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The Story of Temple Drake

The Story of Temple Drake is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film directed by Stephen Roberts and starring Miriam Hopkins and Jack La Rue. It tells the story of Temple Drake, a reckless woman in the American South who falls into the hands of a brutal gangster and rapist. It was adapted from the highly controversial 1931 novel Sanctuary by William Faulkner. Though some of the more salacious elements of the source novel were not included, the film was still considered so indecent that it helped give rise to the strict enforcement of the Hays Code.

The Story of Temple Drake
Directed byStephen Roberts
Screenplay byOliver H.P. Garrett
Based onSanctuary
by William Faulkner
Produced byBenjamin Glazer
Starring
CinematographyKarl Struss
Music by
Color processBlack and white
Production
company
Paramount Pictures
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • May 6, 1933 (1933-05-06)[1]
Running time
71 minutes[2][3]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Long unseen except in bootleg 16mm prints, The Story of Temple Drake was restored by the Museum of Modern Art and re-premiered in 2011 at the TCM Classic Film Festival. The Criterion Collection released the film for the first time on DVD and Blu-ray in December 2019.

Plot edit

Temple Drake, the reckless granddaughter of a prominent judge in a small Mississippi town, refuses to marry her lawyer boyfriend, Stephen Benbow. This earns her a reputation in the town as a seductress. On the night of a town dance, Temple declines Stephen's proposal for a second time, and instead goes out with one of her suitors, Toddy Gowan. Toddy, who has been drinking, crashes their car near a dilapidated plantation home occupied by a speakeasy run by a man named Lee Goodwin. Trigger, a gangster and bootlegger at the speakeasy, forces Temple and Toddy into the house. Toddy, drunk and injured, attempts to fight Trigger, but Trigger knocks him unconscious. Temple tries to flee, but Trigger insists she spend the night. Lee's wife, Ruby, suggests that Temple sleep in the barn, and arranges for a young man named Tommy to stand watch.

At dawn, Trigger shoots Tommy to death before raping Temple in the barn. Trigger proceeds to kidnap Temple, making her his gun moll, and brings her to a brothel in the city run by a woman named Reba. Meanwhile, Toddy awakens in a warehouse and skips town. Newspapers erroneously report that the missing Temple has traveled to Pennsylvania to visit family. At the speakeasy, Lee is arrested for Tommy's murder, and Stephen is appointed as his lawyer. Fearing for his life, Lee refuses to implicate Trigger in Tommy's murder. Ruby, however, directs Stephen to search for Trigger at Reba's home.

Stephen tracks down Trigger to Reba's address, and finds Temple there, dressed in a negligee. Fearing that Trigger will kill Stephen, Temple falsely assures Stephen that she willingly went with him. Stephen believes her, and serves them summons for Tommy's murder trial. After Stephen leaves, Temple tries to escape, only to be attacked by Trigger. In the melee, Temple wrests his gun and shoots him to death.

Temple returns to her hometown, and near the conclusion of the trial, she begs Stephen to dismiss her from testifying. He denies her wish, and forces her to take the stand in court, but, out of his love for her, he is unable to question her about Trigger. Despite his lack of questioning, Temple openly confesses everything that happened, including her witnessing Tommy's murder, her rape, and her murder of Trigger. At the end of her confession, she loses consciousness, and Stephen carries her out of the courtroom.

Cast edit

Production edit

Development edit

 
The film is based on the novel Sanctuary, by William Faulkner (pictured)

In 1932, Paramount Pictures acquired the rights to the film's basis, the controversial novel Sanctuary (1931) by William Faulkner, for $6,000.[4] Faulkner's novel dealt with a young Southern debutante held captive by a gang member and rapist.[2] As the public felt the novel had a racy reputation, the film received a new title as the plot had been made more mild and to avoid associating it with the source work.[1] Despite this, even before filming had begun, it was publicly condemned by U.S. women's leagues, an article in The New York Times, as well as the Roman Catholic Church.[5]

The credits only stated that Faulkner wrote the original novel. Robert Littell, who wrote a review of the film published in The New Republic on June 14, 1933, stated that the film producers also consulted Faulkner; statements about this are not present in the credits.[6]

Deviations from novel edit

Several alterations were made to the screenplay that deviated from the source material: For example, in the novel, the judge is Temple's father; Gene D. Phillips of Loyola University of Chicago stated that "presumably" to make it more believable that he is "ineffectual" with her, he was changed into being her grandfather.[7] For a short period before the film went into production, it was tentatively titled The Shame of Temple Drake.[1]

