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Friendly Persuasion (1956)
In UA's and director William Wyler's nostalgic, western
'family' Americana drama set during the Civil War - it was based
on Jessamyn West's 1945 novel The
Friendly Persuasion (a series of vignettes, featuring 14 short
stories originally published in the early 1940s in various popular
magazines) with an adapted script written by uncredited and blacklisted
writer Michael Wilson; it was Wyler's first color film for a commercial
studio. At 137 minutes, the film was budgeted at $3 million and
domestically-grossed $8 million.
It won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival,
and was the recipient of six Academy Awards nominations (with no
wins), including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay
(without Wilson's name on the ballot), Best Original Song (Dimitri
Tiomkin's popular "Friendly Persuasion (Thee I Love)"
sung by Pat Boone), Best Sound Recording,
and Best Supporting Actor (for Anthony Perkins appearing in his second film):
- the overlong film's opening title credits were presented
as gold-colored text atop 19-century
needlepoint samplers of landscapes
- in the film's beginning,
a pacifist Quaker family, the Birdwells, was living on a farm in
southern Indiana in the town of Vernon (Jennings County) during
the Civil War (in 1862)
- one of the recurring plot points
was introduced in the opening sequence - the family's mischievous white
pet goose Samantha often terrorized or warred against the youngest
boy "Little" Jess (Richard Eyer) (dressed
up in his "best Sunday clothes") by biting
his ankles; he called the family's pet "a s-snake on stilts"
- the family was stringently pacifist and religiously-oriented;
it was composed of patriarchal father and nurseryman
Jess Birdwell (Gary Cooper) and his devout, strait-laced and
very strict Quaker minister wife Eliza (Dorothy McGuire) of a local
fellowship; the pious sect members spoke with antique pronouns for the second person
singular (i.e., thou and thee) - judged as sounding
"mighty queer"; they forbid gambling, swearing, violence,
and even music on Sundays
The Birdwell Family
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Patriarch Jess Birdwell (Gary Cooper)
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Eliza Birdwell (Dorothy McGuire) - Quaker Minister
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Josh Birdwell (Anthony Perkins) - Eldest Son
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(l to r): "Mattie" and "Little" Jess
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"Little" Jess (Richard Eyer)
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"Mattie" (Phyllis Love)
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- the loving couple had three
children: sensitive eldest teenaged son Joshua or "Josh" (Anthony
Perkins), daughter Martha True "Mattie" (Phyllis Love), and
"Little" Jess; the Birdwells employed a farmhand Enoch (Joel Fluellen), a runaway slave;
Mattie was head-over-heels in love with Sam's
dashing, non-Quaker son, Gardner or "Gard" Jordan (Peter
Mark Richman), who was serving as a lieutenant in the Union (or Yankee) cavalry
- in one of the earliest sequences, a weekly Sunday
morning racing contest to church was enacted between Jess (on
his way with the family to the Quaker meetinghouse) versus his
neighboring farmer-friend Sam Jordan (Robert Middleton) (traveling
to the nearby Methodist Church) with son "Gard"; it was one of Jess'
sinful loves to engage in horse-racing (with his horse Red Rover)
against Sam (with his horse Prince) - although he consistently lost
- the silent church meeting (where the women sat
on one side and the men on the other) was interrupted by crippled,
cane-holding Union Army officer Major Harvey (Theodore Newton)
who spoke of how thousands had fought and died to bring about
the end of slavery in two years of Civil War; he warned of approaching
Confederate troops, and he both criticized and challenged the peace-loving
Quakers for not defending themselves or protecting their towns,
families or homes from attack; he questioned whether
their pacifist stance was because they were
afraid to fight, by asking Josh : "Are you afraid
to fight?" - Josh honestly answered: "I don't know"; the Major summarized:
"Do you think it's right to let others do the fighting for you?
To protect your lives and your property?"; Jess stood up to offer
his own thoughtful answer: "I've often asked myself what I would
do if I saw my family endangered"
- temptations often arose
for the inner religious convictions of the Birdwells who were continually
challenged and tested by "worldly" things; Eliza worried
about attending the Jennings County Fair with its "sideshows, freaks,
dancing..."; however, the family attended, where Eliza
quickly became upset that "Little" Jess was watching carnival-goers
betting with a Shell-Game vendor (Frank Jenks) and dragged him away;
she also found Mattie and Gard publically dancing in the fair's pavilion and reprimanded
Gard: "Thy duties as a soldier and Mattie's as a Quaker lie far apart"
- meanwhile, Josh's scrappy friend Caleb Cope (John
Smith) eagerly entered into a bare-chested "friendly" wrestling
match, but soon quit fearing he had injured the left arm of his
burly opponent Billy Goat (Ivan Rasputin); as Josh and Caleb refused
to hit back against those who objected and accused them being quitters,
Jess intervened and threw one of the aggressive men head-first
into a fire barrel filled with water ("Thee needs cooling off,
friend"); Eliza was upset by the entire fair experience: "Fighting,
dancing, gambling, wrestling...")
