Tuesday, May 25, 2021

On This Day... Only Angels Have Wings (1939)

On this day in 1939, Cary Grant's 33rd full length film, Only Angels Have Wings, was released.


Summary:

At a remote South American trading port, the manager of an air freight company is forced to risk his pilots' lives in order to win an important contract.

Cast:

Cary Grant... Geoff Carter
Jean Arthur... Bonnie Lee
Richard Barthelmess... Bat MacPherson
Rita Hayworth... Judy MacPherson
Thomas Mitchell... Kid Dabb
Allyn Joslyn... Les Peters
Sig Ruman... Dutchy (as Sig Rumann)
Victor Kilian... Sparks
John Carroll... Gent Shelton
Don 'Red' Barry... Tex (as Donald Barry)
Noah Beery Jr... Joe Souther
Manuel Álvarez Maciste... The Singer (as Maciste)
Milisa Sierra... Lily (as Milissa Sierra)
Lucio Villegas... Doctor
Pat Flaherty... Mike

Did You Know?

Howard Hawks had known a real-life flier who once parachuted from a burning plane. His co-pilot died in the ensuing crash and his fellow pilots shunned him for the rest of his life.

The film was inspired by a true story of a real-life couple Howard Hawks met while scouting Mexican locations for Viva Villa! (1934) (which was eventually directed by Jack Conway).

"Calling Baranca" later became a recurring line in Looney Toons/Merrie Melodies cartoons.


Dutchy's statement about flying, "Include me out," is a quote from Samuel Goldwyn. It is one of many malapropisms attributed to him.

Richard Barthelmess had deep scars that resulted from an infection due to plastic surgery. The only way to cover them up was with heavy make-up, but Howard Hawks convinced him to leave them the way they were because "those scars tell the story and are important to your character." Hawks also removed planks to make Barthelmess appear smaller, to reflect his character's inferiority among his fellow pilots.

This film was supposed to be among the 12 American titles selected for the first ever Cannes Film Festival, set for September 1, 1939. Sadly, the war would delay the inauguration of the festival by seven years.


When Rita Hayworth couldn't play her drunk scene well enough, Hawks told Cary Grant to throw a bucket of water on her head, dry her hair, and to only say his lines.

Cary Grant is often incorrectly quoted as saying "Judy, Judy, Judy" to Rita Hayworth in this movie. The misquote is attributed to impressionist Larry Storch who, when in the middle of one of his nightclub acts, saw Judy Garland walk in as he was impersonating Grant. Apparently this is how he addressed her.

Quotes:

Bonnie Lee: [Joe has just died and Bonnie is feeling guilty about his death] Mr. Carter? Mr. Carter? Do you really think... I mean... Do you really think it was my fault, what happened out there?
Geoff Carter: Sure it was your fault. You were gonna have dinner with him, the Dutchman hired him, I sent him up on schedule, the fog came in, a tree got in the way. All your fault. Forget it, unless you want the honor.



Geoff Carter: Wait a minute, you little fool, why don't you use your ...
[sees that she's crying]
Geoff Carter: Oh, come on. Stop it.
Bonnie Lee: I don't know how you can act like this when that poor kid, he's ...
Geoff Carter: [coldly] Yeah, I know, he's dead.
Bonnie Lee: Yes, he's dead!
Geoff Carter: That's right. And he's been dead about 20 minutes, and all the weeping and wailing in the world won't make him any deader 20 years from now. If you feel like bawling, how do you think we feel?
Bonnie Lee: Oh, I'm sorry...
Geoff Carter: Oh, come on. Go outside and walk around - and stay there until you put all that together!



Bonnie Lee: How can you eat that?
Geoff Carter: What?
Bonnie Lee: Eat that steak.
Geoff Carter: Well, what's the matter with it?
Bonnie Lee: [referring to Joe] It was his!
Geoff Carter: Well, what do you want me to do, have it stuffed?


Lobby Cards and Posters:




Directed by Howard Hawks.
Produced by Columbia.
Running time: 121 minutes.


Artwork by Rebekah Hawley of Studio 36.

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

On This Day... Indiscreet (1958)

Today in 1958 saw the release of Cary Grant's 64th full length film, Indiscreet...which I first reviewed in my blog post on May 20, 2020 - see https://www.mylifeinayearwitharchie.com/2020/05/on-this-dayindiscreet-1958.html



Summary:

An actress who has given up on love meets a suave banker and begins a flirtation with him...even though he's already married.


