Background
The
Lady Eve (1941) is a sophisticated romantic/sex comedy (with
light romance and mock seduction scenes) - a classic screwball
film, a quintessential Preston Sturges work of art and the director's
first real commercial hit. The film is a fast-paced battle of the
sexes with the painful, antagonistic terrors of sexual passion,
and numerous deceptions and character transformations. It metaphorically
repeats the Garden of Eden biblical fable. In the plot, a cruelly
manipulative temptress [the famed Lady Eve] snags a clueless, virginal
Adam in a sexually-dangerous 'jungle' environment. [Note: One of
the film's posters describes his predicament - "Bewitched
and Bewildered."]
On a transatlantic ocean liner, a resourceful, sophisticated
and alluring Barbara Stanwyck, in her first true comic role, along
with her crooked but lovable father named the Colonel (Charles Coburn),
takes advantage of an innocent, dense and slow-thinking, snake-loving
man nicknamed 'Hopsie' (Henry Fonda) - the wealthy heir to a brewery
fortune. In slapstick scenes throughout the film, he 'falls' for
her - literally and figuratively - in three inspired pratfalls. The
serious young millionaire is lured to her twice when the wily con
artist masquerades as a shipboard cardsharp (and is discovered as
an worldly adventuress when they reach New York) and then in another
identity as an aristocratic, English noble lady - excusing herself
as the identical twin of her black-sheep, discredited half-sister.
On their wedding night train trip, she relates fanciful tales of
numerous love affairs to cause her 'husband' to become thoroughly
disillusioned and then depart. By film's end, however, she is tempted
and falls for her own prey, resists her father's attempt to maneuver
for a rich settlement, and is happily reunited with her man on another
cruise ship.
Because of his successful pairing with Stanwyck, Fonda
went on to co-star with her in director Wesley Ruggles' lesser romantic
comedy You Belong to Me (1941). [Note: They had also worked
together in The Mad Miss Manton (1938).]
It was the third (and arguably his best and most expensive
work to date) in a series of self-directed scripts (the first two
being The Great McGinty (1940) and Christmas in July (1940))
from the great romantic comedy director Preston Sturges. His delightfully
inventive, and ribald script with fast-paced witty dialogue, delivered
mostly by a saucy woman, was taken from the short story Two Bad
Hats by English playwright Monckton Hoffe.
Amazingly, the film
received only one unsuccessful Academy Award nomination - for Best
Original Story (Monckton Hoffe), that lost to Here Comes Mr. Jordan.
[In the same year, Charles Coburn was a Best Supporting Actor Oscar
nominee (his first) for another romantic comedy, The Devil and
Miss Jones (1941). And Barbara Stanwyck was a Best Actress Oscar
nominee (her second nomination) for Howard Hawks' Ball of Fire
(1941).] The film was remade in the mid-fifties as The Birds
and the Bees (1956), with Mitzi Gaynor as the female lead,
and David Niven and George Gobel as co-stars.
Plot Synopsis
From the start, the main credits render the primal
myth in cartoonish form - an animated, buck-fanged, top-hatted, besotted
snake - with a slightly battered derby hat and maracas - slithers
and curls around a tree as it descends in a coil. The image presents
a hint of the twisting, snake-like plot that is to come.
On the banks of a tropical Amazon river following a
year's snake-hunting expedition [in a primordial jungle cartoonishly
representing the Biblical Garden of Eden] funded by the Pike fortune,
Charles Pike (Henry Fonda), a serious amateur ophiologist (snake-expert),
is given a wooden box by Professor Jones (Reginald Sheffield) before
he boards a motor launch. The box contains a specimen - a Brazilian
glass snake named Emma, and Pike is instructed on how to feed and
care for the snake with a once-a-day diet of a couple of flies, a
sip of milk and perhaps a pigeon's egg on Sundays. The Professor
mentions that Pike is to tell another academic, Professor Marsdits,
about the snake's Latin name: "I have named her especially in
his honor." [Marsdits is an disguised reference to Raymond B.
Ditmars, the best-known reptile expert in the country at the time.]
