“This
is where television actually helps us. Kids
today, they grew up watching Crawford and Davis on Saturday afternoons. They know who they are.” Pauline to Bob
Aldrich, Feud.
Today
I’d like to discuss the miniseries Feud,
which has just concluded its eight-episode run on cable channel FX. It is uncommon these days for the world of
classic films to have such a well-publicized “center stage” moment in modern
pop culture. For that reason alone, Feud is worth examining.
Long post. Go get a drink.
I
enjoyed the series. It was not without
flaw, but the overall production I think was a success for many reasons, and
some of those reasons are not technical at all, but rather for the themes and
messages presented in such a thoughtful and creative manner. One accomplishment is that the series manages to be more than about Bette and Joan; it's about Bette and Joan in the scheme of things. To take a narrow focus and from it draw a large and sweeping view of our society is the mark of a production that wants to do more than just dish the dirt for ratings.
The series has made classic films relevant, and that is an achievement, however temporary, over which classic film fans must marvel. As for the technical merits:
The series has made classic films relevant, and that is an achievement, however temporary, over which classic film fans must marvel. As for the technical merits:
I
thought the acting was superb, and I like the various Zeitgeist touches of
musical score, sets, and all the ephemera that is plunked down and inserts us neatly
into the early 1960s. I noticed, as many
of you probably have, a few anachronisms, but nothing that really mattered to
render the production illegitimate or phony.
(But that did not look anything like the Martin Beck Theater, now, did
it?)
My
biggest joy was that Jessica Lange’s portrayal of Joan Crawford did not stray
into the asinine realm of Faye Dunaway’s cartoonish Mommie Dearest persona. I
suppose once I saw that in the first episode, the rest of the series was, at
the very least, a relief.
Executive
Producer Ryan Murphy and his band of collaborators have done an admirable job. I liked Judy Davis, striking, prickly, and
funny as Hedda Hopper. She is allowed to
pull out all stops as befits this ridiculous, venomous gossip columnist. It must have been a blast to play. I think probably my favorite line from the
series or at least the one that made me laugh the most was Hedda Hopper’s
disdain that Bette Davis appeared to show no respect for the two Oscars she had
won in past years, fuming that Davis had put one Oscar on display in her
bathroom. “That poor Oscar has to watch
that woman go to the toilet.”
Alfred
Molina as director Robert Aldrich was splendid. His anger of a
schmuck caught between the spokes of a controlling hierarchy in his industry
and two controlling women, his gloomy resentment, and his guilt at various
turns for his sins was masterfully eloquent, and the humanity of a kind of everyman, yet morally
complicated in his dual function as both manipulator and victim. I think of all the characters, we come to know
him best because of his profoundly transparent performance.
I
believe that Catherine Zeta-Jones did a credible Olivia de Havilland, although
I’m aware others have a different opinion about her effectiveness in the role. She did not mimic her, but there were instead deft
traces of de Havilland’s demure, ladylike but steely reserve, breathy, elegant, and knowing. Kathy Bates was a funny Joan Blondell,
actually an easier role to interpret than De Havilland.
I
have to say my favorite character was Mamacita, Joan Crawford’s maid, played
with an almost vaudevillian deadpan by Jackie Hoffman. Mamacita had only to enter a room to crack me
up and make me wonder what she was going to do or say next. I’ve never seen such an adept scene stealer. I think Jackie Hoffman as Mamacita should have
her own TV show. Her own weekly show, The Mamacita Show. The
Mamacita Variety Hour. Featuring the
Mamacita Dancers.
The
production values including minute detail of the sets were terrific and if not
always spot-on, certainly evocative of the era, of both the glamour and the
artifice. The opening credits are
inspired, a mimicry of the work of Saul Bass, with a nightmarish cartoon
synopsis of the Davis and Crawford relationship as their characters in Whatever Happened to Baby Jane. This sequence is on YouTube here. The cartoon characters in silhouette run an
obstacle course of events from the film but always are seen as marionettes
under the power of the executives. This
particular theme I think we can accept perhaps only to varying degrees, but
we’ll get to that later.
