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Katharine Hepburn, left - Cate Blanchett as Katharine Hepburn, right |
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Showing posts with label Howard Hughes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Howard Hughes. Show all posts
06 September 2012
Cate Blanchett as Kate Hepburn in THE AVIATOR (2004)
In 2004 Martin Scorsese directed Leonardo DiCaprio as Howard Hughes in THE AVIATOR. Cate Blanchett co-starred as Katharine Hepburn, Howard Hughes' long-term girlfriend in the 1930s. In this post, I will analyse Blanchett's overall look and her general performance as the great KH. Then I will break down the scenes in which Hepburn and Hughes are portrayed and discuss the accuracy of the filmmakers in portraying their relationship.
17 May 2012
THE PHILADELPHIA STORY (1940)
The Philadelphia Story (1940) marks the turning point in Hepburn’s
film career. She had decided to return home in 1938 after being labeled “box office poison”
for a series of failed costume dramas at RKO. After a hurricane swept away her
family’s Fenwick home, Hepburn tried to piece her life and career back together.
Playwright Philip Barry visited her in Fenwick with a play which he had written
for her about a Philadelphia socialite modeled after Hepburn herself.
The play ran for an unprecedented 415 performances. Hepburn’s then boyfriend, Howard Hughes, purchased the rights for her so that she would be able to return to Hollywood and call her own shots. Rather than returning to RKO, Hepburn signed a contract with MGM studio mogul Louis B. Mayer. The Philadelphia Story was the first film in which Hepburn had almost exclusive
control over the casting of the film. She was given top billing across Cary Grant and Jimmy Stewart and her friend George Cukor was chosen to direct.

The plot of The Philadelphia Story both
promotes and contradicts many feminist ideals. Some audiences viewed Tracy’s reformation
as a taming, though many film critics debate this point. Although Hepburn’s
character is scolded and insulted by the various male characters, they each in
one way or another love, admire, or respect her. Tracy's "upper-classness" (Andrew Britton, 1995) is the epitome of
Hepburn, but in a way very much unlike her alter ego Jo March. Tracy is an
intellectual with very strong opinions about herself and about other people.
She is not ambitious like Jo March but she sets very high standards for herself and
the people around her. One might observe that Jo March is very like the young Hepburn, the
kid behind the star, while Tracy epitomizes that which audiences identify in her
star persona – class, intelligence, wit, and high moral standards. Through
her role as Tracy, Hepburn came to represent a “special class of the American
female,” full of strength and “inner divinity.”

Tracy’s relationship with her ex-husband,
played by Cary Grant, is the most complex. He refuses to be impressed by her
“so-called strength” and he leads the pack in trying to reform her, but it is
clear that he truly loves her. His arguments for her reformation are not that
she should be less of a strong, independent-minded woman, but that she should
be more of a compassionate human being: “You’ll never be a first-class human
being or a first-class woman until you have learned to have some regard for
human frailty.” His appeal is not an attack on her female strength, but more an appeal to her humanity. It is clear that he and Tracy are evenly
matched because he does not wish to break her will but only to refine it. The tension between Tracy and Macaulay is based on social and economic class division, but C.K. Dexter Haven argues on the basis of the human vs. either the merely material statue, or the other-worldly, deific goddess. He supports the refined, yet secular, view of mankind which is indicative of his expectations for perfection, regardless of social class. At one point he says "You (Tracy) could marry Mack the night watchman and I'd cheer for you!"
Tracy's father's objections are the most infuriating because he blames her for his affair with another woman. He also attacks her womanhood when he says,
"You have a good mind, a pretty face, a disciplined body that does what you tell it to.
You have everything it takes to make a beautiful woman except the one essential: an
understanding heart. And without that you might as well be made of bronze."
Her father's remarks might cut the deepest, but at bottom they are simply a reiteration of what Haven has already said, including the statue motif. The fact that these arguments are framed in a way that limits Tracy's femaleness, they are not read as such by the characters involved. He also practically retracts all that he has said by the end of the film when he denies that Tracy has ever been a disappointment as a daughter, thus voiding his entire arguments against her.
Her father's remarks might cut the deepest, but at bottom they are simply a reiteration of what Haven has already said, including the statue motif. The fact that these arguments are framed in a way that limits Tracy's femaleness, they are not read as such by the characters involved. He also practically retracts all that he has said by the end of the film when he denies that Tracy has ever been a disappointment as a daughter, thus voiding his entire arguments against her.

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