MovieChat Forums > Up the Down Staircase (1967) Discussion > The Late Ellen O'Mara's Superb Performan...

The Late Ellen O'Mara's Superb Performance as Alice Blake.


Miss O'Mara gave a heartbreaking performance as Alice Blake in Up the Down Staircase. Critic Andrew Sarris wrote in his review for the film: "There is a five-or-six minute sequence in Up the Down Staircase that is better than anything I have seen on the screen this year. The sequence begins with an act of compassion at a high school dance and ends with an adolescent's suicide attempt the next day. The lyrical link between the two time sequences is composed of a gliding camera movement that follows the young girl as she shuffles away from and back to the teacher's letter box in which she hs deposited a note of heartfelt gratitude for the night before. The teacher (Patrick Bedford) summons her for a cruel lesson in "composition." As he corrects her grammatical (and emotional) errors, Mulligan's camera glances at the girl's poignantly inexpressive face and then cuts to her hand clutching the sleeve of her coat. Between them, Robert Mulligan and Ellen O'Mara have resurrected the behavorial beauty of those old Hollywood movies that amaze us with their privileged moments in the midst of punk scenarios." New York film critic Arthur Knight wrote "Under (Robert) Mulligan's skillful guidance, not one of these youngsters displays an iota of self-consciousness; and plain, plumpish Ellen O'Mara, hopelessly in love with her English teacher, quite simply tears your heart out."

alfie

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As a child I remember that scene more then anyother.
Years later I started collecting 16mm film prints from various sellars around the country and was able to buy a copy of this for $35.
I screened it for my friends, who are much younger then me, and was amazed at the expressions on their faces after that scene.
Its timeless.
That poor girl. I think all of us have known someone like her.
Sorry to hear the actress passed on.

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alfiehitchie:

I know it's been a year since you posted your comments, but I want to very belatedly echo your opinion. I saw the movie when it came out and have never seen it again, but I still remember the scene Sarris talks about with Ellen O'Mara and Brian Bedford. She certainly was not a typical ingenue type and must have been hard to cast, but she deserved a better film career than she had.

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"Typical" ingenue? What's that supposed to mean? Most of them are ugly.

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I always thought that the scene where Patrick Bedford corrects Alice's letter for grammar and spelling is like something from a horror movie. I saw that scene when I was a kid and never forgot it.

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My heart just broke for Alice, and there are lots of Alices out there. Rest in peace, Ms. O'Mara.

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Yes! In the book you only hear about how Barringer responded--you see Sylvia's reaction (or rather, she writes about it to her friend) but you don't experience it. The film! Oh my Lord, my jaw literally dropped during that scene. Who DOES that?! What a sadistic thing to do!

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"Who does that?" I knew quite a few who did. Lucky you who lived such a sheltered existence. They existed on the plane between America and the border of Canada, 20 miles across Lake Erie from the Canadian border, that's 'who' does that. Including a former manager who, when I called to say my grandmother had just passed away, began grilling me about where my grandmother lived to determine how many days off I would get for funeral, and started PAGING THROUGH THE EMPLOYEE HANDBOOK to look it up , all the while reading aloud from it and asking me questions while I was in mourning and had literally just lost my grandmother who lived downstairs from me.

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I wholeheartedly agree; Ms. O'Mara's performance was absolutely brilliant. I remember that scene from the novel; it appeared as Alice's note in print with Mr. Barringer's corrections on it. I remember chuckling at it every one of the numerous times I read the book. But seeing this on the screen, with Ellen O'Mara's wonderful body language, my heart was broken as surely as Alice's.

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THAT is what I call an epiphany.

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ALFIE:

I agree with you 100% - heartbreaking performance...timeless sequence...I've been there. I know how that feels. She was perfect.

Enrique Sanchez

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An absolutely stunning scene. I think of all the action films with their supposedly "cool" violence, and that's such a fantasy. This scene is true violence -- quiet, deliberate, horribly cruel. Especially since the teacher probably thinks he's being quite clever in dealing with what he would consider a pathetic crush. It's clear he simply does not see Alice as a human being, someone with feelings & an easily broken heart. The casual way in which he dismisses & destroys a vulnerable girl is horrifying. And Ellen O'Mara is so good, letting just enough hint of anguish to flicker behind her almost impassive face -- which makes it overflow with emotion that we feel more than see.

