooth talking womanizing carnival magician Marc whose stage name is Marcus the Magnificent Lili is infatuated with him and follows him to the carnival where on learning that she is 16 he helps her get a job as waitress Lili is fired on her first night when she spends her time watching the magic act instead of waiting tables When Lili consults the magician for advice he tells her to go back to where she came from Homeless and heartbroken she contemplates suicide unaware that she is being watched by the carnival s puppeteer Paul He strikes up a conversation with her through his puppets a brash red haired boy named Carrot Top a sly fox Reynardo a vain ballerina Marguerite and a cowardly giant Golo Soon a large group of carnival workers is enthralled watching Lili s interaction with the puppets as she is seemingly unaware that there is a puppeteer behind the curtain Afterwards Paul and his partner Jacquot offer Lili a job in the act talking with the puppets She accepts and her natural manner of interacting with the puppets becomes the most valuable part of the act Paul was once a well known dancer but suffered a leg injury in World War II He regards the puppet show as far inferior to his old career which embitters him Lili refers to him as the Angry Man Although he falls in love with Lili he can only express his feelings through the puppets Fearing rejection due to his physical impairment he keeps his distance by being unpleasant to her Lili continues to dream about the handsome magician wishing to replace his assistant Rosalie Soon Marcus receives an offer to perform at the local casino and decides to leave the carnival to the joy of Rosalie who announces to everyone that she is his wife Lili is heartbroken and innocently invites Marc to her trailer His lecherous plans are interrupted by Paul and he leaves When Lili finds Marc s wedding ring in the seat cushions and tries to chase him Paul stops her calls her a fool and slaps her Two impresarios from Paris who have been scouting the show come to see Paul and Jacquot They recognize Paul as the former dancer and tell him that his act with Lili and the puppets is ingenious Paul is ecstatic about this and the offer but Jacquot tells the agents that they will have to let them know He then tells Paul that Lili is leaving Lili takes the wedding ring to Marc and tells him that every little girl has to wake up from her girlish dreams She has decided to leave the carnival On her way out she is stopped by the voices of Carrot Top and Reynardo who ask her to take them with her As they embrace her she finds they are shaking She remembers somebody is behind the curtain and pulls it away to see Paul Instead of telling her how he feels he tells her of the agents offer She confronts him about the difference between his real self seemingly incapable of love and his puppets Paul tells her he is the puppets a creature of many facets and many flaws He concludes by telling her This is business Not any more retorts Lili who walks away Walking out of town she imagines that the puppets now life sized have joined her As she dances with each puppet in turn they all turn into Paul Coming back to reality Lili runs back to the carnival and into Paul s arms They kiss passionately as the puppets applaud Cast editLeslie Caron Lili Daurier Mel Ferrer Paul Berthalet Jean Pierre Aumont Marc Zsa Zsa Gabor Rosalie Kurt Kasznar Jacquot Amanda Blake Peach Lips Alex Gerry Proprietor Ralph Dumke Mr Corvier Wilton Graff Mr Tonit George Baxter Mr EnriqueProduction editPuppets edit Walton and O Rourke famous in puppeteering circles made the puppets They mostly worked in cabarets and did not appear on television Lili is among the few known filmed records of their work which also includes the Walter Lantz cartoon and live action short film Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Puppet Show 1936 5 Walton and O Rourke manipulated Marguerite and Reynardo George Latshaw was responsible for Carrot Top and Wolo Von Trutzschler handled Golo the Giant 6 Burr Tillstrom was approached to create puppets for the film but turned it down 7 Music edit The score was composed by Bronislaw Kaper and conducted by Hans Sommer with orchestrations by Robert Franklyn and Skip Martin Kaper s music received the Oscar for Best Music Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Lyrics for the song Hi Lili Hi Lo were written by Helen Deutsch for her previously published short story Song of Love Kaper s setting of the song was performed by Caron and Mel Ferrer in the film the performance was released on record and reached number 30 in the American charts 8 Four excerpts from the score were first issued by MGM Records at the time of the film s release The complete score was issued on CD in 2005 on Film Score Monthly records Responses and box office editThe New York Times included it in its 2004 Guide to the Best 1 000 Movies Ever Made 9 as did Angie Errigo and Jo Berry in a 2005 compilation of Chick Flicks Movies Women Love 10 Bosley Crowther reviewing the film at its opening had nothing but praise for the movie rejoicing that at last Leslie Caron s simplicity and freshness have been captured again in the film He showered other encomia on Caron calling her elfin winsome the focus of warmth and appeal praising her charm grace beauty and vitality He said screenwriter Helen Deutsch had put together a frankly fanciful romance with clarity humor and lack of guile and admires the choreographer sets music and title song 11 The film was not universally liked though Pauline Kael called it a sickly whimsy and referred to Mel Ferrer s narcissistic masochistic smiles 12 According to MGM records the film earned 2 210 000 in the U S and Canada and 3 183 000 overseas resulting in a profit of 1 878 000 making it MGM s most popular musical of the year 1 Awards and nominations edit Award Category Nominee s Result Ref Academy Awards Best Director Charles Walters Nominated 13 Best Actress Leslie