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Bing's Birthday Movie: Rhythm on the River (1940)

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It's my favourite holiday of the year.  Bing Crosby's birthday, of which there is some confusion to the actual date.  Is it May 2nd or May 3rd?  I stick with the 3rd thus making it a two day holiday.  Hooray!

This year's Bing's Birthday Movie is the charming Rhythm on the River.  The casual movie fan has probably heard of Going My Way, The Country Girl or High Society, but Rhythm on the River has its fans.  Anyone who has seen it, really enjoys it although it only has a paltry 189 votes on the IMDb.

The story idea is from the deliciously twisted mind of Billy Wilder and the screenplay is by Dwight Taylor who gave us such delightful scripts as Top Hat, The Gay Divorcee and Follow the Fleet, along with thrillers I Wake Up Screaming and Pickup on South Street.

The director of Rhythm on the River is Victor Schertzinger.  A violin prodigy, composer and conductor, Schertzinger began directing films in 1917.  Sound was no obstacle for the director, who continued to compose scores and popular songs.  He has a special place in my heart for the song Sand in My Shoes.  If you haven`t heard Connie Boswell sing that haunting tune - all I can say is it is the reason Edison invented the phonograph.  As a director Schertzinger knew how to successfully combine the musical moments with the comedic and dramatic in such entertainments as the Hollywood spoof Something to Sing About starring James Cagney, Love Me Forever with Grace Moore and the gorgeous 1939 version of Gilbert and Sullivan`s The Mikado.  

Schertzinger and Crosby combined their talents on Rhythm on the River, Road to Singapore, Road toZanzibar and Birth of the Blues.  It is a shame that we don`t have even more Schertzinger pictures to enjoy, but sadly he passed from a heart attack in 1941 at the age of 53.  His last film, released in 1942, was The Fleet`s In starring Dorothy Lamour.  The movie features Schertzinger and Johnny Mercer standards, I Remember You, Tangerine and the fun novelty piece Arthur Murray Taught MeDancing in a Hurry.

Basil Rathbone, Bing Crosby

Rhythm on the River is the story of Oliver Courtney played by Basil Rathbone.  The man really should have been in more comedies.  Courtney is a high-strung and famous Broadway composer.  Sadly, he has lost his muse and "temporarily" and on the q.t. collaborating with composer Bob Sommers played by Bing Crosby.  Bob is willing to go along with the arrangement for the money, for the chance to work with the great Courtney and with the hope that it will be his big break.  However, Courtney is also "temporarily" collaborating with lyricist Cherry Lane played by Mary Martin.  Cherry is willing to go along with the arrangement for the money, for the chance to work with the great Courtney and with the hope that it will be her big break.  Only Courtney's transcriber and confidante Billy Starbuck played by Oscar Levant is, in his everlasting sarcastic way, in on the secret.  Once that secret breaks however, Bob and Cherry form a professional and private partnership.  The course of true love does not run smoothly.  Oliver Courtney sees to that.  Music publishers take care of scuttling the couple`s show business dreams.  They already have a full catalogue of Courtney material.  Maybe they should try something original.

Oscar Levant, Bing Crosby

Musical comedies must have their complications and it helps to have an Oscar nominated soundtrack.  The breakout song from this feature is James V. Monaco and Johnny Burke`s OnlyForever.  Along with Bing and Mary`s lovely version you can find recordings by Dean Martin and Nat King Cole.

My favourite of Bing's title tracks is the one for Rhythm on the River.  As with most of his pictures, all you need is Bing and a song, but on this dandy he is backed up by none other than famed Dixieland trumpeter Wingy Manone.  His parents named him Joseph, but after losing his right arm (he used a prosthesis) in a streetcar accident, he could be no one else but "Wingy".

Here's the title tune set in a pawn shop where Bob and Cherry's pal's instruments are being held hostage.  Can't beat Courtney at his own game without a band.  That's Christian "Gepetto" Rub grooving in the background.  Prior to this scene Cherry has a great line of musician snark when she inquires of the lads:  "What else can you fellas play outside of "Tiger Rag" and pinochle?"  Ouch!

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xraBEoQTgDA&list=PL43B44B6203E25867&index=4


The Mary Astor Blogathon: Mary Goes to the Dogs

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Mary Astor
(1906 - 1987)

The fascinating and entertaining Mary Astor Blogathon continues.  Many thanks to our hosts, Dorian of Tales of the Easily Distracted and Ruth of Silver Screenings.

Mary Astor was born Lucile Vasconcellos Langhanke in Illinois.  The attractive and imaginative only child of driven parents, she became the focus of their thwarted ambitions and the family breadwinner.  The route to success lay in show business and while looks were the key to opportunities on the screen in time Mary discovered a skill to provide independence and a craft in which she ultimately took some pride.  In a career that spanned silent films to live television Mary found few roles that she would acknowledge as worthy.  Mired in "mother roles" at MGM or playing "decorative dolls" did not sit well with the strong-minded Ms. Astor. 

One of my favourite of Mary's performances is of the duplicitous Brigid O'Shaughnessy in John Huston's darkly humorous thriller The Maltese Falcon based on Dashiell Hammett's 1930 novel.  In scene after scene, Mary is perfection as the adventuress.  It is a performance that inspires me to want to rush the sound stage and thump Mary on the back, shout hooray and perhaps even do a little celebration dance.  I think Ms. Astor would be less than impressed with such effusiveness from a stranger, but it's her own fault for being so good.  

Many of us fans who live on the right side of the law enjoy nothing better than a good crime novel or mystery movie.  Alongside The Maltese Falcon, Mary Astor features prominently in the two other literary/film treats we will look at today.

THE KENNEL MURDER CASE (1933)

S.S. Van Dine is the pen name of Williard Huntington Wright, the ne-er-do-well son of a wealthy family whose ambitions and education outstripped his means during most of his life.  Illnesses and a drug habit added to his troubles.  During a prolonged illness he followed the advice of a friend and worked on constructing a mystery novel which proved popular beyond imagination.  The mysteries solved by wealthy amateur sleuth Philo Vance are chronicled in novel form by his attorney S.S. Vane Dine.  The stories are set among the wealthy in New York City and are intricate puzzles to tantalize the reader.  The first of the stories was The Benson Murder Case in 1926.  The actor most associated with the role is William Powell who played Vance in 1929s The Canary Murder Case and The Greene Murder Case.  In 1930 he starred in The Benson Murder Case and in 1933 The KennelMurder Case.  Basil Rathbone, Edmund Lowe, Warren William, Paul Lukas and James Stephenson are some of the other actors who had a crack at Vance.  As befits a man who once edited a magazine called The Smart Set, Van Dine knew a lot of words and seems to use them all in his stories.  While I might find a Vance story ultimately satisfying, I do find them quite a slog.  However, the film TheKennel Murder Case is a dandy.  Directed by Michael Curtiz with his usual flair for entertainment he keeps the pace brisk with a series of wipes and juggles the suspects with aplomb.

Our characters are introduced at the Long Island Kennel Club competition.  Vance's adorable Scottie, Captain MacTavish is an entrant, but not a semi-finalist.  There is bad blood between two of the finalists Archer Coe (Robert Barrett, Heroes for Sale) and Colonel Thomas MacDonald (Paul Cavanagh, The Scarlet Claw) and when MacDonald's pooch Ghillie is found killed suspicion falls on Coe.  When Coe is killed suspicion falls on just about everybody else in the movie.  He was not a well-liked man.  For starters, there are about two million Chinese distilled into his Cambridge educated cook Liang (James Lee) who is disturbed by Coe's collecting of revered Chinese artifacts.  There is Brisbane Coe (Frank Conroy, The Ox-Bow Incident).  Brotherly love are just words between Brisbane and Archer.  There is Archer's belittled secretary Raymond Wrede (Ralph Morgan, No Greater Glory).  Edward Grassi (Jack LaRue, The Story of Temple Drake) has not only been cheated on a business deal with Coe, he's been seeing Coe's girl on the side Doris Delafield (Helen Vinson, Torrid Zone).  Gamble, the butler (Arthur Hohl, Island of Lost Souls) is not all he seems.  We can't leave out Hilda Lake played by Mary Astor.  Hilda is Archer's niece and she resents not only his tight fist on the purse strings, but his jealous control over her personal life.  

Archer Coe is found dead in his locked bedroom, an apparent suicide.  When Philo Vance hears the news over the radio he suspects murder and cancels a planned ocean voyage to assist District Attorney Markham (Robert McWade, brother of Edward McWade) and Detective Heath (Eugene Pallette, The Adventures of Robin Hood).  The coroner Dr. Doremus (Etienne Girardot, The WholeTown's Talking) is a scene stealer who must be the great-great-grandfather of "Bones" McCoy with lines such as "I'm a doctor, not a magician" and "I'm the city butcher, not a detective."  The spin-off boys dropped the ball with this character.

As the only gals in the proceedings Ms. Astor and Ms. Vinson get to wear Orry-Kelly gowns.  Ms. Vinson, as a shady lady, enjoys off the shoulder negligees and day dresses with a bit of spangle.  Ms. Astor is always perfectly tailored and accessorized.  Both ladies have a fiery nature.  They had legitimate reasons to hate Archer Coe which make them suspects.  They both place themselves in conflict with the investigators when they suspect their lovers may be involved in the killing.  Philo Vance, in his usual methodical manner unravels the locked room puzzle, but Hilda Lake is paramount in bringing the criminal to justice.  The movie is very entertaining thanks in large part to William Powell who makes Philo Vance a more appealing fellow than he appears in print.
 

THE CASE OF THE HOWLING DOG (1934)

Erle Stanley Gardner was a rambunctious youngster who became an energetic and successful lawyer, author of mystery fiction as well as books on travel and conservation.  Along with other legal professionals he started the so-called Court of Last Resort to assist the wrongly convicted.  I highly recommend Dorothy B. Hughes' The Case of the Real Perry Mason for Gardner's fascinating life story.  Gardner's most famous protagonist and greatest gift to popular fiction is Perry Mason.  I love kicking back with one of the Mason page turners.  Perry Mason goes beyond the extra mile for his clients and it echoes much of Gardner's thinking that the "law" has everything on its side in terms of power and resources and anything a lawyer has to do to assist his client is only right.  The first Mason novel was published in 1933, The Case of the Velvet Claws followed by The Case of the Sulky Girl and in 1934 by The Case of the Lucky Legs and The Case of the Howling Dog.  If I had to choose only one favourite Gardner story (please, don't make me!) it would be The Case of the Howling Dog as it packed a real emotional punch upon my first reading.  It was this story that Warner Brothers wanted to kick off a series of films based on the popular character.  The studio's first thought for the role of Mason was Edward G. Robinson.  I would have liked to have seen that.  Warren William, whose first screen triumph was as The Mouthpiece and who had just played Philo Vance in The Dragon Murder Case was tapped to be the screen's first Perry Mason and he's wonderful in a first-class production directed by Alan Crosland (The Jazz Singer).  Canadian born Helen Trenholme plays a most winning Della Street in one of two movies she made for Warner Brothers before returning to a stage career. 

Arthur Cartwright (Gordon Westcott) is a very nervous client.  He wants his neighbor's dog to cease its nighttime howling.  Is a noisy dog the only thing keeping Cartwright up at night?  He seems very  interested in that neighbor, Clinton Foley (Russell Hicks, Charlie Chan in Shanghai) and everyone in that household.  He seems particularly concerned for Mrs. Clinton Foley.  Intrigued by what may be the secret motive behind this client's actions Perry takes on the case which expands to include a Will designed to protect said Mrs. Clinton Foley.  When Arthur Cartwright mysteriously disappears Perry finds that he may have a client in someone he has never met and sets about trying to locate Mrs. Clinton Foley beginning by staking out the Foley home.  On a dark night a beautiful woman enters the home, voices are raised, a dog barks, shots ring out.  The dog and its owner lay dead.

Perry immediately begins working for his client even without her knowledge.  Bessie Foley is played by Mary Astor and, again gowned by Orry-Kelly, she looks marvelous.  Both cool and hot as a woman in desperate trouble she immediately draws you to her side and you want to protect her.  Perry uses all the means at his disposal, especially his favourite of testing the recall of eye witnesses.  This was something Gardner used early in his career, not just for the courtroom effect, but because he truly felt that police skewered the process by planting ideas with witnesses prior to line-ups or photo identification.  

Suspicious characters abound including Foley's secretary Lucy Benton (Dorothy Tree, The Asphalt Jungle) and her chauffeur boyfriend Joe Sawyer (TVs The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin).  Luckily, the police a predisposed to being more helpful than not in the forms of Captain Kelly (Joseph Crehan, Dick Tracy vs. Cueball) and Sgt. Holcomb (Allen Jenkins, Destry Rides Again).

The trial is a testing ground for Perry who becomes a whipping boy for the press when he keeps his client silent.  The court of the popular press is willing to give the beautiful Ms. Astor as Bessie Foley every break and Della is sure that once she tells her side of the story everything will fall into place.  Perry sticks to his tactics and after turning the courtroom into a circus there is a shocking revelation and his client is freed in an ending which probably wouldn't make the screen in only a few months time.  Thank you very much, Mr. Hays.

Run-of-the-mill roles forgotten by their creator immediately the job was done, Mary Astor nonetheless laid the groundwork for one of her most famous characters in these early mysteries from the Golden Age of print detectives.

"We all love Regis Toomey."

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Regis Toomey (1898 - 1991)
"The High and the Mighty"

"And there is the one and only - Regis Toomey.  We all love Regis Toomey.  Wonderful actor.  A favourite of many directors, not just your father.  Your father liked him just fine, but he worked a lot for Capra - he worked for everybody."

- Leonard Maltin to William Wellman, Jr. on the commentary track to the DVD release of 1954s The High and the Mighty.  Toomey plays the operations manager of the airline and enters the picture close to the climax.


