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Film
Jennifer Jones: Selznick's Muse

From good girl to bad, one woman 's golden age in Hollywood

by Stein, Elliot
May 13th, 2008 12:00 AM

Jones in John Huston's Beat the Devil


United Artists/The Kobal Collection
Saint and Sinner: The Tempestuous Career of Jennifer Jones
May 16 through 24
Walter Reade Theater

The girl who would be Jennifer Jones was born Phylis Isley, in Oklahoma. She made her movie debut in 1939 in a supporting role in New Frontier, a low-budget John Wayne western by Republic, attracting the attention of David O. Selznick, the producer of Gone With the Wind. Selznick changed her name, signed her to a long-term contract, and groomed her for stardom.

During a long career, celebrated by the Film Society of Lincoln Center this week, Jones managed to avoid typecasting and appeared in roles ranging from the innocent and saintly to the wild and hysterical, working with a number of major directors—Vincente Minnelli, John Huston, and Vittorio de Sica, to name a few. Yet, never secure with stardom, Jones was driven to pursue it by Selznick's Svengali-like obsession with her. They eventually married, and he micromanaged every facet of her career until his death. When she was cast in the coveted leading role in Henry King's The Song of Bernadette (1944), the story of a peasant girl who claimed to see visions of the Virgin Mary, every effort was made to conceal her earlier work at Republic—and she duly won the Best Actress Oscar for her "screen-debut" performance.

Selznick conceived Duel in the Sun (1946) as a Gone With the Wind for the '40s and a hymn to Jones's allure. He bought the property for his muse and cast her as a half-breed Pearl, torn between good and evil, who unsurprisingly succumbs to her passions. It's a whopping example of filmmaking in the grand manner, florid and inflated, with a lurid climax that's one of the most excessive sequences ever filmed in Hollywood. Selznick's daily visits to the set were a constant nuisance; director King Vidor couldn't take it and quit before the movie was finished.

Jones proved herself an adept comedienne in Ernst Lubitsch's engaging Cluny Brown (1946) as a whimsical working-class girl who doesn't know her place, paired with European writer-in-exile Charles Boyer. This meeting of two free souls generates a bubble-light satire on the foibles of upper-crust British society. It's Jones's most relaxed performance; Selznick, busy elsewhere, didn't poke his nose on the set.

Impressed by The Red Shoes, Selznick approached Michael Powell to create a star vehicle for his lady. The result was Gone to Earth (1950), about a rural 19th-century child of nature, forced to choose between sacred and profane love. Jones is utterly convincing as the complex and divided heroine. Powell's beautiful film contains startling images of a remote world where magic is still at work; it's being shown here in a glorious restored print.

Jones worked with King Vidor a second time on Ruby Gentry (1952), the greatest of the director's flamboyant late melodramas. She's a stormy troublemaker from the wrong side of the tracks, involved in a hot and heavy love/hate affair with the last survivor of a decayed aristocratic line. Jones made a few notable pictures after it, but her career virtually ended when Selznick died in 1965. She later married art collector Norton Simon and settled in as the wife of a multimillionaire. Now 89, Jones lives in Malibu, rarely giving interviews or talking about her career.

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howard morley on Sun Jun 29, 2008, 18:08, says:
I simply adore Jennifer Jones and have collected every one of her 24 or so films.In addition I own both versions of "Wild Heart" and "Gone to Earth", her A&E Biography (2001), her appearances at "Oscar" ceremonies, all the biography books written about her and have many period magazines and photos of her.In addition, being artistic, I constantly draw and paint her for my own satisfaction.I can almost recite ad verbatim her dialogue in films!That's the extent of my devotion as a married man from a committed fan, while my wife and son look on benignly.

Yes, she has always had that ethereal, spiritual quality in her acting which I do not see in modern actresses.I am now 62 years old and a resident of London, England so she was 27 when I was born in 1946, when she exploded on the screen as Pearl Chavez, surely one of the most erotic films for the time.I wrote my own biography of her on the Imdb.com website entitled "Outline of Jennifer" portions of which appear on the Internet.I am fascinated with the woman apart from her acting career, such as her honest personality, her auxhilary nursing experience, visiting the U.S.troops in Korea in 1951, and her job as successor curator to the late Norton Simon's art museum in Pasadena C.A.At 89 she is certainly one of Nature's survivors.Long may she live.


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