I
was particularly struck by the first moments of this cartoon sequence when the
two figures are standing on top of the Hollywood sign, which though unintended
I’m sure, reminded me instantly of the tragic Peg Entwistle and the comment
that Bette Davis made in an interview that Entwistle was her inspiration to
become an actress. She saw Peg Entwistle
in the Ibsen play, The Wild Duck, and
was captivated.
What
I most enjoy about the series is what I most love about classic films –
close-ups and slow scenes, beautiful lighting, camera work that allows us to
soak up the background, and the clever, intelligent dialogue spoken in clear,
crisp enunciation. (“They had faces then.”) The murky “realistic” (yeah, right) filming,
the shaky camera, the irritating untrained voices of the grunting low-talkers of today’s films is nowhere to be
found. Hallelujah.
I
love the many scenes where Jessica Lange and Susan Sarandon as Joan and Bette
re-create moments from Baby Jane, and
also from other Crawford and Davis films (Catch the back of “Ann Blyth” in the Mildred Pierce scene on the receiving
end of the famous slap). What a surprise
to see Sarandon do the Davis singing of the pop version of the Baby Jane song parody on The Andy Williams Show. I was familiar with that clip and so to see
her re-create the performance in such spectacular detail was a marvel. Have a look at this “mash up” on YouTube, and another here.
It
is in these scenes where Sarandon does most of her close mimicry of Davis and
her clipped speech. I think it was wise
to save it for these “replica” scenes because we are familiar with these
jocular moments on television talk show interviews and in clips from her
movies. It was prudent to reserve most
of Bette Davis’ vocal and physical traits to these moments.
The
many repeated mirror shots are captivating – especially those in hand mirrors,
which are more intimate. We are dealing
here with a lifetime of reflected images.
There
is still some campiness in these episodes, as we might expect, but not as much
as there could be and I do think the directors and producers showed restraint,
considering the gossipy subject matter.
On
the use of background music of popular tunes for moving the tale along, this
was done in a delightfully skillful manner. Unlike the heavy-handedness of a Max Steiner
score, rather they cause us to smile at their slyness. Peggy Lee’s chipper rendition of “Somebody Else is Taking My Place,” in “The Other Woman” episode, and in a montage of the
Baby Jane scenes, “Mama Said There’d Be Days Like This,” and the moody strains of “Charade” (anachronism alert) when
Joan and Bette go out for drinks to dish the dirt and talk about their
childhoods. In the “Abandoned” episode Bob
comes to Joan’s hospital room to face off with her over her stalling the
picture, and we hear from the portable radio Leslie Gore singing “You Don’t Own Me.”
The
music swells at the end of the “Abandoned” episode and we hear Miss Patti Page
(“The Singing Rage”) sing the theme song to Hush,Hush, Sweet Charlotte as Bob, Bette and Olivia pose for a photo in front of
the Coke cooler with Cokes in hand (a dig at Joan Crawford’s connection to
Pepsi). This was a re-creation of an
actual photo except that Joseph Cotten was also in the original picture, but
it’s a cute touch.
I'd love to know if sales of Pepsi were increased lately, as well as of Aqua Net hairspray.
I'd love to know if sales of Pepsi were increased lately, as well as of Aqua Net hairspray.
Another
aspect to Feud that I thought was
great fun was seeing the “familiar” faces of lesser characters in the story,
like George Cukor, Patty Duke, Anne Bancroft, Joseph Cotten and others. Also the scene with Wendell Corey who was the
president of the Screen Actors Guild at the time. His secretary gets a great line when Joan
Crawford stomps towards his office. The
secretary looks up in horror, “Mr. Corey, Joan Crawford’s heading this way and
she’s not slowing down!”
We
could mention, of course, that the scene where Joan and Bette go out for drinks
and discuss their childhoods is helpful for us to understand their motivations,
particularly for Joan whose reputation has been pretty nearly destroyed by her
daughter’s book, Mommie Dearest, but in
real life they never would have sat down and had this heart-to-heart talk. However, this not a documentary but a
dramatization, and this and similar scenes are used not to stretch the truth,
but to illuminate it.
