Driving Miss Daisy
is a 1989 film adapted from the Alfred Uhry play of the same title for Warner Bros. The film was directed by Bruce Beresford with Morgan Freeman reprising his role and Jessica Tandy playing Miss Daisy. The story defines Daisy and her point of view through a network of relationships and emotions by focusing on her home life, synagogue, friends, family, fears, and concerns. Hoke is rarely seen out of Miss Daisy's presence, although the title implies that the story is told from his perspective. Driving Miss Daisy
won the Academy Award for Best Picture and was the last PG-rated film to do so.
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Plot
It is 1948 and Mrs. ("Miss") Daisy Werthan, a 72-year-old widow, lives in
Atlanta,
Georgia, alone except for an African American
housemaid named Idella (Rolle). After a driving mishap where her
Chrysler automobile is totaled, Miss Daisy’s son Boolie (Aykroyd) tells her she will have to get a
chauffeur because no insurance company will insure her. She refuses, but Boolie is determined to find her one. Meanwhile, she is stuck at home and is unable to run errands or visit friends.
Boolie finds a man named Hoke Colburn (Freeman), who had driven for a local judge until he died, and he decided to remain in the area rather than accompany the widow when she moved away.
Miss Daisy at first refuses to let Hoke drive her, going so far as to walk to the local
Piggly Wiggly. It is revealed that her reluctance to be driven around is because she is embarrassed. People might think she is either too old to drive, or so well off that she can afford a driver.
Daisy comes to accept Hoke and the fact that she needs him to drive her around. Miss Daisy finds out that Hoke cannot read, so she teaches him how to read. Over the years Hoke drives Daisy in a succession of vehicles including a
Hudson Commodore and a series of
Cadillacs. When it became time to trade in the car for a new vehicle, Hoke often purchases the previous car and uses it as his personal vehicle.
Miss Daisy has Hoke drive her to her brother's 90
th birthday party in
Mobile, Alabama. Hoke reveals, during the trip, that it is the first time that he has left his home state of Georgia. During their trip from Atlanta to Mobile, Daisy realizes in several circumstances that Hoke's race affects how others treat him; her eyes are further opened to the social aspects of racial prejudice. As Daisy and Hoke spend time together, she gains appreciation for Hoke's many skills.
One day in
1963, while watching
The Edge of Night
in the kitchen, Idella dies. Miss Daisy is saddened because Idella was very close to her. She and her family attend the funeral, being the only white people in attendance.
The racism and prejudice that permeated American society is explored in this movie, especially when Hoke is questioned by a pair of racist
highway patrolmen, who also make out-of-earshot comments about Miss Daisy being an "old Jew woman" and Hoke being an "old nigger". After her synagogue, the
The Temple (Atlanta, Georgia), is
bombed Daisy realizes that she, as a Jew, is subject to many of the same prejudices as Hoke. But in the course of the movie, American society undergoes radical changes, and Miss Daisy soon attends a dinner in which Dr.
Martin Luther King gives a speech. She initially invites Boolie to the dinner, but he declines, and suggests that Miss Daisy invite Hoke. Miss Daisy does not mention the invitation to Hoke until he is driving her to the dinner. Her reluctance to invite Hoke underlines the passive racism that often goes unnoticed when compared with more open and aggravated racism.
A few years later, Hoke comes to her house to find her in a confused and agitated state. He calls Boolie and tells him his mother is upset. Before her son arrives Miss Daisy tells Hoke that he's her best friend and holds his hand. Her son arranges for her to enter a retirement home.
Two years later, in 1973, the family home is sold, and Hoke has given up driving. Hoke is now 85 and Miss Daisy is 97. Boolie and Hoke meet at Miss Daisy's house one final time before the new owner takes possession, and they drive over to the retirement home to visit Miss Daisy. The movie ends on
Thanksgiving with Hoke feeding Miss Daisy a piece of pie.
Awards
Academy Awards
At the
62nd Academy Awards for
1989,
Driving Miss Daisy
received a total of four awards from nine nominations. The four awards included:
Best Picture,
Best Actress (Jessica Tandy),
Best Makeup, and
Best Adapted Screenplay. The remaining five nominations included:
Best Actor (Morgan Freeman),
Best Supporting Actor (Dan Aykroyd),
Best Art Direction,
Best Costume Design, and
Best Film Editing.
