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The Naked Kiss (1964)
In maverick writer/director Sam Fuller's unorthodox,
bold and raw, feminist B-film and sordid, film-noirish melodrama
- it provided an uneven treatise about the abuse and exploitation
of women by perverse, misogynistic men and women, and the hypocrisy
of middle-class, mainstream morality. The tabloid-plotted movie featured
striking B/W cinematography from noted cinematographer Stanley Cortez,
who had worked on two previous classics: The
Magnificent Ambersons (1942) and The
Night of the Hunter (1955).
The film's major character with an androgynous name
(Kelly) - was a tough, strong and smart prostitute who attempted
to go straight, become respectable, and keep her past a secret. Although
she was stifled by corrupt and misogynistic men and social judgment
and prejudice in a Thornton Wilder-like small town, she refused to
be compromised or victimized. She manifested her aggressive fury
in four instances (or set-pieces) - when she retaliated against her
unfair pimp in the film's opening, her advice (and slap) toward a
young female about to enter a life of prostitution, her confrontation
with a brothel madam, and her murderous reaction to her fiancee after
learning that he was a child molester.
The semi-sleazy, taboo-challenging film noir by cult
film auteur Sam Fuller had two prominent taglines: "Candy's
Place--where all kinds of men find all kinds of sweets!", and "Shock
and Shame Story of a Night-Girl. She knew all the answers until she
felt the touch of The Naked Kiss." Fuller was fond of self-promotion,
and featured two references within this film to himself (his previous
film Shock Corridor (1963) seen on a marquee, and a paperback book
of his own 1944 pulp novel The Dark Page).
- in the violent, fierce, unsettling, and striking
pre-titles opening scene of the lurid melodrama (with a jazzy score
and great alternating POV shots), call-girl Kelly (Constance Towers),
wearing only a strapless bra with a matching black slip, skirt
and scarf, beat her abusive, drunk pimp Farlunde (Monte Mansfield)
with her handbag and spike-heeled pumps, when he suddenly pulled
at her hair - and revealed her bald and shaved scalp (making her
look like a mannequin (an object)) [Note: Cheating Farlunde
drugged her and had cut off her hair in retaliation for her urging
of six prostitutes to walk out on him and leave his "stable"]
- after he fell to the floor and begged for her to
stop since he was drunk, she sprayed him with seltzer water, took
only $75 cash that belonged to her (of the $800 dollars in his
wallet, emphasizing her morals: "I'm taking only what's coming
to me") and called him out: "You
parasite!"; she stuffed the cash in her bra and kicked him;
as the title credits played, she adjusted her wig and makeup, and
then ripped up her clientele photo from a wall of photos before
she strode away; as he struggled to get up, there was a view of
a calendar marking July 4th, 1961 (Kelly's 'independence day')!
- about two years later in the year 1963 (in August),
blonde-haired Kelly arrived by Greyhound bus with hand
luggage in the seemingly wholesome and idyllic suburban community
of Grantville; the marquee of the town's theatre advertised the
showing of the director's previous film Shock
Corridor (1963) - about madness in a mental hospital; at the
bus depot, as she descended the bus steps, the camera focused on
her long slender legs; wearing a light-colored tailored suit, she
spoke briefly to future love interest - low-life, vain, tough,
and hypocritical town Police Captain Griff (Anthony Eisley); she
had brought with her a monogrammed trunk that she would pick up later
- Griff remarked about her appearance as he watched
her from behind after she smiled at him and walked off: "That's
enough to make a bulldog bust his chain"; as Kelly
left the bus station on foot, she passed two baby carriages (one on
the sidewalk, and one in a park) - and displayed some maternal feelings;
Griff tracked after her and the two found themselves on a park bench,
where she was reading director Sam Fuller's own paperback pulp fiction novel The Dark Page
- Griff asked if she was a traveling
saleslady and whether she was "staying long" - she opened up her
case to reveal what she was selling - "Angel
Foam" (3 bottles of California champagne at $10/bottle) to avoid being busted
