Jack Lemmon on Days of Wine and Roses

Nowadays, Jack Lemmon is mostly remembered as a comedic actor. The actor won his first Oscar (Best Supporting Actor) for his role as Ensign Pulver in “Mister Roberts” (1955). The film had its comic and dramatic moments, and the Pulver character provided some of both. Here is a hilarious segment:

In Days of Wine and Roses (1962), Lemmon had a far more serious role as Joe Clay, a NYC ad man whose liquid lunches take him on a downward spiral. He takes Kirsty, his wife (portrayed by Lee Remick), with him on the way down. Here is a promo for the film in which Lemmon urged folks to see the movie. Pretty ironic. He’s talking about one addiction while indulging in another! However, the lit cigarette wouldn’t have merited a second thought back in the 60s

Jack was nominated for 7 Best Actor Oscars: “Days of Wine and Roses” was his third. The others were: “Some Like It Hot” (1959), “The Apartment” (1960), “Save the Tiger” (1973), “The China Syndrome” (1979), “Tribute” (1980) and “Missing” (1982). He became the first actor with both a Best Supporting Actor Oscar and and Best Actor when he won for “Save the Tiger” in 1974. Since then five actors have matched that accomplishment:

Robert DeNiro — Supporting: The Godfather: Part II (1974); Best Actor: “Raging Bull” (1980)
Jack Nicholson — Supporting: “Terms of Endearment” (1983); Best Actor: “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” (1975), “As Good As It Gets” (1997)
Gene Hackman — Supporting: “Unforgiven” (1992); Best Actor: “The French Connection” (1971)
Kevin Spacey — Supporting: “The Usual Suspects” (1995); Best Actor: “American Beauty” (1999)
Denzel Washington — Supporting: “Glory” (1989); Best Actor: Training Day (2001)

The only Oscar “Days of Wine & Roses” picked up was for Best Original Song, the theme song of the same name by Henry Mancini (music) and Johnny Mercer (lyrics). The song was a Jeopardy! clue in 2014 and 2009, both times with Henry Mancini as the correct response.

The last time a clue about a Jack Lemmon movie came up on the quiz show Jeopardy! was during the Battle of the Decades (3/31/2014) in the category “Big-Screen Gender Benders ($800): Josephine & Daphne in “Some Like It Hot”. Some of his other movies that have come up in clues over the last 5 years are: The Odd Couple”, “Mr. Roberts”, “Tuesdays with Morrie” and “The Out-of-Towners.”

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15 Responses

  1. vj says:

    I’m with you guys on the subtitles too. I love foreign films. Many are not so white hat, black hat – you might wind up with sympathy for the villain!

    I did know about Spacey’s admiration for Lemmon. From his Oscar speech after winning for American Beauty —

    “This is the highlight of my day. I hope it is not all downhill from here. I first have to say that I would like to dedicate this to the man who inspired my performance. A man who has been my friend and my mentor, and since my father died, a little bit like my father, whose performance in “The Apartment” stands as one of the finest we’ve ever had. Jack Lemmon, wherever you are, thank you, thank you, thank you.”

    • eric steele says:

      That does sound familar. “Sometimes I think that I have forgotten more than I’ll ever know.” … Eric Steele

  2. willie k says:

    I love Turner Classic Movies!

    I’ve particularly loved the history of Hollywood and film that TCM has done not too far back, and I really, really, loved the multipart series that was created by the Northern Irishman, Mark Cousins, called, “The Story of Film, An Odyssey”.

    Cousins created his baby an a spartan budget over many years (10?) and thousands of miles travelled. A book form is also out there, but I think the film is invaluable as a resource.

    And you guys probably know that Kevin Spacey idolized Jack Lemmon and was quite personally close to him.

    See youz guys around,

    ~Bill

    • eric steele says:

      I didn’t know about Spacey, and that series sounds interesting.

      • willie k says:

        Check the wiki entry for “The Story of Film”.

        It’s possible that you might get it from your local library.

