INTER-RACIAL LOVE IN ADVENTURE
Mon, 5 Jun 1995 13:23:13 EST
A footnote to some of the interesting contributions David Desser,
Jeremy Butler, and others have made to the thread on interracial
romance ....
One variation on the idea of a romance between a white woman and
a man "of color", earlier than most mentioned, was depicted in
the 1953 colonial adventure, KING OF THE KHYBER RIFLES. Tyrone
Power played a half-caste officer (mother Indian, father white)
in British India at the time of the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857. White
officers habitually refuse to share their quarters with him,
causing the commander's daughter (Terry Moore) at the fort to
resent the unfairness and start to fall in love with Power. He
and his native troops save the fort after the whites fail, and
Power is finally accepted by the British as an officer and as a
future son-in-law.
Actually, the interracial element of the plot was urged by Zanuck
(and, on the issue of casting such roles, Power was almost
certain to be the lead considering his status at 20th C-Fox). For
three years, different versions of the screenplay went back and
forth on whether the man or woman would be native to India. In
the original book by Talbot Mundy, which was only related to the
1954 movie by title, there was a strong heroine of Russian-Indian
background, with a white British hero. This had been retained in
1924 and 1929 films of the story.
KING OF THE KHYBER RIFLES was a major box-office success. One of
the several pictures made in the next year imitating it, BENGAL
BRIGADE, also contained an inter-racial romance, although it is
between an Englishman and a native woman, and is depicted as a
failure.
And, as may be inferred from the four examples cited already,
inter-racial romance is a major motif in historical adventure
films.
Interestingly, the director of KING OF THE KHYBER RIFLES, Henry
King, told me in an interview that he found the romance the
intriguing part of the movie. A year later King also directed
LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING, this time with a tragic
love-affair between a white man and an Asian woman (played by
Jennifer Jones, just as Tyrone Power was supposed to be Indian).
Brian Taves
Motion Picture-Broadcasting-Recorded Sound Div.
Library of Congress
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