brought to you by The Val Lewton Screenplay Collection
THE CAT PEOPLE
Original Screen Play
by DeWitt Bodeen
The RKO trademark FADES OFF, leaving a black screen, in the
center of which are two slits of pale light. These move
closer until we see that they are a pair of cat's eyes. Over
these mysteriously blinking lights the title is SUPERIMPOSED.
DISSOLVE
A misty OUT-OF-FOCUS SHOT of a black panther pacing behind
cage bars. Over this come the production credits. A pale
fog rises over the shot of the black panther, and over it
Is SUPERIMPOSED the following quotation:
EVEN AS FOG CONTINUES TO LIE IN THE VALLEYS, SO DOES ANCIENT
SIN CLING TO THE LOW PLACES, THE DEPRESSIONS IN THE WORLD
CONSCIOUSNESS.
SIGMUND FREUD
EXT. ZOO PROMENADE - PARK - AFTERNOON
As the last word of the quotation FADES from the screen, the
fog clears, the caged leopard comes into full focus, and we
see that it is an actual leopard behind actual bars. Over
the scene is the wheezy music of the Triumphal March from
"Aida," as played on a hand, organ. This is playing in the
distance, and we do not see the organ-grinder until later.
The CAMERA DRAWS BACK to show a young artist sitting before
the cage on a campstool with a drawing portfolio in her hand.
She is presumably sketching the panther, although her drawing
is not shown, and we do not see the features of the girl's
face. The girl picks up the drawing and holds it off,
weighing its values. It evidently does not meet with her
approval, for she wads the drawing Into a ball and turns to
look for a place to throw the waste paper. We see her face.
It is heart-shaped, demure, even a little naive. She is
small, young,and very beautiful. In one hand the wad of
waste paper is poised, ready to throw into a container.
INSERT WASTEPAPER BASKET as Irena sees it.
It is a rather fancy container in the shape of a tree
trunk.
OLIVER
Yes.
(then continuing in the
same tone)
"Sometimes whoever seeks abroad
may find Thee sitting careless on
a granary floor, Thy hair soft
lifted...
(ponders, as if trying to
remember) Thy hair soft
lifted..."
ALICE
(snapping her compact
shut)
Reminds me. I have a date with the
hairdresser.
OLIVER
What a way to spend a Saturday
afternoon!
ALICE
The business girl's holiday
OLIVER
You should've minded your mother
and eaten more bread crusts. You'd
have curly hair now.
ALICE
Thank you for lunch. See you at
the office Monday.
She starts off down the promenade. She walks briskly in one
direction, while Oliver turns the other way, ambling toward
the leopard cage. Along the promenade a file of Saturday
afternoon idlers goes by. Oliver moves up to the cages and
pauses at the guard rail before the leopard cage. Near him
sits Irena, busily sketching. Oliver looks at her, but she
does not look up at him. She gets up and moves a few steps,
her eyes intent on the movements of the panther, which is
walking about In its cage. Oliver politely steps aside so
that she can get a better vantage point. She does not even
notice him. She frowns at her drawing, wads the paper into a
ball, and turns to throw it into the container. Oliver steps
before her, smiling and extending his hand. She looks at him
a moment, then smiles and drops the wad of paper into his
hand.
IRENA
Thank you.
With an easy aim, Oliver tosses it neatly into the container
and turns to her with a shrug, as if to say how easy it was.
But Irena has picked up another drawing upon which she has
worked and is now studying it. The music of the organ-grinder
grows constantly louder as the scene progresses.
OLIVER
You won't believe this, and
you've probably heard it a dozen
times before...but I've never
known any artists.
IRENA
I'm not an artist, really... not a
real artist...just a sketch artist
for fashion drawings.
She has picked up the drawing and is holding it in her hand
with its back toward Oliver, who extends his hand.
OLIVER
May I see it?
Irena smiles but shakes her head as she tears the drawing
about two-thirds of the way through, dropping it face down
upon the pavement.
IRENA
Oh, no. It's not good. If I let you
see it, you might not want to know
any artists...ever.
OLIVER (SMILING AT HER)
I'm afraid it would have to be
pretty bad to do that. Besides,
look... (pointing to a drawing she
had dropped, quoting in a mocking
tone)
"Let no one say, and say it to
your shame..."
Irena laughs and starts to pick up the paper, but a gust of
wind blows it down the promenade. She turns to Oliver and
shrugs her shoulders. She starts to fold up her campstool.
Oliver comes forward to offer his assistance. At the same
time the organ-grinder passes between them and the camera,
playing "Aida" on his hand organ. Oliver asks Irena if he may
help her, but the music is so loud she cannot hear him. He
assists Irena in gathering up her things. He takes the
campstool, and Irena carries her artist's portfolio. They
start toward the avenue together.
CLOSE SHOT of the torn drawing as a little wind, carrying
with it some autumn leaves, picks up the paper again and
blows it over and over up the promenade. The torn half of
the drawing falls over into place, so we see what Irena had
been drawing. It is a smart fashion sketch of the type seen
in Vogue or Harper's Bazaar, but the face of the model is the
blunt mask of a black panther, and the hands protruding from
the sleeves are tipped with feline talons. The CAMERA HOLDS
on the drawing.
DISSOLVE OUT
EXT. STREET - AFTERNOON
TWO SHOT of Irena and Oliver as they walk down a side street.
Irena is looking straight ahead of her, amused. Oliver is
doing his best to get acquainted.
OLIVER
Irena Dubrovna -- is that a Russian
name?
IRENA
No...I am from Serbia.
OLIVER
I see. Would you mind spelling it?
IRENA
You want to know how to spell my
name? Are you going to write me a
letter?
OLIVER
I'd like to write you a letter.
IRENA
What about?
OLIVER
I would say in this letter... "Dear
Miss...Dubrovna," I would say,
"will you have tea with me?"
Irena shakes her head with a little smile. Oliver is
undaunted.
OLIVER
Well, in that case, I'd just have
to write you another letter, I'd
say...
But again, with the same teasing smile, she shakes her
head. She suddenly stops and TURNS to Oliver.
IRENA
Here is my house.
Oliver starts to give her the campstool he is carrying, She
lays a soft, gloved hand on his coat sleeve and smiles
charmingly.
IRENA
Perhaps, Mr. Reed, you would like
to have tea in my apartment.
Oliver looks at her quizzically, realizing that she had meant
to ask him all the time, that he needn't have tried so hard
to wangle a date. He grins.
OLIVER
Oh, Miss Dubrovna, you make life so
simple!
DISSOLVE
INT. GROUND FLOOR HALLWAY - IRENA'S APARTMENT HOUSE
AFTERNOON
MED. SHOT of Irena and Oliver as they enter the building
from the street. It is the ornate, elaborate interior of a
brownstone mansion converted into an apartment house. They
walk the few steps of the short hallway to the stairs.
Oliver looks at the enormous staircase.
OLIVER (POINTING)
I never cease to marvel at what
lies behind a brownstone front.
They start up the stairs.
INT. HALLWAY OUTSIDE IRENA'S APARTMENT - AFTERNOON
MED. SHOT. Irena has inserted the key in the lock of her
door. She turns it, but before she opens the door, she looks
up at Oliver.
OLIVER
What's the matter?
IRENA
Nothing.
OLIVER
But you looked at me in such a
funny way.
IRENA
I've never had anyone here. You're
the first friend I've met in
America. I know lots of people in
business...editors, secretaries,
other sketch artists...you know.
But you might be my first real
friend. That's why I looked at
you.
(pauses)
OLIVER
(seriously)
Thank you.
Irena swings the door wide open. Through the doorway a
little bit of the room can be seen. Prominently displayed
is an odd equestrian statuette.
It is the figure of a man in armor, carved out of gray
stone. The man wears a regal chaplet on his head and is
mounted on a magnificent horse. Around the base of the
statue is a circle of flames, while the rider holds high
above his head a sword upon which is impaled the figure of
a writhing cat. Irena takes a step into the room and stands
waiting for Oliver to follow her, then turns to look back
at him. He has become aware of the perfume in the room.
OLIVER (cont'd)
Mm. Nice.
IRENA
That's Lalage.
OLIVER
Lalage?
IRENA
The perfume I use. I like it,
perhaps too well. Maybe I use too
much of it, living alone like this.
OLIVER
Oh, I like it all right. It's hard
to describe...not like
flowers...it's like something warm
and living.
As he goes on into the room, she closes the door.
DISSOLVE OUT
DISSOLVE IN
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - TWILIGHT
MED. CLOSE SHOT of statuette. The figure is silhouetted
against a window dim with twilight. As the CAMERA HOLDS on
the statuette, a light appears in a bay window across the
street, bringing the figures of horse, king, and cat into
dramatic focus. Over the shot we hear Irena's voice humming
"Berceuses du Chat" by Stravinsky.
