Issues and Themes
With his emphasis on existence as performance, as well as his deep concern
about the centrality of autonomy in the lives of women and men ...
Theatre as a microcosm for life.
The need for autonomy: crucial decisions which can change our lives
As discussed elsewhere in this guide, one of Mankiewicz’s major concerns in All
About Eve is the idea of performing, of acting, of life as artifice, as well as the
resultant tension between surfaces and depths, appearance and reality. The
differences between Margo, Bill, Lloyd, even Karen, and Eve are that the former
have all achieved many of their ambitions; they belong; they have crossed the
threshold, while for the majority of the film, Eve aspires to what they have.
Additionally, the other characters are aware of the difference between performing
and being sincere, and Eve does not make this distinction. The others struggle to
define and evaluate their lives; Eve is driven solely by her needs and ambition,
amoral and predatory. There are few moments in which we see Eve without her
‘mask’, without her constructed persona. At the end of the film, there is little sense
that we now know ‘all about Eve’. One of the complexities of this film is derived from
the idea that it is difficult to know all about anyone.
The dominance of the female characters focuses our attention on them in terms of
plot development and crucial moments in their lives. Despite her vision of married life
as a clichéd 1950s existence, Margo is no less a star at the end. We probably don’t
even notice the wedding ring on her finger in the opening sequence. Yet, she also
seems happier at the end. It would be valuable to look at arguments for and against
the above statement. What evidence does the film offer?
If Mankiewicz, as Dauth suggests, is concerned with autonomy in the lives of his
characters, another exercise could be to study each one of them with this in mind.
Given that the societal roles and expectations they are subject to have not changed,
it is possible to argue that all but Eve have made choices that ultimately offer them
the autonomy and fulfilment we all desire. What of Eve? We need to decide whether
she has succeeded, whether her dreams have really come true, or whether she has
achieved fame and power superficially only.
Some pivotal moments at which characters make choices that drive the plot forward,
fulfilling the cause-and-effect shape of narrative cinema include:
• Karen’s introduction of Eve into the Curran Theatre and into the other
characters’ lives
• Margo’s decision to bring Eve into her home and life
• Margo’s decision to ask Max to give Eve a job, coupled with Karen’s promise to
ask Max to make Eve Margo’s new understudy14
• Karen’s decision to play a trick on Margo
• Addison DeWitt’s decision to align himself with Eve, which brings Bill back to
Margo.
• Eve’s decision to allow Phoebe to stay, thus suggesting that Eve is at the mercy
of forces external to her.
• Are there any other decisions which are relevant? Are women’s decisions more
important than men’s? Do men make any? Do we count Addison DeWitt?
Gender roles—on and off the stage and screen; art and commerce
Top actresses such as Meryl Streep have often spoken about the dearth of good
roles for older women in films. When Margo Channing relinquishes the role of 24-
year-old Cora, she is accepting her own age, and perhaps exhibiting a new maturity.
The necessity for women to be attractive, beautifully and expensively dressed, to
perform on every level of their existence is explored by Mankiewicz in All About Eve.
Even Addison DeWitt arrives at the party with a young, stunning blonde on his arm.
It’s all about appearances.
In the 21st century, little has changed, with ‘the lack of female presence in big studio
movies ... shockingly apparent’.15 Before we condemn too vociferously the gendered
existence of 1950, we need to realise how gendered Hollywood films still are. Out of
the 100 top-grossing movies of 2012, 4 per cent were directed by women; out of 500
top-grossing films in 2012, 71.6 per cent of characters are men. In fact, one
academic argues that, during the studio system, ‘women...played far more
interesting and more powerful characters than they do today’.16 This argument
suggests that All About Eve has a more advanced view of women than many of the
films we watch today. Because the studio system groomed and nurtured its stars,
they could play roles that, today, would be seen as risking alienating the audience.
The media often talk about the ‘glass ceiling’ encountered by able and ambitious
women. To what extent is this present or absent in All About Eve?
Linked with the portrayal of a world in which women are expected to be decorative,
and pleasing to men, is Mankiewicz’s delight in what he shows as female strength
and resilience. Margo must change, as she is indulging in the equivalent of childish
tantrums, the only means she has of expressing her frustrations, and only open to
her because she is a star. The plot pivots on the result of her behaviour at the
party—she has gone too far; something must change.
Later, in the car with Karen, Margo admits, ‘I've been oversensitive to...well, to the
fact that she's so young—so feminine and helpless. To so many things I want to be
for Bill...funny business, a woman's career. The things you drop on your way up the
ladder, so you can move faster. You forget you'll need them again when you go back
to being a woman. That's one career all females have in common—whether we like it
or not—being a woman. Sooner or later we've all got to work at it, no matter what
other careers we've had or wanted...and, in the last analysis, nothing is any good
unless you can look up just before dinner or turn around in bed—and there he is.
Without that, you're not a woman. You're something with a French provincial office or
a book full of clippings—but you're not a woman’.
15 Goodwin, Christopher ‘The generation game’ 14 July 2013 in The Sunday Times, London 16 Goodwin, Christopher ‘The generation game’ 14 July 2013 in The Sunday Times, London
• Would a film made in 2014 have a character say this?
That marriage is offered as a solution to the problem of a woman getting older is
problematic for modern audiences, but there are hints that, for Margo, marriage to
Bill will allow to her mature and attain her dreams—emotionally and professionally.
• Draw up a ‘for’ and ‘against’ table, delineating the issues involved here. Is this
strong woman going to subjugate her career to busy herself ‘around the house’,
her excuse for not being present during rehearsals for ‘Footsteps on the
Ceiling’?
The American need for success: The American Dream
Embedded in the American Dream is the assumption that hard work and ambition
will bring happiness, and that happiness will come in the form of material success,
and of course, social approval and popularity. In the character of Eve, this is seen in
its purest, most extreme form: success is equated with fame, glamour, belonging,
ultimately love. In Eve, we also see the weapons that a woman must employ in a
world in which all the power resides with men. Max, Bill, Addison DeWitt, Lloyd--
they are fair game for Eve because she needs what they can endow her with. Her
power is derived from her sexuality; Margo uses animal comparisons to suggest
Eve’s instinctive offering of her body as payment for what she wants. If she
considers love at all, she sees it as associated with fame and money and adulation.