Regis Toomey's presence in close to 300 movie and television appearances generally bespoke a comforting image.  If he was in charge you could be sure he knew what he was doing.  If he was your pal, you knew you could trust him.  It wasn't always the way, but he grew into himself.  Toomey was born in Pittsburgh and studied Law before succumbing to the acting bug and toured in musical theatre.  His wife of 56 years, Kathryn Scott was the choreographer of a 1924 production of Rose Marie in which Toomey appeared.  The couple would have two children together.  While touring in England Toomey suffered a severe case of laryngitis which caused him to rethink singing as a career and focus on acting.  His film debut was in Roland West's Oscar nominated 1929 gangster film Alibi starring Chester Morris.  Toomey is undercover cop Danny McGann and I am not one of the admirers of his performance.  Goodness knows it's not as if I wanted Chester Morris to get away with anything, but my how I found Regis grating.  Perhaps it was the roles that Toomey was getting at this period that actually annoyed me.  The wimpy jealous husband of Mary Astor in 1931s Other Men's Women, the wimpy rich husband of socially unacceptable Barbara Stanwyck in 1932s Shopworn and Loretta Young's unbearably chauvinistic boyfriend in 1933s She Had to Say Yes.  I was just waiting for the "real" Regis Toomey to start showing up in the movies.

Frank Jenks, Roscoe Karns, Rosalind Russell, Porter Hall
Gene Lockhart, Regis Toomey, Cliff Edwards
"His Girl Friday"

By "real" Regis Toomey, I might mean movie cop and Detective "Smiley" North in 1934s Hildegarde Withers flick Murder on the Blackboard is a great start.  In 1935s "G" Men he is FBI agent Eddie Buchanan whose death at the hands of mobsters incites pal "Brick" Davis played by James Cagney to join the Agency to extract revenge.  There follows a string of reporters, cops and working stiffs and a nice role as railroader Paddy O'Rourke in C.B. DeMille's 1939 epic Union Pacific.  In 1940s His GirlFriday Toomey is tops as one of the fast-talking, wise-cracking reporters.

Walter Brennan, Gary Cooper, Regis Toomey
J. Farrell MacDonald, Ann Doran
"Meet John Doe"

Frank Capra's 1941 feature Meet John Doe gives us grade A, number 1 Regis Toomey as Bert Hanson, one of the fellows who starts up the John Doe Clubs, along with his wife played by Ann Doran.  They are also there on the rooftop at the Christmas Eve finale of the picture, giving comfort.

Humphrey Bogart, Regis Toomey
"The Big Sleep"

As Chief Inspector Barney Ohls in 1946s The Big Sleep from Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe novel, Toomey may be the only sane person in the entire movie!  Maybe you have a favourite Regis Toomey role in The Devil and Miss Jones, The Bishop's Wife, Mighty Joe Young, Raw Deal,DrumsAcross the River or dozens other titles.

Regis Toomey, Dick Powell, Richard Erdman
"Cry Danger"

In 1951s The Tall Target directed by Anthony Mann and starring Regis Toomey's close real-life friend Dick Powell, Toomey is once again a cop and once again his murder sets off the action in possibly the best thriller ever set on a train.  The same year he co-stars with Powell in Cry Danger as a police officer whom Powell's character describes as having the "face of a saint and the heart of a thug".  Perfect.

Jean Simmons, Marlon Brando
Regis Toomey, Kathryn Givney
"Guys and Dolls"

In 1955s Guys and Dolls Regis Toomey uses that "face of a saint" as Sarah Brown's (Jean Simmons) Uncle Arvide Abernathy.  One of the great shames of this movie version of the classic musical (besides having Brando and Sinatra in the wrong roles) is that they omitted Arvide's lovely little song "More I Cannot Wish You".  It would have been a lovely moment for Regis Toomey and the audience.  
Detectives Les Hart, Tim Tilson and Captain Amos Burke
Regis Toomey, Gary Conway, Gene Barry
"Burke's Law"

TV kept Regis Toomey busy from 1950 on with guest appearances and recurring roles on shows from The Mickey Rooney Show in 1954 to Petticoat Junction in 1968.  Many of the programs were produced by Dick Powell's Four Star Productions including Richard Diamond, Private Detective, Zane Grey Theater and Four Star Playhouse.  I most enjoy Burke's Law with its cheeky mystery plots and line-up of Golden Age of Hollywood guest stars.  The 1963 - 1964 series often poked fun at Det. Les Hart's (Regis Toomey) age and memory reaching back to silent screen days.  Regis Toomey passed away from natural causes at the age of 93.  The man with the enviable career once said "I'd rather be a supporting actor than a star.  Supporting actors last longer."

The Peter Cushing Centennial Blogathon: Sherlock Holmes

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The Peter Cushing Centennial Blogathon is well underway and features much of interest.  Many thanks to our esteemed host Frankensteinia's Pierre Fournier.


Waiting in line at a coffee shop I overheard a fellow complain to his friend that "all of a sudden that Sherlock Holmes character is everywhere and it's getting annoying".  I so wanted to mention to the stranger that the phenomenon was not "all of a sudden", but simply the result of having been born in the last 100 years.  However, his companion settled things by giving the raised eyebrow and a succinct "people like that guy".

Ronald Howard as Sherlock Holmes in 1954

People do like that guy.  They can't get enough Holmes.  Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's four novels and 50-odd stories have never been enough.  The characters of the brilliant consulting detective Holmes and his friend and chronicler Dr. Watson have appeared in further adventures, homages and pastiches that include encounters with Jack the Ripper, a frozen incarnation in the future and even an animated mouse.  Since William Gillette wrote and performed his play Sherlock Holmes in 1899 innumerable actors have brought Holmes to life on stage, radio and screens large and small.  The Adventures ofSherlock Holmes is a television series from 1954 starring Ronald Howard whose Holmes is not only a brilliant man of action, but charming with a wry smile for the world.  My sister describes him as a Doctor Who sort of Sherlock.  The mind wanders. 

Douglas Wilmer as Sherlock Holmes in 1964

The imposing Douglas Wilmer played Sherlock Holmes in a BBC production of The Speckled Band in 1964.  Versatile Nigel Stock was the embodiment of Dr. Watson.  Here our Watson is not the bumbler as was increasingly required of Nigel Bruce in the Universal films of the 1940s, but more of a befuddled companion.  No more befuddled, I dare say, than the rest of us when we first read the Holmes stories.  Like Watson, it is after the mystery has been cleared that it all seems perfectly obvious.  The BBC planned to continue the series, this time in colour, in 1968 and while Stock was on board as Watson, Wilmer had other career fish to fry.  Fortunately for fans Wilmer never entirely left Holmes, playing the detective in 1975s The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes Smarter Brother, recording audio versions of the stories and making a cameo appearance in The Reichenbach Fall episode of 2012s Sherlock.  The BBC in 1968 had to look to another Holmes.  John Neville was first choice having earned his Holmes stripes hunting Jack the Ripper in 1965s A Study in Terror, but he declined.  Happily, Peter Cushing accepted the gig.  What took them so long?


Terror Stalks the Moor!
Horror Fills the Night!

Cushing first became Holmes in Hammer Film Productions 1959 lush and lurid Technicolor version of the popular The Hound of the Baskervilles.  Andre Morell (TVs Quatermass) is Watson and Christopher Lee is Sir Henry.  Was there a busier actor than Peter Cushing?  Classic roles in television plays and in movies with names like Mr. Darcy, Sir Robert Morton, Victor Frankenstein and Van Helsing dot his resume, and now Sherlock Holmes.  Here we had a Holmes in colour and looking every inch as he should.  The brilliant observations fall naturally in his clipped speech.  The impatience with incompetence, yet the patience to see a thing through.  Ah, what a Holmes indeed.

Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes in 1968

Only a few episodes of 1968s Sherlock Holmes survive for our viewing pleasure and they are all adaptions of original Conan Doyle stories.  The plots adhere to the stories with necessary cuts for time and compression of events.  Much of the dialogue, particularly the explanations from Holmes come straight from the page.  The sets are much more than serviceable, but not as rich as we would find in productions of today.  Much use of location shooting is made when necessary.  The Hound of the Baskervilles is presented in two parts with a fine supporting cast and works as a public service announcement to stay away from that Grimpen Mire.  A Study in Scarlet is a lot of story to tell in 50 minutes, but they manage nicely even throwing a music hall entertainer into the mix.  The adaption does not delve into the first meeting of Holmes and Watson, but features their established personaes.  The BascombeValley Mystery is another that benefits greatly from location shooting.  The Sign of Four loses none of its inherit excitement despite the truncated version.  There are some very nice touches concerning the attraction between Dr. Watson and Miss Morstan.  Sir Arthur favoured us with one mystery set at Christmas and you'll want some eggnog when watching The Blue Carbuncle which is currently available on the inestimable YouTube.  Reminder:  I've never tried goose.  I wonder if it tastes like chicken.

The theme music promises we are about to see something chilling and mysterious.  However, I find the program more comforting than anything else perhaps due to familiarity with the stories.  There is also a comforting familiarity to seeing Peter Cushing as Holmes almost a decade after he first took on the role.  The audience slips into the show the way he slipped into the dressing gown and settled into 221B Baker Street.

Holmes and Watson
Peter Cushing and Nigel Stock

Beyond the stories, it is the characters of Holmes and Watson that tie generations of fans together.  The continuity of Nigel Stock's Watson is a boon for this program.  Peter Cushing is the jewel in the crown.  The planes of his face, his sharp features and those piercing eyes continually draw you to him.  His thoughtful and natural delivery leaves no doubt as to who is in charge and the smartest one in the room.  When he has inadvertently dismissed Watson's efforts or assistance, Holmes' "My dear fellow!" is honestly contrite, but he just doesn't seem to understand why Watson should be hurt, why he doesn't get the joke.  We should all have such a friend as Watson who will put up with our foibles.

Holmes and Watson
Peter Cushing and John Mills

Peter Cushing was 46 when he first played Holmes in the feature The Hound of the Baskervilles and 55 when he starred in the television series.  At the age of 71 Peter Cushing was directed by Roy Ward Baker as Sherlock Holmes in the TV movie The Masks of Death with  John Mills co-starring as Dr. Watson.  Here is something unique in representations of the world's most popular fictional character.  An actor portraying a character through a span of his lifetime.  Here is a Holmes altered by age.  Still with the same intellect and ferocious need to solve a puzzle.  Still with the steel in his backbone.  Still our Holmes.  Still our Peter Cushing.     

Caftan Woman's Choice: One for June on TCM

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Peter Sellers is brilliantly funny as the title character in 1964s The World of Henry Orient and you are forgiven for thinking that he is the star of the picture when he is not.  The three stars of this unique and quirky film are two teenage girls and New York City.

Nora Johnson was 23 when her source novel was published.  The core idea was based on the crush she and some girlhood friends had on well-known pianist and bon vivant Oscar Levant.  If there is such a thing as a writing gene, no doubt Nora inherited it from her father, reporter, humourist and Oscar nominated screenwriter Nunnally Johnson.  Among his movie gifts are The Grapes of Wrath, The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit, How to Marry a Millionaire, The Gunfighter, Roxie Hart, The Woman in the Window, The Mudlark and The Prisoner of Shark Island.  He and Nora collaborated on the screenplay for the movie. 

The World of Henry Orient was the third feature film for director George Roy Hill whose previous work included many of the live television anthology programs of the 1950s, Period of Adjustment starring Jane Fonda and Jim Hutton and Toys in the Attic with Geraldine Page and Dean Martin.  Later triumphs include Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and The Sting.  The cinematographer, Boris Kaufman, was no stranger to location shooting, but the carefree atmosphere prevalent in this colour feature is a far cry from the mean streets of 1954s On the Waterfront.  The original score is from that master manipulator Elmer Bernstein.

Merrie Spaeth, Tippy Walker
"Gil" and "Val"

Two lonely teenage girls meet early in a new school year and become instant best friends.  Name actresses such as Hayley Mills and Patty Duke were considered for the roles, however much to the betterment of the story two newcomers to films were cast.  Merrie Spaeth plays Marian Gilbert or "Gil".  Gil lives in a homey townhouse with her divorced mother played by the sympathetic Phyllis Thaxter and family friend, a deliciously sarcastic Bibi Osterwald.  Gil has lots of love and attention, but cannot help but feel a sense of abandonment as her father has moved to Florida with a new wife and new children.  Tippy Walker is Valerie Campbell Boyd or "Val".  Val comes from money and divides her time between school and psychiatric appointments.  It seems Val has issues.   Those issues may be based on the fact that she lives alone in the city with servants.  Her well-meaning but ineffectual father played by Tom Bosley travels for business.  Her socialite mother played by Angela Lansbury travels for fun and perhaps to forget that she has a growing daughter.  Fans of Murder, SheWrote (and aren't we all?) will get a great kick out of seeing "Sheriff Tupper" and "Mrs. Fletcher" in these high society roles.

Peter Sellers
"Henry Orient"

Val is the leader of the two girls in their games of imaginative role play with Manhattan as their playground.  After a chance encounter in Central Park their energies and devotion is transferred to avant-garde pianist Henry Orient, becoming his admiring and non-threatening stalkers.  The trouble for Henry Orient is that these adolescents are cramping his style.  Henry Orient is one big phony baloney who fancies himself an international playboy.  The latest object of his desire is Mrs. Stella Dunnworthy played by Paula Prentiss.  It is one of life's joyous mysteries how Ms. Prentiss can be so elegant and so goofy at the same time.  The young wife has artistic aspirations and is intrigued and flattered by Henry Orient, but she's also a conventional suburban housewife with a guilty conscious.  Every surreptitious move of Mrs. Dunnworthy and Mr. Orient is observed by Val and Gil, and it has the almost adulterous couple on a comic edge.

Inevitable change comes about when the worlds of the adults and the teens collide.  Change is not necessarily a bad thing although emotional fallout can be traumatic.  The World of Henry Orient is both funny in its situations and a very true coming-of-age story.

In 1967 a musical version of the story called Henry, Sweet Henry with songs by Bob Merrill, book by Nunnally Johnson and directed by George Roy Hill had a brief run of 80 performances on Broadway.  Don Ameche played Henry Orient and Carol Bruce (Mother Carlson, WKRP in Cincinnati) played Mrs. Boyd.  Tony nominations were received by Michael Bennett for choreography and Alice Playten as featured actress.

If necessary, I can provide testimony from relatives who succumbed to my browbeating about watching this movie and genuinely thanked me for being so persistent.  My coming to your house and making you plop down in front of the television is not outside the realm of possibility.

TCM is screening The World of Henry Orient on Tuesday, June 25th at 10:00 p.m.

A Liebster! For me?

