We
continue our series on the aviatrix with two films from the 1940s: Wings and the Woman (1942), and Flight for Freedom (1943). They both
illustrate a more self-conscious female pilot than in the first two films we
discussed in last week’s post: Tail Spin,and Women in the Wind, both from1939. The wartime aviatrix was back to fighting the battle of the sexes.
The
film lauds her independence and her drive. As a young woman she
attains college degrees, applies herself in different office jobs, but it is
not until she begins her hobby of learning to fly where she feels the most
satisfaction and the greatest sense of purpose for her intelligence and her
energy. In the 1930s her exploits captivated the British public and she became
famous. In close-ups of her perched in the cockpit the film becomes an intimate
examination of not only her motives but of the great sense of freedom she feels
while she is flying. One particular scene, where after several hours of
exhaustion and despair, she finally sights her goal of reaching northern
Australia, the relief and ecstasy on her face are more eloquent than any
explanations of why would a young woman want to put herself through such a
dangerous test.
The film explores in a more introspective way a woman’s need to excel and to feel the freedom of pursuing her own dreams, as well as the unusual freedom of just being alone. (Indeed, in the two films we discussed last week from 1939, there was a camaraderie in a community of female flyers; but in the two wartime films in this post, the ladies are truly solo, without the support of other women.) In the first two films that we discussed last week, which were more lighthearted and less introspective, we do not examine the women’s motives for being pilots. This may result in a less satisfying story; however there is, ironically, a greater sense of freedom and self command displayed in those earlier two movies by the women who never needed to be examined for their motives, never needed to explain why they were doing what they were doing, and never needed validation. They were just pilots, and that was jake with the men around them. In a sense, it was not a story about men and women; there were only pilots and non-pilots.
The film explores in a more introspective way a woman’s need to excel and to feel the freedom of pursuing her own dreams, as well as the unusual freedom of just being alone. (Indeed, in the two films we discussed last week from 1939, there was a camaraderie in a community of female flyers; but in the two wartime films in this post, the ladies are truly solo, without the support of other women.) In the first two films that we discussed last week, which were more lighthearted and less introspective, we do not examine the women’s motives for being pilots. This may result in a less satisfying story; however there is, ironically, a greater sense of freedom and self command displayed in those earlier two movies by the women who never needed to be examined for their motives, never needed to explain why they were doing what they were doing, and never needed validation. They were just pilots, and that was jake with the men around them. In a sense, it was not a story about men and women; there were only pilots and non-pilots.
Over
the Channel, Amy’s plane goes down, and we see her parachute into the dark, cold
waters below. The real-life event happened January 5, 1941. Amy’s body was
never recovered. She was 37 years old. The movie ends, poignantly, with a shot
of the interior of the plane with its open door from which Amy has jumped. On
the floor of the plane lies her military cap. This is a nod to her war of the
straw boater at the beginning of the film. It is a new hat, a uniform hat,
signifying honor, purpose, and dignity, and service to King and Country. But like
her balking at wearing the straw boater—there is no individuality allowed in a
military uniform.
Rosalind
Russell plays the fictional Tonie Carter, who learns to fly under the tutelage
of Herbert Marshall. He is a designer of aircraft in the early 1930s with
dreams of establishing his own company. Fred MacMurray is a hotshot pilot, a
brash playboy with no use for women flyers. He remarks, “Women ought to stick
to what they were made for.” He is especially disdainful of women pilots
because they steal headlines and he thinks the only reason they fly is to get
their names in the paper. “I just don’t like women who try to be men.”
Eventually, they do begin a romance, on-again/off-again, because they are hardly ever in
the same spot at once, but it is an unsatisfying if typical movie scenario: We
don’t really know why Rosalind Russell is attracted to Fred MacMurray; he’s
really quite rude and obnoxious. I suppose the writers have thrown in her slavish
attraction to a “man’s man” merely to prove that, despite the grease and dirt
on her mechanic’s coveralls, she still a “real” woman.
But
Roz is human and makes mistakes – not just about Fred MacMurray. In a flight
from New York to Los Angeles she tries to fly very high above stormy weather to
pick up some speed but in this era of unpressurized cabins, the high altitude
makes her drowsy and she nearly crashes. Eventually, she makes the trip from L.A.
to New York in 12 hours of straight flying and breaks a record. A lady reporter
yells, “You got a boyfriend? What’s his name?” Of all the films we’ve discussed
on the aviatrix, this one unfortunately is rife with sexism and it’s a shame to
see Rosalind Russell play the poor sap, when we have seen her as the
magnificent Hildy Johnson only a few years earlier. But it’s wartime now and
the men are heroes, and the women are not supposed to compete.
Just
before this, Herbert Marshall, her longtime mentor and plane designer, has
proposed marriage. His proposal is so sweet and awkward and we (or me, at
least) rejoice at his being the better partner and a far more interesting man
with whom to spend her life than the self-involved, if handsome, Fred MacMurray. Because she
is on the outs with Fred, she accepts Herbert, but she tells him she must do her
flight around the world first, and when she comes home, she will marry him.
The
opening credits of the movie are placed over a vast map of the Pacific. When
Roz meets the Navy officer who gives her instructions on her mission, they
stand in a briefing room on which on one wall there is likewise a huge map of
the Pacific. It is a good illustration because it dwarfs the people in the
scene and it shows not merely how large a body of water that is, but how little
we know about it. Most of our armed forces, once we got into the war, were
island hopping all across the Pacific somewhat blindly: many of those islands
were really uncharted.
She flies to the Pacific and meets her contact in a Polynesian wayside inn. The palm trees sway and the moon shines over the exotic island.
It’s
Fred MacMurray.
They
renew their passion for each other, and she forgets all about Herbert. Their
postwar plans have Fred continuing to fly all over the world, but Roz will stay
home with the kids. But going back to
the hotel desk to get her key from the sinister Japanese desk clerk, he tells
her with snide confidence that he knows who she is, who Fred MacMurray is, what
their mission is, and they will never succeed. They know all about the plans.
Roz
goes back to Fred, but instead of telling him straight out that the jig is up,
she asks him what he would do if he was flying alone and he knew the mission
had been compromised, if there was no hope for his survival. He says
cavalierly, and quite hypothetically, he thinks, that he would just keep flying
until the plane ran out of gas.
She
decides to do that. She takes off in the plane alone, sparing Fred’s
life, and flies off into the vast sky over the Pacific Ocean. In a reprise of
the early scene where she had tried to break a record and flew too high, making
herself drowsy and nearly crashing, she decides that she will take this
comfortable way out and she aims the plane straight for the heavens. The higher
she goes, the less oxygen she has and she begins to fall asleep.
In
these two movies, in which both our heroines meet their ends crashing their planes into the ocean, we know that their self-sacrifice is a common self-flagellation
element to the wartime propaganda films. The women become symbols more than
people, although we get to know Amy Johnson’s motives a little bit better than
we do the fictional Tonie Carter. In the first two movies, Tail Spin and Women of the Wind,
those women flyers faced sudden death in crashes pursuing records and shrugged
it off with a kind of pragmatism that was almost heartless; the wartime films seek
to demonstrate that their deaths are not without meaning, and that sacrifice is
noble, and required—including, for Roz, the sacrifice of a career when the war
is over.
These
two women seem to have a yoke on their shoulders that the early 1930s aviatrix
did not. Life has become very complicated, and not just because the planes have
become more complicated.
***
Have
a look at the career of real-life aviatrix Maude Tait, a record-breaking flyer
who beat Amelia Earhart’s record, a lady from my hometown – over at my New England Travels blog.
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