  3. eric steele says:

    I am racking and wrecking my brain trying to think of an actor with nearly the range of the venerable Jack Lemmon.
    Thanks also for listing the others to receive both awards.
    Oddly, I never realized that Blake Edwards directed The Days Of Wine And Roses, as I always associated him with comedies.

    • vj says:

      How about Dustin Hoffman, Eric? Dustin can do it all, too. Two Best Actor Oscars.

      5 minutes to Wapner. (one is from that movie)

      In the other he co-starred with Meryl Streep who has won supporting actress. So that must mean I have to a post on her because she has won supporting and many best actress oscars, right?

      I want to thank you guys for giving me the idea to do these posts. It gives me the opportunity to look up all this stuff. I like to know more about trivia questions than just the answer esp when I didn’t get one (and you have no idea how much I dislike gossip items).

      • eric steele says:

        Sort of? Although certainly well done, he was like the straight man with the funny lines. When I think of Dustin Hoffman, I don’t think funny (actually sonething about him seems sad, although I dont know why). When I think of Jack Lemmon, I smile. Actually, sadly, I’m more inclined to think of Phillip Seymour Hoffman as a candidate, but to a lesser degree.

      • vj says:

        So it’s kinda the reverse – Lemmon’s Odd Couple and Some Like It Hot overshadow his dramatic roles and Hoffman’s dramatic roles overshadow his comedic turns (Tootsie was funny stuff and he was nominated for that).

        Here’s a bonus tidbit — the year Hoffman won Best Oscar for Kramer v. Kramer, he beat out Jack Lemmon in Chinatown. (and Pacino in Justice for All, Roy Scheider in All That Jazz, and Peter Sellers in Being There

        • eric steele says:

          Ironically, Tootsie was a derivation of Some Like It Hot. You definitely have a point about the overshadowing, but when I saw The Days of Wine and Roses, I couldn’t believe what I was seeing: a deep and compelling performance.
          Even though Hoffman was great in KvK, Peter Sellers was an instant classic in Being There. Speaking of which, a film review, with which I completely concur, described Forrest Gump as Zelig meets Being There, but not as good as either.

        • vj says:

          Well, I saw Days way before I say KvK, and let me say KvK cleaned up at the Oscars!!! Streep was competing against Jane Alexander for the Best Supporting Actress — same movie. Even the kid was nominated. But I can’t remember much about it unlike Days of Wine & Roses which, like you, made a powerful impression on me.

          Those were my fan days, I guess. Back in the day, as far as movies go. I would watch anything Lemmon was in. Edward G. Yul Brynner, Tony Curtis, James Cagney… Hey, you mug!

        • eric steele says:

          I think a lot of KvK was of the social relevance (although with great acting as well). For a father to get custody then, without a deranged mother, was highly unlikely.
          Speaking of Cagney, though, how about Lemmon nominated in a movie alongside Cagney and William Powell? My mother and I still watch Life With Father to think of my dad. I think that and the original Father of the Bride are my favorite old ones.

        • vj says:

          that’s wonderful, that you and your mom have that film to remember your dad.

          Gosh, there are so many classic films I have loved, I wouldn’t know where to start to pick a favorite. I think it’s pretty sad when I hear someone say they don’t want to watch a movie just because it’s in black and white.

          Some of my memories of them aren’t just about the movie itself — When my daughter was about 6, they were running an Abbott and Costello monsters marathon. I had that on and went off to cook some food. These big guffaws were coming out of this little child — it was hilarious. Another time, I put an old-time horror movie on and she (about 5 then) scoffed at it — that’s not a monster, it’s a giant turtle. I went off and she was still watching it when I came back. She said “that’s no ordinary turtle, you know. Fire comes out of its mouth!”

        • eric steele says:

          I think that it’s too bad when people won’t watch movies with subtitles. I pointed out to my mother, who everyone but her thinks that her hearing may be going, that since she has the volume low and the closed captioning on, she might as well get the best movie possible: it doesn’t matter what language they’re speaking when you’re reading English either way.

        • willie k says:

          Yes, the beauty of the silent era actually. Films could cross national boundaries in way that they don’t so much today –except big budget Hollywood stuff which isn’t typically of very good quality, intelligence-wise.