Natalie Wood Soulfully Resonates in the Poignant Splendor in the Grass
A probing, profound drama with an earnest depiction of how
young romance can turn tragic with the Generation Gap interference so commonly
shown in films of the period, 1961’s Splendor in the Grass offers one of
the richest, most complex renderings in the coming-of-age film genre. Director
Elia Kazan artfully mixes overblown theatrics with moments of great truth to
serve up an impactful melodrama that anyone who has dealt with unrequited love,
mental turmoil or family conflict will find engrossing. Utilizing a fine,
perceptive William Inge original screenplay (based on events from Inge’s early
years) Kazan crafts scenes of incredible emotional resonance, aided by an
evocative, jazz-infused score by David Amram that manages to capture both the
melancholic and sensational aspects of the story, depending the on scene, and a
talented cast of players who bring individuality and intelligence to their
roles, led by Natalie Wood, giving perhaps her finest, most dedicated and
emotional-driven performance as Deanie Loomis, the teen who finds passion and
turmoil disrupting her idyllic life in 1920’s Kansas.
Elia
Kazan appears fully engaged in vividly transferring the tumultuous
opportunities Inge’s florid, moving story presents to the screen in all their
highly emotive glory, showing his flair for making the ultra-dramatic
believable and thrilling. Already a leading force in theater and film via
previous work such as his directorial film debut via 1945’s A Tree Grows in
Brooklyn (Kazan had started his film career as an actor in 1940’s City
of Conquest), the stage and screen workings of A Streetcar Named
Desire and Best Director Oscars for 1947’s Gentlemen’s Agreement and
a peak for Kazan and virtually everyone else involved, On the Waterfront, by
the time of Splendor Kazan had honed his unique knack for drawing
trenchant performances from entire casts. Using daring closeups throughout Splendor
to reveal an array of moods and expressions that illustrates the depth and
complexity of each skillfully crafted performance, Kazan allows his actors to
seemingly work freely under his discerning eye, with nearly every cast member
skillfully adding creativity and remarkable detail to their assignments, while
interacting with each other in a convincing, deeply felt manner that enriches
the relationships between a wide variety of types, creating electric, emotional
scenes of devastating, visceral force that leaves a viewer in an overwhelmed
state. After this lengthy period of sustained success, Kazan would produce his
personal passion project America, America in 1963 before faring in less
accomplished fashion with his final projects, ending with 1976’s The Last
Tycoon. Kazan’s 1952 HUAC testimony, wherein he named names of possible
communists and later painted himself as a noble figure for doing so, made it
progressively difficult for some to separate his sublime achievements as an
artist with his personal convictions, cumulating in a divided reaction to what
should have been a late-career highlight, his 1998 honorary Oscar, bestowed a
few years before Kazan’s death in 2003 at 94.
For
Natalie Wood, Splendor would mark an important career transition, from
young ingenue to a full-fledged star capable of bringing impressive dramatic
finesse to roles, while also adding ample box-office appeal to her films. Of
Russian descent, Wood was discovered at four in her hometown of Santa Rosa,
with a 1943 film debut in director Irving Pichel’s The Moon is Down. With
encouragement from Pichel, Wood soon moved up to place among the most notable
child actors after standout work opposite Orson Welles and Claudette Colbert for
Tomorrow is Forever and her most famous role from the period as Susie in
the Christmas perennial The Miracle on 34th Street. Wood
would largely avoid the awkwardness that put paid to many child stars once
puberty hits, blossoming into a lovely while proving her dramatic credentials
via Oscar-nominated work in the ultimate teen-oriented classic, as Judy in
1955’s Rebel Without a Cause, from Warner Bros. Her focused work,
including a spellbinding introduction scene at a police station wherein Judy
breaks down in hysterics while relating her at-home conflicts and fine
chemistry opposite James Dean and Sal Mineo, led to several years as Warner
Bros. preeminent young leading lady, with the choice title role in the screen
adaptation of one of the 1950’s bestsellers, Majorie Morningstar, perhaps
the highlight of this era, although Wood’s brief appearance in 1956’s The
Searchers allowed her entry into yet another all-time classic.