The CAMERA PANS to show Irena and Oliver seated together on a
couch near the window. Because of the dim light in the room
they can barely be seen. Oliver is listening to her sing. She
ends her song, and they sit quietly for a moment. Suddenly,
as sometimes happens, there is a lull in the traffic outside.
In this momentary stillness, this stillness in which a great
city seems to catch its breath, Oliver hears the sound of
distant roaring, muffled and yet full of savage
reverberation.
OLIVER
(looking toward Irena)
What's that?
IRENA
It's the lions in the zoo. One can
hear them here often. Many people
in this building complain. The
roaring keeps them awake.
OLIVER
And you don't mind it?
IRENA
No. To me it's the way the sound
of the sea is to others, natural
and soothing. I like it.
She looks out the window, then turns back to Oliver.
IRENA (cont'd)
Some nights there is another sound.
The panther. It screams... like a
woman. I don't like that.
Oliver strikes a match to light his cigarette. He looks at
Irena's face in the dancing match light. She smiles at him.
IRENA (cont'd)
I hadn't realized how dark it was
getting.
She rises and goes over to a lamp. She speaks in a sighing
breath of ecstasy.
IRENA (cont'd)
I like the dark. It is friendly.
She turns on the lamp. Now, in the light, we see her
apartment — a nicely proportioned living room with a little
fireplace set under a neat Georgian mantel. Doors at either
end of the room lead off into small bedrooms. Behind a
fantastic three-part screen on which is painted the long,
sleek figure of a black leopard against a background of
jungle foliage, is concealed the two-burner stove, tiny sink,
and old-fashioned icebox which make up the kitchenette. In
the other corner, under the wide window, are a drawing board
and a desk, littered with crayons, brushes, bottles of
discolored water, and papers. On one side of the wall, in
neat frames, hang three of Grandville's amusing studies of
cats dressed as humans. Over the mantel hangs a beautiful
reproduction of Goya's sinister portrait of Don Manuel Osorio
do Zunlga and the cats. In front of Oliver, on the coffee
table, are the remnants of their tea. Irena comes down to
pick the tray up to take it into the kitchenette. Oliver
starts to help her, but she stops him.
IRENA (cont'd)
No, no. Sit still, please.
She begins to dump the ash trays and collect the saucers and
cups. Oliver smokes contentedly. Irena carries the tray
behind the screen. Oliver snuffs out the cigarette and picks
the statue up, holding it for a moment in his hand.
IRENA (cont'd)
(coming out from behind
screen; eagerly)
Are you admiring my statue?
OLIVER
(who does not like it at
all)
Not exactly. Who's it supposed to
be?
IRENA
King John.
OLIVER
King John? The Magna Carta and
stuff?
IRENA
Oh, no. King John of Serbia. He
was a fine king. He drove the
Mamelukes out of Serbia and freed
the people.
OLIVER
But why have this around?
IRENA
Perhaps you have in your room a
picture of George Washington or
Abraham Lincoln?
OLIVER
(still unconvinced)
Aren't there some better statues of
him -- some without that cat thing?
IRENA
Yes. There are beautiful statues
of King John. There is one in
Belgrade, where his face shines
with goodness. But this statue
reminds me of my home, the little
village where I was born. This is
the statue that stands in the
square.
OLIVER
But what does it mean? Why is he
spearing that cat?
Irena turns, her back to the fireplace mantel. In her hand
is the statue of King John. Above her, to one side, the three
cats in the Goya portrait glare from the shadowed background.
IRENA
It's not really a cat. It's
meant to represent the evil ways
into which my village once had
fallen. You see, the Mamelukes
came to Serbia long, long ago,
and they made the people slaves.
But my village was too little,
too far away in the mountains.
They left it alone. For five
hundred years my little village
was cut off from the Mother
Church. At first the people were
good and worshipped God in a true
Christian way. But, little by
little, the people changed. When
King John drove out the Mamelukes
and came to our village he found
dreadful things. The people bowed
down to Satan and said their
Masses to him. They had become
witches and were evil. King John
put some of them to the sword and
burned some of them in fires.
(pauses, drops her voice
a little)
But some --the wisest and the
most wicked -- escaped into the
mountains.
(looks at Oliver) )
Now, do you understand?
Oliver comes over beside her near the mantel.
OLIVER
I still don't see what it has to do
with you.
Irena looks down at the statue of King John. There is a
haunting look of memory in her eyes.
IRENA
Those who escaped — the wicked ones
-- their legend haunts the village
where I was born. The past
remains...
She breaks off suddenly, conscious that she has spoken too
much and too frankly. A little ormolu clock on the mantel
strikes the hour. It is six. It is obvious that Irena
welcomes the interruption and she glances down at her own
wrist watch. Oliver takes the hint. He starts toward the
door.
OLIVER
(as he picks up his
things)
Boys who come to tea can't expect
to stay to dinner.
INT. HALLWAY OUTSIDE IRENA'S APARTMENT & STAIRWAY - TWILIGHT
Irena has followed Oliver out and stands in the doorway
Oliver turns to look at her.
OLIVER
When am I going to see you again?
Tomorrow?
Irena nods with a smile, Oliver continues to the head of the
stairs and turns back.
OLIVER (cont'd)
What time tomorrow?
Irena shrugs her shoulders.
OLIVER (cont'd)
Dinner?
Irena nods and smiles at him.
SHOT of stairway as Oliver comes down the stairs. He reaches
a landing, turns, and looks up, Irena is looking down at him
from the bannister. They both smile. He continues down the
stairs. At the very bottom he looks up again. Irena is still
standing watching him. He smiles up at her and exits.
FADE OUT
FADE IN
INT. DRAFTING OFFICE - MORNING
WIDE VIEW. The Consolidated Ship and Barge Construction
Company has a handsome drafting office. Severe and modern,
it is nevertheless a room that immediately suggests
shipbuilding. A wide doorway opens in from the hall, in the
f.g. are three draftsmen's tables, glass-topped and lighted
from beneath. Behind them are several tables for other
workers. There are a number of rows of filing cabinets, and
at one side is a water cooler. The back wall of the office
is unadorned, wide, and slightly curving. At the moment, a
group of office workers are just starting to paste up the
sectional plans of a ship, entitled "PROJECT NO. 457," on
this wall. The ship's bow can be seen taking form in
detailed constructional profile.
Two of the three draftsmen's tables in the f.g. are now
occupied. Oliver sits working at one of them.
The center one is unoccupied. At the other one, a tall,
lean Englishman works. This is James Carver. At the back
wall, Alice Moore is supervising two workers, who are doing
the actual pasting. She holds in her hands a small sheet of
paper with the detailed mathematical measurements of the
project,
Beside her, Commodore Judson, head of the Consolidated Ship
and Barge Construction Company, stands watching the beginning
of the project with genuine delight. He is a bald, bearded
gentleman and would look like an amiable tramp rather than
the head of a successful shipbuilding company, if it were not
for the seamanlike neatness of his clothes.
ALICE
(motioning to one of the
men at the wall)
A little more to the left, Harry.
Easy...just a hair...
She lifts her hand to indicate that it's in position.
COMMODORE
By George! This is going to bo
our best yet. Wait till she rides
into Tokyo Bay.
ALICE
She's got what it takes all right,
Commodore.
Alice turns and goes to the desk between Oliver and Jim
Carver. She picks up a sheet of paper from the desk and is
just about to return to the wall, when she is stopped by
the sound of a cat's mewing. She listens. The mew is
repeated. Carver raises his head and also listens. Alice
takes a look at the floor under and around her desk,
Oliver is still bending over his work, Alice looks
suspiciously and questioningly at Carver, Carver replies by
throwing his hands out to show that he doesn't know,and
then pointing to himself and shaking his head to announce
that the mew is not coming from him. The mewing continues
during this, which is one reason Carver and Alice do not
speak. They are listening. Alice and Carver both turn and
look at Oliver, He knows very well that they are looking at
him, and his pose is one of elaborate innocence. There is a
light cardboard box on his desk.
The CAMERA FOCUSES on it as the lid of the box rises, and
the head of a very small Siamese kitten pokes out, Alice
hurries to Oliver's desk, uttering a cross between a coo
and a cry of pleased surprise.
ALICE (cont'd)
A-a-ah!
She picks up the kitten and cuddles it against her cheek.
ALICE (cont'd)
It's a darling! Where'd you got
it?
OLIVER
Bought it.
The Commodore has joined them.
COMMODORE
You're not going to start keeping
cats, are you?
(scratching kitten's head)
OLIVER
No, Commodore, I just got it for a
friend.
CARVER
We arrive at the inescapable
conclusion that our Oliver
(he is addressing the
assembled multitude)
has a girl.
COMMODORE
A brilliant deduction.
He takes Carver's arm and draws him away/
ALICE
A girl friend?
OLIVER
(almost as if correcting her)
A girl.
ALICE
Anybody I know?
Oliver takes the kitten and puts it back into the box. It
makes vain efforts to scramble out past his restraining
hand,
OLIVER
Not yet, but I know you'll like
her.