for swapping cash for sex; when he asked for a free sample, she
closed the case and denied him "free sips"; Griff responded with sexual
innuendo: "I'm pretty good at popping the cork - if the vintage is right";
she described her product for customers: ("Angel Foam goes down
like liquid gold and comes up like slow dynamite")
- after a lot of sexual innuendo conversation and
a fade-out, the two were in his place on the couch with Beethoven's
Moonlight Sonata playing in the background; she was brushing
her newly grown-back hair and they were drinking champagne - he
was her first customer - for $20; he put his arms around her from
behind and kissed her neck and nibbled on her ear
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Kelly Drinking Champagne (for $20) With Police Captain
Griff in His Apartment
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- after an interlude of sleeping together (off-screen),
he offered his place to her for the night; he already had suspected
that she was a call-girl or night-girl: ("Well, I don’t
see any battle scars"), and she knew that he was a cop with
a "badge"; he firmly suggested that he had to keep his
town "clean" - and she was insulted by the insinuation; she attempted to quote
German poet Goethe (incorrectly pronounced 'Gotha') to prove her
intelligence: "For a cop, you oughtta read books - Goethe
for instance... Goethe the poet. He said nothing is more terrible
than an act of ignorance and mister, you proved him one hundred
percent right"; he attempted to justify having her leave his town: "It's
nothing personal, Muffin. If I let you set up shop in this neighborhood,
the people would chop me like a ripe banana" - and she quipped
back: "Then why'd you buy my merchandise?"
- he proposed that she find a job "across
the river" in the wide-open town of Delmar Falls across the
state line - to work at a "salon" (bordello)
run by his personal friend, Madam Candy Allacarte (Virginia Grey),
whose full name was Candy a La Carte; he suggested he could become
a frequent 'sex' customer there: "I'll
buy a bottle from ya now and then...You'll be my Ichiban" (a
Japanese expression meaning "number
one"); Griff asked for change on his $20 purchase: "You
owe me ten bucks change," but she refused: "I never make change"
- after spending the night, the next morning she awoke
and noticed a framed Grantville Gazette newspaper
from the early 50s, about how Griff had been saved during the Korean
War by the town's war-hero; she gazed into a mirror to self-reflect;
the prostitute 'with a heart of gold' Kelly decided to completely
reform herself - she rented a room from the town's trusting and
naive local seamstress Madame Josephine (Betty Bronson) without
needing character references; landlady Josephine suggested moving
her dress-making mannequin named "Charlie" from
her room, but Kelly thought it would be fine to keep it there to
occasionally talk to; the mannequin had been created as a substitute
for her fiancee-lover Charlie who died in WWII 20 years earlier;
the mannequin was dressed in her long-dead fiancee's 1st Infantry
Div. military uniform with a pith helmet
- Griff was frequenting the salon - a front for
prostitution selling "Bon-bons" - populated by girls
that looked like Playboy Bunnies with fuzzy hearts mounted
on their heads and demeaning nicknames (such as Marshmallow (Sally
Mills), Redhead (Breena Howard), and brunette Hatrack (Edy Williams,
later involved with Russ Meyer)); he also 'pimped' for the salon,
and had met and recruited Hatrack similar to Kelly's situation
when she appeared in town; the sign above the bar advertised: "Sweets
Guarantee: Indescribable Pleasure";
Griff asked the brothel madam Candy, wearing a sequined gown, if
Kelly had started working, but Candy didn't recognize the name;
Griff referred to Kelly as "a pro and she’s got class"
Griff Flirting With the Bonbon Girls at Candy's "Salon"
(l to r: "Marshmallow" and "Redhead")
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(l to r): Candy, Griff, and "Hatrack" (Edy Williams)
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- as she unpacked, Kelly learned a bit of history
about the town of Grantville from Miss Josephine, about how the
founder was the great great grandfather of the town's "most
famous citizen" (J.L. Grant) whom Kelly had read was an "international