The relatively upbeat ending of the film is in marked contrast to the ending of Faulkner's novel Sanctuary, in which Temple perjures herself in court, resulting in the lynching of an innocent man. E. Pauline Degenfelder of Worcester Public Schools wrote that the characterization of Temple differs from that of the novel version,[8] and that the film gives her a "dual nature", dark and light.[9] Phillips wrote that she is "better" morally than the novel character.[10] According to Pre-Code scholar Thomas Doherty, the film implies that the deeds done to Temple are in recompense for her immorality in falling into a relationship with the gangster instead of fleeing him.[11]

Casting edit

 
Miriam Hopkins was cast as the titular Temple Drake

George Raft was initially cast as the male lead of Trigger,[12] but dropped out of the production, which resulted in his being temporarily suspended by Paramount.[1] Raft felt taking the role would be "screen suicide" as the character had no redeemable qualities,[13] and also demanded a salary of $2 million.[14] He was ultimately replaced by Jack La Rue, then a bit player for Paramount[13] who had garnered some notice for his performance in a Broadway production of Diamond Lil opposite Mae West.[14]

According to Filmink the fact the film ultimately "did little for La Rue’s career... served to give Raft a false idea of the quality of his instincts when it came to script selection. "[15]

Miriam Hopkins, who was cast in the titular role of Temple Drake, was a newcomer at the time of filming, and had only begun establishing herself in two Ernst Lubitsch films: The Smiling Lieutenant (1931) and Trouble in Paradise (1932).[13] Hopkins' mother was reportedly upset that her daughter was portraying a rape victim.[16] Hopkins herself would continually cite the role as one of her personal favorites due to its emotional complexity: "That Temple Drake, now, there was a thing. Just give me a nice un-standardized wretch like Temple three times a year! Give me the complex ladies, and I'll interpret the daylights out of them."[17]

Filming edit

Principal photography of The Story of Temple Drake began in mid-February 1933[14] on the Paramount Studio lot in Los Angeles, California.[18] According to biographer Allan Ellenberger, the mood on the set was "gloomy" due to the dark subject matter, and the cast members frequently played pranks on one another to lighten the mood.[19] Jean Negulesco, a sketch artist and technical advisor at Paramount, helped design and orchestrate the film's rape sequence.[16] Though the film only suggests the rape, as the scene concludes with Trigger approaching Temple, followed by her scream, Hopkins recalled that Negulesco had extensively "planned how it could be done...  If you can call a rape artistically done, it was."[16]

Release edit

Censorship edit

Will H. Hays, who was in charge of the Motion Picture Production Code, had objected to any film adaptation of Sanctuary, and, after the film was made, forbade any reference to it in advertising materials.[1] However, Joseph I. Breen, who was in charge of public relations for the Hays Office, stated the finished film was so tame in comparison to Faulkner's novel that patrons who had read it and watched the film would "charge us with fraud."[1]

In March 1933, the Hays Office recommended several cuts be made before the film was released, with the central rape scene being of utmost concern.[1] In the original cut (and in Faulkner's novel), Temple's rape occurs in a corn crib, and she is at one point penetrated with a corn cob during the assault; the sequence also featured shots in which the corncob is picked up by Trigger and examined after the rape.[1][19] These shots were allegedly only supposed to be included in rushes and not in the final cut, but were considered obscene enough that the Hays Office ordered Paramount to reshoot the rape sequence in a barn, and mandated that no footage of a corncob could be shown.[1] The scenes at Reba's home were also "portrayed too graphically," according to the Hays Office, and they ordered Paramount to excise footage and dialogue that indicated that the home was a brothel.[1] It was now portrayed, despite nude statuary, as a boarding house.[20] Some lines were cut, while Ruby's use of the word "chippie" (a slang term for a woman of low morals) was occluded by a clap of thunder.[1]

Because the film was considered so scandalous, it has been credited with spurring the strict enforcement of the Hays Code.[21][22]

Box office edit

The Story of Temple Drake premiered theatrically in the United States on May 12, 1933.[1] According to film historian Lou Sabini, it was one of the highest-earning films of the year.[23]

Critical response edit

Several protests and critical articles in newspapers appeared after the production company had purchased the rights before the release of the film.[7] Phillips wrote that some critics, while acknowledging the murder of Trigger would be justifiable, believed that it was wrong for the film to justify it.[24] A review published in The Washington Times lambasted the film, describing it as "trash," while the New York American deemed it "shoddy, obnoxiously disagreeable...  trashy, sex-plugged piece."[25] Edwin Schallert of the Los Angeles Times was similarly unimpressed, describing the film as "deliberately sordid, unsympathetic, and nearly offensive," as well as "crudely realistic."[26]

