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Pinky

Reprinted by permission of Donald Bogle from his film reference work, Blacks in American Films & Television: An Illustrated Encyclopedia (Simon & Schuster)
Pinky<br> <br>
Reprinted by permission of Donald Bogle from his film reference 
work, <I>Blacks in American Films & Television: An Illustrated 
Encyclopedia</I> (Simon & Schuster)
In "The Shadow and the Act," his now-famous essay on Hollywood's problem pictures of 1949, Ralph Ellison wrote that although such films as Home of the Brave and Lost Boundaries were laden with absurdities, "they are all worth seeing, and if seen, of involving us emotionally. That they do is testimony to the deep centers of American emotion that they touch...It is as though there were some deep relief to be gained merely from seeing these subjects projected on the screen."

Clearly, that is true of Pinky [1949], a compromised film that has moved audiences nevertheless. The story is of a light-skinned young black woman, Pinky, who, while studying nursing in the North (Boston), has passed for white. Upon returning home to her grandmother (Ethel Waters), Pinky is forced to face the debilitating plight of being a Negro in the Deep South. Humiliated, abused, and caged in, she plans to return to the North where she can live as a free (white) woman. But eventually Pinky comes to a new maturity and racial awareness, ironically brought about through a terminally ill, crusty, aristocratic white woman (Ethel Barrymore), who, intuitively aware of Pinky's dilemma, dies, leaving her estate to this troubled mulatto. Pinky is forced to go to court to hold onto this inheritance. Against all odds, she wins. When her white fiance from the North comes to take her away, she realizes she's been running from herself. Deciding to remain in the South, she converts the property left to her into a school for young black nurses. The film ends with a saddened Pinky, standing alone, melancholic and misty-eyed, facing a future with a new racial pride but having lost personal happiness with the man she loved. She is, of course, a tragic mulatto.

Whether we live it or not, at every turn, there is something affecting and engrossing about Pinky, its undercurrents and its subtext disturbing and intriguing us far beyond our expectations. As the stoic, kind-hearted, Christian grandmother, Ethel Waters infuses what could have been no more than an appallingly dated stereotype with genuine warmth, integrity, and an overriding sense of committment. For her work in Pinky, Waters was nominated for an Oscar® as Best Supporting Actress of 1949.

Still one cannot overlook the film's basic dishonesties. Foremost was the casting of white actress Jeanne Crain as the Negro girl. Because there are interracial romantic sequences between Pinky and her white doctor boyfriend (played by actor William Lundigan), the studio found it then unthinkable to use a real black woman in the part. It was assumed audiences would be in an uproar. Not until Dorothy Dandridge's appearance opposite white actor John Justin in the 1957 movie Island in the Sun was the film industry "daring" enough to have a real interracial couple on screen, although, again, the compromises were apparent. One also cannot ignore the basically patronizing attitude inherent in Pinky: the black girl finds herself, not through the advice of her black grandmother but through the aid of a white aristocrat. Finally, in Quality, the novel by Cid Ricketts Sumner on which the film was based, after the heroine had won her court case to keep the mansion left to her, the place was burned to the ground by the Ku Klux Klan. This unhappy and more realistic ending was entirely scrapped by the studio.

Within the movie industry, many feared the picture would fail commercially because southern exhibitors would refuse to run it. That indeed did happen. In Marshall, Texas, a self-appointed censorship board banned the film. But a feisty exhibitor named L. Gelling showed it anyway, then found himself arrested. He fought the case, which eventually wound up in the Supreme Court. The decision, as reported on June 3, 1952, in The New York Times: "The Supreme Court today struck down a motion picture censor ordinance by which the city of Marshall, Texas, disapproved the showing of the film Pinky."

So Pinky did break ground. Variety wrote: "The story may leave questions unanswered and in spots be naive, but the mature treatment of a significant theme in a manner that promises broad public acceptance and b.o. [box office] success truly moves the American film medium a desirable notch forward in stature and importance." As it turned out, later Variety reported that Pinky was one the top grossing films of 1949.

Producer: Darryl F. Zanuck
Director: Elia Kazan
Screenplay: Philip Dunne, Dudley Nichols
Cinematography: Joseph MacDonald
Film Editing: Harmon Jones
Art Direction: J. Russell Spencer, Lyle Wheeler
Music: Alfred Newman
Cast: Jeanne Crain (Patricia 'Pinky' Johnson), Ethel Barrymore (Miss Em), Ethel Waters (Pinky's Granny), William Lundigan (Dr. Thomas Adams), Basil Ruysdael (Judge Walker), Kenny Washington (Dr. Canady).
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