Film Review
It is a commonly held view that American cinema reached its creative peak
towards the end of the 1930s. The fallacy of this is at once apparent
when you consider the sheer abundance of cinematic marvels that came out
of the Hollywood studios in the decade that followed - a cornucopia that
was fuelled as much by the huge influx of talent from Europe as by the burgeoning
importance of cinema as the primary medium of mass entertainment. Occupying
a dominant position on the quality end of the spectrum was the lavish adaptation
of literary classics, a prime example of this being William Wyler's 1949
masterpiece
The Heiress - a flawless retelling of Henry James's 1880
novel
Washington Square. The film takes its title from the successful
stage play version of James's highly regarded novel, its authors - the husband-and-wife
team Augustus and Ruth Goetz - also providing the screenplay.
When Olivia de Havilland saw the Goetzes' play on Broadway she was so impressed
that she immediately approached Wyler and persuaded him to adapt it for the
cinema at Paramount Studios, with her naturally taking the leading role (the
part created by Wendy Hiller on stage). It so happened that Paramount
had just signed a three-picture deal with a star-in-the-making, Montgomery
Clift and the opportunity of pairing this hyper-charismatic, hyper-talented
youngster with the Oscar-winning box office magnet de Havilland was too good
to miss. Clift had so far featured in only two films - Howard Hawks'
Red River (1948) and Fred Zinnemann's
The Search (1948) - but already he was a movie sensation and the Hollywood
studios were falling over themselves to hire him. One of the changes
to the Goetzes' play which Paramount insisted on was that the character Morris
Townsend be made more sympathetic, so as not to harm Clift's prospects for
playing the romantic lead in subsequent films, which would include George
Steven's phenomenally successful
A
Place in the Sun (1952), where he starred alongside Elizabeth Taylor.
For the role of de Havilland's father in the film, the primly respectable
Dr Sloper, Ralph Richardson was an obvious casting choice, as he had already
played the part on stage to great acclaim (opposite Peggy Ashcroft) in a
popular run of the original play in London, England, which premiered in February
1949. Although Richardson was best known as a stage actor - one of
the finest England ever produced - he also had an impressive string of film
credits to his name, Carol Reed's
Fallen
Idol (1948) bringing him international renown. Whereas critical
success had come easy to Clift and Richardson, de Havilland had had a far
more difficult time convincing the world of her abilities, and it was the
snobbish belief that the latter belonged to a lower class of performer that
led to a highly strained working relationship between de Havilland and her
two male co-stars. As it turned out, the friction between the three
lead performers was to the film's advantage, heightening the tangible sense
of estrangement and antagonism that develops between the heroine Catherine
and the two selfish, manipulative men who ruin her life.
Crafted with an abundance of intelligence and delicacy,
The Heiress
is undoubtedly the best film William Wyler ever made, the crowning achievement
in a career replete with too many critical and commercial successes to list.
From the 1930s to the 1960s, Wyler was one of Hollywood's most talented and
most commercially successful film directors, his oeuvre stuffed to the gills
with much-loved classics that include
Wuthering Heights (1939),
The Letter (1940),
Mrs Miniver
(1942),
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) and
Ben-Hur (1959). Wyler's cinema
may not be as showy or groundbreaking as that of some of his contemporaries
but it possesses a level of sustained creative flair, human feeling and psychological
depth that sets it apart, with an indefinable timeless quality that makes
his films startlingly relevant to this day.
By staying so close to the original stage play (retaining its structure,
minimal dramatis personae and most of the dialogue),
The Heiress risks
being seen as little more than a piece of filmed theatre, but such is the
quality of the mise-en-scène and design (in every area of production)
that the film transcends this perceived flaw with ease and stands as one
of its director's most visually striking and compelling works. It was
through his close association with the esteemed cinematographer Gregg Toland
that William Wyler realised the visual power and dramatic possibilities of
deep focus photography, which he subsequently made an essential part of his
art. By having an extended depth of field, Wyler was able to position
his actors in the foreground, midground and background in the same shot,
providing some interesting possibilities for character interaction.
In
The Heiress, the growing spatial distancing of the heroine Catherine
from the two men who attempt to control her (her father and lover) underscores
both her widening emotional separation from her tormentors and her transition
to an independent assertive woman.
