Stage Door (1937) | |
Plot Synopsis (continued)
In her dormitory room, a drunkenly mixed-up ("high") Jean tells her room-mate about her "wonderful" evening: "It was wonderful. The view was wonderful. The supper was wonderful...And Harcourt is wonderful...(My name) It's going to be in letters that big. No, that big...And he's gonna divorce his wife and marry Galatea...She's a statue. She should never have gotten married in the first place. But it's going to be wonderful...Harcourt's going to marry Galatea and we're all going to live together in a great big sign. And I feel terrible." The next morning, Linda makes sure to mention to Jean that she saw "Mr. Powell at the Colony Bar this afternoon with another young lady. However, you've done much better than I expected. I didn't think you'd last this long." Another seduction scene - with Terry this time in Jean's position - is prefaced again by the same incense-burning figure and vase of flowers. Terry, wearing a black evening gown with bands of gold on the collar and sleeves, has been offered the lead role in Enchanted April by the producer - a play backed by his secretive, mysterious client [Terry is unaware that financial backing and casting has been arranged by her father.]:
Terry knows that Jean is still infatuated with Powell, but the dictatorial producer has acted cruelly toward her. After more antagonistic questions, he accuses Terry of being "a district attorney" and threatens to take back his acting offer: "Do you want to play this part or don't you?" She strolls away, lights a cigarette, and asks about his underlying motivations in choosing her: "How do you know that I can act?...because I've never been on the stage." Skeptical, she tells him that she is an "unemotional" person, and doesn't want to be molded into a role, but prefers acting with her brain:
When Jean crashes into the penthouse, outraged that he's seeing another woman after speaking to Linda, she asks: "Have you got a woman in this apartment?" She finds her tipsy room-mate, in a "frame-up," posed in a languid sprawl on the floor in a compromising position: "So it's you!" Even though she is jeopardizing her friendship with her roommate, the contriving Terry has designed the scene to make Jean break her liaison with the no-good producer. Powell anxiously explains that Terry came up to his place "to sign a contract to do a play." Dashed, hurt, and jealous, Jean breaks her relationship with both of them, returns Terry's red fox cape, and admonishes her never to borrow items of clothing from her again:
After Jean storms out, Terry explains why she deliberately manipulated Jean. And she accuses the blowhard producer of being a bachelor and posing as a married man to avoid entanglements with female consorts:
She reaches for evidence of his fakery - the photographs of his supposed wife and son. The boy's picture "has been used to advertise a certain military academy for a great number of years...(I know) because my brother went to that academy." And the photograph of his wife: "She's done a lot of posing for the face powder ads, I believe." After being exposed and having his marriage neutralized, Powell admits:
Inexplicably, they shake hands together, and Powell further discusses the plot of the play to his chosen actress. In a darkened Footlights Club, the girls hold a surprise birthday party for Kaye. With confetti flying, party hats, and horns, they escort her to a cake with one candle on it. "The guest of honor" is touched by their generosity, and makes a wish - to play the lead in Enchanted April - before blowing out the flame. In the midst of the party frivolity, Catherine announces that Terry Randall has landed the part that should have gone to Kaye, an actress with real talent. She is crushed and brokenhearted, but tearfully, generously and graciously concedes that Terry deserves her "moment in the theatre" - and then collapses melodramatically while cutting her cake:
The scene cuts to stage rehearsals for Enchanted April, where Terry rehearses for her first Broadway play role as the "broken-hearted" Jeanette. She misses her cue, continually argues with the stage director (Frank Reicher), and finally delivers her famous entrance line [dialogue taken from Hepburn's flop 1933 Broadway play The Lake]:
But the words are delivered by the amateur actress in a wooden monotone, and she is criticized by the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright (Jack Rice): "You might learn to read it correctly. That would help...I refuse to sit quietly by and see my play butchered." She also defensively yells back at Powell, who insists that she follow instructions from the director: "Well, what am I supposed to do? Walk around like a puppet or use my intelligence?...If you think I'm so terrible, why did you hire me for the part?" Exasperated, Powell considers releasing himself from his contract with Carmichael to put Terry Randall on the stage: "I've got to get out of this contract somehow...She may have possibilities, but right now, she's a rank amateur about as emotional as a fish and she's useless in the bargain. She questions everyone - the director, the writer, the actors. I don't see how this play is going to be anything but a flop." [The strategy of Terry's father appears to be working - her opportunity to fail as an actress will subsequently force her to return home and find a more conventional career.] "Free tickets" are distributed to the girls in the boarding house to fill the house for the opening night of Terry's play performance. According to the cynical Eve: "She wanted to be sure someone