playboy, chateau in Normandy, Villa along the Riviera, private
yacht in Monte Carlo, society's most eligible bachelor"; Miss
Josephine contradicted Kelley's view of Grant: "He’s
a hard worker, Miss Kelly. He’s no playboy. His very name
is a synonym for charity. He’s got the biggest heart in the
world. Why he built our hospital. He built the Orthopaedic Medical
Center and sponsors it all by himself. And it’s open to all
handicapped children, with no racial or religious barriers...It’s
a haven of hope for those angels, so little, so helpless, and so
pitifully crippled"
- instead of checking out Candy's salon, Kelly
applied to be a "do-gooder" job
in town as a pediatric nurse's aide at the Grantville Orthopaedic
Medical Center, specializing in helping handicapped and crippled
children; Head Nurse Mac (Patsy Kelly) extolled to Griff about
how Kelly was hired due to her angelic nature alone: "She
came out of the clouds one night without a single reference. I
hired her on the spot... Some people are born to write books, symphonies,
paint pictures, build bridges. But Kelly - she was born to handle
children with crutches and babies in braces"; the judgmental
Griff was skeptical of Kelly's transformation from a marked woman
(whore) to a Madonna angel: "Sounds like one of those sweet
Florence Nightingales"; Nurse Mac corrected him: "She's tough! Runs her ward like a
pirate ship! She makes Captain Bligh look like a sissy"
- Griff harshly criticized
Kelly's work and new 'trade': ("That's a new low. Using crippled
kids to front your trade") - and deservedly received a
slap in the face from her, as she asserted:
"I quit my trade...I washed my face clean the morning I woke
up in your bedroom"; she resolutely explained how she had made a complete turnabout
and transformation from her old way of life after taking a long
look at herself in his mirror: "I saw a broken-down piece
of machinery. Nothing but the buck, the bed and the bottle for
the rest of my life. That's what I saw";
he continued to insult her: "A hooker moving in with the town virgin!
What an act!"; she was angry at his insinuations about using her
wiles to sell bottles of champagne: ("How much Angel
Foam did you peddle?"); she lashed back: "You were the only buyer I had in this town
- and my last one!"
- she defended herself and emphasized that she had
really changed and would no longer use her body for her livelihood:
"Look Griff, I'm trying your side of the fence. Is there a law against it? Is there
anything wrong with it?"; when he questioned her sincerity: "Your face
might fool a lot of these people, but not your body. Your body's
your only passport", she reluctantly agreed: "I can renew a passport,
but I can't renew my body or my face. Or my health. Oh look Griff, I'm
trying to change, please help me. Give me a break"
- surrounded by the children wearing costumes and
pirate hats, Kelly told them the 'pretend' story of the White Swan
Queen - a redemptive tale about transformation; in a fantasy sequence,
Kelly worked with the multi-racial children in the ward, pretending
that they were healthy and could run and play outdoors without
physical impediments; one boy kept repeating: "I have legs"
- accompanied by Nurse Mac, Kelly appeared in a long
black gown (with a fur wrap) at a party hosted by Griff's war hero-partner
(the wounded Griff was saved by Grant during the war) - where she
was introduced to the most respected, charitable and wealthy citizen
of the community - philanthropist bachelor J. L. Grant (Michael
Dante) and great-great grandson of the town's founder; he had single-handedly
built and sponsored the Medical Center
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The Start of Kelly's Romance With Bachelor J. L. Grant (Michael Dante)
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- just recently, Grant had returned from
a trip to Venice, Italy, and presented Kelly with a gift -
a blown glass vase from the 17th century
- during another visit,
the two reclined on his leopard print sofa listening with their
eyes closed to Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata playing on a reel-to-reel tape recorder; Grant
spoke: ("I see myself by moonlight
on the lake of Lucerne, in a boat wandering through a leafy alley
in a garden, and Beethoven's hands playing the Moonlight Sonata.