Much has been written about the sexuality of both Eve and Addison DeWitt.
Consider the extent to which the extract below is relevant to an interpretation of the
film.
It is worth reconsidering an argument concerning this film and classical
Hollywood’s treatment of homosexuality. White (1999) and Corber (2005), for
example, proposed that Eve and Addison, and particularly Eve, are portrayed
as characters of diminished fulfilment and happiness because of their
homosexuality. Most provocatively in one short scene, Eve enlists a female
companion to assist her with a phone call in a plot concerning Lloyd. After that
call, she and Eve walk up a staircase in bathrobes, arms around each other’s
waists. Thus a lesbian reading seems not inappropriate. Nonetheless, it is
worth noting that Eve also tries to seduce all three male leads in the film, and
late in the film Addison confronts her with her past, which involved a
relationship with married man and a quick, paid departure from her hometown.
We think that Eve is essentially omnivorous, rather than simply lesbian. In
addition, Addison seems asexual rather than homosexual. He asserts to Eve in
a climactic scene: ‘After tonight you will belong to me ... “we both have a
contempt for humanity, an inability to love and be loved... We deserve each
other”.’
© VATE Inside Stories 2014 — ALL ABOUT EVE 32
All About Eve (THEMES)IDENTITY
The theme of identity is explored through the film.
“All about Eve” demonstrates how one’s identity can be masked and kept hidden through the various versions of Eve. The audience is able to witness how quickly Eve transforms from a furious actress strangling her wig viciously to being calm and collected after hearing Addison’s knock on the door. The director uses the lighting and shadows to suggest to the audience of Eve being two-faced through bringing her from the shadow of the alley to a harsher light and then back in the shadow. Though Eve declares to Karen “I wish I'd never met him [Addison], I'd like him to be dead”, she shamelessly comments to Addison few minutes later of how “I confide in you and rely on you more than anyone I've ever known!” and “I need you more than ever”. Addison’s exposure of Eve Harrington’s name actually being “Gertrude Slescynski” gives proof that one’s true identity can be kept hidden and covered by a fake identity. Phoebe’s defensive statement “I call myself Phoebe” also provides evidence to how easy it is to hide one’s true self.
The opening awards ceremony introduces characters according to their roles, portraying the statement that one’s identity is closely linked to the roles they take part in. Their roles are the first thing that is made known to the audience, this clearly shows how the status of one impacts greatly to one’s individuality. Karen is “of the theatre by marriage”, thus lowering her self-esteem as she feels that she “has no talent to offer”. Although she is opinionated and confident, clearly shown by her arguments with Lloyd and Margo, she becomes timid and fearful because of her being “the lowest form of celebrity“. Therefore, it is apparent that one’s character can be defined by their role.
One’s identity depends on one’s surrounding. The public and private self of Margo and Eve behave differently in different contexts. During the party, Margo is perceived to be an arrogant “Queen Mother” who “treats her guest like her supporting cast”. In the public view, Margo can be seen as being confident and full of herself. However, while she is alone with Karen, she “lets her hair down” and confides in Karen. In the private view, she is seen to be humble by apologising and insecure. For Eve, to the public, “We know her Humility”, “her love, her deep and abiding love” but to those who surround her, she is identified as being a “louse”, a “contemptible little worm”. Eve’s public façade deceives people into believing “time has been good to Eve” while in reality, she is trapped, forced to “belong” to Addison. One’s identity is altered to different people.
Many female characters in the film based their identity on their youth and ageing. Margo’s sense of identity becomes lost when “Three months ago, I was forty years old”. The director uses the film technique of cross-cutting the scene where Bill and Margo are placed side by side with contrasting lighting. Margo’s bedroom is dim-lit, exposing her wrinkles while Bill's bright lit bedroom emphasises his youth. This highlights Margo’s ageing. Due to her advancing age, Margo feels “unwanted and insecure - or unloved”, "as if I'd suddenly taken all my clothes off” is. Margo expresses her concern that “ten years from now - Margo Channing will have ceased to exist”, also Karen becomes “helpless” when she suspects Lloyd’s affair with someone much younger than her. This depicts the fact that one’s identity can be wavered when ageing. In contrast, much of the Eve, Claudia and Phoebe’s identity resides in their youthfulness. Their youth is emphasised by their beauty and confidence, giving them a wide-eyed, naïve personality. Eve manages to take care of herself and managing Margo’s affair while Margo is left to be dependent and taken care of. Age is a factor that affects ones identity.
RELATIONSHIPS
“Relationships” are an important theme in the film “All about Eve”
The representation of marriage by Karen and Lloyd is supportive yet tense and disconnected. At the beginning, Karen is Lloyd’s “loyal little woman” and the director shows their closeness as a couple through positioning Karen on Lloyd’s knees. The couple is also always framed together even when arguing, representing their affection towards each other. Lloyd also shows his respect towards Karen by his assurance “I certainly wouldn't make a change without your approval. , showing respect in their marriage. However, Karen is not always a “happy little housewife”. After Eve’s seduction towards Lloyd, Karen is left feeling “helpless”, insecure that “Everything Lloyd loved about me, he had gotten used to long ago”. Also, Lloyd’s statement “For services rendered - beyond the whatever-it-is-of-duty” is a comparison of surviving a marriage to surviving a war represents that marriage can be unstable and hard work. In contrast to Karen and Lloyd’s view on marriage, Bill and Margo comprehend marriage as something that “would be enough” to prove their love towards each other. The thought of Margo being “A foursquare, upright, downright, forthright married lady” brought excitement and pure joy on their faces. While marriage is defined by Karen and Lloyd as survival, it is labelled as happiness.