Other
scenes also do not necessarily ring true, but they do convey the spirit of the
themes beautifully and draw our emotional response. In the “More or Less” episode there’s a scene
where Joan and director Bob Aldrich attend the sneak preview of Baby Jane and, because they all feared
that it would be a flop, they are astounded and filled with surprised rapture
when the theater audience is receptive to the movie. Joan stands in the lobby and young people
crowd around her asking for her autograph, and she lifts her eyes in an
eloquent mixture of gratitude and resplendent triumph towards Bob. (Lange’s work is consistently remarkable in
this series, and she does most of the heavy lifting.) We could cheer for her. It is a skillful film indeed that draws such
an emotional response from us, especially over a character who is not even
likable most of the time—because we are growing to understand her.
Other
scenes, however striking and well used dramatically, are, at best,
manipulations of the truth, such as Jack Warner’s rant (played wonderfully by
Stanley Tucci) where Bob first brings the Baby
Jane project to him. Warner throws a
temper tantrum about the idea of using Bette Davis, because of his resentment
for her taking Warner Bros. to court in the 1930s. His tantrum and explosive spewing of vulgarity
directed more towards appealing to a modern audience and less with an idea of
documentary realism, however real it might have been, is another case where the
truth is stretched just a bit for entertainment value. It’s true he probably felt that strongly
twenty or so years earlier, but in the meantime he and Davis had long since
patched things up, and Davis often complimented Warner on his taste in women’s
pictures. She was, after all, often
jokingly called The Fifth Warner. Neither woman, back in her day, was anybody's marionette.
Most
devastating is not Warner’s meanness towards Davis or Crawford, but to Bob,
whom he repeatedly humiliates simply because he can.
Another
invented aspect to the show is the possibility of Joan’s having performed in a
stag film in her past and then later trying to cover it up: she may or may not
have appeared in stag film and may or may not have tried to cover up, but this
series boldly pronounces it as fact, and boldly pronounces her brother as being
a blackmailer over the issue. That I feel
is going too far. This is too serious an issue to play creative pretend games. Speculation must always be used wisely because it is a most powerful weapon. We live in an era
where practically nobody believes anything about politicians anymore, but many people read any sort of tabloid supermarket trash about a Hollywood star and
instantly believe everything they read. Why the stars, once idols of glamour, became our punching bags, is perhaps a topic for another time, but Feud certainly outlines this strange
change in our treatment of celebrities.
Jack Warner as played by Tucci is tickled over the success of Baby Jane, calling it, “Degradation,
that’s what sells. Tearing down your
idols. It’s very satisfying.”
Those
of us from the world of classic film fandom can sort these things out with
equanimity (I hope): the careers of
Davis and Crawford and the tales about them, but such freewheeling with the
facts may not benefit the newcomer to classic films, or those with only a
casual interest. It is perhaps good to
remember that for a writer, stories are not really about characters so much as
they are about themes. The characters
are just tools, mouthpieces through which the themes are woven (or unravel).
Sexism
and ageism, the two main themes of the series – and if sometimes expressed a
little too heavy-handed and even trite—reiterate that these are important
problems to handle for our own time. What
the series seems to fail to capture is that, despite sexism rampant everywhere
and in every industry in the twentieth century, the Golden age of Hollywood was
something of an oasis of great women’s roles and marvelous actresses, and more
opportunity for women than in other careers.
Conversely, the 1960s through the rest of the twentieth century saw far
fewer roles for women – great roles or otherwise, no matter their age. Most stories featured women as victims. They were merely the props around which the
male characters conducted their adventures. They were mostly disposable on TV and in the
movies. Women in later eras saw it become
normal for an actress to be prepared, if not required, to take off her clothes
for a part. We need not feel so superior
over the days of the studio system, when actresses often had it better.
The
character of Pauline, director Bob Aldrich’s assistant, played by Alison Wright,
is fictional. That she has such an
important role as a spokesperson and sounding board and yet she is fictional,
is quite telling in and of itself. There
was no real person in the early 1960s connected to this story to whom the writers could assign this function.