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Have you met Gwen of Movies, Silently?  She's a grand gal - knowledgeable, bright and with a great sense of humour.  A couple of weeks back Gwen graciously awarded this blog the coveted Liebster Award.  In such cases I would like to be diligent about responding, but it's been a busy time with the end of my choir's season.  In March when Aurora of Once Upon a Screen sent the Liebster my way, I backed out of the forwarding component of the award and feel I must continue in that vein.  One reason being that I fear I may have forgotten whom I may have "liebstered" in the past (a mind is a terrible thing to waste).  However, I would like to suggest that anyone who stumbles into this little corner of the internet take a gander at my blog list and take the time to check out at least one blog you may not have visited  before.  I guarantee a good time.

I blushingly thank Gwen very much for the honour and present 11 Caftan Woman facts:

1.  I'm afraid of heights.
2.  I play the lottery every week.  One ticket.  Hopelessly optimistic.
3.  Our first family cats were named Buddy and Sally after famous sitcom characters.
4.  I consider gravy a beverage.
5.  My favourite "boy bands" are The Hi Lo's, The Mills Brothers and The Sons of the Pioneers.
6.  I stopped dying my hair a few years ago because I like silver highlights and I'm lazy.
7.  When I was a little girl I wanted to be a poet or a big band singer when I grew up.
8.  I used to play hookey and hang out in the school library reading plays.
9.  I love the sound of a train whistle late at night.
10. Don't ask me about my kids or I will never stop talking.
11. My husband and I both thought the theme to The Great Escape would be a good recessional wedding theme, but the church organist didn't know it.

Reporter Gwen's questions:


1. What is one of your favorite “show, don’t tell” movie moments? You know, moments that really symbolize the characters, mood or setting without dialogue or narration.
Rev. Clayton tries to make himself invisible while Ethan and Martha silently say good-bye in John Ford's The Searchers.

2. Name five of your favorite film scores.
The Big Country (Jerome Moross)
Shane (Victor Young)
Black Beauty (Danny Elfman)
Dial M for Murder (Dimitri Tiomkin)
Rear Window (Franz Waxman)

3. What was your favorite childhood game?
Cops and Robbers


4. What really weird food did you like as a kid?
I was crazy for bologna.  My grandparents had a store and Pappy would give me a slice of bologna whenever a customer ordered any.

5. What decade of the 20th century exemplifies coolness to you?
The 1940s, the dawning of film-noir.


6. Name three underrated movies/books/albums that you think everyone should see/read/listen to. (Choose three of the same or mix and match!)
3 British comedies:  The Happiest Days of Your Life, A Run for Your Money, Genevieve

7. What music would you like to have played every time you enter a room?
Ron Goodwin's theme for Miss Marple, Murder She Said.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpKEDinZn0g

8. What is your favorite thing to cook?
I love to bake, especially my mom's recipe for black and white squares.


9. The store you lose yourself in is The World's Biggest Book Store in Toronto.

10. How do you eat Oreos? (Or the #1 goodie in your country if you are not in the U.S.)
Funny thing.  My daughter just tucked into a bag of Oreos.  They don't do anything for me any more.  I'll have to bake those black and white squares. 

11. How did you decide on the name of your blog?
Five years ago I bought myself a caftan.  It was a thing of beauty and polyester and many colours.  My husband and daughter laughed at me.  I haughtily placed my hands on my hips in the classic Wonder Woman stance and said "You dare to laugh at Caftan Woman?!"  I liked the sound of it.

Thanks, Gwen.  It's a pleasure to sound off and humbling to be honoured.

A Quarter of a Century!

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Dum-dee-dum-dum.  It was Saturday, June 25, 1988.  It was hot and hazy in Toronto.  We were working the Marriage Watch out of St. Mark's United.  The groom was Garry.  I carried a bouquet.  I was the bride.  Dum-dee-dum-dum-dah.

Judge and Mrs. Hardy and children
Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, Fay Holden, Cecilia Parker

On that day in 1988 25 years in the future seemed a long time coming.  I imagined us morphing into dignified middle age like MGMs Carvel couple pictured above.

Ma and Pa Kettle
Percy Kilbride, Marjorie Main

Our actual level of refinement reached as far as Universal International's money making marrieds of the 50s.  I am reminded of Charlie Chan in Charlie Chan at the Race Track when he said "Truth sometimes like stab of cruel knife."

Garry's favourite movie quote is from His Girl Friday.

Walter:  "And I still claim I was tight the night I proposed to you. If you had been a gentleman, you would have forgotten all about it."



Happy Anniversary, Sweetie 


Funny Lady blogathon: Judy Holliday

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Judy Holliday
1921 - 1965

A baker's dozen of film performances and two bona-fide Broadway hits out of five shows does not seem the stuff of legend.  When those film performances include one of the Academy's rare Best Actress Oscars for a comedic performance and the Broadway hit was a Tony winner for its leading lady, you know you are dealing with someone very special.  Today I celebrate the sadly brief, but joyously creative life of Judy Holliday.

Judy Tuvim was an only child whose sense of self worth was compromised by the divorce of her parents.  The bright girl, who tested with an IQ of 172, loved crosswords and made her mark in school as a writer.  Like many imaginative, creative people Judy was intrigued by the theatre and saw herself as a writer/director.  While still a teen a family friend found her job as switchboard operator with the Mercury Theater.  She unsuccessfully auditioned for a small role in one of the productions, but took advantage of the opportunity afforded to pour over manuscripts.

Prone to illness, 17-year-old Judy took a leave of absence from her work and she and her mother attended a summer camp for adults in the Catskills.  The entertainment director at the camp was an energetic 24-year old Adolph Green.  The future writing partner of Betty Comden and Oscar nominee (The Band Wagon, It's Always Fair Weather) was taken with the bright girl with the dazzling smile and sharp mind.  A fast friendship was formed that would impact both their lives.  Back in New York City, Judy found an offbeat nightclub ran by a man named Max Gordon.  The Vanguard featured poets and other bohemian entertainers looking for a place to ply their wares.  Judy wrangled a spot for her friend Adolph and his group.  She planned to help out with backstage duties.  After a few unpromising weeks at the venue the troupe of comic performers now known as The Revuers was solidified with Adolph, Betty, Alvin Hammer, John Frank and Judy.

Over the next six years the young people wrote  and performed skits lampooning the arts and their beloved NYC.  They learned what worked with different audiences as they moved from cozy venues to massive halls developing their following.  A cross country tour took them to Hollywood in 1944 with hope in their hearts and a scene in the film Greenwich Village which ended on the cutting room floor.  Judy was given a contract at 20th Century Fox which she was loath to accept as it didn't include her friends.  At this point, The Revuers had run its course so Judy and her mother remained in California while Betty and Adolph returned to New York.  At 20th Century Fox Judy had a bit as a defense plant worker in Something for the Boys and a lovely turn as a military wife in Winged Victory, but was then dropped by the studio.  Too much of a character actress to be a perky leading lady and too much of a leading lady to be a movie character actress, she left Hollywood disappointed but with a new name.

A showy role in a wartime romance Kiss Them for Me on Broadway in 1945 brought a lot of attention to the young actress.  Judy's name was mentioned as a possibility to Garson Kanin and producer Max Gordon (not her earlier benefactor) as a possible replacement for Jean Arthur in their upcoming production, Born Yesterday.  Kanin had written Born Yesterday thinking specifically of Jean Arthur for the lead, but for whatever reason - her well-known shyness, lack of confidence in the material - Miss Arthur contacted cold feet and opted out of the show.  On three days notice for an out-of-town tryout, Judy Holliday flung herself into the role of Billie Dawn.  Billie is the showgirl companion of industrialist and top-level political manipulator Harry Brock (Paul Douglas).  Harry feels Billie is holding him back in society and hires a tutor (Gary Merrill) to smooth off her rough edges.  Billie is a girl who isn't quite as dumb as she acts.  A girl has to do what a girl as to do to get along.  She's ready for a new attitude and a new man as she becomes a more confident woman who turns the tables on Harry to get what she wants.  Judy Holliday as a hit playing the role for almost 1000 performances.  Replacement and touring Billie's included Jan Sterling, Jean Parker, Jean Hagen and Cara Williams.  Marie Wilson, Gloria Grahame, Barbara Hale and Celeste Holm were all touted for the film version although Harry Cohn of Columbia had purchased the property with Rita Hayworth planned for the lead.  Romance (Hayworth married Aly Khan) and a bit of skullduggery by Garson Kanin and George Cukor helped Judy return to Hollywood in style.


Garson Kanin and his wife Ruth Gordon had written Adam's Rib for Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy and that film (one of my favourite talkies) was to be directed by George Cukor who was also tapped for Born Yesterday.  Cukor had been convinced that Judy was the only one to play Billie Dawn on screen, but they had to overcome Cohn's objection.  Kanin and Gordon convinced Judy to play Doris Attinger in Adam's Rib, the accused defended by Hepburn and prosecuted by Tracy.  They would beef up the role and the talented actress would take care of the rest.  Judy's first scene on the shoot was when she tells her tale of woe to attorney Amanda Bonner.  Cukor placed the camera over Hepburn's shoulder and let Judy do her stuff.  He was prepared to set up for reaction shots from Hepburn, but that star told him to forget it.  It was Judy's scene.  It certainly was.  Harry Cohn bowed to the inevitable and Judy starred in Born Yesterday with Oscar winner (All the King's Men) Broderick Crawford as Harry and future Oscar winner (Stalag 17) William Holden as Paul. 

Billie:  Would ya' do me a favor, Harry?
Harry:  What?
Billie:  Drop dead!

Judy knew Billie Dawn inside and out, but the screen version was different from the stage in that Hollywood liked to play up the dumb showgirl look for all it was worth.  Judy gave us the tough dame, the good-hearted kid, the sly plotter, the woman in love.  There is not a false note in the highs and lows of the script.  The Oscar nomination was well deserved along with those for Bette Davis in All About Eve, Anne Baxter in All About Eve, Eleanor Parker in Caged and Gloria Swanson in SunsetBoulevard.  A line-up such as that makes one realize just how silly on an artistic level is the idea of the award, although no one can fault its value in promotion.  Judy was in New York on Oscar night as were nominees Celeste Holm, Gloria Swanson and Jose Ferrer who arranged a party and radio hook-up should any of them win.  Jose received the trophy for Cyrano de Bergerac and gave a speech.  Judy's award was accepted for her in Hollywood by Ethel Barrymore before she could reach the microphone.   

At the time of her Oscar win Judy was married to musician/recording executive David Oppenheim.  The following year their son Jonathan would be born.  A career which included long stints out of town was just one of the pressures which would end the marriage in 1958 after ten years.

Judy's follow-up to Born Yesterday had to be something that would take her out of the world of the dumb blonde.  Directed again by George Cukor with a script by Kanin and Gordon, 1952s TheMarrying Kind was a serio-comic look at the romance and marriage of a lower middle class couple played by Judy and, in his first leading role, Aldo Ray.  The couple in this film are completely relateable with the humour springing from the characters and situations.  The tragedy faced by the family comes suddenly and nothing feels forced.  You root for the Keefers because of the sensitivity of the performances and the strangeness of seeing something that aims for reality on the screen.  This isn't the scrubbed clean middle class nor the dust-free slums which movie viewers had become accustomed to through the years.  


After the birth of her son in 1952, Judy would not be another film until 1954.  Again it was a Cukor vehicle from the pen of Garson Kanin.  Her leading man was Jack Lemmon and the movie the charming and insightful It Should Happen to You.  Judy is Gladys Glover who came to NYC to make a name for herself.  When the gods of fame seemed to be neglecting the untalented yet ambitious miss, Gladys put her savings into having her name plastered on a billboard.  If this were contemporary time she would probably make a sex tape, but seeing as this was 60 years ago, all she had to do to get her name in lights was to put it there herself.  Once people have heard of you, then you are a celebrity.  Gladys soon found herself the spokeswoman for products and the object of amorous and financial attention from Peter Lawford as an executive who at first needed that billboard and then found ways to use Gladys.  None of this goes over very well with Gladys' boyfriend.  Jack Lemmon plays a documentary filmmaker who discovered Gladys in the park one day.  He is of the old-fashioned opinion that fame should be merited and that a person should stand for something.  Silly boy!  Judy Holliday is wonderful and winning as Gladys.  You can't be mad at her.  She is so honest about what she wants, and her eventual come down is almost gut wrenching.  

In 1954 Judy was cast in Phffft for Columbia.  I know I saw the movie once, but it didn't leave much of an impression beyond that Judy always knew what she was doing.  It is again Judy and Jack and their marriage is sidetracked by Jack Carson and Kim Novak.  Judy left the studio feeling that all of the effort that should have been put into her career had been shifted to Miss Novak.

Judy's two 1956 releases were both directed by Richard Quine.  I like Richard Quine's comedies.  They give me a sense of wackiness and sweet melancholy that I find comforting.  The first is an adaption of a Broadway hit The Solid Gold Cadillac by Howard Teichmann and George S. Kaufman.  The play starred Josephine Hull (Arsenic and Old Lace) as Laura Partridge, a small stockholder in a large corporation who gums up the works for the big boys looking to make their profit on the backs of the little guy.  Adapted for the younger Miss Holliday the movie isn't a world shaker, but a rather by-the-numbers good over evil story.  It is Judy reaching out to the other stockholders and opening the heart of an executive, her Broadway co-star Paul Douglas, who makes things work.  Of course, for us today it is also a look at the mid-century offices that has a certain appeal.

The other Quine feature is a charmer that is a personal favourite of mine.  Full of Life is written by John Fante from his own story and experience.  Italian-American writer (Richard Conte) and his wife (Judy) are expecting their first child.  They have bought a little house in suburbia and he has set up his writing office in the garage.  Judy gives us one of the screen's first real looks at pregnancy.  The cravings, the jealousy when every woman in the neighbourhood who talks to her husband has a waistline, and the overwhelming need for nesting.  When Emily Rocco falls through the kitchen floor, it is humiliating and no good to remind her it was termites.  Repairs are beyond the couple at this point so they turn to Papa.  Construction is his business.  Also, mending fences with his son before the grandchild arrives is his business.  Making his movie debut is opera bass Salvatore Baccaloni.  Everyone is completely believable including the scene-stealing Baccaloni.  Full of Life is a celebration of family that doesn't need to use sentimentality to make you good.


