Frank Borzage’s America: The Vanishing Virginian (1942)![]() Rebecca Yancey (Kathryn Grayson) taps into popular sentiment with the modernist anti-landscape above. The second daughter of Cap’n Bob Yancey (Frank Morgan), longtime district attorney in Lynchburg, Virginia, Rebecca is trying to escape the role of a proper lady, with the suffragettes’ equal opportunity rhetoric ringing in her ears. Set in 1913, Frank Borzage’s The Vanishing Virginian (1941) is equal parts bittersweet nostalgia and progressive optimism. Just released on DVD from Warner Archive, along with Borzage’s follow-up, Seven Sweethearts (1942), it is a lovely bit of propagandistic Americana, released two months after the U.S.’s entry into WWII.
In the film he is a paternalistic egalitarian, frequently invoking the Bill of Rights and then going home to his black servants, presumably his former slaves. Then he intentionally botches the only case we see him prosecute, after he determines the all-white jury will not conduct a fair verdict for the black defendant. The servants are characters of Southern wish-fulfillment, slaves happy to stay with their masters, but Borzage and the actors give them a depth and dignity that pushes against their essentialization. Leigh Whipper plays “Uncle Josh Preston”, a sweet old man with beatific eyes whose mild manner masks an iron will. In a film where most of the movement is inside the frame (there are some great choreographed family pratfalls), each tracking shot carries extra force, and the most complex one occurs after Uncle Josh collapses. The camera trails back from Bob carrying his prone figure, and then there is a cut to a movement forward to the church that will forever house him. This latter image contains no human figure, a shock in a film configured around the family. The clapboard church is privileged to hold the frame, and Josh’s spirit with it. Whipper was the first black member of the Actors’ Equity Association in 1913, making his film debut in Oscar Micheaux’s groundbreaking “race films” Within Our Gates (1920) and Symbol of the Unconquered, and was one of the founding members of the Negro Actors’ Guild of America (1939). The Louise Beavers character, “Aunt Emmeline”, is more stereotypical, a “mammy” type who smiles at her employers’ jokes and scuttles in the background. But at a funeral of one of her friends, Borzage continually cuts to close-ups of Beavers’ face, where Emmeline’s bottled up sadness and rage quivers to the surface. The eldest Yancey girls, Rebecca and Margaret (Natalie Thompson) push back against their parents’ social conservatism, In the end, horses and carriages have given way to cars and the women who drive them, including Rebecca. Bob continues to run for election, accepting the new social landscape as it shifts around him. In the final shot, the town gathers ’round him to honor his service, as in the end of another paternalistic dream of Southern community, John Ford’s The Sun Shines Bright (1953). Each profiles a doddering relic holding their towns together with principles that time and politics are rendering obsolete. It is up to the viewer to decide which of their disappearing beliefs is worth mourning. *** Seven Sweethearts is a bizarre item, a Hungarian operetta re-staged in Michigan, with the perpetually-smarmy Van Heflin as the ostensibly dashing lead. Kathryon Grayson is his small-town inamorata, and Borzage stages a number of scenes to show off her impressive coloratura soprano vocals. The story goes that Heflin is an entry-level reporter, getting a story on a Tulip festival in the small Michigan town of Little Delft. It’s a Dutch town where the neighbors practice their French horn during work hours and where Viennese composers never pay rent. S.Z. Sakall is the proprietor of the local hotel, and the single father of seven beautiful daughters (all with male names – since he was hoping for boys). It is tradition that no girl can be married until the eldest is hitched, so the younger girls are itching for Reggie (Marsha Hunt) to tie the knot. Creaky wackiness ensues, and Heflin is ill-suited for the thin air of this sub-Lubitsch atmosphere. It just seems to make him queasy. Borzage speeds through it with seemingly little investment, but I enjoyed the too-in-love Honeymoon couple and the broad caricature of the supporting cast, especiall Sakall’s jolly windbag. At TCM.com, Jeremy Arnold reported an unsavory postscript to this sweetheart tale: “In 1949, Hungarian playwright Ferenc Herczeg sued MGM, Pasternak, and screenwriters Walter Reich and Leo Townsend for $200,000, claiming they had plagiarized his play Seven Sisters, which he had written in 1903 and which Paramount had adapted into a 1915 movie starring Madge Evans. Herczeg was imprisoned in a concentration camp in Hungary when Seven Sweethearts was produced and released, and consequently he didn’t learn of the film’s existence until years later. The suit was settled out of court.” TCM is screening THE VANISHING VIRGINIAN on October 3rd at 4:15PM, and SEVEN SWEETHEARTS on October 10th at 10:45 AM. 17 Responses Frank Borzage’s America: The Vanishing Virginian (1942)
