“Now, as then, teachers are overworked, underpaid, and underappreciated.”
Up the Down Staircase author, Bel Kaufman. 2012
Although I lived in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco at the time, my strongest memory of June and July of 1967 isn’t related to the human “Be-In” that was The Summer of Love (as I was only 10-years-old at the time, in contrast to the timbre of the times, my entire existence actually depended on trusting people over 30), but to the fact that it was the summer vacation, I spent almost entirely in school. Not actual summer school, mind you, but as an observer in the classes of Mr. Mark Thackeray and Miss Sylvia Barrett.
Vaguely evoking the "dueling Harlows" of 1965, in the summer of 1967, two films starring Academy Award-winners cast as idealistic high school teachers facing hoards of unruly teens in “problem area” inner-city high schools, were released within weeks of one another. To Sir, with Love and Up the Down Staircase came out in June and July, respectively, and I spent many hours in dark theaters that summer--an honorary high-schooler in a virtual classroom--receiving a first-rate education in life lessons and human compassion from two of the most inspiring fictional teachers ever culled from best-selling, semi-autobiographical sources.
Sandy Dennis as Sylvia Barrett |
Patrick Bedford as Paul Barringer |
Ellen O'Mara as Alice Blake |
Jeff Howard as Joe Ferone |
In an earlier essay on Brian De Palma’s Carrie (1976), I commented on the psychological soundness of De Palma limiting the scope of Carrie’s destruction exclusively to that of her school (as opposed to the entire town, as it is in the novel), for the simple reason that to the average adolescent and teenager, school IS their world.
This was certainly true for me. Back when school comprised the totality of my outside-the-home activity and influenced whatever social perceptions a ten-year-old child can lay claim to; said narrow scope of experience led to my favoring television shows in which schools and classrooms played a regular part. The television programs I grew up watching were Leave it to Beaver, Dennis the Menace, The Andy Griffith Show, Father Knows Best, Our Miss Brooks, Dobie Gillis, and Room 222. Saturday afternoon movies and Late Show staples were of the reactionary 1950s “high school juvenile delinquency” movies like High School Confidential, High School Caesar, The Cool & the Crazy, and High School Hellcats.
And even if these all-white, staunchly middle-class, sanitized exemplars of Eisenhower-era values were more social propaganda than any kind of recognizable reality to me, in their classroom archetypes (teacher’s pet, class clown, bully, tattletale) and basic school-system templates (teachers, principal, classrooms, assembly halls); just enough discernible truth was able to seep through in these movies and TV shows for me to feel as though the world I occupied--seven hours a day, five days a week--was validated through representation.
Having attended mostly Catholic schools with nuns for teachers, one of my true all-time fave high-school movies is 1966s The Trouble with Angels. Alas, none of the nuns I recall were quite as even-tempered as Rosalind Russell’s Mother Superior.
Both To Sir, with Love and Up the Down Staircase were mainstream reboots of the somewhat dormant high school juvenile delinquency film (which, during the early '60s, had largely been supplanted by the motorcycle gang/beach party genre), their near-simultaneous release in the summer of 1967 coinciding with Hollywood's reawakened interest in the boxoffice clout of the young. No longer a strictly Drive-In exploitation market, youth-centric movies were now served up with a healthy dose of social relevancy.Ruth White as Beatrice Schacter |
Having attended mostly Catholic schools with nuns for teachers, one of my true all-time fave high-school movies is 1966s The Trouble with Angels. Alas, none of the nuns I recall were quite as even-tempered as Rosalind Russell’s Mother Superior.
To Sir, with Love (a cross between that 1961 British rarity, Spare the Rod and 1955s Blackboard Jungle) benefited from the heavy radio airplay of its ubiquitous title song; its simplified, feel-good, Civil Rights Movement topicality; and the above-the-title participation of megastar Sidney Poitier (Heat of the Night and Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? came out later that year). In this film, Poitier was essentially taking on a role similar to that of Glenn Ford's in Blackboard Jungle– the great-granddaddy of all high school juvenile delinquency films in which Poitier was cast (for the first and last time) as a disagreeable tough.
Up the Down Staircase, on the other hand, promoted itself largely on the strength and popularity of Bel Kaufman's terrific bestselling book—an epistolary novel consisting of notes, directives and letters (not unlike Bob Randall's novel for the Lauren Bacall film, The Fan)—and in the casting of Sandy Dennis, the Oscar-winning breakout star of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? in her first starring role.