Meanwhile, back in New York, Adolph Green and Betty Comden have written a play that they feel is the perfect showcase for their old friend Judy Holliday.  Bells Are Ringing is the story of Ella Peterson, who works for her cousin Susan at Susanswerphone.  This telephone service provides extra perks as Ella becomes personally involved in the lives of the clients.  She takes on different characters to help others with their problems, ignoring her own loneliness.  To playwright Jeff Moss she is "Mom" over the phone.  She becomes "Melisande Scott" in his real life, helping him to find the discipline to stick to his work.  Typical in its romantic complications, amusing in its subplots and brimming with good humour and music, Bells Are Ringing was a major hit.  Judy and her leading man Sidney Chaplin had begun a romance and that must have added to the good feelings.  Judy won the Tony Award for Distinguished Musical Actress over Julie Andrews in My Fair Lady and Ethel Merman in Happy Hunting.

We are fortunate to have Judy Holliday on screen as Ella in the Vincente Minnelli production of BellsAre Ringing.  Dean Martin is the leading man and look quick for Broadway lead understudy Hal Linden as a nightclub singer.  (Keep on pitching, Hal.  Barney Miller is 14 years in your future.)  The movie gives us a glimpse of what theatre audiences kept returning to again and again.  Any night in the theatre is a night shared with the performers, but some nights are special.  Audiences appreciated the talent of the actress and the spirit of the person that Judy/Ella brought to them.

Bells Are Ringing was not a box office success and it would be Judy's last screen appearance.  Her love and professional lives would merge when she became involved with the great jazz artist Gerry Mulligan.  They collaborated on songs as Judy had never stopped writing, but plans for a Broadway show never came to be.  The public soon lost track of Judy as she became ill first with breast cancer and an unpublicized mastectomy.  Later, throat cancer would claim her life shortly before her 44th birthday in 1965.

Judy's professional legacy is one of a creative soul striving for perfection and achieving greatness in her field.  The awards are markers but perhaps mean less than the acclaim and admiration of her peers and co-stars, the love of her audience and the influence on generations of actresses who aren't afraid to show their comic hearts.  


Movies, Silently is hosting ablogathonlooking at the funny ladies of the silver screen.  Let's enjoy all of the wonderful posts on these grand gals.




       

Caftan Woman's Choice: One for July on TCM

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My late father once told me "You have to watch Fritz Lang".  I believe he meant that literally, but in recent years I've come to think of it as "you have to watch Fritz Lang because he's sneaky".  Many of his films seem to tell a straight-forward story in a straight-forward way, but you'll find yourself sidetracked and your thoughts going in a different direction by the way he'll linger on a face or an object, or not linger on it.  The story of one character becomes the story of another.  The focus on one event or theme days later becomes something else entirely.  I think that's why no matter how many times I have seen it, I never pass up the opportunity to watch 1953s The Big Heat.  Perhaps you feel the same way.
Glenn Ford as Dave Bannion

The Big Heat is the story of corruption in a big city.  A cop named Duncan has the goods on a crime boss named Lagana.  Duncan's suicide elicits a lot of unanswered questions and both sides of law and order are stressed by information that may or may not come out.  There are tough, uncompromising men involved in this scenario including honest detective Dave Bannion (Glenn Ford), respectably-fronted hood Mike Lagana (Alexander Scourby) and his muscle Vince Stone (Lee Marvin).  However, for me, the story of The Big Heat is the story of its women.

Debby and Vince
Gloria Grahame, Lee Marvin

Gloria Grahame is Debby Marsh, Vince's girl.  She's a moll who takes the money and the high life that comes from her association with the powerful element in town.  She's also not as dumb as she lets on, although not as smart as she should be.  She has a good heart and an honest way of looking at the world and her place in it.  Debby is one of the most memorable characters in film-noir and it is due to Gloria's heartbreakingly layered performance.

Katie and Dave
Jocelyn Brando, Glenn Ford

Jocelyn Brando is Katie Bannion, Dave's wife.  She is captured at a perfect time in her life with a loving husband and a sweet young daughter.  The life she is building has a strong foundation and it makes her confident and free to enjoy all her moments.

Bertha Duncan and Dave Bannion
Jeanette Nolan, Glenn Ford

Jeanette Nolan is Bertha Duncan, widow.  Bertha is the reason her late husband was on the take.  She wanted more and her husband's sideways position in the mob was her way to get more.  Her husband's suicide gives her the power she craves and she is more than happy to wield it.  The versatile Ms. Nolan in this film is more Lady Macbeth (1948s Macbeth) than Dirty Sally of her 1974 TV show.  She's cold and resolute.  Her pride perhaps clouds her judgment.

Lucy Chapman and Dave Bannion
Dorothy Green, Glenn Ford

Dorothy Green is Lucy Chapman, Duncan's conscience and B girl.  Ms. Green's soft and pretty looks which would later land her the role of Brooks family matriarch Jennifer on TVs The Young and theRestless plays against Bertha's toughness and her own character's tough circumstances.  It is her relationship with Duncan that precipitates the breakdown of the mob.  Her quietly desperate scene with Bannion as she looks in vain for official solace in Tom Duncan's death is fraught with fear.  She is doomed.

Carolyn Jones is Doris, just a girl at a bar looking for some fun.  Carolyn Jones (Oscar nominee, The Bachelor Party, TVs The Addams Family) always stands out, even in the smallest bits.  In this role she emphasizes things about Debby and Vince that we need to know. Edith Evanson (Shane, IRemember Mama) is Selma Parker, the most invisible of women, middle-aged and lame.  In a city filled with timid men, she sees a way to assist the brave and does so at her peril.  Celia Lovsky's image is the portrait of Mike Lagana's mother that overwhelms his massive den and his life.  The prolific actress and former Mrs. Peter Lorre was a close friend of Fritz Lang's and the first character to say the words "Live long and prosper" as T'Pau on Star Trek: Amok Time

Amid the topcoats and fedoras, the brutality and the conceit, The Big Heat is the story of its women and their hearts.

TCM is screening The Big Heat on Tuesday, July 9 at 9:15 am.

Dynamic Duos in Classic Movies blogathon: Roy Rogers & Dale Evans

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The Nerve of Some People is an adorable number from 1944s Lights of Old Santa Fe that typifies the Roy Rogers - Dale Evans relationship in some 20 features made in the 40s for Republic Studios.  The peppy song was written by Jack Elliott, composer of such hits as Sam's Song, It's So Nice to Have a Man Around the House and the ballad standard In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning.  Elliot garnered many hits writing for Republic Studios.


In Lights of Old Santa Fe Dale plays Marjorie who, with the help of "Gabby" Hayes is trying to keep her family business, a wild west show in the black.  Gabby enlists the aid of Roy and the Sons of the Pioneers and, of course, Trigger.  Marjorie resents this.  Who does that Rogers fellow think he is anyway?  Roy just smiles and does a lot of darn fool things that are all for Margie's own good and after a lot of complications things right themselves in the end.  If this had been RKO in the 30s, they'd be Fred and Ginger on the range.  At MGM it would be Nick and Nora on horseback.  How did this felicitous teaming come about?

Francis Smith was born in Texas in 1912, a bright and precocious girl who moved ahead in school and loved to perform.  At the age of 14 she ran off and married her 18-year-old boyfriend and at 15 was back home with a baby son.  She decided against a reconciliation with her husband and relied on her parent's help to raise her boy Tom as she worked in secretarial jobs and still dreamed of show business.  She wrote songs and eventually landed a gig as a radio singer.  Her popularity as a musician grew over the years and she tried for the big time in Chicago twice.  The first time Dale (the name given to her by a station manager) and her son ended up broke and ill and back home.  The second time, at age 27, she started to grove with bookings in the best clubs and national radio spots.  She picked up stage tips from headliners such as Fats Waller and Ray Bolger.  A Hollywood agent paid for a trip to the coast for an audition for Paramount's Holiday Inn.  At this point Dale figured she was too old for any studio to take an interest, but a friend advised her to take the money and enjoy the trip.  Once in Tinseltown ambition took over and Dale found she really wanted whatever Hollywood had to offer.  If that meant lying about her age and lying about her son by saying he was her kid brother, and working more on her career than on a failing second marriage, she told herself it was all for the greater good.  Paramount didn't want her, but Dale did get a bit in 20th Century Fox's 1942 film Orchestra Wives.  The next year found her at Republic for Swing Your Partner.  The year after that she was paired with the studio's box office champ Roy Rogers for Cowboy and the Senorita.  Dale says she made the silliest senorita you ever saw with her hair dyed raven black and her Texas accent bursting through some phonetic Spanish, but Roy and Dale clicked.  Roy had many lovely leading ladies before Dale including Carol Hughes, Mary Hart, Pauline Moore, but who wants a couple of good scenes and billing behind a horse?  The personality plus band singer gave as good as she got and a new screen team was born.


Leonard Sly was born in Ohio in 1911 to a poor and loving family.  At a young age, Len's father bought a small farm in Duck Run but still worked in a Cincinnati shoe factory to make ends meet.  The younger brother of three sisters took on the responsibility of being the man of the family.  At 18, Len and the folks traveled to California where his oldest sister Mary was living with her husband.  When the family returned to Duck Run it wasn't long before Len made the trip back to the land of sunshine.  He found work picking fruit and working for a trucking company, but his sister had another idea.  Len could play the guitar and sing, and despite his shyness, he entered a radio talent contest.  He found work with a country band and met fellow singer/composer Bob Nolan.  Eventually, with Tim Spencer they would found The Sons of the Pioneers and become popular with their original tunes like Tumbling Tumbleweeds and their unique brand of harmonies and western swing.  Of course, they got paid more in experience than in cold hard cash, but it sure beat picking fruit.  Eventually the group started getting some movie spots.  Singing cowboys were the rage and there was always a scene or two that called for some music and some square dance calling.  At this point Roy was going by the name of Dick Weston and the group appeared in some Gene Autry pictures at Republic.  Gene was renegotiating his contract with studio boss Herbert Yates and walked out before production on what would become 1938s Under Western Stars.  The lead in the film, a congressman from the west who alerts Washington to the needs of people in the dust bowl, was given to the newly christened Roy Rogers.  A star was born.  Roy's natural likeability, good looks, way with a song and with action sequences made him a natural.


A new cowboy star needs a horse so the many stables that rented to the studios sent possible candidates for Roy to check out.  It was love at first sight when Roy rode Golden Cloud, a beautiful palomino stallion who had appeared in The Adventures of Robin Hood.  Smiley Burnett rechristened him Trigger and Roy bought him from the stable for $2,500 on the installment plan.  This purchase made future studio negotiations fun for Roy when Yates couldn't "make anybody a star by putting him on Trigger".


In 1938, the newly successful Roy married Arline Wilkins, whom he had met while the Sons of the Pioneers were on one of their early tours.  Longing for a family, they adopted a daughter Cheryl in 1940 and her arrival was followed by the birth of their daughter Linda and of Roy, Jr. known as Dusty in 1946.  Sadly, Arline passed from complications from the Cesarean birth within a week of Dusty's birth.  The King of the Cowboys had everything he could possibly want at one moment and lost it all in the next.

Roy kept on working and even recent leading lady Dale Evans returned to the fold after trying to shake the cowgirl image in a couple of films that didn't pan out.  Dale recalled that during those days at Republic you worked so closely, for such long hours together that casts and crew became like a family seeing each other at their best and their worst.  However, it wasn't without a great deal of trepidation that Dale accepted Roy's marriage proposal 15 months after Arline's passing.  Not the least of her red flags was the prospect of being a stepmom to two little girls who would probably resent her presence.  However, just like in their movies, Roy knew she'd come around and on the eve of 1948 they were married at the location used for their feature Home in Oklahoma.


Roy and Dale produced and starred in The Roy Rogers Show from 1951 to 1957.  Along with Pat Brady, the jeep Nellybelle, Trigger, Dale's horse Buttermilk and Bullet, the wonder dog (who was also the family pet), they entertained children of all ages with adventures on the range.  Dale wrote the closing theme song, Happy Trails for their radio program.

Some trails are happy ones, others are blue.
It's the way you ride the trail that counts;
Here's a happy one for you.
Happy trails to you until we meet again,
Happy trails to you, keep smilin' until then.
Who cares about the clouds when we're together?
Just sing a song and bring the sunny weather.
Happy trails to you until we meet again.

Joy and sorrow comes to each family.  Dale and Roy had a little daughter whom they named Robin.  She was a Down Syndrome baby with many physical frailties and a poor heart, passing at the age of two.  The couple adopted Mary Doe, of Choctaw background like Roy.  They also adopted Sandy, an abused child from Ohio and Debbie from Korea.  A Scottish girl named Marion joined their family as their ward as they were unable to adopt a British subject.  Debbie was killed with a schoolfriend at the age of 12 in a school bus accident.  Sandy, a young soldier stationed in Germany, died from an unaccustomed bout of binge drinking.  Tragically, that is a story still too common in the news these days.  Dale shared her loss and her comfort in her Faith by writing.  You can learn a lot about this strong woman in Angel Unaware, Hear the Children Crying, Say Yes to Tomorrow and The Woman at the Well.


You can find Roy away from the Republic lot introducing Cole Porter's Don't Fence Me In in 1944s Hollywood Canteen.  In 1948 Roy, Trigger - and the Sons of the Pioneers - were featured in the PecosBill segment of Disney's Melody Time.  (There was a time when my son was a little buckaroo when the only thing that would quiet him down was the Sons of the Pioneers singing Blue Shadows on the Trail.)  Roy and Trigger had some fun with Bob Hope in 1952s Son of Paleface, and Roy and other western stars have fun cameos in Hope's 1959 feature Alias Jesse James.  Roy's last movie was 1975s Mackintosh and T.J. wherein young Clay O'Brien learns all those lessons Roy taught generations of kids through the years.  Around that time Roy had a surprise hit with the song Hoppy, Gene and Me.  1991 saw the release of an album called Tribute featuring Roy singing duets with contemporary country and western vocalists such as Clint Black, Ricky Van Shelton, Emmylou Harris and more.  Roy introduced films under the banner Great Movie Cowboys in syndication, and he and Dale hosted a similar program for their films on the Nashville Network.  Just  like in their movies Dale would be cracking wise and Roy would sit back and smile.