By 1961
Wood was looking to add prestige to her resume after a series of standard fare
and, as with Rebel, worked hard to convince her director she was the
right talent to enact a complex, demanding part. She is unforgettable as
Deanie, particularly in several electrifying moments wherein the disturbed teen
becomes unhinged due to the breakup of her bond with her soulmate, Bud Stamper,
the rich high school star athlete bound for Yale, personified by a never
dreamier Warren Beatty in his film debut. Wood could sometimes come across
onscreen as rehearsed and too actorly, but she had an incredible gift for
fearlessly throwing herself into emotionally driven scenes, which she does in Splendor
with unabashed force, detailing Deanie’s agony and hopelessness to
shattering effect. This is evident in her most famous scene, wherein she breaks
down in the bathtub, but she’s at least as potent in the touching classroom passage
wherein she is asked to recite the Wordsworth poem responsible for the film’s
title, or in a later reunion with Bud at a dance, wherein Deanie cannot except
their parting. Wood handles Deanie’s rich character arch, including a
thought-provoking finale, with a maturity, skill and persuasion rarely seen in
film, allowing Deanie to stand out as possibly the most indelible work found in
a substantial filmography, with West Side
Story (wherein Wood again lends
a lot dramatic weight to the movie’s devastating ending) immediately following,
then continuing through the 1960’s with Gypsy, Oscar-nominated
work in a great teaming with Steve McQueen in Love with the Proper Stranger, trying her hand at large-scale comedy in The Great Race, before
ending the decade with one of her biggest financial and critic successes, Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice. A less fruitful 1970’s period, wherein Wood
focused more on family life after the birth of her daughter, with Wood ending
her career via the intriguing Brainstorm,
released posthumously after her
death in 1981 at the tender age of 43.
Warren
Beatty made a quick rise to the top of Hollywood’s young talent with his acute,
contemplative work as the sensitive Bud. Scoring in Inge’s A Loss of Roses on
Broadway and on television in The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis prior to Splendor,
Beatty’s beatific countenance and intelligent playing of the troubled Bud brought
him instant stardom and respect as a performer owning a unique presence and
acumen onscreen. Although Beatty’s methodical, thoughtful approach to the role
comes across as a bit stylized at times, it also allows Beatty to ring true in powerful
moments as Bud silently yet forcefully reacts to some of the indignities he
faces, making it clear to the audience Bud is wise to some elder’s ulterior motives.
He and Wood also create one of the most painstaking illustrations of the
sensuality and anguish that can accompany young love, with viewers firmly on
Bud and Deanie’s side as obstacles hinder their happiness. Beatty immediately
showed his diversity as an actor by following Splendor with sly work as
the young Italian gigolo who catches Vivien Leigh’s eye in The Roman Spring
of Mrs. Stone then, after a few years finding his footing onscreen, broke
through with a string of influential (and usually smash hit level) work,
starting with 1967’s Bonnie and Clyde, then followed by McCabe and
Mrs. Miller, Shampoo, Heaven Can Wait and, after several nominations in
various categories as actor, writer, producer and director, a Best Director
Oscar for Reds. Beatty would score several more successes with Dick
Tracy, Bugsy (wherein he met his wife, costar Annette Bening) and Bulworth,
in a lively performance of fine comic brio as a rappin’ politician, while
also suffering the barbs brought about by Ishtar, an all-time flop,
before cutting back on his film output as he settled down with Bening to raise
a family.
Heading the supporting players, Pat
Hingle and Audrey Christie bring color and perception to their playing of
meddlesome parents, Bud’s bombastic father Ace, determined to exert firm
control over all aspects of his son’s life, and Frieda Loomis, Deanie’s well-meaning
but invasive mother, focused on sexual issues and terrified Deanie will be
“spoiled” in Bud’s amorous embrace. Although caricature elements of the
overbearing parent often found in these dramas exist in both roles (especially
Ace), Hingle adds dimension to the restlessness that is driving Ace to control
Bud and influence what he thinks is best for his son, while Christie is given a
more humane character arch then normally found in parts of this ilk, allowing
the viewer to feel compassion for Mrs. Loomis by the movie’s end. Coming across
in a more uncomplicated, likeable manner is Joanna Roos as Bud’s nervous-yet-kindly
mother and Fred Stewart, who as Deanie’s warm, understated father, has a couple
very moving moments wherein the normally quiet and seemingly ineffectual man
shows he is fully aware of his daughter’s plight, and is supportive of any
measure that will help her recover.
