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  1. Mildred Pierce is a psychological drama by James M. Cain published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1941. [1] A story of “social inequity and opportunity in America" set during the Great Depression, Mildred Pierce follows the trajectory of a lower-middle class divorcee with two children in her tragic struggle to achieve financial and personal success. [2]

  2. Feb 20, 2017 · Her first husband, Bert (Bruce Bennett), is a gloomy defeatist who resents her greater spine and energy, though he correctly diagnoses her toxic obsession with their children. Having lost his job, he consoles himself with a mistress, and sees his wife’s own earning capacity as a deliberate rebuke.

  3. Mar 21, 2011 · (In “Mildred Pierce,” Mildred, newly separated from Herbert, interviews for a job as a housekeeper with a snobbish, hypocritical woman, Mrs. Forrester, who was likely inspired by Cain’s ...

    • Hilton Als
  4. Bert disapproves of the way Mildred fawns over their older daughter, Veda, and feels humiliated by the fact that Mildred has taken a job. As a result, he has begun an affair with Maggie Biederhof, and when he gets a call at home from Maggie, Mildred kicks him out once and for all.

  5. by Michael Curtiz. Buy Study Guide. Mildred Pierce Summary and Analysis of Part 2: Mildred takes a job. Summary. Mildred goes up and puts Veda 's dress on her bed, as Bert complains that Mildred is raising their children as if they have more money, threatening to slap Veda for being so fresh.

  6. Mildred knows she must obtain a job to keep her home, which Bert mortgaged; however, she has no skills or experience. At first, she waitresses, but when Mildred’s 11-year-old daughter Veda is scandalized that her mother has such a demeaning job, Mildred decides to open her own restaurant.

  7. the embarrassed Veda, who felt that Mildred wasn't up to supporting a more luxurious lifestyle for her, found Mildred's hidden restaurant uniform in her closet kept a secret from her; she judgmentally delivered harsh words to Mildred about her lowly restaurant job: "My mother, a waitress!";