- during an almost two-week trip across the Ohio
River into Ohio to sell "first-class nursery stock" to his
customers, Jess (with Josh) were forced to spend the night with
Widow Abigail Hudspeth (Marjorie Main) and her three man-hungry
daughters - Opal, Pearl, and Ruby: (Edna Skinner, Marjorie Durant,
and Frances Farwell); the Widow tried to calm her over-eager daughters:
"Menfolk's are so scarce around here, the girls get carried away
at the sight of one. But I keep telling 'em, easy does it"; the
three daughters comically tussled over Josh,
and later sang "Marry Me" accompanied by a harp and accordion
Widow Abigail Hudspeth (Marjorie Main) - With Three Marriageable Daughters
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Three Daughters Singing "Marry Me"
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- Jess was able to negotiate and exchange his
slow-racing horse Red Rover with a faster "Narragansett pacer"
mare (named Lady) from the Widow, that shortly later led to victory over Sam's carriage
- immediately upon Jess' arrival
home, there were objections and a major difference of opinion
when Professor Quigley (Walter Catlett) showed up to
deliver Jess' secret "unholy" purchase
of a Pacemen Clark pump organ made at the fair; the Professor
called it a "substitute on Earth for choiring angels"; Eliza
scolded Jess' hidden desire for music by forbidding the organ's
entry into the house; she made Jess choose between her and
the organ: "Thee make thy choice. Thee can have that instrument
or thee can have thy wife. But both, thee cannot have"; when
Jess persisted, she decided to sleep in the barn; later, they were
able to resolve the forbidden organ issue by bedding down
together for the entire night and returning to the house at 6:30 am the next morning
- later in a comical sequence, three
stern-faced Elder Quakers (Brother Amos, Brother Cope, and Brother
Griffith from the ministry and oversight committee) arrived at
the Birdwell farmhouse one evening for a brief prayer meeting with
Jess and Eliza; upstairs in the attic (where the organ had been
relegated), Mattie and Gard (who were falling in love with each
other) were playing keys on the instrument;
downstairs, Jess frantically prayed with the Elders to try and
drown out the sound of the offending music; at
the end of Jess' fervent prayer, one Elder admitted:
"Thy prayer carried me so near to Heaven's gates I thought
I heard the choiring of angel voices and the playing of heavenly harps"
- with Enoch in the barn, Josh helped in the difficult
birth of a calf; Josh pondered the question of death, asking: "I
wonder what it feels like to die"; Enoch answered: "Just stopping
breathing, I reckon"; Josh responded: "Just going to sleep"
- meanwhile, there were reports of increasing threats
to the peaceful lives of the Birdwells by Morgan's Raiders - 1,500
rebel Confederate guerrillas and cavalry, who had now crossed the
Ohio River and were conducting raids into S. Indiana, to burn barns
and loot houses; they were currently only 30 miles from Vernon and would arrive soon
- wounded and on leave from the battlefront,
Gard was ordered to organize and recruit a local militia (the Home Guard) to defend
against an attack; then after recovering and just before leaving
to fight with the Home Guard, he came to say goodbye to Mattie; meanwhile, troubled
son Josh - who was conflicted by his religious beliefs, was worried
about the approach of the Raiders; he was concerned when his mother
reacted passively: 'If it's the Lord's will, there's nothing we can
do"; to his parents' surprise, Josh announced
his reluctant, sudden decision to join Gard and the Home Guard,
and that he would be leaving from Vernon the next morning
- due to the threatening situation, Jess freed Enoch
and allowed him to take a gun and saddle up a horse after Enoch
expressed worry about his fate as a runaway slave: ("So if
they're going to catch me, I'm goin' down fightin'")
- as Gard rode off from the Birdwell farm, Mattie
ran after him and openly told him of her love;
she eagerly agreed to marry him after he proposed: ("Martha True
Birdwell, when I come back, will you marry me? Will you be my wedded
wife forever and ever?")