Alice watches him try to got the cover of the box over the
protesting kitten.
ALICE (SPEAKING LIGHTLY)
If you like her, she's okay with
me.
CAMERA PANS DOWN to CLOSE SHOT of kitten, and as the lid of
the box hides It from view, we
DISSOLVE
INT. HALLWAY OUTSIDE IRENA'S APARTMENT - NOON
MED. SHOT. Oliver, with the boxed kitten under one arm, is
ringing the bell to Irena's apartment. After a moment, she
opens the door. She is wearing a paint-stained smock and has
obviously boon interrupted in her work. She smiles at Oliver,
and he bends down to put the box on the floor.
OLIVER
Look, Irena. I brought you a
present.
He takes the kitten out of the box and sets it on the floor.
Irena stoops down beside it. Seeing her, the kitten draws
back, arching itself. Oliver, puzzled, looks from the cat to
Irena. She leans forward, smiling, trying to coax the kitten
to come to her. The kitten snarls and spits viciously at her.
Oliver scoops it up in his hands.
OLIVER (cont'd)
Why, you little devil!
IRENA
(as she rises to her feet)
It's all right. It's just that
cats don't seem to like me.
OLIVER
But this is only a kitten. It's
very friendly. When I had it in the
office, Alice — the girl who works
in our department — it played with
her.
IRENA
(smiling uncomfortably)
Cats just don't like me.
Oliver has stuffed the kitten back into its box and put the
lid over it. He is obviously disappointed. Irena puts her
hand on Oliver's arm.
IRENA (cont'd)
(Brightly)
I know what we can do. You got it
at a pet store, didn't you?
OLIVER
Yes.
IRENA
Good. We could exchange it for some
other pet?
She looks up at him. He nods.
IRENA (cont'd)
I'll get my hat and coat.
She turns to go back into the apartment for her coat and hat.
DISSOLVE
INT. PET STORE - DAY
All is tranquil in Miss Plunkett's Pet Shoppe. Outside it
is raining, a soft autumn rain. Miss Plunkett sits nodding.
Most of the birds and animals are sleeping. Above Miss
Plunkett, in a circular stand, a brilliant macaw swings. It
looks very much like Miss Plunkett, and, like her, is
peacefully nodding in sleep. A little bell tinkles, and
there is the sound of the door opening and closing. Miss
Plunkett sleeps right on. We see that Irena and Oliver have
entered the shop. Immediately there is a transformation.
The birds begin to call back and forth to one another,
their calls growing excited, shrill. The monkeys, awakened,
clamber excitedly in their cages, whimpering and chattering
madly. The puppies begin to bark, the cats to meow. In a
moment the sound has grown to sheer cacophony. The macaw,
too, has awakened, and is screeching its head off. Miss
Plunkett snaps out of her stolen rest and looks about her,
blinking curiously. Her lips form the words of amazement,
"Landie, dearie me!" but there is so much noise now that
nothing she says can be heard. She looks up to see what
may have startled the animals into such noisy activity;
MED. SHOT of Irena and Oliver, as they stand, perplexed by
all the commotion. Oliver is closing an umbrella. Miss
Plunkett comes into the scene. She tries to yell to the
animals to bo quiet. The noise is too much for her. Oliver
tries to explain to Miss Plunkett that he wants to exchange
the kitten, which he holds in the box in his hands, for a
canary, but he cannot make himself heard. She only shakes
her head and tries to say something at which Oliver shakes
his head. Irena touches Oliver's arm, indicating that it
might bo better to go outside. Oliver points outdoors to
Miss Plunkett. She nods and follows them out onto the
street.
EXT. PET STORE - DAY
MED. SHOT. The three emerge from the store, Miss Plunkett
closing the door behind her. All three stand under the
umbrella. In the loud, shrieking voice she has been using,
Miss Plunkett starts to speak.
MISS PLUNKETT
I can't imagine...
She realizes she doesn't have to talk so loudly now, and,
with an embarrassed laugh, begins again in her natural voice.
MISS PLUNKETT (cont'd)
Landie, dearie me! I can't
imagine what got into them... all
that caterwauling. The last time
they did that was when an alley
cat got in and ate up one of my
nice rice finches.
OLIVER
All I want is to exchange this
kitten for a bird.
MISS PLUNKETT
Why, of course. I have some lovely
canaries. One little lemon-colored
follow with top notes like Caruso.
She opens the door cautiously and peeks in, turning back to
them with a pleased expression
MISS PLUNKETT (cont'd)
As peaceful as my dream of
heaven! Shall we go back now and
select just which little birdie?
IRENA
(to Oliver)
You go, please, Oliver. Pick the
one you like. It's so hot and
stifling in there. I'd rather stay
here.
OLIVER
(handing Irena the
umbrella)
Of course. I'll only bo a minute.
INT. PET STORE - DAY
Oliver and Miss Plunkett return inside the shop, Miss
Plunkett talking all the while.
MISS PLUNKETT
Animals are ever so psychic. There
are some people who just can't come
in hero. My dear brother's wife,
for instance; she's a very nice
girl...I've nothing against
her...but you should just see what
happens when she puts her foot
inside this place.
The cats particularly. They seem to
know. You can fool everybody, but
landie, dearie me, you can't fool a
cat. In some ways they seem to know
who's not right — if you know what
I mean.
(she has the bird in her
hand and holds it up
with pleasure)
Here we are! Isn't he a ducky
little angel!
Oliver takes the bird and holds it up for Irena to see.
Irena, standing outside the window, looking in, nods her
head eagerly. Oliver turns back to Miss Plunkett
OLIVER
This is it.
EXT. PET STORE - DAY
MED. SHOT of Irena. The little bell tinkles over the door as
Oliver comes out with the bird in a small wooden cage. He
comes over to Irena. She exchanges the umbrella for the bird
cage.
OLIVER
(giving her the cage)
What do you think of it?
Irena holds the cage up before her eyes, tenderly to the
bird.
She coos.
IRENA
Ah, he is sweet!
(turns and smiles up at Oliver)
He will like me very much. You
will see. I like to be liked.
Oliver takes her by the arm and smiles at her.
OLIVER
That ought to be easy. Really easy.
They start away together up the street, under the umbrella,
smiling at one another, as we
FADE OUT
FADE IN
INT. DRAFTING OFFICE - DAY
MED. SHOT. In the b.g. the ship plans on the wall can be
seen. They are complete now as far back as the flying bridge.
Obviously some time has elapsed.
Oliver and Alice are sitting back to back, both of them doing
particularly exacting pieces of mathematical measuring.
Oliver raises up to call out:
OLIVER
Slide rule.
Alice makes no motion. He turns to her more definitely,
calling out again, louder this time:
OLIVER (CONT'D) (cont'd)
Let me borrow your slide rule, will
you?
But Alice is in the midst of a difficult problem, and she
goes on with it. Oliver turns around to her, places one arm
around her, and whispers in her ear after the fashion of
Charles Boyer.
OLIVER (CONT'D) (cont'd)
Mademoiselle, you are so beautiful
- so charming. So gracious a lady
will surely pass me her slide rule,
no?
Alice succumbs. She looks up at him and gives him the slide
rule. Then she gulps.
ALICE
(getting up)
I have to wash the taste of that
out of my mouth.
She goes over to the water cooler. Oliver follows her,
Alice looks up to see Jim Carver approaching.
ALICE (cont'd)
Look who's coming.
Oliver winks at her, Jim reaches the two at the water
cooler. Alice has a paper cup full of water in one hand.
She takes out a coin with the other hand.
ALICE (cont'd)
Doc, I'll bet there's one thing you
can't do..
CARVER
What's that?
ALICE
(demonstrating with belt
on her dress)
I'll bet you a dollar you can't
hold a quarter on your forehead
like this, pull out your belt,
lower your head, and let the
quarter fall bingo into your
trousers.
CARVER
(taking the quarter;
with confidence)
A mere matter of precision.
He balances the quarter on his forehead, throwing his head
back to do so. He holds out the front of his trousers. Oliver
takes a box of paper clips from a near-by desk and empties
them into Carver's trousers. They all laugh. Carver laughs
with them. At this moment the Commodore comes down from the
mezzanine. There is instant silence.
COMMODORE
Who wants to go out on my boat
Sunday?
Everyone ad libs enthusiastic acceptance except Oliver.
Carver, forgetting the paper clips, joins in and moves a
little more than he should; a deluge of clips falls around
his ankles. The Commodore looks at him, then back to
Oliver.
COMMODORE (cont'd)
Don't you want to go, Ollie?
OLIVER
The fact is, sir, I've got an
engagement for Sunday.
ALICE
Your boat seems to have
competition, Commodore.
CARVER
You should meet the competition.
ALICE
Have you met her, Doc?
CARVER
I saw her one day with Ollie.
ALICE
(looking at Oliver)
Ollie's always saying he'll take me
to see her, but he never does.
