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Sabrina (1954)
In Billy Wilder's delightful romantic comedy, the story
was a version of the Cinderella tale, in which two brothers
in a rich Long Island society family both competed (with differing
motivations) for romance with their chauffeur's pretty
daughter Sabrina Fairchild (Audrey Hepburn):
- in the film's post-credits
opening (in voice-over), chauffeur's daughter Sabrina Fairchild
introduced the grounds of the large Larrabee estate on Long Island,
and the many servants to take care of the lifestyle required, including
widowed family chauffeur Thomas Fairchild (John Williams): "Once
upon a time, on the north shore of Long Island, some 30 miles from
New York, there lived a small girl on a large estate. The estate
was very large indeed and had many servants....Also on the estate,
there was a chauffeur by the name of Fairchild, who had been imported
from England years ago together with a new Rolls-Royce. Fairchild
was a fine chauffeur of considerable polish like the eight cars
in his care. And he had a daughter by the name of Sabrina....There
were four Larrabees in all -- father, mother and two sons....Linus
Larrabee, the elder son, graduated from Yale, where his classmates
voted him the man most likely to leave his alma mater $50 million.
His brother David went through several of the best eastern colleges
for short periods of time and through several marriages for even shorter
periods of time. He is now a successful six-goal polo player, and is
listed on Linus's tax return as a $600 deduction. Life was pleasant
among the Larrabees, for this was as close to heaven as one could get
on Long Island"
Film's Opening Voice-Over Narration
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The Larrabee Estate
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Chauffeur's Daughter Sabrina (Audrey Hepburn)
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The Larrabee Family
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The Larrabees
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Linus Larrabee
(Humphrey Bogart)
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David Larrabee
(William Holden)
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- the tremendous beauty and charm of Sabrina Fairchild,
who initially snooped on the Larrabee's annual party
on Long Island from a perch in a tree; she was particularly enamoured
and had a "crush" for the youngest ultra-rich Larrabee
son: light blonde, ne'er-do-well, womanizing playboyish David Larrabee
(William Holden) who was three times divorced; his older brother
was stuffy, formal, workaholic, middle-aged, conservative and uptight businessman
Linus Larrabee (54 year-old Humphrey Bogart) who was running Larrabee
Industries Ltd. and associated companies; David regarded Sabrina
as somebody who just worked for the family
- an envious Sabrina watched anxiously as David took
a bottle of champagne and two glasses (stashed into his back pockets)
from the party to the nearby indoor tennis where he seduced giggly
socialite Gretchen Van Horn (Joan Vohs) with his charming manner
- Sabrina's father Thomas scolded his lovesick daughter
for aspring beyond her class status: ("Don't reach for the moon,
child") - but then depressed and in despair about her unrequited
love for David, returned to her bedroom and wrote a suicide note
to her father, and tried to asphyxiate herself in the closed garage
via carbon monoxide poisioning; she was dramatically rescued by Linus
and carried back to her bedroom above the garage, as he told her:
("Of all the idiotic things, haven't you ever heard of carbon monoxide?
It kills people")
- during the next section of the film, Sabrina departed
for Paris for chef and culinary training at Le Cordon Bleu; where
she confessed her unhappy love life to 74 year-old Baron St. Fontanel
(Marcel Dalio): ("I might as well be reaching for the moon"); he
advised: "Oh, you young people! You are so old-fashioned. Have you
not heard? We are building rockets to reach the moon!"
- back at home, Linus manipulatively
encouraged David, for solely business reasons, to enter
into an engagement and marriage of convenience (and $20 million business
deal) to wealthy socialite-heiress Elizabeth Tyson (Martha Hyer)
of the Oyster Bay Tysons; Elizabeth's father owned one of the largest
sugar cane holdings in Puerto Rico - a product needed for the Larrabee's
manufacture of plastic; David was skeptical about an almost-immediate
summer wedding: "I'm supposed to be offered up as a human sacrifice on the altar of industrial
progress. Is that it?"; Linus persuasively responded: "You
make it sound so vulgar, David, as if the son of the hot dog dynasty
were being offered in marriage to the daughter of the mustard king.
