If you watch films from the early 20th century, sometimes you'll hear well-educated or upper-class American characters speak as though they were trying and failing to assume a British accent. For years I thought this was horrible and fake and the result of poor training of studio actors, but then I read an interview with a linguist who says that regional accents can come and go over the course of a generation or two, and that the actors from the 1930s were imitating a speech pattern that was actually in use among the well-to-do on the eastern seaboard.
So yes, accents come and go, and it's entirely possible that Melanie was imitating a genuine upper-class woman's speech pattern of the period. Nothing like that is in use in modern-day San Francisco, of course, I've lived around the area my whole life and have even been to some "society" events, and I've never heard the like.
“Seventy-seven courses and a regicide, never a wedding like it!
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