In the summer of 1939, Europe was months away from war and England was desperate for American support. Franklin Roosevelt invited the King and Queen to visit the US and to spend the weekend at his country house in upstate New York. That weekend, the fate of Europe was decided over a picnic — FDR actually served King George VI a hot dog.
The new movie Hyde Park on Hudson captures that pivotal weekend, and presents FDR as a more complicated character than we remember now. The story is told is from the perspective of Daisy Suckley, a distant relative, close friend, and, Nelson believes, lover of the president. “What interests me as a writer,” screenwriter Richard Nelson tells Kurt Andersen, “both in the theater and now film, is to show people in their complexity — and leaders in their complexity, and their ambiguities, and their confusions, and how they address that within the events of their lives. I think the more we take our leaders and put them on pedestals, the more we take the onus of responsibility off our own shoulders.”
The film’s director, Roger Michell, had only one actor in mind for the role of FDR: Bill Murray, whose humor gives the president a particularly sardonic edge. Nelson recalls seeing Murray as the aging movie star moored in Tokyo in Lost in Translation. “There’s such a sense of life behind those eyes, and also a sense of loss and loneliness. And yet a kind of way of kidding along, keeping a room easy — all these things that we thought were at the center of our Franklin Roosevelt.”
If You Ever Change Your Mind (Green-Siegler-Watts)
Artist: Tommy Dorsey (trombone) et son orchestreAlbum: Tommy Dorsey Et Son Orchestre 1939





Leave a Comment
Register for your own account so you can vote on comments, save your favorites, and more. Learn more.
Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. We reserve the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting. By leaving a comment, you agree to New York Public Radio's Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use.