Norma and Norma |
There’s a
moment in this film when Norma Shearer leans over and embraces Norma Shearer.
She’s playing two roles and in a critical scene her characters meet and make
fateful decisions in the back of a limousine. We all think we know how it’s
done: split screens and double exposure but that moment… you can’t quiet explain it away. Well, not until
you realise that a double has been used briefly to play the more heavily
made-up character: an uncredited actress named Joan Crawford.
Back in
1925 viewers wouldn’t have been able to freeze the frame and roll back the
action to reveal the truth to the vague delight of their wife and daughter… nor
would they have been able to recognise one of the most famous faces in cinema
history... but I could, so there you go.
Norma and Joan |
This
snippet aside Lady of the Night’s
major revelation was Miss Shearer herself who gives two top-notch performances
in a manner my daughter described as naturalistic and unaffected – “she’s not
like the rest: she’s almost modern…” (I feel that I’m giving our Beth a good
grounding; don’t you?).
Norma Molly and Norma Florence... |
Norma does
indeed stand out and the same intelligence on evidence in her more famous
pre-code hits can be seen here in the sassy, gum-chewing, broken hearted Molly
Helmer. If you didn’t know she was also the soft, highly privileged but decent,
Florence Banning you might struggle to recognise her… but that is acting. I get
the impression she really enjoyed the former role more – there’s a lot more of
an emotional ride and she’s the true noblewoman in the end; defined by her
choices and not her position in society.
This is
typical Hollywood double-think – an industry in a hurry to get rich quick,
largely peddling tales in which the ordinary poor have it better because that
choice of being “good” is much harder: this played well with their working
class audience who then gave them back a fortune in return.
Miss
Shearer is often accused of riding high on the extent of her husband, Irving
Thalberg’s, considerable influence but this is some months before their affair
began although she was in a relationship with this film’s Director Monta Bell
at the time… But Norma Shearer is a darn fine actress and she shows it twice
over in Lady of the Night (1925):
even in the 1920’s women didn’t need any help from men in gaining success
through sheer talent. And, do we really think that one of the best
talent-spotters in Hollywood history would push the claims of anyone he didn’t
think was anything less than exceptional?
On this
evidence Shearer was an unique acting presence and one that relied more on
skill than sheer good looks to impress. Her emoting is impressively nuanced and
you are compelled to watch her every sneer, wince and head-tilt as her Molly
struggles to make the best of things as the dice roll first for then against
her…
The film
opens with Molly’s father Chris being sent down for twenty years just after she
is born. He says goodbye to her in handcuffs then rails against the wealthy
Judge Banning (Fred Esmelton)
as his baby daughter is wheeled up safe in the
arms of her rich aunt Miss Carr (Dale Fuller).
18 year’s
later both girls are orphans and as Florence leaves her select school for
girls, Molly leaves her reform school with her gum-chewing friends Gertie
played by Betty Morrissey and another, un-named, performed by Gwen Lee.
Typical Girls: Gwen Lee, Betty Morrissey and Norma Shearer |
Molly heads
off to Kelly’s bar for an evening of dancing with her long-standing beau,
“Chunky" Dunn (the marvellous George K. Arthur) whilst Florence attends
an elegant coming out party. Chunky attempts to defend Molly form the
attentions of a local wide-boy only for a neighbour, David Page (Malcolm
McGregor) to have to step in and do the job properly. Molly is impressed and
starts planning a boyfriend upgrade by inviting her rescuer to diner.
George K. Arthur |
Mr Page is
not just handy with his fists though, he’s an inventor and before his
appointment he achieves the breakthrough he’s been working for: a device that
can open any safe! Wow, if only the script had gone into more specifics on that
one… He tells Molly and, their gooseberry for the evening, Chunky who suggests
there will be a fortune available from the underworld but Molly’s having none
of it and tells David to sell it as a security device to banks.
He follows
the straight and narrow and seals a lucrative deal with local bankers and their
wealthy backers – including Judge Banning. He meets Florence and falls in an
instant… future life sorted – not bad for an evening’s work.
Choices, choices... Malcolm McGregor and the Normas |
But… it’s
not that simple and David’s life is to be eventually decided by the women in
his life and not his own free will… an interesting progression from Alice D.G.
Miller (who wrote the scenario) and Adela Rogers St. Johns who scripted. The
ending’s not too surprising but the way we get there is based on moral code and
not character weakness or happenstance… it’s not greatly dramatic but it is
well done and Norma Shearer shines!
I watched
the Warner Archives edition which comes with a cracking new score from Jon
Mirsalis. It’s worth it for the double barrels of Norma and that first glimpse
of Miss Crawford. It's available from Amazons...
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