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I first saw it when I was a young teenager and liked it very much. Leigh is beautiful, and an absolutely wonderful actress. It's the exact kind of doomed romance formulated to appeal to young teen girls (much as the romance in Titanic did several generations later). But seeing it as an adult, though the leads are awfully appealing, it fell a little flat for me. Her suicide rankled. As did the whole long, contrived marriage permission business. Robert Taylor seems simply far too adult. It felt odd that he needed any sort of permission to marry - permission for leave is totally understandable, but a man who looks to be in his 30s needing a relative's approval to get married is a little baffling. It's a beautifully made film, it's just a little simple and contrived. And, as I said, seeing Vivian Leigh kill herself because of her shame in being a fallen woman is ridiculous (Scarlett would have toughed it out, for sure).
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In this version of the story, Mae Clarke plays a down on her uppers American chorus girl stuck in London. Her show closes and she slides into prostitution to pay the rent (and you get the distinct impression that this might not be a first for her). She meets Montgomery, a young Canadian officer. They (inevitably) fall in love, though he doesn't know what she's been doing for a living. When the film was shot, Clarke was 20 or 21 and Montgomery was 23. Clarke gives one of the best early film performances I've seen. She's natural, funny and charismatic.
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Mae Clarke was born Violet Mary Klotz to a theatrical family (her father played piano in movie houses, later in vaudeville), born in Philadelphia, her family moved to Atlantic City when she was a baby as there were far more opportunities for a musician. When she was in Junior High, through her dancing school, Mae won a spot with "Dawson's Dancing Dolls" and began dancing in big shows in Atlantic City pretty much right off the bat. She was quickly discovered by a producer, moved to New York at 14 where she was introduced to Ms. Stanwyck who became something of a mentor (at 17 she was already a vaudeville and Follies veteran). They both danced in the Earl Lindsay Revue in which Mae was a featured dancer. Lindsay must have had a very good eye, as he gave Ruby Keeler her first big break as well.
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Much like that other legendary teenage chorus girl turned actress, Louise Brooks, Clarke claimed most of her career was luck. She was pretty and talented and opportunities landed in her lap. Men liked her, and she could clearly hold her own in pretty hard-bitten company. Like Miss Brooks, her acting stands out simply because it is so easy and effortless and natural. She was incredibly gifted. But, like the far more famous Louise, she was a mess. Like many other young, successful performers, she was financially responsible for various relatives. She married badly (and repeatedly). She drank. She was also fairly religious and turned down some casting couch offers (from Billy Rose, Fanny's ex). She married an aviator in 1937 and quit the business. They moved to Rio. It didn't work out (Drinking. Infidelity.). She returned to Hollywood and took what work she could get. Looking at IMDb, her roles of the early 40s are all walk-ons in undistinguished films. But, reading her autobiography, she sounds like a nice person. She doesn't trash talk, and she took her work very, very seriously. It's all such a shame.
At one point, desperate for work, she arranged for a screening of Waterloo Bridge to be shown. Apparently, the film's style was out of favor and people laughed. She worked sporadically for the rest of her life, plagued by breakdowns and poverty. She died in 1992.
Find Trav S.D.'s birthday salute to Ms. Clarke here.
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