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Doctor Zhivago was released in the US on 22 December 1965.
Producer Carlo Ponti wanted to make a film of Boris Pasternak's 1957 novel as a vehicle for Ponti's wife, Sophia Loren. He approached David Lean (who had just come off the success of 1962's Lawrence of Arabia) about directing and Lean accepted and offered the title role to Peter O'Toole, who declined. Omar Sharif had been offered the role of Pasha, but when other actors (including Michael Caine and Paul Newman) declined the role of Zhivago, Sharif was offered the role. Lean convinced Ponti that Loren was not right for the role of Lara and offered the part to a number of people before being recommended Julie Christie by Jack Cardiff (who had just directed her in Young Cassidy).
Nicolas Roeg was hired as director of photography, but after disagreements with Lean, he was replaced by Freddie Young.
The film was released to mixed reviews, with most critics finding that it missed the beauty and point of the novel. "Boris Pasternak's sprawling, complex, elusive novel is held together by its unity of style, by the driving force of its narrative, by the passionate voice of a poet who weaves a mass of diverse characters into a single tapestry. And this is precisely what David Lean's film lacks. Somewhere in the two years of the film's making the spirit of the novel has been lost," wrote Monthly Film Bulletin.
Doctor Zhivago was a huge box office hit, the 2nd highest-grossing film of 1965 (behind The Sound of Music), and the 9th highest-grossing film in the world (adjusted for inflation), and the 8th highest-grossing film in US film history. It was nominated for 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actor (Tom Courtenay), Best Editing (Norman Savage), and Best Sound. It received 5 Oscars, including Robert Bolt for Best Adapted Screenplay, Freddie Young for Best Cinematography - Color, and Maurice Jarre for Best Score.
Chapuius: Et quamdiu illam linguam sanctissimam in his litoribus audiemus?
Mora: Non est sancta, excellensis: modo antiqua.
Live Review: TV legends bring Robert Bolt's A Man For All Seasons to York
Martin Shaw and Gary Wilmot may seem like a highly unlikely pairing, but the TV stars put bums on seats at York’s Grand Opera House for a fine rendition of A Man For All Seasons on Tuesday evening. Continue reading Live Review: TV legends bring Robert Bolt’s A Man For All Seasons to York

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Every time I rewatch Lawrence of Arabia my biggest takeaway is the same: Daud and Farraj deserved better. Those poor sweet babies just wanted to help. Their story is one of the most heartbreaking in film history, period, and nobody ever talks about them enough.
Laurence Olivier-Sarah Miles "Lady Caroline Lamb" 1972, de Robert Bolt.
ROGER CLARK as King Henry VIII in:
A Man For All Seasons • By Robert Bolt • Directed by Paul Mullins
Also starring:
James McMenamin as Thomas Cromwell (bottom left)
Thomas Michael Hammond as Sir Thomas More and Mary Stewart as Alice More (bottom center)
Raphael Nash Thompson as Cardinal Woolsey (bottom right)
A Man For All Seasons was performed at The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey from October 18th to November 5th, 2023.