August 31, 2023
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
Gone but Not
Forgotten: Five Classic Films that Southerners Should Explore
It’s no secret that Hollywood over the past three
decades has not been kind to the South or to the Confederacy. The last major
films that have in any way been fair or which attempted to be objective about
the Confederacy were, probably, “Ride With the Devil” (in 1999), “Gods and Generals”
(in 2003), and perhaps "The Conspirator" (2010). But despite general audience approval, the negative reaction to
these blockbusters by supposedly sophisticated “critics,” and the evaporation
of financial funding for such cinema (no doubt affected by the changing cultural
climate), Hollywood in recent years has considered the South, and in
particular, the Confederacy, toxic, racist, and a cesspool of “white
supremacy.”
But it was not always that way. Indeed, during the
mid-twentieth century Hollywood directors and producers released literally
dozens of films which reflected the continuation of a cultural trend that began
a few decades after Appomattox. That trend was one of national unity—unification—of
recognizing the nobility, sacrifices and honor of those hundreds of thousands
of men who wore the gray, and welcoming them back into the union. Certainly,
slavery was condemned, but as most historians and political leaders of the
period recognized, that issue was in the past. Indeed, former Confederate
officers of higher rank served in the Spanish-American War, under the Stars and
Stripes, including notably “Fightin’ Joe” Wheeler, Fitzhugh Lee, Matthew
Butler, and Thomas Rosser.
This emphasis on unification and the recognition that
Confederate veterans were honorable and deserving of respect produced the
widespread movement in the early twentieth century to erect monuments in their
memory all through the Southland, most notably and impressively the Arlington
Monument, sculpted by the internationally-famous sculptor, Moses Ezekiel, and
strongly supported by four American presidents.
Likewise, in the relatively young cinema industry,
centered by the 1920s in Hollywood, California, the unification theme and the
nobility of the Confederate soldier appeared on the big screen, with such films
as “So Red the Rose” (1935), starring North Carolinian Randolph Scott and based
on a novel by Southern Agrarian Stark Young. But in was later in the ‘30s and
1940s that the Confederate theme became a dominant emphasis in films coming out
of Hollywood. And, indeed, not just movies about the Confederacy and the
Confederate soldier and his experiences, but the production of a number of
superb productions which were frankly quite favorable to the South, its history
and its culture.
Most filmgoers are familiar with “Gone With the Wind”
(1939), still considered one of the greatest films ever produced, despite the contemporary
swirling controversy over its “racist” and “white supremacist” elements. Anyone
who tunes into the Encore Westerns Channel is liable to catch such major
productions as “Jesse James” (1939, with Tyrone Power, Henry Fonda, and
Randolph Scott) and “The Return of Frank James (1940, with Fonda). And there
are others, which I reviewed in June
2014, March
2021,
and February
2022.
In particular, it is the period between 1938 and 1946
that I would consider “the golden age” of positive, Southern-themed movies. Not
only films about the war, especially the “border war” out in Missouri and
Kansas, but also very sympathetic portrayals of traditional Southern domestic
life and concerns drew thousands to the box office.
I’d like to consider five such films, each one
excellent and worthy of viewing, yet mostly unknown to Southerners. And these
are in addition to the earlier films I discussed, which mainly deal with the
War and its aftermath.
First, and the earliest of the group is “The Toy Wife”
(1938), set in antebellum Cajun Louisiana and lavishly produced by MGM. The film heralded the studio’s newest starlet,
German actress Luise Rainer, who had already won two Oscars for her work in
“The Great Ziegfeld” (1936) and “The Good Earth” (1937). In some ways it was
MGM’s answer to Warner Brothers’ hit, “Jezebel” (1938), starring Bette Davis.
Rainer is the lead female character, Gilberte “Frou
Frou” Brigard, who has returned from strict convent school in France to her
father’s immense plantation in Louisiana. Just as in “Gone with the Wind,”
released a year later, Frou Frou is flighty and has a “devil may care” attitude
towards practical things, including a possible future husband. While infatuated
with the debonair and undisciplined Andre Vallaire (Robert Young, best
remembered for the long-running TV sitcom “Father Knows Best”), she ends up in
a loveless marriage with the far more practical and worldly George Sartoris
(Melvyn Douglas). Her downfall occurs as she and Vallaire escape to New York,
only to suffer from a fatal case of pneumonia. Her sister, Louise (played by
Barbara O’Neill), finally persuades George to allow a repentant Frou Frou to
return home to see her young son and to die.
