Karen Stewart (Phyllis Thaxter) is miserably hungover: she knows it even before she opens her eyes and sees her bandaged wrist and the hospital room around her. Sheโs all voiceover and groggy thrash, and so โHelp Wantedโ instantly pins her down as vulnerable, self-loathing, and unguarded. Everything she feels comes out in her body. This is a story of psychological and physical disintegration.
The voiceover is a stylized touch thatโs common elsewhere, if not here; the luminous cocktail glass that takes over Karenโs vision as she tries to remember what happened last night is rarer. Itโs cheesyโsoโs the thrashing, for that matterโbut effective, and it takes us back to a much more composed, much more elegant Karen. โFour weeks, two days, and six hoursโ sober, she carries an empty cocktail glass around her apartment as a kind of superstitious token: look, still bone dry. The burned, blackened dress in her closet is another token, and itโs intentional overkillโpast awareness and acknowledgment and into a kind of self-flagellation.
Itโs a visual clichรฉ of contemporary alcoholic stories for the jittery early-sobriety days to include some anxious fondling of a one-week or one-month AA chip, but you can feel the difference there: thatโs someone holding on to the clarity theyโve gained and want to carry on with. Mollyโs surrounding herself with tokens of failure, trying to shame her past to buoy up her present. Letโs say itโs not the best strategy in the world.
And Karen needs a better one, both because sheโs fragile and because neither she nor her boyfriend, Jeff (early TV stalwart Warren Stevens), have good instincts about helping her avoid temptation.
Karen is to blame for a lot of itโone of the scriptโs and Thaxterโs strengths is implicitly showing what Karen gets out of drinking. To be kind, Karen has no self-confidence (no wonder she is, or thinks she will be, more motivated by shame than hope, more able to scold herself for her past than envision a future); to be mean, sheโs a bit of a drip. She worries about Jeff being late. She worries about whether or not Jeff is drawn to bright, vivacious Renee (Louise Allbritton)–whom he unhelpfully describes as โthe brightest woman in advertising.โ She worries about making small talk at a party. I say all this knowing full well that I come close to being the same wayโGod knows making small talk at a party is one of my biggest fears, and I can drinkโbut showing all Karenโs weaknesses and none of her strengths makes her a kind of sponge, and we know exactly what sheโll inevitably soak up. A woman whose tearful internal monologue despairs at her boyfriend going off for a few minutes of talk with her rival, but who wonโt follow him or conclude beforehand that maybe sheโs not ready for such a stressful party, is not a woman who will keep up her sobriety for very long.
But for that much, to be honest, I blame Jeff. He shows exactly one hint of awareness of how hard it is for Karen to resist the ease and consolation of a drinkโhe initially balks at having one in front of herโbut when she, with glassy brightness, insists on fixing it for him, he instantly forgets again. People canโt entirely agree on how alcoholism works now, so I donโt expect a TV character written in 1956 to necessarily match my views, but Jeff knows how vulnerable Karen feels right now. He knows sheโs nervous about this party! I watched her tell him! He owes it to her to stick close, and he doesnโt.
And she canโt correct his mistake in any real way, because she doesnโt want to annoy him. Sheโs needy but has trouble asking him to satisfy any of those needsโbecause her insecurity runs so deep that sheโd rather blame herself for having themโso she turns to drink instead.
Thereโs some sharp writing in this party scene, and it feels like it was crafted by either a recovering alcoholic or someone who knew one: the way a non-drinking Karen is treated as a kind of implicit buzzkill (โSweetie, donโt be disagreeable,โ a man tells her when she refuses a glass) and the cruel kindness of having the warm martini sheโs scrupulously not sucking down being replaced with a freshly chilled one are memorably good details. The direction is strong and stylish, too, especially with all the intercutting to the booze around the room, like itโs all Karen can pay attention to.
But she doesnโt drink. Not yet. The flesh is still weak, though, so she throws a drink in Reneeโs face.
And, in a painful little development, the evening goes from bad to better โฆ but only for a little while. Karen and Jeff retreat and have a real conversation, and he offers her the best reassurance and external sign of value he has: a proposal. That could be enough for a night. It could ground her to where she could start figuring herself out. Butโflush with triumphโKaren decides to clean herself up and return to the party instead, risking embarrassment for the rare chance to fluster rather than be flustered. After all, sheโs on top of the world, right? What could knock her down now?