- Josh's change in his faith caused great concern
for his pacifist parents; he admitted to them what his decision
to fight meant: "I'll kill if I have to... Mother, I hate fighting.
I don't want to die. I don't know if I could kill anyone if I tried.
But I have to try so long as other people have to"; Jess
rationalized to Eliza that he was not Josh’s conscience,
and that he had to let Josh make up his own mind about
joining the conflict: ("I'm just his father, Eliza. I'm not his
conscience. A man's life ain't worth a hill beans except he lives
up to his conscience. I've got to give Josh that chance"); that
night at bedtime, Eliza tucked in her grown son and prayed for
him, when he told her: "I have to do what's
right"; he departed the next morning with his rifle
Concerns About Josh's Decision to Fight
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Josh's Last Night at Home
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Josh With His Gun
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- confrontational neighbor Purdy (Richard Hale)
rode to Jess' place and claimed his barn had been burned down
and horses were stolen, he urged Jess to defend the community
("If thee wants to help, pick up a gun and fight the same as I'm
doing"); Jess claimed he would not use a gun, but would turn the
other cheek; Sam came to Jess' defense and vowed to fight for both
of their families ("And if there's any fighting to be done I'll
do it for both of us"); he also said he was glad to see someone
hold out for a better way of settling things
- various incidents brought to light the violence
and horrors of war: during the fighting by the nearby river, Josh
witnessed the death of one of his comrades and fired
back at the Confederates, as tears streamed down his face
- after a riderless horse appeared at the Birdwell farm, Jess feared that
his son was dead, and rode off with his rifle toward the nearby
warring-conflict at the river to find his son; during Jess' absence,
a group of Confederates arrived to pillage the Birdwell farm
- to spare her family, the openly-hospitable Eliza greeted and welcomed the
enemy soldiers, allowed them to take all the meat, chickens and supplies
they wanted, fed them in her kitchen; however, she uncharacteristically
fought back with a broom when one of the soldiers grabbed the pet
goose Samantha, shouting out: "She's a pure pet!"; later, she worried
that Jess would find out about what she had done: "I raised my hand
in anger"
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Confederates Pillaging the Birdwell Farm
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- during Jess' search for his son at the river,
he found Sam dying (with a stomach bullet wound after a "reb bushwhacker"
tried to steal his horse) and they talked about their ritualistic
horse-racing rivalry before he passed away; Jess
was also ambushed by the lone Confederate "Rebel" bushwhacker
(Richard Garland) and appeared to be hit, but was only slightly
grazed on the forehead; he fell and pretended to be dead and then
- although he had the opportunity to kill the soldier,
he only disarmed him and then freed him unhurt
("Go on, get. I'll not harm thee")
- Jess located his heart-sick,
wounded (in the arm) but surviving son Josh lying on the ground amongst
other bodies, and reaching out to the corpse near to him; he was
distraught over having killed the young Confederate soldier; as
the film was concluding, Jess brought his son back home on his
horse
- as the family prepared itself to depart to another
Sunday meeting, "Little" Jess divulged the secret that
Eliza had whacked a Reb with a broom
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Opening Title Credits
Samantha - Pet Goose
The Birdwells
Enoch (Joel Fluellen) - Runaway Slave Farmhand
On Sunday, on the Way to the Quaker Meetinghouse: Jess & Eliza
Neighbor Friend Sam Jordan (Robert Middleton)
Union Army Lt. "Gard" Jordan (Mark Richman), Sam's Son
Major Harvey (Theodore Newton) Speaking to Quakers About Their Duty
to Fight in War
Professor Waldo Quigley (Walter Catlett) - Organ Seller
Jess and Eliza Returning to the House After Sleeping in the Barn Together
Jess With New Faster Horse Lady
Racing to Church: Jess' Lady vs. Sam's Prince
The Prayer Meeting With Three Church Elders
Mattie and Gard Playing the Organ in the Attic During Prayer Meeting
Josh at the Birth of a Calf, Asking: "I wonder what it feels like
to die"
Gard's Marriage Proposal to Mattie
Josh's Comrade Killed Next to Him
Josh Firing Back at the Confederates
Jess with Dying Sam
Jess Grazed on Forehead by Reb Bushwacker
Josh Wounded and Heartsick Over Killing a Confederate Soldier
The Family Preparing For Another Sunday Meeting
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