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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stella-dallas12_8102.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:Sad, huh?]]

''Stella Dallas'' is a 1937 {{Melodrama}} starring Creator/BarbaraStanwyck, directed by Creator/KingVidor. Stella Martin is a young woman in a mill town in 1919. She deliberately attracts the attention of Stephen Dallas, a supervisor at the mill. They hit it off and get married. They have a baby, Laurel, but soon figure out that they have nothing in common--Stella is loud, brassy, and fun, while Stephen is a boring, drippy, narrow-minded scold. Eventually they separate.

Years go by and Laurel grows to be a teenager, living with her mother, seeing her father only occasionally. Stephen strikes up a renewed relationship with Helen Morrison, his old girlfriend, who married another man but is now a widow. Stella for her part pals around with Ed Munn, her alcoholic neighbor, but has no interest in a new relationship, focusing on her daughter. Stephen wants Laurel to live with him and the Morrisons in a mansion, but Stella refuses to give him a divorce. Stella tries to give Laurel the high-society life that Stephen is offering her, but her own tacky brashness embarrasses her daughter.

Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as [[Film/StellaDallas1925 a 1925 silent feature]], and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''{{Film/Stella}}''. Stanwyck, who never won an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

----
!!Tropes:

* TheAlcoholic: Ed's always wanting a drink when he pops in to Stella's apartment. By the end of the movie he's a drunken wreck.
* AmazinglyEmbarrassingParents: Played for tragedy. Stella's outrageous outfits and pancake makeup and general brassy demeanor make her the laughingstock of the fancy resort she took Laurel to, embarrassing Laurel and leading Stella to decide to give her daughter to Stephen and Helen.
* BittersweetEnding: Stella has given up her daughter. Laurel gets married to her boyfriend in the parlor of the Dallas/Morrison home while Stella stands outside, in the rain, not wanting to spoil things. But the smile on her face as she walks away indicates that she's content with her choices.
* BreakHisHeartToSaveHim: Stella decided that Laurel should live with Stephen and Helen, because they are fancy society folks--and because for some reason Stella is unable to do basic things like stop dressing like a hooker. But she knows that Laurel will never leave her mother. So she pretends that she doesn't care about Laurel and tells Laurel that she's tired of being a mother and is going to marry Ed and have good times. Stella breaks down crying after a distraught Laurel leaves for good.
* CharacterTitle
* ChickFlick: Self-sacrificing mother gives up everything for the good of her daughter.
* DrivingADesk: Super-obvious when Stephen and Laurel are riding around.
* GossipyHens: All the snooty old mothers in the town snipe about Stella. After they see her acting all goofy with Ed on the train, none of them will let their kids come to poor Laurel's birthday party.
* GrayRainOfDepression: Stella's stuck outside, watching her daughter get married. How to make this even sadder? Make it be raining.
* LetsJustBeFriends: Stella says this to Ed. His slide into alcoholism proves it to be a good decision, but her reluctance to cut Ed out of her life completely makes her look bad in the eyes of both her ex-husband and her daughter.
* {{Melodrama}}: You know it's a melodrama when things like Laurel getting embarrassed at a country resort are elevated to the level of Greek tragedy.
* OnePersonBirthdayParty: Well, not quite, since Stella and the maid are there. But Laurel is crushed when neither her teacher nor any of her friends will come to her birthday party, because they don't approve of Stella.
* TimeSkip: Over a decade as toddler Laurel goes to teenaged Laurel.
* TrainStationGoodbye: Played straight when Laurel leaves Stella to go visit Stephen and Helen.
* UnableToSupportAWife: Stephen didn't marry Helen Morrison in the backstory because his father killed himself after losing the family fortune.
* UptownGirl: The class conflict between Stephen and Stella unravels their marriage, as he wants to turn her into a proper society lady, and she doesn't particularly want to be one.

to:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stella-dallas12_8102.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:Sad, huh?]]

The novel ''Stella Dallas'' is a 1937 {{Melodrama}} starring Creator/BarbaraStanwyck, directed by Creator/KingVidor. Stella Martin is a young woman in a mill town in 1919. She deliberately attracts the attention of Stephen Dallas, a supervisor at the mill. They hit it off and get married. They has been adapted for film multiple times.

* ''Film/StellaDallas1925''
* ''Film/StellaDallas1937''
* ''{{Film/Stella}}''

If you
have followed a baby, Laurel, but soon figure out that they have nothing in common--Stella is loud, brassy, and fun, while Stephen is a boring, drippy, narrow-minded scold. Eventually they separate.