Her
character is used to express this theme of sexism. When she dreams of directing the script she
has written, and her hopes are dashed—even by other professional women such as
Joan Crawford, Mamacita encourages her with statistics about the ratio of men
to women, and how more women in the future will be the audience and therefore
more roles about women and by women will be created. Mamacita tells her “your
time is coming.” She also adds in her
amusing Mamacita philosophy, “Men have shorter lives because they are less
strong.”
We
are left to feel the bitter irony, knowing what Pauline does not yet know –
that it never happened. It is 2017 and
superheroes and such movies made for teens and young males are the norm.
There
is yet the promise fulfilled, however, because Lange and Sarandon are both in
their late sixties early seventies, and still working in prominent roles and
positions of power in the film industry. They are producers of the series as well as
its stars. Ryan Murphy, the originator
of this series has taken some heat for his long, slow education on using
women writers, directors, but he has learned marvelously, and except for the
remaining bits of campiness and the childish titillation over two women having
a cat fight, I’d say he deserves encouragement and congratulations.
“And
the Winner Is” episode brings us to the 1962 Oscars, a glittering festival of
rivalry, revenge, and shameful opportunism. I particularly liked the tracking shot
following Joan offstage after presenting Best Director to David Lean when he is
confused about where to go next. She
briskly tells him to follow her and she proceeds to march through a series of
hallways with David Lean and us following her through twists and turns, seeing
bystanders and loiterers, a brief handoff from Mamacita like a train snagging a
mail pouch, and through a men’s room where she pats a man on the shoulder who is
standing at a urinal, and then she emerges on the other side of the stage
preparing for the announcement of the winner of Best Actress. She has agreed to accept for Anne Bancroft if Bancroft
is the winner. And, of course, she is,
and therefore Joan is also the winner. It’s
funny, but that trip as we follow her through a backstage maze is like a
metaphor for her career trajectory, full of twists and turns, light and shadows,
moments of attention and adulation, and quiet moments of anxiety. She lights another cigarette.
By
the way, when I was blogging on my Year of Ann Blyth series, I had completely
missed the significance of the television episode Ann Blyth appeared in called “The Year Joan
Crawford Won the Oscar,” discussed here, which was broadcast in January
1963. I had suspected that this title,
which really had no significance to the plot of the story on the short-lived
series Saints and Sinners (it refers
to a trivia question), was only a cute nod to the fact that its star, Ann
Blyth, was also in Mildred Pierce,
for which Joan won her Oscar (and Blyth was nominated for Best Supporting
Actress.) I see now that naming this
episode as such was probably part of the publicity campaign for Baby Jane’s upcoming Oscar season. The nominations for the Oscars were announced
in late February, a month after this TV show had aired, so at the time the
episode was broadcast Joan was still very much a contender in people’s
expectations. The ceremony was broadcast
in April.
Speaking
of smoking; it's funny that the constant smoking and drinking may be the most shocking aspect that catches our attention in this series. I doubt seeing events of the famous feud being played out is more shocking than this, because we are familiar with the stories. The series also presents us with the era’s glamorized self-destruction of these
women.
The
ageism theme I think is as valid but strangely less political than the sexism,
and I don’t know why because we all age and we have all experienced or will
experience prejudice because of it. We
can even feel sorry for the nasty Jack Warner when he says, “I used to make the
culture. Today I’m lost in it.”
The
final episode of the series, “You Mean All This Time We Could Have Been
Friends” addresses the final years of the feud and Joan’s last days. We are in the 1970s, and another in a
repeated series of scenes set in 1978 shows a documentary director interviewing
another player in the story about the feud (it is only in this last episode that we learn the interviews are being held on the occasion of the Oscar ceremony -- nice touch).
This time, Pauline is back, and she tells us what she’s been up to:
finding job satisfaction in producing documentaries, which affords more
opportunities to women than does trying to work in feature films. Is she involved with this one?
True
to her purpose of being the linchpin for the writers, directors, and producers
of this series and the audience they are trying to reach, Pauline recounts
meeting a frail, elderly, and lonely Joan in an airport. She tells the documentary director to call
his grandmother. To some this will sound
like Hallmark card mawkishness, but I liked it because it was a dash of
sentiment in which there is also truth. Joan
was still a scrappy person at the end of her life, but she was also alone and
overwhelmed.
