Honeysuckle Rose
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Jerry Schatzberg
Willie Nelson
Dyan Cannon
Amy Irving
Ray D Hollingsworth
Mary Jane Valle
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Country singer and songwriter Buck Bonham has a solid following in his home state of Texas and in the West, but has not had a hit that would give him national fame. As he and his band are on the road, his wife and son miss him, and Buck is begining to wonder if he should continue with his musical career or quit. Just as Buck finds himself at this crossroad, his guitarist and good friend Garland announces his retirement, and his daughter Lily replaces him in the band. Lily, who has had a crush on Buck since she was a little girl, is now a lovely woman, and an additional consideration for Buck in choosing home or career.
Director
Jerry Schatzberg
Cast
Willie Nelson
Dyan Cannon
Amy Irving
Ray D Hollingsworth
Mary Jane Valle
J Frank Stewart
Bill Mounce
Randy Arlyn Fletcher
Cara Kanak
John Meadows
Randy Locke
Guy Houston Garrett
Jeannie Seely
Dick Gimble
Grady Martin
Emmylou Harris
Johnny Gimble
Bernadette Whitehead
Slim Pickens
Robert Gotschall
Kenny Frazier
Gene Rader
Lane Smith
Joey Floyd
Charles Levin
Centa Boyd
Lu Belle Camp
Bobby Nelson
Kenneth Threadgill
Sam Allred
Augie Myers
Maurice Anderson
Emilio Gonzales
Nelson Fowler
Rex Ludwick
T Snake
Kenneth Eric Hamilton
Cody Hubach
Jackie Ezzell
Pepe Serna
Diana Scarwid
Bee Spears
Ray Liberto
Paul English
Bob Baty
Hank Cochran
Chris Ethridge
Mickey Rooney Jr.
Jody Payne
Priscilla Pointer
Harvey Christiansen
Hackberry Johnson
Mickey Raphael
Crew
Sam Allred
Aram Avakian
Richard Baskin
John Binder
Stan Bochner
Hank Briere
Lou Cerborino
Lee Clayton
Hank Cochran
Jim Coe
Dianne Crittenden
Rodney Crowell
Glenn Cunningham
Bob Elkins
Carolyn Ferguson
Tom Fleischman
Peter C Frank
Joseph Gannon
Gino Garlanda
Norman Gay
Johnny Gible
Johnny Gimble
Jeff Haley
Lee Harman
Bradley Hartman
Gustaf Holander
Michael Jacobi
Chuck Joyce
Gary Karr
Neil L Kaufman
Liz Keigley
Kris Kristofferson
Marc Laub
Dan Lieberstein
Leo Lotito
Evan Lottman
Robert Q. Lovett
Jim Lucas
Nick Marck
David Mcgiffert
Robby Muller
Al Nahmias
Willie Nelson
Willie Nelson
Otto Paolini
Julie Paul
Tim Phelps
Sydney Pollack
Richard Portman
Kaye Pownall
Karen Rae
Arthur Rochester
Mickey Rooney Jr.
Denine Rowan
Leon Russell
Wally Samson
Maurice Schell
Joel Schiller
John Bush Shinn
Gail Showalter
Nicholas C Smith
Carol Sobieski
Gosta Steven
Gene Taft
Kenneth Threadgill
Richard Grant Valesko
William D Wittliff
Jeffrey Wolf
Jo Ynocencio
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Film Details
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Best Song
Articles
Honeysuckle Rose -
That picture's director, Sydney Pollack, obviously saw something special in the diminutive 46-year-old. He decided to build a movie he was producing around Nelson's persona and music, and cast him as the lead--a romantic lead, no less. In Honeysuckle Rose, Nelson plays a hard-living country star who is frequently "On the Road Again" (the debut for his most iconic song) much to the consternation of his loyal, long-suffering wife (Dyan Cannon). After one of his band members quits, Buck Bonham (Nelson) hires the musician's pretty young daughter (Amy Irving), and romantic complications ensue.
In an even more unlikely twist, the film is loosely based on a romantic melodrama set in the world of classical music, Intermezzo: a Love Story (1939), in which married concert violinist Leslie Howard has an illicit affair on tour with pianist Ingrid Bergman (her Hollywood debut in a remake of her 1936 Swedish hit). That would explain why the down-home, all-American Nelson picture carries story credits for Gustaf Molander and Gosta Stevens.
