In a clever bit of stunt
casting, the producers of The Miracle
Worker, a made-for-TV remake of the celebrated 1962 film, hired Patty Duke
to play the leading role of Annie Sullivan, the heroic real-life teacher who
taught blind and deaf child Hellen Keller to communicate in the 1880s. Duke, of
course, first gained fame by portraying Keller on Broadway in 1959 and then by
reprising the role opposite Anne Bancroft (as Sullivan) in the aforementioned
1962 film. Duke won a Tony for the play, an Oscar for the movie, and an Emmy
for this telefilm. All three of these versions of The Miracle Worker were written by William Gibson, who extrapolated
the material from Keller’s autobiography. Gibson presents Sullivan’s work with
Keller as a psychological duel, so the story provides fantastic opportunities
for actors—Sullivan and Keller battle mentally and physically as the teacher
tries to break through the student’s fear. And if Duke’s work as Sullivan is
ultimately more pedestrian than her famous childhood performance as Keller, she
generates palpable intensity with her telefilm costar, Little House on the Prairie actress Melissa Gilbert.
The telefilm
opens by introducing Sullivan, who was partially cured of blindness during
childhood and then devoted her life to teaching the visually impaired. She’s
impassioned, strident, and willful. Then the picture introduces the Keller
family. Living in a comfortable country house, parents Captain Keller (Charles
Siebert) and Kate Keller (Diana Muldaur) treat Helen differently from their
other children, resigned to the fact that Helen will never escape the private
world of her disabilities. The Kellers hire Sullivan with low expectations, and
Sullivan quickly alienates Helen’s parents by accusing them of spoiling Helen.
Indeed, Helen gets her way by throwing tantrums. Sullivan pushes back against
Helen’s demonstrative behavior, even matching Helen slap for slap when Helen
attempts to scare her teacher away with violence. Eventually, Sullivan teaches
Helen to use hand movements for communication, the “miracle” of the title.
Gibson’s narrative is so solid that even the perfunctory nature of TV-movie
acting and production values cannot diminish the story’s innate power. It’s
moving, if unsurprising, whenever Sullivan makes progress with Helen, although the novelty of seeing Duke play opposite what amounts to a younger version of
herself ultimately adds very little. In fact, Duke alone isn’t what makes this
telefilm work, since interplay is the core of The Miracle Worker. Gilbert relies on commitment whenever her
technique is insufficient, just as Duke imbues her characterization with
intensity. Therefore, this version of The
Miracle Worker may be about the work more than the miracle, but that’s good
enough for achieving an acceptable level of quality.
The Miracle Worker: GROOVY
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