Years go by and Laurel grows
link to be a teenager, living with her mother, seeing her father only occasionally. Stephen strikes up a renewed relationship with Helen Morrison, his old girlfriend, who married another man but is now a widow. Stella for her part pals around with Ed Munn, her alcoholic neighbor, but has no interest in a new relationship, focusing on her daughter. Stephen wants Laurel to live with him and the Morrisons in a mansion, but Stella refuses to give him a divorce. Stella tries to give Laurel the high-society life that Stephen is offering her, but her own tacky brashness embarrasses her daughter.

Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find
this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as [[Film/StellaDallas1925 a 1925 silent feature]], and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''{{Film/Stella}}''. Stanwyck, who never won an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

----
!!Tropes:

* TheAlcoholic: Ed's always wanting a drink when he pops in to Stella's apartment. By the end of the movie he's a drunken wreck.
* AmazinglyEmbarrassingParents: Played for tragedy. Stella's outrageous outfits and pancake makeup and general brassy demeanor make her the laughingstock of the fancy resort she took Laurel to, embarrassing Laurel and leading Stella to decide to give her daughter to Stephen and Helen.
* BittersweetEnding: Stella has given up her daughter. Laurel gets married to her boyfriend in the parlor of the Dallas/Morrison home while Stella stands outside, in the rain, not wanting to spoil things. But the smile on her face as she walks away indicates that she's content with her choices.
* BreakHisHeartToSaveHim: Stella decided that Laurel should live with Stephen and Helen, because they are fancy society folks--and because for some reason Stella is unable to do basic things like stop dressing like a hooker. But she knows that Laurel will never leave her mother. So she pretends that she doesn't care about Laurel and tells Laurel that she's tired of being a mother and is going to marry Ed and have good times. Stella breaks down crying after a distraught Laurel leaves for good.
* CharacterTitle
* ChickFlick: Self-sacrificing mother gives up everything for the good of her daughter.
* DrivingADesk: Super-obvious when Stephen and Laurel are riding around.
* GossipyHens: All the snooty old mothers in the town snipe about Stella. After they see her acting all goofy with Ed on the train, none of them will let their kids come to poor Laurel's birthday party.
* GrayRainOfDepression: Stella's stuck outside, watching her daughter get married. How to make this even sadder? Make it be raining.
* LetsJustBeFriends: Stella says this to Ed. His slide into alcoholism proves
page, please edit it to be a good decision, but her reluctance to cut Ed out of her life completely makes her look bad in the eyes of both her ex-husband and her daughter.
* {{Melodrama}}: You know it's a melodrama when things like Laurel getting embarrassed at a country resort are elevated
point to the level of Greek tragedy.
* OnePersonBirthdayParty: Well, not quite, since Stella and the maid are there. But Laurel is crushed when neither her teacher nor any of her friends will come to her birthday party, because they don't approve of Stella.
* TimeSkip: Over a decade as toddler Laurel goes to teenaged Laurel.
* TrainStationGoodbye: Played straight when Laurel leaves Stella to go visit Stephen and Helen.
* UnableToSupportAWife: Stephen didn't marry Helen Morrison in the backstory because his father killed himself after losing the family fortune.
* UptownGirl: The class conflict between Stephen and Stella unravels their marriage, as he wants to turn her into a proper society lady, and she doesn't particularly want to be one.
correct work.
----
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as [[Film/StellaDallas1925 a 1925 silent feature]], and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''. Stanwyck, who never won an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

to:

Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as [[Film/StellaDallas1925 a 1925 silent feature]], and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''.''{{Film/Stella}}''. Stanwyck, who never won an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as a 1925 silent feature, and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''. Stanwyck, who never won an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

to:

Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as [[Film/StellaDallas1925 a 1925 silent feature, feature]], and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''. Stanwyck, who never won an UsefulNotes/AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* {{Tearjerker}}: Standing outside in the rain while your daughter gets married inside is pretty goddamn depressing.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
creators are not tropes


* Creator/SJPerelman: Rips the silent version of this film apart in his "Cloudland Revisited" essay series ("'M' is for the Migraine That She Gave Me").
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as a 1925 silent feature, and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''. Stanwyck, who never won an AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

to:

Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as a 1925 silent feature, and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''. Stanwyck, who never won an AcademyAward, UsefulNotes/AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
\"I\'m Sorry I Made Me Cry\" is for another film.


* Creator/SJPerelman: Rips the silent version of this film apart in his "Cloudland Revisited" essay series ("I'm Sorry I Made Me Cry").

to:

* Creator/SJPerelman: Rips the silent version of this film apart in his "Cloudland Revisited" essay series ("I'm Sorry I Made Me Cry").("'M' is for the Migraine That She Gave Me").
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* Creator/SJPerelman: Rips the silent version of this film apart in his "Cloudland Revisited" essay series ("I'm Sorry I Made Me Cry").
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* GrayRainOfDepression: Stella's stuck outside, watching her daughter get married. How to make this even sadder? Make it be raining.