Some critics were more favorable in their responses, such as Martin Dickson of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, who deemed the film a "compelling, if not always pleasant, photodrama," adding that Hopkins brings "a vital and credible characterization to the part."[27] The Atlanta Constitution also praised Hopkins' performance as "outstanding," and also praised La Rue as "excellent."[28] Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times heralded the cast as "well chosen," also adding that "Miss Hopkins delivers a capital portrayal."[29]

Home media edit

The Story of Temple Drake largely remained unavailable to the public after its initial theatrical release,[30] never even receiving television airings in the United States.[23] The Museum of Modern Art restored the film in 2011 and subsequently screened it to the public.[30] The Criterion Collection released the film on Blu-ray and DVD for the first time on December 3, 2019.[31]

Legacy edit

Faulkner stated that initially he wished to end the plot at the end of Sanctuary but he decided that, in Degenfelder's words, "Temple's reinterpretation would be dramatic and worthwhile."[6] Degenfelder believes that he may have gotten inspiration for the sequel, Requiem for a Nun, from The Story of Temple Drake due to common elements between the two.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "The Story of Temple Drake". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Los Angeles, California: American Film Institute. from the original on November 20, 2019.
  2. ^ a b Sabini 2017, p. 219.
  3. ^ Vermilye 1985, p. 104.
  4. ^ Ellenberger 2017, p. 79.
  5. ^ Sabini 2017, p. 220.
  6. ^ a b c Degenfelder 1976, p. 552.
  7. ^ a b Phillips 1973, p. 265.
  8. ^ Degenfelder 1976, p. 548.
  9. ^ Degenfelder 1976, p. 549.
  10. ^ Phillips 1973, p. 267.
  11. ^ Doherty 1999, pp. 117–118.
  12. ^ "Projection jottings". The New York Times. New York City, New York. February 19, 1933. p. X5.
  13. ^ a b c Sabini 2017, p. 221.
  14. ^ a b c Ellenberger 2017, p. 81.
  15. ^ Vagg, Stephen (February 9, 2020). "Why Stars Stop Being Stars: George Raft". Filmink.
  16. ^ a b c Ellenberger 2017, p. 82.
  17. ^ Ellenberger 2017, p. 85.
  18. ^ Ellenberger 2017, pp. 80–84.
  19. ^ a b Ellenberger 2017, p. 83.
  20. ^ Campbell, Russell (1997). "Prostitution and Film Censorship in the USA". Screening the Past (2): C/7. Retrieved 2020-07-05.
  21. ^ "The Story of Temple Drake". AllMovie. Retrieved November 20, 2019.
  22. ^ Sabini 2017, p. 122.
  23. ^ a b Sabini 2017, p. 222.
  24. ^ Phillips 1973, p. 268.
  25. ^ Ellenberger 2017, p. 84.
  26. ^ Schallert, Edwin (June 3, 1933). "Temple Drake's Story Relate". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. p. 21 – via Newspapers.com.
  27. ^ Dickson, Martin (May 22, 1933). "The Screen". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, New York. p. 9 – via Newspapers.com.
  28. ^ "Miriam Hopkins at Paramount in 'Story of Temple Drake'". The Atlanta Constitution. Atlanta, Georgia. May 14, 1933. p. 18 – via Newspapers.com.
  29. ^ Hall, Mordaunt (May 6, 1933). "Miriam Hopkins and Jack LaRue in a Pictorial Conception of a Novel by William Faulkner". The New York Times. New York City, New York. Archived from the original on November 20, 2019.
  30. ^ a b Morra, Anne (December 8, 2011). "Temple Drake: Was She Ever Lost?". Museum of Modern Art. from the original on February 7, 2017.
  31. ^ "The Story of Temple Drake". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved November 20, 2019.

