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A Double Life (1947)
In George Cukor's noirish, spell-binding melodrama
about an unpredictable stage actor overly-involved and influenced
by his character roles (and leading a double life):
- the amazing soliloquy (partly in voice-over) delivered
by popular Broadway matinee actor Anthony John (Oscar-winning Ronald
Colman) to his ex-wife Brita (Signe Hasso), first off-stage, and
then on-stage, about his insecurities and anxieties about performing
on stage as Othello: ("The tricks your mind can play.
You know, somewhere in the future, I can see it all finished. I
can see the whole magical production. Opened, praised. It feels
fine to have done something worthy, and then I think of all the
things that have to be done between now and then. The terrifying
thought of that first rehearsal. The actors nervous and frightened.
Your inner self telling you every instant you're making a big mistake
to try this, knowing all the time you're caught, and it's too late
to change your mind. Trying to make someone else's words your own,
thoughts your own. Over and over and over. You whip your imagination
into a frenzy. The key to the character? Jealousy, and you dig
for it within yourself. What does it feel like - real jealousy.
Try to remember jealous moments in your own past. Jealousy. Jealousy.
Find it, hold it, live it! Jealousy! And the hours when you worry
about nothing but shoes and props and make-up and the costume fittings.
And then the dress rehearsals. The heartening moments when it seems
to be going right. The inevitable things that go wrong... Nerves,
arguments, changes... Far, far into the night. Pills to help you
stay awake. And pills to help you sleep. The part begins to seep
into your life, and the battle begins. Imagination against reality.
Keep each in its place. That's the job if you can do it. And all
at once, it's opening night. And you look out at the audience,
a terrifying monster with a thousand heads. You're in a kind of
trance, only vaguely aware that the curtain is about to go up.
Then, somehow, the next thing you know, the play is almost over.
The last scene is about to begin. But you remember that you're
on the stage in a theater, an audience in front of you, And suddenly,
suddenly you're startled by the sound of your own voice. You try
to hang on desperately. You're two men now, grappling for control,
you - and Othello")
- Anthony's disorienting and crazed experience of delirium
at Othello's opening night party, and his request that Brita
take him home
- the scene during the 300th performance of Shakespeare's
play Othello - the near-death, on-stage strangulation of Anthony's
co-star Brita (as Desdemona) - she begged: ("Tony, please, you're
hurting me! Be careful, please!")
- the scene shortly later when Tony was miffed when
he asked Brita to remarry him and she rejected him: (Brita: "Because
if at first you don't succeed, don't try again - isn't that how it
goes?...Let's not try marrying again"); he was angered and jealous
that Brita was in love with press agent Bill Friend (Edmond O'Brien),
and chastised her with multiple questions about him: ("Is he
smooth? Is he charming? Does he speak gently? Does he write lovely
stories about you? Does he dance well? I don't. Remember? Do you?
Does he listen? Does he sympathize? And what else does he do? Does
he?"); she told him to "Stop it!" and demanded that
he leave
- Anthony John's angry, deliriously confused and jealous
strangulation of his own naive mistress Pat (Shelley Winters), a
waitress named Pat at the Venezia Cafe, in the middle of the night
in her bedroom; he kissed and then choked her to death behind a curtain,
in retaliation for being slighted by Brita moments earlier - and
then he suffered amnesia (with no memory of the crime)
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Strangulation of Mistress Pat
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- the curtain-falling conclusion of Othello which
further blurred the boundary between art and life, when guilt-ridden
and troubled Anthony John (who was tricked into believing that
the murdered Pat was still alive and serving him at the restaurant)
stabbed himself in the abdomen on-stage
Self-Stabbing on Stage and Deathbed Speech
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- Anthony's last deathbed words, in which he recognized
the fact of his murder of Pat, as he spoke to Brita: ("The
things that go through one's head. Suddenly I thought, I hope no
one shouts, 'Die again' 'cause I couldn't have....The things that
go through one's head....It doesn't feel bad now. Peaceful, really.
It's in my mind I feel bad. Pat. That unfortunate Pat. I'll apologize
to her up there. Or down there. Yeah, down there. You bet. Bill?...Look
out for the papers. Don't let 'em say I was a bad actor, huh? Brita...Brita,
Brita, you...")
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Anthony John's Soliloquy
Crazed Delirium
300th Performance of Othello
Near-Death On-Stage Strangulation of Brita
Anthony John Miffed by Brita
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