was in the audience." Jean is reluctant to contribute to the collection for her room-mate's flowers: "I'll give a dollar if it's for her funeral." Eve again wise-cracks that she will miss the opening night: "I'm going tomorrow and catch the closing," but Jean wouldn't miss it for anything: "As long as she's gonna be a flop, I'm gonna be there and see it." Linda explains the motivation for Jean's hatred: "She's sore because Terry took my boyfriend away from her...tired little boyfriend." Upstairs in her room only an hour before curtain time on the rainy opening night, Terry nervously practices (and forgets) her lines with Catherine, her acting coach. Although an overwrought, sickly Kaye has been instructed by her doctor to "stay in bed," she stops by, encourages Terry, and thoughtfully makes some suggestions about how to play the part: "It's not a play. It really happened to someone I knew...This isn't just your night. It's my night too. You've got to be a success tonight. You've got to give a great performance no matter what happens." As they part, Kaye gives Terry a ring for good luck: "A girl gave it to me last year on my opening night and it brought me luck...I'll be there, in spirit." In an unforgettable, award-winning scene, a depressed Kaye slowly walks up a staircase to the imagined sounds of applause from an opening night audience - - before committing suicide by throwing herself from the roof - off-screen. [The scene anticipates Gloria Swanson's mad descent down the stairs in the conclusion of Sunset Boulevard (1950).] A distraught girl rushes into the living room: "Oh - Kaye. She jumped before I could stop her. She's lying out there in the rain." As a "packed house" of play-goers is seated at the play, Powell expects the worst: "They don't know what's in store for them...We're likely to be trampled to death when they start running out." Backstage in her dressing room, Terry has just been accused by a grieving and angered Jean (holding an umbrella motionless between her hands) that she is responsible for her boardinghouse friend's death:
With a quivering lip, Terry is shocked and shattered into humility and wracked with guilt. She refuses to go on, and wails: "I've got to get out of here. I'm not going on...Why didn't someone tell me? I would have given up a thousand times rather than have this happen. I'm going to go out there and tell them I'm not going to go on. And I'm going to tell them why." Her coach convinces her that the show must go on:
With three minutes until opening curtain time, Catherine dries Terry's eyes, persuades her to perform, and guides her forward. Calla lilies are placed in her hands, and she carries them with Kaye's suggested interpretation. In the film's memorable climax, Terry delivers the same lines, but now in a heartfelt, moving, 'broken-hearted' performance with heightened meaning and ad-libbed additions:
Following the play that's gone "over big," she also presents an affecting curtain call speech in a spotlight, filmed at a distance from partway back in the theatre hall (to make her appear as a small figure). Her simple words of tribute move her appreciative audience to tears, shown in cutaways to various faces:
As the patrons leave the theatre and Terry is acclaimed as a "sensation," Powell learns that the "guy with Carmichael is her father...He's nobody but Henry Sims, the Wheat King." Opposed to his daughter's career, Sims is disappointed that he may lose his daughter to an acting career: "This hasn't worked out the way I expected." Elsworth (Theodore von Eltz), a critic assesses Terry and notes her "strange," haunting qualities: "She has rather a strange quality. Reminds me very much of that girl you brought out last year...What was her name?...yes, Miss Kaye Hamilton." Catherine congratulates her star pupil:
Touched by Terry's performance, Jean returns to her dressing room to affectionately embrace, cry, and respectfully commiserate with her new-found friend about Kaye's death: "Don't try to say anything. We'll go to her...We're going to see Kaye...." To avoid "the press, photographers," Powell's loud accolades and more "reporters, society editors," they leave arm-in-arm by the back door. Triumphantly, Terry's name is emblazoned in large, lettered lights on a marquee as the play moves into its fourth month. Audiences continue to pack the theatre, and newspaper critics write that the star has remained at the club: "Terry Randall, Eccentric Debutante Continues to Live at Footlights Club." Life goes on in similar fashion at the Footlights Club with the girls pursuing their careers. Judy is moving to Seattle to settle there with her husband: "If any of you hams happen to come up to Seattle, the house of Milbanks is always open to you." Jean and Terry pair up to carry her over the threshold of the front door to an awaiting taxi. The film ends with their concluding, bittersweet comments about their friend's departure, and their own lonely, but independent career tracks:
The front doorbell rings and a new, aspiring actress with a suitcase arrives and inquires about accommodations - to begin the cycle of the film all over again. [The conclusion anticipates the finale of All About Eve (1950).] Meanwhile, Jean phones Bill to ask for a date, while Terry cautions her about abandoning her career and finding romance with a man: "Don't be sentimental. Remember, you're a ham at heart." When Linda walks by her on the stairs, Jean wisecracks: "Hold on, gangrene just set in." The film fades out as Mrs. Orcutt leads the new girl around: "I think you'll like it here. We're one big family..." |