It is through Wyler's adept use of deep focus photography that Catherine's
ornately furnished mid-19th century townhouse soon takes on the character
of a prison, the gilded cage from which Catherine seems destined never to
escape. It is in only a few scenes that the young woman is seen outside
her opulent New York home, scenes in which she acquires an unexpected vitality
and shows some sign of the free-spirit struggling for release within her
suffocatingly tight corsets. For most of the time, Catherine is seen
as just a part of the decor of her father's immaculate residence - a submissive
mouse of a girl gradually turning into an embittered old maid within a prudish
edifice of bourgeois respectability that is at first her prison and then
her sanctuary.
There are two features of the house that provide the film with its two most
powerfully moving moments. The first is the stately staircase that
appears to take pride of place in the Washington Square residence.
It is up this coldly impersonal artificial hill that the broken-hearted Catherine
is to be seen laboriously lugging her suitcase after being jilted by her
lover. It is a scene of devastating poignancy, the staging of it and
de Havilland's understated performance achieving an emotional wallop of such
resounding intensity that you can hardly bare to watch. At the end
of the film, the locked front door - so terribly illustrative of Catherine's
entire life - becomes just as potent a dramatic device as the staircase.
On the one hand, the locked door is a symbol of victory, signifying the unfortunate
woman's ultimate triumph over the sex that has blighted her existence.
But it also screams out the sad implication that Catherine is a woman destined
to live her entire life alone, forever separated not only from the man she
has rejected but any other who might have brought happiness and fulfilment
to her. Throughout the film, but particularly in these two crucial
scenes, Aaron Copland's richly expressive score drives home the tragedy and
irony of the heroine's plight, making us grimly aware of the fatalist undercurrents
that are driving her in her process of metamorphosis from sad girl to even
sadder woman.
Olivia de Havilland won her second Academy Award for her performance in
The
Heiress, and rightly so. Her harrowingly authentic portrayal of
Catherine Sloper is unquestionably the highpoint of her career and a crucial
stepping stone to the more complex roles she was desperate to move on to
after years of being typecast as the eternal ingénue. In the
three or four years prior to this, the actress had taken audiences and critics
by surprise with a series of unglamorous, down-to-earth and occasionally
controversial roles that gave her ample scope for radically altering her
screen persona. From her Oscar winning turn in Mitchell Leisen's hard-hitting
maternal drama
To Each His Own (1946) to her convincing portrayal
of a mentally ill woman in Anatole Litvak's
The Snake Pit (1948),
Olivia de Havilland had demonstrated not only a willingness to take on more
challenging parts, but an awe-inspiring talent only a few thought she possessed.
It is through her character's gradual but striking transformation in
The
Heiress that de Havilland showed the world what a remarkably accomplished
actress she was. When we first meet Catherine, she is the very picture
of spinsterly gaucheness, so lacking in confidence, so timidly self-effacing,
that she appears almost afraid to take up any space in the frame. The
Catherine we see at the end of the film is a totally different character
- an assertive mature woman who is not only aware of the power she exerts
over others, but also has the hardness of heart to exercise that power with
scant regard to the pain she may inflict. A key scene is the one in
which Catherine sits in silence in her drawing room as her lover Morris makes
futile attempts to gain entrance to her house to resume their aborted love
affair. The expressions we see playing on Catherine's face as we hear
Morris's desperate entreaties show us more clearly than any quantity of dialogue
the thoughts and feelings that are running through her mind. Is that
joy at a long-anticipated reunion that we fleetingly glimpse in her eyes?
The impression vanishes in an instant when we see a look of bitter reproach
take control of her countenance. Years of conflicting emotions are
brought to the surface one after the other, each altering the expression
in Catherine's surprisingly malleable features. We see the rejected
lover, the indignant daughter, the disillusioned old maid and finally the
look of elation of a woman who has finally got what she has long yearned
for. De Havilland's performance has such nuance and depth that at every
stage Catherine's metamorphosis from oppressed nursling to fully independent
woman rings true with a blistering reality - to such a degree that
The
Heiress acquires a pro-feminist perspective of astonishing power and
modernity.
Whilst this is unquestionably de Havilland's film, it would be a sin to overlook
the contributions of Montgomery Clift and Ralph Richardson, who both deliver
performances of exceptional quality under Wyler's faultless direction.
