Amazon.com Essentials:
In this 1942 melodrama, founded on the novel by Olivia Higgins
Prouty (who also wrote the novel on which
Stella Dallas was
based), Bette Davis stars as Charlotte Vale, a dowdy, repressed woman
who, overwhelmed by her domineering mother, is on the verge of a
nervous breakdown. She finds help at a sanitarium from a kind
psychiatrist (Claude Rains), who turns her into a beautiful, confident
woman. As a new person, she takes a pleasure cruise, where she meets
Jerry (Paul Henreid), an architect trapped in an unhappy marriage,
saddled with a troubled daughter. The two fall in love, but, of
course, the romance is doomed. Yet their paths cross on occasion, and,
despite their feelings, Charlotte finds satisfaction in helping
Jerry's depressed child. The film will seem familiar to new
viewers--the campy style was the pattern for many tearjerkers to come,
and its most famous line has been oft repeated ("Don't ask for the
moon--we have the stars"). But the heartstrings are tugged, and
as Paul Henreid chivalrously lights two cigarettes and hands one over
to the doleful-eyed Davis, pull out the box of tissues--you're gonna
need 'em. --Jenny Brown