Friendship is explored throughout this film. True friendship is shown at the Cub Room scene through Lloyd’s honest acknowledgment and toast “ To each of us and all of us, never have we been more close, may we never be farther apart.” Their friendship is long-lasting and real, evident by Karen’s remark “We're never deeply angry” and Lloyd’s assurance that he doesn’t think he will ever be “really, deeply angry” towards Margo. The deepness of their bond is accentuated through the honest words of Bill “The point is - in the cathedral, a ball park or a penny arcade - we want to have you two beside us, our nearest and dearest friends.” Eve and Addison’s companionship however is based on gains and benefits from each other. Eve pursues to take advantage of having “a powerful friend in Addison” and Addison seeks to control Eve through blackmailing her to “belong” to him.
Loyalty and trust are steady for some characters and fluctuates for others. Birdie is fiercely loyal to Margo. This is evident by her taking a cup of coffee towards Margo when she was drunk and by her cautions to Margo about Eve, showing her loyalty. Bill, although seduced by Eve, remained faithful to Margo. While loyalty endured, “Eve's disloyalty and ingratitude must be contagious” as Lloyd is manipulated by Eve to take the prominent part of playing Cora away from Margo. Lloyd also shows disloyalty to Karen when he disconnects their relationship to be seduced by Eve. Karen shows betrayal to Margo in hopes to “to give her that boot in the rear she needs and deserves” that could potentially ruin their valued friendship. The director shows this by Karen and Margo not being in the same frame in the Cub Room until Margo confesses her decline to play Cora. This depicts the fact that Karen’s betrayal affects their friendship. In return for Karen’s goodwill, Eve makes “A simple exchange of favours” by blackmailing Karen into choosing Eve’s career over Margo’s. Trust is also broken many times in the film. Margo’s promise to Max to read at the audition was unfulfilled and vice versa with “Eve is not working for Max after all”. Eve’s lies to Addison which he “intend to hold you to it” was exposed, destroying any trust between the two.
Group identity provides a clear distinction of any outsiders. The close knit group backstage is interrupted by Eve who starts replacing the role of many characters. Eve attempts to substitute Birdie by being an indispensable assistant. Karen loses her importance as a wife through Eve’s intervention.
Eve also takes over the centre focus of Margo. The director shows this through the shift of attention from Margo to Eve as she tells her sad sentimental story. It can also be seen that Margo becomes the outsider after the audition when Eve, Bill and Lloyd was together on one side while Margo being alone at another. Margo’s alienation is pointed out by her being unaccompanied on the stage bed, dwarfed by the huge stage.
POWER AND AMBITION
“All about Eve” is set in a time where the society accepts the American Dream. Eve relied on her belief that hard work and ambition will bring success and happiness. It is true that Eve had to persevere and be persistent to reach her goal. This can be evident by Eve’s dedication for “six nights a week - for weeks - of watching even Margo Channing enter and leave a theatre”. Eve had to sacrifice her time and money to form connections to bring her the success she longed for. Eve also had to work hard, being Margo’s “my sister, lawyer, mother, friend, psychiatrist and cop” and her indispensable assistant. Max’s remark “the kid's earned her way” confirms the diligence and effort Eve made to accomplish her ambition. Although that hard work brought her the success she craved for, it failed to grant her with happiness she thought was guaranteed. At the start of the film, she describes the applause being “like waves of love coming over the footlights and wrapping you up”, however, at the end of the film she no longer sees those applaud as significant. She had thought her fame would be enough to content her, however her refusal to attend Max’s party dedicated for her shows how she lacks the satisfaction and joy. Margo’s remark “But I wouldn't worry too much about your heart. You can always put that award where your heart ought to be” insinuates the emptiness and lack of happiness Eve ends up with.
Set in a man’s world, the female characters in “All about Eve” have the mindset that one has to “look up just before dinner or turns around in bed - and there he is. Without that, you're not woman”. Margo is a star but doesn’t feel like a woman because of the tradition where females are meant to be “happy little housewife”. Margo’s confession “funny business, a woman's career. The things you drop on your way up the ladder, so you can move faster. You forget you'll need them again when you go back to being a woman”. Margo further acknowledges the importance of this gender role of being a housewife through her realisation “That’s one career all females have in common - whether we like it or not - being a woman. Sooner or later we've all got to work at it, no matter what other careers we've had or wanted”.
Status is a vital feature in this film. The fur coat is a symbol of status; it is a display for the world to envy one’s success and riches. This can be supported through Miss Casswell’s admiring statement “Now there's something a girl could make sacrifices for” when she sets her eyes upon a Hollywood star’s sable coat. The fact that “Women with furs like that where it never gets cold” shows how although it is unnecessary to have such a thick coat, it is still seen as essential for Hollywood stars for the purpose of flaunting their fame and fortune. However, this status comes with a price, as reinforced by Bill’s comment of how she “probably has” made sacrifices for it. Eve is also confirms that truth by having to fake her identity in order to become “the Golden Girl, the cover girl”.
Control is seen in this film through Addison who seeks to rule over others. The director shows this during Addison’s narration at the beginning of the film where Addison seems to control the public. The camera moves according to Addison’s narration and the background music is muted to highlight the importance of Addison’s presence. When Karen takes over the narration, Addison looks at her, as if he is giving his permission for her to be the voice-over. This conveys that the whole film is from Addison’s perspective and opinion, that he owns her story. Addison blackmailing Eve and forcing her to “belong” to him indicates the controlling desire he has within him. Also, Addison introduces himself as someone who is “essential to the theatre, in hopes to convince the audience that he has the power.
