approximately 18 minutes and 19 seconds
16 scenes
roughly 14% of film's total running time
16 scenes
roughly 14% of film's total running time
Judith Anderson plays Mrs. Danvers, the obsessively devoted housekeeper to Mrs. DeWinter, the "first" lady of Manderlay.
The main problem, though, is that the Mrs. DeWinter -- Rebecca of the film's title -- to whom Anderson's Mrs. Danvers remains so dutifully, lovingly devoted? Well, she's dead. Real dead. Bottom of the ocean dead. And now there's a new Mrs. DeWinter (Joan Fontaine in a brilliant, sturdy wisp of a performance) on the scene. Mrs. Danvers, as might be expected, does not approve.
The arrival of this 2nd Mrs. DeWinter to Manderlay puts Anderson's Mrs. Danvers on the horns of a dilemma. Whatever is Mrs. Danvers to do with this pale, pathetic replacement for the glorious Rebecca? Subsequently, Anderson's portrayal becomes a delicious portrait of malevolent mentorship, as the housekeeper experiments with different strategies to solve the problem posed by the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter.
First, Mrs. Danvers attempts to mold the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter in the fashion of Rebecca, trying training her to do things as Rebecca did.
Then, when that doesn't work, Mrs. Danvers tries to seduce the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter into sharing her delight in Rebecca's luxuriant charms by welcoming the woman into the dead woman's boudoir.
But when the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter repudiates Mrs. Danvers's devotion by ordering the removal of Rebecca's things, Anderson's Danvers resorts to sabotage, creating an evening gown situation that she knows will turn out disastrously for the new woman. Then, after the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter confronts Danvers about the cruelty of her trick, Anderson's Danvers moves in for -- literally -- the kill. In measured, powerful tones, Anderson's Danvers endeavors to eliminate the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter, methodically stripping the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter of the little self-esteem she has as Danvers nudges, pokes, and prods the woman to jump to her death.
Alas, none of Mrs. Danvers's plans work. Even worse, not only does the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter survive, but the mystery around Rebecca's death expands, thus threatening in new ways the memory of Rebecca that Mrs. Danvers has constructed and for which she lives.
In this way, the film constructs Mrs. Danvers's arc along two parts. First, it's Mrs. Danvers as malevolent mentor seeking to shape, control or destroy the "problem" of the 2nd Mrs. DeWinter. Next, Mrs. Danvers slips a little into irrelevance as the mystique around Rebecca's untimely demise transforms into an actual murder mystery, the reality of which threatens the elaborate mausoleum of memory that Danvers has erected for Rebecca.
Hitchcock and Anderson make great hay with Danvers during the character's first arc. They both have great fun with key lights, tightly focused to land upon Anderson's formidable nose and brow, allowing for much creepy eye twitches and bulges. (This trick receives brilliant comic homage in the cinematic construction of Morticia Adams by Anjelica Huston and Barry Sonnenfeld in the Addams Family movies of the early 1990s.)
But Danver's second arc makes less sense. As Danvers's fantasy of her beloved Rebecca is challenged and confused by reality, the character's descent to madness makes sense mostly for the vestigial nuttiness of the first scenes. It's unfortunate, as Mrs. Danvers is one of the most palpably creepy loonys created on film, that her character is more presence than person in the crucial later scenes.
That said, Mrs. Danvers has one of the truly gorgeous and terrifying deaths in cinema. A death that, every time, makes me giggle with delight and quaver in fear. My favorite combo, really -- and a big part why I love the "Pure Evil" Supporting Actressness so much.
For that, on this Halloween morn, I offer tribute to Judith Anderson -- among the most enduringly terrifying supporting actress nominations ever.