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Jewel 2001

Runtime

120 mins

Language

English

English

Set in the 1940s, a 40‑year‑old mother already raising five healthy children gives birth to a daughter with Down syndrome. Facing a society that offers little support, she refuses to surrender hope, fighting prejudice and limited resources to nurture and protect her special child.

Set in the 1940s, a 40‑year‑old mother already raising five healthy children gives birth to a daughter with Down syndrome. Facing a society that offers little support, she refuses to surrender hope, fighting prejudice and limited resources to nurture and protect her special child.

Does Jewel have end credit scenes?

No!

Jewel does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Meet the Full Cast and Actors of Jewel

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Jewel (2001) Quiz: Test your knowledge of the 2001 film Jewel, its characters, plot points, and themes.

Who portrays the title character Jewel Hilburn?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for Jewel

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Read the complete plot summary of Jewel, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


In 1945, Jewel Hilburn, Farrah Fawcett, and her husband Leston Hilburn, Patrick Bergin, are mired in poverty on a rural Mississippi homestead, raising four children: Raylene Hilburn, Rachel Skarsten; Burton Hilburn, Kyle Fairlie; Wilman Hilburn, Max Morrow; and Annie Hilburn, Alexis Vandermaelen. Their devoted nanny and housekeeper Cathedral, Cicely Tyson, helps hold the family together while Leston earns money by pulling out war-time pine stumps. Cathedral’s husband, Nelson, Ardon Bess, and their sons Sepulchur and Temple also work for the Hilburns, weaving a fragile web of mutual dependence.

When Jewel learns she is pregnant again, the family braces for the strain, and Cathedral issues a warning filled with a quiet gravity: the unborn child will bring hardship but also a kind of divine testing. They name the baby Brenda Kay, and it soon becomes clear she is developmentally slower than her siblings. A diagnosis from Dr. Beaudry, Geoffrey Bowes, prompts the family to seek help from Dr. Basket, Ron Payne, a renowned pediatrician who suggests placing Brenda Kay in an institution. Jewel refuses, determined to raise Brenda Kay at home as part of the family, and the injections prescribed to strengthen her bones become a costly but necessary commitment.

The financial pressures grow stiffer when Leston loses his job, yet Jewel scrambles to keep Brenda Kay thriving. The other children adapt in their own ways: Raylene leaves school to work, the family tends their garden, and Jewel doubles as a seamstress whenever possible. Brenda Kay, however, continues to miss milestones, drawing Jewel’s attention and energy away from her other children and creating a continuous test of the family’s unity.

A beacon appears in the form of a distant opportunity: a “miracle school” in Los Angeles that could help Brenda Kay thrive. Jewel covertly explores the chance, while Burton heads west to find work. Brenda Kay, meanwhile, endures several near escapes from death, underscoring the fragility of her world and the stakes for the entire family.

Eventually Jewel works toward a move to California, with Leston agreeing to relocate on the condition that they can someday return to Mississippi. Raylene marries and remains in the South, while the others follow Jewel and Burton to a fresh start in Los Angeles, where Brenda Kay begins attending the school directed by Nathan White, Peter Donaldson. For the first time Brenda Kay meets other children like herself, and Jewel begins to see a little relief in the shared care.

As Brenda Kay grows older, the real shift arrives in evaluating what success should look like for a person with Down syndrome. White, a steady advocate, advises Jewel to loosen her grip and allow Brenda Kay to chart her own path. The Hilburns eventually return to Mississippi briefly, but Leston realizes his future—and his heart—lie elsewhere. The family resettles in California, and Brenda Kay is gradually guided toward greater independence with support from a specialized group home, where she can forge friendships and life skills beyond her mother’s protective care.

In a quiet, patient arc, Jewel learns to balance love with letting go. She continues to visit Brenda Kay, but she recognizes the essential truth that Brenda Kay must live her own life. The film closes on a note of tempered optimism: a family’s steadfast devotion evolving toward acceptance and growth for Brenda Kay, and for each member as they find their place within a broader world.

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Jewel Themes and Keywords

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character name as titleforename as titledown syndrome1940sspecial schoolspecial needs schoolschooldisabilitydisabled childdisabled girlteaching assistantmental disabilityinterracial friendshipinterracial relationshipmovingchildbirthteenage girllittle girlcaliforniamississippibrother sister relationshipfather daughter relationshipmother daughter relationshiphusband wife relationshiprole played by multiple actorsyounger version of characterfamily relationshipsafrican americanhousekeeper1960sfemale protagonistone word titlebased on true storybased on novel

Jewel Other Names and Titles

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Todo por ella Jewel: Tutto per mia figlia

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