THE WORLD OF THE THEATRE
Life is a performance in “All about Eve”. Karen’s assumption that Eve apologised “On her knees, I have no doubt! Very touching, very Academy-of-Dramatic Arts!” clearly points out Eve’s actions are merely just an act. The statement “Lloyd says Margo compensates for underplaying on the stage by overplaying reality” insinuates that Margo’s approach on life is constantly dramatic and showy. Margo admits that she has taken acting into her real life when she confesses she has no other identity “besides something spelled out in light bulbs, I mean. Besides something called temperament.” The metaphor “Real diamonds in a wig” is one that portrays how something real can be easily suffocated under an artifice, one’s true nature hidden under a performance. When Bill and Margo go upstairs after their argument, Addison comments “we’ll miss the third act, it’s going to be played offstage”. Also, Bill remarks “We usually wind up screaming and throwing things as the curtain comes down. Then it comes up again and everything's fine”. This suggest that the lives of the characters in “All about Eve” is one filled with drama and acting.
Appearance can contrast reality; Eve is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. She chooses a “drizzly” night to approach Karen, wearing a “Kind of mousy trench coat and funny hat “to appear as a helpless, unthreatening fan. Eve gives the impression of having “The lack of pretence, that sort of strange directness and understanding” , causing others to have “developed a big protective feeling for her - a lamb loose in our big stone jungle”. However in reality, she is a schemer who would do anything “for a part in a play”. Eve acts as a martyr to Margo’s temper and pretends that “if she's got to pick on someone, I'd just as soon it was me”, acting helpless and defenceless, while in truth, she is the prey that is about to devour others.
Stars reside in theatres while celebrities exist from film. “All about Eve’ shows the distinctive differences between the two. Eve’s award makes her a celebrity but Margo is a star. While Margo is identified as a “true star”, Eve is simply a “light”, something to replicate a star. Celebrities are seen as a “carbon copy” where there are many others, such as Phoebe, who will replace each other. Furthermore, Margo does not seek to give her fans any more than her on stage performance as she sees them as “Autograph fiends! They're not people - those little beasts who run in packs like coyotes”. In contrast Eve’s attachment to her fans, being “profiled, covered, revealed, reported” is what equips her with fame. The director uses the flashing of the cameras on Eve’s face that covers her whole face with a white light, to represent the emptiness a film star has as it is the public façade that the public sees and not their true self. It is also conveyed that fans used to “worships” stars but since the development of Hollywood films, “Fans no longer pull the carriage through the streets - they tear off clothes and steal wrist watches.” This shows how the loyalty of film fans is only on the surface whereas theatre fans are more faithful, evident by Eve being “being told off in no uncertain terms all over town”. In the theatre, “Wherever there's magic and make-believe and an audience”, the theatre cast have a greater freedom compared to film-making. Whereas “they change everything around” in the theatre, films are controlled quite rigidly. As there is a distance between the stage and the seats in the theatre, Margo is “Week after week, to thousands of people, you're as young as you want while in the film, Bette Davis, the actress cannot conceal her age. In the film, Hollywood is seen as a place where “So few come back” .so far away that an airplane is needed and is paved with “stars”, fame and fortune. The theatre is portrayed to be for the “elite”, an enclosed and old fashioned place.
SYMBOLS AND MOTIFS
Symbols and motifs are present throughout the film. These include doors, costume, lighting and stairs.
Doors in the film portray the idea of insiders and outsiders in group identity and belonging. Before Karen first introduces Eve to the group, a roar of laughter is heard behind the door. This suggests that the characters inside are a close-knitted group and Karen, is not one of them. During Eve’s introduction, Birdie gets mad after being insulted by Margo of being “a fifth-rate vaudevillian”. Birdie then slams the door and is shut off from the group, insinuating that Eve is about to replace Birdie as one of the insider. Doors are also represented as a door of opportunity. Eve uses Karen, the “lowest form of celebrity” to open up her way to achieve her ambition. This is shown through Karen opening the door to Margo’s dressing room to invite Eve in, the start of Eve’s connection which would be the stepping stone to her success. Also, during Bill’s welcome home party, Eve opens the door of Margo’s bedroom to ask Karen for a favour, “about to ask you for another favour - after all you've already done”.
The costume used is an important feature in the film. In the beginning, Eve wears unflattering attire, “Kind of mousy trench coat and funny hat”. Compared to Karen’s new mink coat, Eve looks unthreatening and helpless, gaining the direct acceptance and sympathy from Karen. Later, Eve changes her style of clothing to Margo’s style and transforms from a timid fan to a confident assistant. Her “elegant new suit” was a hand-me-down from Margo, conveying the message to the audience that this is the start of Eve stealing Margo’s look. The scene where Eve holds Margo’s costume in front of the mirror is another confirmation that Eve is scheming to take over Margo’s identity.
The director uses lighting to express underlined messages to the audience. When Eve is seen in the alley, she moves from the shadow to a harsh light and back into the shadow again. This is a representation of Eve’s character, to suggest her two-faced nature. Margo is seen to be insecure about being “forty years old. Forty. Four oh”. While the character in “All about Eve” assures that “Margo Channing is ageless”, the director uses lighting so the audience is able to accept Margo’s age anxiety. While the other female characters are filmed under a flattering light, Margo is filmed under a flat light to emphasis on her aging. Through lighting, Eve is seen be radiant and youthful in contrast to Margo’s age advancing in years.
Stairs in the film is perceived to be a symbol of a ladder to accomplish one’s ambition. During Eve and Karen’s first meeting, Karen is seen to be stuck in between the steps of a stair. This epitomizes how Eve is about to use Karen as a way to access her dreams. It also indicates the fact that Karen would be trapped by acting as a ladder for Eve, evident by Eve blackmailing Karen. During Bill’s welcome home party, Addison sits a step above Eve, demonstrating Eve’s motives of using Addison to climb her way up to the top of the theatre world. Furthermore, stairs are a representation of being ambitious. After Eve lures Lloyd into her apartment in the middle of the night, Eve walks hand in hand with a girl up the stairs. This denotes that Eve has an ambitious plan and she will do everything to get her way.
Mirrors are a sign of how appearances may not necessary be reliable. In the beginning, when Margo looks into the mirror, Margo sees Eve appearing like an adoring fan. However, in truth, Eve is about to steal her identity. Moreover, in the final image of the film, Phoebe looks into an endless repetition of herself on the mirror. This is a symbol of how there are many characters like Eve and Phoebe.
