Dirty Gertie from Harlem, U.S.A.
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Spencer Williams
Francine Everett
Don Wilson
Kathrine Moore
Alfred Hawkins
Boykin
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
When famous Harlem stripper Gertie LaRue arrives on the island of Rinidad, she is given celebrity treatment and taken to the Paradise Hotel, where she and her assistant, Stella Van Johnson, are placed in the posh bridal suite. The hotel's proprietor, Diamond Joe, is smitten with Gertie, but Gertie ignores Stella's suggestion that she take an interest in him. Meanwhile, in their private dormitory room, members of Gertie's troupe discuss Gertie's past relationship with a generous Harlem man named Al, whom Gertie treated poorly and deserted. Also staying at the hotel is the pious Mr. Jonathan Christian and his assistant Ezra Crumm, two missionaries who have come to the island to teach about sin. Having witnessed Gertie's flirtatious behavior on the boat, Mr. Christian tells Ezra that she is a "painted trollop." Gertie remains true to her reputation as a gregarious flirt when she joins a sailor named Tight Pants and a soldier named Big Boy for a drink at the Diamond Palace lounge. There, Larry, the bar's piano player, recognizes Gertie and plays a tune intended to stir memories of her troubled past in Harlem and her relationship with his friend Al. When Gertie returns to the hotel drunk and in the company of the two military men, Mr. Christian watches in horror as she kisses both of them. He also sees Gertie throw a liquor bottle at a hallucination of Al that has suddenly haunted her. Gertie faints when Mr. Christian emerges from the shadows, and when she regains consciousness, she misinterprets his actions and accuses him of trying to take advantage of her. Later that day, Gertie, having been spooked by bad omens since her arrival on the island, goes to a fortune teller, an old woman named Old Hager, who looks into her crystal ball and sees Gertie's misdeeds and has a vision of a man coming after her. However, neither the medium's portents nor Mr. Christian's best efforts to have the Diamond Palace shut down prevent Gertie from taking the stage and performing her striptease. During her act, Mr. Christian, who has been watching the show with interest, takes to the stage and orders an end to the show. A brawl ensues when he grabs Gertie, but Diamond Joe whisks her out of the club and takes her back to the hotel. Alone in her room, Gertie is unhappy with the image she has caught of herself in the mirror, and while she is thinking, Al bursts into the room from the balcony and shoots her. When Stella and the police rush into the room, Al tells them that he killed her because he loved her.
Director
Spencer Williams
Cast
Francine Everett
Don Wilson
Kathrine Moore
Alfred Hawkins
Boykin
L. E. Lewis
Inez Newell
Piano Frank
John King
Shelly Ross
Hugh Watson
Don Gilbert
Spencer Williams
July Jones
Howard Galloway
6-harlem Beauties-6
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Dirty Gertie from Harlem U.S.A.
Dirty Gertie from Harlem U.S.A. (1946), one of their last productions, is an unauthorized adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's short story "Miss Thompson." It had already been turned into a play (Rain) and brought to the screen twice (as Sadie Thompson, 1928, and Rain, 1932). Williams' version, from a screenplay credited to True T. Thompson, relocates the setting from the South Pacific to a fictional Caribbean island called Rinidad and transforms its title character, renamed Gertie La Rue, from a prostitute to a celebrity headliner in a nightclub act (her exact talents are vague but one fan remembers seeing her striptease act two years before). She earned the name "Dirty Gertie" for her philandering ways and had to flee Harlem after cheating on her man. Before the curtain rises on her first show, she is courted by a sailor, a Marine officer, and the owner of the local show palace.
Francine Everett (her last name is misspelled as Everette in the credits) stars as the glamorous Gertie. Everett was a singer, dancer, and actress who went to Hollywood in the 1930s with her husband, Rex Ingram, but turned down the stereotypical roles offered black actors and instead turned to low-budget race films. She was a striking beauty and Dirty Gertie gave her the chance to play a glamorous, sexy black woman never seen in Hollywood pictures. In addition to her film roles, she was a featured vocalist in over 50 "soundies" (short musical films) and a popular fashion model. She was one of the last of the leading ladies of all-black films and made her final screen appearance in an unbilled part in No Way Out (1950), which marked the film debut of Sidney Poitier.
Williams himself takes on a small but memorable role: the "voodoo woman" Old Hager, who sees no good in Gertie's future. In some ways he anticipates Tyler Perry, playing the voice of fate in drag, but with his visible mustache and a husky voice, Williams barely bothers with the pretense of playing a wizened old woman beyond wearing a shapeless muumuu and gypsy jewelry. The weirdness of the scene, however, adds to the tension as a black cat and a broken mirror bring out Gertie's superstitions.
Dirty Gertie from Harlem U.S.A. was shot in Dallas, Texas, where the tropical island setting is recreated on a budget smaller than a typical Hollywood B-movie. It was a success on the race circuit but virtually unseen by white audiences and it was one of the last films he directed. The all-black film circuit disappeared in the 1950s, as Hollywood began to integrate its films and feature black actors and actresses in major, non-stereotyped roles. Their low budgets and primitive technical resources could not compete with Hollywood polish and the race circuit went the way of vaudeville. For years the film, which had fallen into the public domain and was virtually abandoned but for dedicated archives (such as Southwest Film-Video Archives in Dallas), was available to the public only on horribly degraded, poor-quality VHS tapes and DVDs. This new restoration was mastered from 35mm film elements preserved by the G. William Jones Film and Video Collection of Southern Methodist University.
Sources:
Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams, Donald Bogle. Ballantine Books, 2005.
Oscar Micheaux and his Circle, ed. Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines and Charles Musser. Indiana University Press, 2001.
Spencer Williams, Alvin Childress, Tim Moore and Spencer Williams. AfricanAmericans.com. "Black Filmmaking," G. William Jones. Handbook of Texas Online, 2010.
"Francine Everett, Striking Star of All-Black Movies, Is Dead," Mel Watkins. The New York Times, June 20, 1999.
AFI Catalog of Feature Films IMDb
By Sean Axmaker
Dirty Gertie from Harlem U.S.A.
Quotes
Take your hands off me, you dirty psalm-singin' polecat! If the truth were only known, you want me just like all the rest!- Gertie La Rue
Trivia
Notes
Star Francine Everett's name is misspelled as "Francine Everette" in the credits. Although the viewed print contained a copyright statement by True Thompson, the film was not listed in the Catalog of Copyright Entries for motion pictures. As noted in modern sources, the storyline of the film is loosely based on W. Somerset Maugham's short story "Miss Thompson," in The Smart Set (Apr 1921). The short story was adapted for the stage by John Colton and Clemence Randolph as Rain (New York, 7 November 1922), and adapted for motion pictures several times. For information on other film adaptations of the story, consult the entry for the 1932 Lewis Milestone-directed United Artists release of Rain, starring Joan Crawford (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1931-40; F3.3606). Although neither contemporary reviews nor an exact release date have been located, a completed script of the film was submitted to NYSA in 1947. A modern source states that this film was shot in Fort Worth, San Antonio and Dallas, TX. A phonograph recording of "Blues in the Night" by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer is heard in the film.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1946
Released in United States 1946