Pike is reluctant to say farewell to the "company
of men" in the expedition that is on a "pursuit of knowledge," as
he leaves with his watchful bodyguard/valet
"Muggsy" Murgatroyd (William Demarest). Mac shouts a warning
about "dames"
to backward, egg-headed Charlie who hasn't dodged city traffic or women
in a long time. He laughs and replies as the launch takes him away: "You
know me, Mac. Nothing but reptiles."
His steam-powered launch's whistle sloppily signals
the S. S. Southern Queen transatlantic ocean liner, a big
white ship bound for New York. As his launch approaches to board
the luxury vessel, a young girl, one of many marriageable daughters
who seek a rich husband, points and shouts toward the launch. As
the camera pans along the railing, it is hinted that Pike is fabulously
wealthy - heir to a brewery fortune. Daughters are encouraged by
their parents to entice and snare the handsome, eligible bachelor
as a husband by dressing in provocative shorts or a peek-a-boo.
Pike becomes the obvious next target of calculating
cardsharps and theiving con artists as the camera travels upward
to the upper deck, where it finds two high-class figures in white
sports clothes: predatory femme fatale Jean (Eugenia) Harrington
(Barbara Stanwyck) - appropriately nibbling on an apple - and her
debonair father "Handsome" "Colonel" Harry Harrington
(Charles Coburn). The confidence operators stand there noticing the
arrival of their next unsuspecting prey (another "sucker" or "mug").
She protests that she shouldn't always have to romance and "do
all the dirty work" on their victims. The Colonel reprimands
her with his dignified 'business' creed:
Don't be vulgar, Jean. Let us be crooked, but never
common.
Indeed, Pike is "dripping with dough," according
to their colleague Gerald (Melville Cooper), the Colonel's valet.
The new arrival is heir to the Pike's Brewing Company Pale Ale fortune
in Bridgefield, Connecticut. Gerald identifies the newcomer's source
of wealth: "Pike's Pale, The Ale That Won for Yale."
To begin her conquest and initiate her temptation,
Jean considers going after the tiny figure in the approaching launch
by clunking him on the head with an apple [as Eve also offered an
apple to Adam in the Garden of Eden story.] Her father attempts to
stop her, but he is too late. She holds her apple out over the railing
of the ship, directly aims at Pike's pith-helmeted head, and drops
the object. The apple bonks the explorer and splatters onto Muggsy,
as they are just starting up the rope ladder from the launch onto
the boat.
In the next scene, at the service bar at one end of
the elegant main dining room on the ship, stewards place numerous
orders for Pike's Pale. One of the waiters insists that the customers
will only drink Pike's Pale: "The ale that won for Yale, rah,
rah, rah." But the bartender replies that they have run out.
The bookwormish chump Charles, meanwhile, is ignoring the rest of
the passengers (with bottles of Pike's Pale adorning the tables),
engrossed in reading a book titled Are Snakes Necessary?,
by Hugo Marzditz [another instance of phallic snake imagery].
In a clever, imaginatively choreographed scene, society
girls surrounding him compete and try to get him to notice them (or
their ale choice) by smiling beguilingly or fluttering their eyelids.
Filmed in a visually-striking style, Jean voyeuristically describes
what she sees through a compact make-up mirror held up to reflect
the obvious and futile efforts and tricks of the amateurish debutantes
behind her. [As a conjurer, she literally holds his image and his
actions in the palm of her hand as she begins to manipulate, connive,
and control him.] Young women raise a glass of Pike's Pale to him,
smile engagingly and flutter their eyelids, look enticely at him,
pass his table with swinging hips, drop their handkerchiefs, or try
to socially engage him in conversation. She narrates, in voice-over
to her father, on the lack of skill of every other female in the
room. She also mocks his unpreparedness and deplorable naivete -
while she 'directs' the movie scene in her mirror:
Not good enough...they're not good enough for him.
Every Jane in the room is giving him the thermometer and he feels
they're just a waste of time. He's returning to his book, he's
deeply immersed in it. He sees no one except - watch his head turn
when that kid goes by. It won't do you any good, dear, he's a bookworm,
but swing 'em anyway. Oh, now how about this one. How would you
like that hanging on your Christmas tree? Oh you wouldn't? Well,
what is your weakness, brother? Holy smoke, the dropped kerchief!