Up the Down Staircase, on the other hand, promoted itself largely on the strength and popularity of Bel Kaufman's terrific bestselling book—an epistolary novel consisting of notes, directives and letters (not unlike Bob Randall's novel for the Lauren Bacall film, The Fan)—and in the casting of Sandy Dennis, the Oscar-winning breakout star of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? in her first starring role.
When I at last got the opportunity to see both films, I was surprised and relieved to find that each, while covering roughly the same territory (teacher idealism vs. public school reality), did so from very different perspectives: To Sir, with Love taking the more socially-conscious angle of students learning life lessons about accountability and human interdependence; Up the Down Staircase satirically pitting the personal and professional challenges of being a teacher against the obstacles of administrative boondoggling and student apathy.
Both films get a big gold star from me and rate high on my list of all-time favorite films about teachers and teaching - The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie occupying the top spot. But over time To Sir, With Love, a film I'd initially favored, has begun to feel more quaint and sweetly naive (in spite of the warm, fuzzy feelings these movies invoke in me, I’m not one to disavow claims that neither film fully succeeds in sidestepping the clichéd racial tropes of the well-intentioned Hollywood movie: the black saint/the white savior.), while Up the Down Staircase, a film that once felt too easygoing, has grown in emotional richness for me.
Mean Streets |
WHAT I LOVE ABOUT THIS FILM
I’ve neglected going into the plot of Up the Down Staircase because, as an example of the idealistic inner-city schoolteacher genre, it’s one of those films (like the manic pixie dream girl rom-com or renegade cop drama) whose genre classification serves as a roadmap for its narrative. In Up the Down Staircase, the seriocomic adventures of neophyte English teacher Syliva Barrett (Dennis) as she grapples with the undisciplined, underserved students and battle-fatigued, red-tape deluged staff of New York’s fictional Calvin Coolidge High, follows a preset, genre-standardized dramatic arc of idealism/disillusionment/renewal - as inexorably and unwaveringly as a NY subway train speeding along the tracks.
What saves Up the Down Staircase from being just another high-minded lecture on “What’s wrong with our schools” is its light touch and sense of realism. It’s most definitely a film with points to make, but thanks to a zippy pace, a great deal of authentic school atmosphere captured frequently with a hand-held camera, and the effective performances director Robert Mulligan (Inside Daisy Clover) elicits from his sizable cast of youthful unknowns, the film makes its points gently and with a great deal of sensitivity.
During the self-serious '60s, Up the Down Staircase’s cutesy score, pat characters (Dennis has at least one of each standard-issue troubled youth “types” in her class), and then-uncommon mix of comedy and drama, had the effect of making the film appear insubstantial and mawkish. However, what perhaps looked facile to me in 1967 comes across as measured and delicate today.
What saves Up the Down Staircase from being just another high-minded lecture on “What’s wrong with our schools” is its light touch and sense of realism. It’s most definitely a film with points to make, but thanks to a zippy pace, a great deal of authentic school atmosphere captured frequently with a hand-held camera, and the effective performances director Robert Mulligan (Inside Daisy Clover) elicits from his sizable cast of youthful unknowns, the film makes its points gently and with a great deal of sensitivity.
Jose Rodriguez as Jose Rodriguez If there is any one character in this movie that comes closest to capturing what I was like as an adolescent, this guy is it |
Instead of a socially naïve, politically heavy-handed drama trapped eternally in the time-warp of the issues of late 1960s; Up the Down Staircase, in focusing on a dedicated teacher’s frustration at being hindered from doing her job by distractions both disciplinary and administrative, achieves a kind of timeless poignancy as a character drama. In some of the most economical filmmaking outside of an Altman movie, we come to know and care a great deal about both the kids and the teaching staff. Without really knowing how, you find yourself becoming involved in what is happening with a particular student, and, come the film's conclusion, you're likely to wonder if the story arc of your particular favorite will have a happy ending or be (realistically) left unresolved.
The always-welcome Eileen Heckart as Henrietta Pastorfield |
What's certainly surprising is that the problems facing these '60s teens are really no different from what you'd hear kids talking (texting?) about today. The same goes for the complaints of the teaching staff and the burdens placed on the school system. And, true to the era (in the New Hollywood, happy endings were out) Up the Down Staircase doesn’t neatly solve or wrap up all of its dilemmas; it ends fittingly and without much fanfare…a few heartbreaking failures, a few quiet victories.
