During the 1950s, with the nation enjoying a new prosperity and television providing fierce competition, the reign of the old moguls began a long decline. The movies needed new ideas that went beyond 3-D, widescreen processes and stereophonic sound. Dore Schary became the new production head at MGM, and by 1951 L. B. Mayer was forced out of his own company. At Warner Bros., a hot new director named Elia Kazan brought earthy realism to the screen with such films as A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) and On the Waterfront (1954). An ominous atmosphere was created by the anti-Communist blacklist, poisoning a tough business where reputation was everything. In 1958 Stanley Kramer produced and directed The Defiant Ones, which gave Sidney Poitier above the-title billing and created the first African-American superstar.
Christopher Plummer
Narrator
Leonard Maltin
Self
Ricky Jay
Self
Carla Laemmle
Self
Daniel Selznick
Self
Gregory Orr
Self
Marc Wanamaker
Self
Bob Balaban
Self
Samuel Goldwyn Jr.
Self
Tony Maietta
Self
Molly Haskell
Self
Donald Bogle
Self
Peter Bogdanovich
Self
Richard D. Zanuck
Self
Robert Osborne
Self
Gore Vidal
Self
William Wellman Jr.
Self
Andrew Bergman
Self
Marsha Hunt
Self
Sidney Lumet
Self
Paul Mazursky
Self
Roger Corman
Self
Mark Harris
Self
Walter Mirisch
Self
David Brown
Self
Peter Guber
Self
Robert Benton
Self
Buck Henry
Self
John Sayles
Self