That hasn't been used since Lily Langtry. You'll have to pick it
up yourself, madam. It's a shame, but he doesn't care for the flesh.
He'll never see it.
Jean speaks tartly to both the "bookworm" and
one beauty with "nice store teeth all beaming" who wishes
to catch his attentive eye. The girl eventually marches over to his
table for a conversation - imagining that she knows him:
Look at that girl over to his left. Look over to
your left, bookworm. There's a girl pining for ya. A little further.
Just a little further. [He obeys her powerful orders.] There. Wasn't
that worth looking for? See those nice store teeth all beaming
at you. She recognizes you. She's up, she's down. She can't make
up her mind. She's up again. She recognizes you. She's coming over
to speak to you. The suspense is killing me. 'Why for heaven's
sake, aren't you Fuzzy Oathammer I went to manual training school
with in Louisville? Oh you're not? Well, you certainly look exactly
like him. It's certainly a remarkable resemblance. But you're not
going to ask me to sit down. I suppose you're not going to ask
me to sit down. I'm very sorry. I certainly hope I haven't caused
you any embarrassment, you so and so.'
The duplicitous Jean understands Charles' awkwardness
and scholarly interest, getting into his mind by putting words into
his own mouth. It is the first step in her own romantic downfall: "I
wonder if my tie's on straight. I certainly upset them, don't I?
Now who else is after me? Ah, the lady champion wrestler, wouldn't
she make a houseful. Oh, you don't like her either. Well, what are
you going to do about her? Oh, you just can't stand it anymore. You're
leaving. These women don't give you a moment's peace, do they? Well
go ahead! Go sulk in your cabin. Go soak your head and see if I care."
As the reclusive millionaire closes his book and walks
out, she devises a malicious and effective tactical strategy of her
own to snare and hook him - she stretches out her shapely foot and
ankle from under the table into his path, tripping him. He hurtles
to the floor with a loud, frightful crash, and is left sprawled flat
on his face [the first of many slapstick pratfalls for Pike in the
film]. Then as he picks himself up, she stands and looks down on
him, claims upset, and complains that he has broken the heel off
her shoe. After introductions, he must immediately escort her to
her room to replace the shoes he has ruined with "another pair
of slippers." With her arm clasped in his on their way
toward her stateroom from the dining room, she gimps on one heel
to the exit, having shrewdly disarmed him as she pulls him away on
their unusual way of getting acquainted.
The memorable scene in Colonel Harrington's cabin is
one of the most satirically-sexy scenes ever filmed. As they enter
the cabin, the naively-innocent, gullible adventurer remarks on the
overpowering presence of perfume - he's "been up the Amazon
for a year" where "they don't use perfume." In a black,
exposed-midriff outfit and tightly curled hair, Jean aggressively
leans back on a wardrobe trunk and flirtatiously insinuates: "See
anything you like?" She invites him [her Prince Charming] to
pick out a pair of evening "slippers' for her to wear. She points
to a compartmented shoe bag with fifty pairs of shoes, seducing him
with suggestive lines about touching the shoes, selecting a pair
and putting them on her feet. After he has shyly chosen an appropriate
pair of evening slippers, she sits down and crosses her nyloned leg
in front of him - revealing her black evening gown slit to her knees.
She elegantly dominates him, suggesting that he put the slippers
on her feet. He clumsily gets down on one knee in front of her as
she extends her foot, with his face almost touching her kneecap as
he takes ahold of her foot. From his perspective, Charles' vision
blurs as he reels and swoons dizzyingly in front of her. While holding
onto her leg and fiddling with her shoe strap, he explains how he
is a snake-enthusiast and an ale heir:
It's funny to be even here at your feet talking about
beer? You see, I don't like beer, bock beer, lager beer, or steam
beer...I do not! And I don't like pale ale, brown ale, nut brown
ale, porter or stout which makes me ulp just to think about it.
Ulp! Excuse me. But it wasn't enough so everybody'd call me Hopsie
ever since I was six years old. Hopsie Pike.
