Thursday, December 13, 2007

Final Visual Essay

One House, Two Mothers

The film “Imitation of Life” directed by Douglas Sirk is a film dedicated to the portrayal of two women of the 1950’s. As the movie tells us each woman is single and widowed at an early age, and now carries the responsibility of caring for their daughters. There is a difference between these two women however; the social status of each woman is clearly marked by the color of their skin and the fact that one woman has a place to live in and the other does not. From the very beginning of the film, a person who is looking for a great sociological exploration into the lives of these seemingly similar women will get what they ask for. Although the film is a remake, is had perfect timing in regards to the social climate of America. Women were starting to be thought of as equals in society and at the same time African Americans were starting the battle to become equal in the eyes of society. It was a difficult movie to undertake due to the social regards of the film however a German filmmaker had just the style of filmmaking to make Imitation of Life a true masterpiece. The direction that Douglas Sirk takes is clearly different and is shown by his mastery of the screen and camera. This essay will look at the different roles the two women find themselves in, focusing on the way they function in one household raising two daughters, while coming from two completely different backgrounds. Discovering their roles taken up in the household can carry over into the roles that society has delineated for the women of our story.

In the mid to late 1950’s the culture and civil climate was changing. There were changes not just in the governmental realm but also in the societal realm. There was a deep need for social justice to break free and be allowed to grow unhindered by the government’s institutions of the time. In May of 1954, The United States Supreme Court declared that schools should not be segregated by color, and that the old adage “separate but equal” should be abandoned as a disrespectable way to treat human beings. Not being separate from society, Hollywood wanted to continue its task on being relevant in the public’s eye. Douglas Sirk was also aware of his adopted countries social change and he wanted to take the time in this film to show how Lora Meredith and Annie Johnson was “every woman” in this new awakening in America. From the very beginning of the film we are introduced to these two women who are going to go through this social change together. The two mothers in Imitation of Life can be looked at in one of two ways. The first way is to look at them as a white women and her black friend who lives with her. A person may be able to view this film and stay generalized and not get beneath the surface to discover the true meaning of the film. If this was the case they may see Imitation of Life as simply a story of two friends who live out their lives together and one woman carries on the legacy after the other is gone. In reality there is much more going on in this film. Fred Camper writes in the [1]Epistemologist of Despair that the true premise behind the film is that “characters discard true human connections, including with themselves, for material goods and the sake of appearances.” Camper believes that underneath this friendship there is a tragic struggle for each woman. Lora cannot realize that she has subconscious beliefs about where black people should be in society, and Annie has a crisis of raising her daughter to be healthy with a roof over her head, while at the same time helping her daughter understand the black/white world she lives in. This first way of looking at the films characters will illuminate hidden prejudices and personal awareness that may not be so evident just watching the film thinking that the two women are friends and their relationship is perfect. The second way to look at these two women is from the gender side of the current social change. We have two women who are raising two daughters and the one question that may surface while watching this film is; who is the father and who is the mother? Lora Meredith and Annie Johnson have two clearly distinct roles in the Meredith/Johnson household, and have two clearly distinct roles in the raising of their two daughters Sarah Jane and Susie.

The hidden prejudice and personal awareness can be seen by looking at the scene immediately after the beach. It is the first time that Lora and Meredith go to Lora’s apartment and we get to see their living space. In the beginning Lora is very much in charge of this space of her apartment. She turns on the lights, turns the fan on and is doing things for herself and the betterment and comfort of everyone else. Then later in the film, after Lora has become super-star, she has people set up the house and turn on the lights for her. Just as Lora accepts the servants later in the film doing things for her now Annie is allowed to just accept the things that Lora is doing for her. She shows Annie where the linens are and where their bedroom will be for the night.

