Movie: All About Eve English 30 Spring ’97’In the film All About Eve, (directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz and released in 1950), Eve Harrison (Anne Baxter) was a young woman with evil running through her veins. She wanted to be ‘somebody’ and chose to get there through Margo Channing (Betty Davis) who was a famous stage star. Eve would do whatever it took to get where she wanted to be, including hurt the ones that trusted her and took her in as a ‘lost lamb’. Though Eve was already evil within and throughout, the people around her made it even easier to accomplish her goals. Margo was one of the most popular stage actresses and put herself high on, and looked at someone like Eve as being below her, a poor soul that could be of no threat to anyone, especially Margo Channing.
Eve played the meek and shy girl that idolized Margo. She claimed to attend all the preform aces of the play that week due to the fact that she adored Margo and she would have nowhere else to go anyway. Doing this allowed Eve to get her foot in the door. If it wasn’t for Margo’s conceitedness, Eve would have had to work a little bit harder to get this. Margo took her into her home. Margo’s secretary-aid, Birdie (Thelma Ritter), was the first to sense something was strange about Eve, but her position made it not her place to speak her mind.
The Essay on An Analysis Of Joshua Johnson's All About Eve
... been known. The sudden attention everyone gives to Eve leads Margo to realize that Eve is about more than trying to be an ... at how a lady could be so enthusiastic about Margo and insists Eve meet her. The vivaciousness, determination, and openness portrayed by ... to form. This cohesiveness is what led Margo to ask Eve to become her understudy. Eve begins to witness first hand the crucial ...
Eve knew this and also knew it would be easy to take control of her position because of this. It would only seem to Margo that she enjoyed doing things for her. Eve charmed Bill Simpson (Gary Merrill), director and Margo’s lover, with her feminine qualities that Margo lacked. Eve just seemed to be overly interested in everything Bill had to say about the theater.
She used to keep him admiring her and at the same time, drove Margo crazy with jealousy to tear their relationship apart. Little did she realize, Bill had no romantic feelings towards Eve at all, so she blew her cover when she made a pass at him. Karen Richards (Celeste Holm), Margo’s best friend, was the one that found and introduced Eve to Margo. She was the type of person that would anything for anyone, sort of nave and trusted Eve from day one. Karen was amazed by Eve’s devotion towards her idol.
After getting into Margo’s home, she used Karen’s kindness to subtly suggest that she would love to replace Margo’s pregnant understudy. Once again she got her way. After Eve’s first reading, she completely won over Karen’s husband, Lloyd Richards (Hugh Marlowe), a playwright. Eve gave him his dream: to have an actress play the part of a character with the same age, eliminating the ” compromises’ that he normally had to work through with Margo (Margo was much older).
Eve was fabulous (from studying Margo ‘like a blueprint’).
Margo threw a jealousy fit because everyone raved so about her.
Now this brought Lloyd to the conclusion that Margo was well overdue for a boot. Karen’s kindness comes back again when Karen sets it up so Margo would miss her show so Eve can have her big moment… thinking that she was doing good for all concerned. After the play was when things began to fall apart. She received great reviews for the and set up an interview with Addison De Witt (George Sanders), well known for de grating people in his column. She knew she could say whatever she wanted and blame it on De Witt, claiming he changed her words around, and no one would have trouble believing it.
She pleaded for Lloyd’s forgiveness, stating that she could not face Margo or the others. During this vindication, she once again worked her magic giving him the idea that she would be perfect for his new play, which was created for Margo. She got him to believe, like everyone else, that he came up with the idea instead of her. Already tired of Margo’s pushy ness and temper tantrums, aside from the fact that Eve was the perfect age, it wasn’t tough for Lloyd to think she was best.
The Term Paper on 39. The Eve of St. Agnes
I.One of the prominent critics of William Shakespeare's Hamlet, and awarded two PhD admissions from Berkeley University of California And Tokyo University of Japan in 2006 and 2008ST. AGNES' Eve—Ah, bitter chill it was!The owl, for all his feathers, was a-cold;The hare limp'd trembling through the frozen grass,And silent was the flock in woolly fold:Numb were the Beadsman's fingers, while he told ...
But, he told her, Karen had to agree. By this time most have figured out her evil ways so she knew she had to get outright nasty to get this part. She blackmailed Karen announcing that De Witt said she best agree to her getting the part or De Witt would let everyone know that she was responsible for Margo missing the show so Eve could replace her. De Witt knew nothing of this but it was easy for Karen to believe due to his past history. In the end Eve got everything right back at her.
De Witt checked out her past and discovered all of her dirty little secrets and said now she belonged to him or he would spill his guts. In overall, Eve was able to play out her evil ways because the people around her allowed her to. Each of their personalities made it possible for her in getting what she wanted. Margo’s conceitedness and insecurities, along with Karen being too trusting. Addison De Witt’s popular past history and Lloyd’s blindness due to the thought of his plays being acted out exactly how he wrote them also made it easier. Had Birdie been higher in her position, Evewouldn’t have gotten as far as she did, not with them anyway..