OLIVER
As a matter of fact, Alice, I was
going to take you around next
Sunday, but since the Commodore...
COMMODORE (QUICKLY)
I withdraw my invitation to you
two.
ALICE
We'll take a rain check, Commodore,
(looks at Oliver)
COMMODORE
(turning to go)
I'll expect the rest of you.
He starts toward the door. Carver moves to get out of his
way. There is a veritable deluge of clips. The Commodore
looks down at the clips and then gives Carver a long and
searching glance.
COMMODORE (cont'd)
I always wondered what held you
together, Carver.
DISSOLVE
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - AFTERNOON
Alice, Irena, and Oliver are walking Into the room. It is
obvious that Alice and Oliver have just arrived and been met
at the door by Irena. She has her free arm linked through
Alice's.
IRENA
I think, Alice, I shall like you
very much. We shall be good
friends, you and I.
Alice is a little embarrassed by Irena's warmth of manner.
She looks about the apartment.
ALICE
Ollie tells me you like to draw
cats. I tried to draw a cat once --
looked more like a mouse.
IRENA
Cats are harder to draw than the
human hand...a good cat portrait is
almost impossible. Look up
there...
(pointing to the mantel
picture)
Even Goya couldn't do it...not
really well. That's why I like
It...because it's hard.'
ALICE
(with a laugh)
Because it's hard? You're a glutton
for punishment.
IRENA
No, it's not just because it's
hard. In a way, I felt I had to
draw them. Didn't you draw
boats?
ALICE (NODDING)
Sure. I spent half my study periods
drawing boats. The Marblehead
tomboy — that was me.. My poor
mother wept every time I brought
home a report card.
IRENA
And I drew cats. The other children
in my village had cats, and they
could hug them and play with them.
But cats don't like me. They won't
let me cuddle or caress them. So
instead of playing with them, I
drew them. They're the one subject
still too hard for me. You
understand, don't you?
Without waiting for an answer, she rises and picks up a sheaf
of drawings from nor desk. She spreads them out before
Alice.
IRENA (CONT'D) (cont'd)
Look, Fashion drawings bore mo.
The only way I can do them is this
way.
Alice picks up one of the drawings and looks at it,
IRENA (CONT'D) (cont'd)
Of course, when I got the gown the
way I want it, I rub out the cat's
face and sketch in a regular face.
Alice nods and puts the drawing back with the others. Oliver,
looking at Alice, is afraid that she has not been
sufficiently Impressed. He feels called upon to defend
Irena's work and to change the subject.
OLIVER
I think it's right clever. How
about my mixing a cocktail?
IRENA
I have them all mixed.
She hurries off behind the screen. Alice looks up at
Oliver, He is beaming with pride. She smiles at him,
holding up her finger, ring-joined, in a little gesture of
silent approval. The canary beings to sing. Alice rises
and goes over to the canary's cage. Oliver joins her beside
the cage.
OLIVER
This is what the kitten turned
into.
ALICE
Much easier for a working girl to
keep.
(as the bird hits an
especially high note)
Listen to her, will you? Little old
Jenny Lind herself.
The bird suddenly stops singing. Alice and Oliver look at
one another.
IRENA'S VOICE
(coming over scene)
Was the bird singing?
They turn.
ALICE
Yes. It gave out with an aria.
Irena comes toward them. She holds a small tray upon which
is a martini whirler, three glasses, and a small plateful of
hors d'oeuvres. She places the cocktail things upon a small
table.
IRENA
It's never sung before. This is
the first time.
She comes up to the cage, trying to coax the bird into song
with little cooing and whistling noises. The bird mopes on
its perch as far away from her as the cage will allow.
IRENA (cont'd)
The naughty bird. For me he will
never sing.
ALICE
Probably a prima donna.
Turning toward the coffee table, Irena speaks suddenly, as if
with a desire to change the subject.
IRENA
Shall we have our martinis?
Oliver bends down, gets the glasses, and hands them around.
Just as they lift their glasses, the eerie scream of the
panther sounds. Oliver and Alice look up.
IRENA (cont'd)
It's the panther --
OLIVER
(lifting his glass)
Here's luck to all of us...May we
always be in better voice than
that.
MED. CLOSEUP of Alice. She is twirling the glass in her
fingers thoughtfully.
ALICE
To all of us.
DISSOLVE
EXT. PANTHER CAGE - PARK - DAY
The panther is pacing behind the bars of its cage. It is a
windy day, one of the last days of fall. A gust of wind blows
a shower of dead leaves across the screen in front of the
cage.
DISSOLVE OUT
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
CLOSE SHOT of the panther screen, glowing In bright
firelight. Over this shot comes the melody of "Berceuses du
Chat."
CAMERA DRAWS BACK to Include CLOSE SHOT of Irena near the
phonograph as she turns down the music so that it Is only
background music. She is wearing an attractive hostess gown.
She goes over to the sofa where Oliver is stretched out and
sits beside him. Irena's fingers begin to stroke his brows
regularly. She smiles down at him.
IRENA
Better now?
OLIVER
Much better. Those under-lit
tables we work at...we had to use
them all day today... they give a
man a rotten headache.
IRENA
What about Alice? Doesn't she mind
them?
OLIVER
I suppose so, but she never lets
anything bother her. She says the
best cure for anything is swimming.
(his voice begins to get
sleepy)
She only lives at that women's club
because there's a pool there.
Irena continues to caress his brow. His head sinks down into
the pillows. He closes his eyes. An outside sound distracts
Irena, and she looks up.
CLOSE SHOT of the window from Irena's viewpoint. It has
begun to rain, and a blast of wind has spangled the window
with raindrops.
CLOSE SHOT of Irena as she smiles contentedly and looks down
at Oliver. He has fallen asleep and is breathing easily. He
moves gently, and one hand extends over the edge of the sofa.
Irena lets herself slide from the sofa to the floor. She
nestles against the sofa, cuddles her cheek against the back
of Oliver's outstretched hand, and rubs her face back and
forth, almost like a cat that pets itself against its
master's hand. Her eyes look toward the dancing flames in
the fireplace.
DISSOLVE
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
SHOT of the fire. The flames have burned down. There are
only glowing coals on the hearth. The room is almost dark.
The music has stopped.
The CAMERA MOVES from the fire to Irena, as she still sits on
the floor with her cheek against Oliver's hand, Oliver stirs
slightly and opens his eyes. Irena does not move. Oliver
looks at her.
OLIVER
Irena
IRENA
Yes.
OLIVER
I've been asleep.
IRENA
I know.
OLIVER
It couldn't have been very
entertaining for you.
IRENA
I was watching you.
OLIVER
And that was fun?
Irena makes a little purring murmur of assent. There is a
pause then Oliver speaks softly.
OLIVER (cont'd)
Do you love me, Irena?
Again the little murmur of ascent.
OLIVER (cont'd)
I thought so. And you know that I
love you, don't you?
Again the little, happy, thrilling murmur from the
darkness. Oliver puts his hand on her shoulder.
OLIVER (cont'd)
I've never kissed you.
(pauses)
You know, that's funny,
Irena withdraws gently from him and moves back a bit into
the shadows away from him.
IRENA
Why?
OLIVER
When people in America know each
other as well as we do — when
they're in love — or oven think
they're in love, they've usually
kissed long ago.
Irena slips further away from him into the shadows. He leans
toward her.
OLIVER (cont'd)
Well...?
He can see only the dim outline of her shoulders, the white
blur of her face.
IRENA
(suddenly taut,
anguished, as if the
words were being pulled
from her throat)
I love you, Oliver.
OLIVER
(sitting up, alarmed by
her intensity)
For heaven's sake, Irena, what's
wrong?
Without answering, Irena suddenly lays her cheek against his
knee and beings to sob. Perplexed, Oliver looks down at her
and puts a hand on her head. She turns her head but does not
look at him. Her voice has a wild, strained quality, echoing
some strange agony.
IRENA
I've lived in dread of this moment,
Oliver. I've not wanted to love
you. I kept myself away from
people...I stayed alone...I never
wanted this to happen.
OLIVER
But you just told me you loved me.
IRENA
I do. I do.
Oliver puts his hands under her elbows and tries to draw her
up to him.
OLIVER
Then there's only one thing to do.
Come up here and be kissed.
IRENA
(withdrawing from his
hands)
No. I can't, Oliver, I've fled
from the past, from things
you could never know or
understand...evil things...
evil...
She breaks out again, sobbing. He looks down at her, worried.
Her sobs lessen, and Oliver begins to speak very quietly,
very calmly.
OLIVER
Irena, you've told me something
of the past...of King John, and
the witches in the village, and
the cat people who are descended
from them. Fairy tales, Irena,
fairy tales you heard in
childhood...nothing more than
that. They've nothing to do with
you, really.
You're Irena...you're here In
America...you're so normal you're
even in love with me...Oliver
Reed...a good, plain Americano.