As Bud’s free-wheeling, rebellious
sister Ginny, Barbara Loden adds spontaneity and edginess to her portrayal,
making one believe this bold young lady has the proper tenacity to go
toe-to-toe with her tough, disapproving father and seek her own path in life,
abet in reckless fashion. Loden, already a veteran of stage and television who
made her film debut the previous year in Kazan’s Wild River, scores
strongest in one of the film’s bravura sequences centered around a New Year’s
Eve party wherein a tipsy Ginny goes off the rails and entices a bevy of men
well aware of her “bad girl” reputation. It’s unsettling to watch as the men
move in on her, and Loden perfectly expresses the wide range of emotions, from
Ginny’s initial gaiety as the New Year is rung in, to confusion over an
encounter with her father, to throwing herself into the arms of randy suitors,
to breaking down with regret over the encounter. After Splendor Loden,
in Marilyn Monroe mode, would go on to score a Tony on Broadway in Kazan’s
(whom she eventually married) production of Arthur Miller’s After the Fall, then
create a small but important niche for herself as a landmark female
writer/director with her thought-provoking 1970 drama Wanda, with Loden
in the title role, then direct a couple of shorts (appearing in one of them)
before her untimely death at 48 in 1980.
Rounding out the incredible cast,
Zorna Lambert makes a wonderfully natural impression late in the film as Angelina,
the kind young woman Bud turns to at a critical point. Sandy Dennis makes a
nice film debut as Kay, a school chum of Deanie and Bud, giving viewers a
chance to see her singular acting style in its earliest form. Gary Lockwood,
several years before his most famous role in 2001, adds the right amount
of smarminess to “Toots,” Bud’s football colleague and friend with designs on
Deanie, while Jan Norris comes across as both friendly and a bit spiteful as
Juantia, the school’s most free-spirited, provocative date, who flirts in an
unashamed, liberated manner with Bud, and boys in general. Martine Bartlett as
the spinsterish but also romantic teacher also does first-rate work, while Crystal
Field and Marla Adams are given a nice opportunity to shine as Hazel and June,
two of Deanie’s most loyal friends. Inge impresses onscreen in a couple brief
moments, lending a reflective, melancholic tone as Reverend Whitman, from whom Deanie
seeks guidance. Finally, out of nowhere Phyliss Diller shows up in her film
debut to add a welcome bit of levity to the proceedings, appearing as Texas
Guinan in a nightclub sequence.
Splendor in the Grass was
met with some highly favorable reactions by critics, especially Newsweek, who
named the film the best of the year among some worthy competition (The
Hustler, West Side Story, Guns of Navarone etc.), while the New York
Times also placed the stirring drama among its list of top ten films. Kazan
was included among the initial candidates for the Director’s Guild of America
prize, while the film, Beatty and Wood were nominated at the Globes, with
Beatty also winning a Globe for Most Promising Newcomer. At the Academy Awards,
Inge ensured the film a place in the annals of film history as an Oscar-winning
classic with his victory for Best Original Screenplay while Wood, considered a
frontrunner, probably came closest to ever winning one for her affecting work
as Deanie, losing to Sophia Loren for her also-histrionically vivid work in Two
Women. The movie also made a distinct impression on 1961 audiences after
its October release, becoming a popular box-office venture for viewers desiring
an incisive, lush look at the many facets involved in a burgeoning romance. The
compelling drama has lingered as an important cinematic work, inspiring a 1981
television remark and placing on the AFI list of the 100 greatest love stories,
while gathering new generations of fans with physical media releases and
showings on TCM and elsewhere. With grade-A work across the board, specifically
the unforgettable presence of Natalie Wood at her most fragile and nakedly impassioned,
Splendor in the Grass remains one of Hollywood’s most relatable, intense
and heart-rendering takes on young love, and is sure to provide a deeply-felt
experience for viewers willing to follow the distressing-yet-telling story of
Deanie and Bud as they search for unity and peace circa 1920’s Kansas.
A recent showing at TCM Film Festival, wherein a new, pristine print of Splendor in the Grass was shown, confirmed the heartbreaking classic has lost none of its ability to profoundly move and pull honest tears from audiences. Prior to the screening, elegant TCM host Alicia Malone hosted and excellent Q&A with Natalie’s daughter, Natasha Gregson Wagner, and her granddaughter, Clover, both of whom bear a striking resemble to the film icon, wherein Ms. Wagner spoke of first seeing the film as a teen in a high school film class, and wondering over her mother’s exceptional performance, while the composed pre-teen Clover mentioned she was excited to see the film for the first time and, when prompted, mentioned she was interested in trying her luck as an actress. Judging by her heritage, Clover should be rolling in her namesake in films if she chooses to take part in the family business.