Caron NominatedBest Screenplay Helen Deutsch NominatedBest Art Direction Color Art Direction Cedric Gibbons and Paul Groesse Set Decoration Edwin B Willis and Arthur Krams NominatedBest Cinematography Color Robert Planck NominatedBest Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture Bronislaw Kaper WonBritish Academy Film Awards Best Film from any Source Nominated 14 Best Foreign Actress Leslie Caron WonCannes Film Festival Grand Prix Charles Walters Nominated 15 International Award Entertainment Film WonSpecial Mention For the charming acting WonDirectors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Charles Walters Nominated 16 Golden Globe Awards Best Screenplay Helen Deutsch Won 17 National Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films 5th Place 18 Writers Guild of America Awards Best Written American Musical Helen Deutsch Won 19 Source text and sequel editThe Man Who Hated People short story edit The Man Who Hated People appeared in the October 28 1950 issue of The Saturday Evening Post 20 It is lighter in tone than other versions of the story In particular the abuse heaped by the puppeteer on the innocent girl is emotional and verbal Unlike the novel The Love of Seven Dolls the short story does not even hint at physical or sexual abuse The story opens in a New York City television studio where Milly a sweet faced girl with a slightly harassed expression is about to make her farewell appearance on the Peter and Panda show Peter and Panda are part of an ensemble of puppets they are a leprechaun and a panda respectively other puppets include Arthur a raffish crocodile Mme Robineau a French lady of indeterminate age with dyed hair Doctor Henderson a penguin and Mr Tootenheimer a toymaker They are all operated by a single puppeteer named Crake Villeridge Despite being a puppet show it has like the real life Kukla Fran and Ollie TV show a huge audience of all ages Also like Kukla Fran and Ollie there is no script it s all ad libbed In fact the illustration included with the story features the actual stage used for Kukla Fran and Ollie At the end of the show millions watching felt a sense of loss as though a family close to them were breaking up Milly has been with the show two years and as in other versions of the story she interacts in a spontaneous way directly with the personae of the puppets In a flashback during her audition she had met and talked to the puppets before meeting any human being Not realizing that this encounter was her audition she is surprised when a station representative meets her and tells her Your performance this afternoon came closest to what Mr Villeridge wants She says But it actually wasn t a performance and is told Exactly The first time you start giving a performance you re through Villeridge we learn is French Canadian and had once been headed for a serious career as a hockey player In an accident two men skated over the side of his face ending his hockey career and seriously and permanently disfiguring him She soon learns that Villeridge is emotionally an abuser She loves the on air performances loves the puppets and their personalities and finds Mr Tootenheimer the wise old toymaker particularly comforting but she hates Villeridge and what he does to her in rehearsal and after the show He shouts at her demeans her criticizes everything she has done and humiliates her in front of the staff When she meets a nice man named Fred Archer and believes she is a little in love with him she decides she can no longer stand Villeridge and his tyrannical ways She announces that she is marrying Archer and gives notice After her farewell show she changes into her street dress She waits for everyone else to leave the studio afraid of encountering Villeridge who might be waiting for her with one last attack As she leaves she hears the voice of Arthur the puppet who says I stayed behind Milly take me with you Soon she is talking to Arthur and the other puppets Mr Tootenheimer the old philosopher explains to her that every man is composed of many things and that the puppets represent aspects of Villeridge s real personality And if a man who has been cut and scarred and is ashamed of his appearance who loved you from the first time his eyes rested upon your face could be a brutal fool believing that if you could be made to love all of the things he really was you would never again recoil from the things he seemed to be Millie cries Crake Crake come to me They embrace and Milly decides to say goodbye to the outside world reality Fred Archer and live with Villeridge and his created Never Never Land of the mind Love of Seven Dolls edit In Paris in the spring of our times a young girl was about to throw herself into the Seine Thus opens the novella from which the film Lili and the musical Carnival was drawn The Paul Gallico short story from which Lili was adapted was published in expanded form in 1954 as Love of Seven Dolls a 125 page novella The New York Times review of the book opens Those audiences still making their way to see Lili may now read the book from which this motion picture was adapted The original short story was clearly based on the popular television puppet show Kukla Fran and Ollie as it takes place in a television studio not a carnival as in the film and book and has many characters based on the Kuklapolitans The novella was more mystical and magic than the short story Brettonais from the village of Plouha Wretched though she was some of the mystery of that mysterious land still clung to her the gravity of her glance the innocence and primitive mind there were dark corners of Celtic brooding a little scarecrow Gallico s book is far darker in tone In the book the girl s nickname is Mouche fly rather than Lili The puppeteer is named Michel Peyrot stage name Capitaine Coq rather than Paul Berthalet The puppeteer s assistant is a primitive Senegalese man named Golo rather than the movie s amiable Frenchman