Harry and Tonto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harry and Tonto

Art Carney and Josh Mostel
Directed by Paul Mazursky
Produced by Paul Mazursky
Written by Josh Greenfeld
Paul Mazursky
Starring Art Carney
Ellen Burstyn
Geraldine Fitzgerald
Larry Hagman
Chief Dan George
Melanie Mayron
Josh Mostel
Arthur Hunnicutt
Cliff De Young
Tonto (cat)
Distributed by Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
Release date(s) 12 August 1974
Running time 115 min.
Language English
IMDb profile

Harry and Tonto is a 1974 comedy-drama directed by Paul Mazursky and starring Art Carney as Harry Coombes, an elderly widower who is forced from his condemned New York City apartment against his will. He initially stays with his son's family on Long Island, but eventually chooses to travel cross country with his pet cat Tonto in tow. During his episodic journey, he befriends a hitchhiker, visits his daughter in Chicago and finally meets his youngest son in Los Angeles. The supporting cast includes Ellen Burstyn, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Larry Hagman, Chief Dan George, Melanie Mayron (in her debut role), Josh Mostel, Arthur Hunnicutt and Cliff De Young. Also appearing toward the end of the film is Sally Marr, mother of Lenny Bruce.

The screenplay was written by Josh Greenfeld and Paul Mazursky.

Art Carney won the Academy Award for Best Actor while the film was nominated for Best Writing, Original Screenplay. Carney won the Golden Globe for Best Actor Musical/Comedy and the film was nominated for Best Picture Musical/Comedy. The screenplay by Greenfeld and Mazursky was nominated for the Writers Guild of America Award as Best Drama Written Directly for the Screen.

According to Art Carney: A Biography, by Michael Seth Starr (Fromm International, 1997), Carney actually disliked cats. A contemporary Time article [1] confirms that he "never liked cats," but that he got along with the cat in this film.

[edit] External links

This 1970s drama film-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.