He tries to raise her again, to kiss her, but she eludes him
and cuddles down by his feet, pressing her cheek against his
knee. She has stopped crying.
OLIVER (cont'd)
Yes, you're so normal that you're
going to marry me, Irena, And
those fairy tales of yours, you
can tell them to our children...
for them...hundreds of kittens to
amuse them...
Irena utters a little murmur of happiness and delight.
Oliver bends over, and kisses her hair softly.. Over the
sound of the rain and wind comes the coughing roar of
lions in the park.
DISSOLVE OUT
DISSOLVE IN
EXT. & INT. SERBIAN RESTAURANT - NIGHT
The Belgrade, as seen through the plate glass window from
outside. It la snowing, the first light snow of the winter.
In the window on display are three calves' heads prepared in
Serbian fashion. They have been skinned. The eyes,
considered a great delicacy by gourmets, are wide open and
glisten like bullets. The heads are crowned with chaplets of
artificial flowers. In the b.g. we see the wedding party.
Seated around a table are Oliver, Irena, Alice, the
Commodore, Jim Carver, and some of the other people we have
seen on the office sequences. Irena is dressed in a light
suit and wears a bridal bouquet on her shoulder. She is
laughing a natural, happy laugh to contrast with the later
hysterical laugh. The proprietor of the restaurant has just
brought proudly to the table from the kitchen a large iron
kettle from which the steam of hot wine is rising.
The CAMERA TRUCKS THROUGH to the wedding party. A trio of
musicians, dressed in Balkan costume, is playing a Balkan
love song. Jim Carver, like everyone else in the party, has
been drinking, and is in a gay mood. As the proprietor
places the iron kettle on the table, Carver applauds.
CARVER
(calling out)
Ah! Comitaji!
The proprietor gives him a fierce look. Irena laughs
merrily.
IRENA
Oh, Mr. Carver, you should
not call the good man that.
CARVER
But it's Serbian. I got it from my
barber this afternoon.
IRENA
You might insult him. "Comitaji"
means bandit...robber...
CARVER
Bless my soul!
Commodore Judson, seated next to Alice, is watching Irena.
He turns to find Alice's eyes on his.
COMMODORE
Oliver's bride seems a very nice
girl...and very pretty too.
Carver tells me she's a bit odd.
He's a little worried about the
marriage.
ALICE
(defensively)
Nonsense. Irena's a grand gir1.
She and Oliver are going to be very
happy together.
MED. CLOSE SHOT of a woman who is seated at a little table at
the far side of the restaurant. She is in evening dress, but
is dining alone. The woman looks like a cat. She has a
round, tabby face and a pompadour which somehow suggests the
roundness of a cat's head. The eyes, slanting, large, and
very light in color, fringed with sweeping lashes, are
completely feline. She turns these great, luminous eyes in
the direction of the wedding party and stares at the
festivities.
MED. SHOT of the wedding party. The Commodore rises, with
his glass in one hand.
COMMODORE
To the bride.
Everybody toasts Irena. Oliver looks down at her, proud and
happy.
CLOSEUP of the Cat Woman, as she looks straight at Irena.
MED. SHOT of the wedding party. As the Commodore is sitting
down, he sees the Cat Woman. He turns to Jim Carver.
COMMODORE (cont'd)
Look at that woman. Isn't she
something.
CARVER
(glancing up)
Looks like a cat.
He turns back to his food.
MED. SHOT - the Cat Woman. Drawing-on her gloves, she rises
and crosses the room. As she reaches the wedding party and is
directly opposite Irena, she stops and stares at Irena.
MED. SHOT - the wedding party, holding her hand as she talks.
Irena is turned to Alice.
IRENA
Thank you so much, Alice, for this
lovely party. I did not know there
was a Serbian restaurant.
ALICE
Anything you want to know about
this city, ask me. I know all the
unimportant details.
Irena laughs, and turning around, looks up at the Cat Woman.
The smile fades from her face. She stares at the woman with
a kind of haunted fascination. The Cat Woman takes a step
closer, never removing her eyes from Irena. She smiles and
speaks. (Note: Irena's voice is to be dubbed in on the
sound track when the Cat Woman speaks.)
CAT WOMAN
Moja sestra.
Irena blanches and shrinks, back into her chair. She makes
the sign of the Cross. The Cat Woman smiles and repeats the
words. (Note: Scene without sign of Cross to be made for
England.)
CAT WOMAN (cont'd)
Moja sostra.
She turns and walks out back on a festive basis.
Alice tries to put the party
ALICE
How do you like that?
WO SHOT - Oliver and Irena. Irena is looking white and
shaken. Oliver takes her hand.
OLIVER
What did that woman say to you?
Irena looks up at him with frightened eyes,
OLIVER (cont'd)
What did she say, darling?
IRENA
(slowly, seriously)
If this were any night but-my
wedding night...If you were any
man but my husband...I would not
tell you.
OLIVER
Wait a minute. It can't be that
serious...just one single word --
IRENA
(very seriously)
She greeted me...she called me
"sister."
(seizing his hands,
looking up at him)
You saw her, Oliver. You saw what
she looked like.
OLIVER
(laughing)
Oh, the cat people ... she's one of
the cat people. She looks like a
cat, and so she must be one of the
cat people...one of King John's
pets.
(tweaks her chin
playfully)
Irena, you crazy kid!
Irena looks at him from her throat sobs of hysterical
laughter break
OLIVER (cont'd)
Look...you're laughing. You can
see how funny it is yourself.
And it is true. Irena is laughing with him, but hers is the
forced, flat laughter of near hysteria.
The CAMERA MOVES IN so that we see that it is hysteria,
whereas Oliver, seated beside her, feels sure it Is normal
laughter joined with his.
DISSOLVE OUT.
DISSOLVE IN
EXT. IRENA'S APARTMENT HOUSE - NIGHT
A cab draws up before Irena's apartment house. In it are
Oliver, Irena, the Commodore, and Carver. It is still
snowing lightly. Carver is the first out, extricating
himself from the jump seat. He helps Irena out, and Oliver
follows her.
CARVER
I know a joke about weddings. Why
would my wedding be a dollar and
cents wedding?
He looks at Irena. She does not say anything. He looks
around at the rest. No one says anything. Then the
Commodore pokes his head out of the cab.
COMMODORE
All right -- why?
CARVER
Because I haven't d dollar, and my
girl hasn't any sense.
No one laughs. It hasn't bean a funny joke. Then Irena,
begins to laugh. She laughs hysterically. Oliver locks at
her worried. Carver is very pleased, because he thinks he
has been funny. The Commodore reaches out from the cab and
taps him on the shoulder.
COMMODORE
Come along, Carver.
Carver climbs into the cab, and it drives off.
TWO SHOT of Irena and Oliver on the sidewalk. The soft snow
falls on their shoulders. For the first time they are alone
together, and Irena's problems have to be discussed.
OLIVER
What is it, darling?
Irena is struggling to put a hard request into reasonable
words. She forces herself to speak.
IRENA
I'm going to beg --
She breaks off, unable to speak. They stand there a moment.
Oliver is looking at her. He wants to help her; he wants to
know the way of her thoughts.
OLIVER
(encouragingly; softly)
Mrs. Reed.
Irena stops and puts her hands tenderly against his chest.
IRENA
It's nice to hear that...nice. I
want to be Mrs.. Reed.
OLIVER
You are, Irena.
IRENA
But I want to be Mrs. Reed
really. I want to be everything
that name means to me —
(with tears coming to
her eyes)
-- and I can't -- I can't.
OLIVER
There's no sense in what you're
saying, darling. You're excited.
That woman in the restaurant upset
you.
IRENA
She brought back the old fears. If
I could have some time to --
(seizing his hands)
Oliver, be kind -- be patient -
let me have time - time to get
over this feeling there's
something evil in me.
Oliver looks at her quietly for a moment.
OLIVER
Darling, you can have all the time
there is In the world, If you want
it, and all the patience and the
kindness there's in me. You didn't
have to ask for that.
Irena draws his hand to her lips and kisses it.
IRENA
Only a little time...only a
little time, Oliver. I don't want
more than that!
They turn toward the house, and as they begin to walk
DISSOLVE
INT. IRENA'S BEDROOM - NIGHT
Irena is crossing the room toward the door. The room
is lighted only by the glow from the street lamps outside.
She is in a negligee. Outside, through the window, the snow
can be soon falling.
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Oliver, still wearing street clothes, stands at the door of
Irena's bedroom. He taps lightly on the door.
OLIVER
(softly)
Good night, Irena,
He stands waiting.
INT. IRENA'S BEDROOM - NIGHT
Irena presses herself against the door. Her hand goes down
to the doorknob.
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Oliver stands waiting.
INT. IRENA'S BEDROOM - NIGHT
Irena sinks down to her knees beside the door and crouches
there, lonely and desirous. She moves slightly. Her hand
goes up toward the doorknob. There is no doubt that her
intention is to open the door. From the park comes the thin,
eerie scream of the panther. Irena listens, trembles, and
takes her hand from the knob.
