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Baby Doll Information

Baby Doll is a 1956 black comedy [1]/drama film directed by Elia Kazan.[2][3] It was produced by Kazan and Tennessee Williams, and adapted by Williams from his own one-act play 27 Wagons Full of Cotton.[4] It stars Karl Malden, Carroll Baker and Eli Wallach, in his feature-film debut, and features Mildred Dunnock and Rip Torn.

The film was controversial when it was released, provoking a response from the Catholic Legion of Decency, which attempted to have the film banned. Nevertheless, the film received nominations for major awards. Elia Kazan won the Golden Globe Award for Best Director and the film was nominated for four other Golden Globe awards, as well as four Academy awards and four BAFTA Awards[5] awards, with Eli Wallach taking the BAFTA prize for "Most Promising Newcomer to Film."

The film is credited with originating the name and popularity of the babydoll nightgown, which derives from the costume worn by Baker's character.

Contents

Plot

In the Mississippi Delta, failing, bigoted, middle-aged cotton gin-owner Archie Lee Meighan (Karl Malden) has been married to pretty, empty-headed 19-year old virgin Baby Doll Meighan (Carroll Baker) for two years. Archie impatiently waits for Baby Doll's 20th birthday just a few days away when, by prior agreement with Baby Doll's dying father, the marriage can finally be consummated. In the meantime, Baby Doll still sleeps in a crib, wearing childish shorty-nightgowns and sucking her thumb, while Archie spies on her through a hole in a wall of their decrepit antebellum mansion, "Fox Tail".

Archie's competitor, Sicilian Silva Vacarro (Eli Wallach), who owns a newer and more modern cotton gin, has taken away all of Archie's business, and Archie retaliates by burning down Vacarro's gin. Suspecting Archie as the arsonist, Vacarro plans his revenge: he will pursue and seduce Baby Doll and terrorize her into signing an affidavit admitting her husband's guilt.[4][6][7][8]

Cast

Cast notes

Production

Although the film's title card says "Tennessee William's Baby Doll", and the film is based on Williams' one-act play 27 Wagons Full of Cotton, in his autobiography director Elia Kazan claimed that Williams was only "half-heartedly" involved in writing the screenplay, of which Kazan himself actually wrote the majority.[10] The film was shot in Benoit, Mississippi, in a plantation house built in 1848 and called "Old Burras Place," the only antebelleum house in Bolivar County. Other locations were Greenville, Mississippi and New York City.[10] According to Kazan, Williams did not stay long while the film was shooting in Benoit, because of the way people looked at him.[10] Some locals were used for minor roles, and one, "Boll Weevil" not only acted but was the production unit's utility man as well.[10]

The working titles for the film included the name of the play and "Mississippi Woman"; actress Carroll Baker claims that Kazan changed the title to Baby Doll as a present to her.[10] Although Baker was Kazan's first choice for the role, Williams would have preferred to see Marilyn Monroe get the part.[10]

Response

The film received a seal from the Motion Picture Code, but the Catholic Legion of Decency gave it a "C" ("Condemned") rating and called it "grievously offensive to Christian and traditional standards of morality and decency." They succeeded in having the film withdrawn from release in most U.S. theaters because of their objections over its sexual themes.[10] Variety noted that it was the first time in years that the Legion had condemned a major American film which had received the approval of the Code.[10]

Other religious figures became involved in the controversy surrounding the film, including Francis J. Spellman, the Catholic Archbishop of New York, who called it "sinful" and forbade Catholics in the archdiocese to see the film and James A. Pike of the Episcopal Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York, who countered Spellman by ponting out that there was more "sensuality" in the film The Ten Commandments than there was in Baby Doll, and argued that "the church's duty is not to prevent adults from having the experience of this picture, but to give them a wholesome basis for interpretation and serious answers to questions that were asked with seriousness."[10] Others agreed with Pike, including the Catholic Archbishop of Paris and the head of the Catholic film Institute in the U.K., while the Catholic Bishop of Albany, New York also forbade Catholics to see the film, which the American Civil Liberties Union objected to as a violation of the First Amendment.[10]

