The Country Girl is one of the rawest, most compelling pieces of literature I’ve ever read. Although the event that sets the plot in motion is the return to the stage of Frank Elgin, an alcoholic has-been actor, it’s less about a comeback than it is about a codependent relationship.
His wife Georgie, the titular country girl, is the only one who can keep him from falling apart completely. By today’s standards, it would be easy to dismiss her as the archetypal long-suffering wife, but Georgie has too many nuances to be pigeonholed. For starters, she’s almost two decades younger than Frank; having grown up with an absentee father who dazzled her when he did appear, she married Frank because he was charming and represented a ticket to a new life away from the simplicity of Hartford (Connecticut). Georgie is not stupid: she noticed from the beginning that he drank too much, but thought she could fix that. In their twelve years together, she left and returned twice.
Frank Elgin is simultaneously hateful and pathetic. As Georgie points out, he has a compulsive need to be liked, so he leaves the unsavory tasks that might earn him any antipathy to Georgie. Therefore, people regard her as a manipulative and controlling Lady Macbeth, scheming backstage. Far from feeling any gratitude towards his wife, Frank portrays her as weak and needy to others, making her responsible for his problems to cover his shame. Throughout the play, I wondered why Georgie chooses to stay with him, but I had to remind myself that even the most unhealthy relationships have had some happy moments at some point and she probably clings to them.
Bernie Dodd is the theatre director who gives Frank the opportunity for a new start. He idolized him as a boy and wants him to succeed, but he’s also a misogynist who had a bad divorce and thus is inclined to think ill of all women, including Georgie. Bernie is deceived by Frank and for most of the play, he’s hostile towards her, until she exposes Frank’s ruse. Then she gains his respect and they make an effort to be civil. As it turns out, Bernie’s hostility towards Georgie hid his attraction to her, and there is some suspense as to whether she will ever leave Frank or whether his return to acting will succeed or fail.
I adored The Country Girl as a reader, and I would love to direct a theatrical production and play Georgie Elgin in it. It’s a gift to any artist.