The film was directed not by Pollack but by Jerry Schatzberg, who had just directed Meryl Streep and Alan Alda to acclaimed performances in The Seduction of Joe Tynan (1979). Although Honeysuckle Rose did fine at the box office, Schatzberg was not so lucky critically with this one bringing Irving an unfortunate Golden Raspberry (aka Razzie) Award for Worst Supporting Actress. The picture itself did not receive any other "worst" nominations; bad musicals were already well represented that year by Can't Stop the Music and Xanadu.
Which is not to say this picture is "bad." In fact, it has been dubbed the Purple Rain of country music. While acknowledging a certain "edge of disappointment" coming off the movie, critic Roger Ebert called it "one of the cheeriest, brightest looking movies I've ever seen" and praised Schatzberg for using "an easy-going documentary style to show us life on the band bus, at a family reunion and backstage at big concerts."
Nelson fared well with the soundtrack, performing more than a dozen of his self-composed songs. "On the Road Again" was his sixth #1 hit as a solo performer and his ninth #1 country hit overall. It was also an Academy Award Best Song nominee and winner of the Grammy for Best Country Song. In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked it #471 on its list of the 500 greatest songs of all time, and in 2011 it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.
The 1928 Fats Waller jazz classic that gives the film its title, however, was not included in the picture. "Honeysuckle Rose" here is simply the name of Nelson's tour bus. Irving and Cannon did their own singing. Emmylou Harris appears as herself, singing "Angel Eyes" and "So You Think You're a Cowboy" with Nelson.
Director: Jerry Schatzberg
Producer: Sydney Pollack
Screenplay: John Binder, Carol Sobieski, William D. Wittliff; story by Gustaf Molander and Gosta Stevens
Cinematography: Robby Müller
Editing: Aram Avakian, Norman Gay, Marc Laub, Evan A. Lottman
Production Design: Joel Schiller
Music: Richard Baskin, Willie Nelson
Cast: Willie Nelson (Buck Bonham), Dyan Cannon (Viv Bonham), Amy Irving (Lily Ramsey), Slim Pickens (Garland Ramsey), Joey Floyd (Jamie Bonham)
By Rob Nixon
Honeysuckle Rose -
Lane Smith (1936-2005)
Born in Memphis, Tennessee on April 29, 1936, Smith had a desire to act from a very young age. After a brief stint in the Army, he moved to New York to study at the Actors Studio and made his debut on off-Broadway debut in 1959. For the next 20 years, Smith was a staple of the New York stage before sinking his teeth into television: Kojak, The Rockford Files, Dallas; and small parts in big films: Rooster Cogburn (1975), Network (1976).
In 1978, he moved to Los Angeles to focus on better film roles, and his toothy grin and southern drawl found him a niche in backwoods dramas: Resurrection (1980), Honeysuckle Rose (1980); and a prominent role as the feisty Mayor in the dated Cold War political yarn Red Dawn (1984).
Smith returned to New York in 1984 and scored a hit on Broadway when he received a starring role in David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross and earned a drama desk award in the process. His breakthrough role for many critics and colleagues was his powerful turn as Richard Nixon in The Final Days (1989); a docudrama based on the book by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. He earned a Golden Globe nomination for his spot-on portrayal of the fallen President, and his career picked up from there as parts in prominent Hollywood films came his way: Air America (1990), My Cousin Vinny, The Mighty Ducks (both 1992), and the Pauly Shore comedy Son in Law (1993).
For all his dependable performances over the years, Smith wasn't a familiar presence to millions of viewers until he landed the plump role of Perry White, the editor of the Daily Planet in Superman: Lois and Clark which co-starred Dean Cain and Teri Hatcher (1993-1997). After that run, he gave a scorching performance as Reverend Jeremiah Brown in the teleplay Inherit the Wind (1999); and he appeared last in the miniseries Out of Order (2003). He is survived by his wife Debbie; and son, Rob.
by Michael T. Toole
Lane Smith (1936-2005)
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Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States July 1980
Released in United States Summer July 1, 1980
Released in United States July 1980
Released in United States Summer July 1, 1980