With his emphasis on existence as performance, as well as his deep concern
about the centrality of autonomy in the lives of women and men ...
Theatre as a microcosm for life.
The need for autonomy: crucial decisions which can change our lives
As discussed elsewhere in this guide, one of Mankiewicz’s major concerns in All
About Eve is the idea of performing, of acting, of life as artifice, as well as the
resultant tension between surfaces and depths, appearance and reality. The
differences between Margo, Bill, Lloyd, even Karen, and Eve are that the former
have all achieved many of their ambitions; they belong; they have crossed the
threshold, while for the majority of the film, Eve aspires to what they have.
Additionally, the other characters are aware of the difference between performing
and being sincere, and Eve does not make this distinction. The others struggle to
define and evaluate their lives; Eve is driven solely by her needs and ambition,
amoral and predatory. There are few moments in which we see Eve without her
‘mask’, without her constructed persona. At the end of the film, there is little sense
that we now know ‘all about Eve’. One of the complexities of this film is derived from
the idea that it is difficult to know all about anyone.
The dominance of the female characters focuses our attention on them in terms of
plot development and crucial moments in their lives. Despite her vision of married life
as a clichéd 1950s existence, Margo is no less a star at the end. We probably don’t
even notice the wedding ring on her finger in the opening sequence. Yet, she also
seems happier at the end. It would be valuable to look at arguments for and against
the above statement. What evidence does the film offer?
If Mankiewicz, as Dauth suggests, is concerned with autonomy in the lives of his
characters, another exercise could be to study each one of them with this in mind.
Given that the societal roles and expectations they are subject to have not changed,
it is possible to argue that all but Eve have made choices that ultimately offer them
the autonomy and fulfilment we all desire. What of Eve? We need to decide whether
she has succeeded, whether her dreams have really come true, or whether she has
achieved fame and power superficially only.
Some pivotal moments at which characters make choices that drive the plot forward,
fulfilling the cause-and-effect shape of narrative cinema include:
• Karen’s introduction of Eve into the Curran Theatre and into the other
characters’ lives
• Margo’s decision to bring Eve into her home and life
• Margo’s decision to ask Max to give Eve a job, coupled with Karen’s promise to
ask Max to make Eve Margo’s new understudy14
• Karen’s decision to play a trick on Margo
• Addison DeWitt’s decision to align himself with Eve, which brings Bill back to
Margo.
• Eve’s decision to allow Phoebe to stay, thus suggesting that Eve is at the mercy
of forces external to her.
• Are there any other decisions which are relevant? Are women’s decisions more
important than men’s? Do men make any? Do we count Addison DeWitt?
Gender roles—on and off the stage and screen; art and commerce
Top actresses such as Meryl Streep have often spoken about the dearth of good
roles for older women in films. When Margo Channing relinquishes the role of 24-
year-old Cora, she is accepting her own age, and perhaps exhibiting a new maturity.
The necessity for women to be attractive, beautifully and expensively dressed, to
perform on every level of their existence is explored by Mankiewicz in All About Eve.
Even Addison DeWitt arrives at the party with a young, stunning blonde on his arm.
It’s all about appearances.
In the 21st century, little has changed, with ‘the lack of female presence in big studio
movies ... shockingly apparent’.15 Before we condemn too vociferously the gendered
existence of 1950, we need to realise how gendered Hollywood films still are. Out of
the 100 top-grossing movies of 2012, 4 per cent were directed by women; out of 500
top-grossing films in 2012, 71.6 per cent of characters are men. In fact, one
academic argues that, during the studio system, ‘women...played far more
interesting and more powerful characters than they do today’.16 This argument
suggests that All About Eve has a more advanced view of women than many of the
films we watch today. Because the studio system groomed and nurtured its stars,
they could play roles that, today, would be seen as risking alienating the audience.
The media often talk about the ‘glass ceiling’ encountered by able and ambitious
women. To what extent is this present or absent in All About Eve?
Linked with the portrayal of a world in which women are expected to be decorative,
and pleasing to men, is Mankiewicz’s delight in what he shows as female strength
and resilience. Margo must change, as she is indulging in the equivalent of childish
tantrums, the only means she has of expressing her frustrations, and only open to
her because she is a star. The plot pivots on the result of her behaviour at the
party—she has gone too far; something must change.
Later, in the car with Karen, Margo admits, ‘I've been oversensitive to...well, to the
fact that she's so young—so feminine and helpless. To so many things I want to be
for Bill...funny business, a woman's career. The things you drop on your way up the
ladder, so you can move faster. You forget you'll need them again when you go back
to being a woman. That's one career all females have in common—whether we like it
or not—being a woman. Sooner or later we've all got to work at it, no matter what
other careers we've had or wanted...and, in the last analysis, nothing is any good
unless you can look up just before dinner or turn around in bed—and there he is.
Without that, you're not a woman. You're something with a French provincial office or
a book full of clippings—but you're not a woman’.
15 Goodwin, Christopher ‘The generation game’ 14 July 2013 in The Sunday Times, London 16 Goodwin, Christopher ‘The generation game’ 14 July 2013 in The Sunday Times, London
• Would a film made in 2014 have a character say this?
That marriage is offered as a solution to the problem of a woman getting older is
problematic for modern audiences, but there are hints that, for Margo, marriage to
Bill will allow to her mature and attain her dreams—emotionally and professionally.
• Draw up a ‘for’ and ‘against’ table, delineating the issues involved here. Is this
strong woman going to subjugate her career to busy herself ‘around the house’,
her excuse for not being present during rehearsals for ‘Footsteps on the
Ceiling’?
The American need for success: The American Dream
Embedded in the American Dream is the assumption that hard work and ambition
will bring happiness, and that happiness will come in the form of material success,
and of course, social approval and popularity. In the character of Eve, this is seen in
its purest, most extreme form: success is equated with fame, glamour, belonging,
ultimately love. In Eve, we also see the weapons that a woman must employ in a
world in which all the power resides with men. Max, Bill, Addison DeWitt, Lloyd--
they are fair game for Eve because she needs what they can endow her with. Her
power is derived from her sexuality; Margo uses animal comparisons to suggest
Eve’s instinctive offering of her body as payment for what she wants. If she
considers love at all, she sees it as associated with fame and money and adulation.