IRENA
(almost whispering)
Good night, Oliver..
OLIVER'S VOICE
(from the other side of
the door)
Good night, Irena.
FADE OUT
FADE IN
EXT. PANTHER CAGE - PAR" - DAY
The keeper of the cat cages is sweeping out the blank
panther's cage with a long-handled broom. He sings to
himself in a nasal New England voice. Irena comes and stops
at the guard rail.
KEEPER (SINGING)
There was not any person hurt,
Except the Reverend Parson Burt...
(sliding the broom handle far into
the cage)
He wasn't killed by cannon ball,
As judged by jurors one and all.
The panther steps haughtily over the broom handle, and comes
up to the bars.
KEEPER (cont'd)
But being in a sickly state, He
frightened fell and met his fate.
The leopard, maneuvering for a better view of Irena, gets
in the way of the broom. The old keeper stops his work and
his song, turning to see what has attracted the leopard's
attention. On seeing Irena, he tips his peaked cap and
smiles,.
KEEPER (cont'd)
Ain't seen you here for some
time, ma1am.
IRENA
I've been married. I've been
married almost a month.
Withdrawing his broom, the old keeper uses it as a crutch to
support himself. He jerks one thumb in the direction of the
leopard.
KEEPER
That's what I tell this misbegotten
devil...nobody comes to see him
when they're happy. The monkey
house and the aviary draw the happy
customers.
Irena leans over the guard rail. The leopard's hackles rise
and he tenses his front paws to unsheathe the talons.
IRENA
(admiringly)
But he's beautiful.
KEEPER
No. He ain't beautiful. He's an
evil creature, ma'am. You read
your Bible. In Revelations -- when
the Book is talking about the worst
beast of them all -- it says, "And
the beast which I saw was like unto
a leopard."
IRENA
(repeating softly)
Like unto a leopard...
KEEPER
Yes, ma'am, like a leopard... but
not a leopard. I guess that fits
this fellow.
IRENA
Yes, it fits him.
She pauses a moment, then leaves the guard rail to continue
on her way down the promenade. The old keeper calls after
her.
KEEPER
Best wishes for your marriage, ma'
am.
She turns and waves to him.
DISSOLVE
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - DAY
The panther screen is glowing in the bright sunlight
streaming through the window. The sun throws a shadow onto
the screen just over the panther. It is the enlarged shadow
of tbe bird cage, with the canary hopping about inside the
bars.
CAMERA DRAWS BACK to show Irena at her desk. She has just
finished working on a sketch. Now she gets up, stretching
and turning. Her eyes fall on the bird in its cage, and she
crosses over to it, the CAMERA MOVING with her. The bird
huddles on its perch, frightened, Irena tries to encourage it
to sing. She whistles a few notes. Still no response. She
opens the small door of the cage, and puts her hand inside to
take hold of the canary. The bird flutters wildly. Before
she can get hold of it, it falls to the cage floor and lies
there. Irena picks it up tenderly and holds it in her hands.
The bird is dead. Irena is serious and concerned as she puts
the bird down on a table, opens a drawer, and takes out an
empty bonbon box. Very carefully she places the dead bird in
the box, and ties it up with a bit of ribbon. She puts on
her hat and coat, gets a trowel chat Is on. The window lodge
by one of the window boxes, and leaves the room with the
trowel and the box under her handbag.
QUICK DISSOLVE
EXT. PARK WALK - DAY
Irena walks along the park path. The CAMERA is MOVING with
her. Her eyes are searching for a likely spot of earth to
bury the dead bird. Under a bush she spies a bit of soft
earth. She stops, and takes a step toward It. A whistled tune
attracts her attention, and she looks up.
A policeman has rounded a corner of the path, and is coming
toward her amiably swinging his nightstick, as he whistles
"Who?" Irena swiftly pushes the purse back on her arm and
continues walking along the path, passing the policeman,
who goes right on whistling.
EXT. PANTHER CAGE - PARK - DAY
Irena comes up the walk. The panther is pacing back and
forth behind the bars. It stops pacing as she passes the
cage. She, too, stops, and looks at the beast. Suddenly, as
if under the compulsion of some thought or desire outside
herself, she hurriedly takes the box, tears off the lid, and
throws the dead body of the canary into the cage.
CLOSE SHOT of the panther, as daintily, with little paw pats,
it begins to play with the dead bird, shuffling the tiny
yellow body across the dusty floor of the cage,
CLOSE SHOT of Irena watching the animal. She shudders,
almost as if recovering herself, and turning, walks quickly
away.
DISSOLVE
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Irena is standing looking out the window. Oliver is opening
the little cabinet which they use for a bar. He half turns
and calls over his shoulder to her.
OLIVER
Would you like some sherry?
Irena doesn't answer. Oliver fills two glasses with sherry
and brings them over to her. He offers her one.
OLIVER (CONT'D) (cont'd)
Here. If you're determined to mourn
that bird...we'11 have a regular
wake...
IRENA (LOOKING AT HIM)
It's not just because the bird
died.
Oliver puts a glass Into her hands and stands beside her. She
takes a little sip of the wine and stares into the glass,
thoughtfully.
IRENA (cont'd)
It's me. I envy every woman I see
on the street.
OLIVER
They can't match your little
finger.
IRENA
I envy them. They are happy. They
make their husbands happy. They
lead normal, happy lives. They're
free...
(a pause)
The bird...do you know what
happened to the bird?
OLIVER
It died.
IRENA
It died of fright when I tried to
take it In my hand.
OLIVER
All right. The bird was afraid of
you -- that's nothing. I had a
rabbit once that hated me; yet I
grew up to be quite a nice fellow.
IRENA
(shaking her head)
Oliver, when I went past the
panther's cage I had to open the
box; I had to throw the bird to
him,
(a pause; then more
intensely)
Do you understand?...I had to. I
had to do it! That's what
frightens me.
Oliver looks at her for a moment then, speaks quietly, no
longer mocking her.
OLIVER
I've been trying to kid you out of
it. Maybe that's wrong. I've
tried...
IRENA
(taking his hand)
No one could have been more gentle
or more patient.
OLIVER
I've tried to make you realize all
these stories that worry you are so
much nonsense. Now I see it's not
the stories... it's the fact that
you believe them. We've got to have
help, Irena.
Irena half turns. The statuette of King John is on the table
before her. She lets one hand rest for a minute on the base
of the figure. Oliver follows the direction of her gaze and
he shakes his head.
OLIVER (cont'd)
Not that sort of help. There's
something wrong, and we have to
face it in an intelligent way. We
don't need a King John with fire
and sword. We need someone who can
root out the reason for your belief
and cure it. That's what we need —
a psychiatrist.
Irena turns toward him, her face eager and hopeful,
IRENA
(eagerly)
Find one for me, Oliver. The best
one...the very best one I
DISSOLVE
INT. DR. JUDD'S OFFICE - DAY
CLOSE SHOT of Irena. She is in a dark room. Coming diagonally
across is a square shaft of light which falls softly on
Irena's face, framing the closed eyes, the nose, and the
mouth, leaving everything else in undisturbed darkness. From
the darkness comes a male voice, a very persuasive, insistent
voice.
JUDD
the cats...the cats...you were
saying the cats....the cats...
IRENA
(eyes still closed as
she speaks)
They torment me. I wake in the
night, I fool their warmth and
their strength in me...in me. I
walk in the day, and the tread of
their foot whispers in my brain.
I have no peace...for they are in
me...
She pauses, and a little grimace of pain goes over her
features. From her closed eyes two tears course slowly down
her cheeks. From the darkness the voice continues to urge
her on.
JUDD
In me... in me...
There is no response. The man gets up, so that we see him in
silhouette. He crosses the room and draws the curtains,
letting in the brilliant sunlight. Irena lies with eyes
closed, breathing with the shallow, regular breath of sleep,
undisturbed by the harsh light.
TWO SHOT of Irena and Dr. Louis Judd. He stands for a moment
watching her. Judd is a harshly ugly man of early middle
ago. There is an arrogance in his bearing which makes some
women see him as the suave, continental man, perfectly sure
of his success with any woman. His consulting room is clean,
antiseptic, and sparsely furnished with a couch, a chair, and
a gooseneck lamp on a stand. Irena is lying on the couch.
Judd, standing beside her, makes a few notations on a pad.
Then he lightly pats her cheek to wake her. She comes from
sleep very quietly.
JUDD (cont'd)
You are very tired.
IRENA
(smiling uncertainly)
No...not very.
Dr. Judd pours her n drink from a carafe.
JUDD
Hypnosis always tires me. And some
of my patients, too, find it
exhausting.
IRENA
(taking the glass he gives
her)
It's only that I remember nothing.
JUDD
But It 1s my duty to remember,
(patting the notebook in his hand)
I have it all here. Most
Interesting. You told me of your
village, and the people, and
their strange beliefs.
