Gene
Tierney was "undeniably the most beautiful actress in movie history"
according to her boss at 20th Century-Fox, Darryl F. Zanuck. Indeed, she
was one of the screen's most gorgeous stars, with a persona of elegance
and cool sophistication. It was this graceful elegance which lent
itself perfectly to Laura (1944), the stylish and
sophisticated murder mystery that made her a star and is the movie with
which she is most readily associated. Unusual in one respect, compared
to most films of its time, the main character, Laura, doesn't appear on
screen at all for the first quarter of the movie, except in the
representation of a portrait above her fireplace, and for the next
quarter, only in flashback.
The
film begins in the plush New York City apartment of Waldo Lydecker
(Clifton Webb), an acid tongued, poison-penned columnist and radio
personality who is being questioned by detective Mark McPherson (Dana
Andrews) while typing his newest column in his ornate bathtub (Thank
goodness its not an electric typewriter....say, what's a typewriter).
Detective McPherson is investigating the murder of beautiful Laura Hunt
(Tierney), successful ad executive and protegee of Lydecker. McPherson's
investigation finds a menagerie of decadent, amoral Manhattenites with
various relationships to Laura. As the case progresses, the tough
talking, hard boiled detective becomes infatuated with the portrait of
the victim and obsessed with her via personal interviews and the dead
woman's private papers. Falling asleep one night in Laura's apartment,
under her mezmorizing portrait, he is awakened by none other than the
object of his obsession. Laura is alive and it turns out that the dead
woman, whose face was obliterated by the gunshot, is a model at the ad
agency who was using Laura's apartment the night of the murder. So who
tried to kill Laura and is she now safe?
The film was
wrought with problems and delays from the outset. According to Tierney's
autobiography, Jennifer Jones was originally offered the title role but
refused (as did Hedy Lamarr). Stylistic director Rouben Mamoulian was
originally assigned to oversee the picture but fired well into
production. Producer Otto Preminger was then allowed to produce and
direct the film, a job that was first denied him by boss Darryl Zanuck,
due to an old grudge between the two. It turned out to be, what some
call, Preminger's finest work, and the bald headed Austrian was
nominated for an Academy Award.
Prissy
and effete stage actor Clifton Webb was Preminger's choice for the
prissy and effete character of Waldo Lydecker. Zanuck, however, didn't
care for Webb, a known homosexual. After a test revealed that Webb's
mannerisms were perfect for the character, Zanuck relented and the actor
won both an Oscar nomination for the role as well as a long term
contract with the studio. It is hard to believe that Webb's aging dandy
would actually lust after the young and nubile Tierney~and even harder
to believe that she would have any physical attraction to him. His
interest would be seen as having more of a controlling rather than
romantic nature, despite what the script might try to imply. It is also
hard to imagine Laura's romantic involvement with her fiancee, Shelby
Carpenter (Vincent Price), a weak, sponging Southern gigolo, who plays
pattycake with Laura's wealthy aunt, Ann Treadwell (Judith Anderson).
Her vitality and vivaciousness is much more suited to the virile
detective McPherson and an immediate attraction can be felt between
these two. Both Tierney and Andrews had rather mediocre careers before
they made the noir classic, but the films popularity made instant stars
of both.
Besides the Oscar nomination for Preminger and
Webb, the movie also raked in nods for Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Art
Direction (B&W) and Best Cinematography (B&W). The latter won
the coveted prize for Joseph LaShelle. Composer David Raksin's score was
also very notable including the haunting title tune which became a
beloved standard. On the strength of her performance in Laura, Tierney was cast in the plum role of Ellen in the dark Leave Her to Heaven, the following year and received her own nomination from the Academy.
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