Executive King Suite Mgm Pictures

Executive King Suite Mgm Pictures Average ratng: 7,8/10 2433 votes

MGM was founded in 1924 when the entertainment entrepreneur Marcus Loew gained control of Metro Pictures, Goldwyn Pictures, and Louis B. page neededIn 1971, it was announced that MGM was to merge with 20th Century Fox, but the plan never came to fruition. MGM Names New Senior Management Team. The beautifully appointed 1,628 sq ft. Two bedroom Tower Suite offers sweeping views of the landscape via floor to ceiling windows. The luxurious interiors feature all the amenities of suite living in a variety of color schemes. Double doors separate the large living and dining area from the bedrooms.

With more than 5,000 guest rooms and 170,000 square feet of gaming space, the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada, is the third largest hotel in the world and the eighth largest casino. In addition to typical guest rooms, it has an assortment of suites to accommodate families, high rollers or just those who want a little extra room while they take in all the city has to offer.

Executive Suites

With king or queen beds, the Executive suites offer 675 square feet of living space. The L-shaped open floor plan gives the suites a spacious feel while accommodating a sleeping space, living area, work station and large bathroom. Each suite is equipped with a mini bar, media hub and 40-inch high-definition television.

Tower Suites

At close to 700 square feet, the Tower suites are slightly larger than the Executive suites. Although they have most of the same amenities, they also come with a table and chairs where you can have a meal or play a game of cards, as well as full wet bar. The one-bedroom suites have separate living and sleeping areas, while the spa suites have Carrera marble-tiled bathrooms with whirlpool spas.

City View Suites

Executive King Suite Mgm Pictures

The MGM Grand’s City View suites are designed for those who want to entertain while enjoying views of the Las Vegas Strip. A typical City View suite offers 950 square feet of separate sleeping and living space. It features the amenities found in the Tower Suites with the addition of 180-degree views of the city from the suites’ corner locations. The Penthouse City View suite is 1,250 square feet; it features a private master bath and separate powder room off the living area.

Skyline Suites

The Skyline suites offer luxurious living at the MGM Grand. The 1,500-square-foot Skyline Marquee suites feature two en suite bedrooms, a spacious living area, a dining table for up to six people and a great room with media area. The two bedroom, 2 1/2-bath Skyline Terrace suites feature 1,300 square feet of living space on two floors as well as a 786-square-foot outdoor terrace offering views of the city. The terrace extends the living space with a dining table, sectional sofa and high-definition television.

References

Resources

About the Author

After attending Fairfield University, Hannah Wickford spent more than 15 years in market research and marketing in the consumer packaged goods industry. In 2003 she decided to shift careers and now maintains three successful food-related blogs and writes online articles, website copy and newsletters for multiple clients.

Photo Credits

  • Thinkstock Images/Comstock/Getty Images

More Articles

Executive Suite
Directed byRobert Wise
Produced byJohn Houseman
Written byErnest Lehman
Based onExecutive Suite
by Cameron Hawley
StarringWilliam Holden
June Allyson
Barbara Stanwyck
Fredric March
Walter Pidgeon
CinematographyGeorge J. Folsey
Edited byRalph E. Winters
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  • May 6, 1954
104 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,383,000[1]
Box office$3,585,000[1]
Lobby card with Louis Calhern

Executive Suite is a 1954 American Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer drama film directed by Robert Wise and written by Ernest Lehman, based on the novel of the same name by Cameron Hawley. The film stars William Holden, June Allyson, Barbara Stanwyck, Fredric March, Walter Pidgeon, Shelley Winters, Louis Calhern and Nina Foch.[2][3] The plot depicts the internal struggle for control of a furniture manufacturing company after the unexpected death of the company's CEO. Executive Suite was nominated for multiple Academy Awards, including for Nina Foch's performance, which earned a Best Supporting Actress nomination.

This was Lehman's first produced screenplay, and its plot deviates substantially from the novel. He went on to write Sabrina, North by Northwest, West Side Story, and other films. The film is one of few in Hollywood history without a musical score, but the song 'Singin' in the Rain' is sung by Mike Walling while he is off-camera taking a shower. The song appears in many MGM films during the period when its lyricist Arthur Freed was a producer at the studio.