Driving Miss Daisy
also achieved the following distinctions at the 62nd Academy Awards ceremony:
- it is the only film based on an off Broadway production ever to win an Academy Award for Best Picture; [1]
- it is the last Best Picture winner to date to receive a PG rating;
- it is the last film to date (and one of only three films ever) to win Best Picture without having received a Best Director nomination; and
- Jessica Tandy, at age 80, became both the oldest winner and the oldest nominee ever in the history of the Best Actress category.
Other awards
Driving Miss Daisy
also won three
Golden Globe Awards (Best Picture, Best Actor
Morgan Freeman, and Best Actress
Jessica Tandy) in the Comedy/Musical genre. At the 1989
Writers Guild of America Awards, the film won in the Best Adapted Screenplay category. Rounding out its
United States awards, the film won both Best Picture and Best Actor from the
National Board of Review of Motion Pictures. In the
United Kingdom,
Driving Miss Daisy
was nominated for four
British Academy Film Awards, with Jessica Tandy winning in the Best Actress category.
Filming locations
- Georgia, USA
- *Atlanta, Georgia
- **Fulton Supply Company
- **Euclid Avenue near the Little Five Points intersection in the Inman Park Neighborhood
- **1589 Peachtree Street NE
- **Castleberry Hill
- **Druid Hills, Georgia
- ***822 Lullwater Road
- *Decatur, Georgia
- **Agnes Scott College, 141 E. College Avenue
- *Douglasville, Georgia
- *Griffin, Georgia
Media
; Soundtrack
The film's score was composed by
Hans Zimmer, who won a
BMI Film Music Award and was nominated for a
Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture or for Television for his work. The score was performed entirely by Zimmer, done electronically using samplers and synthesizers, and did not feature a single live instrument. There is a scene, however, in which the "Song to the Moon" from the opera
Rusalka
by
Antonín Dvorák is heard on the car radio as sung by
Gabriela Benacková. The soundtrack was issued on
Varese Sarabande.
;
DVD
- U.S. release: April 30, 1997
- Special edition: February 4, 2003
Media references
- In the movie Stay Tuned
, one of the various parodies was called "Driving Over Miss Daisy." It featured Mr. Spike running over an old lady, then attempting to run over the protagonist with the car shortly afterwards.
- In the second season of the British teen drama Skins
, while attending a fancy dress party, the cast seem surprised to see their friend Chris come in full costume as Miss Daisy, with their friend Kenneth as Hoke Coburn. Chris later claims that it is the best film ever, as well as the only film he has seen (excepting pornographic films).
- In the feature film Be Kind Rewind
, Driving Miss Daisy
is one of the first films that a customer requests to be sweded. It featured Mos Def as Hoke and Jack Black as Miss Daisy.
- The film was spoofed in "Driving Miss Garry", the 1990 series finale of It's Garry Shandling's Show
. Shandling plays the role of Miss Daisy and Paul Winfield plays Hoke. Dan Aykroyd made a guest appearance in the episode.
- In "Honey" where Missy Eliot yells at her driver for making her late.
- In a spoken word / non-musical segment of the Public Enemy song "Burn Hollywood Burn" on the album Fear Of A Black Planet
, Chuck D, Big Daddy Kane, Ice Cube and others go to a theater to watch an unknown movie. When the special feature is announced as being Driving Miss Daisy
, the group begins to complain loudly and then they leave the theater.
- The sixth episode of the television series Quantum Leap
entitled "The Color of Truth" drew a great deal of its story from the original 1987 play upon which Driving Miss Daisy
was based.
- An episode of That's So Raven
was titled "Driving Miss Lazy."
- On a song off of Lil Wayne's 2008 album The Carter 3
, he references Driving Miss Daisy
in a rap.
- In "Driving Miss Gilmore", a 2006 episode of the American TV series Gilmore Girls
, Emily becomes dependent on Lorelai for transportation after undergoing eye surgery.
- In the feature film The First Wives Club
, Goldie Hawn's character states that there are three ages for women in Hollywood: "babe, district attorney, and Driving Miss Daisy".
- On an episode of Full House
was titled "Drving Miss DJ" on February 25, 1992.
- On Moesha
, the episode was titled "Driving Miss Moesha" season 1 in 1996.
- In the movie Role Models
, Danny asks Ronnie and Wheeler to pick him up Ronnie responds "Fuck you Miss Daisy".
- In the film A Love Song for Bobby Long
, Bobby is referred to as "Miss Daisy" by Lawson.
References
- Academy's Diamond Anniversary Screening Series to Feature "Driving Miss Daisy"