The movie was banned in many countries, such as Sweden, due to what was called exaggerated sexual content. The film was also condemned by Time magazine, which called it the "dirtiest American-made motion picture that had ever been legally exhibited".[11] Due in part to the attempts to have it banned or suppressed, the film was not a commercial success. Kazan reported that it never made a profit.[9]

Awards and honors

References

Notes
  1. ^ Butler, Craig "Review" (AMG)
  2. ^ Variety film review; December 5, 1956, page 6.
  3. ^ Harrison's Reports film review; December 8, 1956, page 195.
  4. ^ a b c Erickson, Hal "Overview" (AMG)
  5. ^ Baby Doll (1956) Awards, The New York Times,
  6. ^ TCM "Full Synopsis"
  7. ^ Crawford, Rod "Plot synopsis" (IMDB)
  8. ^ alfiehitchie "Plot synopsis" (IMDB)
  9. ^ a b Steinberg, Jay S. "Baby Doll" (TCM article)
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j TCM "Notes"
  11. ^ "New Picture", Time, December 24, 1956. Accessed 29 June 2008.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Baby Doll (film)
Films directed by Elia Kazan
1940s A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) • The Sea of Grass (1947) • Boomerang! (1947) • Gentleman's Agreement (1947) • Pinky (1949)
1950s Panic in the Streets (1950) • A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) • Viva Zapata! (1952) • Man on a Tightrope (1953) • On the Waterfront (1954) • East of Eden (1955) • Baby Doll (1956) • A Face in the Crowd (1957)
1960s Wild River (1960) • Splendor in the Grass (1961) • America, America (1963) • The Arrangement (1969)
1970s The Visitors (1972) • The Last Tycoon (1976)
Works by Tennessee Williams
Apprentice plays

Candles to the Sun (1936) · Spring Storm (1937) · Fugitive Kind (1937) · Not About Nightingales (1938) · Battle of Angels (1940) · You Touched Me (1945) · Stairs to the Roof (1947)

Major plays

The Glass Menagerie (1944) · A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) · Summer and Smoke (1948) · The Rose Tattoo (1951) · Camino Real (1953) · Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955) · Orpheus Descending (1957) · Suddenly, Last Summer (1958) · Sweet Bird of Youth (1959) · Period of Adjustment (1960) · The Night of the Iguana (1961) · The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore (1963) · The Seven Descents of Myrtle (1968) · In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel (1969) · Will Mr. Merriweather Return from Memphis? (1969) · Out Cry (1971) · Small Craft Warnings (1972) · The Two-Character Play (1973) · The Red Devil Battery Sign (1975) · This Is (An Entertainment) (1976) · Vieux Carré (1977) · A Lovely Sunday for Creve Coeur (1979) · Clothes for a Summer Hotel (1980) · The Notebook of Trigorin (1981) · Something Cloudy, Something Clear (1981) · A House Not Meant to Stand (1982)

Short stories

The Vengeance of Nitocris (1928) · The Field of Blue Children (1939) · The Resemblance Between a Violin Case and a Coffin (1951) · Hard Candy: A Book of Stories (1954) · Three Players of a Summer Game and Other Stories (1960) · The Knightly Quest: a Novella and Four Short Stories (1966) · One Arm and Other Stories (1967) · Eight Mortal Ladies Possessed: a Book of Stories (1974) · Tent Worms (1980) · It Happened the day the Sun Rose, and Other Stories (1981)

Related articles List of one-act plays by Tennessee Williams
Screenplays

Baby Doll (1956) · The Fugitive Kind (co-author, 1959) · Suddenly, Last Summer (co-author, 1959) · The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond (1957, filmed 2009)

Unfinished manuscripts In Masks Outrageous and Austere (1983)

Categories: English-language films | 1956 films | 1950s drama films | Adultery in fiction | Films directed by Elia Kazan | Films whose director won the Best Director Golden Globe | American drama films | Screenplays by Tennessee Williams | Black comedy films

 

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