The Country Girl

Synopsis: Washed up singer/actor Frank Elgin has a chance to make a come-back when director Bernie Dodd offers him the leading role in his new musical. Frank however is very insecure, turns to alcohol and shuns even the smallest of responsibilities, leaving everything up to his wife Georgie who finds it harder and harder to cope with her husband's lack of spirit. Bernie tries to help Frank regain his self-confidence, believing that it is Georgie who's the cause of his insecurity.
Genre: Drama, Music
Director(s): George Seaton
Production: Paramount Pictures
  Won 2 Oscars. Another 5 wins & 11 nominations.
 
IMDB:
7.3
Rotten Tomatoes:
86%
UNRATED
Year:
1954
104 min
1,179 Views


Here's a coffee, Bernie.

Coffee, Mr Cook?

Let's discuss it. Don't pout as if

I'd just taken away your tricycle.

I'm not pouting. I just disagree.

But Frank Elgin?

Let the doorman read for the part!

Phil, we've been in rehearsal

for five days.

Our leading man was dreadful. Maybe

I was the wrong director for him.

We let him go yesterday.

We do not have a replacement.

We open in Boston on the 28th.

We are in trouble.

- I can do without the sarcasm.

- Let me audition him for you.

Phil, there's no harm

in giving the man a reading.

I agree with you, but when

I wanted to read Ray Watson,

that was a waste of time,

and he's a better actor than Elgin.

A lot of guys can act or sing better,

but nobody can do both as well.

- What about Billy Hertz?

- He's pompous.

This isn't Student Prince

or Blossom Time.

The guy has to act while he's singing

and sing while he's acting.

In Lonesome Town, Elgin played

a part like this. He was magnificent.

- Ask Henry. He played the piano.

- When?

- Eight years ago.

- He didn't fall off bar stools then.

- He hasn't had a drink in ages.

- To a drunk, ten minutes is ages.

- I just want you to listen to him!

- All right, go ahead!

Larry?

- As soon as Elgin comes in...

- He's here.

I didn't want to interrupt.

Send him in.

Now, Cookie, no cracks, please.

- What are you auditioning, owls?

- Hello, Frank. Bernie Dodd.

- How do you do?

- Our producer, Mr Cook.

- Hello. How are you?

- Paul Unger and Henry Johnson.

- Hey, Henry!

- It's been a long time.

I told him to write his own music.

You took my advice, huh?

- How's the family?

- Fine.

- Is your boy in high school?

- The Air Force.

- No!

- Yes, he is.

Let's get started.

I've got a luncheon date.

This is an offbeat show, a

dramatisation of The Land Around Us.

- You remember the book?

- Sure.

The boys have done

an exciting musical adaptation.

The music is part of the fabric,

woven in and out.

Keep the seats from getting dusty,

give them something different.

Yeah. Would you read

a couple of scenes for Mr Cook?

- There's one in the first act...

- Excuse me.

You were speaking of Lonesome Town.

Frank could do the Pitchman number.

That'd show Phil everything.

- All right.

- If I remember it. You sure you do?

I should. Eight performances a week

for a year and a half.

- Describe the number to Mr Cook.

- OK.

It wasn't much, really.

I played one of those pitchmen,

sort of a fanciful character.

Instead of selling a patent medicine,

I was selling a philosophy,

a sunshine salesman.

The scene was a New York

street corner, under a lamppost.

I had a... Is it OK

if I use this for a minute?

- Use anything you like.

- Thanks.

- When I made my entrance...

- OK, I get it. Get on with it.

I was carrying an imaginary valise,

one of those pitchman's outfits.

OK, Henry.

And then a crowd of sourpusses

began to gather round.

A left-handed Indian, this kid.

Friends, I have here in this valise

nostrums, cure-alls, panaceas,

unguents, oils and healing waters.

What did you say, son?

You say the valise is empty?

Son, this valise is loaded.

You're just looking at it,

and your windows are foggy.

What did you say?

You can't see nothing?

There's no trick in believing in

what you see.

The trick is believing in

what you can't see.

You've got to visualise

the indiscernible.

Every item in this valise belongs

to you as well as it does to me.

What's that you say, Officer?

Have I got a licence?

Just the greatest licence

in the world, poetic licence.

You been listening to my pitch?

We're going to the station house?

You got a desk sergeant

who's a little cantankerous?

Here's how we'll handle his case.

Share it among you, friends.

Tell them where you got it.

- You have a good beat for a writer.

- Fine, Frank.

You ought to hear it with

an orchestra. It's good and lousy.

- Wait outside for a second.

- I'm a little in the dark.

