Greenwich Village Story

Greenwich Village Story
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJack O'Connell
Written byJack O'Connell
Produced by
  • William Montgomery
  • Jack O'Connell
Starring
CinematographyBaird Bryant
Edited by
  • Jean Begley
  • Carl Lerner
Music byHy Gubernick
Production
company
Lion International
Distributed byShawn International
Release date
  • July 11, 1963 (1963-07-11)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Greenwich Village Story (also known as Birthplace of the Hootenanny, They Love as They Please and Greenwich Village) is a 1963 American feature film written and directed and written by Jack O'Connell and starring Robert Hogan.[1]

Plot

In the Manhattan section of Greenwich Village, Genie, a talented ballet dancer, is pregnant with the child of her underachieving boyfriend Brian, an aspiring novelist. Genie forgoes a professional dancing job to stay with Brian in the apartment that they share. When Brian's novel is rejected by a publisher upon whose patronage he was depending, he spends several days with his ex-girlfriend Anne, a society woman several years older than he who is often accompanied by a young advertising copywriter named George.

Not aware that Genie is pregnant, Brian has made their marriage conditional upon his success as a writer. Genie fears that Brian, who is emotionally immature, will reject her when he learns of her pregnancy. Brian is informally mentored in the ways of the world by the cynical and experienced bohemian Norman and is tempted into the world of Madison Avenue by George, with whom he has developed a friendship.

While away in the Berkshires with Anne, whose advances he gently shuns, Brian, still unaware of Genie's pregnancy, realizes that he loves and wants to marry Genie. He hurriedly returns to Greenwich Village, but Genie is difficult to trace.[2]

Cast

  • Robert Hogan as Brian
  • Melinda Plank as Genie
  • Tani Seitz as Anne
  • James Frawley as Norman
  • Sunja Svendsen as Claudine
  • James Cresson as George
  • Aaron Banks as Franko
  • John G. Avildsen as Alvie
  • John Brent as Poet
  • Charles Gossett as Judge

Production

The film was shot on location in Greenwich Village and in the Berkshires, including a nude swimming scene filmed at Lake Garfield, Massachusetts. According to director Jack O'Connell, the loud sounds of motorboat engines in the sequence were replaced in the final soundtrack by prerecorded crickets.

O'Connell had earlier worked as second assistant director for Michelangelo Antonioni's L'Avventura (1960), while cinematographer Baird Bryant later worked as an uncredited assistant to László Kovács for Easy Rider (1969) and shot that film's LSD trip sequence in a New Orleans cemetery.

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic A. H. Weiler wrote "Life, Mr. O'Connell apparently has learned, is real and earnest and happy Hollywood endings occur only on the West Coast. His leads and the supporting players, most of whom have had experience in the theater and television, behave, for the most part, naturally and unaffectedly. There are many evidences of amateurism, but these may be forgiven for the obvious sincerity they contribute to their assignments."[3]

Kine Weekly wrote: "While the picture has points to recommend it, the artistic validity is much lessened by the fact that the author-producer-director has grafted an essentially melodramatic story onto real backgrounds of Greenwich Village, containing real people going about their normally unusual daily rounds."[4]

Boxoffice wrote: "This is a first-rate example of realistic, strikingly original independent filmmaking. ... O'Connell, who gained film experience with Federico Fellini and Michelangelo Antonioni in Italy, has achieved some of these masters' off-beat authenticity and appeal. ... His use of actual Village locations, including an opening during a Washington Square folk-sing and the crowded beatnik bars and hangouts, is superb and the photography by Baird Bryant is striking."[5]

References

  1. ^ "Greenwich Village Story". American Film Institute Catalog. Retrieved February 24, 2026.
  2. ^ "Greenwich Village Story". afi.com. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  3. ^ Weiler, A. H. (July 12, 1963). "The Screen: Dedicated Artist in Greenwich Village". The New York Times. p. 14.
  4. ^ "Greenwich Village Story". Kine Weekly. 594 (3088): 24. December 10, 1966. ProQuest 2600857459.
  5. ^ "Greenwich Village Story". Boxoffice. 83 (14): a11, a12. July 29, 1963. ProQuest 1670963543.