He carved that sonata out of moonlight"); they
discussed how Beethoven was in love at the time but failed to find
a marital partner - with a quote not from Goethe but from Charles Baudelaire ("A
sweetheart is a bottle of wine, a wife is a wine bottle"); she
attempted to exhibit her intelligence - telling him that Lord Byron
was her "favorite poet"; Grant was stunned that she was
both beautiful and smart: "Kelly you baffle me, intellect
is seldom a feature of physical beauty. And that makes you a remarkable
woman. The most interesting contradiction I've met in years, with
a love of poetry, rare in this age of missiles"
- Grant began to show Kelly his 16 mm home movies
- a travelogue of his recent travel to Venice - the city of canals
and gondolas; Grant told her to imagine the gondolier singing: "If
you pretend hard enough, and if you listen hard enough, you'll
hear his fine Italian voice"
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Kelly's Romantic Fantasy of Being on a Venetian
Gondola with Grant - Ending with a "Naked Kiss"
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- and then in a gondola fantasy sequence, Kelly joyfully
imagined herself with Grant lying back on silken cushions on a
canal boat on a black surface of water in the fabled city, with
a gondolier singing in the background; she pretended there were
flower petals floating down on them; she awakened from the dream, discovering that she was kissing Grant
- but then she pulled back uncomfortably, and paused to give him
a long, strange and curious stare (explained later)
- late one evening during her work shift, Kelly spoke with her young nurse-aide
friend Buff (Marie Devereux) who spoke about possibly quitting
her job: "I'm not like you, Kelly. I haven't got steel in my veins";
later during a visit in Kelly's rented room, Buff (wearing Kelly's
fancy black and silver glame gown) showed Kelly that she had received
an "advance" of $25 dollars from Candy at the "club across the river" to
work there as a Bon-Bon girl
Buff Showing Off Candy's $25 Dollar Advance
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Kelly: "Those Bon bons aren't there just to serve drinks you know"
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Kelly's Slap of Young Nurse Friend Buff
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- Kelly warned with puritanical advice: "Those
Bon Bons aren't there just to serve drinks you know," and
slapped her, but Buff had already been enticed to accept a position
in the perverse "game" of prostitution at Candy's club for $300/week; Kelly
vehemently urged her to not quit:
- "All right, go ahead. You know what's
different about the first night? Nothing. Nothing, except
it lasts forever, that's all. You'll be sleeping on the skin
of a nightmare for the rest of your life. Oh, you're a beautiful
girl, Buff. Young. Oh, they'll outbid each other for you.
You'll get compliments, clothes, cash. And you'll meet men you live
on, and men who live on you. And those are the only men
you'll meet. And, after a steady grind of making every john
feel at home, you'll become a block of ice. And if you do happen
to melt a little, you'll get slipped a tip behind Candy's back.
You'll be every man's wife-in-law, and no man's wife. Why, your
world with Candy will become so warped that you'll hate all men.
And you'll hate yourself! Because you'll become a social problem,
a medical problem, a mental problem! And a despicable
failure as a woman!"
- afterwards, to retaliate against Madam Candy, Kelly
appeared at the club in a simple black dress
to confront the Madam, who circled around her while surveying her
figure and noting: "Griff told me about you"; in the club office, Kelly assaulted and
repeatedly bitch-slapped the vampirish salon owner with her handbag,
forcing her back onto the sofa; and then stuffed
Buff's first night's cash earnings of $25 into her mouth ("Ten,
ten, and five") and then warned her to "stay away from Buff"
- in a second instance, Kelly showed
compassion for a troubled single nurse's aide Dusty (Karen Conrad)
who had become pregnant
- shortly later, while with Grant for a romantic
evening, Kelly admitted her own sordid and secret past: "When
I came to this town, the first day I came, I was a prostitute.
My first customer was my last one. Next morning, I quit. Now I'm
in love with a man who's the dream of every woman - every woman
who has the right to dream. With a man who's got to stop seeing me
before the volcano erupts";
without hesitation or a reaction, the indifferent Grant didn't
flinch and immediately proposed engagement-marriage to her, but
she hesitatingly responded twice: "I've got to think it out"
- later that night while drinking from the gifted blown Venetian glass given
to her by Grant, Kelly contemplated his abrupt marriage proposal;
Grant's voice-over monologue reminded her what he had said: "I
wasn't cut out to be a monk, and you're not the type to turn nun.