For many years visitors could enjoy memorabilia of the Rogers family life and career at their museum in California and then Branson, Missouri.  The museum was closed and the items auctioned in 2010.  According to news reports of the time, auctioneer Cathy Elkies said it was the "most colorful, emotional and sentimental" sale she had experienced in her 20 years at Christie's.  Roy's passing in 1998 was headline making news and I recall that the PBS Newshour dedicated half of their program to recalling the joy Roy brought to us.  Dale passed away 2001.

The barefoot boy from Duck Run and the sassy gal from Texas left their mark on show business and in the hearts of generations of adoring fans.


Once Upon a Screen and Classic Movie Hub are co-sponsoring the Dynamic Duos in Classic Movies Blogathon.  I know you'll enjoy all of the informative and entertaining entries.   

Me-TVs Summer of Classic TV Blogathon: My Three Sons

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This post is part of the Me-TVs Summer of Classic TV Blogathon hosted by the Classic TV Blog Association.

I could be having such fun with Me-TV because they are running My-Show, My Three Sons.  The program ran from 1960 - 1972, that's 12 seasons of situation comedy shenanigans originally on ABC and then from 1966 on CBS.

We are invited into the life of the Douglas clan of Bryant Park, Somewhere, USA.  Widowed aerospace engineer Steve (Fred MacMurray) is raising his three sons Mike (Tim Considine), Robbie (Don Grady) and "Chip" (Stanley Livingston) with the help of his father-in-law "Bub" O'Casey (William Frawley).  Film star MacMurray moved into the world of television with a unique contract which allowed for the shooting of all of his scenes in a block.  Over the years much has been written that this arrangement may have been difficult for others on the set, but I've always thought it was cool that someone could get bosses to see things his way.  The strange way of getting the product in the can certainly didn't impact the viewer's response to the quirky show.  I think it may have led to a sense of freedom and certainly a very nice energy among the young performers.

The Douglas' lifestyle is very relatable.  The house (set) looks lived in with newspapers on the floor, dishes drying in the dish rack and nothing ever in its assigned spot.  The boys, especially Chip, sleep in mismatched shirts and pajama pants and the dog, Tramp, is everywhere.  Teenagers do not wake up when first summoned and they never want to do their allotted chores.  There's bickering and yelling, and nobody listens.  It's a real home.

Time would bring many changes to My Three Sons.  Eventually Tim Considine left the program as Mike married and moved away.  Another third son was welcomed to the fold in the form of orphaned Ernie Thompson (Barry Livingston).  The kid cracks me up!  William Frawley became ill and was replaced by William Demarest as cantankerous Uncle Charley.  The original black and white show was now in colour.  The Douglas family moved to Los Angeles where Robbie married Katie (Tina Cole) and they were saddled with triplets.  Steve married Barbara (Beverly Garland).  Not much was asked of Beverly as a sitcom wife, but she gave more than was called for with her vibrant personality.  Barbara came with a daughter Dodie (Dawn Lynn), a game little actress surrounded by adults who did not know how to write for a little girl.  Chip (little Chip!) married Polly Williams (Ronne Troup).  It was fun to watch her parents played by Doris Singleton and Norm Alden.

When I first married the housing market was tight in Toronto and my husband and I moved into the basement apartment in his family home.  I was not altogether thrilled with the arrangement and as I unpacked I muttered under my breath that "When Mike married Sally he left the show".  From another room, my husband with his Vulcan hearing countered with "Yeah?  Well, Robbie and Katie movied in!"

I don't know which era of programs Me-TV is treating fans to presently, but I raise a toast to them and to My Three Sons whether it is Robbie as a klutz, an escaped lion roaming the Douglas house or Chip and Polly freezing their salad.  While we're toasting, let's include three of my favourite episodes from Season 1.

Back row:  Tim Considine, Fred MacMurray
Down front:  William Frawley, Stanley Livingston, Don Grady


Countdown
Director:  Peter Tewksbury
Writers:  George Tibbles, James Leighton, Peter Tewksbury
Original air date:  October 20, 1960

A Monday morning with the Douglas family.  The alarm goes off at 8:00 am and nobody wants to get up.  A sleepy Steve stumbles to his draft board and places the drawing he has been working on all weekend in a tube to take to the office.  The important work lands instead in the garbage can by the desk.  Robbie sounds a drowsy Reveille on his trumpet, drops it to the floor and goes back to sleep.  Chip and Tramp amble to the living room and turn on the TV watching the launching of a satellite.  Mike does some half-hearted calisthenics and works on memorizing Chaucer for class.  Bub starts yelling for the laundry, and for the trash for the incinerator.  Chip has nothing for "Show and Tell".  Robbie hasn't written his English assignment because nothing dramatic has ever happened to him.

From the television we hear Paul Frees as the announcer describe the intricate machinations which go into the launching of a satellite and how every person involved is integral and has a role to play in the success of the operation in the important period leading up to the countdown.  This narration is mirrored by the actions of the Douglasses coping with four fellows and one bathroom, homework assignments, household chores, lost items and a myriad of little details leading up to their own countdown.  Disasters are averted as we reach zero hour and as the satellite falls from the air in a spectacular failure we learn that the broadcast is originally from 1957 and the car radio alerts our intrepid crew that their clocks were wrong due to daylight saving time.  Steve finds a spot on the couch, Mike and Bub are on chairs, Chip is on Tramp and all are sleeping except for Robbie who finally has something dramatic to write about for class.

Dorothy Green

Lady Engineer
Director:  Peter Tewksbury
Writer:  Dorothy Cooper
Original air date:  November 10, 1960

Dorothy Green (Face of a Fugitive, The Big Heat, The Young and the Restless) guest stars as Dr. J.M. Johnson, a freelance engineer hired to assist Steve on a project.  The attractive woman is devoted to her career, but Steve is smitten.  When they first meet Steve doesn't realize she is to be his new working partner, and follows her through the maze of office cubicles with a lost glove to some spiffy jazzy flute music.  He assumes she is one of the guests on "Visitor Day" and attempts to make conversation by explaining the work and equipment.  He feels very foolish when put on the spot by Dr. Johnson, but the infatuation continues.  Steve hopes a working dinner may lead to romance and he tries to arrange the perfect atmosphere at the restaurant with low lighting and flowers and practicing his moves.  Again, Steve is made to feel foolish when he sees Dr. Johnson has arrived and has been observing him from another booth.  Fred MacMurray is so much fun to watch in his anticipation and discomforture.  I think one of the things that made him such a good, solid actor in all of his roles is that MacMurray started as a musician.  He plays those notes on the page as called for, but he's not afraid to add those grace notes.  Things gradually do start to move toward a more personal relationship between Steve and Joan, but she stops short from meeting his family, afraid to get caught.  They miss their last chance to be together because of a missed phone message and after we get to see Steve in a situation away from home, it is back to broken appliances and taking care of the boys.

Unite or Sink
Director:  Peter Tewksbury
Writer:  Art Friedman
Original air date:  April 6, 1961

Mike and Robbie have a lot of things in common, they are both broke, they are both looking for an odd job and they are getting on each other's last nerve.  Steve wonders why the boys have never thought of just doing something for somebody just for the sake of doing it.  When the milkman Harry (Robert Gothie) mentions that the Jensons need their fence painted, Robbie gets the job from Mr. Jenson and Mike arranges the same thing by telephone with Mrs. Jenson.  Mr. and Mrs. J are away from home when Mike and Robbie start haggling about the job while Chip and his pal "Sudsy" (Ricky Allen) goof around.  Mrs. Foster (Ann Morgan Guilbert) is watching the boys and gets involved in an advisory capacity with Mike and Robbie's paint job.  Mr. Kincaid (Malcolm Atterbury) starts contributing his two cents and so does Bub when he comes along on his second trip of that day to the grocery store.  More neighbours, Verna (Pearl Shear) and Pete (Bill Idelson) fill out the crowd.  Everyone is talking about everything under the sun from Bub's navy days to ecology to silent films to sports to housework.  While they talk, and not really listen, everyone starts pitching in on the Jenson's yard.  Chip and Sudsy start selling their lemonade and sandwiches, eventually branching out to fruit and veggies when a seller passes the street.  The day rolls on and the Jenson's yard is neat and tidy, Chip and Sudsy are successful entrepreneurs and Mike, with Robbie's agreement, writes "No Charge" on their bill to Mr. Jenson.  Back at home, Steve is at first upset at the thought of the boys making money of an elderly couple on a pension, but Mr. Jenson's phone call of thanks makes Steve proud of his sons, and he's more than happy to spot them an extra couple of bucks for Saturday night.  The theme of people pulling together, the cohesive work of the acting ensemble, the clever non sequitur lines and editing make Unite and Sink an all-time great in sitcom history. 


Barbara Stanwyck Blogathon: The Barbara Stanwyck Show (1960-61)

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Tonight, from Hollywod, The Barbara Stanwyck Show.  After the announcement, Earle Hagen's dramatic and slightly melancholy theme begins and there she is, Miss Barbara Stanwyck, dressed to the nines in a gown from Werle.  She smiles and welcomes us to the program, briefly outlining the episode's plot, the writers and director and, sometimes, her co-star.

From an interview with Kay Gardella:  "I hated playing the role of hostess every week.  I know Loretta Young loved it when she had her show on, but I couldn't stand it.  I was lousy at it.  I find I have to hide behind something.  I can't just play myself."

If Barbara Stanwyck felt outside her comfort zone in the pre- and post-episode hostess role, it really didn't show.  The taglines were often rather cute with a rueful smile or joke or praise for her co-stars.  As a viewer, I looked forward to sharing a couple of moments with the star.  In a couple of instances when she thanked the audience for their letters and asked if they would please let them know which episodes they enjoyed the most you can almost imagine her saying to herself "let them like the westerns best, please".  The unaired pilot for the program was a western story.

Barbara Stanwyck had been a movie star for over 30 years, but the movie executives have always had trouble seeing past a birth certificate.  Executives in all eras seem to think that what the public wants are new faces.  While it is true that audiences are more than happy to give those new faces a chance, we still want our old friends.  However, the number of film roles and, in some instances, their quality had declined for our Missy as she entered her 50s.  Television was the way to go and Barbara Stanwyck was no elitist.  She lived to work and she would follow the work.

Barbara Stanwyck's first major foray into television was guesting four times on Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater.  The actor turned successful producer had an amazing array of names appearing on programs under the Four Star banner.  During this time, westerns were the big thing on television and Barbara Stanwyck, little Ruby Stevens from Brooklyn, had become an adept horsewoman and stunt player in the role of many strong-minded western females.  Surely Stanwyck on TV in a western was a perfect fit.  The "brain boys", as she referred to the network executives, considered westerns the exclusive domain of men.  Dale Evans and Annie Oakley (Gail Davis) were for kids.

Also popular at the time were anthology series, such as the previously mentioned Zane Grey Theater (1956-1961), The Twilight Zone (1959-1964), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955-1962) and the crown jewel of them all, The Loretta Young Show (1953-1961).  Other big name film stars took their turn with Jane Wyman Present The Fireside Theater (1955-1958) and The DuPont Show with June Allyson (1959-1961).  In 1960 it was time for The Barbara Stanwyck Show.


Executive Producer Louis Edelman and Barbara Stanwyck began their long friendship in the 1930s where Mr. Edelman began working as a producer for Warner Brothers.  Some of the familiar titles he worked on include G-Men, The Fighting 69th, I'll See You in My Dreams and White Heat.  In the 1950s he moved into television producing such successful shows as The Life and Legend of WyattEarp and Make Room for Daddy.  Producer William H. Wright had been in production at MGM working on such films as Stars in My Crown, Black Hand, Act of Violence and The Naked Spur.  There is also a credit for Barwyck productions which would indicate a deeply personal stake for the star.  With a trusted friend at the helm, Barbara Stanwyck was in good hands and only the best would do for each half hour episode.  Writers included A.E. Bezzerides (Thieves' Highway, On DangerousGround), Blanche Hanalis (Little House on the Prairie) and Leonard Praskins (Maverick, Wagon Train).  Directors for the series would include the Dean of 50s TV David Lowell Rich, Jacques Tourneur (Out of the Past) and Richard Whorf (Champagne for Caesar).  And if a lady wants to look her best she can do no better than be photographed by Hal Mohr, the only write-in Oscar nominee (AMidsummer Night's Dream) or Nicholas Musuraca (Blood on the Moon, Deadline at Dawn, I Remember Mama).

There was one recurring character in the series, that of Far East importer and adventuress Jo Little.  Jo was featured in The Miraculous Journey of Tadpole Chan, Dragon by the Tail and Adventure onHappiness Street.  It seems as if there may have been hopes for a continuing series with that character should the anthology format fail to click.  There are some wonderful guest stars in the set including Ralph Bellamy and Lew Ayres.  It is fun to see Sen Yung and Layne Tom from the Charlie Chan movies, and Ann May Wong from way back.

The episodes play like sharply written short stories, sometimes dramatic, sometimes light-hearted.  Barbara Stanwyck played a variety of women from all walks of life and different eras.  Some were women in desperate situations, some were desperate women who created their situations.  Best of all were the character pieces with one or two guest stars where the actors were free to really dig in and show their stuff.  Among those would be Vic Morrow in The Key to the Killer.  Julie London had violence in her heart and dragged Michael Ansara into her plan in Night Visitors.  Lee Marvin in Confession, based on a true life murder case.  In her introduction Miss Stanwyck said the episode had a passing similarity to Double Indemnity, a film she made a few years ago that she hopes we remember.  The Golden Acres owed a bit of a debt to The Little Foxes.

Two character actress greats had the chance to strut their stuff in atypical roles.  Doris Packer (Leave It to Beaver) as a domineering mother-in-law/oil magnate in Mrs. Randall's Secret.  She came up the hard way and is as tough as her daughter-in-law.  Elizabeth Patterson (Remember the Night) in BigCareer is allowed to forego the ditherings of the latter part of her career as another sort of mother-in-law.

Earle Hagen's (the theme's composer) famous 1930s tune Harlem Nocturne is featured prominently in the episode Out of the Shadows where Barbara plays a psychiatrist helping a troubled young musician played by William Stephens.  In the western episode Ironbank's Bride, she is the mail order bride to a wealthy rancher played by Charles Bickford.  Her character has a son named "Jarrod".  The episode Little Big Mouth stars Barbara as crusading real-life reporter Nellie Bly and the role fits like a glove, although the show is stolen by 11-year-old Judy Strangis (Room 222).

