If you only watch one Sidney Poitier film on
Tuesday’s TCM Summer Under the Stars special, make sure it's
A Patch of Blue (1965). This sensitive ground-breaking film features fine performances from
Shelley Winters, then-newcomer
Elizabeth Hartman and the great
Sidney Poitier.
A Patch of Blue is one of those films that merits repeat viewings. Every time I watch it, I’m reminded of several things: the importance of kindness, the injustice of racial prejudice and the blindness of love.
Selina D’Arcy (Elizabeth Hartman) is a blind girl living with her mother Rose-Ann (Shelley Winters) and her grandfather Ole Pa (Wallace Ford), both of whom are consistently drunk and getting into trouble. Rose-Ann’s promiscuity has always been the source of pain and suffering for Selina. When two of Rose-Ann’s lovers get into a quarrel, a bottle of acid is thrown by accident at 5 year old Selina leading to her permanent blindness. A Patch of Blue refers to Selina’s happy memory of seeing the color blue before she went blind.
Selina is not allowed to have an education and is forced to keep the home, make dinner and work on beading necklaces and jewelry to supply more income to the family. As Rose-Ann gets older, she becomes more and more jealous of Selina’s youth and beauty and is constantly finding ways to bring her down. Then one day Selina meets Gordon Ralfe (Sidney Poitier) in the park. He’s the first person to be kind to her. Genuinely kind. He helps her with her beads, pulls a caterpillar out of her shirt, gives her pineapple juice, teaches her how to use a payphone, corrects her grammar, and more. Rose-Ann had worked so hard to keep Selina paralyzed and sheltered. It’s much easier to control someone when you deny them the
tools to defend themselves and become independent. But it only took one kind person to give Selina a new chance at life. Sidney Poitier’s Gordon is the catalyst who makes Selina’s world open up with many possibilities.
A handsome 38-year-old Sidney Poitier is a marvel to watch.
He’s tall and graceful, has beautiful skin, bright eyes and a smile that
could light up a room.
Sidney Poitier’s Gordon is my favorite character in the
film. Gordon could have continued his walk through the park not paying any mind to Selina. Instead, he took pity on her and decided
to help her out. If anything this world needs it’s more kindness. I really
gravitate towards characters such as Gordon whom despite their own problems extend
kindness to others in need. Gordon’s generosity towards Selina always
makes me cry.
I mean c’mon! She’s got a sad bag of crackers for lunch and
he takes pity on her and leads her to the local deli for corned beef sandwiches
and pineapple juice. He could have just left her to her sad lunch but instead he
treated to something better and taught her how to get out of the park and
navigate traffic too! He doesn’t baby her. He enables her to be
independent and to do things on her own. And that’s key! It’s one thing to be nice
to someone and it’s another to empower them.
The film is ground-breaking because it shows, for the very
first time, a kiss between a white woman and a black man. According to IMDB,
this scene was cut out of versions shown in certain states in the American
south because at that time miscegenation was still illegal there. To me this film is especially
important because it shows how two people can fall in love regardless of race.
Selina’s blindness demonstrates how love itself is blind and what’s important is
who we are inside. Her naïveté about society's rules regarding race could fuel discussion of why those rules ever existed.
While it was Shelly Winters who won the Academy Award for her performance, I think there is a lot to Sidney Poitier's sensitive portrayal of Gordon Ralfe. This film made me fall in love with Sidney Poitier and I've been a happy fan ever since.
Thanks to Jill and Michael for hosting the TCM Summer Under the Stars (SUTS) blogathon and for letting me participate!