DIFFERENT

Credits

Synopsis

Wav Files and Photos

Credits

Written by Susan Arnout Smith

Directed by Paul Wendkos

Amanda Talmadge Lynn Redgrave
Hope Goodell Annabeth Gish
Russell Talmadge Nigel Bennett
Bernie Goodell Ben Siegler
Libby Goodell Cecilley Carroll

Synopsis

Hope Talmadge's (Annabeth Gish) life was full of the idealized promise of an 11 year-old until a car accident left her mentally disabled. After the accident, Hope was sent away to special schools and group homes because her mother, Amanda (Lynn Redgrave), was never able to accept her daughter's imperfections. Over the years, Hope's father, Russell (Nigel Bennett), tried to have a relationship with his daughter. At 30, Hope is now happily married to Bernie Goodell (Ben Siegler), a man who was born developmentally disabled. Together, they have a healthy 11 year-old daughter, Libby (Cecilley Carroll). For years, they have lived in a supervised group home, but now budget cuts have forced its closing. With Russell's help, Hope and her family plan to move into their own house located near Amanda and Russell.

While Hope and Bernie adjust to their new neighborhood, Amanda aggressively develops a relationship with Libby once it's clear that Libby is perfect. Before the accident, Hope had been an aspiring ballerina. Presuming that Libby will love to dance too, Amanda enrolls her in a ballet class. Libby is quite taken with her newfound grandmother and all that she offers. When Amanda registers Libby for her new school she is caught by surprise when Libby decides to register as Libby Talmadge; yet she doesn't dispute the name change or balk at being called Mom. For Libby, it's an
opportunity to have a normal mother like everyone else.

Hope and Bernie struggle to make ends meet with their minimum wage jobs. Not understanding the consequences of a maxed out credit card, they suddenly find themselves broke. When Libby becomes desperately ill, Bernie and Hope have no money for food or medical care and Bernie must turn to Amanda for help. Amanda insists that Libby stay with she and Russell, even after she recovers. She allows Libby to visit her parents once a week, and they can visit Libby once a week. Although she loves her parents dearly, Libby is relieved to stay with her grandparents because they offer her something she's never had -- a normal life. Hope and Bernie are determined to get Libby back and both take second jobs to pay off their debts. Hope also joins a developmentally-challenged dance troupe at the suggestion of her counselor.

At Thanksgiving dinner, Hope happily announces that she and Bernie have paid off their bills and that it's time for Libby to come home. She also tells the family that she's dancing in a recital with "The Famous People Players." Libby is horrified. Her dance group is part of the same recital.

Libby reluctantly goes home, but with Amanda's help, she tries to prolong the charade that she's Amanda and Russell's daughter. She doesn't tell Hope about her first dance recital but Hope finds out about it and decides to surprise Libby. At the recital Hope is shocked when the teacher announces Libby's name as Libby Talmadge. Hope jumps onto the stage to correct the teacher, which embarrasses Libby. After an emotional argument with Libby, Hope goes home, packs Libby's things and brings them over to Amanda's house. She explains to a confused Russell that Libby is not her daughter any longer.

Bernie convinces Hope that Libby really does love them but that she is just a child. The two of them go over to Amanda and Russell's house to take Libby home again. While Amanda watches Hope pack up Libby's things, Hope finally lets loose with the feelings of rejection she has been bottling up over the past 20 years. After they leave, Russell tells Amanda that he doesn't know how she could be so cold-hearted toward their daughter and he threatens to leave her if she doesn't come to terms with Hope's condition and love her for who she is.

On the night of Hope's recital, Libby and Hope perform side by side on stage. Waiting in the wings is Amanda, who has found a way to open her arms and heart to both her daughter and granddaughter.

Wav Files and Photos

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different03.wav
"How's my little girl?"

 

different09.wav
"I wanted to just give you the house as a gift, but they told us that wouldn't be good for you, so here it is: the payment book. You just give us one every month; they're all marked."

 

different11.wav
"You think she'll be surprised when she sees you've kept her room exactly the way it was?"

 

different14.wav
"Libby? She was perfectly fine every time I saw her."

 

different15.wav
"Good night, Amanda."

 

different16.wav
"Hi, sweetheart. Clem. So, did you find out what you needed to know?"

 

different21.wav
"Your mother was probably the strongest-willed person that I ever met."

 

different22.wav
"Russell: Do you know what her first words were? I mean, after Mama, Dada?
Libby: What?
Russell: Me do it.
Libby: Me do it?
Russell: Me do it. Boy, that just about sums it up. She and your grandmother used to lock horns."