Clift's charisma and demonic good looks make him a natural scene-stealer
but it is through his teasingly ambiguous portrayal of Morris Townsend (a
far less obvious rogue than he is in the original novel and stage play) that
he shows himself to be an actor of formidable ability. At no point
in the film can we be sure of Morris's motives. It is so tempting to
see him as Dr Sloper does, the scurrilous gold-digger, and yet Clift's natural
air of boyish innocence pulls us in the other direction, towards Catherine's
notion of the romantic
beau idéal. Likewise, Richardson's
Dr Sloper is far from being the one-dimensional archetype. He may at
first resemble the heartless, starch-shirted patriarch, but it soon becomes
apparent that his somewhat abusive treatment of his daughter arises from
a genuine loving concern over her future prospects. The fact that none
of the three main characters is easily pinned down makes for some interesting
dynamics and prevents this from ever being the usual melodrama in which one
protagonist unequivocally occupies the moral high-ground. Catherine,
Morris and Sloper are all sufficiently complex and ambivalent in their behaviour
that they each have aspects of victimhood and monstrosity, and we can never
be sure whether their misfortunes are brought about by others or are merely
the result of their own failings.
The Heiress may not have been a commercial success on its first release
but it garnered considerable critical acclaim and is now regarded as one
of the supreme achievements from Hollywood's Golden Age. In addition
to de Havilland's Oscar win for Best Actress, the film was nominated for
seven other Academy Awards (including Best Picture and Best Director), winning
three other awards in the categories of Best Original Score, Best Art Direction
on a B&W film (John Meehan, Harry Horner, Emile Kuri ) and Best Costume
Design on a B&W film (Edith Head). De Havilland also took the Golden
Globe for Best Actress. Henry James's novels have had many notable
screen adaptations but none can compare with the sheer artistry and emotional
resonance of William Wyler's
The Heiress. The only one that
comes close to matching its narrative power, psychological depth and cinematographic
brilliance is Jack Clayton's wondrously chilling adaptation of James's famous
ghost story
The Turn of the Screw,
The Innocents (1961), although
Martin Gabel's
The Lost Moment
(1947) (based on
The Aspern Papers) is also well worth a look - if
only for its grimly oppresive atmosphere.
© James Travers 2023
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the 1840s, Dr Austin Sloper, a successful medical practitioner,
lives with his daughter Catherine in New York's affluent Washington Square.
In her early twenties, Catherine is a disappointment to her father, lacking
the beauty, intelligence and social graces of his deceased wife. The
prospect that one day his daughter will marry a suitable man of their social
standing is Dr Sloper's abiding concern. To that end, he allows Catherine's
romantically inclined Aunt Lavinia to move in, hoping that under her influence
the gauche social embarrassment will one day blossom into a highly eligible
bride-to-be. One evening at a society ball, Catherine makes the acquaintance
of a handsome young man, Morris Townsend. It isn't long before she
is head-over-heels in love with the smooth-talking bachelor and readily accepts
his hasty proposal of marriage.
Dr Sloper is far from pleased by this unexpected turn of events and immediately
suspects Morris of being a fortune hunter. Making enquiries, he soon
discovers that the prospective bridegroom has neither money nor profession,
and has recently squandered his modest inheritance on a grand tour of Europe.
Catherine remains firm in her resolve to marry Morris, even when her father
tells her he will disinherit her, leaving her with just the 10,000 dollars
per annum she inherited from her mother. Dr Sloper's hopes that his
daughter will come to her senses after a six month stay in Europe come to
nothing. Exasperated, he insists that Morris's only interest in Catherine
is her wealth - there is nothing else she can possibly offer him. Catherine
is so hurt by her father's cruel outburst that she immediately makes up her
mind to elope with Morris.
The two lovers make their plans to run away that very evening, Morris apparently
undeterred by the news that his future bride will only have a third of the
income that was promised before being disinherited. The appointed hour
passes and Morris fails to turn up at the Sloper residence. Catherine
takes no consolation from the fact that her father was right in his assessment
of the young man's character. A few years pass, during which time Dr
Sloper dies and his daughter lives alone, hardened and wiser through her
disappointment in love. Then, one day, Morris turns up unexpectedly,
virtually destitute after failing to make his fortune in California.
He assures Catherine that his love for her is as deep as it ever was and
that the only reason he jilted her was to prevent her from losing her inheritance.
Once again, Morris asks his beloved if she will be his wife and, seemingly
taken in by his protestations of love, Catherine consents. When he
returns that evening, Morris has a nasty surprise in store for him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.