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The Ballad of Little Jo

 
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The Ballad of Little Jo

  • Director: Maggie Greenwald
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Western
  • Movie Type: Feminist Film, Revisionist Western
  • Themes: Tomboys, Questioning Gender Roles, Starting Over
  • Main Cast: Suzy Amis, Bo Hopkins, Ian McKellen, David Chung, Carrie Snodgress
  • Release Year: 1993
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 120 minutes

Plot

The Ballad of Little Jo is based on a true story -- several true stories, in fact. Suzy Amis plays demure young Josephine Monagan, who in 1866 is run out of her home town after bearing an illegitimate child. Fleeing westward, Josephine is terrified by stories of how treacherous the frontier can be for a woman alone. As a result, upon arriving in the muddy burg of Ruby City, she disguises herself as a man, going so far as to scar her face to suggest that she's been in a few scrapes. In this guise, "Little Jo" does just fine by herself for nearly 30 years! Almost as good as Suzy Amis is Bo Hopkins as gunslinger Frank Badger, Little Jo's best buddy (if only he knew....) Written and directed by Maggie Greenwald, The Ballad of Little Jo does a marvelous job conveying the people and places of its period; and, unlike Bad Girls (which was released around the same time), we aren't bludgeoned to death by feminist revisionism. Unfortunately ignored when it went out to theatres in the fall of 1993, The Ballad of Little Jo has fared rather better on video. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Turning the feminist point of view askew, this film offers the premise that the only way a woman could prosper in the frontier West with any dignity was to disguise herself as a man. The fact is, given the constrictions on women at the time, this was likely the only means of prospering for a woman anywhere in America. But Little Jo, née Josephine Monaghan, has a better chance of concealing her identity on the underpopulated frontier, which also was democratically open to an entrepreneur with some talent and determination. Jo learns how to be a sheepherder from Frank Badger (Bo Hopkins), and then turns the tables on him by saving up enough to buy her own spread and flock. They manage to coexist as neighbors, if not outright pals, for the rest of her life. But her secret is discovered rather quickly by another outcast, a Chinese veteran of railroad work (David Chung), who becomes, in turn, her domestic servant and then her lover. Concealing both her identity and the affair almost overwhelms Jo, and the film is distressingly vague on the resolution of the couple's relationship. Another subplot involving a cattle baron trying to buy Jo's land is similarly unresolved. What the film is best at portraying is the isolation and terrible loneliness of life on the frontier. Writer/director Maggie Greenwald's next film, Songcatcher, also dealt with a woman venturing into a isolated culture where she wasn't welcome; in that story, the protagonist made few accommodations. In a rare lead performance, Suzy Amis is persuasive, but because of her character's understandable reticence, the real life of this party is Bo Hopkins' Frank, a man who's sure that Little Jo is some kind of peculiar fellow but is at the same time remarkably tolerant of him. ~ Tom Wiener, All Movie Guide

Cast

René Auberjonois - Streight Hollander; Heather Graham - Mary Addie; Jeffrey Andrews - Sam; Tom Bower - Lyle (uncredited); Jim Dunkin - Mr. Brown; Cathy Haase - Mrs. Addie; Anthony Heald - Mr. Henry Grey; Melissa Leo - Mrs. Grey; Tracy Mayfield - John; Sean Murphy - Young Henry Grey; Sam Robards - Jasper Hill; Michael Ruud - Russian Father; Troy A. Smith - Soldier #1; Robert Erickson - Wilkins; Jeffery Passero; Olinda Turturro - Elvira; Ruth Maleczech - Shop Keeper; Karen Johnson - Farmwife

Credit

Ginger Tougas - Art Director, Claudia Brown - Costume Designer, Lisa Zimble - First Assistant Director, Cas Donovan - First Assistant Director, Maggie Greenwald - Director, Keith Reamer - Editor, Ira Deutchman - Executive Producer, John Sloss - Executive Producer, David Mansfield - Composer (Music Score), Felipe Borrero - Musical Direction/Supervision, Mark Friedberg - Production Designer, Declan Quinn - Cinematographer, Barry Bernardi - Producer, Fred Berner - Producer, Brenda Goodman - Producer, Stephanie Carroll - Set Designer, Jim Halty - Stunts, Maggie Greenwald - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

The Grey Fox; Just One of the Guys; McCabe & Mrs. Miller; Queen Christina; Belle Starr; Cattle Annie and Little Britches; Potomok Belogo Barsa; Orlando; My Friend Joe; Man to Man; Buffalo Girls; Boys Don't Cry
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The Ballad of Little Jo

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Maggie Greenwald
Produced by Fred Berner
Written by Maggie Greenwald
Starring Suzy Amis
Bo Hopkins
Ian McKellen
David Chung
Heather Graham
Rene Auberjonois
Carrie Snodgress
Melissa Leo
Music by David Mansfield
Cinematography Declan Quinn
Editing by Keith Reamer
Release date(s) August 20, 1993
Running time 121 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Ballad of Little Jo is a 1993 film inspired by the true story of a society woman who tries to escape the stigma of bearing a child out of wedlock by going out West, and living disguised as a man. The film stars Suzy Amis, Bo Hopkins, Ian McKellen, David Chung, Heather Graham, Carrie Snodgrass and Melissa Leo, and was written and directed by Maggie Greenwald.

Roger Ebert described the film as depicting a culture in which, "men of poor breeding lived and worked together in desperate poverty of mind and body, and were so enclosed inside their roles that they hardly knew each other at all."

