So many gay men of my generation and the one before can repeat the majority of lines in it by heart.
The Women (1939) needs no introduction but I will try anyway. It amazes me that the back story behind this movie (a film about relationships in New York high society that featured no men but women dealing with their relationships with men) didn't garner either a book or a movie.
In some ways, the back story is more interesting than the movie. In one corner, you have Norma Shearer, the queen of the movie lot who was the star of the movie guarding her territory and status. She portrays Mary Haines, a woman who suddenly finds out that her husband has been stepping out on her.
In the other is Joan Crawford who needed this movie to be a hit because she was recently labeled as "box office poison." She took the role of man-stealing Crystal Allen on a hunch that it would revitalize her career. And it did.
Then there is Rosalind Russell who, after it was all over, was believed to have been the actual winner. In the middle of the battle between Shearer and Crawford, her character, Sylvia Fowler (the comically evil instigator of the entire situation), stole the show. And it gave her a reputation as a comic actress - one which she rode into screen history.
Those of us who are movie buffs know the story behind The Women - the fights, the petty battle for position between Shearer and Crawford, and how gay director
But in the middle of all of this, one story has been omitted.
The movie contained what could be seen as a thinly veiled lesbian character. Her name was Nancy and she was portrayed by actress Florence Nash.
It being 1939, the movie couldn't come out and designate Nancy as a lesbian, so a lot of hints were thrown around. She was an "old maid," a "liberated woman who had her own career," etc. etc.
To me, the most telling comes in an exchange she has with Russell's character in the first scene. The exchange starts at 7:40:
Transcript:
Nancy: You just can't bear Mary's happiness, can you? It gets you down.
Sylvia: How ridiculous. Why should it?
Nancy: She's contented to be what she is.
Sylvia: Which is what?
Nancy: A woman.
Sylvia: And what are we?
Nancy: Females.
Sylvia: Really? And what are you, pet?
Nancy: What nature abhors. An old maid. A frozen asset.
And for the benefit of the brothers and others who love this movie (and those who have never seen it), the following clip features some of the funniest lines:
Past Know Your LGBT History Posts:
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The Jeffersons and the transgender community
4 comments:
I saw this movie twice, and loved it both times. Only downside was the 30 min long runway show... but the dyke in me just fast forwards.
Same here. The fashion show was an unecessary drag and the fashions were atrocious.
Yes...great lines! As soon as I saw the posting title, I said to myself "what nature abhors, a frozen asset". Love it!
Good review of a movie I've always been fond of. One correction: the director's name is George Cukor, not Michael.
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