7/10
THE PRESIDENT'S LADY (Henry Levin, 1953) ***
18 March 2014
Seeing how I had just started my usual Epics marathon a little earlier than Easter time this year and that it happened to be Andrew Jackson's birthday yesterday, I made it a point to catch up with both the original 1938 Cecil B. De Mille production of THE BUCCANEER as well as Charlton Heston's first stab at the role (the second would, of course, occur in the 1958 remake of the latter) in the film under review which, incidentally, I have missed out on several times on Italian TV over the years thinking it more a "woman's picture" than a historical epic. While the latter suspicion turned out to be true enough, it also proved more enjoyable and even compelling than I had initially envisaged.

20th Century Fox's current diva, Susan Hayward, plays the titular role of Rachel Donaldson and it is just one of many real-life women she vividly portrayed on the screen: from Bathsheba to Messalina, from Jane Froman to Lillian Roth, culminating in her Oscar-winning turn as Barbara Grahame in I WANT TO LIVE! (1958). The story, narrated in the first person by Hayward herself, starts with her very first meeting with Andrew Jackson, then a budding Nashville lawyer in partnership with an older one (John McIntire). The two fall for each other instantly and they do not shirk from displaying it to everybody else…even down to having Hayward's unpleasant husband returning unannounced to break up their square dance! This sets off a feud between Jackson and the Donaldsons (who also include matriarch Fay Bainter) on one side and the Robards (including a brother named Jason!!) that hounds the increasingly prestigious couple till the end of her days. In the eyes of the close-minded Nashville community, the feisty Hayward willfully destroyed her marriage to pursue the brash new-kid-in-town Heston – even if her husband had actually been having an affair with his Creole maid behind closed doors right under the nose of his dying mother (Margaret Wycherley)!

Once Jackson's career as a lawyer takes off, he is soon appointed the regional Attorney General but still takes time off to romance Donaldson while employed as an Indian trapper on a treacherous riverside trip she is undertaking to escape from her husband's wrath. Reaching Natchez, they are mistakenly informed that her husband's plea for divorce had been accepted and they marry immediately; it turns out that divorce claim was premature and on and on they go to more public shunning (including after an all-important horse race Heston wins against Charles Dingle that leads to a fatal duel) and, ultimately, public shaming when Senator Jackson joins the U.S. Presidential race that, we are told here, he wins on the very day he lost his sickly wife. Indeed, we had previously watched a lonely Hayward undergoing many hardships while taking care of her two homesteads at the same time that Heston is battling the British in New Orleans or other senators in Washington. The barren woman had also had her adopted Indian child (brought back home by Jackson after one of his campaigns) die on her while she was engaged in yet another fruitless attempt to be accepted as an equal by the unforgiving female community! Although I have no clue as to how accurate the melodramatic events depicted here are or not (they are based on an Irving Stone book, whose later biographies of Vincent Van Gogh and Michelangelo were also filmed, the latter with Heston himself), the resulting film is good to look at and listen to: Leo Tover was the cinematographer, Alfred Newman provided the fine score and both the production and costume designs garnered Oscar nods.
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