Hammond On Andy Griffith: Not Just Another ‘Face In The Crowd’

UPDATED: Andy Griffith gave the greatest performance of his career the first time he ever stepped in front of a film camera. In fact his portrayal of country bumpkin-turned rabidly ambitious and menacing media force in Elia Kazan’s 1957 masterpiece A Face In The Crowd is not only one of the great screen performances of that decade, but just about any other decade too. It’s almost criminal more people have not seen this film, a flop in its time but a hugely influential movie in the intervening years. Paddy Chayefsky’s brilliant Oscar-winning satire Network is often cited as being way ahead of its time in predicting the future power of the media. If that’s the case then A Face In The Crowd, which represented the re-teaming of Kazan and his On The Waterfront screenwriter Budd Schulberg, was about 20 years ahead of Network.

Related: R.I.P. Andy Griffith

Griffith, who died today at the age of 86, was simply brilliant playing this country nobody who in his ability to relate to the regular folks turns into a huge media star, but a fake one with an ice-cold inner being who uses his newfound celebrity status as an unbridled grab for power behind the mike. “The whole country’s just like my flock of sheep….I’m not just an entertainer. I’m an influence, a wielder of opinion, a force…a force!,”  said Lonsome Rhoades. “Rednecks, crackers, hillbillies, hausfraus, shut-ins, pea pickers – everybody that’s got to jump when somebody else blows the whistle…they’re mine, I own them. They think like I do. Only they’re more stupid than I am so I gotta think for ‘em…you just wait and see. I’m gonna be the power behind the President!”

Related: EXCLUSIVE: Ron Howard On Andy Griffith

When I saw the sad news on Deadline that TV icon Andy Griffith had passed away this morning I didn’t first think of one of the great TV dads ever, Sheriff Andy Taylor of Mayberry. I didn’t think right away of the crafty southern lawyer Matlock. I didn’t even think of Private Will Stockdale , the signature folksy Broadway role for which he won a Tony nomination  in 1955 (he won another Tony nom in 1959 for the musical Destry Rides Again), a character he re-created in the 1958 film version of No Time For Sergeants. That one was a smash for Warner Bros and Griffith that led to his iconic TV series success. No,  I thought immediately of A Face In The Crowd,  the box office flop he did for Warners the year before, the one no one saw at the time and the one that incredibly did not receive a single Academy Award nomination that year.

Forget the fact that lesser films, including the soapy Peyton Place, swept up multiple major nods in 1957 from the Academy, it’s remarkable 55 years after its debut in late May of ’57 that at the very least Griffith’s towering debut did not somehow merit Best Actor Oscar recognition. Look at this biting all-knowing portrayal now and you realize he should have won. He wasn’t even nominated, an egregious oversight that ranks with the worst omissions in Academy history. I consider this performance and Kazan’s film one of the ten best I have ever seen. Kazan said in his book, “Kazan On Directing” that he and Schulberg conceived the movie “as a warning to the American people”. Unfortunately not many of them saw it including, apparently, members of the Motion Picture Academy.

Nominees for Best Actor that year were Marlon Brando playing not nearly as memorable a southerner in Sayonara, Anthony Franciosa (ironically a co-star in Face In The Crowd) in the drug addiction drama A Hatful Of Rain, Charles Laughton in Witness For The Prosecution, Anthony Quinn in the forgotten Wild Is The Wind and a deserving winner Alec Guiness in The Bridge On The River Kwai, but even that great performance in the year’s winning Best Picture doesn’t seem as powerful to me today as Griffith’s. Certainly none of them have the same relevance half a century later.

Perhaps the Academy just felt Kazan and Schulberg had gotten enough Oscar glory three years earlier when On The Waterfront swept the awards but it seems a shame Griffith wasn’t deservedly heralded, not even as Most Promising Male Newcomer at the Golden Globes. James Garner, John Saxon and John Wayne’s son Patrick got that honor over Griffith! The fact is, unlike the Tonys, Andy never had much luck on the Hollywood awards circuit. Incredibly he had only one Emmy nomination over the course of his career and that was as a supporting actor in the 1981 NBC mini-series Murder In Texas (a category being eliminated next year by the way). There was nothing for his work on The Andy Griffith Show or Matlock or any other number of fine performances in television over the years.

Griffith suffered the awards curse of making it all look too easy, but he didn’t seem to mind.  I do. When you consider there are hairdressers in town whose shelves are lined with Emmy statuettes, it just seems unfair that the medium’s true Icons like Griffith or Jackie Gleason never even had one. Thankfully the Academy has at least included them in their Hall of Fame. But as far as I can tell Griffith’s most significant competitive awards win from the television industry was the People’s Choice Award he got in 1987 as Favorite Male Performer in a New TV Program for Matlock and the “Single Dad Of The Year” award he got from TV Land in 2003 for their Andy Griffith Show reruns.

In terms of movies that initial blastoff in A Face In The Crowd turned out to be his first and only real shot for Oscar immortality. After he ended the Griffith show he did try to reignite his starring film career by playing  a small town Reverend, the same kind of folksy character as Andy Taylor in Universal’s forgettable 1969 family comedy, Angel In My Pocket. Over the years he would turn up in an interesting film here and there like the underrated Jeff Bridges starrer, Hearts Of The West (1975),  and there was even a little mild Oscar buzz for his amusing role as Old Joe, a diner’s wise customer in 2007′s  Waitress, but it wasn’t to be.

