8/10
Brave Performance
1 June 2020
As an actress I have often admired Ginger Rogers. I am one of the few who think the films she made after the musicals she made with Fred Astaire are better than all that Art Deco Camp that still in some quarters has dominated her reputation. To name two only, ' Storm Warning ' and ' Tender Comrade '. She excelled as a witty serious actress, and when given the chance was riveting to watch. In this film she gives an exceptionally brave performance realising that a woman in the cold world of show business does not have to be, or should be always ' 29 '. Other people have remarked upon the certain similarities with ' All About Eve ' and there are some, especially with the main content being a new and apparently brilliant actress wanting to take her place in a stage play. This film is sexually bolder as Rogers plays a woman who unashamedly has had a sting of younger lovers with her ex-husband still very much an emotional focal point in her life. and she plays this up in many ways that Bette Davis in ' All About Eve ' could not have done. Rogers has a stronger sexual presence and shows it. The other brave aspect is her recognition that time is not on her side and the scenes where she admits that are truly moving, and without histrionics. William Holden is her latest conquest but his acting in the film does not match hers. He is also encumbered with many scenes with the aspiring young actress played very badly by Pat Crowley. She is nowhere in the same range of acting ability as Anne Baxter opposite Bette Davis. I am not sure if Irving Rapper the director was responsible but Pat Crowley was miscast and what could have been a very good film with a fine script loses much of its force and poignancy. I give it an 8 for the script itself, for Paul Douglas as the ex-husband and for the excellent Ginger Rogers.
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