Boxcar Bertha
directed by Martin Scorsese
written by Joyce H. Corrington and John William
Corrington,
based on the book Sister of the Road: The Autobiography of
Boxcar Bertha by Ben Reitman,
released in the United States on June
13, 1972.
Music by Gib Guilbeau and Thad Maxwell.
Cast: Barbara Hershey, David Carradine, Barry
Primus, Bernie Casey, John Carradine, Victor Argo, David Osterhout, Grahame
Pratt, ‘Chicken’ Holleman, Harry Northup, Ann Morell, Marianne Dole, Joe
Reynolds, Jerry Cortez, Louie Elias, Michael Fitzgerald, Gerald Raines, Gayne
Rescher, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Martin Scorsese. #Noir
Recommended reading:
Sister of the Road:
The Autobiography of Boxcar Bertha
by Ben Reitman.
Filmed as Boxcar Bertha (1972),
directed by Martin Scorsese.
Published by AK Press.
First published 1937.
First published 1937.
ISBN-10: 1902593030
ISBN-13: 9781902593036
ISBN-13: 9781902593036
Description:
Born in the shadows of a railroad yard, of a
wandering mother who took her lovers where she found them and a father who was
scarcely conscious of her arrival in the world, Bertha Thompson took to the
road as soon as the restless impulses of adolescence stirred in her. She was
more interested in wanders than those who settled down in homes, more
interested in criminals than law-abiding citizens. She wanted to see how they
lived, live as they did, know what they were like. As a result of her
restlessness and curiosity, she became, in fifteen years of wandering, a hobo,
treveling from one end of the country to the other in box-cars, decking
passenger trains, and hitchhiking; member of a gang of shoplifters, traveling
as the mistress of one of the men; a prostitute working in a Chicago brothel;
the mother of a child of an unknown father; and a research worker for a New
York social service bureau. Sister of the Road is Bertha s own story of those
fifteen years and the record of her conclusions about them. Gifted with a
naturally keen intelligence, fearless of consequences to herself, willing and
eager to do and be everything which other members of her group did and were,
her story is a mine of little-known information and a succession of moving
human stories about that vast and growing army of homeless, jobless, wandering
women who live by begging, stealing, cheating, prostituting themselves, and
occasionally working at legitimate jobs.
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