No, there was never going to be another A Face In The Crowd for Andy Griffith. Our loss. So again, when I heard the news of his passing I thought of this movie which still has so much to say about the way we were and the way we are. It also has a lot to say about the raw, underappreciated talent of Andy Griffith. If his death does anything it would be great to put the focus on this classic movie (it will air as part of a TCM tribute July 18) and its star, perhaps giving new life and appreciation to both for new (and old) generations to come.

That might be greater than any award Hollywood could dream up for a star who was anything but just another face in the crowd.

Comments (31)

  • “A Face In The Crowd” is with out a doubt a masterpiece that was way a head of its time. A movie that is still being talked about to this day for predicting how our media is run today. God Bless Andy Griffith for giving probably the most unappreciated powerful acting performance ever on film.

    Andy should get a posthumous Oscar for that performance, he clearly deserves it in spades.

    Comment by Fred — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 3:31pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • Nicely put. There are those handful of prophetic dramas and comedies that most people have forgotten or overlooked. “A Face In The Crowd” blew me away when I stumbled on it, one late night, many years ago, and it continues to do so today. Along with the aforementioned ‘Network’ and the other masterpiece of that period, ‘Sweet Smell of Success’, our future, at least in regards to our media, was proffered. To bad nobody took heed. Fare thee well Lonsome…

    Comment by Jeff Wilber — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 3:37pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • an awful performance, horribly over the top, one can only imagine what a great actor like brando or tracy or even lancaster would have done with the role…he was a d list actor with no talent , and anyone who rents that movie is wasting their precious time on this earth.

    Comment by big mac — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 4:07pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Hopefully people will be more respectful when you die than you have been today. No matter your opinion, today is probably not the day and this is probably not the forum for such negativity. Most of us can only hope to have the impact that Andy Griffith had on America during his wonderful career.

      Comment by Anonymous — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 10:11pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • A Face in the Crowd IS an excellent film. Remember that Griffith portrayed a megalomaniac. I liked Brando, but as far as over-the-top acting is concerned, I need only to mention The Fugitive Kind. Awful. And I will not mention Lancaster in The Rose Tattoo. Sometimes I think that people are so fond of toned-down acting (which very often does not elicit any emotion whatsoever in the public) because their first encounter with ‘moving pictures’ is by means of video-games. I want to see the actor show fear, love, irritation, tenderness, lust, pain, wrath, pensiveness. After all, he is supposed to be a vector of emotions.

      Comment by Lou — Wednesday July 4, 2012 @ 5:33am PDT  Reply to this post
    • Of course his performance was over-the-top. His character was over-the-top. Lonesome Rhoades was megalomaniac and was portrayed perfectly.

      I don’t know who won the Best Actor Oscar that year, but I know it should have been Andy Griffith.

      Comment by Lord Eugene Pepper-Hickory — Wednesday July 4, 2012 @ 3:49pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • You are entitled to your opinion although your timing is obnoxious. Nevertheless – I just rented “A Face in the Crowd” and I thought it was amazing. You criticize Andy for being “over the top” and then suggest Burt Lancaster? Ironic. Spencer? Brando? (Brando – really?!) Umm, I guess another actor could have played Lonesome Rhodes, but Andy WAS Lonesome Rhodes. I can’t believe he wasn’t nominated for his performance because he certainly deserved it. (Maybe he did such a great job as Sheriff Taylor that people like you have trouble seeing him play a man as disturbing as Lonesome?)
      RIP Andy…

      Comment by @bigmac — Thursday July 5, 2012 @ 8:05am PDT  Reply to this post
  • The best write up on Mr. Griffith I’ve read today and when I heard that he passed away my first thoughts were about his performances in A Face in the Crowd and the TV movie Murder in Texas.

    Comment by Eileen — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 4:50pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • God Bless Andy Griffith he is a Icon and father figure to a lot of us. He will be miss. Prayers to his family.

    Comment by Theresa Eran — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 4:50pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • He was not nominated for Best Actor??
    The Academy and Foreign Press members should be ashamed!

    Comment by Lucifer — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 5:09pm PDT  Reply to this post
    • Unmentioned here is the whole Kazan HUAC testimony around that time, which surely caused a lot of ill will come awards season.

      Comment by Lumiere — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 8:56pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • A drama major in college when “Face In the Crowd” was released I remember being blown away by the film and it was the first thing to pop into my mind when I read of Mr. Griffith’s passing. Don’t know if it ever made it to DVD but I’m now gonna hunt for it as I am eager to see it again. RIP Andy Griffith and thank you for your largely unheralded body of work.

    Comment by EK — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 5:35pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • That was a beautifully written, and insightful, appreciation.

    Comment by Anonymousgirlfriday — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 5:43pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • The true Masters of the actors art never seem as if they are “acting”. Mr. Griffith was one of the greats, one of the few true Icons.

    Comment by mike — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 5:55pm PDT  Reply to this post
  • I saw it as a young teen and never bought into it or him for a minute. May he rest in peace.

    Comment by jett — Tuesday July 3, 2012 @ 7:37pm PDT  Reply to this post
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