Surely, surely you don't object to Elizabeth just because her
father happens to have twenty million dollars? That's very narrow-minded
of you, David" - Linus admitted that he had already proposed
the 'merger' marriage to Mr. Tyson, and the offer had been accepted
- the scene of Linus' forward-looking speech to David
about progress via American capitalism and its benefits for everyone
in society: "A new product has been found, something of use to the
world. So a new industry moves into an undeveloped area. Factories
go up, machines are brought in, a harbor is dug, and you're in business.
It's purely coincidental, of course, that people who never saw
a dime before now suddenly have a dollar, and barefooted kids wear
shoes and have their teeth fixed and their faces washed. What's wrong
with a kind of an urge that gives people libraries, hospitals, baseball
diamonds and movies on a Saturday night?"
- while in Paris after two years, Sabrina had become
more mature, well-grounded, and realistic about love affairs - she
wrote to her father just before returning: "I have learned how to
live, how to be IN the world and OF the world, and not just to stand
aside and watch. And I will never, never again run away from life.
Or from love, either"
- the scene of Sabrina's costumed
Cinderella-like transformation after returning from Paris
as a refined, sophisticated and cultured 22 year-old woman with a
new hairdo and sleek clothes; in a memorable scene when Sabrina was
picked up at the Long Island (Glen Cove) railroad station by an astounded
David, he flirted with her and didn't recognize her immediately ("Who
are you?"); he offered to take her home, and as they pulled into
the Larrabee estate, he shouted out: "You don't live here!", but
she asserted that he was her neighbor ("Hi neighbor!")
- now back home, Sabrina's father cautioned her about
falling in love with David again, since he was engaged (and planned
to be married in 10 days): "He's still David Larrabee, and you're still the chauffeur's
daughter, and you're still reaching for the moon" - she clarified
how David was now interested in her: "No, father. The moon's
reaching for ME"
- at a Larrabee party hosted that night, single-minded
David attempted to sneak away from his fiancee Elizabeth to romance
and dance with Sabrina - who was wearing a gorgeous Parisian gown;
while dancing cheek-to-cheek, she answered
his question about where she had been all his life: ("Right
over the garage")
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Sabrina's Stunning Entrance at Party
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David's Romancing of Sabrina at Party
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Sabrina: "Right Over the Garage"
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- David schemed to
set up a rendezvous with Sabrina in the indoor tennis court as he
had with other socialites, but was waylaid by Linus and Oliver
(who realized David's interest in Sabrina would endanger the marriage);
Oliver groused: "This boy should be drummed out of the family...No
gentleman makes love to a servant in his mother's house!...You
have embarrassed not only your mother but also our chauffeur...You
will get rid of that girl immediately, do you understand, and
you'll apologize to your fiancee!"; fortuitously, Linus was able
to convince David to sit down, and he suffered a rear-end bruising
(due to the two hidden champagne glasses in his back pockets)
- instead of the injured and incapacitated David (who
eventually required 23 stitches), Linus met Sabrina at the tennis
court and they spoke about her love for David; Linus admitted the
obvious problem: "He's completely forgotten he's engaged....There
goes the engagement"; he added as they shared a few drinks together:
"I'm sorry it isn't David here instead of me. But it's all in the
family"; he again mentioned the phrase: "It's all in the family,"
before a close hug some slow-dancing with her, and then a kiss: "Here's
a kiss from David" - and another: "It's all in the family"
- the stodgy Linus continued his maneuverings - to
romance Sabrina and distract her from David, to save the marriage
and protect the 'merger' deal; during a day of sailing the next
afternoon, Sabrina mentioned how she thought Linus could never fall in
love: "Always wearing your black homburg,
and carrying a briefcase and an umbrella. I thought you could never
belong to anyone, never care for anyone"; the self-confessed "cold
businessman" Linus confessed to Sabrina that he actually had two long-lost loves; he
claimed (similar to Sabrina) that he almost committed suicide over
one past romance; Sabrina suggested for him to do what she did -
travel to Paris as a remedy for his troubles: ("Oh,
but Paris isn't for changing planes, it's, it's for changing your
outlook, for, for throwing open the windows and letting in, letting
in la vie en rose"); Linus replied sadly: "Paris is for lovers. Maybe that's why
I stayed only thirty-five minutes"
- gradually, however, Linus began
to fall in love with Sabrina; in a scene in Linus'
office before taking her on a date to the theatre with dinner and dancing,
he offered Sabrina a mixed drink; she became visibly impressed by his
position of power and influence: "Look at all these gadgets. Just imagine.