And stop being so prickly over films with messages in them. You need to hear this. Go call your grandmother, dammit.
And stop being so prickly over films with messages in them. You need to hear this. Go call your grandmother, dammit.
We
have a montage of scenes of Joan now living a Spartan existence in her New York
apartment, cleaning, learning to use the new microwave oven, and doing without
a maid or the lavishness of her former lifestyle. She watches TV while eating her meals on a
tray, and switches the channel from the news of the Vietnam War, and finds an
old movie of hers. She is pleased and
watches it with interest.
I don't find this glimpse into Joan's vulnerability exploitive, not the way it's handled. This
episode is loving, in the way that caretakers of the elderly protect and
comfort their charges but are forced by circumstances to involve themselves
frankly and intimately with the slow demise of a human being—which is
physically messy and emotionally painful.
A lot of people don't have the stomach for it, or the heart. The best caretakers are also mindful of, and ready to preserve, the
elderly person’s dignity. I believe this
episode does that. It does what so many of Joan's closest friends, family, fans, and colleagues did not do: it accompanies her as she does not go gentle into that good night.
Some fans might feel any depiction of the frailty of their heroes as demeaning, especially for someone like Joan Crawford who took herself out of the public eye in her final years with the intent of keeping her dignity and her pride. Bette Davis would later put it succinctly: “Old age is no place for sissies.”
Some fans might feel any depiction of the frailty of their heroes as demeaning, especially for someone like Joan Crawford who took herself out of the public eye in her final years with the intent of keeping her dignity and her pride. Bette Davis would later put it succinctly: “Old age is no place for sissies.”
In
this self-imposed seclusion, I would contend we see not the degradation of a
star, but the true measure of her feistiness.
Battling severe periodontal disease, Joan relates the career move of
having several molars extracted in her twenties at the advice of an agent to
attain the sunken-cheek look. She
refuses dentures, but tells her dentist, “I’d rather spit blood into a sink
than look like Martha Raye.”
We
see, before this period, her stoic professionalism on the set of Trog (1970), an awful experience that
was in its way far more degrading than being old and ill and alone.
Finally,
back in her apartment, she tells her agent over the phone to not submit her
name for any more work, she’s quitting. It’s
another mirror shot, but her reflection is through a window this time, on which
a brick wall is reflected in a pattern against her face.
Bette
is having trouble securing work also, filming a succession of TV pilots that
were never broadcast. Dominic Burgess as Victor Buono has a great line here: “It
was like Miles Davis performing jingles for lunch meat commercials.”
Davis’
biggest challenge of the era was working on the TV movie The Disappearance of Aimee (1976), and an unhappy collaboration
with Faye Dunaway. It is remarked, “For
all her complaints about Joan, she didn’t know true hatred until she met Faye.” It also gives Bette an opportunity to defend Joan, noting
that she was a professional, who unlike Faye Dunaway, did not keep the cast
waiting.
Before
we dwell too much on the thought that Dunaway will figure prominently in Joan’s
future reputation, we have a poignant scene where her daughter Cathy visits
with her children. Joan is ill with cancer,
serving her guests microwaved food on paper plates and Styrofoam cups. A far cry from her glamorous days in her
Hollywood mansion, but here is the picture of a woman courageous and ingenious
enough to adapt to the realities of her situation.
She
watches the children playing in the living room and whispers to her daughter, “Do
they think of me as their real grandmother?”
It’s a heartbreaking moment, an image meant to remind us that
all her life, Joan fought to remove the stain of illegitimacy—in her childhood
of poverty and abuse; in her career; in her first marriage to Douglas Fairbanks
Jr. where she was unwelcomed by his family, including the queen of Hollywood,
Mary Pickford; even in being unable to enjoy winning the Oscar without the
nagging doubt that she would never compete with the likes of a “serious”
actress like Bette Davis. Here she
wonders if she is accepted as a real grandmother by the children of her adopted
daughter. Her daughter’s response is
affectionate and comforting and brings Joan to tears.
