This Flash movie requires a newer version of the Flash plug-in. Please upgrade your Flash plug-in by visiting www.macromedia.com
TCM Search Database
Movie Database
(Over 150,000 titles)
Site
Sign In register
TCM This Month

Additional Articles
Introduction to Race & Hollywood
Race & Hollywood Photo Gallery
Race & Hollywood: Trailers & Film Clips
Featured Films
The Birth of a Nation
Haunted Spooks
Uncle Tom's Cabin (1927)
The Jazz Singer
Hallelujah!
The Green Pastures
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1939)
Baby Face
Judge Priest
Check and Double Check
The Mad Miss Manton
The Ghost Breakers
A Day at the Races
Imitation of Life (1934)
The Littlest Rebel
Show Boat (1936)
Going Places
New Orleans
Gone with the Wind
Way Down South
Cabin in the Sky
Home of the Brave
Pinky (Donald Bogle version)
Intruder in the Dust
Lost Boundaries
Bright Road
The World, the Flesh and the Devil
A Patch of Blue
The Member of the Wedding
In the Heat of the Night
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner?
Shaft (1971)
Super Fly
Sounder
Rocky III
Devil in a Blue Dress
Get on the Bus
Imitation of Life (1934)
Imitation of Life (1934)
Through a chance meeting, two widowed mothers - one white, Beatrice Pullman (Claudette Colbert), and one black, Delilah Johnson (Louise Beavers) - decide to pool their talents and go into business together, opening a waffle shop. A surprising financial success, their business is quickly franchised into a chain of coffee shops that market their unique product line - Delilah's waffle recipe and Bea's maple sugar-candy hearts. But their success is a mixed blessing because it complicates their relationships with their own daughters. Feeling neglected, Bea's daughter, Jessie, rebels against her mother and eventually tries to steal her fiancee away. Delilah's daughter, Peola, on the other hand, is a beautiful mulatto who tries to pass for white, completely disassociating herself from her mother and her own race.

Less well known than the 1959 Douglas Sirk remake starring Lana Turner and Juanita Moore, the first film version of Imitation of Life (1934), directed by John M. Stahl, is actually more faithful to the Fannie Hurst novel and in many ways presents a much more socially progressive viewpoint than the Sirk version. For one thing, Stahl's version was ahead of its time in presenting single women as successful entrepreneurs in a business traditionally run by men. Even more significant was its subplot which addressed sensitive racial issues (light-skinned vs. dark-skinned blacks) that were rarely acknowledged in Hollywood films. Not surprisingly, the 1934 film version was attacked by both liberal and conservative critics when it was first released. The liberals felt that Delilah's character was an outdated domestic stereotype ("the jolly black cook") which was unrealistic in the context of the story. After all, Delilah was the one who created the successful waffle recipe and had no need to continue living with Bea as her servant. At the same time, some viewers, particularly in the South, felt it was unbelievable that a white woman would go into business with her maid.

Stahl's version of Imitation of Life is also significant for another reason - Fredi Washington's performance as Peola. According to Jean-Pierre Coursodon in his essay on John M. Stahl in American Directors, "Fredi Washington...reportedly received a great deal of mail from young blacks thanking her for having expressed their intimate concerns and contradictions so well. One may add that Stahl's film was somewhat unique in its casting of a black actress in this kind of part - which was to become a Hollywood stereotype of sorts. Subsequently, the studios cautiously used white actresses in semi-blackface: Helen Morgan in the 1936 and Ava Gardner in the 1951 Show Boat, Jeanne Crain in Pinky, Susan Kohner in the second Imitation of Life."

As for Louise Beavers, her role as Delilah was rather ironic since she made it clear she detested kitchen work and particularly hated pancakes and waffles. On the set, professional white chefs would prepare the food while Beavers, pancake flipper in hand, would stand by, waiting for the director to yell, "Action!" Despite her own feelings about her roles, Beavers built a career on playing cheerful domestics in films with Jean Harlow, Mae West and Carole Lombard, and eventually became one of the first black actresses to have her own television show - Beulah (1952-1953). Imitation of Life is certainly one of her best performances and should have been nominated for an Oscar. Columnist Jimmy Fiddler was one of many who objected to this oversight and wrote, "I also lament the fact that the motion picture industry has not set aside racial prejudice in naming actresses. I don't see how it is possible to overlook the magnificent portrayal of the Negro actress, Louise Beavers, who played the mother in Imitation of Life. If the industry chooses to ignore Miss Beavers' performance, please let this reporter, born and bred in the South, tender a special award of praise to Louise Beavers for the finest performance of 1934."

Not many people know that the actual inspiration for Fannie Hurst's novel Imitation of Life came from a road trip to Canada that the author took with her friend Zora Neale Hurston, the acclaimed black short-story writer and folklorist who wrote Mules and Men (1935), a non-fiction study of black culture in Florida, and Jonah's Gourd Vine (1934), a novel about a black preacher. Hurst had originally planned to call her novel about Bea and Delilah, Sugar House, but changed the title to Imitation of Life just prior to publication. Like most of Hurst's novels, Imitation of Life became a popular screen success as well - in both of its versions. The 1934 version won Academy Award nominations for Best Picture and Best Sound while the 1959 version garnered Best Supporting Actress Oscar nominations for Juanita Moore and Susan Kohner.

Producer: Carl Laemmle, Jr.
Director: John M. Stahl
Screenplay: William Hurlbut
Cinematography: Merritt B. Gerstad
Film Editing: Phil Cahn
Original Music: Heinz Roemheld
Principal Cast: Claudette Colbert (Beatrice "Bea" Pullman), Warren William (Stephen Archer), Louise Beavers (Delilah), Ned Sparks (Elmer), Fredi Washington (Peola at 19), Rochelle Hudson (Jessie at 18), Alan Hale (Martin), Seble Hendricks (Peola at 4).
BW-111m. Closed captioning.

by Jeff Stafford

Email This Article Print Article

Also Playing On TCM
Silent Sunday Nights - November Schedule Silent Sunday Nights - November Schedule
Among the featured films this month are The Battle of the Sexes (1928) in which a golddigger and her boyfriend try to con an older businessman plus seven more treats from the silent era.
MORE >
More Articles This Month
Robert Osborne on Grace Kelly
TCM Imports - November Schedule
Deals With the Devil - 11/28
Guest Programmer: Anthony Hopkins - 11/30
Silent Sunday Nights - November Schedule
TCM Shopping
Universal Cult Horror Collection (DVD) - AVAILABLE NOW!
A 5-disc collection of mad doctors and murderous fiends that includes such rarely seen thrillers as the Pre-Code shocker Murders in the Zoo (1933), House of Horrors (1946) and The Mad Ghoul (1943).
Was: $64.99
Now: $49.99
MORE >
Universal Cult Horror Collection (DVD) - AVAILABLE NOW!

Greatest Classic Films Collection: Holiday (DVD)
A 2-disc, 4-film pack the whole family can enjoy during the Yuletide; includes Christmas in Connecticut, the 1938 version of A Christmas Carol, It Happened on 5th Avenue & The Shop Around the Corner.
Was: $27.99
Now: $19.99
MORE >
Greatest Classic Films Collection: Holiday (DVD)