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This film was made in 1958 by a phone company called Western Electric. At the time, almost every telephone operator in the United States was a woman, usually a young woman. And there were hundreds of thousands of jobs available, in every city and town.
Some of the scenes shown in this film I believe are the real experiences operators had even though that is hard to believe that things could've been like this when looked at from the present. Scenes show that you could actually talk with a long distance operator when you had a problem, when you were scared, when there was a fire, when you couldn't find someone you needed, and sometimes when you just needed to talk with someone. In many towns of smaller size, you actually knew the name of the operator who was on the phone trying to help you.
Many of the older viewers among my subscribers would prefer that things go back. They don't like new technology and the automated systems, especially automated voices. They would rather return to real operators. No doubt this would offer many many people real jobs. But according to the phone companies, live real-person operators just cost too much money to sustain these days. And remember, the price of phone service per phone call has gone down substantially since the 1950s.
But when I look at this film now and show it to my wife and daughter and I ask their opinion, they feel pretty negatively about it because it treats the young woman looking for career in such a naïve (innocent?) light. Like she was pure and innocent and didn't really know anything. I understand how they feel. But as these kinds of films go, I feel that this one is well-made. The voices of the actresses sound like they were raised in England (UK) and came to America as young adults. They called that accent "professional" back in the day and it is to me quite beautiful. I don't particularly like the moments between scenes when the lead actress turns to the camera and stares right into the lens, almost as though she's living a dream.
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