IRENA
(anxiously)
Is that all I told you?
JUDD
You told me tales of blood,
violence...mangled bodies in dark
forests...men torn to death by
woman half witch, half panther.
IRENA
I am so ashamed. It must seem so
childish.
JUDD
And the cat woman of your
village...you told me of them,
too...woman who In jealousy or
anger, or out of their own
corrupt passions, could change
into great cats, like panthers.
And if one of those woman were to
fall in love...and if her lover
were to kiss her...take her into
his embrace, she would be driven
by her own evil to kill him.
JUDD (cont'd)
(pausing, coming closer
to her)
That's what you believe and what
you fear, isn't it?
Irena nods her head but does not raise her eyes.
JUDD (cont'd)
Frankly, there is no need to be
ashamed. This is only what we call
a psychological block...a thing
which stands between you and what
you really desire.
Irena looks at him. He looks at his watch, crosses to the
desk and puts away his notebook with an air of finality.
JUDD (cont'd)
Those things are very simple to
psychiatrists. You told me of your
childhood. Perhaps we'll find this
trouble stems from some early
experience. You said you didn't
know your father...that he had died
in some mysterious accident in the
forest before your birth...and
because of that the children teased
you and called your mother a
witch...a cat woman. These
childhood tragedies are inclined to
corrode the soul, to leave a canker
in the mind, but we will try to
repair the damage.
Irena rises and gives Dr. Judd her hand. He places an arm
around her shoulders with familiar ease, as he leads her to
the door.
JUDD (cont'd)
You are not to worry.
IRENA
What shall I tell my husband?
Naturally, he is anxious to have
some word.
JUDD
(with heavy gallantry; as
he assists her with her
coat)
What does one tell a husband? One
tells him nothing.
By this time they have reached the door to the outer office
- the waiting room.
INT. DR. JUDD'S WAITING ROOM - DAY
Dr. Judd and Irena enter and cross to the door which leads to
the hall. He opens the door for her.
JUDD
Friday, at eleven?
Irena nods and leaves. Dr. Judd turns to another of his
patients in the waiting room. She is a beautiful, neurotic
looking woman, swathed in furs and adorned with loops of
pearls. Judd bows from the waist to kiss her hand.
JUDD (cont'd)
My dear lady.
DISSOLVE
INT. GROUND FLOOR HALLWAY - IRENA'S APARTMENT HOUSE -
AFTERNOON
CLOSE SHOT of Irena running lightly up the stairs, humming
a little snatch of song.
INT. HALLWAY OUTSIDE IRENA*5 APARTMENT - AFTERNOON
CLOSE SHOT of Irena as she reaches the top of the stairs and
goes down the hallway to her door, still humming the song.
Joyously she swings open the door of the apartment*
CLOSEUP of Irena as she sees something inside,
REVERSE SHOT. Through the door can be seen Oliver and Alice
seated together on the sofa. Oliver-is just bending over to
light Alice's cigarette. They turn and look as Irena enters
and closes the door.
Irena, Alice and Oliver.
IRENA
(as she crosses to
Alice)
Alice, it's so nice to see you!
ALICE
Hello, darling. How did you make
out with Louis?
IRENA
(puzzled)
Louis ?
ALICE
Dr. Judd.
Instantly Irena's mood changes. She looks at Alice,
puzzled and a little hurt to think that Oliver has spoken
of her visit to the psychiatrist. Oliver catches Irena's
look.
OLIVER
(quickly)
Alice knows, darling.
ALICE
(not catching the
vibrations in the air)
Of course. Didn't I suggest Dr.
Judd? I met him on the
Commodore's boat. The way he
goes around kissing hands makes
me want to spit cotton, but I
guess he knows all there is to
know about psychiatry.
Oliver is looking very embarrassed. Irena is both startled
and angry now. Alice looks at both of them and catches on.
ALICE (cont'd)
Uh-oh!
OLIVER
(to Irena)
I told Alice; I knew she'd know
some good doctor.
IRENA
I don't see why that was necessary.
Her manner is very cold. She gives them both a long look,
and walks away to stand by the window, gazing out, with her
back toward them. Alice looks guiltily at Oliver, shrugs
her shoulders, and picks up her hat and coat from a near-by
chair.
ALICE
Sorry. I seem to have put my big
foot in it.
She lets Oliver help her on with her coat, and, with her hat
still in her hand, she goes over to the door. Pausing, she
calls out to Irena.
ALICE (cont'd)
Sorry, Irena. I'm sure neither I
nor Oliver had any notion of
offending you. I'm dreadfully
sorry.
IRENA
(half-turning, coldly)
Good-bye, Alice.
With another-guilty look at Oliver, Alice closes the door
behind her. The moment the door clicks shut, Irena turns to
face Oliver. She is furious, hurt, offended. Oliver tries to
make nice with her.
OLIVER
Darling, really, there's no
reason....
IRENA
But, Oliver, how can you discuss
such things...such intimate things
about me? How much did you tell
her?
OLIVER
(good-naturedly)
You can tell Alice anything. She's
such a good egg, she can understand
anything.
IRENA
There are some things a woman
doesn't want other women to
understand.
She crosses the room, goes into the bedroom, and closes the
door firmly behind her. Oliver is honestly perplexed. He
looks after her ruefully.
DISSOLVE
INT. IRENA'S BEDROOM - NIGHT
Irena is unable to sleep. A bright moon drives a shaft of
misty light through the window and across her bed. She turns
restlessly, gets up, and goes to the window for a moment to
look out. From the park comes the sound of the lions and one
eerie, piercing shriek that she knows is the leopard's cry.
She trembles, perhaps with cold, perhaps with some emotion
that she cannot understand. She comes to a decision, throws
a fur coat over her nightdress, outs on a pair of galoshes
over her bedroom slippers, and lets herself out of the room.
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Irena hesitates as she tiptoes across the studio room of her
apartment. The moonlight Is pouring in through the window,
throwing the familiar objects of the room Into mysterious
half-shadows. She goes quietly over to the other door, opens
it quietly, and looks in.
INT. OLIVER'S BEDROOM - NIGHT
Oliver is sound asleep In his bed. He sleeps quietly.
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Irena closes the door to Oliver's bedroom softly, and tiptoes
to the main door, snapping the night latch back, and quietly
letting herself out.
X
X
X
X
X
X
TWO SHOT. Oliver comes out of the shadows of the hallway and
joins Irena on the steps.
OLIVER
I woke up. You were gone, What's
wrong, darling?
IRENA
(a pause, as she looks at him)
I couldn't sleep. I went out.
They continue up the stairs together, the CAMERA HOLDING on
them. As they reach a landing, Oliver stops.
OLIVER
Where'd you go?
IRENA
Just walked.
There is a brief pause. Oliver reaches out and takes her
hand.
OLIVER
I'm sorry about this afternoon. I
just didn't think.
IRENA
We should never quarrel, Oliver. I
need you so much. You must help me,
Oliver.
(pauses)
Never let me feel jealousy or
anger. Whatever it is that is In me
is held in...is kept
harmless...when I am happy.
OLIVER
I'd turn handsprings, darling...
I'd dance In the streets...to make
you happy.
He smiles down at her. Then, taking her little face in his
hands, he pinches her cheeks together so that her mouth
puckers to an enforced smile.
FADE OUT
FADE IN
EXT. THE PANTHER'S CAGE - PARK - DAY
Irena stands at the guard rail, watching the old keeper
unlock the cage door and throw in the big, bloody chunks of
meat. He is singing again his monotonous, nasal song, but
even his singing cannot drown out the noisy feeding of the
panther as it gnaws and tears at the meat. When he has thrown
in the last chunk, he slams shut the cage door and moves on.
It is a gusty, blowy day of hard, inconstant winds. Irena
notices that he has left the key in the look of the cage.
INSERT THE KEY in the panther cage lock.
BACK TO SCENE. Irena pushes aside the little gate, gets the
key, stands with it for a moment in her hands, and then runs
after the keeper. She holds it out toward him.
IRENA
You forgot your key.
KEEPER
(taking the key)
Ah, I'm always forgettin' it,
'Tain't no worry in It. Nobody'd
steal one of them creatures.
He moves on, muttering his monotonous song to himself. Irena
returns to the little gate. Dr. Judd is now standing where
she had formerly stood. He is smiling at her.
She lets herself out of the gate and stands beside him. He
leans on his cane with a great air of nonchalant ease.
JUDD
You resist temptation admirably.
IRENA
Temptation?
JUDD
The key.
IRENA
Why would I want it?
JUDD
For many reasons. There is, in some
cases, a psychic need to loose evil
upon the world. And we all of us
carry within us a desire for death.
You fear the panther; yet you are
drawn to him again and again. Could
you not turn to him as an
instrument of death?
(a pause)
You didn't come back to see me
Friday. I've had to come to you.