But together, we'll prove our whole existence for each other. You're
the only woman I want for my wife.... If they condemn you for your
past, I don't want them for my friends. Kelly darling, no one can
forbid you your tomorrow. And I'm all your tomorrows, all of them";
she commiserated about her dilemma by speaking to Charlie and wrapping
her arm around the mannequin dummy [Note: The mannequin was listed
in the credits as "Charlie" (Himself).] Kelly asked the
question: "What should I do?...Why should Grant want to marry a woman like me?
Confidentially Charlie, we girls are always chasing dreams. Why
shouldn't I have a right to catch mine?"; she compared Grant
to her "Rock of Gibraltar" to give her strength, and expressed
her fear of being alone in the world: ("Oh Charlie, the dread
of every woman in my business is ending up alone. I know that world.
And I know his world. And that makes me a woman of two worlds. And
that's not good. Or is it? With him, I'm complete, a whole woman")
- but remained doubtful about her momentous decision
- the next day early in the morning, Kelly burst into
Grant's home and yelled out about how it was such a wonderful,
beautiful and glorious day; she spun a huge globe in the living
room and then listened to the tape recorder playing Beethoven's 5th
Symphony; when Grant awakened and appeared from upstairs in
his bathrobe, she grasped both of his hands and announced her decision: "I
love you. It's a deal"; he was pleased but reacted with little
emotion, and then over breakfast, he asked questions about
the specifics of the marriage location, ceremony and plans, and she
insisted on paying for her own wedding dress; he handed over his
house-key: ("This is your home, darling")
- at work, Kelly handed $1,000 dollars (loaned from
Grant) over to Dusty to assist her in leaving town to avoid shame,
rather than having an abortion ("You have that baby"); Dusty promised: "Boy
or girl, I'll name it Kelly."
- during
a lengthy and sappy musical number, various tone-deaf, disabled children
wearing pirate hats and standing with the aid of crutches awkwardly
sang Cab Calloway's "Little Child" (lyrics: "Mommy dear, tell me please, is the world
really round...Tell me where, is the bluebird of happiness found?...Tell
me why Is the sky up above so blue...and when you were a child, did your mommy tell you?" (replayed
later during the climactic revelation scene))
- an upset Griff came to Kelly at the hospital, to express how he was concerned that
ex-whore Kelly had accepted a marriage proposal with his best friend
Grant, and that he was asked to be 'best man'; however, he calmed
down when Kelly confided that she had already told Grant of her
past profession - without identifying names (including Griff's): "I
told him all about myself, Griff. And about you and the $20....And I
told him my track record as a call girl before he asked me to marry
him"; on the phone with Grant, Griff changed his tune and congratulated
him: "I just wanted to tell you one thing. You're the luckiest guy in the
world. Congratulations"; he also affirmed his support: "That's
the big score - falling in love with the right person and being
loved"
- Kelly paid a visit to Grant's home to show him her white wedding dress
and veil constructed and sewn by Miss Josephine that was packed in
a big oblong box, although she was warned that it was "bad
luck"; she was surprised to discover Grant's perversion as a predatory
pedophile (with a tape of "Little Child"
playing) when she saw Grant's young niece Bunny (Betty Robinson) skipping
out the front door from his place (after the girl was threatened with
molestation (off-screen))
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In Grant's Home, Kelly's Revolting Discovery
of Bunny with Grant - Who Was Revealed to Be a Pervert
and Pedophile - With Bunny Skipping Away Toward the Front Door
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- Grant was prompted to again propose marriage, claiming
that he had forgiven Kelly for her past, and that his problems
should also be overlooked because they had similar problems: "Now
you know why I could never marry a normal woman. That's why I love
you. You understand my sickness. You've been conditioned to people
like me. You live in my world, and it will be an exciting world!
