Lack of money forces an actress' strong ambitions to find fame and fortune through acting in films to kick in when her in-laws won't help her financially for her child, while her husband is off in WWI dealing with the terrible struggles of the time. This causes her to give her child, temporally she thinks, to a friend for safekeeping, but the friend can't keep her and she is soon adopted by her wealthy employers. This changes the lives of many people. Eventually, forgiveness and love come into play letting the wings of destiny spread allowing love and forgiveness to rule.
Being a professional actress is not an easy career, but when youve been bitten by the acting bug, youre doomed. Why do I say doomed? Because it can take away so much of what normal life is about. Im talking about the ordinary things in life, like a stable married life with children and a home. I dont know if I was born with the acting bug or if it came later to me, but it certainly ruled the first part of my life. I look at the world of theater and filmoh, I guess they say movies nowand I see the same thing happening. Whats it all for? Its for fame and money, thats what. Its a purely selfish endeavor. In my early days, they hadnt discovered the idea of genetic forces leading people into things unknown. I do understand that Freud played with this field, but regular people didnt know about it. We all just did what we did. Often, people are looked at because of preconceived notions or what was an established family tradition. You swam alone, going into uncharted waters of your own desire and making. Well, thats what I did. Am I sorry? Partially. I left my first husband for it, and I gave up my one and only child.
1968 for me was not simply the year I found myself away from home for the first time. It was not just the year I donned the uniform of a soldier and took up arms against communist aggression, traveling to the jungles of Southeast Asia to do my patriotic duty. To characterize that year merely as my coming of age fails to recognize the significance of the year itself. Few intervals of similar duration in the history of our nation have been as important as those twelve months. Perhaps only 1776 surpasses 1968 in its impact on who and what we as a nation will become thereafter. The eras of the Civil War and the two World Wars, although of equal or greater significance unfolded over longer spans of time, each more gradually evolving the beliefs and practices of American citizens. 1968 seems to have struck with impatient tenacity, delivering to the United States of America a wake up call from our cultural complacency and the natural acceptance of our assumed righteousness. 1968 began the polarization of America. Neutrality of belief or philosophy was no longer to be valued or even tolerated. The lines were being drawn; lines between left and right; between the old and the new, between generations and perhaps even between clarity and confusion. What we were as a people, who we were and what we stood for was cast in 1968 under the unflattering spotlight of war and internal conflict as a reaction to that war. College students, the children of World War II veterans, raised their voices in opposition to the edicts of the American Government. Extremists took matters into their own hands and murdered Martin Luther King Junior and Robert Kennedy. American soldiers committed atrocities at My Lai that shocked a citizenry unable to accept this dissonant view of Americans in uniform and our military and governmental leaders threw up their hands behind closed doors, coming to the same conclusion; we can't win this war. On the home front popular music transitioned away from the malt-shop themes of the fifties and early sixties and became a vehicle for conveying political messages, for drawing young people away from the dreamy and into the heuristic. Being twenty-one in America in 1968 was different than being twenty-one in America in 1967 or any time before. American soldiers in Vietnam in 1968
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.