Shirley Booth and Burt Lancaster in Come Back, Little Sheba, 1952. Burt's doing his best to look boring and dull. |
Shirley Booth and Burt Lancaster in Come Back, Little Sheba, 1952. Burt's kneeling. Shirley Booth was not a giant. |
I recently watched the 1952 movie Come Back, Little Sheba, starring Shirley Booth and Burt Lancaster,
and based on William Inge’s play, which opened on Broadway in 1950. It’s a pretty
dated and boring movie, but it’s important in Lancaster’s filmography as it was
his first real dramatic acting role. Lancaster had appeared in film noir dramas
before, but Come Back, Little Sheba
required him to show that he was more than just a muscle-bound action star. Since
his film debut in The Killers in
1946, Lancaster had been slowly expanding his acting range, and the role of
alcoholic Doc Delaney in Sheba was a “stretch”
part for Lancaster, the kind of role that he sought again and again in his career,
as he wanted to show the full range of his acting talents.
The plot, meager as it is, centers around Lola Delaney, a housewife
played by Shirley Booth, and her dull marriage to Doc Delaney, a recovering
alcoholic. The Delaneys take in a boarder, Marie, played by Terry Moore, a
young girl who is a student at the nearby university. The Delaneys have had a
difficult existence, as Doc married Lola because she was pregnant. Lola’s
father disowned her; she lost the baby and was unable to have any more
children. Doc had to drop out of medical school and couldn’t continue his
studies, thus he is a chiropractor and not a full MD. And then he became an
alcoholic and drank away his inheritance from his mother. Both Lola and Doc
enjoy having Marie live with them, as she provides vicarious entertainment for
them. Doc develops something of a crush on Marie, and doesn’t like the jerky
jock Turk (Richard Jaeckel) that she flirts with. Marie shows kindness towards
Doc and only has good things to say about him.
One of the problems with Come
Back, Little Sheba is that there’s no dramatic tension whatsoever. You’re
watching these characters meander through life, but you’re not really wondering
what will happen next because nothing does. The title refers to dog the
Delaneys had that ran away, and Lola keeps blindly hoping that the dog will
return, even though it’s been gone for months. (I can’t really blame the dog
for running away from the Delaneys.)
Booth had previously played Lola on Broadway, and won a
Tony. She would go on to win the Oscar for Best Actress, making her one of just
9 performers to win both a Tony and an Oscar for playing the same role. Booth does
a good job, but her character is so annoying that it overshadows her artistry.
Booth’s grating voice predates Jean Stapleton’s squawking tones as Edith Bunker
on All in the Family, which doesn’t
make Lola any more pleasant or sympathetic. Booth’s overwrought performance
looks very dated now; whereas Lancaster’s comparative underplaying still holds
up well. The movie shows very clearly how acting styles have changed in the
last 60 years.
Booth and Lancaster are a completely mismatched couple. Booth
was 15 years older than Lancaster, and she was the right age for the part. She
was 53 when filming began in February, 1952, and Lancaster was only 38. Lancaster
does well in the role, but to be honest, he was completely miscast. Lancaster
was too strong, too virile, too tall, and too young for the part. The role
called for someone who was more of an everyman, someone like Lee J. Cobb, or
Karl Malden, although they both would have been too young for the part as well.
The most ridiculous line of the movie is when Booth says something about Doc
not being athletic. Nope, not true, your husband is Burt Lancaster; he’s a
former trapeze artist.
One way in which a more everyman actor would have brought different
shadings to the role is Doc’s crush on Marie. It should probably be more of a
hopeless infatuation, and this would have worked better with an older, more
plain-looking actor in the role. As it is, you half expect Terry Moore to start
making out with Doc because he’s Burt Lancaster in the prime of his life.
Lancaster did a fine job playing Doc, and communicating Doc’s
quiet battle against his alcoholism. Lancaster clearly had a strong affinity
for Doc, and he said “It was a part I wanted to play more than any other I ever
got close to. Doc Delaney is the most human, if imperfect, kind of guy ever
written into a play or script.” (Burt
Lancaster: Pyramid Illustrated History of the Movies, by Tony Thomas, p.54)
Although he never said as much publicly, the role of Doc no doubt touched some
sort of a nerve with Lancaster, perhaps in part because his second wife Norma,
the mother of all 5 of Lancaster’s children, was an alcoholic. In order to play
Doc Delaney, Lancaster buries all the handsomeness, all the charisma, and all
the physical energy that made him such an electric performer. He wore padding while
playing Doc to make himself look heavier and grey was added to his hair to make
him look older. Lancaster always conformed to the part; he didn’t try to change
the role to fit his image or to play to his strengths. Throughout his career
Lancaster played roles that didn’t trade off of his good looks or his charisma.
He does it in Sweet Smell of Success, The
Leopard, Seven Days in May, Judgment at Nuremburg, and Atlantic City, to name just a few. The amazing range of characters
he played is what makes his career so interesting and so varied.
Terry Moore does a fine job as Marie, playing a girl who is
torn between the handsome but shallow Turk and Bruce, her steady boyfriend from
back home. Moore was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for the
role. On a side note, Moore claimed that she was secretly married to billionaire
Howard Hughes in 1949. Her claims have been disputed, but Moore wrote two books
about Hughes.
Come Back, Little
Sheba was director Daniel Mann’s first movie, and it shows. Mann had
directed the play on Broadway, which was why he was chosen to helm the film. The
film is terribly edited, as camera angles change for no reason in the middle of
scenes. The continuity is also poor, as, to name just one example, Lancaster is
seen opening a car door twice-because the camera angle changes for no reason.
Amazingly, the movie was nominated for an Oscar for Best Editing! Fortunately,
it didn’t win.
Come Back, Little
Sheba is a rather dated relic now, more than 60 years after it was
released, but it’s still of interest because of the performances by Booth,
Lancaster, and Moore.