However as you watch the film the tone does not feel as though Lora is showing of the house for just one night. It is almost as though she is showing Annie where everything will be in the future for when she begins working for her. They dwell in the back room long enough for Annie to look around and give Lora validation that the room will be just fine for Annie over the next ten years. If Lora had intention of Annie only staying one or two nights she would have made up the bed for Annie and wouldn’t have given her the grand tour of the apartment. It is clear from the few words that Annie speaks in this scene, is that she is accepting all the “benefits” that Lora is giving to her for working for her. Now understanding this scene is not to suggest that Lora has ulterior motives from the beginning, and wants to subject Annie to be her free house servant. We take from this scene an understanding that Lora so easily allows Annie to fit into the role of caretaker that society has declared is the only job fit for a black woman in the fifties. Lora seems oblivious to the very deferential body language that Annie is giving to her. Even the words that Annie says to Lora suggest that she will be just fine working here for her. Lora was at first adamant when she said “you must understand that...this arrangement can only be for tonight”, but by the time the door had been unlocked to the apartment Lora had already submitted to the inevitable that Annie would be living with her. It is comical to watch the next few days with the two women because it further cements the two-tiered relationship of Lora and Annie. Annie knows that this arrangement is master and servant, while Lora would like to think that it’s two women friends who live together. Annie is just a guest in her home for the next ten years and who just so happens to be cleaning her house and taking care of their girls.

The level of master and servant relationship can be found throughout the length of the film, where Lora and her career is forefront and Annie and the children are secondary. Then about two-thirds through the film Lora is awakened, or brought out of her haze or unawareness in the scene where Sarah-Jane brings out a food platter for Lora and her movie star guests. Lora is shocked when Sarah-Jane acts like an indentured servant towards her and goes right to the kitchen to confront her. In this kitchen scene the truth of all ten years, and their living arrangement comes to a head.

Lora is scolding Sarah-Jane and she asks Annie if she heard what Sarah had said. Annie answers the question in a painful and revealing three words “I heard Her”. These three words are paramount, those three words are lifting the veil that has separated Annie and Lora; the veil of servant and master. Annie knew this veil existed from their first meeting in the kitchen, but now Lora is let in on the “secret”. It has been understood that Annie and her daughter are second class citizens. They are reserved only for the kitchen and the back servant staircase. For ten years Lora has thought that Annie was just her friend who did everything for her because Lora provided a roof for Annie and Sarah Jane. Annie being humble and kind allowed Lora to assume her role as servant, in order that she could take care of her daughter Sarah Jane. Annie, in her response to Lora in the kitchen, is full of remorse for what has just transpired. She would have liked to keep things just the way that they had been for the past nine or ten years; Lora thinking one thing, a lie, and Annie knowing another, the truth about their relationship and their roles. Lora now has the job of understanding and coming to terms with how things have been for the past ten years.

While watching this film in the beginning we have an understanding that there is little male interaction with the characters of Lora and Meredith. However in the time and social climate of the film these two women were living in a male influenced society. There are stirring and emotive references to who in this dyad of parents the mother is, and who the father is. If we start in the kitchen scene from the very beginning just imagine that Lora is the father and Annie is the wife. Showing of the house and where she will be living is not far from the way women were portrayed in the fifties and early sixties. Lora is the “breadwinner” and Annie is the little housewife who takes care of the kids and settles their quarrels and makes them behave as to not upset “father figure” Lora.

One scene in particular that has references to an old [2]1955 Housekeeping Monthly article entitled the good wife’s guide where women are encouraged to quiet the children for the husband. This is manifest in the scene where Annie has told the children to be quiet so that Lora can have a nice sleep. This relationship also goes on unnoticed to Lora but very aware to Annie.

The very essence of a household in the thirties, forties, and fifties was that there were two different roles in the household and that one role was unimportant, the role of the mother, and the role of the husband was superior. Unlike today where the role of parent, breadwinner, and caretaker of the house are equally shared and valued as equal while remaining intrinsically different. Lora is like the husband in the household and Annie is like the mother. If you watch the film, look for this other level of subversive behavior between the two women.

Sirk was a master of the complex character. The two-faced character that had a subconscious level unaware even to themselves and it is made evident to the audience at the same time as it is made aware to the character. Sirk has at many times referenced the ideas of Bertolt Brecht and his theories of theatre and the nature of the character. In Brechtian thought the story and idea is paramount and the actor or character should be only a vessel to allow for the thought and story to come across. The character of Lora is very self-aware at this point and is now almost looking towards to audience for validation for her actions. Annie has been a poster child throughout the film of social injustice and the audience knew it. Brecht once wrote regarding his play [3]The Threepenny Opera “Today when human character must be understood as the 'totality of all social conditions' the epic form is the only one that can comprehend all the processes, which could serve the drama as materials for a fully representative picture of the world.” This is the exact definition of Annie’s role in the film from beginning to end. In today’s terms she would be illustrating absurdity on the big screen.


[1] Chicago Reader, 2006

[2] House Keeping Monthly, 13th May, 1955.

[3] A three Act Play by Bertolt Brecht

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