Hank Williams: The Show He Never Gave

Hank Williams: The Show He Never Gave
Directed by David Acomba
Produced by Helga Stephenson, Henk Van Der Kolk, William T. Marshall
Written by Maynard Collins
Starring Sneezy Waters, Dixie Seatle, Sean McCann, Jackie Washington
Music by

Hank Williams, Sneezy Waters

Keith Glass - Guitar
Joel Zifkin - Violin
David Harvey - Bass
Ron Dann - Steel Guitar
Peter Beaudoin - Drums
Release dates
December 31, 1980
Running time
86 minutes
Country Canada
Language English
Budget CAD$578,000

Hank Williams: The Show He Never Gave (1980) is a color movie from Canada that runs for 86 minutes. It was released by Simcom Limited and made by the Film Consortium Of Canada.

The movie stars Sneezy Waters as Hank Williams Sr. It also stars Dixie Seatle, Sean McCann, Jackie Washington, Joel Zifkin, and Sean Hewitt.

The film was produced by Henk Van Der Kolk and William T. Marshall. Helga Stephenson was the executive producer. It was directed by David Acomba. Maynard Collins wrote it, and it was based on his stage play. The budget was $CAD578,000.

The movie was nominated for "The Tex Ritter Award" at The Country Music 1983 Awards Show. It lost to Tender Mercies. It played at the Toronto Film Festival, the London Film Festival and at FILMEX in Los Angeles, California.

Sneezy Waters sings 23 Hank Williams songs. "Tennessee Waltz", sung by Patti Page, is heard on a jukebox.

Unable to secure music rights for a theatrical release, the movie was only shown on television. The movie was filmed between December 8, 1980 - December 13, 1980. On the night of the first day of filming, the crew learned that John Lennon had been assassinated. This news gave the movie a very real sense of melancholy.

Waters changed some of the lyrics of "Too Many Parties", making it about the brother of a lawyer instead of a wayward woman. He added new lyrics to "Men With Broken Hearts" ("And even sleep brings no relief to these men who curse their births/they have no dreams of happiness left in heaven or on earth/for how can men have faith in God when faith in fellow man departs") and rearranged other lyrics.

This movie is available on two DVDs, from White Star and Echo Bridge. Neither contain any extras. Both are full-screen.

Plot

The movie is set on December 31, 1952, and has the country western singer Hank Williams being driven to a concert in Ohio. As he sits in the back seat of the car, he imagines a show he wishes he was giving. In this fantasy show, set in a bar, Williams sings many songs and talks about his personal life and religious philosophies. The movie cuts back and forth from the fictional show to the car. At the end, Williams sings the song "Men With Broken Hearts" to the crowd. He asks them to pray for him and wishes them a happy new year, then he walks out of the bar as bells toll. Back in the car, the real Williams dies. He was only 29 years old. On EW.COM, "Entertainment Weekly" gave the movie a "B+" when it was reviewed on November 27, 1992. Ken Tucker wrote that the film "still fascinates because it taps into the deep melancholy power of its subject" and noted "dark, eerie and atmospheric, this 'Show' is a heartfelt work".

Reception

Nathan Southern, in The New York Times, wrote that the movie "enables the audience to see directly into the soul of this self-destructive and emotionally beleaguered young man".[1]

References

  1. Hank Williams: The Show He Never Gave (1981) The New York Times. Retrieved July 7, 2014

Hank Williams: The Show He Never Gave at the Internet Movie Database

Originally produced in Canada by "an artist and a beekeeper" who were friends of Sneezy Waters, the live theatre show was a spectacular hit in Canada where it played in the kind of questionable bars Hank Williams might have played. The show first opened in Ottawa, Collins' and Waters' home town, in 1977. Its debut in Toronto that year sparked rave reviews and front pay superlatives. The following year the show crossed Canada and then traveled to many places in the United States before being picked up as a movie.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.