(He sank to his knees) My darling, our-our marriage will be a paradise
because we're, we're both abnormal" - it was a bold-faced
attempt to equate her sordid prostituting past with his sickness
Grant: "Now you know why I could never marry a normal woman"
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Kelly's Stone-Faced Reaction to His Confession
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On His Knees, Grant Again Proposing Marriage to
Kelly: ("We're both abnormal")
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Kelly Accidentally Murdering Grant With a Phone
Receiver
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Grant's Prone Body Under Kelly's Crepe Wedding Veil
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Kelly Sitting Immobile in a Chair Next to Grant's Body
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- in a stunning scene after being betrayed, Kelly
impulsively reacted with rage and disgust and accidentally murdered
Grant after she picked up a phone receiver and bashed him in the
head; he fell lifelessly to the floor, as Kelly's crepe wedding
veil covered his body; she stuffed the dress and veil back into
the box, and then sat immobile in a chair next to the body
and the huge globe - with her dreams of upward mobility shattered
and closed to her forever; the scene faded to black
- the following day's headlines (being read by Miss
Josephine, a cop, Nurse Mac, another nurse, Candy, and Buff)
were superimposed - in bold white letters: "GRANT
- IS - DEAD; - SLAIN - BY - PROSTITUTE" on
the next few frames; Kelly surrendered herself for arrest by Griff
and in the police station, she explained her motive for killing
the sexual deviant; she explained how she knew from the first moment
that she kissed Grant that he was a pervert, from their "naked
kiss": "Once before, a man's kiss tasted like that. He was put away in a psycho
ward. Oh, I got the same taste the first time Grant kissed me.
It was, what we call a naked kiss. It's the sign of a pervert"
- Kelly was charged with murder; Griff didn't believe
Kelly's explanation and kept asking: "Why did you kill him?";
Kelly continued to argue that the murder was justifiable homicide:
("He was molesting a child...the child ran out...he couldn't marry a
normal woman...he said I would understand his weakness"),
but Griff suspected Kelly killed Grant and had threatened
him with blackmail and extortion to acquire his wealth; he also
questioned why Kelly couldn't remember or describe the little girl's
appearance and identity ("It was all a blur")
- a number of character witnesses (including pimp Farlunde,
Dusty, Madam Candy, and Buff) were called in by Griff to testify
against Kelly, to refute her claims and defame her, and to accuse
her of blackmail and extortion; Farlunde planned to perjure himself
to seek revenge against Kelly's desertion by claiming that she had
blackmailed one of her political legislator-customers to pass a certain
bill; Dusty offered to admit how Kelly had helped her to avoid having
an abortion with $1,000 from Grant; Griff wished to prove how it
was another example of money Kelly had "squeezed" out of Grant; the
deceitful Madam Candy asserted that Kelly's motive was to take "healthy
payoffs" from Grant to avoid having his good name and hospital besmirched;
Grant had become so scared that he even promised marriage to Kelly
to keep her quiet; Candy claimed that when Grant changed his mind
about the wedding, Kelly killed him; Candy even denied that Buff
had been advanced $25 dollars to work in her salon, or that Kelly
had returned the money; Candy spitefully told Griff: "I've got
no time to break in baby baggage"; Buff was called in to verify
Candy's claims and denied being offered $25 dollars by Candy to avoid
being shamed - Kelly also lied to back her up ("Wrong girl");
Candy was spiteful toward Kelly: "Nobody shoves dirty money in my
mouth!"