Sources edit

External links edit

story, temple, drake, 1933, american, code, drama, film, directed, stephen, roberts, starring, miriam, hopkins, jack, tells, story, temple, drake, reckless, woman, american, south, falls, into, hands, brutal, gangster, rapist, adapted, from, highly, controvers. The Story of Temple Drake is a 1933 American pre Code drama film directed by Stephen Roberts and starring Miriam Hopkins and Jack La Rue It tells the story of Temple Drake a reckless woman in the American South who falls into the hands of a brutal gangster and rapist It was adapted from the highly controversial 1931 novel Sanctuary by William Faulkner Though some of the more salacious elements of the source novel were not included the film was still considered so indecent that it helped give rise to the strict enforcement of the Hays Code The Story of Temple DrakeDirected byStephen RobertsScreenplay byOliver H P GarrettBased onSanctuaryby William FaulknerProduced byBenjamin GlazerStarringMiriam Hopkins Jack La RueCinematographyKarl StrussMusic byKarl Hajos Bernhard Kaun John Leipold Ralph RaingerColor processBlack and whiteProductioncompanyParamount PicturesDistributed byParamount PicturesRelease dateMay 6 1933 1933 05 06 1 Running time71 minutes 2 3 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishLong unseen except in bootleg 16mm prints The Story of Temple Drake was restored by the Museum of Modern Art and re premiered in 2011 at the TCM Classic Film Festival The Criterion Collection released the film for the first time on DVD and Blu ray in December 2019 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 1 1 Deviations from novel 3 2 Casting 3 3 Filming 4 Release 4 1 Censorship 4 2 Box office 4 3 Critical response 4 4 Home media 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksPlot editTemple Drake the reckless granddaughter of a prominent judge in a small Mississippi town refuses to marry her lawyer boyfriend Stephen Benbow This earns her a reputation in the town as a seductress On the night of a town dance Temple declines Stephen s proposal for a second time and instead goes out with one of her suitors Toddy Gowan Toddy who has been drinking crashes their car near a dilapidated plantation home occupied by a speakeasy run by a man named Lee Goodwin Trigger a gangster and bootlegger at the speakeasy forces Temple and Toddy into the house Toddy drunk and injured attempts to fight Trigger but Trigger knocks him unconscious Temple tries to flee but Trigger insists she spend the night Lee s wife Ruby suggests that Temple sleep in the barn and arranges for a young man named Tommy to stand watch At dawn Trigger shoots Tommy to death before raping Temple in the barn Trigger proceeds to kidnap Temple making her his gun moll and brings her to a brothel in the city run by a woman named Reba Meanwhile Toddy awakens in a warehouse and skips town Newspapers erroneously report that the missing Temple has traveled to Pennsylvania to visit family At the speakeasy Lee is arrested for Tommy s murder and Stephen is appointed as his lawyer Fearing for his life Lee refuses to implicate Trigger in Tommy s murder Ruby however directs Stephen to search for Trigger at Reba s home Stephen tracks down Trigger to Reba s address and finds Temple there dressed in a negligee Fearing that Trigger will kill Stephen Temple falsely assures Stephen that she willingly went with him Stephen believes her and serves them summons for Tommy s murder trial After Stephen leaves Temple tries to escape only to be attacked by Trigger In the melee Temple wrests his gun and shoots him to death Temple returns to her hometown and near the conclusion of the trial she begs Stephen to dismiss her from testifying He denies her wish and forces her to take the stand in court but out of his love for her he is unable to question her about Trigger Despite his lack of questioning Temple openly confesses everything that happened including her witnessing Tommy s murder her rape and her murder of Trigger At the end of her confession she loses consciousness and Stephen carries her out of the courtroom Cast editMiriam Hopkins as Temple Drake Jack La Rue as Trigger William Gargan as Stephen Benbow William Collier Jr as Toddy Gowan Irving Pichel as Lee Goodwin Jobyna Howland as Miss Reba Guy Standing as Judge Drake Temple s grandfather Elizabeth Patterson as Aunt Jennie Florence Eldridge as Ruby Lemarr James Eagles as Tommy Harlan Knight as Pap James Mason as Van Louise Beavers as Minnie Arthur Belasco as WhartonProduction editDevelopment edit nbsp The film is based on the novel Sanctuary by William Faulkner pictured In 1932 Paramount Pictures acquired the rights to the film s basis the controversial novel Sanctuary 1931 by William Faulkner for 6 000 4 Faulkner s novel dealt with a young Southern debutante held captive by a gang member and rapist 2 As the public felt the novel had a racy reputation the film received a new title as the plot had been made more mild and to avoid associating it with the source work 1 Despite this even before filming had begun it was publicly condemned by U S women s leagues an article in The New York Times as well as the Roman Catholic