Bette
has an adopted daughter with special needs whom she visits and plays with, but
whom she cannot reach emotionally to give her the satisfaction of reciprocal
love. Her biological daughter, B.D.,
hates her. We don’t really see the
motivations for B.D.’s virulent hatred of her mother, and B.D. comes off just
as a nasty person (some people just are). Not delving into her
motivations, and not including the adopted sons of both actresses in the
narrative is probably a concession to expedience, more than anything. There are just so many plot threads you can follow. I was surprised, though, that the series did not cover Joan's filling in for her daughter Christina on the soap opera The Secret Storm in 1968.
Another
nice use of imagery is the dream/hallucination Joan experiences in her last
days, when in the middle of the night, she wanders into her darkened living
room and finds Hedda Hopper and Jack Warner playing at a card table, in evening
dress, laughing over party conversation.
Joan joins them, and we see her as she appeared in earlier days, dark
hair coiffed, white opera gloves. Bette
Davis then joins them, both women in red.
Joan, still psychologically her frail, elderly self, muses, as though
watching herself in a dream, “Why am I so happy to see you?” They confess they wish they had been
friends. Faithful Mamacita arrives in
her bathrobe to escort the confused Joan back to bed. She dies a week later.
At
the Oscars, Bette and Olivia de Havilland, Victor Buono, Joan Blondell, and
Pauline gather in the green room and watch the In Memoriam reel. For a brief instant, Joan Crawford’s face
appears on the TV monitor.
Olivia
remarks, “Fifty years in show business and all they gave her was two seconds.”
Bette
grimly replies, “That’s all any of us will get.” They raise their glasses and toast Joan. The documentary director approaches Davis, but
she will not be interviewed. “You’ll
want funny, bitchy lines about Joan Crawford.
I won’t do it. She was a
professional. We did one picture
together. Our lives intersected. That’s it.”
The
documentary crew muse to themselves afterward that nobody will ever know the
truth about the Davis-Crawford feud, and a young woman on the crew (perhaps
their modern era “Pauline”) wonders what they said to each other on their first
meeting on the Baby Jane set. Instantly, we melt back to the past, to the
first day of shooting on Baby Jane,
and that iconic photo of Joan and Bette in their chairs, laughing.
I
like the final roll call of “whatever happened to…” the cast of the
main characters, with their real photos alongside the actors playing them, from
Bob Aldrich to Hedda Hopper. Joan is
lauded in these end credits as “a good and sometimes great actress.” It is a good tribute. That more people are starting to say it would gratify her.
Interestingly,
Joan Crawford’s grandson, Casey
LaLonde likes the series because his grandmother is treated with fairness even
if in sometimes ugly frankness, and presented at times sympathetically and with
dignity. He hopes to encourage his
mother, who was deeply hurt by the Mommie
Dearest book and film, to watch it. Last
weekend Olivia de
Havilland announced her typically classy and distant response.
What
would Joan and Bette have thought of the show? I really don’t know. More to the point, what would they have
thought of each other’s characterizations, the revealing of each other’s
motivations?
I
believe both Joan and Bette would have gotten greater satisfaction by their work being
shown on Turner Classic Movies, which has done more to rehabilitate Joan
Crawford’s reputation than anything else could.
I
am pleased that the Hollywood greats are back in the focus of pop culture for
this series – not just their peccadilloes, but because of their important place
in Hollywood history. I don’t suppose,
however, this series will create any new classic film fans. The only thing that can create more old movie
buffs is to show more classic films on more channels. Although many classic films are available on
DVD, most newcomers will be easier introduced to them if they are given an
ample selection for free. Like that
person standing in the grocery store with the tray of crackers—you try it, you
like it, then you go buy a box. New fans
have to be exposed to classic film before we ever expect them to spend their
money and their time on it.
This
past Easter we again had a prime time major network broadcast of The Ten Commandments (1956). There are
seldom other opportunities that major networks take to promote classic films.
They do it with this movie because it fits the Passover/Easter season and is
so-called family fare. In a weekend of
expected low ratings, it has the feeling of a throwaway, a pro bono broadcast.
With the notice Feud has received, the major networks could ride the tail with showings of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane and Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte, to start. There’s a whole world waiting to explore for all those who don’t have TCM or would normally venture to find it on cable company with hundreds of channels. We discussed some of this last year in our year-long series about the state of the classic film fans.
