All About Eve

All About Eve

Showered with Oscars, this wonderfully bitchy (and witty) comedy written and directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz concerns an aging theater star (Bette Davis) whose life is being supplanted by a wolf-in-sheep's-clothing ingenue (Anne Baxter) whom she helped. This is a film for a viewer to take in like a box of chocolates, packed with scene-for-scene delights that make the entire story even better than it really is. The film also gives deviously talented actors such as George Sanders and Thelma Ritter a chance to speak dazzling lines; Davis bites into her role and never lets go. A classic from Mankiewicz, a legendary screenwriter and the brilliant director of A Letter to Three Wives, The Barefoot Contessa, and Sleuth. --Tom Keogh

Genre: Drama
Production: 20th Century Fox
  Won 6 Oscars. Another 17 wins & 17 nominations.
 
IMDB:
8.3
Metacritic:
98
Rotten Tomatoes:
100%
NR (Not Rated)
Year:
1950
138
15,780 Views

Bill:
We started talking. She wanted to know about Hollywood. She seemed so interested.

Margo:
She's a girl of so many interests.

Bill:
A pretty rare quality these days.

Margo:
A girl of so many rare qualities.

Bill:
So she seems.

Margo:
So you've pointed out so often. So many qualities so often. Her loyalty, efficiency, devotion, warmth, and affection, and so young. So young and so fair.

Bill:
I can't believe you're making this up. It sounds like something out of an old Clyde Fitch play.

Margo:
Clyde Fitch--though you may not think so--was well before my time.

Bill:
I've always denied the legend that you were in "Our American Cousin" the night Lincoln was shot.

Margo:
I don't think that's funny.

Bill:
Of course it's funny. This is all too laughable to be anything else. You know what I feel about this age obsession of yours. And now this ridiculous attempt to whip yourself up into a jealous froth because I spent ten minutes with a stage-struck kid.

Margo:
Twenty.

Bill:
Thirty minutes, forty minutes, what of it?

Margo:
Stage-struck kid! She's a young lady of qualities. And I'll have you know I'm fed up with both the young lady and her qualities. Studying me as if I were a play or a blueprint, how I walk, talk, think, act, sleep...

Bill:
Now, how can you take offense at a kid trying in every way to be as much like her ideal as possible?

Margo:
Stop calling her a kid! As it happens, there are particular aspects of my life to which I would like to maintain sole and exclusive rights and privileges.

Bill:
For instance what?

Margo:
For instance you.

Bill:
This is my cue to take you in my arms and reassure you. But I'm not going to. I'm too mad...

Margo:
[interrupting] Guilty.

Bill:
...Mad! Darling, there are certain characteristics for which you are famous onstage and off. I love you for some of them in spite of others. I haven't let those become too important. They're part of your equipment for getting along in what is laughingly called our environment. You have to keep your teeth sharp, all right. But I will not have you sharpen them on me - or on Eve.

Margo:
What about her teeth? What about her fangs?

Bill:
She hasn't cut them yet, and you know it! So when you start judging an idealistic, dreamy-eyed kid by the barroom benzedrine standards of this megalomaniac society, I won't have it. Eve Harrington has never by a word, a look, or a suggestion indicated anything to me but her adoration for you and her happiness at our being in love. And to intimate anything else doesn't spell jealousy to me. It spells out paranoiac insecurity that you should be ashamed of.

Margo:
Cut! Print it! What happens in the next reel? Do I get dragged off screaming to the snake pits?

De Witt:
Every so often some elder statesman of the theatre reminds the public that actors and actresses are just plain folks, completely ignoring the fact thath their whole attraction is their complete lack of resemblance to ordinary human beings. We all have that abnormality in common. We're a breed apart from the rest of humanity, we theatre folk. We are the original displaced personalities.

Bill:
(To Eve) You won't have to read his collumn tomorrow kid, you just heard it. I don't agree, Addison.

De Witt:
That happens to be your particular abnormality.

Miss Casswell:
[interrupting] Oh, waiter!

De Witt:
That isn't a waiter, my dear. That's a butler.

Miss Casswell:
Well, I can't yell, 'Oh, butler!' can I? Maybe somebody's name is Butler.

De Witt:
You have a point. An idiotic one, but a point.

Miss Casswell:
I don't want to make trouble. All I want is a drink.

Max:
Leave it to me. I'll get you one.

Miss Caswell:
[smiling] Thank you, Mr. Fabian.

De Witt:
Well done. I can see your career rising in the east like the sun. You were saying.

Bill:
I'll admit there's a screwball element in the theatre. It's got splotlights on it and a brass band but it isn't basic. To be a good actor or actress or anything else in the theatre means wanting to be that more than anything else in the world.

Eve:
[softly] Yes, yes it does.

Bill:
It means concentration of desire or ambition, and sacrifice such as no other profession demands. And I'll agree that the man or woman who accepts those terms can't be ordinary, can't be just someone. To give so much for almost always so little.

Eve:
So little. So little, did you say? Why, if there's nothing else, there's applause. I've listened backstage to people applaud. It's like, like waves of love coming over the footlights and wrapping you up. Imagine. To know, every night, that different hundreds of people love you. They smile, and their eyes shine. You've pleased them. They want you. You belong. Just that alone is worth anything.

Bill:
The gong rang, the fight's over. Calm down.

Margo:
I will not calm down.

Bill:
Don't calm down.

Margo:
You're being terribly tolerant, aren't you?

Bill:
I'm trying terribly hard.

Margo:
But you needn't be. I will not be tolerated and I will not be plotted against.

Bill:
Here we go.

Margo:
Such nonsense. What do you all take me for - Little Nell from the country? Been my understudy for over a week without my knowing it, carefully hidden no doubt.

Bill:
I am sick and tired of these paranoiac outbursts

Margo:
Paranoiac!

Bill:
For the last time, I'll tell it to you. You've got to stop hurting yourself and me and the two of us by these paranoiac tantrums.

Margo:
Oh that word again, I don't even know what it means.

Bill:
Well it's about time you found out. I love you.

Margo:
Ha!

Bill:
I love you! You're a beautiful and an intelligent woman ...

Margo:
A body with a voice!

Bill:
A beautiful and an intelligent woman and a great actress. A great actress at the peak of her career. You have every reason for happiness.

Margo:
Except happiness!

Bill:
But due to some strange, uncontrollable, unconscious drive, you permit the slightest action of a kid ...

Margo:
(Sneering) A kid.

Bill:
... of a kid like Eve to turn you into an hysterical, screaming harpy. Now, once and for all, stop it!

Margo:
It's obvious you're not a woman.

Bill:
I've been aware of that for some time.

Margo:
Well I am.

Bill:
I'll say.

Margo:
Don't be condescending.

Bill:
C'mon, get up. I'll buy you a drink.

Margo:
I'll admit I may have seen better days, but I'm still not to be had for the price of a cocktail, like a salted peanut.


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