Church 5 The credits only stated that Faulkner wrote the original novel Robert Littell who wrote a review of the film published in The New Republic on June 14 1933 stated that the film producers also consulted Faulkner statements about this are not present in the credits 6 Deviations from novel edit Several alterations were made to the screenplay that deviated from the source material For example in the novel the judge is Temple s father Gene D Phillips of Loyola University of Chicago stated that presumably to make it more believable that he is ineffectual with her he was changed into being her grandfather 7 For a short period before the film went into production it was tentatively titled The Shame of Temple Drake 1 The relatively upbeat ending of the film is in marked contrast to the ending of Faulkner s novel Sanctuary in which Temple perjures herself in court resulting in the lynching of an innocent man E Pauline Degenfelder of Worcester Public Schools wrote that the characterization of Temple differs from that of the novel version 8 and that the film gives her a dual nature dark and light 9 Phillips wrote that she is better morally than the novel character 10 According to Pre Code scholar Thomas Doherty the film implies that the deeds done to Temple are in recompense for her immorality in falling into a relationship with the gangster instead of fleeing him 11 Casting edit nbsp Miriam Hopkins was cast as the titular Temple DrakeGeorge Raft was initially cast as the male lead of Trigger 12 but dropped out of the production which resulted in his being temporarily suspended by Paramount 1 Raft felt taking the role would be screen suicide as the character had no redeemable qualities 13 and also demanded a salary of 2 million 14 He was ultimately replaced by Jack La Rue then a bit player for Paramount 13 who had garnered some notice for his performance in a Broadway production of Diamond Lil opposite Mae West 14 According to Filmink the fact the film ultimately did little for La Rue s career served to give Raft a false idea of the quality of his instincts when it came to script selection 15 Miriam Hopkins who was cast in the titular role of Temple Drake was a newcomer at the time of filming and had only begun establishing herself in two Ernst Lubitsch films The Smiling Lieutenant 1931 and Trouble in Paradise 1932 13 Hopkins mother was reportedly upset that her daughter was portraying a rape victim 16 Hopkins herself would continually cite the role as one of her personal favorites due to its emotional complexity That Temple Drake now there was a thing Just give me a nice un standardized wretch like Temple three times a year Give me the complex ladies and I ll interpret the daylights out of them 17 Filming edit Principal photography of The Story of Temple Drake began in mid February 1933 14 on the Paramount Studio lot in Los Angeles California 18 According to biographer Allan Ellenberger the mood on the set was gloomy due to the dark subject matter and the cast members frequently played pranks on one another to lighten the mood 19 Jean Negulesco a sketch artist and technical advisor at Paramount helped design and orchestrate the film s rape sequence 16 Though the film only suggests the rape as the scene concludes with Trigger approaching Temple followed by her scream Hopkins recalled that Negulesco had extensively planned how it could be done If you can call a rape artistically done it was 16 Release editCensorship edit Will H Hays who was in charge of the Motion Picture Production Code had objected to any film adaptation of Sanctuary and after the film was made forbade any reference to it in advertising materials 1 However Joseph I Breen who was in charge of public relations for the Hays Office stated the finished film was so tame in comparison to Faulkner s novel that patrons who had read it and watched the film would charge us with fraud 1 In March 1933 the Hays Office recommended several cuts be made before the film was released with the central rape scene being of utmost concern 1 In the original cut and in Faulkner s novel Temple s rape occurs in a corn crib and she is at one point penetrated with a corn cob during the assault the sequence also featured shots in which the corncob is picked up by Trigger and examined after the rape 1 19 These shots were allegedly only supposed to be included in rushes and not in the final cut but were considered obscene enough that the Hays Office ordered Paramount to reshoot the rape sequence in a barn and mandated that no footage of a corncob could be shown 1 The scenes at Reba s home were also portrayed too graphically according to the Hays Office and they ordered Paramount to excise footage and dialogue that indicated that the home was a brothel 1 It was now portrayed despite nude statuary as a boarding house 20 Some lines were cut while Ruby s use of the word chippie a slang term for a woman of low morals was occluded by a clap of thunder 1 Because the film was considered so scandalous it has been credited with spurring the strict enforcement of the Hays Code 21 22 Box office edit The Story of Temple Drake premiered theatrically in the United States on May 12 