"You're everything to me. My very life," Marian Ormsby (Barbara Stanwyck) tells her fiancé Ned Montgomery (Phillip Reed) on the eve of their wedding. But within minutes of her amorous pronouncement, Ned has been murdered by a jealous romantic rival and Marian is plunged into a deep, unshakable despair.

A Lost Lady (1934) centers on Marian's difficult recovery from depression following her fiancé's death with the help of an older, wealthy lawyer Daniel Forrester (Frank Morgan). After rescuing Marian from a terrible fall at a mountain retreat, Daniel becomes enamored with the heartbroken woman. He proposes marriage, and while Marian agrees she tells him she will never love again.

The couple's whirlwind life of polo, tennis and a magnificent new mansion built for Marian ends when she discovers she is still capable of falling in love. The object of her affection is handsome young pilot and businessman Ellinger (Ricardo Cortez) who threatens the security and happiness Marian and Daniel have built together.

Barbara Stanwyck was the second leading lady - following Irene Rich in the 1925 silent version - to star in a screen adaptation of Willa Cather's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel A Lost Lady. But Cather did not like the cinema and was disappointed by both screen adaptations of her novel. After viewing the Stanwyck version she wrote a stipulation into her will forbidding any more movie adaptations of her work.

Originally published as a three-part serial in Century magazine, A Lost Lady was in the tradition of nineteenth century novels of adultery like Madame Bovary and Anna Karenina, and told the story of the love affair and eventual financial downfall of the young wife of a Nebraska banker. The novel was an admitted influence on F. Scott Fitzgerald who read it while writing The Great Gatsby.

The character of Marian Ormsby was based on the wife of the governor of Nebraska, Mrs. Silas Garber. Garber's death in 1921 inspired Cather to begin the novel based on her recollections of the lively, beautiful California-born Garber of whom Cather remembered in James Woodress's biography Willa Cather: A Literary Life, "I wasn't interested in her character when I was little, but in her lovely hair and her laugh which made me happy clear down to my toes." Cather (O Pioneers!, My Antonia), who moved from Virginia to Nebraska as a child, took Nebraska as the setting for a number of her novels.

Frank Morgan, who played Marian's older husband, was only 44 when A Lost Lady was filmed, but made to look far older to be believably doddering next to the lovely Stanwyck who was singled out for praise in what was generally viewed as a mediocre film.

Stanwyck was widely seen as more talented than the lackluster adaptation of Cather's novel to the screen demanded. Despite sharing the same writers Gene Markey and Kathryn Scola and the same director Alfred E. Green, A Lost Lady had none of the salty punch of Stanwyck's pre-Code gold digger yarn Baby Face (1933).

In reviewing A Lost Lady the New York Sun enjoyed the performance despite lamenting the film, "Barbara Stanwyck, as usual, almost saves the day by giving one of her earnestly honest performances." The New York Mirror struck a similar note, observing, "Miss Stanwyck is so plausible, so sincere and so convincing that any story she plays becomes interesting. She carries A Lost Lady quite alone and makes it fairly interesting."

Stanwyck made over eighty movies during her career in Hollywood. Raised in a series of foster homes, the orphan born Ruby Stevens overcame that sad childhood to become one of the most iconoclastic and successful actresses in Studio-era Hollywood.

Entering show business as a chorus girl, Stanwyck found her first big break in Frank Capra's Ladies of Leisure (1930). She signed on with both Columbia and Warner Bros. and became known for her ability to handle all genres, performing as well in screwball comedies such as The Lady Eve (1941) as in heart wrenching melodramas (Stella Dallas, 1937) and film noirs (Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity, 1944). One of the few actresses able to survive and prosper with a transition to television, Stanwyck found reincarnation as a Western matriarch in the television drama "The Big Valley" from 1965-1969, winning three Emmys over the course of her career in television.

Yet, despite a career defined by shape-shifting performances in work by some of the luminaries of the Studio-era such as Preston Sturges, Frank Capra, King Vidor, John Ford and Howard Hawks, Stanwyck never won an Oscar®. In 1982, however, she did receive an honorary Academy Award for her work.

Director: Alfred E. Green
Screenplay: Gene Markey and Kathryn Scola based on the novel by Willa Cather
Cinematography: Sid Hickox
Production Design: Jack Okey
Music: Leo F. Forbstein
Cast: Barbara Stanwyck (Marian Ormsby), Frank Morgan (Daniel Forrester), Ricardo Cortez (Ellinger), Lyle Talbot (Neil), Phillip Reed (Ned Montgomery), Hobart Cavanaugh (Robert), Rafaela Ottiano (Rosa).
BW-61m.

by Felicia Feaster