Parallels with “Gone with the Wind” abound. Indeed,
Rainer was considered for the role of Scarlet O’Hara, a role which eventually went
to Vivien Leigh. Both films concern the domestic lives of large Southern
Catholic planters—the O’Haras in Georgia, the Brigards and Vallaires in Louisiana.
Both feature large casts of black actors who live and work on the respective
plantations. And in both households the extended families are called together
for regular evening prayers.
In “The Toy Wife” the relationships between the
Brigard slaves and Frou Frou are close and familial. When she first arrives
back from France, Frou Frou is introduced to all the house servants. As she
asks their names, she spies a young woman partially hiding under the circular
stairway. She asks: “And what is your name?” The young slave responds: “Ma’am,
I ain’t got no name.” Frou Frou responds
tenderly, “I will call you ‘Pick,’ because you are the smallest pickaninny on
the plantation, and you will be with me from now on!”
“The Toy Wife” is available in an inexpensive,
three-DVD set in the Warner Archive Collection, including two other Rainer
films, “The Emperor’s Candlesticks” (with William Powell) and “Big City” (with
Spencer Tracy). It’s in black and white, but in every way a stand-out
production and a fascinating window on antebellum life in Cajun Louisiana.
The remaining films in my review are all set in the
first third or so of the twentieth century, and each in its own manner offers an
endearing account of the survival of Southern traditions and heritage, and how
diverse families meet challenges confronting them.
The film “Maryland” was a big budget Twentieth
Century-Fox color production, released in 1940, with deluxe casting of Walter
Brennan, John Payne, Fay Bainter, Charlie Ruggles, and Hattie McDaniel, who had
already established herself as a major player in “Gone with the Wind” (for
which she was to win an Academy Award).
In contemporary America we are too apt to think of
Maryland as one big suburb of Washington, DC. But Maryland was traditionally a
Southern state, and this film reflects the long and honorable Southern tradition
of fox hunting and racing champion horses. Charlotte Danfield (Bainter), the
owner of a large estate, once the center of aristocratic horse breeding, has
gotten rid of her stables because her husband was killed in a fall during a
hunt. And she has forbidden her son Lee (John Payne) from riding in an upcoming
competition. Unknown to her, her former horse trainer William Stewart
(three-time Academy Award winner Walter Brennan) has continued to train horses,
including the offspring of the horse that Charlotte’s ill-fated husband had
ridden the day of his death. The film has an exciting and heart-warming
conclusion.
The character of the gambling-prone servant Shadrach
(played by Ben Carter) serves as the film’s comedic centerpiece. As Hattie
McDaniel’s husband, Shadrach can’t resist wagering away any money confided to
him. Finally, he is persuaded to attend a revival where he “gets religion.” The
scene must be viewed, as it is one of the funniest on film (I am surprised that
Fox released this commercially, given the climate we live in).
On DVD it is available in the Twentieth Century-Fox Cinema
Archives Collection.
Next is MGM’s black and white “The Vanishing
Virginian,” released in 1942, directed by Frank Borzage, and starring Frank
Morgan (remember him as the Wizard in “The Wizard of Oz”), Spring Byington, and
North Carolinian Kathryn Grayson, whose exquisite soprano voice in heard during
the movie. The story is based on the memoirs of Rebecca Yancey Williams and is
an affectionate chronicling of the life of the Yancey family of Lynchburg,
Virginia. Beginning in pre-World War I times, “The Vanishing Virginian” traces
the history of the Yancey family and its head, Robert, who was prominent in
Virginia politics for several decades. But it is also the recounting of how
Southern and Virginia traditions survived and met the headwinds of the
twentieth century, including women’s suffrage. In the film’s prologue, the
voice-over announces: "This
is the story of a vanishing era when simple men so loved their country, their
families and their friends that America became a better place in which to live.
Such a man was Cap'n Bob Yancey." The proud heritage of the “Old Dominion State”
is never far from center stage in this heartwarming production.
"The Vanishing Virginian" is available on DVD in the Warner Archive Collection.
