Susan Hayward, I'll Cry Tomorrow
Katharine Hepburn, Summertime
Jennifer Jones, Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing
Eleanor Parker, Interrupted Melody
The Field: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Ranking Oscar's Ballot
My Pick: Susan Hayward, I'll Cry Tomorrow ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
From There: Katharine Hepburn, Summertime ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
In my lifetime of commitment to Katharine Hepburn, her starring role in Summertime remains the great riddle: I can't decide how I feel about it, and it has the odd
double-effect of seeming incongruous to her star narrative, maybe even resistant to her abilities, while also illuminating more about Hepburn as actor and woman than anything
else she's done, possibly excepting Little Women. A key story element involves a goblet of vermilion-colored glass that is never fully resolved as a magnificent
artifact or a dispiriting fake, propped up on its admirers' desire for truth and beauty, even in their absence. Summertime probably intends us to see the goblet as a metaphor for its
American spinster's sad, sentimental, but nonetheless stirring trip to Venice, which plays convincingly as a climax of this woman's experience and as a somewhat pitiful self-delusion, and most
richly as a blend of the two. In pulling his camera so close to the goblet, David Lean has the confidence and grace to invite speculation as to whether his own film duplicates
the worrying riddles of that goblet. Summertime's lush but self-commodifying colorism sometimes seems dubious, though its emotional through-lines prove more delicate by
the finish than the first hour leads me to expect, revealing a genuine distillation of poignant, autumnal feeling beneath a summer sun, rather than an exuberantly lacquered miming
of the same. But what about Hepburn herself? Is she also the gobleta rare beauty, but also a heartbreaking myth? As with many of our most wondrous actresses, directors'
desires to use her and viewers' craving to see her invited several occasions of strained casting, sometimes to her insuperable disadvantage (The Rainmaker) but often to
her resourceful glory (Long Day's Journey into Night). Summertime entails an affront to plausibility right from the get-go. Hepburn's Jane wields a home-movie
camera with such elated, confident vigor during the opening arrival to Venice that she's utterly believable as a hungry, first-time visitor to this particular city. But who could ever countenance
Kate Hepburn as someone who'd never been anywhere? The piece depends, hugely, on our sense of the character's horizons expanding decisively, with a looming expiration date,
but everything about Hepburn's gait and figure and mien connote a long life of open doors, knowledge absorbed, invitations rarely denied her even when she denied them. Scenes
where she has to dog-paddle around with insulated American foibles, ostentatiously fumbling simple Italian words or proving too timid to solicit a waiter for her bill, cannot
help but play as unconvincing pantomime for Hepburn, and also against the more elegant passages of the movie. I'm sometimes tempted to believe that Jane requires projections
of bashfulness or naïveté that Hepburn simply cannot manage, but then the material clearly parses psychology into finer categories than just innocence and experience.
Lean surely knew what he wanted when he cast this barnstorming New Englander in a role where the easier, reductive choice would have been a frump or a Jane Wyman type, though
at the same time, Wyman might have found more to exploit than Hepburn is willing in scenes like the famous spill into the canal, where Kate is so sporting about her own stuntwork
that she's weirdly unembarrassed by the public mishap. In any event, Summertime works as a challenge to Jane's coping mechanisms, whatever those have been: she needn't
be played as a delicate bloom, or as utterly uninitiated to the ways in which a wider world works, the ways in which people prevaricate in pursuit of sex or companionship or
experience. So it's only for a while, then, that the cultivated Hepburnness of Hepburn, in all her disarming shrewdness and haughty charisma, seems to interfere with her
ability to conjure as tremulous a figure as Jane initially presents, and also to serve as appealing but arbitrary compensation for a film that gawks so often and so centrally at the beauty of
Venice that Jane herself feels like a generically mandated convenience on which to hang the spectacles and the formal compositions in which Lean is more fully interested. If
the main character is a basically arbitrary surrogate for the camera, why not the Hepburn we know and love, rather than the paler, more vulnerable woman the script seems to
solicit? But then, as Summertime confronts Jane with the truth of her desires and with the ambiguous effects of gratifying them, Hepburn's odd or erratic offering of
herself in place of the scripted character becomes fascinating and rich. It isn't just that her driftless hurt and solitudecommunicated with real delicacy and sadness in shots
like the one where she sits on a set of low steps by the side of a canal, or where she hides out of view of a younger couple who are abruptly reconsidering whether to invite
her along on a dinner datefeel more moving to the extent that we associate them with Hepburn herself. After so many years of standing next to Tracy, not just contentedly
but strangely pushing his cold stolidity to curb or eclipse her impetuousness, the woman we find once we get her alone is not the sidelined spitfire yearning for independence
but a much more bruised and incapacitated figure, an inveterate codependent forced to languish by herself. More immediate plot concerns, like Jane's initial outrage and then
her soft-spoken pursuit of love with a married man, only intensify the conditions for seeing Jane as a window not into Venice, about which Summertime has little to say,
