THE WINNER:
Olivia de Havilland (The Heiress)
The Nominees: Jeanne Crain (Pinky), Susan Hayward (My Foolish Heart), Deborah Kerr (Edward, My Son), Loretta Young (Come to the Stable)

MY CHOICE:
Olivia de Havilland (The Heiress)
My Nominee: Jeanne Crain (Pinky)
Had it not been for Carol Reed's The Third Man, then William Wyler's adaptation of Henry James' The Heiress would have been my choice for Best Picture of 1949. The film is uncompromising in its portrait of a plain spinster (Olivia de Havilland) who lives under the watchful eye of her wealthy father who becomes suspicious of the man who courts and offers her marriage in a matter of only days.
Olivia de Havilland would win the Oscar for Best Actress, her second after winning for To Each His Own in 1946, but this time I think they made the right choice. This is the only time of the decade that I agree with the academy’s choice for Best Actress which proves nothing beyond the fact that, as Catherine Sloper, I think she did the best work of her career. The film takes place "A hundred years ago" and we meet Catherine, a shy, plain-looking spinster who lives with her father, the respected doctor Austin Sloper (Ralph Richardson), in a large house in Washington Square.
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Austin doesn't think much of Catharine. He repeatedly compares her with her late mother and deems her "unmarriageable." She is shy, with few social graces and bears little ability to hold a conversation. She is easily hurt but something about her manner tells us that she has gotten used to it. During a society party one night, she tries having a conversation with a man who excuses himself to get them both drinks and never returns. Later she sees him happily dancing with someone else. When she is later approached by handsome Morris Townsend (Montgomery Clift), she assumes he will be no different. He seems genuinely interested in Catherine; he laughs with her, talks to her and doesn't seem to be finding reasons to leave her side. When he goes off to get drinks, she assumes that he will not return. She accepts an offer to dance with an older gentleman and is surprised when she sees Morris looking for her with drinks in hand.
He charms her and she is surprised when he comes calling the next day and professes that he has fallen in love with her. There is tenderness about him that startles Catherine. She has never experienced love, never had a man approach her in this manner, and she is taken aback, especially several days later when he comes calling again with a proposal of marriage.
Understandably, Austin is suspicious. Why, suddenly, would this handsome young fellow come calling on a woman with no social skills, who isn't beautiful, who can barely hold a conversation? He learns at dinner that night that Morris isn't very good with money, that he squandered an inheritance. Since Catherine earns an inheritance of $10,000 per year as part of her late mother’s will, and stands to earn another $30,000 a year upon her father's passing, Austin suspects that Morris wants her money. Still, everything in Catherine's heart tells her that Morris’ intentions are completely honorable and for the first time she begins to defy her father's wishes even though he threatens to divert her inheritance to his clinic if she marries this man.
Austin takes Catherine away to Europe, hoping that the trip will clear Morris from her mind. It doesn't work and when they return home, she finds that Morris has regularly been stopping in. On a rainy night, they stand in an archway and he says they should elope. Catherine tests his love by telling him that she is willing to give up the inheritance and marry him. Morris says he will return the following night to pick her up but he never returns. She is deeply hurt and as the days and weeks pass, her heart and her soul become hardened. She becomes cynical, unfeeling. Upon her father's deathbed she tells him that she won’t marry Morris.
Some time after her father's death, Morris returns but by this time Catherine has had enough. She walls up her emotions and her heart and decides to feed this man the same hurtful cruelty that he played on her. She accepts his offer of marriage but when he returns she orders the maid to bolt the door. Walking upstairs as Morris stands outside pounding on the door and calling her name, she resigns herself to a solitary, emotionless life that her father always said would be her destiny.
In praising The Heiress, I never forget to mention three names: Hal Lierly, Wally Westmore and William Woods, the makeup artists who succeeded brilliantly at the task of making Olivia de Havilland look unattractive. In the first half of the film, she is dowdy, her eyes are dark, her face is colorless, her clothes are drab, her hair pinned back in an unflattering bun. It really is an amazing transformation, and it couples nicely with de Havilland’s performance. She allows Catherine a certain desperation in wanting to be accepted. She barely speaks above a quiet whisper and when she speaks so that others can hear, it is with a fumbling attempt at conversation. But something opens up when she falls in love with Morris. Her eyes lose their desperation and appear to dance. Olivia de Havilland has large eyes that express so much, and she has never used them to better effect then in this film. They go from downcast, to sparkling, to cold and calculating.
It is in the latter half of the film is where we really see her transformation, after Morris has left her - her voice becomes deeper, her speech patterns become deliberate. She has the look of someone who has been deeply wounded but who has hardened over time. It is in the closing scenes that she comes around, as she tells her aunt that she accepts his second proposal. She is tired of being jerked around and tells her aunt "He's grown greedier over the years. Before he only wanted my money; now he wants my love as well. Well, he came to the wrong house - and he came twice. I shall see that he does not come a third time."
What is amazing about The Heiress is that Morris' approach to Catherine is so beautifully handled, so genuinely tender and so believable that the viewer is drawn to him as well. We genuinely think that he loves her and it breaks our hearts when we find that Austin was right about him. Those of us who weren't blessed with great looks or social graces find something in Catherine that we recognize and understand when her emotions are broken beyond repair. Was it spite that made Catherine want to leave Morris wanting her? I don't think so. I think that, for the first time, Catherine was taking control over her own destiny. Caught between money and a marriage that would likely have been based on a lie, she chooses a life of solitude.
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