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Documentary

Being Mary Tyler Moore

- The woman behind the smile.

With unprecedented access to the Mary Tyler Moore Estate, friends, family, and colleagues, Being Mary Tyler Moore constructs an intimate mosaic of Mary's sixty-year career in show business.

Release Date : 2023-03-13

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : HBO Documentary FilmsFifth SeasonHillman Grad ProductionsGood Trouble StudiosMartin Chase ProductionsThe Mission Entertainment

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Mary Tyler Moore

Character Name : Self (archive footage)

Original Name : Mary Tyler Moore

Gender : Female

Ed Asner

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Ed Asner

Gender : Male

Emanuel Azenberg

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Emanuel Azenberg

Gender : Male

James L. Brooks

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : James L. Brooks

Gender : Male

James Burrows

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : James Burrows

Gender : Male

Debra Martin Chase

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Debra Martin Chase

Gender : Female

Katie Couric

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Katie Couric

Gender : Female

Joan Darling

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Joan Darling

Gender : Female

Joel Grey

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Joel Grey

Gender : Male

Norman Lear

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Norman Lear

Gender : Male

S. Robert Levine

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : S. Robert Levine

Gender : Male

Julia Louis-Dreyfus

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Julia Louis-Dreyfus

Gender : Female

Michael Lindsay-Hogg

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Michael Lindsay-Hogg

Gender : Male

Rosie O'Donnell

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Rosie O'Donnell

Gender : Female

Larry Mathews

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Larry Mathews

Gender : Male

Bill Persky

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Bill Persky

Gender : Male

Bernadette Peters

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Bernadette Peters

Gender : Female

Phylicia Rashād

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Phylicia Rashād

Gender : Female

Rob Reiner

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Rob Reiner

Gender : Male

Beverly Sanders

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Beverly Sanders

Gender : Female

Susan Silver

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Susan Silver

Gender : Female

Treva Silverman

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Treva Silverman

Gender : Male

Terry Sims

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Terry Sims

Gender : Male

John Tinker

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : John Tinker

Gender : Male

Ronda Rich

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Ronda Rich

Gender : Female

Lena Waithe

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Lena Waithe

Gender : Female

Reese Witherspoon

Character Name : Self (voice)

Original Name : Reese Witherspoon

Gender : Female

Reviews

B

Brent Marchant

@Brent_Marchant

2023-05-30

To say that iconic actress/dancer/comedienne Mary Tyler Moore was a gifted, complicated, reserved, often-misunderstood individual is indeed an understatement. However, director James Adolphus’s new HBO documentary presents a reverent, insightful and respectfully candid biography of the famed star of TV, stage and screen, showing Moore in all of her magnificent multidimensionality. As the winner of seven Emmys, three Golden Globes, a special Tony Award and the Screen Actors Guild Lifetime Achievement Award, as well as an Oscar nomination for her tremendous lead performance in “Ordinary People” (1980), she significantly changed the face of television comedy and demonstrated a degree of acting versatility rarely seen. In her TV roles as Laura Petrie on The Dick Van Dyke Show and Mary Richards on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, she opened doors for actresses by portraying characters who hadn’t been seen on the little screen before. And, in a wider sense, in her role as Mary Richards, she significantly bolstered the growth of the women’s movement in the world at large, a role she championed despite her own somewhat conventional off-screen lifestyle, a way of life for which she was often criticized by feminists. However, Moore’s personal life often ran counter to the perky, cheerful on-screen persona she routinely projected, and she rarely spoke openly about the many challenges she faced – a sometimes-troubled relationship with her parents, two divorces, the loss of her only son in a gun shot accident, the untimely deaths of her two younger siblings, alcohol abuse and coping with complications from type 1 diabetes. As she aged, however, the fighter within her found ways to work through the anguish, such as choosing projects that enabled her to purge her pain, receiving treatment at the Betty Ford Clinic, becoming an advocate for her favorite causes and finding true love in a third marriage. The filmmaker tells Moore’s complex, moving and inspiring story with an array of clips from her work, archive interview footage with renowned journalists and celebrities, and ample voiceover observations from those who knew her and admired her work. The narrative is admittedly somewhat straightforward and formulaic, but it presents an excellent composite of images and insights into the life and work of a legend, one that’s bound to cause her to be seen in a new light and could well introduce her to a new generation of fans who may not have previously been aware of her many accomplishments. Take a bow, Mary.