but into Hepburn, even though Lean is too tactful and Hepburn still too fundamentally guarded and canny to imply a total unveiling, much less an exploitative one. She's still
stuck saying lots of stuff that sounds like the kind of dialogue that Hepburn would sneer at from her patio at Fenwick: "Let me go, I must catch that train! Oh, Renato!" There
are at least a handful of moments one wants to rewrite, redirect, or excise. But
she's breathtaking, ecstatic and sad, when she's all dolled up for her night out with Rossano Brazzi: unprecedentedly eligible for chic strapless gowns, but also
self-conscious about her age, her reserve, the tomboyish and undeniable eccentricity of her freckled beauty. She puts real heart into Jane's ardor as well as her disappointment. As
brittly mannered as Hepburn usually was, it's affecting to see how simply and directly she assumes Jane's elation and her mounting grief through the second half of Summertime,
unmistakably connecting at some personal level with the material and thereby elevating the film above the risks of hollow melodrama or unanchored pictorialism. She plays from
the heart, but not only from the heart: she knows that Jane's problems, her dramas, and her enigmas are finally in her head. Note that in her early, lying speech to the manager
of her pensione about the "friend" who is really herself, traveling to Italy so as to connect with "something hidden way in the back of her mind," Hepburn reads the line
not as a moist paean to the ineffable "something" but with a kind of pleased, reverential respect for the mysteries of the mind. In this and other ways, we come to perceive a
whole host of stories that Jane/Hepburn performs for herself, as herself, as well as what it looks like when she punctures or admits her own illusions: sometimes with tears, sometimes with angry swats at the
furniture, sometimes with a kind of serenity unusual for the hardworking Hepburn. In some sense, all of this derives from overcoming an erratically written role, and from enforcing
more of her own persona upon the part than she probably ought, even when it could stand a little saving. The more interesting and sobering coefficent for what Hepburn finally
achieves, though, in all the peaks and revelations of her work in Summertime is a portrait of desperate neediness that is so credible that the lustrous carapace of
Hepburn's independence in so many other films and press appearances is never again so believablea heavy toll to pay, if Hepburn has ever served, as she long did for me,
as an exemplar of how to proudly and publicly know your own mind. Even more than Garbo's beauty or Bogart's sangfroid, Hepburn's headstrong, proudly intellectual spirit of
autonomy is for me one of the paragon creations of the movies, onscreen or off. It's also, to no small extent, a willful and self-serving mirage for a woman who clearly fetishized
paternal surrogates and made herself subservient to men and to myths that don't seem worthy of the brilliant persona she forged and sustained. Any reader of Me: Stories of
My Life can perceive the measures of masochism and denial in Hepburn, and one need not relinquish passion and gratitude for everything Hepburn achieved and represented, even
if her image is built on shakier premises than one loves to admit. Summertime is the one performance where Hepburn discloses these dynamics of heart and mind; maybe
that's why it's the performance that seems most to combine moments of her unique, incandescent best with flashes of her limitations and failures of nerve. It's hard to look
at Hepburn and acknowledge that some of what you're seeing is fake, but it's well worth it when so much else, so much more is beautiful, and when the sum of the fake
and the beautiful feel so much like the truth.
Anna Magnani, The Rose Tattoo ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Eleanor Parker, Interrupted Melody ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Jennifer Jones, Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Who gets your vote in this field, and on my dream ballot below? VOTE HERE!
My Favorites from 1955: (As determined by years of Oscar eligibility)
My Pick: Susan Hayward, I'll Cry Tomorrow
Nominees: Betsy Blair, Marty
Nominees: Véra Clouzot, Diabolique
Nominees: Katharine Hepburn, Summertime
Nominees: Jane Wyman, All That Heaven Allows
Honorable Mentions:
Anna Magnani, The Rose Tattoo;
Julie Harris, East of Eden;
Simone Signoret, Diabolique;
Jean Simmons, Guys and Dolls;
Eleanor Parker, Interrupted Melody;
Shirley Jones, Oklahoma! Gourmet Prospects:
Ingrid Bergman, Voyage to Italy;
Suzanne Cloutier, Othello;
Doris Day, Love Me or Leave Me;
Anne Francis, Bad Day at Black Rock;
Julie Harris, I Am a Camera;
Evelyn Keyes, The Seven Year Itch;
Machiko Kyô, Ugetsu;
Ida Lupino, The Big Knife;
Shirley MacLaine, The Trouble with Harry;
Dorothy McGuire, Trial;
Marilyn Monroe, The Seven Year Itch;
Kim Novak, The Man with the Golden Arm;
Eleanor Parker, The Man with the Golden Arm
Further Research:
Honor Blackman, The Glass Cage;
Ann Blyth, Kismet;
Leslie Caron, Daddy Long Legs;
Cyd Charisse, It's Always Fair Weather;
Jeanne Crain, Gentlemen Marry Brunettes;
Joan Crawford, Queen Bee;
Bette Davis, The Virgin Queen;
Olivia de Havilland, Not as a Stranger;
Anne Francis, The Blackboard Jungle;
Betty Garrett, My Sister Eileen;
Greer Garson, Strange Lady in Town;
Kathryn Grant, The Phenix City Story;
Barbara Hale, Unchained;
Susan Hayward, Soldier of Fortune;
Grace Kelly, The Bridges at Toko-Ri;
Grace Kelly, To Catch a Thief;
Janet Leigh, My Sister Eileen;
Kim Novak, Picnic;
Nathalie Pascaud, M. Hulot's Holiday;
Jean Peters, A Man Called Peter;
Debbie Reynolds, The Tender Trap;
Jane Russell, Gentlemen Marry Brunettes;
Rosalind Russell, Picnic;
Martha Scott, The Desperate Hours;
Lana Turner, The Rains of Ranchipur