Greatest Film Scenes
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The Three Faces of Eve (1957)

 



Written by Tim Dirks

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Movie Title/Year and Scene Descriptions
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The Three Faces of Eve (1957)

In director/writer Nunnally Johnson's film-noirish, B/W psychological drama - an authenticated representation of an actual psychiatric case recorded in the 1957 book The Three Faces of Eve: A Case of Multiple Personality that was written by two Georgia psychiatrists of the Medical College (Corbett H. Thigpen and Hervey M. Cleckley) who assisted with the screenplay.

Before their book's publication, the two doctors had also published a 17-page research article in 1954 in the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology about their therapeutic sessions with their multiple-personality patient "Eve." At the time, the influential film provided groundbreaking subject matter, and opened the door for many other films showcasing various forms of dissociative identity disorder, including the popular TV movie Sybil (1976). Best Actress-winning Joanne Woodward provided a tour-de-force performance in the role of the actual patient named Chris Costner Sizemore.

  • in the opening prologue, the distinguished Britisher Alistair Cooke (as Himself) faced the camera in an empty movie theatre and provided authenticity to the film with his opening narration, followed by additional off-screen commentary about the progression of the main character's mental illness:

    "This is a true story. How often have you seen that statement at the beginning of a picture?... Well, this is a true story about a sweet rather baffled young housewife, who in 1951, in her hometown in Georgia, suddenly frightened her husband by behaving very unlike herself....in a literal and terrifying sense, inside this demure young woman, two very vivid and different personalities were battling for the mastery of her character. She was, in fact, a case of what is called 'multiple personality.'"

  • set in August of 1951 in Augusta, GA, a young, drab, withdrawn, plagued young housewife named Eve White (Joanne Woodward) was introduced
  • Eve's concerned husband Ralph White (David Wayne) became disturbed by his wife's aberrant behavior (i.e., buying flashy clothes) and physical symptoms (blinding headaches, memory lapses or amnesia, and blackouts), and reported the distressing symptoms to Dr. Curtis Luther (Lee J. Cobb) [Note: The original two psychiatrists were condensed into a single character.]
  • Eve apparently attempted to strangle the White's young daughter Bonnie (Terry Ann Ross) with a venetian-blinds cord in their living room, and Ralph had to throw her to the ground
  • in consultation with Dr. Luther, Eve claimed she was hearing one familiar but unrecognizable female voice: ("She tells me to do things...To do things like leave Ralph, take Bonnie and run away. All kind of terrible things like that"); the headache symptoms often signaled the onset of her underlying mental illness
  • during Dr. Luther's psychiatric treatment involving therapeutic and hypnosis sessions with her, Eve (in addition to her normal timid Eve White personality) was found to have an additional or separate personality (or face) that emerged -- a fun-loving, flirtatious, seductive, party-happy, provocative, wild and immodest character known as Eve 'Black'; completely out of character, Eve denied that she was married to the "jerk" Ralph, and referred to Mrs. White in the third person
The Emergence of Eve's Second Personality: Eve 'Black'
  • Dr. Luther described his patient as having a multi-phasic personality disorder ("a case of multiple personality"); Eve 'Black' described how she co-existed with Eve White and Ralph: "She don't know anything about me, but I know everything about her. Everything I want to, anyway. There's some things about her l'm not interested in, like that jughead out there"; she also asserted that Eve White should "leave the so-and-so. Take the kid and beat it... I ain't gonna go through the rest of my life with that creep"
  • by 1952, Eve was admitted to a hospital for treatment; Dr. Luther confirmed his diagnosis of "multiple personality" to both Eve and Ralph: ("At some point in the past, apparently when she was a little girl, her personality became divided into two different personalities. In effect, she's now two different women, entirely different in character. To be more specific about it - the girl you married, Bonnie's mother, the sweet, quiet girl you fell in love with, that's one of the women. The other is the one that scared Bonnie, the one who bought all those clothes. The one who had that row with you in Atlanta. You know those headaches and blackout spells? Well, that was when this other woman, the one who calls herself Eve Black, was trying to get out...Out of the body. Your wife's body....This is an actual mental condition with Mrs. White. It isn't pretending or faking. She can't help it. But that doesn't mean she's psychotic, crazy")
  • according to the narrator Alistair Cooke: "After she'd been in the hospital for two weeks, Dr. Luther and Dr. Day were satisfied that whether she behaved as Eve White or Eve Black, she would do no harm to herself or to others" - Eve was discharged, and would receive out-patient treatment; meanwhile, Ralph moved by himself to Jacksonville, FL
  • Eve 'Black's' sporadic and unstable behavior, including provocative and seductive nightclub behavior with other men (and with Ralph himself) increased tensions and ultimately forced Ralph to divorce his wife
  • Dr. Luther was worried that both of Eve's two personalities were incapable of being 'normal.' In fact, he learned from Eve 'Black' that Mrs. White had considered suicide the night before by slitting her wrist with a razor blade
  • after further hypnosis, a third more stable, composed, mature and sophisticated matronly personality emerged known as 'Jane.' She claimed that she knew of her alter-egos (Eve 'Black' and Mrs. White) but was mostly unfamiliar with them; the narrator summarized the finding: "And so, now Dr. Luther had three inadequate personalities to complicate and confuse his search for one stable and complete woman, all of whom continued to live, so to speak, their own separate lives. Which would it be? The rollicking and irresponsible playgirl?...The defeated wife?...Or the pleasant young woman who had no memory? What, in short, had nature, in the first place, intended this woman to be?"
  • in the fall of 1953 during further treatment, Eve "White" (who appeared to be 'dying' or disappearing) reported instances of intense fatigue and other memory lapses; with Dr. Luther, Eve (under hypnosis) recalled a traumatic event in her own childhood (Mimi Gibson as young Eve); during the memory, Eve cried out: "No, Mama! Mama, please don't make me!...She made me kiss her!"
  • in a stunning flashback, the young girl described how her mother had forced her to kiss her grandmother in an open-casket during a funeral: ("You've got to kiss Grandma goodbye. Then you won't miss her so much if you kiss her goodbye, sugar pie. You know that"); it appeared that the terrifying incident was the trigger that had given birth within her to the personality of Eve "White"
The Film's Dramatic Climax

