I was going to try to introduce this week's profile with a whole jag on how video not only killed the radio star, but also the big, blowsy, bodacious "women's picture"...how daytime and nighttime soaps, as well as the tv mini-series and Lifetime movie, have taken all the grand romances of innocence, infidelity, and crazy rich bitches (the sort of stories that made Bette Davis a star) off the silver screen and permanently confined them to the small screen. I was gonna go on about all that but whatever. Let's just get to this week's cinematic concoction which brings us the kind of unhinged character performance you'd like to never see on the big screen today (unless Fiona Shaw happens to be involved), but which was given in 1940 with glamorous ease by...approximately 20 minutes and 43 seconds
17 scenes
roughly 15% of film's total running time
17 scenes
roughly 15% of film's total running time
Barbara O'Neil plays the Duchesse de Praslin, the imperious lady whose children, home and husband fall under the spell of a mousy governess (Bette Davis doing her basic "humility is nobility" bit, characteristically electric and moving at an incisive clip).
The Duchesse's marriage (to the mildly squicky Charles Boyer) is in trouble, and the incredibly, righteously self-absorbed Duchesse just cannot be bothered with attending to banal details -- like her children -- as she seeks to regain her husband's attention and good grace.
O'Neil seems, then, to have lain an appropriately deep groundwork. Further, the actress's resonant vocality serves the Duchesse, both in allowing her shrieks to penetrate walls and to aurally locate O'Neil as a resonant counterpoint to Davis's tinkling, staccato reediness. With all of this in place, then, why doesn't O'Neil's performance actually work?
Nonetheless, O'Neil's enormous presence in the film provides more than its share of giddy thrills. Her brilliantly theatrical facial tics animate, say, "the letter" scene (above - click pic to enlarge) with a cunning that is at once dastardly, despicable and delicious.
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