PERFORMANCES
PERFORMANCES
It's always puzzled me why critics have always singled Sandy Dennis out for her acting mannerisms. I'm not saying she doesn't have them, but next to the twitchy gimmicks and facial contortions of Marlon Brando and James Dean, Dennis is practically a Sphinx. In a film like Up the Down Staircase, one with a large cast of characters required to establish their personalities quickly, a director does well to cast actors capable of exuding a distinctive, idiosyncratic individuality: something Ms. Dennis possesses in abundance. Portraying perhaps the least-neurotic character of her screen career, Dennis displays a great deal of sympathetic charm, allowing her trademark hesitancy and fragility to give overqualified first-year teacher, Sylvia Barrett, a vulnerable “otherness” that appropriately sets her apart and makes believable her soft-hearted compassion for her students. She's one of my favorite actresses, and here she gives a nicely understated performance.
At the time of its release, Up the Down Staircase garnered a lot of publicity for casting real New York high school students in major roles and as extras (who, by the way, in their low-income modes of dress, still look positively dapper compared to kid's styles today). And indeed, the youthful, diverse faces in Up the Down Staircase are a welcome improvement on the callow blandness of those Disney Channel teens I see nowadays, or the AARP-ready adolescents in movies like Grease. Director Mulligan makes use of the inexperience of his cast members to get raw, suitably awkward performances that are not only a boon to the realistic feel of the film, but are surprisingly moving in their naturalness. Newcomer Ellen O'Mara is especially good (the scene where her lovesick character is politely excoriated by the object of her affections is more brutal than most horror films), as is the terminally shy Jose Rodriguez, and the brooding, hard to reach Jeff Howard.
Special mention must be made of Dennis' very teacher-like wardrobe for the film. |
THE STUFF OF FANTASY
Films shot on location in New York usually benefit from the wealth of theater-trained actors at their disposal, and Up the Down Staircase is no exception. From Frances Sternhagen as the librarian who cares a bit too deeply about her books, to Jean Stapleton as the over-efficient office secretary who practically runs the school single-handedly; Up the Down Staircase boasts an impressive and colorful supporting cast. In addition, the film is chock-full of the early-career appearances by many actors who went on to become familiar TV faces in '70s.
All in The Family's Jean Stapleton as Sadie Finch |
The Dukes of Hazzard's Sorrell Booke (l.) as Dr. Samuel Bester, Roy Poole as J.J. McHabe |
Florence Stanley as Ellen Friedenberg (played Abe Vigoda's wife on 70s TV series, Fish) |
Good Times' Esther Rolle appears as an unnamed teacher |
Although rarely cited in film sources, that's Liz Torres (The John Larroquette Show) making her film debut |
Harold and Maude's Bud Cort, also making his film debut |
That's Bel Kaufman, author of Up the Down Staircase, making a well-placed cameo |
THE STUFF OF DREAMS
They don’t call Hollywood the dream machine for nothing. Only Hollywood could make us all believe we really value teachers. Up the Down Staircase is a veritable valentine to the teaching profession. It dramatizes the state of intellectual crisis so many kids find themselves in, and it sheds light on the potential of dedicated, caring teachers to guide and shape young lives.
It certainly must be an idea we like, because every few years or so, Hollywood hands us the same fable under a different title. Call it Dangerous Minds, Conrack, Dead Poets Society, or Stand and Deliver, the message is always the same: our young people are the answers to a better tomorrow, and our teachers hold the keys to unlocking their minds and spirits.
Sandy Dennis plays the kind of schoolteacher we all wish we had (and perhaps a lucky few did!) |
Sounds good in theory, and it certainly makes for lovely, weepy movies that make us proud of our teachers, proud of our education system, and proud of ourselves.
But what do we do in real life? We pay teachers next to nothing, refuse to pay taxes for school funding, and actively support the cutting of programs and services devoted to helping “our” children develop into well-rounded, functioning, individuals. And because we love our guns so much, we also contribute to helping to make our schools about as safe as a war zone. Of late, we've adopted a political culture of staunch anti-intellectualism that is frightening as it is disturbing. It’s embarrassing to contemplate and makes little sense until one stops to consider we’re also a culture that loves movies about brotherhood and racial harmony.
Lucky for us, movies like Up the Down Staircase are there to also remind and reassure us that good teachers are so dedicated, they'll continue to be devoted to educating our nation's youth...whether they actively get our support or not.
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