![]() Louise Beavers was only 39 when The Vanishing Virginian was released. A 39 year old woman in 1913 would not have been alive during slavery. Leigh Whipper was 65. His character could have possibly been a former slave. ![]() I am a recent fan of Borzage’s, and I have not seen many of his films. I will try to remember to catch these movies on TCM. Thanks for bringing them to our attention. ![]() I am a recent fan of Borzage’s, and I have not seen many of his films. I will try to remember to catch these movies on TCM. Thanks for bringing them to our attention. ![]() “The Vanishing Virginian” premiered at the now-defunct Paramount Theater in Lynchburg (where I currently reside). Here are pictures from the event: http://www.lynchburghistory.com/details.php?gid=&sgid=&pid=389 ![]() “The Vanishing Virginian” premiered at the now-defunct Paramount Theater in Lynchburg (where I currently reside). Here are pictures from the event: http://www.lynchburghistory.com/details.php?gid=&sgid=&pid=389 ![]() Thanks for the heads up on when these flicks will air. Did you mean that Van Heflin’s character is perpetually smarmy in Seven Sweethearts, or did you mean that you think he was always perpetually smarmy in all of his roles? ![]() Thanks for the heads up on when these flicks will air. Did you mean that Van Heflin’s character is perpetually smarmy in Seven Sweethearts, or did you mean that you think he was always perpetually smarmy in all of his roles? ![]() Jenni – I just meant that Heflin was miscast as a carefree romantic lead. He brings a darkness, occasionally smarmy, to all of his roles. Or perhaps I’ve just watched THE PROWLER too often recently. Thanks for the photos Vincent! And Duke, the actors’ age doesn’t necessarily reflect the characters’ age. But either way, the servants were at least the offspring of slaves, and continued in their servitude. ![]() Jenni – I just meant that Heflin was miscast as a carefree romantic lead. He brings a darkness, occasionally smarmy, to all of his roles. Or perhaps I’ve just watched THE PROWLER too often recently. Thanks for the photos Vincent! And Duke, the actors’ age doesn’t necessarily reflect the characters’ age. But either way, the servants were at least the offspring of slaves, and continued in their servitude. ![]() Most women get mad if you think they’re older than they really are. I you had told 39 year old Louise Beavers that you thought she was at least 50 she might’ve gotten pretty upset. Her being the child of one of their family slaves from years ago is highly possible and an acceptable answer. ![]() Most women get mad if you think they’re older than they really are. I you had told 39 year old Louise Beavers that you thought she was at least 50 she might’ve gotten pretty upset. Her being the child of one of their family slaves from years ago is highly possible and an acceptable answer. ![]() Thanks for the reply, Mr. Sweeney. I finally saw The Prowler earlier this year, and my husband and I were riveted to the film, especially when the wife finds out she is 3 months pregnant, which will ruin their plans/story of how they met. Yes, I bet you’ve seen it too much, as Van Heflin is one mixed-up, messed up, smarmy with a capital S in that picture. Time to get out Shane, and view him as a nice, but weak, rancher/farmer. ![]() Thanks for the reply, Mr. Sweeney. I finally saw The Prowler earlier this year, and my husband and I were riveted to the film, especially when the wife finds out she is 3 months pregnant, which will ruin their plans/story of how they met. Yes, I bet you’ve seen it too much, as Van Heflin is one mixed-up, messed up, smarmy with a capital S in that picture. Time to get out Shane, and view him as a nice, but weak, rancher/farmer. ![]() [...] Frank Borzage’s America: The Vanishing Virginian (1942) (moviemorlocks.com) [...] ![]() [...] Frank Borzage’s America: The Vanishing Virginian (1942) (moviemorlocks.com) [...] ![]() Does anyone out there know of Frank Borzage surviving family members? Leave a Reply |
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Louise Beavers was only 39 when The Vanishing Virginian was released. A 39 year old woman in 1913 would not have been alive during slavery. Leigh Whipper was 65. His character could have possibly been a former slave.