I’m very sad and sorry about the debilitating disease (Alzheimer’s) that began to enfold poor Mary Beth Hurt back in the teens. And about her death, which was announced on Facebook earlier today.
I’m also sorry that I never caught any of Hurt’s Manhattan stage performances (Trelawny of the Wells, Crimes of the Heart, Benefactors), which were earnestly praised.
I was re-watching Woody Allen‘s Interiors (’78) only three or four days ago. It’s not one of my favorite Woody’s (feels too “written”, too on-the-nose), but Hurt’s portrayal of Joey, a creatively frustrated 30something who wants to be a top-tier writer but hasn’t quite the talent for it, got to me back then.
Because I was feeling some of the same things in ’78. I wanted very much to break into the Manhattan film-critic fraternity, but I was beset by doubts about my ability to write well enough, which was basically rooted in a lack of confidence, which came from my low self-esteem, which came from being the pissed-off son of an alcoholic.
Like Joey and God knows how many others I would type and type and re-type, over and over and over, the 8 1/2 x 11 paper in my typewriter caked with smudges of white-out. It would take me forever (two or three days!) to bang out a simple 750-word review.
Hurt’s performance was moving but disturbing because Joey’s story, I had decided during my initial viewing, was sorta kinda my own. I felt a certain morose affinity.
Yes, I managed to climb out of that awful fraught place (took me a couple of years) but…well, I’ve said it.
Hurt was downishly believable (and therefore memorable as hell) in Joan Micklin Silver‘s Chilly Scenes of Winter (’79); ditto George Roy Hill‘s The World According to Garp (’82).
I’ll never forget that scene in Garp in which Hurt’s Helen, a college professor married to Robin Williams, accidentally decapitates her younger boyfriend’s schlong while she’s blowing him in the front seat of his car, an accident caused by an agitated Williams slamming his vehicle into the rear of the boyfriend’s auto.
When I finally pass, I don’t want it to happen in godforsaken Jersey City. I want it to happen on a cobblestoned street in Montmartre, preferably in the mid-summer. Or somewhere in northern Italy or in the Czech Republic even. Or somewhere in the California desert.





