In some ways more relevant
than ever, the made-for-TV drama My Sweet
Charlie pairs the plight of unwed mothers with the struggles of black men
caught up in racial violence. To its great credit, the picture eschews the
histrionic approach one might expect considering the subject matter. My Sweet Charlie is a sensitive story
about tolerance and tragedy, somewhat in the vein of Harper Lee’s enduring 1960
novel To Kill a Mockingbird and its
famous 1962 film adaptation. While My
Sweet Charlie is nowhere near as ambitious, as moving, or as poetic as the
Lee novel or the 1962 film, My Sweet Charlie
can be experienced as a continuation of the conversations about humanism,
ignorance, race, and the twisted path of justice that Lee’s novel sparked. In
both projects, a good man’s survival depends on the ability of a Southern
community to surmount ingrained prejudice, and a naïve young woman learns
painful lessons about the world by watching that good man contemplate the
possibility of premature mortality.
Based on a novel and play by David
Westheimer, My Sweet Charlie takes
place on the Gulf coast of Texas. Unsophisticated teenager Marlene Chambers
(Patty Duke) arrives in a tiny town, breaking into an empty vacation home and
using it as a refuge. The backstory is that she ran away from home after her
unforgiving father discovered she was pregnant. Marlene isn’t sure what to do,
occasionally succumbing to the magical-thinking notion that she can somehow
will her pregnancy out of existence. One night, another individual breaks into
the same house. He’s Charlie Roberts (Al Freeman Jr.), and to Marlene’s horror,
he’s black. Yet Charlie is infinitely worldlier than Marlene. He’s a New York
lawyer who travelled to the South to participate in a Civil Rights protest, only
to stumble into a tragic situation when a brawl with white bigots spiraled out
of control. His options are as limited and unappealing as Marlene’s. Charlie’s
erudition wears down Marlene’s resistance, as does her recognition that they can
benefit from each other’s help. An unlikely friendship forms, but even though
the setup is contrived, the character dynamics feel believable and organic.
My Sweet Charlie is a story from a
different time, treating the notion that blacks and whites can overcome their
differences if they embrace their commonalities like something groundbreaking,
but there’s a certain toughness to the piece that keeps My Sweet Charlie from feeling preachy or schematic. Both characters
are treated with respect, so neither Marlene’s pregnancy nor Charlie’s
situation is oversimplified. Moreover, a painful truth about American race
relations underscores the whole story, because everyone onscreen knows that
authorities won’t shoot Marlene for her infraction of social codes, whereas
Charlie cannot expect the same leniency. Duke, who earned one of this film’s
three Emmys for her performance, taps the same depths that won her an Oscar for
The Miracle Worker (1963), while
Freeman, who was nominated for an Emmy, infuses his performance with a complex
mixture of amusement, bitterness, pride, and wistfulness. Under the sure hand
of director Lamont Johnson, Duke and Freeman paint a delicate picture of human
connection to the accompaniment of Gil Melle’s emotive musical scoring.
My Sweet Charlie: GROOVY
2 comments:
A true television landmark. Still one of the all-time great made-for-TV movies.
Let's not forget the contribution made by William Link and Richard Levinson, the writing-producing team who brought this story to the screen. While most famous for Columbo and Murder, She Wrote, this duo produced a number of notable made-for-tv movies including The Gun, That Certain Summer and The Execution of Private Slovik.
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