Three of my favourite episodes are a nice sample of the entertainment available on the series which ran on NBC on Monday at 10:00 pm, following Dante starring Howard Duff and opposite Jackie Cooper in Hennesy and the last half hour of Adventures in Paradise starring Gardner McKay.  AMan's Game is a droll spoof of western cliches.  Barbara is a saloon keeper turned sheriff, engaged to a former gunslinger played by Charles Drake.  Edgar Buchanan is a philosophy spouting judge and Clinton Sundberg is the meanest gunfighter in the west.  Well, I told you it was a spoof!  Assassin features Barbara as a kooky secretary with a criminal secret and a criminal boss who hires a hit man played by Peter Falk to dispose of the problematic gal.  It's a battle of wits and wills.  Sign of theZodiac is a story of revenge, double crosses and madness with guest stars Joan Blondell (Night Nurse) and Dan Duryea.  It's a dandy!

There would be no second season for The Barbara Stanwyck Show.  It was replaced in the NBC lineup by another anthology program, Thriller hosted by Boris Karloff.  Barbara Stanwyck was nominated four times for a competitive Oscar, but never took home the prize.  She was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Series (Lead) opposite two other ladies with self-titled programs, Donna Reed and Loretta Young.  On her first shot at the TV prize, Barbara Stanwyck had her first acting trophy.  She looked lovely in a knee length dress first worn to introduce one of the episodes of her series (The Choice guesting Robert Horton and James Best).  There was a charming mix-up when Lou Edelman's congratulatory kiss ended up with his cuff link becoming attached to her clothing.  Luckily, Jackie Cooper in the next row helped save the day.  Barbara thanked her beloved producer and all the people behind the scenes who truly made this possible and happily returned to her seat.
 

The Emmy win must have felt like a mixed triumph after so much work, but Barbara Stanwyck was not one to dwell on the past.  Her talent was once again affirmed and her career would continue, but in what direction?  She couldn't know that night that there would be three more movies and a lot more television or that Emmy nominations would become as prolific as Oscar nominations.  Her beloved Lou and A.I. Bezzerides would create The Big Valley and Barbara Stanwyck would have her western.  Generations of fans would discover and fall in love with "and starring Miss Barbara Stanwyck as Victoria Barkley".  All that was in the future, beyond that door that was opening as one door was closing on The Barbara Stanwyck Show.

Aubyn, The Girl with the White Parasol, is graciously hosting the Barbara Stanwyck Blogathon from July 16 - 22.  Please enjoy the tributes.



Fiorello - 'Politics and Poker' - original Broadway version

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Fiorello!

Book by Jerome Weidman and George Abbott
Music by Jerry Bock and Lyrics by Sheldon Harnick
Directed by George Abbott and Choreography by Peter Gennaro

The show opened in November of 1959 and ran for 795 performances.

Tony awards
Best Musical
Best featured actor, Tom Bosley
Best direction, George Abbott

Why am I sharing this delightful and trenchant tune?  It came to mind because my Toronto Riding is holding a by-election tomorrow.  There are five vacant Provincial Parliament seats in Ontario and it is, once again, my duty to play my part in the game by voting.  However, I must acknowledge my debt to the witty writers of Broadway and Hollywood who help to remind me not to take this sort of thing too seriously.

 Brian Donlevy, William Demarest

Skeeter (William Demarest):  "If it wasn't for graft, you'd get a very low type of people in politics.  Men without ambition.  Jellyfish.

- The Great McGinty, 1940
Written and directed by Preston Sturges

William B. Davidson, Mae West

Tira (Mae West):  What do you do for a living?
Ernest Brown (William B. Davison):  Oh, uh, sort of a politician.
Tira:  I don't like work either.

- I'm No Angel, 1933
Written by Mae West, directed by Wesley Ruggles

Caftan Woman's Choice: One for August on TCM

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MGMs fabled producer Hunt Stromberg (The Thin Man series, Pride and Prejudice, Ah, Wilderness!, etc.) returned to his independent filmmaker roots with 1943s Lady of Burlesque and for the next eight years gave us a number of nifty films we've enjoyed through the years.  Two of those films were made with director Douglas Sirk (1946s The Strange Woman and 1947s Lured) in those years before his tenure at Universal-International and his string of Americana-lite flicks (Take Me to Town) and acclaimed melodramas (All That Heaven Allows).  The screenplay for Lured is by Leo Rosten (CaptainNewman, MD novel) and based on a story by Jacques Companeez and Simon Gantillon which was the basis of 1939s Pieges starring Maurice Chevalier.  Lured is a tasty goulash of contemporary mystery/gothic thriller/ripper/romance.

Young women are falling victim to the "Poet Killer" who mails cryptic clues to the police about the crimes.  Inspector Harley Temple played by Oscar winner Charles Coburn (The More the Merrier) and his officers Alan Napier (The Uninvited) and Robert Coote (A Matter of Life and Death) diligently cover all the evidence, but it only leads them in a circle.  What they need is Sherlock Holmes.  What they get is taxi dancer Sandra Carpenter played by a ravishing Lucille Ball in a series of knockout day and evening dresses from Eloise Jensson.  An American stranded in London after the close of a theatrical production, Sandra was friends with the latest victim of the killer and she signs on to act as bait in the case.  It has been determined that the poet killer contacts his victims through the personal columns and Sandra follows up on this lead.  In the course of her work she has encounters with a delusional fashion designer played by Boris Karloff (Targets), Alan Mowbray (MyDarling Clementine) as a seedy butler with a criminal sideline and Joseph Calleia (Five Came Back) as a dangerous gangster.

George Zucco, Lucille Ball

George Zucco (The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes) plays Inspector H.R. Barrett of the Yard and is Sandra's protector.  Born in Manchester in 1886, Zucco was an actor in Canada and on the Vaudeville stage, appearing with his wife Frances aka Stella Francis.  The Zuccos returned to England during WWI where George enlisted in the army and wounded his right arm in France.  His acting career continued following the war in the British film industry and on Broadway in Helen Haye's production of Victoria Regina as Disraeli in 1935.  Mr. Zucco's Hollywood career saw him play in many prestigious productions such as Madame Bovary, A Woman's Face, The Secret Garden, Suez plus a number of horror and cult favourites such as The Mummy's Tomb, Dead Men Walk, The Mad Ghoul, The House of Frankenstein.  George Zucco's reputation was that of a reliable actor and solid family man with an engaging sense of humour.  He once referred to himself as the saddest actor in Hollywood for having to play so many nasty fellows.  A stroke in the early 50s required long-term care and Mr. Zucco passed form pneumonia in 1960.  Nobody rocks the caftan like George Zucco in Tarzan and the Mermaids.  Zucco and Ms. Ball have a very nice chemistry in Lured and it would have been a treat seeing them team up for another adventure.

Speaking of chemistry, I did mention romance, didn't I?  The romantic aspect of the picture is provided by the devilishly charming George Sanders (Call Me Madam) as Robert Fleming.  Along with Cedric Hardwicke (A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court) as his business partner and friend Julian Wilde, Fleming builds and run a series of successful high-end nightclubs stocked with pretty young women.  Aha, you may be thinking what the Yard is thinking and you would be correct.  It is inevitable that Robert and Sandra become close.

Sandra Carpenter - bait

The mystery portion of our movie should not come as any great mystery to fans, but the puzzle is not the only thing that draws us to this type of film.  We look for atmosphere of which Lured has plenty.  The cinematographer is the great William Daniels (Winchester '73).  He gives us a set-bound London where the action is played out mainly at night in foggy alleyways with looming shadows and the eery glow from streetlights.  There is a marvelous game of cat and mouse as the Yard personified by Inspector Temple closes in on our suspect.  A major delight is also the comforting familiarity of the character actors cast to play out the story. Lured is just plain fun.  It is as if a group of our favourite Hollywood folks got together, rolled up their sleeves, rubbed their hands with glee and said "let's give everybody a good time".

TCM is screening Lured on Saturday, August 24th at 2:00 AM (!!!) as part of Charles Coburn Day for Summer Under the Stars.  Maybe next year we'll get a George Zucco Day.



Caftan Woman's Choice: One for September on TCM

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Odds Against Tomorrow was one of two films produced in 1959 by HarBel Productions, the other being the post-apocalyptic drama The World, the Flesh and the Devil.  Producer/actor/singer/activist Harry Belafonte stars in both highly personal projects.  Co-produced with the film's director Robert Wise, Odds Against Tomorrow is a black and white caper story with a message filmed on location in New York.  The script is by the black-listed Abraham Polonsky from a novel by William McGivern.  Depending on where you place yourself on the film-noir front, it can be considered either the end of the post-war noir cycle or the beginning of a new cycle.  Note:  neo-noir not recognized by this blog.

Ed Begley (12 Angry Men, Sweet Bird of Youth) plays Dave Burke, a disgraced ex-cop with mob ties and a plan.  He wants to make a lot of money, make it quick and get out.  There's a bank in upstate New York ripe for the picking, but he needs two men with him for the job.  He doesn't want pros.  He wants desperate men looking for that one big take.  Men he can control.  Dave thinks he has the perfect set-up.

The movie opens on an almost deserted NYC street in the autumn.  In what I consider one of the best character introductions in noir, a lone man walks down the sidewalk, a grim and careworn Earle Slater played by Robert Ryan (The Set-Up, On Dangerous Ground).  The street is not deserted as a group of children run in circles imitating the flock of geese above.  A little girl stumbles and Earle bends and picks her up with a smile on his face and says "You're gonna break your neck trying to fly like that, you little pickaninny.  Yes, you are."  Like a kick in the gut, the sense of unease begins and never lets up.  Earle is a loser.  He's a two time loser from the penal system.  His last stretch was for manslaughter.  He's just past his prime and sees no way out of a life sustained by the hard work of his too devoted wife Lorry played by Shelley Winters (A Patch of Blue, Night of the Hunter).  Slater is a man "...not made for waiting and I've been waiting all my life".  Slater is a man who hates himself and turns that hate outward.  He is an active and unrepentant bigot.

Robert Ryan was reluctant to take on the role of Earle Slater fearing comparisons to the anti-Semite Montgomery he portrayed in 1947s Crossfire and for which he received his only Academy Award nomination.  In a 1959 interview in Ebony magazine Ryan stated he thought it would be "a dangerous step for me to take professionally...audiences are composed of people with varying degrees of sophistication and understanding and there are many who do not separate actors from the characters they portray."  Ryan relented after reading the script which he thought "says something of real significance and says it well, dramatically, without preaching."

Johnny Ingram is played by Harry Belafonte (Island in the Sun, Uptown Saturday Night).  Outwardly, Johnny is everything Slater is not.  Johnny is handsome and pulled together.  A nightclub musician, Johnny dresses in the best and drives a flashy car.  The ladies love him.  He exudes confidence and good will.  Johnny is also a hopeless gambler who is deeply in debt to gangster Bacco played by Will Kuluva (Crime in the Streets).  Burke will use Bacco to convince Johnny to part in the heist.  Dave needs someone of Johnny's skin type for the job.  On another level, Dave seems to have convinced himself that his actions are benevolent as he likes Johnny and Johnny really needs the money.  Johnny has one thing that means the world to him, his ex-wife Ruth played by Kim Hamilton (To Kill a Mockingbird) and daughter Edie played by young Lois Thorne.  Johnny obviously adores Ruth and Edie, so why is the family broken?  Johnny's gambling addiction is one reason.  Ruth does not want the financial instability to be a part of Edie's life.  Johnny and Edie are also world's apart emotionally.  Johnny is a man who is bowed down by fate and the deck that is stacked and will always be against him.  He berates Ruth that it doesn't matter how much tea she drinks with her ofay friends, the world is not going to be any better for Edie and it's time she wised up. 

A couple of incidents convince Earle Slater to participate in the plan.  One is when his self-loathing is exacerbated by cheating on Lorry with upstairs neighbour Helen played by Gloria Grahame (In a Lonely Place, It's a Wonderful Life).  Johnny agrees to join the plan when Bacco threatens his family, but he senses doom, telling Dave  "It's suicide, man.  It's three o'clock in the morning."

Too late Dave Burke discovers that the two seemingly perfect men for the job have issues that he can't control and that threaten his plan.  T'was ever thus in the caper film world.  Slater is an instigator.  Johnny stands his ground.  The desperation and hate boils over to  an explosive finish that will have a touch of familiarity for gangster film fans.




The score to Odds Against Tomorrow is by John Lewis and while jazz and film are not strangers, it is always a treat.  The score, particularly Skating in Central Park remained an honoured part of the Modern Jazz Quartet for years.  Legendary singer Mae Barnes is a joy trying to give the audience All Men Are Evil all the while being bedeviled by a drunk and sorrowful Johnny.

There is an interesting mix of familiar faces to watch for in Odds Against Tomorrow including Cicely Tyson, Zohra Lambert, Diana Sands, Mel Stewart, Wayne Rogers, Bill Zuckert and Robert Earl Jones.

How well the film combines all its aspects will be up to the individual viewer.  The Golden Globe nominated Odds Against Tomorrow in 1960 for its long defunct category "Best Film Promoting International Understanding".

TCM is screening Odds Against Tomorrow on Tuesday, September 10 at 6:00 am.  It is well worth your time.  

Favourite movies: The Late George Apley (1947)

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John P. Marquand's popular Pulitzer prize-winning 1937 novel The Late George Apley skewered the pretentious upper class Bostonian of the early 20th century.  The deceased fictional title character is given the biographical treatment by one of his Boston Brahmin peers and through that narrow lens and the recollection of family and friends a portrait of George Apley emerges.  There is indeed much to snicker at in George Apley's exclusive existence, but as outside observers we see much that escapes the notice of even his nearest and dearest.  While the absurdity of the snobbery is rightfully put in its place, the reader also learns something about the heart of George Apley and his foibles.  George Apley may be a fool, but perhaps no more so a fool than any of us.

Marquand and George S. Kaufman adapted the novel for Broadway where it had a successful run in the 1944-45 season starring Leo G. Carroll as George Apley.  Since George Apley is no longer "late" as in passed on, we are left to wonder if "late" refers to the passing on of the old George Apley as he strives to adapt to the modern world of 1912 or maybe the fact that George is a late bloomer.  Messrs. Marquand and Kaufman did not confide in me.


