By Jane Rossiter
(pseud. William Danial Ross), ©1963
Shirley Grant was excited about her new job as private nurse for the famous actor, Oliver Craft—and she found herself equally drawn to the two men closest to him: Hugh Deering, a former doctor and now a handsome leading man, and Roger Craft, wealthy young businessman from Philadelphia, who was also the star’s grandson. Both were exciting. Both offered her happiness. But only one could win her heart.
GRADE: C-
BEST QUOTES:
“That’s what working in the theater did for you; helped develop a flair for
selecting clothes.”
“A new, pretty girl backstage to flirt with! Maybe this won’t be such a bad
tour after all!”
“You’ll get used to her, or else you’ll wind up like some of the rest of us, wanting to murder her.”
“Do nurses take their medicine without complaints when they’re ill?”
REVIEW:
Nurse and orphan Shirley Grant was once an actress for a few years, so
that makes her perfect for her new assignment: she has been selected from all
the nurses at Eastern Memorial Hospital to care for Famous Movie Actor Oliver
Craft, who has pancreatic cancer and is recovering from surgery (in which he
was “cleaned up”), but now is insisting on going on tour with a stage play. “The
end will be the same, no matter,” he says. “And I prefer to die in harness.” Shirley
does have to fight with curmudgeonly senior Dr. Trask for the job, as he thinks
she is “Too young! Too pretty! More a fashion model than a model nurse! And she’s
a redhead with a snub nose! Redheads with snub noses are invariably stubborn!”
It’s not your resume, it’s your looks that really matter! But Shirley fights
back: “I’m twenty-seven, and I’m considered rather homely by some people,”
which is enough to win her the job.
The tour conveniently starts in the city where they are, Boston, at the Colonial Theater (which really exists, across from Boston Common). One of the actors is Dr. Hugh Deering, who quit medicine after he was “blamed for a man’s death” – though the actual story is pretty ambiguous. He was the driver in a car crash, and “Dr. Deering wasn’t able to help him. Witnesses said he was drunk. Just stumbled around and couldn’t do a thing,” a gossiping nurse tells Shirley, adding that the passenger in his car died. Shirley, who moments before was thinking “she had just met a pleasant young man whom she felt she could really like, with the prospect of being in his close company for several months,” decides that “now it was all spoiled by this revelation about his character.”
The band of actors includes Joy Milland, “a wild, restless sort,” who is out to own Hugh Deering and possibly encourage his drinking if it will help her meet that objective. Early on, Joy tells Shirley that Hugh has asked her to marry him but she hasn’t said yes. This news makes Shirley decide to avoid Hugh, who weeks later asks her why. She tells him it’s because he and Joy are engaged—which is not actually what Joy had said—he emphatically denies it, so she starts spending more time with him. But he may not be the winner there; she has decided that Hugh should give up acting, even though she thinks he’s good at it, and go back to being a doctor, and she’s rather rude about it. “Don’t you want to stop pretending and really live your life again?” she asks him, and when he says he’s quite happy being an actor, she tells him, “You’re not a man; you’re a cynical shadow.”
She has another man to play with, Roger Craft, Oliver’s grandson. Roger is a real estate millionaire that Shirley toys with a bit: “She hadn’t minded Roger’s interest because she had believed that Hugh was engaged to Joy Milland. Now she wasn’t so sure,” she thinks. Hugh, teasing Shirley about Roger, jokingly bets her a week’s pay that when Roger follows the show to Cincinnati, he will propose—and he’s right, though Shirley thinks one thing and says another. “She wasn’t at all certain that she would like Roger’s Philadelphia family, or fit in with them. And she realized that it wasn’t really important to her whether they liked her or not,” thinks the snob, but then, minutes later, tells Roger she likes him a lot and that she will think about it. “She had almost said ‘yes’ to his proposal. She looked up at him fondly. ‘You’ll be very close in my thoughts,’” says the tease.
The bulk of the book is a very tedious will-he-or-won’t he be able to perform, alternating with does-she-or-doesn’t-she love Hugh. One health crisis after another has us supposed to be biting our nails but instead found me quickly wearying of the repetitive plot. The Roger-or-Hugh debate is so riddled with hypocrisy on Shirley’s part, where one minute she thinks she would like to marry Hugh and the next minute she “felt completely miserable at the idea of spoiled Joy linking her life with that of the young ex-doctor’s.” Somehow the show staggers through a week each in Toronto, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Minneapolis, St. Louis, Indianapolis—hard to believe the old man, who is at death’s door every other page, rebounds every time, because I personally was struggling to keep going.
Of course, you know how it will end up, with a medical emergency that calls on Hugh to act the part of a doctor—but it’s quick, with the victim dropping to the floor on one page and packed away in the ambulance on the next. All that remains is for Hugh to tell Shirley he’s going back to medicine, and since this was the only obstacle standing in the way of Shirley’s alleged love for Hugh, they can leave the theater arm in arm. Overall it’s a boring, perfunctory book. The only high points are the rare bit of Iively spark from Shirley’s dialogue and the character of Oliver Craft, who is well-drawn as a grand lion of the theater. Apart from that, though, this book is about par for the course for William Daniel Ross. You’d be much better off opting for Wicked.