 

differenl23.wav
"Russell: She started dancing when she was just a little girl. By the time she was ten she was en pointe.
Libby: She loved it.
Russell: Very much."

 

different24.wav
"Anyway, we'd just gotten back from New York. She'd auditoned to train with the school of American Ballet.
She must have been in a coma for about a month when we found out she had been accepted."

 

different26.wav
"It was a drunk driver. He hit them head on. Everyone was killed except your mother, and
she was in a coma for almost a year."

 

different27.wav
"Russell: But she is our only child, Amanda.
Amanda: Russell, take a good hard look at her.
Russell: I am.
Amanda: What do you see?
Russell: A beautiful daughter."

 

different28.wav
"Amanda, sometime we have to stop and love the person that is."

 

different29.wav
"Well, maybe that perfect little girl in your mind is stopping you from seeing the woman she turned out to be."

 

different30.wav
"Amanda, this...this moment is all that we have. Now, if you want to change all this, then do something - anything - even if it turns out to be wrong."

 

different31.wav
"How many times are you going to watch this? You can't bring her back."

 

different33.wav
"Bernie: You were always nice to me, but you never liked me - not really.
Russell: What are you talking about?"

 

different34.wav
"Russell: What do you want, Bernie?
Bernie: Help me. Help me be a man. All I need is a chance."

 

different36.wav
"Go straight through that door. He's waiting inside. You're going to do fine. Walk tall."

 

different37.wav
"You never wanted her back in this house. The only thing you ever loved about her was her perfection
and when that was gone...."

 

different38.wav
"I can't stop, Amanda. That's the problem; that is the whole problem - I can't stop anymore. All the memories, all the things I wasn't going to think, I wasn't going to say."

 

different39.wav
"You know what I remember the most? This is so odd. She must have been in the coma about six months and
I remember going to the hospital and you were there, and you'd fixed her hair exactly the way you'dd always
liked it. She hated it that way, Amanda. And you were working on it and you were humming. I remember that
distinctly; you were humming."

 

different40.wav
"Russell: This came from the school today. Our daughter made the honor roll. Isn't that amazing? Libby Talmadge made the honor roll. What have you done?
Amanda: What do you mean?
Russell: What have you gone and done?!"

 

different41.wav
"Russell: No, no, you're going to talk to me!
Amanda: She just needed a safe place.
Russell: She needed her mother.
Amanda: She needed me.
Russell: To lie for her? To pretend she's something that she's not?"

 

different42.wav
"Russell: What do you think it's been like for Hope?
Amanda: I don't want to talk about Hope.
Russell: Well, you're going to have to."

 

different43.wav
I can't go on like this anymore. I'm tired. I'm so tired. I'm tired of all the things we can't say to each other.
I'm tired of how polite we are. And I'm really tired - so tired - of pretending that I don't blame you for
what's happened here because I do. I blame your selfishness, your self absorption and your
insistence that everyone live up to some impossibly high standard.

 

different44.wav
"She was a kid, for God's sake! She was an eleven year old kid. All she ever wanted to do was to be with her freinds and play."

 

different45.wav
"Do you know what this accident was? Do you know what it was? It was something horrible that happened to you."

 

different46.wav
"Russell: Now you're doing it again, exactly the same. Colonized Libby. She's not real to you. She's straight A's and potential.
Amanda: Not true.
Russell: I wish it weren't."

 

different47.wav
"Do you know why I bought them the house? Do you have any idea? It wasn't to give Hope and Bernie
a second chance, it was to give you one."

 

different48.wav
"The whole time I'd be looking at you and thinking: just take her in your arms. For God's sake, for once in your life take her in your arms and cherish her. Help her put on her prettiest dress. Take her hand, Amanda. Take her hand and walk her down the street and say to the whole world: This is my daughter and I love her. I love her exactly the way she is. She's doing the best she can, and I'm so proud."

 

different50.wav
"I'm wondering something. I'm wondering, would you leave me if something happened to me? I mean, if I had a heart attack or a stroke or got cancer? Can you only love somebody that's perfect, that isn't any trouble?"

 

different51.wav
"What is love to you, Amanda? I mean, what is this thing we've been doing for thirty years?"

 

different52.wav
"You see the problem, Amanda, the problem is I'm not sure if I still love you. I am sure of one thing: if you can't love her exactly the way she is, then we don't have a chance."

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This page last updated January 6, 2003