- during her incarceration, Kelly looked out her jail
cell window and recognized the young girl whom Grant had molested;
eventually the abused girl was identified and brought into the police
station to help prove Kelly's case to Griff; Kelly attempted to forcibly
coerce a confession from the young girl by shaking her, to extract
information about her treatment by her Uncle Grant: "Do you
remember me?...Of course you remember me. You were at Uncle Grant's
house. You remember Uncle Grant, don't you? Don't you remember Uncle
Grant?"; with no progress, Griff suggested that Kelly speak to the child as
a "mother" might, although Kelly admitted she couldn't have children and would have
to pretend; Kelly urged the girl to admit to her presence in Grant's
home without her parents when she was molested; Bunny described
how Grant had systematically played a "special game"
with her: "Uncle Grant gave me some candy. He liked the dress
Mommy bought for me. He was showing me a new game, and he made me promise
not to tell Mommy or Daddy or anybody, because this was a special game,
just for me. Then you came in and I ran out. You're the lady with
the big cardboard box"; Kelly burst out crying and hugged the
little girl
- Bunny's confession was recorded and the case against
Kelly was conclusively dismissed - bringing
about her vindication: ("The judge and the DA gave you a clean bill of health. The whole town's
got you on a pedestal for what you did for the children"); Kelly
reacted: "They sure put up statues overnight around here, don't they?";
triumphant, she thanked Griff with a kiss and as she left the station,
she passed by five women she had influenced in town: Miss Josephine,
Nurse Mac, Buff, another nurse friend, and then Dusty
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Kelly Walking Through Crowd of Silent Town Onlookers And Departing Grantville Forever
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- the ex-whore Kelly - now an outsider but also a heroine
- walked through a crowd of silent onlookers from town (appearing
like a lynch mob) - presumably forever; the citizens had once hypocritically
regarded her as the killer of the town's legendary hero, but now
regarded her as the savior of the town's children; Griff noted:
"She still owes me $10 bucks" Cop: "Then you'll be seeing
her again" Griff: "She never makes change"; as she walked
down the sidewalk, Kelly maternally smiled and admired a baby in a
carriage; the film concluded with her viewed from above from the same
angle when her bus entered town months earlier
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During the Beating of Her Pimp Farlunde (Monte Mansfield),
Kelly's Wig Was Pulled Off
Call-Girl Kelly (Constance Towers) Leaving Her Abusive Pimp and Restoring
Her Wig
July 4, 1961 (Kelly's 'Independence Day')
Arrival by Bus in Town of Grantville - August 1963
Kelly Stepping Off the Bus, Greeted by Police Captain Griff (Anthony
Eisley)
Kelly - A New Traveling Saleslady in Town Selling Bottles of "Angel Foam"
- Champagne to Griff
Griff Hinting That Kelly Should Leave His "Clean" Town
Framed Newspaper in Griff's Bedroom
Kelly's Self-Reflection in Mirror
Kelly Renting a Room From Seamstress Miss Josephine (Betty Bronson)
Nurse Mac (Patsy Kelly) Extolling the Virtues of Kelly to Griff
Kelly's Work with Children in the Orthopaedic Center
Kelly Lashing Back at Griff For Criticizing Her Transformation, While Admitting
That She Was Trying to Change
Fantasy Segment - Pretending The Children Had No Handicaps
Buff (Marie Devereux) Contemplating Quitting at the Hospital
Kelly's Confrontation with Madam Candy (Virginia Grey) Over
Buff in the Salon
In Candy's Club Office - Kelly Stuffed Buff's
Advance Earnings of $25 into Candy's Mouth
Troubled Nurse's Aide Dusty (Karen Conrad) - An Unwanted
Pregnancy
Kelly Confessing Her Sordid Past to Grant
Without Any Reaction - Grant's Proposal of Marriage to
Kelly
Kelly Drinking While Considering Grant's Marriage Proposal
In a Soliloquy, Kelly Spoke to the Dressmaker's Mannequin
Doll ("Charlie")
Dusty Receiving $1,000 Dollars to Raise Her Child and Name It Kelly
Children With Pirate Hats Singing Song "Little Child" Together With Kelly
Kelly's Confession to Griff That Her First Kiss With Grant Was a "Naked
Kiss" ("It's
the sign of a pervert")
Intense Questioning and Doubt Expressed by Griff
Kelly Arrested and Behind Bars - Accused of Extorting and Blackmailing Grant
for Money
Kelly Recognizing the Young Girl Who Was Molested Outside Her Jail Cell in the
Alleyway
Kelly's Shaking and Questioning of Grant's Molested Niece: "Do You Remember
Me?!"
Jailed Kelly Cleared of Crime and Vindicated
A Thankful Kiss for Griff As Kelly Left the Police Station
Four Women To Say Goodbye to Departing Kelly
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