You press a button and factories go up. Or you pick up a telephone and
a hundred tankers set out for Persia. Or you switch on the dictaphone
and say, 'Buy all of Cleveland and move it to Pittsburgh.' You must be
awfully clever"; without her knowledge, he was planning to sail her back to Paris on a
French cruise liner within a week (although she thought he would
be traveling alone to Paris to rejuvenate his own unfulfilled romantic
life)
Sabrina Falling in Love with Linus
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Plans to Sail to Paris - But Who Would Be Going?
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Linus Romancing Sabrina
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Sabrina Singing: "La Vie en Rose"
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- on the drive back home in David's convertible
(driven by Linus), Sabrina sang "La Vie
En Rose" in French - (a reference to looking at the world through
rose-colored glasses); she advised Linus to alter his usual serious
demeanor and stiff clothing in Paris: "We can't have you walking
up and down the Champs Elysees looking like a tourist undertaker!
And another thing, never a briefcase in Paris and never an umbrella.
There's a law"; he replied with a hint: "How am I ever going to get
along in Paris without someone like you? Who'll be there to help
me with my French, to turn down the brim of my hat?"; he suggested
another possible scenario: "Suppose I were ten years younger. Suppose
you weren't in love with David. Suppose I asked you to - well, I
suppose I'm just talking nonsense"
- meanwhile, David seemed oblivious to Linus' subversive
scheming, and encouraged Sabrina to 'date' and be with Linus, even
though she was still in love with David: "Oh,
I know how you feel, Sabrina. It must be an awful bore, but if Linus
wants to take you out, let's be nice about it. It's very important.
He's our only ally. Don't you see, Father will try to cut off my allowance
and send me off to Larrabee Copper in Butte, Montana, and we don't
wanna go to Butte, Montana, do we?" - he continued by filling her head
with fantasy dreams as he hugged and kissed her: "We'll have a wonderful
time, darling. We'll build ourselves a raft and drift across the
Pacific like Kon-Tiki. Or climb the highest mountain, like Annapurna,
just the two of us"
- as the film was coming to a close,
Linus revealed his devious plan to his father Oliver to get rid of Sabrina
- he would send Sabrina back to Paris alone even though he had reserved
two spots on the cruise liner for them: ("Who said I was going? She
is going. She'll think that I'm going, but I'm not really going...I'm
going to tell Sabrina that I'll meet her on the boat. When the boat
is ten miles out at sea, she'll find out I'm not on the boat. My
cabin will be empty. Just a note of apology and a few presents to
soften the blow"); he would pay for Sabrina's living expenses in
Paris and support her with a car, apartment, bank credit ($50,000),
and 1,500 shares of preferred Larrabee stock would be granted to
her father
- during a late night in Linus' office, Sabrina confessed
her sadness about his departure to Paris: "Tell me I'm imagining
things. Tell me you never even thought of taking me on the boat to
Paris with you. Tell me to put on my coat and go home before I make
a complete fool of myself. But don't let me go home. I couldn't bear
it. This is the last time we're going to see each other"; she repeated
earlier advice to him: "You haven't forgotten my instructions, have
you? Never an umbrella in Paris, and under all circumstances rain
the very first day"; when she saw two tickets to Paris on Linus'
desk, she was jubilant and asked him: "Why didn't you tell me? You
do want to take me with you, don't you?...I know why you didn't tell
me, because you think it's wrong. They'll say I'm too young for you,
there'll be an awful scandal, and the market will go down" - and
she hugged him
- in a dramatic revelation, Linus dashed her hopes and
dreams; he admitted his plan to send her back to Paris alone -
as part of his scheme to keep her away from David: "Sabrina, l -
I wasn't going to take you to Paris. I was going to send you....Yes,
all alone...I'm sorry...High finance. Expansion. Marriage. A merger.
