A Slice of Mid-Twentieth Cinematic American Suburban Home
Life-Joseph Mankiewicz’s A Letter To
Three Wives
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
A Letter To Three Wives, starring Jeanne Crain, Ann
Southern, Linda Darnell, 1949
No question, at least in retrospect, and at least on the
screen, the 1950s in America were something of a “golden age.” A golden age if
your dreams were middle-class and you had the wherewithal to stand up to your
dreams, dreams to move a step or two ahead of your parents, the ones who came “from
hunger during the Great Depression and slogged through World War II rations and
hard fighting (with their blessing, no question). And that golden age, an age
when people expected, somewhat wispfully, to prosper with hard work, some luck,
and some connections in order to get a fleet of cars, a suburban home (complete
with washer and dryer, all kinds of kitchen gadgetry, and even a place to grill)
to park those cars in and kids and a dog to park in the house is the subtext of
the film under review, A Letter To Three
Wives.
Of course a strictly sociological study of mid-20th
century American trends could have been left in the hands of somebody like the
late journalist David Halberstam or the Harvard professor David Riesman or C. Wright
Mills but in Hollywood they mix that knowledge up with a little plot. The plot
here being a letter, as advertised in the title, by one Addie, an unseen
Mayfair swell type (as far as we know since, unseen, we have placed her at the country
club and other 1950s Mayfair spots and not let’s say Jimmy’s Tavern, Ladies Invited
all in neon telling a candid world there are tables fit for woman companion and
not just a roustabout bar with guys nodding their heads on the counter) who had
all the boys gathering around, all the boys being the three husbands of the
three wives in the title.
And the letter’s contents, well, get this, old heartbreaker,
home-wreaker Addie had run off with one of the husbands conveniently not saying
which one, leaving the trio of wives bewitched and befuddled. Now a woman today
running off with a guy (or a woman), a husband or not, would be a yawner, would
be a plot that wouldn’t get pass the studio guardhouse, but in up and coming
country club set of the 1950s this is the equivalent of the last draw, and the
cause of nothing but big time angst by the three wives.
See they all have anxieties, have reasons to believe that
their respective husbands could be the unfaithful one. Especially with Addie
who was the belle of the ball and cause for plenty of sniping, as well as
having known the boys for ages. Now this theme, this running away with some
errant husband rightly or wrongly, told right from the beginning would make a
very short film. So using the old familiar plot-builder flashbacks the three
women each get themselves into a tizzy by magnifying whatever difficulties they
were having in their marriages.
One didn’t think she was pretty enough, poised enough, wore
the right clothes, for her up and coming husband since she was nothing but from
“jump street” and had been upwardly mobile via the military and nothing else. Another
worried that her desire for a time-consuming career as a radio soap opera
scriptwriter, taking time away from the homemaker’s drudgery and catering to
hubby’s whims, was off-putting enough to have him stray from the straight and
narrow. The third who was strictly “from hunger,” strictly from the wrong side
of the tracks (literally since in some at home scenes they had the house
shaking when trains passed by) had made a bad bargain with the devil, her
husband, to get that wedding ring on and easy street and nothing but bickering
and acrimony ever after figured she had made a runaway worthy mistake with
hubby. So the possibilities multiply and in the meantime this Addie fixation,
this Addie this and that gets under all their skins, gets under the husbands’
skins to. The husbands by turn are more than happy with that ex-military wife, encouraging
of the wife’s career and deeply in love with that “from hunger” wife, bickering
and acrimony aside. But which one strayed from the connubial course. Well if
you have a spare hour and one half watch this one to figure who Addie lures into
her web.
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