Cast:

Cary Grant... Philip Adams
Ingrid Bergman... Anna Kalman
Cecil Parker... Alfred Munson
Phyllis Calvert... Mrs Margaret Munson
David Kossoff... Carl Banks
Megs Jenkins... Doris Banks

Did You Know?

Cary Grant said that this was his personal favorite film.

First of two films by Grandon Productions, which was owned by Cary Grant and director Stanley Donen. The other film was The Grass Is Greener (1960).



The original Broadway production of "Kind Sir" by Norman Krasna, on which Indiscreet (1958) is based, opened at the Alvin Theater on November 4, 1953, ran for 166 performances, and closed on March 27, 1954. The cast included Charles Boyer and Mary Martin in the Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman roles.

The car Anna's chauffeur drives is a brand new 1958 Rolls-Royce Silver Wraith, valued at $23,000 at the time (over $209,000 in 2020). Reportedly, Cary Grant purchased the car at the end of filming.


Cary Grant was taught how to play snooker by Sidney Lee, at the time one of Britain's best players, and how to play the violin left handed in order to act the part, while Ingrid Bergman was taught how to dance the Highland Fling.

When director Stanley Donen asked Cary Grant if he would do this film, Grant said only if Ingrid Bergman would be his co-star. Bergman was committed to doing The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958) which was to be filmed in the UK, and a theatrical production in Paris, so this film was moved to Elstree Studios in England.


Ingrid Bergman agreed to do the film with the script sight unseen in order to work with her friend Cary Grant again.

Quotes:

Anna Kalman: This is a very diplomatic matter, I don't want you putting your foot in it.
Philip Adams: I deal with diplomatic matters every day without feet.


Philip Adams: Oh, I tell you. Women are not the sensitive sex. That's one of the grand delusions of literature. Men are the true romanticists.



Anna Kalman: How dare he make love to me and not be a married man.


Lobby Cards:





Directed by Stanley Donen.
Produced by Grandon Productions.
Running time: 100 minutes


Artwork by Rebekah Hawley of Studio 36.

On This Day... The Eagle and the Hawk (1933)

Cary Grant's 10th full length film, The Eagle and the Hawk, was released on this day in 1933...which I first reviewed in my blog post on May 19, 2020 - see https://www.mylifeinayearwitharchie.com/2020/05/on-this-daythe-eagle-and-hawk-1933.html


Summary:

The pilots of a Royal Air Force squadron in World War I face not only physical but mental dangers in their struggle to survive while fighting the enemy.

Cast:

Fredric March... Jerry Young
Cary Grant... Henry Crocker
Jack Oakie... Mike Richards
Carole Lombard... The Beautiful Lady
Guy Standing... Major Dunham (as Sir Guy Standing)
Forrester Harvey... Hogan
Kenneth Howell... John Stevens
Leyland Hodgson... Kingsford
Virginia Hammond... Lady Erskine
Douglas Scott... Tommy
Robert Seiter... Arnold Voss (as Robert Manning)
Adrienne D'Ambricourt... Fifi aka Fanny



Did You Know?

During filming, an explosion went off prematurely, causing Fredric March to become trapped under some fallen beams. Despite being injured himself, Cary Grant held up one of the beams to allow March to escape, saving him from more serious injury.

Multiple times the Allied pilots refer to the Germans as "Greentails." This is a reference to the German squadron Jasta 5, nicknamed "Greentails" because all of their planes had a distinctive green paint scheme on the tail. Jasta 5 was one of the most prolific and deadly German squadrons of the war, recording 253 victories while losing only 19 pilots killed in action.




Ten minutes into the film, Young engages in a dogfight with a German pilot. Some of the footage for this scene was taken from the climax of 1930's 'The Dawn Patrol'. The sequence in which Young and Crocker shoot down a German balloon includes footage from Paramount's earlier aviation epic, Wings (1927).

Gary Cooper was considered for the role of Henry Crocker, and George Raft for the role of Jerry Young.


Quotes:

Henry Crocker: Well, well. I hear you lost five men in two months. Who's fault was that? Your's or theirs?
Jerry H. Young: I wish I knew.
Henry Crocker: Yeah, that would be nice.