Plot[edit]

While in New York City to meet with investment bankers, 56-year-old Avery Bullard, president and driving force of the Tredway Corporation, a major furniture manufacturing company in the town of Millburgh, Pennsylvania, drops dead in the street. As he collapses, he drops his wallet. It is picked up by a bystander, emptied of its cash, and shoved into a wastebasket. Without the wallet, there is no way to immediately identify the body as Bullard.

George Caswell, a member of the Tredway board of directors and one of the investment bankers with whom Bullard had just met, sees what he believes is Bullard's body in the street below their offices and decides to profit from the information. He engages a broker to make a short sale of as much Tredway stock as he can before the end of trading that Friday afternoon. Caswell plans to make an easy profit and cover the sale by buying Tredway stock at 'a 10-point discount' on Monday, when news of Bullard's death will presumably push the stock price down. Caswell begins to doubt that it was Bullard who died, but when he reads in a newspaper that the man had the initials 'A.B.' on his clothes and cufflinks, he calls the police to tip them off to the identity of the deceased.

Bullard had never named his successor. Over the next 28 hours, Tredway's executives vie for the position of president. Once news of his death reaches Tredway, company controller Loren Shaw takes the initiative in arranging Bullard's funeral and coordinating the company's public reaction. In so doing, he undercuts treasurer Frederick Alderson, one of Bullard's close friends, and this effectively diminishes Alderson in his own eyes so that he won't seek the presidency.

Shaw also shrewdly releases the upcoming quarterly report so that the good news of big profits can counter the news of Bullard's death and perhaps even raise the stock price when the market opens.

Ambitious, but narrowly focused, Shaw is concerned more with short-term accounting gains and satisfying the stockholders than the quality of the company's actual products and long-term growth. He gains the proxy of Julia Tredway, the daughter of the company's founder, who is still a major shareholder and board member. She had been considering selling her stock after realizing the futility of her difficult romantic relationship with, and true love for, Bullard after many years. She was finally heartbroken after coming second behind the company for both her father and Bullard.

Shaw buys Caswell's vote in exchange for allowing Caswell to purchase 4,000 shares of company stock at the Friday closing price to cover his 'shady' short sale. If Caswell does not get those shares, he will be in serious financial trouble. Meanwhile, Walt Dudley, back-slapping vice president of sales, is having an affair with his secretary, Eva Bardeman, for which Shaw is now blackmailing him.

In addition, Vice President of Manufacturing Jesse Grimm has decided to retire instead of seeking the top job. But while he's no fan of Shaw's, he has serious reservations about the relative youth of the only other potential contender, Don Walling, the idealistic Vice President for Design and Development.

All these machinations result in Shaw having enough votes that he has a virtual lock on the job even before the board meets.

Treasurer Alderson and Don Walling, however, are determined to prevent Shaw from taking over. After considering all the contenders, Walling convinces Alderson that Walling himself should be president. Walling is a strong believer in developing higher quality new products and more efficient manufacturing methods, although his wife, Mary, is against his giving up his dream of being a full-time designer.

At an emergency board meeting on Saturday evening, the machinations, bargaining, and maneuvering culminate with Walling's enthusiasm, vision, and his stirring boardroom speech eventually changing Jesse Grimm's, Walt Dudley's and Julia Tredway's minds. Walling is ultimately elected unanimously as company president.

As the board leaves the meeting room, Shaw tears up a letter ensuring Caswell's share purchase. Caswell will be ruined financially. Meanwhile Walling and his wife embrace in anticipation of the new challenges in front of them.