Much has been written about the sexuality of both Eve and Addison DeWitt.
Consider the extent to which the extract below is relevant to an interpretation of the
film.
It is worth reconsidering an argument concerning this film and classical
Hollywood’s treatment of homosexuality. White (1999) and Corber (2005), for
example, proposed that Eve and Addison, and particularly Eve, are portrayed
as characters of diminished fulfilment and happiness because of their
homosexuality. Most provocatively in one short scene, Eve enlists a female
companion to assist her with a phone call in a plot concerning Lloyd. After that
call, she and Eve walk up a staircase in bathrobes, arms around each other’s
waists. Thus a lesbian reading seems not inappropriate. Nonetheless, it is
worth noting that Eve also tries to seduce all three male leads in the film, and
late in the film Addison confronts her with her past, which involved a
relationship with married man and a quick, paid departure from her hometown.
We think that Eve is essentially omnivorous, rather than simply lesbian. In
addition, Addison seems asexual rather than homosexual. He asserts to Eve in
a climactic scene: ‘After tonight you will belong to me ... “we both have a
contempt for humanity, an inability to love and be loved... We deserve each
other”.’
© VATE Inside Stories 2014 — ALL ABOUT EVE 32
All About Eve (THEMES)IDENTITY
The theme of identity is explored through the film.
“All about Eve” demonstrates how one’s identity can be masked and kept hidden through the various versions of Eve. The audience is able to witness how quickly Eve transforms from a furious actress strangling her wig viciously to being calm and collected after hearing Addison’s knock on the door. The director uses the lighting and shadows to suggest to the audience of Eve being two-faced through bringing her from the shadow of the alley to a harsher light and then back in the shadow. Though Eve declares to Karen “I wish I'd never met him [Addison], I'd like him to be dead”, she shamelessly comments to Addison few minutes later of how “I confide in you and rely on you more than anyone I've ever known!” and “I need you more than ever”. Addison’s exposure of Eve Harrington’s name actually being “Gertrude Slescynski” gives proof that one’s true identity can be kept hidden and covered by a fake identity. Phoebe’s defensive statement “I call myself Phoebe” also provides evidence to how easy it is to hide one’s true self.
The opening awards ceremony introduces characters according to their roles, portraying the statement that one’s identity is closely linked to the roles they take part in. Their roles are the first thing that is made known to the audience, this clearly shows how the status of one impacts greatly to one’s individuality. Karen is “of the theatre by marriage”, thus lowering her self-esteem as she feels that she “has no talent to offer”. Although she is opinionated and confident, clearly shown by her arguments with Lloyd and Margo, she becomes timid and fearful because of her being “the lowest form of celebrity“. Therefore, it is apparent that one’s character can be defined by their role.
One’s identity depends on one’s surrounding. The public and private self of Margo and Eve behave differently in different contexts. During the party, Margo is perceived to be an arrogant “Queen Mother” who “treats her guest like her supporting cast”. In the public view, Margo can be seen as being confident and full of herself. However, while she is alone with Karen, she “lets her hair down” and confides in Karen. In the private view, she is seen to be humble by apologising and insecure. For Eve, to the public, “We know her Humility”, “her love, her deep and abiding love” but to those who surround her, she is identified as being a “louse”, a “contemptible little worm”. Eve’s public façade deceives people into believing “time has been good to Eve” while in reality, she is trapped, forced to “belong” to Addison. One’s identity is altered to different people.
Many female characters in the film based their identity on their youth and ageing. Margo’s sense of identity becomes lost when “Three months ago, I was forty years old”. The director uses the film technique of cross-cutting the scene where Bill and Margo are placed side by side with contrasting lighting. Margo’s bedroom is dim-lit, exposing her wrinkles while Bill's bright lit bedroom emphasises his youth. This highlights Margo’s ageing. Due to her advancing age, Margo feels “unwanted and insecure - or unloved”, "as if I'd suddenly taken all my clothes off” is. Margo expresses her concern that “ten years from now - Margo Channing will have ceased to exist”, also Karen becomes “helpless” when she suspects Lloyd’s affair with someone much younger than her. This depicts the fact that one’s identity can be wavered when ageing. In contrast, much of the Eve, Claudia and Phoebe’s identity resides in their youthfulness. Their youth is emphasised by their beauty and confidence, giving them a wide-eyed, naïve personality. Eve manages to take care of herself and managing Margo’s affair while Margo is left to be dependent and taken care of. Age is a factor that affects ones identity.
RELATIONSHIPS
“Relationships” are an important theme in the film “All about Eve”
The representation of marriage by Karen and Lloyd is supportive yet tense and disconnected. At the beginning, Karen is Lloyd’s “loyal little woman” and the director shows their closeness as a couple through positioning Karen on Lloyd’s knees. The couple is also always framed together even when arguing, representing their affection towards each other. Lloyd also shows his respect towards Karen by his assurance “I certainly wouldn't make a change without your approval. , showing respect in their marriage. However, Karen is not always a “happy little housewife”. After Eve’s seduction towards Lloyd, Karen is left feeling “helpless”, insecure that “Everything Lloyd loved about me, he had gotten used to long ago”. Also, Lloyd’s statement “For services rendered - beyond the whatever-it-is-of-duty” is a comparison of surviving a marriage to surviving a war represents that marriage can be unstable and hard work. In contrast to Karen and Lloyd’s view on marriage, Bill and Margo comprehend marriage as something that “would be enough” to prove their love towards each other. The thought of Margo being “A foursquare, upright, downright, forthright married lady” brought excitement and pure joy on their faces. While marriage is defined by Karen and Lloyd as survival, it is labelled as happiness.