George Apley and his beloved Emerson
Ronald Colman

The 1947 Twentieth Century Fox film version was adapted by Philip Dunne (The Last of the Mohicans, How Green Was My Valley) and directed by Joseph Mankiewicz (House of Strangers, No Way Out).  Ronald Colman stars as George Apley in this movie released the same year as his Oscar winning performance as the tormented actor Anthony John in A Double Life.  George Apley's torments may be less harrowing than those of Anthony John's, but Colman's performance commitment is one hundred percent for both.  As George Apley he is initially the picture of upright, pompous certainty whose dawning bewilderment at events and people and enthusiastic attempts to set himself and all aright are a delight to behold.

George Apley has a place and standards to maintain.  In his world there is no excuse for shirt sleeves, no room in the cemetery plot for claim jumping distant relatives and no place for foreigners from Worcester.  There is plenty of room for various clubs and committees.  After all, someone must look after the orphaned waifs of Boston.  To George's credit, an electric sign on the edge of the Common proclaiming "Grapenuts" would not add to the quality of anyone's life, but he seems almost anti-electricity.  George's great love, beyond quoting Emerson, is bird watching.  Of course, there is a committee for that as well.

George and Catherine Apley
Ronald Colman, Edna Best

Edna Best (The Man Who Knew Too Much) is charming and patient as George's wife Catherine, much softened from her novel incarnation.  The Apleys have a headstrong daughter Ellie played by the vivacious Peggy Cummins (Gun Crazy).  Her romantic involvement with a forward thinking young professor played by Charles Russell (The Purple Heart) is a source of friction for the family.  Richard Ney (Mrs. Miniver) is John Apley, so much like his father that sometimes it makes his mother cry.

George Apley and Horatio Willing
Ronald Colman, Richard Haydn

A large part of the plot of the play is based on the idea from the novel that George Apley truly likes his daughter-in-law.  In the book, she is a divorcee from New York City.  In the play and film, she is a young cousin determined to live life on her own terms, and that includes her marriage to son and heir John Apley.  Vanessa Brown plays cousin Agnes Willing, five years away from becoming the toast of Broadway as The Girl in The Seven Year Itch.  Agnes parents are Nydia Westman (The Chocolate Soldier) as Jane and Richard Hadyn (Sitting Pretty) as Horatio.  Horatio is a rather Iago-like character (shades of A Double Life) who supports all that is pretentious in George's lifestyle.  He is overprotective of the class to which he has aligned himself.

If any of the ensemble come close to stealing the show it is Percy Waram (Ministry of Fear) as George's brother-in-law Roger Newcombe.  The only cast member imported from the original Broadway run, Roger is the voice of wet wisdom (he likes to drink) and dry wit as the anti-Horatio.  He is married to George's formidable "should have been born the boy" sister Amelia played like a battleship in full sail by Mildred Natwick (The Quiet Man).

Times are changing and dear Roger tries to open George's eyes to the fact while Horatio keeps dragging George back to the status quo.  Life, in all its untidiness, is thrust upon George Apley when he disastrously intervenes in his daughter's romance.  George's admonishment to Ellie that emotions must be kept down has forever coloured the way I will watch Star Trek.  For me Vulcan is no longer a planet of enlightened beings, but a planet inhabited by stuffed shirts.

It is a joy to watch Ronald Colman as George Apley stumble and blink at the sunlight as he rushes headlong into an unfettered future.  The comedy of his situation is told with a clear-eyed wit and a warm heart.  One minute you want to hug him for his enthusiastic effort and the next you'll want to slap him for a silly ass.  You'll laugh at George Apley and you'll laugh with him.  You will never forget him.

Breaking News: Journalism in Classic Film Blogathon - Five Star Final (1931)

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Spoilers abound in this look at Warner Brothers Five Star Final for Breaking News: Journalism in Classic Film Blogathon sponsored by Comet Over Hollywood and Lindsay's Movie Musings.


Mervyn LeRoy
1900 - 1987

Mythologized, demonized, revered and lampooned, the gentlemen of the press make for good copy.  From real life crusader Nellie Bly who became as famous as her exposes to the fictional Charles Foster Kane who thought it would be fun to run a newspaper audiences are as fascinated with the purveyors of the news as - well, as the newsmen are with themselves.  Newsmen Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur created a Broadway sensation and all-time classic with their trenchant comedy full of hard-boiled, wise-cracking reporters The Front Page which ran on Broadway in the late 1920s for 276 performances.  Reporter Louis Weitzenkorn turned his experience on the tabloid New York Evening Graphic into a popular melodrama called Five Star Final starring Arthur Byron (The Mummy) as the conflicted editor Randall and Berton Churchill (Stagecoach) as unscrupulous publisher Hinchecliffe.  Mr. Weitzenkorn obviously had a lot to get off his chest.  The show had a successful Broadway run of 175 performances between December, 1930 to June, 1931.  Before the ink was dry on the Playbill, Warner Brothers released their film version in September of 1931.  The studio and director Mervyn LeRoy had great success with the film which was one of eight nominated for the Best Picture Oscar in its year, the winner being Grand Hotel.  LeRoy directs with great verve, evident from the opening credits over the clatter of the press, the use of split screen, close-ups, wipes and interesting angles which enhance the breathless pace of the dialogue.

No one who works at the New York Gazette is satisfied in their work.  The owner, Hinchecliffe (Oscar Apfel) is displeased with a recent drop in circulation and a conference with his circulation and advertising managers confirms his thinking that his editor Randall (Edward G. Robinson) is to blame for trying to turn the tone of the paper away from the sensational or what Hinchecliffe refers to "human interest".  Apparently, in their long and successful collaboration Randall has tried this sort of thing before, but stenographers and shop girls don't want to read about politics.  Cynical reporters who balk at assignments take the sting out of a day's work by drinking at a local speak.  The speakeasy is the main place of business for contest editor Ziggie Feinstein (George E. Stone) who also delegates the assignments of roughing up newsstands where The Gazette is not featured prominently.  Randall has developed an OCD habit of washing his hands, but they never can get clean enough.  Randall's secretary Miss Taylor (Aline MacMahon) loves him and worries over him.  He complains that she sits there like a giant conscience.

Hinchecliffe, in what he thinks is a sure-fire circulation booster, decides to rehash a lurid murder case of 20 years past.  A young and pregnant stenographer, Nancy Voorhees (Frances Starr) had murdered her boss/lover who deserted her.  Acquitted of the crime, she has disappeared into obscurity, but The Gazette is about to change all that.  They will print the case in serial format pointing out the moral aspects as a warning to young women everywhere.  They will cash in.  In the intervening years Nancy Voorhees married Michael Townsend (H.B. Warner) and together they have raised her daughter Jenny (Marian Marsh).  It is a joyous time in the Townsend household as Jenny is shortly to be married to a sterling young man of good family, Phillip Weeks (Anthony Bushell).

Not ones to regularly purchase The Gazette, it is brought into the Townsend home when Phillip picks up all of the evening papers and they become aware of the notice to watch for the Voorhees serial.  Jenny has never been told of her parent's background and Nancy is devastated by the news that her past is to be dredged up.  With a wedding to take place the Townsend's are not surprised to be called upon by a clergyman who is really a reporter angling for a story.  The despicable Isopod (Boris Karloff) is a two-faced lecher with no morals whatsoever and too late the Townsends find they have been confiding in an enemy.


Desperation overwhelms the unhappy Townsends as they try to keep the story out of the papers and away from Jenny and Phillip.  At The Gazette Randall digs deeper into the story giving it all the experience of years of muckraking.  In addition to Isopod, Miss Carmody (Ona Munson), a go-getter from Chicago, is put on the case.  The angle of the murderess' daughter marrying into the social register makes for a snappy lead.  At the same time he is doing his job Randall is disappearing more into the bottle as the hand washing fails to give relief.  "God gives us trouble.  The devil gives us whisky."  Disgusted he may be with himself, yet Randall persists in carrying out his duty.  "This is one newspaper man who's going to retire with some dough." 

Particularly rough to watch is a scene employing split screen technique where an anxious Nancy Townsend tries to reach Hinchecliffe to beg him not to print the story.  The callous publisher keeps transferring the call to Randall who is no more willing to speak to her.  It is only at Miss Taylor's insistence that Randall does actually get on the line only to tell Nancy that it is too late.  The story has gone to print.  The nervous and exhausted Nancy Voorhees Townsend takes her own life.  In a heartbreaking scene she is discovered by her husband who playfully interacts with his daughter and son-in-law-to-be while hiding the truth.  They are on their way to the church.  Will he be joining them soon?  He tells them that first he will be joining her mother.  The couple's lifeless bodies are then discovered by the enterprising Miss Carmody who breaks into the apartment with a photogapher in tow.  The shutterbug balks, but Carmody gets her way and the picture of the bodies for the front page.

Randall knows himself to be a murderer.  The police want to know how The Gazette got that picture.  Hinchecliffe plans a trip to Europe.  Circulation, advertising and Isopod plan a follow-up on Nancy's story in her own words, now that no one is alive to contradict what they may choose to print.  They plan to offer Jenny $1,200 for the name.  Phillip's family calls off the wedding.  They should have consulted with their son first as he refuses to do so.  Nancy, gun in hand, confronts the senior staff, and the creepy Isopod, demanding to know why they killed her mother.  Only Randall will answer that it was for circulation.  It is something she cannot fathom.  Phillip takes her away with a warning that if they ever print his wife's name in their lousy paper he'll come back and kill them.

In a final showdown with Hinchecliffe, Randall eloquently and profanely quits the paper.  Miss Taylor, with a quiet happiness, follows him out the door.  "The End" appears on the screen as the story of the suicide is swept into the gutter with yesterday's flotsam and the newsboys hawk the latest love nest murder.

Warners remade Five Star Final in 1936 as Two Against the World starring Humphrey Bogart, setting the story in the world of radio.  I have yet to see the film, but can't help feeling that it will lose some of its crackle minus the pre-code innuendo.  A 1954 television presentation on Lux Video Theatre starred Edmond O'Brien as Randall and featured Joanne Woodward and Liam Sullivan as the young couple. 

In this year of "Rico" in Little Caesar and "Nick" in Smart Money, along with the tortured Randall, Edward G. Robinson cemented his place as one of Hollywood's finest acting talents.  1931 was a watershed year for the career of Boris Karloff who at the age of 44, after kicking around Hollywood for over a decade, would give outstanding performances in this film, in The Criminal Code, and as the monster in FrankensteinFive Star Final features the film debut of Aline MacMahon, the great character leading lady whose career would give audiences such treats as The Mouthpiece, One Way Passage, Heat Lightning, Ah, Wilderness!, The Man from Laramie and All the Way Home.  Thank heavens there was a place in Hollywood for her talent.

Five Star Final is worthy to stand alongside director Mervyn LeRoy's other outstanding "ripped from the headlines" pictures of this era including I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang and Little Caesar.  His inventiveness and energetic storytelling has held audiences for generations.


Caftan Woman's Choice: One for October on TCM

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What makes some movies, especially 1954s sci-fi classic Them! the type of film audiences can return to with no diminishing of pleasure?  There is no shock value to the story by George Worthing Yates (The Tall Target, Earth vs. the Flying Saucers).  First-run audiences would have read the reviews and seen the trailers and lobby cards.  Later television viewers would read the TV Guide synopsis.  Sixty years later, we know the legend.  

Ted Sherdeman's (The Winning Team, TVs Hazel) excellent screenplay fits the story pieces together in perfect mystery mode, ever moving forward keeping us totally involved.  Director Gordon Douglas was a former child actor who started out as a gag man at the Roach studio.  The IMDb has a quote from Douglas, the director of over 97 features (Come Fill the Cup, The Detective, Walk a Crooked Mile, etc):  "I have a large family to feed and it's only occasionally that I find a story that interests me."  It seems that in Them! Mr. Douglas found material which piqued his interest.  It is the nuts and bolts of how the story is presented that draws us in every time.

A lot of credit is due to art director Stanley Fleischer and special effects director Ralph Ayers and their teams for the creation of the truly terrifying radiation mutated ants.  Creatures capable of nothing less than the destruction of mankind.  Originally planned to be filmed in colour and 3D, the atmosphere of Them! works perfectly in the black and white world from cinematographer Sid Hickox (White Heat, The Big Sleep). 

A young girl is found wandering in shock in the New Mexico desert.  Three people have disappeared and are presumed dead.  A storekeeper and soon a police officer will die under violent and bizarre circumstances.  There are plenty of clues, but nothing adds up.

Top-billed James Whitmore plays Police Sergeant Ben Peterson.  In his distinguished career Whitmore gave us a variety of characters from his Support Actor Oscar nomination as Sgt. Kinnie in Battleground, the shady Gus in The Asphalt Jungle, real-life President Harry Truman in Give 'Em Hell, Harry to The Shawshank Redemption and memorable TV appearances as in On Thursday We Leave for Home from Twilight Zone.  Ben Peterson is a hero.  He's not a hero with a cape and super powers, but a hero because of his compassion for the victims and dogged determination to see the case through to the end.

Peterson is teamed with FBI agent Bob Graham played by James Arness.  The following year Arness would become a major television star in a 20+ year run as Matt Dillon in the TV version of Gunsmoke.  Initially concerned about derailing his burgeoning movie career, Jim declined CBSs offer, but was convinced to take the role by his mentor and Batjac boss, John Wayne.  In his autobiography Arness relates that the very serious Jimmy Whitmore and he would crack up when looking at bodies in the morgue that had been killed by the ants.  In a case of the more you want to stop laughing, the more you can't, the actors were taken to task by studio executives and had to have their reaction shots filmed separately.

Dr. Medford and Agent Graham's first encounter with Them!
Joan Weldon, James Arness

In Them! viewers are rewarded with a plethora of future TV heroes.  23-year-old Leonard Nimoy, a hero to sci-fi fans the world over as Spock on Star Trek, is an Air Force Sergeant relaying vital information.  Fess Parker, soon to be a phenomenon as Disney's Davey Crockett and later TVs Daniel Boone is a pilot whose encounter with the flying ants gets him tossed in the looney bin.  One of TVs best dads, William Schallert of The Patty Duke Show plays an ambulance attendant.  Baseball player turned actor, John Beradino, is a Los Angeles patrolman.  It's my second favourite cop in a movie played by Beradino.  My favourite is the Sgt. Emile Klinger who has to deal with that crazy drunk Roger O. Thornhill in North by Northwest.  For 30 years Beradino played Dr. Steve Hardy on TVs still running General Hospital.  Richard Deacon plays a reporter in the movie.  As Mel Cooley on The Dick Van Dyke Show Deacon was a hero to bald brothers-in-law everywhere.

