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The Old Maid (1939)
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Synopsis
When
Zoë Akins
' play The Old Maid (based on a novel by Edith Wharton) won the 1934-1935 Pulitzer Prize, the selection was roundly condemned by critics, who felt that
Lillian Hellman
's The Children's Hour was more deserving, but had lost because of its lesbian theme. Certainly, Akins' story of the relationship between two Southern cousins in the years between 1833 and 1854 is nothing spectacular. Delia Lovell marries James Ralston, leaving her old beau Clem Spender out in the cold. Delia's cousin Charlotte comforts Clem by spending the night with him. Charlotte becomes pregnant, secretly farming out her daughter, Tina, to another family. The years pass; Charlotte sets up a day nursery so that she may remain close to her daughter (still in the dark as to the true identity of her mother). Meanwhile, Charlotte has become engaged to Ralston's brother Joseph. The troublesome Delia, who discovers her cousin's secret, contrives to prevent Charlotte from marrying Joseph, then arranges to have Charlotte raise Tina as her niece rather than her daughter. More years pass; Tina regards Delia as her mama and Charlotte as just an "old maid." At Tina's wedding, Charlotte almost reveals the truth to her daughter, but.....It's all slick romance-magazine stuff, and hardly worthy of the Pulitzer. On the other hand, the film version of The Old Maid, starring
Bette Davis
as Charlotte and
Miriam Hopkins
as Delia, is a classic of its kind, and one of Davis' best vehicles. The story is given additional substance by moving the early scenes up to the time of the Civil War, making Clem Spender (
George Brent
) less of a cad by killing him off at Vicksburg, thus rendering it impossible for Clem to make an honest woman of Charlotte. From the vantage point of the 1990s, when film stars find it difficult to turn out more than one picture a year, it is incredible that The Old Maid was but one of four first-rate
Bette Davis
films to be released in 1939; the others were
Dark Victory
,
Juarez
, and
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex
. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Cast
George Brent
Clem Spender
Jane Bryan
Tina
Jerome Cowan
Joe Ralston
Bette Davis
Charlotte Lovell
Louise Fazenda
Dora
Miriam Hopkins
Delia Lovell Ralston
Cecilia Loftus
Grandmother Henrietta Lovell
William Lundigan
Lanning Halsey
Janet Shaw
Dee
James Stephenson
Jim Ralston
Donald Crisp
Dr. Lanskell
Rand Brooks
Jim Ralston Jr.
Production Crew
Robert M. Haas
Art Director
Henry Blanke
Associate Producer
Edith George Amy
Book Author
Edith Wharton
Book Author
Tony Gaudio
Cinematographer
Max Steiner
Composer (Music Score)
Orry-Kelly
Costume Designer
Edmund Goulding
Director
George J. Amy
Editor
Hal B. Wallis
Executive Producer
Leo F. Forbstein
Musical Direction/Supervision
Zoë Akins
Play Author
Hal B. Wallis
Producer
Jack L. Warner
Production Manager
Casey Robinson
Screenwriter
Edith Wharton
Short Story Author
Edith Wharton
Short Story Author
Year: 1939
Runtime: 96
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Feature
Genre
Drama
Produced by
Warner Brothers
Awards
1939 - 10 Best Films - Film Daily
1939 - 10 Best Films - Film Daily
© 2009 Spout LLC. Portions of content provided by All Movie Guide.