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I agree, I saw this when I was a kid, and this was the only part of it I remembered, and with horror. I never forget the deliberateness of his cruelty to that poor little kid.

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this is a great thread and I must salute the humanity of the people posting here. I wish everyone at imdb were as sensitive as you all.

And Bel Kaufman deserves much credit for creating that scene.

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its an amazing scene, they both play it perfectly, the acting throughout is awesome, sandy dennis is so natural its unnerving sometimes

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The movie version of this scene is really so much better than the book's version, which is unusual, and to see such emotion/non-emotion was just heart-breaking. I have had teachers who embarrassed me in el/hi, but that was just a mild humiliation (but I have never forgotten these slights), but Alice's humiliation by Mr. Barringer was just shattering. I thought of what she'd have been like, once she was released from the hospital (I assumed she lived), as I'm sure she was crippled permanently, both physically and emotionally, by what she went though, and how it colored the rest of her life. No doubt, any trust she had in any man would have been blotted out unless she received some very thorough psychiatric help. And I hoped that Mr. B. suffered for the rest of his life, as well (dot, dot, dot).

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I just saw the movie on TCM: the main interest at first was seeing Sandy Dennis after just having watched 'The Out of Towners'. I came to really really enjoy the movie as a whole even more, due to the of 1960's NYC time capsule effect and the excellent drama.

The scene of the subject of this thread was the show stealer of the whole film though, and for reasons said so well so far in this thread.

Two things struck me as well:

The deceptively polished way Mr Barringer masks the brutality of the "correcting" of the letter, and then his crass reaction during the recrimination(s) with the principal/asst principal following Alice's suicide attempt. It was like it was no big deal to him, other than the grilling he was getting.

One one hand I can possibly identify with one aspect of his reaction in that he may feel put upon by the reaction of a mixed-up teenaged girl; being originally no fault of his own. Hence his statement "...and encourage a neurotic teenager". Instead of pulling that stunt of correcting her letter in front of her, he should have just told her tactfully that he appreciated her thought but her overtures were inappropriate, especially in view of their age differences and societal structure. At least she would feel better being rejected that way than being splattered all over a sidewalk or courtyard.

Anyway, superb acting on their parts, and really, pretty much the whole cast. I like the way the kids, because of the environment they were from; were brash/sassy, even while trying to be what they thought was respectful Ms Barrett.

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As much as this movie is a tour de force for Sandy Dennis, it is also quite an ensemble work too. There are SO many wonderful minor characters, done so very, very well. But one performance indeed stands out - Ellen O'Mara's portrayal of Alice Blake. As good as this movie is, I always considered it (like most adaptations of great novels) not quite as good as the book, EXCEPT - Ellen O'Mara's performance. She so nailed that character, in look, demeanor, diction, in EVERY way possible. The naivete, adolescent insecurity, awkwardness, and pathetic hopefulness of the age - man, did she ever EXUDE all that. As you say, it :tears your heart out". This is an unsung performance in a largely forgotten film that deserves more.

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Just finished watching this movie on TCM. I had seen it years ago. Ellen O'Mara did a fine job as Alice. I felt so bad for her. What a pompous jerk the teacher was to her. Humiliate her in that way. I found myself reacting to this scene,and to that ass of a teacher. I was also sad to read that the actress Ellen O'Mara died in her mid 50s.













"the more I meet some people, the more I like the dog"

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I just watched it last night again on TCM, and I noticed something I hadn't before.

When Alice hurried back to the office to retrieve the love letter ( having realized its inappropriateness ) she had earlier put into Mr B's box she sees she's too late and is greeted by Mr Barringer. Bidding her a deceptively cheerful good morning, he asks her if she would come to his class at the end of the day. She nods trepidatiously. What I noticed this time was: as he turns to leave the office he's still smiling at her; but then after eye contact between them fades, he displays a look of absolute utter contempt at her...almost a sneer.

In the book, he relays how he has no patience whatsoever for the crushes his female students have on him; feeling them intellectually his inferior.

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I bet he was a jerk to have as a boyfriend

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