Suit worn by Orson Welles in ‘Citizen Kane’ on auction block

Updated on Dec. 24: The suit sold for $132,000 at auction on Saturday – much higher than the pre-auction estimate. ____ A three-piece suit worn by Orson Welles in his landmark 1941 film “Citizen Kane” is up for bid. The suit is said to have been worn by Welles, who starred as Charles Foster Kane, […]

‘Citizen Kane’ actress Louise Currie dead at 100

Actress Louise Currie, who had a role in Orson Welles’ landmark film “Citizen Kane,” died on Sept. 8 at the age of 100. Uncredited in the RKO film for her portrayal of a reporter at Xanadu, Currie had been described as the last known surviving cast member of “Citizen Kane.” Sonny Bupp, who played Charles […]

Mankiewicz family continues dispute over ‘Citizen Kane’ authorship

Despite the convincing evidence uncovered by film scholar Robert Carringer 35 years ago, the battle over who wrote “Citizen Kane” is not settled in the minds of Herman Mankiewicz’s family. Mankiewicz’s grandson, Turner Classic Movies host Ben Mankiewicz, talks with his father, Frank, about the “Kane” authorship during a Father’s Day showing of the the […]

‘The Complete Citizen Kane’ documentary is now online

The seldom seen British Arena special “The Complete Citizen Kane” has made its way to YouTube.com, courtesy of online video poster Citizen Welles. The 91-minute documentary opens with a faux, but effective, “Heart of Darkness” and includes BBC interviews with Orson Welles filmed in 1960 and 1982. Also interviewed are Peter Bogdanovich and Pauline Kael. […]

Film critic Roger Ebert dead at 70

Roger Ebert, widely viewed as America’s most influential film critic, has died at the age of 70. The Pulitzer Prize winner had endured multiple health problems since 2002 when he was diagnosed with thyroid cancer. He revealed earlier this week that the cancer had returned. Ebert provided an audio commentary for the “Citizen Kane” Criterion […]

rosebud

Rosebud meaning in ‘Citizen Kane’ as given by Orson Welles

“What does ‘Rosebud’ mean in ‘Citizen Kane’?” It is perhaps the question most often fielded by Wellesnet. The most detailed answer given by Orson Welles was contained in a press statement released by RKO Radio Pictures prior the film’s release in May 1941.

Orson Welles as a special guest on The David Frost Show, May 12, 1970

By LAWRENCE FRENCH Orson Welles appearance on The David Frost Show recorded on May 12, 1970 came before most of the numerous biographies about Welles had been published, providing us with Welles’ own point of view on some very interesting aspects of his life and work. This interview also took place in the midst of […]

CITIZEN KANE 70th Anniversary Blu Ray arriving on September 13

Warner Bros. has released the official press release for their 70th Anniversary edition of  Citizen Kane, due out on September 13, 2011. It will come in three editions:   a  DVD 3-disc set, priced at $49.99;  a Blu ray 3-disc set priced at $64.99, and the Amazon exclusive edition which will include a fourth disc […]

Andrew Sarris vs. Pauline Kael on “Raising Kane”

I had never read Andrew Sarris’s reply to Pauline Kael’s infamous article “Raising Kane,” that was first published in The New Yorker in 1971.  So it was a very pleasant surprise to see it turn up in the archive section of  The Village Voice online.  Mr. Sarris makes many salient points about the numerous flaws […]

Comments from a Orson Welles Cineaste in New Zealand

While Orson Welles spent time all over the world, and in at least five of the seven continents, I’m not quite sure if he ever made it to New Zealand or Australia. However, I find it rather amazing that today, due to the internet, we can get input from people down under, just as easily […]

John Houseman on “What happened to Orson Welles?”

Coming across the Autumn, 1962 issue of Sight & Sound at a flea market recently, I was struck by a John Houseman interview, who of all people, defends Orson Welles from that absurd question that seems to have plagued him ever since the fiasco of It’s All True: “What went wrong?” In 1962, Houseman had […]

Ken Russell on Pauline Kael and “The Citizen Kane Book”

Given the recent discussion surrounding the New Yorker magazine’s attacks against Orson Welles, whether in 1945, or most famously in 1971, by Pauline Kael, it’s somewhat bizarre that today I should stumble across the May, 1972 issue of Films and Filming, right outside my house, at the Alamo Square flea market where I saw an […]

Happy Birthday GEORGE ORSON WELLES

To celebrate the 93rd birthday of ORSON WELLES – May 6, 1915 – here are some fond memories from members of the cast and crew of CITIZEN KANE. I’m sure they all would be wishing Orson a very happy birthday today… PAUL STEWART – Raymond, the butler The telephone rang and I heard the unmistakable […]

Erich von Stroheim on Orson Welles’ CITIZEN KANE

Fred Camper, who writes on movies for The Chicago Reader, has posted a fascinating article by Erich von Stroheim on Citizen Kane at his website.  Although it appeared in an obsure magazine called “Decision, a review of free culture” it seems amazing to me it has apparently never been reprinted or, as far as I know, even been […]

ORSON WELLES explains the meaning of Rosebud in CITIZEN KANE

In revisiting Frank Brady’s excellent biography, CITIZEN WELLES,  I came across this statement that Welles issued to the press in January, 1941, to basically counter the growing impression that Citizen Kane was based on a certain well known newspaper publisher.  Given Welles own reluctance to talk about Citizen Kane in any great detail in his later years, it seems […]