Friendship is explored throughout this film. True friendship is shown at the Cub Room scene through Lloyd’s honest acknowledgment and toast “ To each of us and all of us, never have we been more close, may we never be farther apart.” Their friendship is long-lasting and real, evident by Karen’s remark “We're never deeply angry” and Lloyd’s assurance that he doesn’t think he will ever be “really, deeply angry” towards Margo. The deepness of their bond is accentuated through the honest words of Bill “The point is - in the cathedral, a ball park or a penny arcade - we want to have you two beside us, our nearest and dearest friends.” Eve and Addison’s companionship however is based on gains and benefits from each other. Eve pursues to take advantage of having “a powerful friend in Addison” and Addison seeks to control Eve through blackmailing her to “belong” to him.
Loyalty and trust are steady for some characters and fluctuates for others. Birdie is fiercely loyal to Margo. This is evident by her taking a cup of coffee towards Margo when she was drunk and by her cautions to Margo about Eve, showing her loyalty. Bill, although seduced by Eve, remained faithful to Margo. While loyalty endured, “Eve's disloyalty and ingratitude must be contagious” as Lloyd is manipulated by Eve to take the prominent part of playing Cora away from Margo. Lloyd also shows disloyalty to Karen when he disconnects their relationship to be seduced by Eve. Karen shows betrayal to Margo in hopes to “to give her that boot in the rear she needs and deserves” that could potentially ruin their valued friendship. The director shows this by Karen and Margo not being in the same frame in the Cub Room until Margo confesses her decline to play Cora. This depicts the fact that Karen’s betrayal affects their friendship. In return for Karen’s goodwill, Eve makes “A simple exchange of favours” by blackmailing Karen into choosing Eve’s career over Margo’s. Trust is also broken many times in the film. Margo’s promise to Max to read at the audition was unfulfilled and vice versa with “Eve is not working for Max after all”. Eve’s lies to Addison which he “intend to hold you to it” was exposed, destroying any trust between the two.
Group identity provides a clear distinction of any outsiders. The close knit group backstage is interrupted by Eve who starts replacing the role of many characters. Eve attempts to substitute Birdie by being an indispensable assistant. Karen loses her importance as a wife through Eve’s intervention.
Eve also takes over the centre focus of Margo. The director shows this through the shift of attention from Margo to Eve as she tells her sad sentimental story. It can also be seen that Margo becomes the outsider after the audition when Eve, Bill and Lloyd was together on one side while Margo being alone at another. Margo’s alienation is pointed out by her being unaccompanied on the stage bed, dwarfed by the huge stage.
POWER AND AMBITION
“All about Eve” is set in a time where the society accepts the American Dream. Eve relied on her belief that hard work and ambition will bring success and happiness. It is true that Eve had to persevere and be persistent to reach her goal. This can be evident by Eve’s dedication for “six nights a week - for weeks - of watching even Margo Channing enter and leave a theatre”. Eve had to sacrifice her time and money to form connections to bring her the success she longed for. Eve also had to work hard, being Margo’s “my sister, lawyer, mother, friend, psychiatrist and cop” and her indispensable assistant. Max’s remark “the kid's earned her way” confirms the diligence and effort Eve made to accomplish her ambition. Although that hard work brought her the success she craved for, it failed to grant her with happiness she thought was guaranteed. At the start of the film, she describes the applause being “like waves of love coming over the footlights and wrapping you up”, however, at the end of the film she no longer sees those applaud as significant. She had thought her fame would be enough to content her, however her refusal to attend Max’s party dedicated for her shows how she lacks the satisfaction and joy. Margo’s remark “But I wouldn't worry too much about your heart. You can always put that award where your heart ought to be” insinuates the emptiness and lack of happiness Eve ends up with.
Set in a man’s world, the female characters in “All about Eve” have the mindset that one has to “look up just before dinner or turns around in bed - and there he is. Without that, you're not woman”. Margo is a star but doesn’t feel like a woman because of the tradition where females are meant to be “happy little housewife”. Margo’s confession “funny business, a woman's career. The things you drop on your way up the ladder, so you can move faster. You forget you'll need them again when you go back to being a woman”. Margo further acknowledges the importance of this gender role of being a housewife through her realisation “That’s one career all females have in common - whether we like it or not - being a woman. Sooner or later we've all got to work at it, no matter what other careers we've had or wanted”.
Status is a vital feature in this film. The fur coat is a symbol of status; it is a display for the world to envy one’s success and riches. This can be supported through Miss Casswell’s admiring statement “Now there's something a girl could make sacrifices for” when she sets her eyes upon a Hollywood star’s sable coat. The fact that “Women with furs like that where it never gets cold” shows how although it is unnecessary to have such a thick coat, it is still seen as essential for Hollywood stars for the purpose of flaunting their fame and fortune. However, this status comes with a price, as reinforced by Bill’s comment of how she “probably has” made sacrifices for it. Eve is also confirms that truth by having to fake her identity in order to become “the Golden Girl, the cover girl”.
Control is seen in this film through Addison who seeks to rule over others. The director shows this during Addison’s narration at the beginning of the film where Addison seems to control the public. The camera moves according to Addison’s narration and the background music is muted to highlight the importance of Addison’s presence. When Karen takes over the narration, Addison looks at her, as if he is giving his permission for her to be the voice-over. This conveys that the whole film is from Addison’s perspective and opinion, that he owns her story. Addison blackmailing Eve and forcing her to “belong” to him indicates the controlling desire he has within him. Also, Addison introduces himself as someone who is “essential to the theatre, in hopes to convince the audience that he has the power.
THE WORLD OF THE THEATRE
Life is a performance in “All about Eve”. Karen’s assumption that Eve apologised “On her knees, I have no doubt! Very touching, very Academy-of-Dramatic Arts!” clearly points out Eve’s actions are merely just an act. The statement “Lloyd says Margo compensates for underplaying on the stage by overplaying reality” insinuates that Margo’s approach on life is constantly dramatic and showy. Margo admits that she has taken acting into her real life when she confesses she has no other identity “besides something spelled out in light bulbs, I mean. Besides something called temperament.” The metaphor “Real diamonds in a wig” is one that portrays how something real can be easily suffocated under an artifice, one’s true nature hidden under a performance. When Bill and Margo go upstairs after their argument, Addison comments “we’ll miss the third act, it’s going to be played offstage”. Also, Bill remarks “We usually wind up screaming and throwing things as the curtain comes down. Then it comes up again and everything's fine”. This suggest that the lives of the characters in “All about Eve” is one filled with drama and acting.