Then there is “Colonel Effingham’s Raid” (1946),
another Twentieth Century-Fox production, a relatively short, black and white
film, of 70 minutes, but a true gem just the same. It stars Charles Coburn as
Colonel Will Seaborn Effingham, who returns home to Fredericksville, Georgia,
after years in the US Army, there to be received by his young second cousin
Albert Marbury (William Eythe) and by his older cousin Emma (the versatile actress
Elizabeth Patterson). Effingham is full of spit-and-polish and begins to write
a column for the local newspaper. Suddenly he stumbles upon the plans of the
town fathers, who are mostly Yankee transplants only concerned about the
almighty dollar. They intend to tear down the historic courthouse which dates from
the antebellum period and perhaps remove the giant Confederate monument commemorating
Fredericksville’s honored dead. Effingham launches his final “raid,” organizing
the citizens and the UDC in a campaign to save the historic courthouse. He even
demands that thirteen live oaks be planted around the Confederate war memorial
to honor the thirteen states of the Confederacy.
Effingham finally convinces the town officials that
the courthouse should remain and be appropriately repaired, not torn down. In the
final scene, we see Effingham in his military uniform reviewing members of the
Georgia National Guard as they march off to muster (the film is set in 1940).
As they pass in review, the band strikes up the sound of “Dixie” to an enthusiastic
crowd.
“Colonel Effingham’s Raid” is also available on DVD in
the Twentieth Century-Fox Cinema Archives collection.
The final film under review is perhaps the best, and
certainly the most openly pro-Southern. It is “Virginia” (1941), a lavishly-produced,
Technicolor Paramount feature, in a sense that studio’s answer to the major
films from Fox and MGM celebrating the South. And what a film! Starring a young
Fred MacMurray (yes, he of “My Three Sons” and several Disney outings),
Madeleine Carroll, Sterling Hayden, and Louise Beavers, the movie recounts the
return of Charlotte Dunterry (Carroll), heiress to the old Dunterry family
plantation in northern Virginia. The plantation house, reportedly designed by
Thomas Jefferson, has fallen into disrepair, and Charlotte who has spent much
of her life in New York, intends to sell. MacMurray, whose name in the film is
Stonewall after the great general, is a neighbor and fierce defender of
Southern heritage and tradition. He tries to convince Charlotte to stay on, not
to sell. The return of an ancient black retainer, Ezechial, home to Dunterry
house to die persuades Charlotte that she, too, should stay faithful to her
family and her traditions. And she orders that the giant portrait of her Confederate
officer grandfather be hung once again in the central hall.
One rewarding scene occurs when Charlotte suggests
that Southerners should just get over the war which was, she asserts, about
slavery. Stonewall, or Stony as his friends call him, quickly corrects her and
explains that Yankee overreach and aggression were responsible for the war,
and, indeed, for much of the resulting poverty that has afflicted the
Southland.
Of all these films, the most difficult to find on DVD
in decent quality has been “Viriginia.” The reason may be obvious: it is
avowedly pro-Southern and pro-Confederate heritage, and Yankees come in for a cinematic
drubbing. After sampling several releases, all of them in horrid quality, I finally
discovered a copy available via eCrater, sold privately by the seller filmfan502.
Despite being most likely a third generation copy of a VHS tape, the somewhat
faded color film is watchable without distortions and reasonably priced. No, it’s
not state-of-the-art Technicolor, but it’s acceptable until our culture changes
and some enterprising company issues a superior reproduction. “Virginia” is
worth searching out and is recommended to any Southerner interested in a
favorable view of our traditions and heritage.
Interestingly, each of these five films boasts actors
who were staunch conservatives and traditionalists. Charles Coburn, with his distinguishable
monocle, was from Georgia and never forgot his roots; John Payne was from Arkansas.
Both men were involved in conservative causes. Frank Morgan and Walter Brennan
were also noted for their very conservative politics, as was Fred MacMurray.
Brennan was a strong traditionalist Catholic, stating in 1964, "I'm too old not to be a religious
fella.... It appears we are losing something a lot of people made a lot of
sacrifices for." And in 1968 he endorsed George Wallace for
president.
In those days it was not a sin to be a conservative
and traditionalist in Hollywood, and the South and its history were seen as
excellent subjects for positive moviemaking. The result was a number of superior
films which should be better known. Moreover, given the present vicious anti-Southern
and anti-Confederate bias vomited out of Southern California, serious Southerners
could do well to acquire these films. They will guarantee hours of grand entertainment,
but also tell engrossing stories on screen about our ancestors and their history.
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