Image 01 Image 03

Our Beloved Nurse Ratched, Louise Fletcher, Passes Away At 88

Our Beloved Nurse Ratched, Louise Fletcher, Passes Away At 88

Fletcher’s portrayal was brilliant and believable, a nice person in real life portraying a persona we all know too well. The mind-numbed robotic control freak with power over your life and a willingness to use it.

One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest, released in November 1975 and winner of 5 Academy Awards, was one of a small number of movies that had a large impact on the formation of my world outlook, though I certainly didn’t know it at the time.

It’s the story of patients in a mental institution, but it was so much more. It was about the clash between spontaneity and rebelliousness embodied in Randle P. McMurphy, played by Jack Nicholson, and the coldness of the institution bureaucracy and rules and regulations, embodied in Nurse Mildred Ratchet, played by Louise Fletcher.

Nicholson’s character didn’t belong in the institution, he ‘faked’ mental illness get himself committed to avoid serving time in regular prison. His sanity and abhorance of control clashed with the other patients (who all were voluntary admissions and could leave at any time) and the staff, particlarly Nurse Ratched.

Nurse Ratchet is a familiar persona in real life. Her name would be Karen.

She would be a corporate HR administrator or a campus ‘bias response team’ enforcer. The mind-numbed robotic control freak with power over your life and a willingness to use it. We all have dealt with a Nurse Ratched.

This scene, in which she exploited the psychological weakness of “Billy” as to his mother, reflects the power of shame exploited so expertly in so many ways in our own lives:

1975 was among my most formative years, I was a junior in high school. Something about Jack Nicholson’s insurrectionist character instinctively appealed to me, and someting about Nurse Ratched’s repressive bureaucratic character instinctively repelled me. It’s a feeling that later would manifest itself in so many ways.

I’ve probably watch the movie dozens of times. I’ve thought about it in politics, and somehow my word association always seems to gravitate towards one word: Hillary. More important, it helped form how I look at institutional power over individuals, and the power that otherwise weak people can obtain by their position in the institution.

In real life, Louise Fletcher seems like a great person, as her Oscar acceptance speech reflects:

Louise Fletcher, the sweet actress from Alabama who won an Academy Award for her turn as the heartless Nurse Ratched — one of the most reviled characters in movie history — in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, has died. She was 88.

Fletcher died Friday of natural causes at her home in Montdurausse, France, her son Andrew Bick told The Hollywood Reporter. She had survived two bouts with breast cancer.

A daughter of deaf parents — she made one of the most touching acceptance speeches in Oscar history — Fletcher also starred as a psychiatrist in Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977) and played opposite Peter Falk amid the star-studded ensemble in The Cheap Detective (1978)….

Fletcher knew her life had changed forever when she watched Cuckoo’s Nest with an audience for the first time and saw how people reacted to a scene in which McMurphy tries to kill her character.

“It was in Chicago, and it was a packed house,” she recalled. “When he strangles her, the audience stood up and yelled and cheered. Stood up. It was unbelievable. I was thrilled.”

On its 2003 list of the 100 greatest villains in the annals of motion pictures, the American Film Institute placed Nurse Ratched at No. 5, behind only Hannibal Lecter, Norman Bates, Darth Vader and the Wicked Witch of the West.

Rest in Peace, kind soul.

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Tags:
,

Comments

Hillary

I’m a nurse, we’ve ever gotten to her that nick name

She looked so feminine and beautiful during her acceptance speech

I wonder how she end up living in France ?

She was amazing as Kai Winn on Deep Space Nine, the best Star Trek series ever.

    ChrisPeters in reply to CarlosT. | September 26, 2022 at 9:10 am

    I logged in just to make this sort of comment. She played that role to absolute perfection, and I always loved to hate Kai Winn and her devious self-serving machinations.

      cemeterry in reply to ChrisPeters. | September 26, 2022 at 3:19 pm

      I logged in to say the same thing. She was the best and her portrayal of Kai Winn was a masterclass in how to be a villain. She’ll make your blood boil.

Nurse Ratched was very sweet compared to lefty women who nurse their vile hatred of conservatives.

A wonderful actress who gave a stellar performance in one of the best films of all time. The classic Karen. Unfortunately the policy makers took away the wrong lesson and emptied the asylums instead of reigning in the controlling, authoritarian impulses of the bureaucracy.

    M Poppins in reply to CommoChief. | September 26, 2022 at 10:02 am

    reining in

    GrumpyOne in reply to CommoChief. | September 30, 2022 at 6:06 am

    …and we are now paying dearly for emptying the “institutions” that served as an avenue for poor and middle class families to send unruly family members that simply did not fit into form of society. Fully at least 50% of current democrats fit into that category if I recall the former correctly…

she was excellent–a “namesake character” performance–like vivien leigh or sean connery–kesey’s book would have been challenging to film but forman did a very good job of bringing the novel to life–nicholson basically played himself but fletcher’s performance was the pivotal role and she knocked it out of the park

a well-deserved oscar and her acceptance speech was very personal and sincere

Being able to mark off the box next to Over 65+, I was of that generation which also picked upon using that title of reference to those we needed to interact who tended to possess a ‘Nurse Ratched'” persona.
Over the years, those who never having seen the movie, when used, they understood the meaning if not the reference.

Nurse Ratched is the worst type of tyrant, the omnipotent moral busybody in the famous C.S. Lewis quote.
Everything is “for the the patients’ own good” you see.
Reese Witherspoon’s turn as Tracey Flick in “Election” also reminds me of Hilary.