BankofAmericasSweetheart wrote: Actually a non-conventional take on a Pickford story would be to approach her as unlikeable in priviate life while creating an image of charm and like-ability for her film persona.
IF the movie is a success they can turn it into a biopic saga and divide it up into 5 parts, so part 1 would be her childhood years which takes around 200 pages anyway in the Whitfield book, then part 2 and so on.
Agreed. But even if it was a single feature, I would prefer that it spends sufficient time on her childhood -- her career as a child actress from roughly 1900-1909, essentially taking care of her widowed (and actually abandoned is a better description) mother and two young siblings. It would go a long way in establishing why she was as driven to succeed throughout her life as she was, and what it cost her personally (or even professionally) in the long run. You've got to have the audience understand the person before you can portray them as being likeable or unlikeable as the case may be.
Pickford wasn't an overly complex person, it seems to me. but she certainly isn't a one-dimensional caricature of either a "little girl" or a "bitch." She was uneducated, but intelligent. She made choices based upon instincts (and her mother), and many, especially those involving men, were awful, but overall her career choices shouldn't be faulted to the extent they are. How many big stars of the early 1910s were as still popular (or even still working) in 1929 or 1933?