Jerry H. Young: Funny, you being assigned to me, Crocker.
Henry Crocker: No, it isn't. I asked for it.
Jerry H. Young: You? I thought you didn't like me?
Henry Crocker: I don't!
Jerry H. Young: Well, then, what the...
Henry Crocker: Curiosity, fellow, curiosity. I heard about you and your medal. I wanted to see how you did it and how long you could keep on doing it.




Jerry H. Young: What's the matter? Did your guns jam?
Henry Crocker: Yeah, they jammed. And the next time you pull one like that, I'll jam 'em down the back of your skull!
Jerry H. Young: The next time you take a pop at a fella in in a parachute, you won't get a chance to.
Henry Crocker: What do you want me to do? Kiss him!




Lobby Cards:





Directed by Stuart Walker.
Produced by Paramount Publix.
Running time: 72 minutes



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley of Studio 36.


Tuesday, May 18, 2021

On This Day... Thirty-Day Princess (1934)

Today, Cary Grant's 14th full length film, Thirty-Day Princess, was released in 1934... which I first reviewed with the film Born to be Bad in my blog post on May 18, 2020 - see https://www.mylifeinayearwitharchie.com/2020/05/on-this-day1934-born-to-be-bad-and.html

Summary:

A European princess arrives in New York City to secure a much-needed loan for her country. She contracts the mumps, and an actress who looks exactly like her is hired to impersonate her.

Cast:

Sylvia Sidney... Nancy Lane / Princess Catterina
Cary Grant... Porter Madison III
Edward Arnold... Richard M. Gresham
Henry Stephenson... King Anatol XII
Vince Barnett... Count Nicholaus
Edgar Norton... Baron Passeria
Ray Walker... Dan Kirk
Lucien Littlefield... Parker
Robert McWade... Managing Editor
George Baxter... Donald Spottswood
Marguerite Namara... Lady in Waiting



Did You Know?

The streamlined train seen in montages in this film is the Union Pacific M-10000. It was the first of the "streamliner"-style trains in the U.S. It was in service from 1934 to 1941.


The $15,000 Nancy earns would have equated to about $274,000 in 2020.

Quotes:

Porter Madison III: How many reporters are working here?
City Editor: About a quarter of 'em.


Princess Catterina: In Taronia, what we mean, we say. What we say, we mean.


Richard M. Gresham: People come in twos in this world, like the animals in the ark. There's an old fellow at the club looks as much like me as I do. Good-looking man, too.



Lobby Cards and Press Stills:





Directed by Marion Gering.
Produced by B.P. Schulberg Productions
Running time: 73 minutes


Artwork by Rebekah Hawley of Studio 36.

Monday, May 17, 2021

On This Day... Born to be Bad (1934)

Today in 1934 saw the release of Cary Grant's 15th full length film, Born to be Bad, his first of two films with Loretta Young...which I first reviewed in my blog post on May 18, 2020 - see https://www.mylifeinayearwitharchie.com/2020/05/on-this-day1934-born-to-be-bad-and.html


Summary:

An immoral mother blackmails a wealthy businessman after he accidentally hits her delinquent son with his truck.

Cast:

Loretta Young...Letty Strong
Cary Grant...Malcolm Trevor
Jackie Kelk...Mickey Strong
Marion Burns...Mrs. Alyce Trevor
Henry Travers...Fuzzy
Paul Harvey...Attorney Brian
Russell Hopton...Steve Karns
Harry Green...Adolph - Letty's Lawyer


Did You Know?

The film ran into censorship problems from the start, mainly from the character portrayed by Loretta Young and the skimpy clothes she wore. It was rejected twice by the Hays office before it was finally given an approval certificate, after several cuts and retakes (and all this before the Production Code was more rigorously enforced). Sidney Lanfield directed retakes on 10 November 1933 because director Lowell Sherman was on vacation; other retakes were made early in 1934. In 1935, the film was on a list at the Hays Office, of those films whose release should be halted, but it is not known if any action was ever taken.


Andrew Tombes is on an early cast list playing the part of "Max Lieber." A character called "Max" is mentioned in the film, but Tombes never appeared.

Loretta Young and Cary Grant starred together again thirteen years later in The Bishop's Wife (1947).

Quotes:

Tagline: Rules of the game meant nothing to her...she was "born to be bad" ..and she knew it!


Lobby Cards and Press Stills:



Directed by Lowell Sherman.
Produced by Twentieth Century.
Running time: 61 minutes

Artwork by Rebekah Hawley of Studio 36.