What he detests about ale is that he was nicknamed "Hopsie" as
a child. She playfully mocks his name: "And when you get older,
I could call you Popsie. Hopsie Popsie!" As he holds onto her
ankle, Charles stares deeply into her eyes, and she stares back.
When he finishes putting on her 'slippers,' he comments on how he
is smitten with her and bursting with desire after exploring the
Amazon for so long. He attempts to make a pass at her, leaning forward
to kiss her, but she holds him back - simultaneously pulling back
and pushing him away as he leans into her for a kiss:
Jean: We'd better get back now.
Charles: Yes, I guess so. You see, where I've been, I mean up the
Amazon, you kind of forget how, I mean, when you haven't seen
a girl in a long time. (They stand together and remain close
together.) I mean, there's something about that perfume that...
Jean: Don't you like my perfume?
Charles: Like it! I'm cock-eyed on it!
Jean: Why Hopsie! You ought to be kept in a cage!
She walks away from him, leaving him staggering and
woozy, and adjusting his bowtie, while looking after her. But she
does allows him to escort her back to the smoking room for the next
step in her scheme. Having conspired to gain his trust and attention,
she connivingly lures the unworldly young bachelor back to play a
friendly game of cards with her and her father. When they return,
the Colonel remarks: "Well, it certainly took you long enough
to come back in the same outfit?" She makes a ribald retort: "I'm
lucky to have this on. Mr. Pike has been up a river for a year." Considering
himself to be quite a card player, Charles modestly demonstrates
a card trick and how to palm a card, changing a king of diamonds
into an ace of spades. Gleefully, they cannot believe that they have
a sucker in their midst.
The Colonel, acting as a father figure, points overhead
to a precautionary warning sign about PROFESSIONAL GAMBLERS. Jean
slyly disarms the embarrassed Pike again: "You look as honest
as we do." With glasses of brandy, they raise their glasses
for quasi-historical toasts before a game of three-handed bridge:
Harrington: Washington and Valley Forge!
Charles: Dewey and Manila.
Jean: Napoleon and Josephine!
As the Colonel shuffles the cards (forgetting himself
for a moment and showing his real card-shuffling skill), Jean warns: "Every
man for himself." (In another smoking room, Muggsy is losing
many card games to Gerald.) Col. Harrington and Jean allow Charles
to win and insist that they were playing for money:
"But we always play for money, darling. Otherwise, it's like swimming
in an empty swimming pool." Charles is shocked and embarrassed
as he wins $500 from the Colonel and roughly $100 from Jean by the
end of the evening. Jean downplays their losses: "Oh, Father's
in the oil business, dear. It just keeps bubbling up out of the ground." As
he reluctantly collects his winnings, he is unaware that he has been
set up and conned for the next round. After the Colonel leaves them
for the evening to talk about whatever young people talk about, Charles
notes how the Colonel's playing was slightly uneven, and then compliments
Jean on her card-playing skill.
Acting charming and suggestive, she smoothly flirts
with the impossibly-virginal explorer with a silly grin (who fortunately
wasn't up the Amazon for two years), in a classic conversation, as
they sit nose-to-nose. The couple predictably find themselves outside
Charles' stateroom cabin, and now he self-assuredly invites her inside
with a line dripping in sexual innuendo - to see his pet snake:
Charles: Would you care to come in...(he clears his
throat) and see Emma?
Jean (flippantly): That's a new one, isn't it?
Inside the cabin, when Jean realizes that Emma wasn't
just a gag but a rare type of Brazilian glass snake that has gotten
out of its box, she picks up her skirt and then screams bloody murder
when she sees the creature slithering around on Charles' pajamas
on the bed. Jean rushes out of the cabin down the corridor outside
his room, still screaming madly. He follows her down one flight of
a circular staircase to her own cabin, where she anxiously expresses
deep upset: "Why didn't you tell me you had a slimy...?" [The
snake is a potent sexual symbol, although it has a female name.]
After being assured that Emma hadn't followed them down into the
room, she invites him to accompany her to a chaise lounge.