1933 1 According to film historian Lou Sabini it was one of the highest earning films of the year 23 Critical response edit Several protests and critical articles in newspapers appeared after the production company had purchased the rights before the release of the film 7 Phillips wrote that some critics while acknowledging the murder of Trigger would be justifiable believed that it was wrong for the film to justify it 24 A review published in The Washington Times lambasted the film describing it as trash while the New York American deemed it shoddy obnoxiously disagreeable trashy sex plugged piece 25 Edwin Schallert of the Los Angeles Times was similarly unimpressed describing the film as deliberately sordid unsympathetic and nearly offensive as well as crudely realistic 26 Some critics were more favorable in their responses such as Martin Dickson of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle who deemed the film a compelling if not always pleasant photodrama adding that Hopkins brings a vital and credible characterization to the part 27 The Atlanta Constitution also praised Hopkins performance as outstanding and also praised La Rue as excellent 28 Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times heralded the cast as well chosen also adding that Miss Hopkins delivers a capital portrayal 29 Home media edit The Story of Temple Drake largely remained unavailable to the public after its initial theatrical release 30 never even receiving television airings in the United States 23 The Museum of Modern Art restored the film in 2011 and subsequently screened it to the public 30 The Criterion Collection released the film on Blu ray and DVD for the first time on December 3 2019 31 Legacy editFaulkner stated that initially he wished to end the plot at the end of Sanctuary but he decided that in Degenfelder s words Temple s reinterpretation would be dramatic and worthwhile 6 Degenfelder believes that he may have gotten inspiration for the sequel Requiem for a Nun from The Story of Temple Drake due to common elements between the two 6 See also editPre Code sex filmsReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l The Story of Temple Drake AFI Catalog of Feature Films Los Angeles California American Film Institute Archived from the original on November 20 2019 a b Sabini 2017 p 219 Vermilye 1985 p 104 Ellenberger 2017 p 79 Sabini 2017 p 220 a b c Degenfelder 1976 p 552 a b Phillips 1973 p 265 Degenfelder 1976 p 548 Degenfelder 1976 p 549 Phillips 1973 p 267 Doherty 1999 pp 117 118 Projection jottings The New York Times New York City New York February 19 1933 p X5 a b c Sabini 2017 p 221 a b c Ellenberger 2017 p 81 Vagg Stephen February 9 2020 Why Stars Stop Being Stars George Raft Filmink a b c Ellenberger 2017 p 82 Ellenberger 2017 p 85 Ellenberger 2017 pp 80 84 a b Ellenberger 2017 p 83 Campbell Russell 1997 Prostitution and Film Censorship in the USA Screening the Past 2 C 7 Retrieved 2020 07 05 The Story of Temple Drake AllMovie Retrieved November 20 2019 Sabini 2017 p 122 a b Sabini 2017 p 222 Phillips 1973 p 268 Ellenberger 2017 p 84 Schallert Edwin June 3 1933 Temple Drake s Story Relate Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California p 21 via Newspapers com Dickson Martin May 22 1933 The Screen Brooklyn Daily Eagle Brooklyn New York p 9 via Newspapers com Miriam Hopkins at Paramount in Story of Temple Drake The Atlanta Constitution Atlanta Georgia May 14 1933 p 18 via Newspapers com Hall Mordaunt May 6 1933 Miriam Hopkins and Jack LaRue in a Pictorial Conception of a Novel by William Faulkner The New York Times New York City New York Archived from the original on November 20 2019 a b Morra Anne December 8 2011 Temple Drake Was She Ever Lost Museum of Modern Art Archived from the original on February 7 2017 The Story of Temple Drake The Criterion Collection Retrieved November 20 2019 Sources editDegenfelder E Pauline Winter 1976 The Four Faces of Temple Drake Faulkner s Sanctuary Requiem for a Nun and the Two Film Adaptations American Quarterly 28 5 544 560 doi 10 2307 2712288 JSTOR 2712288 Doherty Thomas Patrick 1999 Pre Code Hollywood Sex Immorality and Insurrection in American Cinema 1930 1934 New York Columbia University Press pp 117 8 ISBN 0 231 11094 4 Ellenberger Allan R 2017 Miriam Hopkins Life and Films of a Hollywood Rebel Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 813 17433 4 Phillips Gene D Summer 1973 Faulkner And The Film The Two Versions Of Sanctuary Literature Film Quarterly Salisbury University 1 2 263 273 JSTOR 43795435 Sabini Lou 2017 Sex In the Cinema The Pre Code Years 1929 1934 Albany Georgia BearManor Media ISBN 978 1 629 33107 2 Vermilye Jerry 1985 The Films of the Thirties New York Citadel Press ISBN 978 0 806 50971 6 External links editThe Story of Temple Drake at the TCM Movie Database The Story of Temple Drake at IMDb The Story of Temple Drake at AllMovie The Story of Temple Drake Notorious an essay by Geoffrey O Brien at the Criterion Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Story of Temple Drake amp oldid 1118721860, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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