Troubled Eve "White" with Dr. Luther

Under Hypnosis, Eve Recalled a Traumatic Childhood Event

Eve to Dr. Luther: "She made me kiss her!"

Flashback: Eve as Young Girl at the Open Casket of Her Grandmother

[Note: The film fictionalized the dramatic revelation of Eve's traumatic trigger at a young age, causing her personality fragmentation - it was NOT due to the kissing of her dead grandmother. Instead, at the age of 2, she experienced or witnessed four troubling events: (1) a drowned victim in a ditch, (2) a gruesome lumber mill sawing accident, (3) her own mother's bloody kitchen-accident injury, and (4) an infant's funeral. Also, the film simplified her malady - she actually had 22 distinct personalities that often emerged as threesomes after leaving Georgia, and continued to suffer from split identities until the mid-1970s.]

  • the recollection of her troubled past helped Eve to purge herself of her two negative 'Eve' selves, integrate her memories into one person ("Jane"), and cure her of the psychological disorder; when asked by Dr. Luther: "May I speak to Mrs. White?" Eve replied: "She's gone"; Eve "Black" had also vanished: "They're gone, I tell you. Both of them. They're gone and there's nobody else here but me. I know it. I can feel it"
  • in the film's concluding sequence set in 1955, two years after her breakthrough, Dr. Luther received a letter from Jane about how she had formed a new family with Bonnie and a compassionate, understanding and loving man named Earl (Ken Scott): (voice-over) ("It's the second anniversary of that day in your office, and still no more Eve White and no more Eve Black. That's why we decided it was safe at last to have Bonnie with us. And so here we all are, Earl and Bonnie and me, going home together")

Opening Prologue: Alistair Cooke


In Dr. Luther's Office, With Eve and Ralph White (Joanne Woodward and David Wayne)


Ralph Saving Daughter Bonnie (Terry Ann Ross) From Being Strangled With Cord


Disturbed Wife Eve White (Joanne Woodward) - Hearing a Voice


Stunned Reaction to Learning That She Might Have a "Personality Disorder"

Dr. Luther's Description to Ralph of Eve's "Medical Condition"


Eve 'Black's' Seductive Behavior in a Nightclub


Further Self-Indulgent and Floozy Behavior


Eve's or "Jane's" New Romantic Interest - Earl (Ken Scott)



"Jane's" Joy About the Disappearance of the Two "Eve's" In Her Personality: "They're gone...!"

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