Conservatively, Stage Struck has six endings. They start about fifty-eight minutes into the film, which runs ninety-five minutes. Actually, wait, there are probablyโconservativelyโseven. I forgot how many there are mid-third act before the actual (ending-laden) finale.
For a while, the false endings add to the filmโs charm. Maybe if the third act hadnโt reduced lead Susan Strasberg to a glorified cameo… but by the end, Struckโs already had all its problems. Itโs got a doozyโStrasbergโs in a love triangle with Broadway producer Henry Fonda and playwright Christopher Plummer. Strasberg was twenty at the time, Plummer twenty-nine, and Fonda was fifty-three. For context, Strasbergโs real-life dad was only three years older than Fonda. Strasbergโs character is eighteen-ish. They establish she left her hometown in Vermont, where she was in all her (now dead) uncleโs plays. Fonda presumably reminds her of her uncle (ick). She fawns over him, wanting him to Svengali her, and he canโt help but fall for her. It doesnโt hurt his regular girlfriend, younger but not โIโm only a few years shy of being old enough to be your grandpaโ territory Joan Greenwood, likes to punish him for slights by withholding physical affections.
So, yeah. For a while, it seems like Struckโs going to be all about Fonda and Strasberg getting together. Itโs not, thank goodness, and any threats to revisit the topic end up just being threats, which also get contextualized for Fondaโs character–rich white guys never have to grow up and think about things if they stay rich and white enoughโit doesnโt ever stop being creepy (especially since Strasberg looks like a kid kid), but… I donโt know; it makes โsense.โ And Fondaโs really good at playing this old creeper who does try to act responsibly. Somewhat.
Stage Struck is a remake of Morning Glory, which is based on an unproduced stage play. And Struck filmed entirely on location in New York City, as the opening title promises. Director Lumet and cinematographers Morris Hartzband and Franz Planer have some trouble with the location shooting, but Lumeyโs instincts are all good, and when the shots look good, they look great. Thereโs an exterior location scene between Strasberg and Plummerโif it werenโt a late fifties studio remake of an early thirties studio pictureโitโd be exceptional. Lumet and his photographers foreshadow seventies Hollywood New York movies by over a decade.
And there are some exceptional moments in the film. Itโs all about Strasberg wanting to make it on Broadway but not wanting to go the regular route. She was in a play club in her hometown; she knows all the Shakespeare by heart, why should she go to the Actorโs Studio (did they consider having her real dadโActors Studio coach Lee Strasbergโcameo); she wants to be a star now. It doesnโt work out for her in act one, but when sheโs back in act two, she has this line about having to prove herself. Strasbergโs got to prove to the Broadway people in the movie she can be a major stage actor, which means sheโs also got to prove it to Struckโs audience.
She does. Itโs incredible. At first, it seems like Lumet doesnโt have the scene, then he does, while Strasberg keeps delivering great moment after the great moment, Lumet holding the shots. It echoes in the third act. Itโs so good.
Sadly, itโs also when Fonda sees something he likes.
But itโs more Plummerโs movie than anyone else. Heโs the new playwright who throws in with commercial success Fonda. The film starts with them going into production on one play and ends with their production on the next. Lumet and screenwriters Ruth and Augustus Gortz do a fine job opening the film up enough it never feels too stagyโLumet loves the theater so much he bakes in acknowledging the stageโbut none of these people exist outside their professions. Even when we see Fonda at home, itโs in the context of Broadway producer.
Lots of great acting. Strasberg has an unsteady first act, a knockout second then is missing from most of the third. Intentionally, which is a bad choice. Plummerโs great, and Fondaโs outstanding. Herbert Marshall is an older actor who thinks Strasbergโs swell, but since heโs in his sixties, he doesnโt have to be a pervert about it. Greenwoodโs good, even though sheโs reduced to foil. Nice small work from Daniel Ocko and John Fiedler. Struckโs got a lot of fine performances; given the subject, itโs got to have them.
The filmโs a little too experimental for its own good (with the location shooting), and the third actโs a mess, but Stage Struckโs pretty darn good. A tad too pervy, even if muted, but itโs not a factually inaccurate representation of how Broadway producers behave… and the actingโs superb. Strasbergโs a marvel, and Plummerโs a great lead (in his first theatrical film).
Oh, the Alex North music.
Itโs a tad much; chalk it in the experimental column, especially when it plays over the actors.
This post is part of the Charismatic Christopher Plummer Blogathon hosted by Gabriela of Pale Writer and Gill of Realweegiemidget Reviews.


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