Jacquot He shares with Mouche a sense of primitive magic and with her believes in the reality of the puppets The first four puppets she meets correspond closely to those in the film and are a youth named Carrot Top a fox Reynardo a vain girl Gigi and a huge tousle headed hideous yet pathetic looking giant Alifanfaron The latter two are named Marguerite and Golo in the movie i e the name of the puppeteer s assistant in the book becomes the name of a puppet in the movie The book includes three additional puppets Dr Duclos a penguin who wears a pince nez and is a dignified academic Madame Muscat the concierge who constantly warns Mouche that the others are a bad lot and Monsieur Nicholas a maker and mender of toys with steel rimmed spectacles stocking cap and leather apron The core of both book and movie is the childlike innocence of Mouche Lili and her conviction that she is interacting directly with the puppets themselves which have some kind of existence separate from the puppeteer This separation is explicit in the book It says that Golo was childlike but in the primitive fashion backed by the dark lore of his race and looked upon the puppets as living breathing creatures but the belief in the separate existence of these little people was even more basic with Mouche for it was a necessity to her and a refuge from the storms of life with which she had been unable to cope In the movie the puppeteer Paul Berthalet is gruff unhappy and emotionally distant Although Lili refers to him as the Angry Man he is not very cruel or menacing His bitterness is explained by his identity as a former ballet dancer disabled by a leg injury and reduced to the role of puppeteer Gallico s Peyrot however is more vicious No ballet dancer he was bred out of the gutters of Paris and by the age of fifteen was a little savage practiced in all the cruel arts and swindles of the street fairs and cheap carnivals He has the look of a satyr Throughout his life no one had ever been kind to him or gentle and he paid back the world in like Wholly cynical he had no regard for man woman child or God He would if he could have corrupted the whole world In both book and movie Mouche Lili is tempted by a superficial attraction to a handsome man an acrobat named Balotte in the book the magician Marc in the movie but returns to the puppeteer In the movie Marc s relation with Lili is exploitative In the book however Peyrot is the exploitative and abusive one and the relationship with BalottMouche passed in that moment over the last threshold from child to womanhood and knew the catalyst that could save him It was herself She tells Peyrot Michel I love you I will never leave you Peyrot does not respond but he weeps Mouche holds his transfigured head and knows they were the tears of a man who emerging from the long nightmare would be made forever whole by love If this is a happy ending it is not the simple happy ending of the movie Reviewing the book on its publication Andrea Parke says Gallico creates magic when he writes the sequences with Mouche and the puppets But when he writes the love story of Mouche as the ill treated plaything of the puppet master the story loses its magic The mawkish realism of the passages has an aura of bathos that is not only unreal but unmoving Legacy editThe film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists 2004 AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs Hi Lili Hi Lo Nominated 21 References edit a b c The Eddie Mannix Ledger Los Angeles Margaret Herrick Library Center for Motion Picture Study NY Times Lili Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2012 Archived from the original on 2012 10 18 Retrieved 2008 12 21 Festival de Cannes Lili festival cannes com Retrieved 2009 01 22 The screen credits refer only to a story by Paul Gallico Contemporary Authors Online Thomson Gale 2005 specifically says that it was adapted from The Man Who Hated People Klein Tom Oswald Strings a Treasure 1936 Cartoon Research Walter Lantz Archive Retrieved 2018 11 08 puptcrit archive Archived 2003 06 11 at the Wayback Machine The team of Walton and O Rourke and their puppets Gomavitz Lewis Kukla s Director The Kuklapolitan Website Interview Retrieved 2016 06 10 But the movie went on to be made and it was a good movie called Lili Kendall Lukas 2005 Bronislau Kaper Lili Film Score Monthly CD insert notes Culver City California U S A 8 15 4 The New York Times Guide to the Best 1 000 Movies Ever Made St Martin s Press 2004 ISBN 0 312 32611 4 Errigo Angie Jo Berry 2005 Chick Flicks Movies Women Love Sterling Publishing Company Inc ISBN 0 7528 6832 2 New York Times Mar 11 1953 p 36 Lili With Leslie Caron Jean Pierre Aumont Mel Ferrer Receives Local Premiere Kael Pauline 1985 5001 Nights at the Movies New York Henry Holt and Company p 422 ISBN 978 0 8050 1367 2 The 26th Academy Awards 1954 Nominees and Winners Oscars org Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved May 31 2015 BAFTA Awards Film in 1954 BAFTA 1954 Retrieved 16 September 2016 1953 Le Jury Les Prix cannes fest com Retrieved 25 May 2017 6th DGA Awards Directors Guild of America Awards Retrieved July 5 2021 Lili Golden Globes HFPA Retrieved July 5 2021 1953 Award Winners National Board of Review Retrieved July 5 2021 wga awards Wga org Archived from the original on 2012 12 05 Retrieved 2010 06 06 Gallico Paul 1950 The Man Who Hated People The Saturday Evening Post October 28 1950 223 18 p 22 AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs Nominees PDF Retrieved 2016 07 30 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lili film Lili at IMDb Lili at the TCM Movie Database Lili at AllMovie Lili at the American Film Institute Catalog Lili at Rotten Tomatoes Various releases on LP and cd of the music from the film Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lili amp oldid 1168368687, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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