A new plaque on the Larrabee Building. You got in the way" - even
so, Linus responded positively about their short time together:
"I'm ashamed to say I enjoyed every minute of it"; she departed with
her ticket and sadly said farewell with these words: "I was happy
in Paris. I think you would have been, too. Goodbye, Mr. Larrabee"
- the next morning (on the day of the boat's sailing,
Thursday), Linus announced that he was
going to cancel the Larrabee plastic merger at the board meeting,
and call off his brother's wedding - he had arranged for David to
take his place to Paris with Sabrina
- shortly later in Linus' office, David told
his brother that he had suddenly put "two and two together" about
Linus' devious schemes to be with Sabrina (and he punched him in
the face) - but then he said he had concluded that true-love had
grown between them: "Funniest
thing. Linus Larrabee, the man who doesn't burn, doesn't scorch,
doesn't melt, suddenly throws a twenty million dollar deal out the
window. Are you sure you don't want to go with her?...you're in love
with her" - David knew that Linus was secretly in love with Sabrina
- during the same day's board meeting on the subject
of the Larrabee-Tyson merger (as the French ocean liner pulled out of the NYC dock),
Linus was about to announce
that the deal had "sailed away" - and that David was on his way to
Paris with Sabrina - it would cause a decisive death-blow to the
marriage and the merger; however, David appeared and
showed off an afternoon newspaper announcement of Linus' elopement
with Sabrina to Paris: "It says here that Linus Larrabee, that's
you isn't it, and Sabrina Fairchild, that's she isn't it, have quietly
reserved adjacent deck chairs on the Liberte, sailing today"
- in the film's major plot twist, David explained that
the expected romance between himself and Sabrina had been transferred
to Linus: "Linus Larrabee, wizard of finance, man of distinction,
chairman of the board of Larrabee Industries, getting mixed up with
his chauffeur's daughter....She went after me for awhile, but then
she switched to Linus"; he also accused Linus of being duped
for his money by Sabrina, causing Linus to punch his brother in the
face for besmirching her!; David was left sprawled backwards onto
the board meeting's table
- after orchestrating an entirely different scenario
- (David: "I was just helping you make up your mind - you ARE
in love with her! Well, what are you waiting for?") - the marriage
and merger would proceed as scheduled; David had
also arranged for Linus to sail to Paris with Sabrina - a tugboat
was prepared to take him to the ocean liner; he rushed off from the
meeting to rendezvous with Sabrina - on the boat to Paris
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Board Meeting
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David's Sudden Appearance at Meeting
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Linus Punching David in the Face
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- in the film's ending before a fade to black, Linus hugged a surprised
Sabrina on the deck of the ocean liner
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Sabrina Spying on the Larrabee Party From Tree
Suicide Note
Suicide Attempt in Closed Garage
Sabrina in Parisian Culinary School
Advice to Sabrina From the Baron in Paris
The Many Larrabee Industries Ltd. Companies
Linus' Argument For Capitalism
Sabrina's New Found Maturity After Two Years in Paris
- Writing A Letter to Her Father
Sophisticated Sabrina Waiting at the Train Station
David Greeting Sabrina at the Train Station ("Who are you?")
David's Fiancee Elizabeth Tyson
David's Accident with Champagne Glasses in His Back Pockets
Linus With Sabrina at the Tennis Court
Sabrina in Linus' Office: Very Much Impressed with Him
Sabrina - Still in Love with David Even While Dating Linus
Two Ocean Liner Tickets - For Linus and Sabrina
Sabrina's Late-Night Confession to Linus - She Thought He Was Leaving
for Paris
Sabrina's Discovery of the Two Ocean Liner Tickets
Sabrina's Dashed Dreams - She Was Going to Be Sent to Paris ALONE
Goodbye, Mr. Larrabee
David Punching Linus for Deviously Falling in Love with Sabrina
Linus on Tugboat to Rendezvous with Sabrina on Ocean Liner to Paris
Film's Ending
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