Appearance can contrast reality; Eve is a wolf in sheep’s clothing. She chooses a “drizzly” night to approach Karen, wearing a “Kind of mousy trench coat and funny hat “to appear as a helpless, unthreatening fan. Eve gives the impression of having “The lack of pretence, that sort of strange directness and understanding” , causing others to have “developed a big protective feeling for her - a lamb loose in our big stone jungle”. However in reality, she is a schemer who would do anything “for a part in a play”. Eve acts as a martyr to Margo’s temper and pretends that “if she's got to pick on someone, I'd just as soon it was me”, acting helpless and defenceless, while in truth, she is the prey that is about to devour others.
Stars reside in theatres while celebrities exist from film. “All about Eve’ shows the distinctive differences between the two. Eve’s award makes her a celebrity but Margo is a star. While Margo is identified as a “true star”, Eve is simply a “light”, something to replicate a star. Celebrities are seen as a “carbon copy” where there are many others, such as Phoebe, who will replace each other. Furthermore, Margo does not seek to give her fans any more than her on stage performance as she sees them as “Autograph fiends! They're not people - those little beasts who run in packs like coyotes”. In contrast Eve’s attachment to her fans, being “profiled, covered, revealed, reported” is what equips her with fame. The director uses the flashing of the cameras on Eve’s face that covers her whole face with a white light, to represent the emptiness a film star has as it is the public façade that the public sees and not their true self. It is also conveyed that fans used to “worships” stars but since the development of Hollywood films, “Fans no longer pull the carriage through the streets - they tear off clothes and steal wrist watches.” This shows how the loyalty of film fans is only on the surface whereas theatre fans are more faithful, evident by Eve being “being told off in no uncertain terms all over town”. In the theatre, “Wherever there's magic and make-believe and an audience”, the theatre cast have a greater freedom compared to film-making. Whereas “they change everything around” in the theatre, films are controlled quite rigidly. As there is a distance between the stage and the seats in the theatre, Margo is “Week after week, to thousands of people, you're as young as you want while in the film, Bette Davis, the actress cannot conceal her age. In the film, Hollywood is seen as a place where “So few come back” .so far away that an airplane is needed and is paved with “stars”, fame and fortune. The theatre is portrayed to be for the “elite”, an enclosed and old fashioned place.
SYMBOLS AND MOTIFS
Symbols and motifs are present throughout the film. These include doors, costume, lighting and stairs.
Doors in the film portray the idea of insiders and outsiders in group identity and belonging. Before Karen first introduces Eve to the group, a roar of laughter is heard behind the door. This suggests that the characters inside are a close-knitted group and Karen, is not one of them. During Eve’s introduction, Birdie gets mad after being insulted by Margo of being “a fifth-rate vaudevillian”. Birdie then slams the door and is shut off from the group, insinuating that Eve is about to replace Birdie as one of the insider. Doors are also represented as a door of opportunity. Eve uses Karen, the “lowest form of celebrity” to open up her way to achieve her ambition. This is shown through Karen opening the door to Margo’s dressing room to invite Eve in, the start of Eve’s connection which would be the stepping stone to her success. Also, during Bill’s welcome home party, Eve opens the door of Margo’s bedroom to ask Karen for a favour, “about to ask you for another favour - after all you've already done”.
The costume used is an important feature in the film. In the beginning, Eve wears unflattering attire, “Kind of mousy trench coat and funny hat”. Compared to Karen’s new mink coat, Eve looks unthreatening and helpless, gaining the direct acceptance and sympathy from Karen. Later, Eve changes her style of clothing to Margo’s style and transforms from a timid fan to a confident assistant. Her “elegant new suit” was a hand-me-down from Margo, conveying the message to the audience that this is the start of Eve stealing Margo’s look. The scene where Eve holds Margo’s costume in front of the mirror is another confirmation that Eve is scheming to take over Margo’s identity.
The director uses lighting to express underlined messages to the audience. When Eve is seen in the alley, she moves from the shadow to a harsh light and back into the shadow again. This is a representation of Eve’s character, to suggest her two-faced nature. Margo is seen to be insecure about being “forty years old. Forty. Four oh”. While the character in “All about Eve” assures that “Margo Channing is ageless”, the director uses lighting so the audience is able to accept Margo’s age anxiety. While the other female characters are filmed under a flattering light, Margo is filmed under a flat light to emphasis on her aging. Through lighting, Eve is seen be radiant and youthful in contrast to Margo’s age advancing in years.
Stairs in the film is perceived to be a symbol of a ladder to accomplish one’s ambition. During Eve and Karen’s first meeting, Karen is seen to be stuck in between the steps of a stair. This epitomizes how Eve is about to use Karen as a way to access her dreams. It also indicates the fact that Karen would be trapped by acting as a ladder for Eve, evident by Eve blackmailing Karen. During Bill’s welcome home party, Addison sits a step above Eve, demonstrating Eve’s motives of using Addison to climb her way up to the top of the theatre world. Furthermore, stairs are a representation of being ambitious. After Eve lures Lloyd into her apartment in the middle of the night, Eve walks hand in hand with a girl up the stairs. This denotes that Eve has an ambitious plan and she will do everything to get her way.
Mirrors are a sign of how appearances may not necessary be reliable. In the beginning, when Margo looks into the mirror, Margo sees Eve appearing like an adoring fan. However, in truth, Eve is about to steal her identity. Moreover, in the final image of the film, Phoebe looks into an endless repetition of herself on the mirror. This is a symbol of how there are many characters like Eve and Phoebe.