With the notice Feud has received, the major networks could ride the tail with showings of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane and Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte, to start. There’s a whole world waiting to explore for all those who don’t have TCM or would normally venture to find it on cable company with hundreds of channels. We discussed some of this last year in our year-long series about the state of the classic film fans.
“This
is where television actually helps us. Kids
today, they grew up watching Crawford and Davis on Saturday afternoons. They know who they are.” – Pauline to Bob
Aldrich, Feud.
*********************
The audio book for Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. is now for sale on Audible.com, and on Amazon and iTunes.
The audio book for Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. is now for sale on Audible.com, and on Amazon and iTunes.
Also in paperback and eBook from Amazon, CreateSpace, and my Etsy shop: LynchTwinsPublishing.
There were indeed a whole lotta themes woven throughout FEUD beyond the rivalry. I didn't get to some of them in my coverage, so I'm glad you did.
ReplyDeleteI had never seen BABY JANE prior to this. Now that I have, I think the story behind it is way more interesting than the actual film. Bette and Joan were great stars, but being stars clearly did something to their heads.
Do we know Mamacita's real name? Or why Joan called her that?
Mamacita's name was Anna Marie Brinke, a German woman who spoke next to no English when she was first employed by Joan. In her book MY WAY OF LIFE (1971), Joan recounted that she had just come back from South America when she employed Mamacita, and since she'd heard the term used frequently in her travels there, she accidently referred to her new maid by this term, I guess in an absent-minded moment, and it stuck, becoming a nickname.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate the post. I loved 'Feud'. I was leery myself about the portrayal of Joan Crawford. I adore Joan Crawford and am dismayed that she has gotten such a bad reputation in history, when she really was quite good on film. I may never understand why some historical figures get a pass for their bad behavior and some don't. While we adore gossip of our stars today and as a society like tearing our celebrities down, we are much more forgiving about some of their peccadillos. One need only look to the Kardashians and to see that. As you rightly stated, Bette Davis had the luxury of disputing her daughter B.D.'s claims of physical abuse - Joan did not.
ReplyDeleteThe acting in 'Feud' was fantastic. The themes were good, too. And while the historical inaccuracies did bother me a bit, I understood why they were there to advance the plot and highlight the themes. It think perhaps the reason why the theme of ageism didn't pop as much as feminism is that I don't think as a culture, we understand the problems of aging. Our elderly are often kept away from society in nursing homes or alone at home, not often interacting in places the young don't tend to congregate. There are billion dollar industries promoting looking young such as beauty products, exercise, fashion, food, etc. Our popular culture caters to the desires of the young in movies, television, music, fashion, etc so we never have to encounter anything an older demographic may enjoy. We don't seem to value the experience and knowledge of the elderly because our society values youth and technology, and rather than asking someone who might know the answer, would rather Google it = even if Google gives you the wrong answer or wastes hours of your time searching for the right answer. And since as a culture we are limiting ourselves to only those we wish to interact with, learning about others is more difficult. The most interaction or exposure most people have with the elderly is a 'Golden Girls' rerun.
Great post. Hope it's shown in the UK soon.
ReplyDeleteAmanda, your comment here probably says it best: "And since as a culture we are limiting ourselves to only those we wish to interact with, learning about others is more difficult. The most interaction or exposure most people have with the elderly is a 'Golden Girls' rerun."
ReplyDeleteVienna, thanks very much. I hope it's shown in the UK, soon!
Loved the show, too, and your comprehensive post about it. Great acting and writing throughout all eight episodes.
ReplyDeleteRyan Murphy is "one of us" with real respect for the classics and for seasoned actors of a certain age. Long may he reign as king of must-watch TV!
-Chris
Between you and Rich, my rather disinterested stance toward the series is starting to change. I know I will be watching it one of these days.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Chris. I agree that Ryan Murphy certainly shows respect for the classic film figures, which was a huge relief when my first assumption was that this series was going to be merely exploitive.
ReplyDeleteCW, I'd love to know your thoughts on the series if you happen to catch it.