In one of the film's best, most artful, sexually-lustful
scenes, she invites him to sit next to her on the divan - he falls
to the floor - as she reclines on the chaise and hangs onto him for
comfort and for recovery after allegedly being frightened by the
snake. Soon, she leans over and wraps her arms around his neck, almost
holding it in a vise, and begins to caress his hair, face and earlobe
- while his eyes close. Jean cradles his head with her right arm.
As they talk, she nuzzles close to his cheek, tantalizes him and
drives him wild:
Jean: Oh darling, hold me tight! Oh, you don't know
what you've done to me.
Charles: I'm terribly sorry.
Jean: Oh, that's all right.
Charles: I wouldn't have frightened you for anything in the world.
I mean if there's anyone in the world I wouldn't have wanted to (her
nuzzling causes exquisite torment and he pauses) - it's you.
Jean: You're very sweet. Don't let me go.
Self-conscious and shy, Charles steals a look at her
legs, and appears to be on the verge of swooning again. To prevent
himself from becoming more delirious - and with his eyes averted,
he pulls down her skirt over her bared knees. She graciously accepts.
At the beginning of a long, unbroken camera shot (a close-up of the
two of them) in the film's most memorable scene, they share a conversation
about his experiences up the Amazon, his interest in snakes, his
disinterest in the brewing business, his bachelorhood, and their
fantasy love ideals. With her face nestled against his, she teases
and kids with him - and tenderly and seductively strokes his cheek
and fools with his hair and ear, causing him to become paralyzed
with desire. His eyes close at times, and his voice appears strangulated
and broken:
Charles: Snakes are my life, in a way.
Jean: (thoughtfully) What a life!
Charles: I suppose it does sound sorta silly. I mean, I suppose I
shoulda married and settled down. I imagine my father always wanted
me to. As a matter of fact, he's told me so rather plainly. I just
never cared for the brewing business.
Jean: Oh, you say that's why you've never married?
Charles: Oh no. It's just I've never met her. I suppose she's around
somewhere in the world.
Jean: It would be too bad if you never bumped into each other.
Charles: Well...
Jean: I-I suppose you know what she looks like and everything.
Charles: I-I think so.
Jean: I'll bet she looks like Marguerite in Faust.
Charles: Oh no, she isn't, I mean, she hasn't, she's not as bulky
as an opera singer.
Jean: Oh. How are her teeth?
Charles (startled): Hunh?
Jean: Well, you should always pick one out with good teeth. It saves
expense later.
Charles: Oh, now you're kidding me.
Jean: (tenderly) Not badly. You have a right to have an ideal. Oh,
I guess we all have one.
Charles: What does yours look like?
Jean: He's a little short guy with lots of money.
Charles: Why short?
Jean: What does it matter if he's rich? It's so he'll look up to
me. So I'll be his ideal.
Charles: That's a funny kind of reason.
Jean: Well, look who's reasoning. And when he takes me out to dinner,
he'll never add up the check and he won't smoke greasy cigars or
use grease on his hair. And, oh yes, he, he won't do card tricks.
Charles: Oh.
Jean (sweetly): Oh, it's not that I mind your doing card tricks,
Hopsie. It's just that you naturally wouldn't want your ideal to
do card tricks.
Charles: I shouldn't think that kind of ideal was so difficult to
find.
Jean: Oh he isn't. That's why he's my ideal. What's the sense of
having one if you can't ever find him? Mine is a practical ideal
you can find two or three of in every barber shop - getting the works.
Charles: Why don't you marry one of them?
Jean (almost indignantly): Why should I marry anybody that looked
like that? When I marry, it's gonna be somebody I've never seen before.
I mean I won't know what he looks like or where he'll come from of
what he'll be. I want him to sort of - take me by surprise.
Charles: Like a burglar.
Jean: That's right. And the night will be heavy with perfume. And
I'll hear a step behind me and somebody breathing heavily, and then...(She
moans and sighs softly as she stretches back langorously on the chaise)
You'd better go to bed, Hopsie. I think I can sleep peacefully now.
Charles (tugging his collar out because of the sexual heat that has
been generated): I wish I could say the same.
Jean: Why Hopsie! (He rises to his feet and goes to the door. She
giggles to herself.)
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