Dwight
D. Eisenhower Libraryhttp://eisenhower.archives.gov
NEWS RELEASE Colleen Cearley
(785) 263-6700
The
Paul H. Royer Film Series
All films begin at
The annual Paul H.
Royer Film Series is presented annually on the first three Thursdays of
March. This year’s selections consist of
three American films that either received or were nominated for Academy Awards
fifty years ago. The decade of the 1950s
will be remembered for post-war affluence; the baby boom; television; new
leisure time activities; civil rights; along with conformity. It was also a time when some of
Starring Marlon
Brando, Lee J. Cobb, and Eva Marie Saint, 1954, black and white, 108
minutes. This 1954 film won an
Academy Award for Best Film, as well as Marlon Brando as Best Actor. Ex-fighter Terry Malloy (Brando) could have
been a contender, but now toils for boss John Friendly (Lee J. Cobb) on the
gang-ridden waterfront. Terry is
guilt-stricken, however, when he lures a rebellious worker to his death. It takes the love of Edie Doyle (Eva Marie
Saint, winner of the 1954 Academy Award for Best Actress) to show Terry how low
he has fallen. Directed by Elia Kazan,
this movie is one of the most acclaimed of all films.
Starring Humphrey
Bogart, Audrey Hepburn, and William Holden, 1954, black and white, 112
minutes. Billy Wilder directs this 1954
film starring some of
Starring Spencer
Tracy, Robert Wagner, Richard Widmark, and Katy Jurardo, 1954, color, 96
minutes. Katy Jurado received a 1954
Academy Award nomination for best supporting actress in this memorable
western. The domineering cattle baron
Mat Devereaux (Tracy) rules his vast empire with a ruthless hand. His greatest love is for his Indian wife and
their son, Joe (Robert Wagner), but his three sons from a previous marriage
deeply resent them. Joe agrees to go to
jail for a crime his father commits and returns three years later to a
different world.
ALL MOVIES ARE FREE
SODA AND POPCORN SERVED
Please RSVP by calling: The Eisenhower Center at (785) 263-6700 or 1-877-RING IKE