IRENA
(bewildered)
How did you know where to find me?
JUDD
(smiling)
You told me many things.
Irena looks away.
Irena and Dr. Judd as SHOT from within the panther's cage.
The black panther moves from time to time in the foreground,
sometimes blotting one and then the other character from
view. Irena and Judd are seen through the bars of the cage.
JUDD (cont'd)
Why didn't you come back?
IRENA
I don't feel that you can help me.
You are very wise. You know a great
deal. Yet when you speak of the
soul, you mean the mind...and it is
not my mind that is troubled.
JUDD
What a clever girl! All the
psychologists, all the theologians
have tried for centuries to find
that subtle shade of difference
between mind and soul...and you
have found it!
IRENA
(apologetically, turning
away)
It does seem presumptuous of me,
doesn't it? Good-bye, Doctor.
She starts off. The CAMERA STAYS with her, as we hear o.s.
Judd's voice.
JUDD'S VOICE
I can cut one thread of fear for
you.
Irena turns back to him questioningly, and he smiles at her,
as he joins her on the walk.
JUDD
Your mother. Do you remember her?
IRENA
Yes. My mother was a peasant. She
was lovely...quiet and strong...a
big woman.
The doctor takes one of her hands and holds it up before her.
JUDD
And this aristocratic little
hand...is this a peasant hand? The
little bones of this wrist...are
they peasant bones?
(drops her hand and looks
at her)
The mystery of your father is very
simple. Perhaps a young aristocrat
from Belgrade... maybe an artist on
a sketching trip. And your
mother..fresh and attractive, as
peasant girls are when they are
young.
(making a little gesture
with his cane)
It's quite clear — a hasty marriage...a brief pastoral — and
then he disappears.
JUDD (cont'd)
No wonder your mother never spoke
of him...that the village people
drew aside from her. As for the
children who teased you...who would
explain his absence to them?
Naturally, they could only go by
old wives' tales of cat women and
violence,
(pauses, looking closely
at Irena)
I'm right, am I not?
Irena pauses thoughtfully for a moment.
IRENA
(quietly)
But what of my mother's death?
JUDD
Her death? You didn't tell me.
IRENA
(still quietly)
I held her hand when she died. That
hand...even as I held it... turned
to the black paw of a panther. I
felt the coarse hair, the sharp
talons, the pads...I felt them... I
saw her lying, black... I saw that.
She pauses and looks at Judd, who is frowning at her; she
speaks, almost with a note of triumph,
IRENA (cont'd)
What little pastoral, Doctor... do
you have to explain that?
JUDD
(confidently)
You were a child?
IRENA
I was thirteen when my mother died.
JUDD
Why did she die?
IRENA
There was an epidemic in the
village.
JUDD
And you were sick, feverish,
delirious, when your mother died?
IRENA
No. I was called from school. I
can remember it so clearly. I came
through the fields. The meadow
larks were singing, and the sun was
shining. I carried the knapsack of
school books in my hand. I
remember I could not believe that
on such a day anyone could die. I
was not delirious.
JUDD
There is a delirium in great
grief. There are the illusions of
bereavement.
IRENA
The priest would not come into our
house when he saw what was on the
bed. Was his also an illusion of
grief?
Dr. Judd has no answer to make for a moment. He flicks a leaf
from the path with his cane, then smiles at her.
JUDD
There is always an explanation for
every phenomenon. We shall find the
reasonable explanation for this
one.
Irena gives him a scornful look of disbelief, and turns away
as we
DISSOLVE
INT. DRAFTING OFFICE - DAY
TWO SHOT of Oliver and Alice. They are at a plotting table,
Oliver is holding a slide rule in his hand, and is calling
out numbers as she moves the batten. He looks at the number
on the hairline, and calls It off to Alice.
OLIVER
Toward the sheer line...sixty-two
degrees --
Alice moves the batten with which she is plotting the curve
of a bulkhead to the measurement Oliver has given her. It
takes a sharp, awkward bend. She looks up at Oliver and
points at the batten.
ALICE
Hey!
Oliver looks at the batten, grins ruefully and apologizes!
OLIVER
I'm sorry. Must have given you the
wrong figure. Let me try again.
ALICE
(coming round the table to
him)
Wait. Let's have a cigarette
first.
They go toward the water cooler, as he fishes through his
pockets for a package of cigarettes. Alice takes a cigarette,
taps it on her nail, and smiles at him.
ALICE (cont'd)
That's the third wrong figure
you've given me this morning.
OLIVER
Getting careless in my old ago.
ALICE
Something's on your mind. Anything
wrong?
OLIVER
No.
They have reached the water cooler. She lights her
cigarette, and accepts the cup of water he hands to her. He
draws another cup for himself. She grins at him, as she
waves away the first strong puff of smoke from her cigarette.
ALICE
(lightly)
Must be marriage.
OLIVER
In a way, it is. I'm worried about
Irena.
ALICE
I thought she was going to Dr.
Judd.
OLIVER
That's what I thought. But I
bumped Into Judd this morning,
and she hasn't been there since
the first visit.
ALICE
But you told me she seemed anxious
to be cured.
OLIVER
Apparently not.
Alice crumples up the paper cup and drops It into the waste
basket.
ALICE
I'm sorry, Oliver. It must make you
very unhappy.
OLIVER
(thoughtfully, simply)
You know...it's a funny thing...
I've never been unhappy before.
Things have always gone swell for
me. I had a grand time as a
kid...lots of fun at school... at
the office here with you, and the
Commodore, and Doc. That's why I
don't know what to do about all
this. I've just never been unhappy.
Alice looks at him. Suddenly she begins to cry. Oliver looks
at her in astonishment, takes a quick glance to see that the
other workers in the office have not noticed, and quickly
leads her around behind the filing cabinets.
OLIVER (cont'd)
(drawing out the word)
Hey --
(pulling out his
handkerchief)
Wait a minute!
ALICE
(blowing her nose)
I can't help it. I just can't help
it.
(looking up at him)
I can't bear to see you unhappy. I
love you too darn much, and I don't
care if you do know it. I love you.
OLIVER
(a pause)
I didn't' know it.
ALICE
Of course, you didn't. What do you
think I'd do...drag my blooding
heart across the drafting tables?
It just had to come out now. It's
been too hard to love you...to see
you in love with Irena...and to
see you unhappy.
They stand looking at each other. Alice gives a final blow
to her nose, hands the handkerchief back to Oliver, and
manages a grin.
ALICE (cont'd)
Forgot it. There's Irena... you're
in love with her.
OLIVER
(puzzled)
I don't know. All this trouble has
made me think -- I don't know what
love really is. I don't oven know
whether I'm in love with Irena.
Alice looks at him very thoughtfully.
ALICE
(simply, sincerely)
I know what love is. It's
understanding. It's you and
me...and let the rest of the world
go by. It's just the two of us,
living our lives
together..happily...proudly. No
self-torture...no doubt. It's
enduring and it's everlasting.
Nothing can change it. Nothing can
change us. That's what I think
love is.
Oliver looks over at the water bubbles rising in the cooler.
He looks intently at them, almost as if counting them as they
rise, burbling to the surface. He speaks without looking at
Alice, his eyes on the bubbles rising in the water cooler.
OLIVER
I don't feel that way about Irena.
It's a different feeling. I'm
drawn to her. There's a warmth from
her that pulls at me...I have to
watch her when she's in the room. I
have to touch her when she's near.
But I don't really know her. In
many ways were strangers.
He turns and looks at Alice. She reaches out and takes his
hand. They stand together like two people on a street corner
shaking hands.
ALICE (SIMPLY)
You and I...we'11 never be
strangers.
He smiles at her and she returns his smile.
FADE OUT
FADE IN
INT. IRENA'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
Irena is in the window alcove, busily engaged in washing her
paint brushes. She twirls them between her palms to get the
water out of them. Oliver is in his easy chair. He holds a
magazine in his hands, but he is not reading. Suddenly he
puts the magazine down.
OLIVER
Irena.
Irena turns toward him, but continues to twirl the brush
she has In her hands.
OLIVER (cont'd)
(rising and coming
toward her)
Irena, I'm worried. What's
happening to us?
Irena looks up at him as she stops twirling her brush. She
speaks very simply, as if this explained and adjusted all
difficulties.
IRENA
I love you, Oliver.
OLIVER
I know -- but people can love,
and people can still drift apart.
And that's what I feel is happening
to us. We don't talk together
openly — you are not frank with
me...
IRENA
(interrupting)
I have never lied to you.
OLIVER
I ran into Dr. Judd today.
Irena looks at him and then down at the brush in her hand.
OLIVER (cont'd)
You haven't been back to see him.
IRENA
He cannot help me.
OLIVER
You won't lot him help you. You
won't let me help you. You won't
even help yourself. It's what I
said to Alice this afternoon —
At the mention of Alice, Irena has repeated the name softly,
furiously, the while a look of concentrated fury has come to