Roseland

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OCOpen Caption screening
Additional program content
35mm
SFSensory Friendly. Details HERE
  • Friday, May 16

Showtimes updated on Tuesday evenings

Roseland

Q&A with Director James Ivory

Roseland is made up of three stories, sometimes connecting, all set in the famed New York dance palace, and all having the same theme: finding the right dance partner.

In The Waltz a widow (Teresa Wright) dreams incessantly of her departed husband, imagining his younger self in the Ballroom mirrors, still whirling her over the dance floor. Lou Jacobi, a rough diamond type, brings her to her senses and becomes her newand permanentpartner. In The Hustle three women (Geraldine Chaplin, Helen Gallagher, and Joan Copeland) are all in loveand dancingwith the same handsome young man (Christopher Walken), who manages with considerable aplomb for a time to juggle the demands of each. One must call him a gigolo, but he is a gigolo with a code of honor and some principles. The Peabody, the final story, is about the irrepressible, energetic, and ever-hopeful Rosa (Lilia Skala), a Viennese refugee who dreams of winning the Peabody contest. She enlists David Thomas as her co-contestant, but he is poor materialhe has no rhythmand in the end she has to give up, whereupon she is caught up in the arms of the dance partner of her dreams. Roseland (1977) is the first Merchant Ivory film with a contemporary American story, though not the company’s first American film.

New 2K Restoration from Cohen Film Collection.

"It is the basic proposition of Roseland... that the world is a dance hall in which everyone, even the comparatively young and the quite old, have been arrested in middle age. It's as if they'd been put under a spell by the music of the old-time swing band, whose anonymous players, their faces as expresionless as death-masks, pump and blow and beat away night-after-night-after-night, plus two afternoons a week."
Vincent Canby, The New York Times

SPECIAL EVENTS

Q&A with Director James Ivory

Q&A with Director James Ivory

Friday, May. 16 2025, 7:00

  • James Francis Ivory is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. For many years, he worked extensively with Indian-born film producer Ismail Merchant, his domestic as well as professional partner, and with screenwriter Ruth Prawer Jhabvala. All three were principals in Merchant Ivory Productions, whose films have won seven Academy Awards; Ivory himself has been nominated for four Oscars, winning one. Ivory’s directorial work includes A Room with a View (1985), Maurice, (1987), Howards End, (1992), and The Remains of the Day (1993). For his work on Call Me by Your Name (2017), which he wrote and produced, Ivory won awards for Best Adapted Screenplay from the Academy Awards, British Academy of Film and Television Arts, Writers Guild of America, the Critics’ Choice Awards, and the Scriptor Awards, among others. Upon winning the Oscar and BAFTA at the age of 89, Ivory became the oldest-ever winner in any category for both awards. Ivory is still writing and involved with several film projects.

Tickets: $20 (members), $25 (nonmembers)

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