Added DiffLines:

* TimeSkip: Over a decade as toddler Laurel goes to teenaged Laurel.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/stella-dallas12_8102.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:Sad, huh?]]

Added: 297

Changed: 9

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismAndCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as a 1925 silent feature, and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''. Stanwyck, who never won an AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

to:

Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismAndCynicism, SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as a 1925 silent feature, and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''. Stanwyck, who never won an AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.


Added DiffLines:

* BittersweetEnding: Stella has given up her daughter. Laurel gets married to her boyfriend in the parlor of the Dallas/Morrison home while Stella stands outside, in the rain, not wanting to spoil things. But the smile on her face as she walks away indicates that she's content with her choices.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

''Stella Dallas'' is a 1937 {{Melodrama}} starring Creator/BarbaraStanwyck, directed by Creator/KingVidor. Stella Martin is a young woman in a mill town in 1919. She deliberately attracts the attention of Stephen Dallas, a supervisor at the mill. They hit it off and get married. They have a baby, Laurel, but soon figure out that they have nothing in common--Stella is loud, brassy, and fun, while Stephen is a boring, drippy, narrow-minded scold. Eventually they separate.

Years go by and Laurel grows to be a teenager, living with her mother, seeing her father only occasionally. Stephen strikes up a renewed relationship with Helen Morrison, his old girlfriend, who married another man but is now a widow. Stella for her part pals around with Ed Munn, her alcoholic neighbor, but has no interest in a new relationship, focusing on her daughter. Stephen wants Laurel to live with him and the Morrisons in a mansion, but Stella refuses to give him a divorce. Stella tries to give Laurel the high-society life that Stephen is offering her, but her own tacky brashness embarrasses her daughter.

Depending on where one falls on the SlidingScaleOfIdealismAndCynicism, one may find this movie either a tender story of motherly love and self-sacrifice, or one may find it emotionally manipulative. It was based on a novel, had been made before as a 1925 silent feature, and was made again in 1990 with Creator/BetteMidler as ''Stella''. Stanwyck, who never won an AcademyAward, received one of her four Best Actress nominations for this movie, and Anne Shirley (teenaged Laurel) got a nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

----
!!Tropes:

* TheAlcoholic: Ed's always wanting a drink when he pops in to Stella's apartment. By the end of the movie he's a drunken wreck.
* AmazinglyEmbarrassingParents: Played for tragedy. Stella's outrageous outfits and pancake makeup and general brassy demeanor make her the laughingstock of the fancy resort she took Laurel to, embarrassing Laurel and leading Stella to decide to give her daughter to Stephen and Helen.
* BreakHisHeartToSaveHim: Stella decided that Laurel should live with Stephen and Helen, because they are fancy society folks--and because for some reason Stella is unable to do basic things like stop dressing like a hooker. But she knows that Laurel will never leave her mother. So she pretends that she doesn't care about Laurel and tells Laurel that she's tired of being a mother and is going to marry Ed and have good times. Stella breaks down crying after a distraught Laurel leaves for good.
* CharacterTitle
* ChickFlick: Self-sacrificing mother gives up everything for the good of her daughter.
* DrivingADesk: Super-obvious when Stephen and Laurel are riding around.
* GossipyHens: All the snooty old mothers in the town snipe about Stella. After they see her acting all goofy with Ed on the train, none of them will let their kids come to poor Laurel's birthday party.
* LetsJustBeFriends: Stella says this to Ed. His slide into alcoholism proves it to be a good decision, but her reluctance to cut Ed out of her life completely makes her look bad in the eyes of both her ex-husband and her daughter.
* {{Melodrama}}: You know it's a melodrama when things like Laurel getting embarrassed at a country resort are elevated to the level of Greek tragedy.
* OnePersonBirthdayParty: Well, not quite, since Stella and the maid are there. But Laurel is crushed when neither her teacher nor any of her friends will come to her birthday party, because they don't approve of Stella.
* {{Tearjerker}}: Standing outside in the rain while your daughter gets married inside is pretty goddamn depressing.
* TrainStationGoodbye: Played straight when Laurel leaves Stella to go visit Stephen and Helen.
* UnableToSupportAWife: Stephen didn't marry Helen Morrison in the backstory because his father killed himself after losing the family fortune.
* UptownGirl: The class conflict between Stephen and Stella unravels their marriage, as he wants to turn her into a proper society lady, and she doesn't particularly want to be one.

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