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Alice
Adams (1935)
In director George Stevens' version of Booth Tarkington's
novel of the same name:
- the scene of Alice (Katharine Hepburn), the daughter
of Virgil Adams (Fred Stone), weeping bitterly at her rain-spattered
bedroom window after returning home from the Palmer dance - feeling
completely humiliated by her bedraggled bouquet of flowers, her
insensitive escort brother Walter (Frank Albertson), and dashed
hopes of respectability with new-in-town suitor Arthur (Fred MacMurray)
The Disastrous 'Formal' Dinner
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- the classic, tragically funny, disastrous dinner-party
scene, in which aspiring, pretentious Alice hopelessly wished to
rise up above the low-social prominence of her vulgar, poor family
to impress her rich new suitor Arthur Russell by inviting him to
a "stylish" dinner party at her own home - in the wilting
humidity and summer heat, it was served valiantly by the part-time,
hired black servant/cook Malena (Hattie McDaniel); Alice suffered
with the surly maid, her socially-awkward father, and the incredibly
inappropriate 'formal' dinner menu, and believed afterwards that
she would never see Arthur again
- the couple's kiss on the front porch at the end of
the film
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At the Dance with New-in-Town Suitor Arthur (Fred MacMurray)
Alice's Weeping at Window
The Awkward Dinner Party
Ending Porch Kiss with Arthur
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