The problemโand again, I know this firsthandโis that when you build your self-image entirely out of other peopleโs opinions, you can always be knocked down, and often incredibly quickly and easily. Reneeโs brother, Marlow (Jack Mullaney, who has a sweet but slightly off-kilter vibe, like Anthony Perkins in Psycho), who doesnโt know who she is, innocently tells her that Renee is biding her time to steal Jeff away from his girlfriend (โa drunkโand you know, they never get over itโ).
Thatโs all Karen needs to viciously vindicate Reneeโs dismissal of her, and she takes that drink the way Clint Eastwood finally takes his in Unforgiven, as a kind of decisive self-damnation. She takes the sloshed Marlow with much the same attitude, like sheโs willfully seeking โher own level,โ escaping the party to hit up the bars with him, escaping the endless hurt of trying for the comfort of giving in. But Jeff loves her enough to track her down and help her up off the floor, where sheโs fallen and broken her brandy bottle: a new and messy low, but one he wants to help her recover from. The instincts may be bad, in all cases, but maybe the love is true.
This is a quieter episode that, truth be told, isnโt much โfun,โ and it isnโt as emotionally affecting as I would like it to be: it feels like it needs to be either a little bit rawer or a lot more polished (to the point of having an almost poetic sense of every line and image counting). But itโs well-written1, psychologically well-developed, and directed with real flair. I donโt exactly like it, but it has depth and resonance. And Phyllis Thaxter goes all-in on the physical side of the role once Karen starts drinking again: when we catch up with her in the bar, it legitimately feels like sheโs undergone a transformation. Itโs the most deliberately ugly a female character on this show has gotten since โGuilty Witness.โ All in all, solid and effective, and if itโs a bit po-faced, well, itโs not really trying to be anything else.
The Twist: Short and sad: Karen finds out she isnโt in the hospital, sheโs in the infirmary of the city jail. She cut Jeffโs throat with the broken brandy glass.
Thaxterโs big, fearless performance hits a kind of woodcut grotesquerie in these final moments: screaming and weeping, with her face stretched out in a howl and her hands bent into claws, she looks like a page torn out of EC Comics. Of course she does. For her, this has been a horror story. Right now, at least, it feels like an inescapable one. The title of the episode goes from a vow to a litany. Never again will he come to her door. Never again will they embrace. Never again will he help her up.
I rarely talk about the intros and outros, but the tag hereโa hope that this story will โsomehow, somewhere, help someoneโ–is unusually solemn and earnest. Itโs odd to get a sincere appeal from Alfred Hitchcock. While itโs certainly possible that he meant it, Iโll admit it feels more like a network mandate. Given what tonal whiplash we would get from a sudden jab at the sponsors, maybe itโs an appropriate one. Let there be grief.
Directed by: Robert Stevens
Written by: Adela Rogers St. Johns (story), Gwen Bagni, Irwin Gielgud, and Stirling Silliphant (teleplay)
Up Next: โThe Gentleman from Americaโ
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Lauren James
Lauren James is a writer who wears many different hats (and pen names). She lives in Connecticut with her wife and two cats.
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I was also a little mixed on this one, it’s effectively harrowing but I’m not sure there’s enough hope for it to function as a cautionary tale, Karen seems absolutely doomed in every scene. There are some nicely observed moments and good performances though so it was an interesting episode and quite a different angle for the show to take.
Yes, it’s leaning on shame and horror to demotivate (stop drinking or else you still destroy your happiness!) in a way that … does not feel like it would be that helpful to active alcoholics. I think to the extent that the PSA side of it works, it’s when it addresses the omnipresence of alcohol and shows how little support Karen gets in trying to avoid it. I doubt it helped anyone get sober, but maybe it could have stopped someone from acting like a dick when their friend refused a drink at a party?
Just harsh to watch. Well acted, well directed, but a horror story in the same sense Leaving Las Vegas would be decades later. The most interesting bit was the cocktail party held by and for people from Madison Avenue. The drinking culture that Mad Men would look back on with some sense of jaundice had been noticed already.
Adela Rogers St. Johns would have been somewhat familiar as not a writer of fiction but as a journalist who covered major stories from the Lindbergh kidnapping trial to Patty Hearst. Stirling Silliphant was just beginning a career that would include turning The Naked City into a long running TV series; scripts for Perry Mason and Route 66; and screenplays for The Poseidon Adventure, Village of the Damned, and In the Heat of the Night, which won him an Oscar. We will see him again here.
And of course that title carries a very different meaning in present day discourse.
I think Silliphant was one of the first TV writers I was aware of who wasn’t immediately contemporary to me: incredible career.
It does all fit really well with Mad Men–it’s interesting to see the kind of critique that, as you say, is quite jaundiced and feels like a “look how things were back then” playing out in real-time as “look how things are.”