Blue Denim

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Blue Denim
Directed by Philip Dunne
Produced by Charles Brackett
Written by James Leo Herlihy (play)
William Noble (play)
Philip Dunne
Edith R. Sommer
Starring Carol Lynley
Brandon De Wilde
Music by Bernard Herrmann
Cinematography Leo Tover
Editing by William H. Reynolds
Distributed by 20th Century-Fox
Release date(s) 1959
Running time 89 min.
Country U.S.A.
Language English
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Blue Denim was a successful 1958 Broadway play by writer James Leo Herlihy, made the next year into a successful movie starring Brandon De Wilde and Carol Lynley (who had appeared in the stage version), and dealing with the issues of teenage pregnancy and (then-illegal) abortion. Macdonald Carey, Warren Berlinger and Roberta Shore appear as supporting characters.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The story is set in Dearborn, Michigan, during the 1950s, and revolves around fourteen-year-old Arthur Bartley (DeWilde) and his schoolmates, fifteen-year-old Janet Willard (Lynley) and Ernie (Berlinger). While widower's-daughter Janet laughs at Arthur and Ernie's forays into smoking, drinking, and playing cards, she's always been interested in Arthur, and as Arthur's parents try to shelter him from negative things in life (like the euthanasia of the family dog, done while he's at school), he turns to Janet for comfort.

The relationship between Janet and Arthur results in her becoming pregnant. Unable to ask their parents (who misinterpret their pleas as "ordinary" teenage curiosity about sex and adulthood) for help, they turn to Ernie, who'd boasted earlier about "helping a sailor who got his girl in trouble" by directing him to an abortionist – only to discover Ernie made it all up, based on secondhand stories. The three seek together to arrange an abortion and raise the funds, only to be discovered by their parents. In the meantime, Arthur and Janet find out how much they don't yet know about life – and how much they truly care about each other.

[edit] Differences between stage and film versions

In the original stage version, Janet does have her pregnancy aborted, and she and Arthur talk it over later as they settle their feelings for one another. When the play was adapted for Hollywood, however, strict production codes forbade anything but the condemnation of abortion, so the storyline was changed; Arthur and Janet instead go off together, to get married and stay with Janet's aunt in another city until the baby is born.

[edit] Critical and public reception

While the play and then the movie came and went, at first causing a minor controversy, then becoming part of the 'canon' of Broadway adaptations, and studied for its sociological impact, Blue Denim was still being decried as late as the 1980s by Fundamentalist preachers.

[edit] In other media

In Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, Bobby Rupp, Nancy Clutter's beau, says, "We talked for a while, and made a date to go to the movies Sunday night - a picture all the girls were looking forward to, Blue Denim."

[edit] External links


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