The discovery of the radiation mutated ants is thanks to the Drs. Medford from the Department of Agriculture.  The elder Dr. Medford is played by Supporting Actor Oscar Winner (Miracle on 34th Street) Edmund Gwenn.  I have a problem with Mr. Gwenn in that every time I watch him in a film, be it The Trouble With Harry or Foreign Correspondent or Apartment for Peggy, etc. I am convinced that I have just seen his best performance.  Them! is no exception to the rule.  Gwenn makes me believe he's never been anything but a dedicated, myopic academic.

The younger Dr. MNedford, Patricia, is played by opera singer Joan Weldon.  After a disappointing sojourn in Hollywood as "the girl" in Them!, Gunsight Ridge and Riding Shotgun, she would return to the world of musical theatre.  In hindsight, "the girls" of Them! are the vanguard of professional women to come.  Dr. Medford is a take charge scientist who knows her business.  That she gets to smile at and exchange snappy remarks with Agent Graham is all the personal story this adventures needs.  Ann Doran (Meet John Doe, Roughly Speaking) plays a medicla doctor in charge of the case of the traumatized girl at the beginning of the movie.  Dorothy Green (The Big Heat, TVs The Young and the Restless) is a sympathetic Los Angeles police woman.

The tracking of the monsters and their murderous rampage leads to Los Angeles and two Hollywood's most popular old coots.  Dub Taylor (You Can't Take It With You, Bonnie and Clyde), father of Gunsmoke star and artist Buck Taylor, is a railway guard whose story regarding stolen sugar rings false to local authorities, but brings our team closer to their quarry.  Olin Howlin (Nancy Drew - Reporter, the first victim of The Blob) is a drunk whose hallucinations are more real and deadly than he knows.  Soon the entire city is under martial law as we reach the tension-filled and emotional climax in the 700 mile network of storm drains under the city.  And, yes, the ending is always the same no matter how many times you've seen Them!.

TCM is screening Them! on Sunday, October 27th at 6:00 pm.  Not everything that goes bump in the night came from Universal or Val Lewton.  Happy Hallowe'en.

The Great Imaginary Film Blogathon: Charlie Chan in Hollywood (1940)

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The Great Imaginary Film Blogathon hosted by Diana and Connie, the Metzinger Sisters, at Silver Scenes is underway.  Classic film bloggers will never be accused of not having great imaginations!  Check out the amazing movies that never were yet should have been.


CHARLIE CHAN IN HOLLYWOOD
Released by 20th Century Fox in 1940
Starring Sidney Toler as Charlie Chan
Sen Yung as Jimmy Chan
Special appearance by Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy
Director - Norman Foster
Writers - Earl Derr Biggers (character)
Patricia Nolan-Hall (screenplay)

The renowned detective, Inspector Charlie Chan of Honolulu has a large family that is generally divided into two groups.  Half of his children want to be detectives like their old man.  The other half are movie crazy.  Both characteristics are currently found in beloved number 2 son, Jimmy.  Jimmy is employed at Mammoth Studios as a "best boy" or electrician's assistant.  He has told his parents that the job is only during the summer and that he will be returning to his university studies in the fall.  Charlie decides to check out matters for himself as Jimmy's job is related to the new girl in his life, Linda Li played by Iris Wong (Charlie Chan in Reno).  She's a script girl at Mammoth and was instrumental in Jimmy's employment.

Sen Yung as Jimmy Chan

Sidney Toler was the surprising yet excellent choice to succeed the late Warner Oland in the role of Charlie Chan for 20th Century Fox.  More new world than old in his approach to Earl Derr Biggers creation, he sustained the character's popularity throughout the decade.  His partnership with the wonderful Sen Yung (The Letter, Across the Pacific) as the ebullient Jimmy Chan added immeasurably to the continued success of the series.  In his 60s at the time, Toler had a long career in the theatre as an actor/writer and appeared in small roles in several films.  When the studio dropped the series in 1942, Toler purchased the rights to the character from Derr Biggers' widow and continued playing the role in less expensive productions released through Monogram.

Kane Richmond as Bill Dixon

The head of Mammoth Studios, Miles Trent, is played by George Zucco (The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Tarzan and the Mermaids).  He is a friendly, warmhearted sort of boss who has the trust and affection of his employees.  Trent is most pleased that Jimmy wants to show his Pop around the studio as Mammoth would love to produce a film based on one of Inspector Chan's exploits.  Although aware of his international reputation, the Inspector does not see himself as a screen character.  Trent's partner, Grant Randall, played by Robert Barrat (Heroes for Sale, The Last of the Mohicans) is more the wheeler dealer type.  His bulldozer reputation is accurate and currently he's engaged in some particularly rough negotiations with the studio's popular leading man Bill Dixon played by Kane Richmond (Charlie Chan in Panama, The Shadow Returns).  The leading man gig is okay for what it is, but Bill is a flyer and he's keen on breaking his contract with the studio to go to Canada and join the Royal Air Force.  Randall is not about to let the studio's money maker do a fool thing like that.

Marjorie Weaver as Lois Wilson

Bill's desire to be part of the war is of great concern to his girlfriend, Mammoth's ingenue Lois Wilson played by Marjorie Weaver (Charlie Chan's Murder Cruise, Michael Shayne, Private Detective).  Lois and Linda Li have been friends since childhood so, naturally, her and Bill's problems become Jimmy's as well.

Mary Beth Hughes as Catherine Thomas

Lois also has career issues in that her latest role had originally been intended for another actress on the lot, Catherine Thomas played by Mary Beth Hughes (Charlie Chan in Rio, The Great Flamarion).  Mary Beth could lob sarcastic barbs with the best of them.

 James Ellison as Steve Brannigan

Catherine's stock has gone down considerably due to her involvement with the head of a notorious gambling ring, Steve Brannigan played by James Ellison (Vivacious Lady, I Walked With a Zombie).  The handsome and affable Ellison brings a very dark tone to the character that should have changed the trajectory of his career if this had been an A production.  Catherine's decline is most worrisome to her overbearing stage mother, Evelyn Thomas played by Esther Howard at her most elegant and officious (Sullivan's Travels, Born to Kill).  Evelyn has no difficulty making her displeasure felt at Mammoth Studios.  Harold Huber (The Thin Man, Beau Geste) plays Lou Mason, the head of studio security.  What's his connection with the shady Mr. Brannigan?  Huber keeps you guessing about his character.  Is he really that dumb or that sly?

Hamilton MacFadden, the director of the Chan film The Black Camel, has a featured role in Charlie Chan in Hollywood as film director Roger King.  He's been with Mammoth since the early days when Trent and Randall started the company.  He knows where the bodies are buried, so to speak.  The outstanding treat in this movie is the appearance of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy playing Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy or, at least, two very nice actors whom we imagine Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy to be in real life.

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy as themselves

It is a shocking day at Mammoth when Jimmy discovers the body of Grant Randall with a knife in his back.  Inspector Chan has a corpse, a studio full of suspects, and more assistants than one world famous detective can handle.  Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy consider themselves amateur detectives and are champing at the bit to be part of the excitement.  

Babe Hardy:  "It will work out great, Inspector Chan.  Stan sounds like Sherlock Holmes and I have the brains."

The scene where Jimmy, Stan and Babe sneak into the studio at night to search for clues is played mostly without dialogue and rightfully deserves its reputation as a gem in 40s cinema.  In later years Stan would recall Charlie Chan in Hollywood as the team's happiest time at Fox.  He was most fulsome in his praise of Sen Yung whom he called an inventive and instinctive comic, and a bright young man.

Clocking in at 88 minutes, the movie is longer than the usual Chan feature, but director Norman Foster (Charlie Chan at Treasure Island, Woman on the Run) keeps all the comedy and thrills seamlessly paced and perfectly timed.  The well-drawn characters and behind the scenes atmosphere will leave you wishing it were longer. 

I won't give the ending away except to say that I did not see it coming.  Wow!  Inspector Chan's tried and true "If you want wild bird to sing do not put him in cage" comes into play big time.  Charlie Chan in Hollywood is a dandy.


Favourite movies: Genevieve (1953)

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Genevieve is -

  • The best Ealing comedy not to come from that studio.
  • A quintessentially British film written by an American.
  • A  film about motor cars whose leading man did not hold a driver's license.
  • A beloved classic that flopped at previews.
  • An Oscar nominated score whose composer's credit did not air on screens in America or could be mentioned at the ceremony.

William Rose was born in Jefferson, Missouri and prior to America's entry into WW2 he joined the fracas by way of Canada's Black Watch.  He found a home in England after the war and found a market for his screenplays such as Genevieve, The Ladykillers, The Maggie and The Smallest Show on Earth.  Later films would include The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming, The Flim Flam Man, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World and his Oscar winning Guess Who's Coming to Dinner.

Director Henry Cornelius had a great success at famed Ealing Studios with Passport to Pimlico and left the studio to set up his own company.  He was enthused about Rose's project concerning vintage car enthusiasts and the annual London to Brighton Veteran Car Rally, but couldn't get it off the ground as his first independent film, The Galloping Major hadn't reached the level of success of Pimlico.  Eventually "Corny" found backing from the Rank Organisation, but only if he put up some of his own money.

For their patient co-operation the makers of this film express their thanks to the officers and members of the Veteran Car Club of Great Britain.  Any resemblance between the deportment of our characters and any club members is emphatically denied—by the Club.

The above disclaimer featured at the opening credits let us in immediately on the amused and amusing tone of Genevieve.
Dinah Sheridan, John Gregson
Kenneth More, Kay Kendall

John Gregson (The Holly and the Ivy, Titfield Thunderbolt, Hand in Hand, TVs Gideon C.I.D.) plays Alan McKim, a barrister with a pretty wife and a beloved 1904 Darracq.  His father drove in all the rallies prior to the war and Alan all the years after.  He lives for the vintage car rally and the time he spends tinkering with the car named Genevieve.  At the time of filming, Gregson was learning to drive and had yet to receive his license.  Dinah Sheridan (Breaking the Sound Barrier, Gilbert and Sullivan, The Railway Children) is lovely as Alan's wife Wendy.  Wendy is not so enamoured of bouncing around the countryside in an outmoded form of transportation.  Wendy and Alan have words, but being a young married couple they can't stay angry for long and the trip is on.

Joining in the annual tradition is family friend Ambrose Claverhouse played in his brightest manner by Kenneth More (Reach for the Sky, A Night to Remember, TVs The Forsyte Saga and Father Brown).  Ambrose is the proud owner of a Spyker.  Ambrose also is accompanied on each rally by a different young lady.  It is this playboy's dream to combine the London to Brighton with a "truly memorable emotional experience", but something always goes wrong.  For instance, the year he escorted Wendy, and introduced her to Alan, she locked Ambrose out of her room.  Ah, but this year Ambrose is bringing a model he has just met.  The fashionable Rosalind is played by vivacious Kay Kendall (Les Girls, The Reluctant Debutante, Doctor in the House), who is joined by her neurotic St. Bernard, Suzy.

Ambrose Claverhouse (1980 - 2000)
Beloved Nolan family pet named for Kenneth More's character in Genevieve.

We stop now to applaud Marjory Cornelius, the wife of the director and costume designer for the film.  Rosalind his so very, very chic and modern in her suit, floppy hat and sunglasses.  Wendy is pretty as a picture in a vintage costume suitable for the occasion.  Both ladies get a chance to wear more formal wear for dinner and, again, Rosalind looks like a dream and Wendy as if she never, ever put a foot wrong in the fashion department.  Applause.

Joyce Grenfell as the hotel proprietress, with Dinah Sheridan

Due to that little misunderstanding between Wendy and Alan that was mentioned earlier, they are without a hotel reservation when they finally (Genevieve was acting up) reach Brighton.  Beggars can't be choosers and they take what accommodation they can, although a cranky Wendy does not endear herself to the solicitous landlady played by Joyce Grenfell.  Bad feelings simmer throughout the night, not the least of which is Alan's sudden jealousy toward Ambrose.  An ill-considered bet is the outcome with a secret race on the return trip to London between Alan and Ambrose with nothing less than Genevieve on the line.

Arthur Wontner as an old gentleman

If the journey to Brighton was filled with comic mishaps, the return trip is filled with comic dirty tricks.  Near the finish line there is a charming cameo with Arthur Wontner as an elderly Darracq fan.  Wonter is  most famous for his portrayal of Sherlock Holmes in 5 films in the 1930s.  The best of those Holmes films is The Sign of Four and the best thing about all of the films is Arthur Wonter.

The shooting of the film on location and in Technicolor adds immensely to the delightful feel of this comedy, although the weather and logistics of the cameras made the movie a chore for its actors who came down with all sorts of colds and illnesses.  However, what truly distinguishes Genevieve is its Oscar-nominated score by harmonica virtuoso Larry Adler.  The talented Mr. Adler had moved to England in 1949 to escape the black list, although he retained his U.S. citizenship.  His agent advised against turning down the job to score Genevieve as they could not reach his price.  Instead, Adler agreed to a portion of the profits.  His certificate of nomination from the Academy was presented 31 years after the ceremony.  Adler's score for Genevieve is sprightly and keeps the action moving, always moving.  At the same time, there is a nostalgic, sentimental feel that leaves a warm glow long after the movie has finished.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j4seMwRUJnQ

Along with Larry Adler's Oscar nomination for Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture (winner - Dimitri Tiomkin, The High and the Mighty), William Rose was nominated for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay (winner - Budd Schulberg, On the Waterfront).  Genevieve won a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Picture, a BAFTA for Best British Film and BAFTA nominations for Best Film from any Source (winner - Forbidden Games) and for Kenneth More for Best British Actor (winner - John Gielgud, Julius Caesar).

There is something very comfortable about Genevieve.  Even if you are seeing it for the first time, you feel at home and that home is a place you'll want to revisit.

   
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