The Ballad of Little Jo was nominated for the 1994 Independent Spirit Award for best female lead (Amis) and best supporting male (Chung). [1]

Contents

Plot summary

Josephine Monaghan (Amis) is a young society woman who is seduced by her family's portrait photographer, and as a result, bears an illegitimate child. She is expelled from her family and home in disgrace, and with no other resources, she leaves her newborn son under the care of her sister and heads West.

On the road, Josephine discovers that her options are very limited. As a single woman traveling alone, she is viewed with suspicion, or as sexual prey for any man. She assists a traveling salesman (Rene Auberjonois) who subsequently tries to sell her services as a whore to passing strangers. Seeing it as her only protection, Josephine scars her face, and begins to dress as a man--thus becoming "Jo."

At a mining camp in Ruby City, she meets Percy (McKellen) who takes Jo under his wing. Percy recommends Jo for a job at the stable, and teaches her about how to survive in the frontier. But Percy nurses a deep suspicion of women, viewing them to be "more trouble then they are worth." He later demonstrates his hatred by slashing the face of a prostitute who refuses to give him oral sex.

Jo no longer feels safe with Percy or her secret, so she accepts a job herding sheep, and heads for the mountains. After returning in the spring, Percy gives Jo a letter for her that he had received months earlier. The letter is from Jo's sister, and Percy having opened it, now knows he is a she. He is furious at being made a fool of by a woman and "a whore at that," referring to the mention of her son in the letter. He attacks and tries to rape Jo, but she is able to draw her gun and subdue him. Largely ostracized by the town's people since the incident with the prostitute, Percy promises Jo he will not share her secret if she finances his journey out of the territory. She agrees, though swears to him she will find him and kill him if he breaks his silence.

For five years she works as a shepherd, braving the deadly winters alone to the worry of her employer, Frank Badger (Hopkins), who has taken a liking to the young man he nicknames "Little Jo." When Jo has enough money saved, she quits Badger, and buys her own homestead.

While frequently viewed as "peculiar," Jo is clearly educated, and earns the respect of the people in Ruby City and the surrounding territory. A local girl, Mary, (Graham) has her eye on Jo. Blind to the truth, most hope the two will court.

One day in town, Jo comes across a mob about to lynch a Chinese laborer for trying to "take our jobs." Jo intervenes, and Badger insists the "chinaman," Tinman Wong (David Chung), go to live with Jo to help with the homestead.

Tinman Wong accompanies Jo to the homestead, and takes on the duties of cook and housekeeper. Though he seems slow-witted, Jo is not happy at having company forced upon her, and is afraid he will discover she is not a man. She keeps as much distance as possible. But Tinman easily discovers the truth about Jo, and in doing so, reveals he is far more intelligent then he has pretended to be--he, too, has been masquerading for his own safety. Jo drops her guard and the two begin a love affair.

A feud begins to brew between the sheep herders and cattlemen who are moving into the territory. The Eastern Cattle Company wants to buy up all the land in the area, and they kill anyone who does not comply. One by one, the sheep herders give in, or are murdered by masked gunmen. Jo has witnessed the brutal murders of too many of her friends, and the violence that will be necessary to win this kind of fight goes against her gentle nature. This is a masculine quality that goes beyond her ability to "pass," so Jo dons a dress once again in a feeble effort to step back into a more traditionally feminine role. Tinman argues that it will be impossible for her to go back being the society woman, urging her to keep the homestead, and stand against the cattlemen in the upcoming election. Jo will not be swayed, and meets with the representative from the cattle company, Henry Grey (Anthony Heald) to tell him she will sell.

Tinman falls ill, and Jo summons Badger's wife (Snodgrass), who practices folk medicine, to tend him. Badger comes along, and is furious when Grey arrives with his wife so that Jo can sign the final papers for the sale of the homestead. Feeling betrayed by Jo for helping the cattle company to "squeeze me," Badger hits Jo, proclaiming, "By God, boy! I thought you'd amount to something." As Grey prepares the papers inside, Jo watches his wife who, through the warped glass, is visually reminiscent of Jo when she was a woman of society. In an instant, Jo changes her mind and refuses to sell to Grey who leaves in disgust issuing less than veiled threats.

Tinman recovers, and on election day, Badger and Jo ride to Ruby City but are met by several of Grey's masked gunmen. Badger shoots one of the gunmen, but is wounded, so it is up to Jo to finish the fight. She kills the two remaining men, but the pain of the act of killing is clearly indicated on her face.

The plot jumps to many years later, after Tinman Wong has died. Jo collapses while fetching water, and Badger finds her in bed, near death. He takes her in his wagon to the Ruby City doctor, but she is dead before they arrive. As Badger buys rounds of drinks at the saloon in memory of Little Jo, the undertaker rushes in with his shocking discovery--Little Jo was a woman. The town elders rush back to the undertaker's to inspect. All stand around the preparation table in shock, all except Mrs. Addie (Cathy Haase), the saloon owner, who laughs and laughs.

Badger is furious at the betrayal by his friend, and because Jo "made a fool out of me." He goes back to her homestead, and as he tears the place apart in anger, comes across the letter from her sister, and a picture of her as she lived as a woman. In town, the people tie Jo's dead body to her horse for a photograph.

The final shot is of the newspaper story with the before-and-after photographs, and the headline, "Rancher Jo Was a Woman."

Cast

Footnotes

External links


 
 
Learn More
Suzy Amis (Actor, Thriller/Drama)
Ian McKellen (Actor, Writer, Drama/Fantasy)
James Cameron (Director, Writer, Actor, Science Fiction/Action)

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