Is it a musical spot,

a small part or what?

It's the lead, Frank. The whole show

is built around this character.

Well, didn't it speak for itself?

He's probably been doing that

at dinner parties for ten years.

Did it prove he's worth

risking $200,000 on?

Did it prove he can carry a show?

Be sensible. That guy's been

in the pickle since you were a kid.

Someone took a chance with Laurette

Taylor in The Glass Menagerie.

Bernie, what are you trying to prove?

We've got a good book, good music.

Why can't you be satisfied

with a reliable, sober actor?

He'll give you

a reliable, sober performance.

That's not what people pay to see.

- You fought me over Danelli.

- I think you were wrong.

Instead of teaching an actor to box,

you teach a punch-drunk fighter

to act.

- He gave you a great performance.

- He gave us trouble, too.

If there was a fight at the Garden,

he wouldn't show up.

With Elgin, you'll get something

that happens once in 20 years.

I'll get it out of him.

- You're good, but not that good.

- People have always said that to me.

So now you're going to show them,

every one of them.

Directing doesn't satisfy you.

You want to take a corpse

and breathe life into it.

Maybe I'm crazy.

Doesn't this worry you guys?

- Not if it doesn't worry Bernie.

- He's too old for the part.

Hairpieces will make him look

ten years younger.

All right. Could we look for

someone else while he's rehearsing?

No, we don't let him go

without real cause,

a binge, or if he can't retain lines.

Give him a run-of-the-play contract.

- Wait a minute!

- I need his complete confidence.

No! I'll take a $40,000 loss before I

give him a run-of-the-play contract.

- OK, two weeks. Agreed, Paul? Henry?

- OK with me.

Frank? Frank Elgin?

- Elgin left.

- What do you mean?

- He left.

- Where? Coffee? What?

He just walked out. He didn't say.

Try the nearest bar.

- Mr Elgin in?

- No, he's not.

Mrs Elgin? I'd like to talk

to Frank. I'm Bernie Dodd.

I don't know when Frank will be back.

Mind if I wait?

- Would you like some coffee?

- No, thanks.

- Did Frank say when he'd be back?

- He didn't say where he was going.

- Didn't he say he had an audition?

- No.

I looked around after it was over,

but he'd gone.

- Will he do?

- That all depends.

If you're wondering if you can get

Frank for very little money, you can.

It doesn't depend on that.

Does he still drink?

Just what did you think

I would answer to that?

- Touch.

- What?

- Touch. In French, that means...

- Everybody knows what it means.

You're even younger than I thought.

You try to look like an old lady.

You shouldn't do your hair like that.

Some women pay too much attention to

themselves and some don't pay enough.

That's quite a pearl of wisdom.

May I quote you?

- How long have you been married?

- Ten years.

- Did you meet in a show?

- Look, Mr Dodd...

- Were you ever an actress?

- Not me, thank you.

I'm just a girl from the country.

The theatre and its people have

always been a complete mystery to me.

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Clifford Odets

Clifford Odets (July 18, 1906 – August 14, 1963) was an American playwright, screenwriter, and director. Odets was widely seen as a successor to Nobel Prize-winning playwright Eugene O'Neill as O'Neill began to retire from Broadway's commercial pressures and increasing critical backlash in the mid-1930s. From early 1935 on, Odets' socially relevant dramas proved extremely influential, particularly for the remainder of the Great Depression. Odets' works inspired the next several generations of playwrights, including Arthur Miller, Paddy Chayefsky, Neil Simon, David Mamet, and Jon Robin Baitz. After the production of his play Clash by Night in the 1941–1942 season, Odets focused his energies on film projects, remaining in Hollywood for the next seven years. He began to be eclipsed by such playwrights as Miller, Tennessee Williams and, in 1950, William Inge. Except for his adaptation of Konstantin Simonov's play The Russian People in the 1942–1943 season, Odets did not return to Broadway until 1949, with the premiere of The Big Knife, an allegorical play about Hollywood. At the time of his death in 1963, Odets was serving as both script writer and script supervisor on The Richard Boone Show, born of a plan for televised repertory theater. Though many obituaries lamented his work in Hollywood and considered him someone who had not lived up to his promise, director Elia Kazan understood it differently. "The tragedy of our times in the theatre is the tragedy of Clifford Odets," Kazan began, before defending his late friend against the accusations of failure that had appeared in his obituaries. "His plan, he said, was to . . . come back to New York and get [some new] plays on. They’d be, he assured me, the best plays of his life. . . .Cliff wasn't 'shot.' . . . The mind and talent were alive in the man." more…

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    "The Country Girl" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_country_girl_19981>.

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