Cast[edit]

  • William Holden as McDonald 'Don' Walling, Vice President for Design and Development
  • June Allyson as Mary Blemond Walling, wife of Don Walling
  • Barbara Stanwyck as Julia O. Tredway, daughter and heir of the founder of Tredway
  • Fredric March as Loren Phineas Shaw, Vice President and Controller
  • Walter Pidgeon as Frederick Y. Alderson, Vice President and Treasurer
  • Shelley Winters as Eva Bardeman, secretary to Walter Dudley, as well as his mistress
  • Paul Douglas as Josiah Walter Dudley, Vice President for Sales
  • Louis Calhern as George Nyle Caswell, board member
  • Dean Jagger as Jesse Q. Grimm, Vice President for Manufacturing
  • Raoul Freeman as Avery Bullard[4]
  • Nina Foch as Erica Martin, secretary to the late CEO, Avery Bullard
  • Tim Considine as Mike Walling, son of Don Walling

Production[edit]

The film was planned to have 145 speaking parts, a record for MGM.[5]

Reception[edit]

The film received enthusiastic reviews.[6] It was number one at the US box office for four consecutive weeks during May 1954 grossing $1,845,000.[7][6] According to MGM records, the film eventually earned theatrical rentals of $2,682,000 in the U.S. and Canada, and $903,000 in other markets, for a worldwide total of $3,585,000 and a profit of $772,000.[1]


Awards and nominations[edit]

Award[8]CategoryNominee(s)Result
Academy AwardsBest Supporting ActressNina FochNominated
Best Art Direction – Black-and-WhiteCedric Gibbons, Edward Carfagno, Edwin B. Willis and Emile KuriNominated
Best Cinematography – Black-and-WhiteGeorge FolseyNominated
Best Costume Design – Black-and-WhiteHelen RoseNominated
British Academy Film AwardsBest Film from any SourceExecutive SuiteNominated
Best Foreign ActorFredric MarchNominated
Directors Guild of America AwardsOutstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion PicturesRobert WiseNominated
National Board of Review AwardsTop Ten FilmsExecutive SuiteWon
Best Supporting ActressNina FochWon
Venice International Film FestivalGolden LionRobert WiseNominated
Grand Jury PrizeThe Acting EnsembleWon
Writers Guild of America AwardsBest Written American DramaErnest LehmanNominated

Mgm Grand Executive Queen Suite

Mgm grand executive queen suiteMgm executive suite king pictures

TV series[edit]

Mgm corporate executivesMgm grand executive suite

Mgm Grand Executive Suite

Mitchell Ryan and Wendy Phillips in a 1976 scene from the show.

More than two decades later, the film and novel were adapted into a weekly dramatic television series with the same title. Airing on CBS in 1976-1977, the TV version changed the fictional corporate setting to the Cardway Corporation in Los Angeles. Mitchell Ryan starred as company chairman Dan Walling, with Sharon Acker as his wife, Helen, and Leigh McCloskey and Wendy Phillips as his children, Brian and Stacey. Other series regulars included Stephen Elliott, Byron Morrow, Madlyn Rhue, William Smithers, Paul Lambert, Richard Cox, Trisha Noble, Carl Weintraub, Maxine Stuart, and Ricardo Montalban.

Scheduling opposite Monday Night Football on ABC, and then The Rockford Files on NBC, doomed the show to poor ratings, and it was canceled after one season.

Mgm Executive 2 Queen Suite

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcThe Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  2. ^Variety film review; February 24, 1954, page 6.
  3. ^Harrison's Reports film review; February 27, 1954, page 35.
  4. ^'Executive Suite'. AFI Catalog.
  5. ^'The Gabby Set'. Variety. September 9, 1953. p. 5. Retrieved September 29, 2019 – via Archive.org.
  6. ^ ab''Suite' Shapes As Tops Since 'Ivanhoe''. Variety. June 2, 1954. p. 4 – via Archive.org.
  7. ^'National Boxoffice Survey'. Variety. June 2, 1954. p. 3 – via Archive.org.
  8. ^'NY Times: Executive Suite'. NY Times. Retrieved 2008-12-21.

External links[edit]

Executive King Suite Mgm Grand

  • Executive Suite at IMDb
  • Executive Suite at the TCM Movie Database
  • Executive Suite at AllMovie
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Executive_Suite&oldid=1000753168'