The Bishop's Wife - 13th November, 1947.
Suspicion - 14th November, 1941.
Houseboat - 19th November, 1958.
Once Upon a Honeymoon - 27th November, 1942.
It all started on Instagram in 2020, about Me and Archie...But here it is definitely more about him!!
The Bishop's Wife - 13th November, 1947.
Suspicion - 14th November, 1941.
Houseboat - 19th November, 1958.
Once Upon a Honeymoon - 27th November, 1942.
The Bishop's Wife ,
Starring Cary Grant, David Niven, Loretta Young, Opens at Astor
By Bosley Crowther
Dec. 10, 1947
With David Niven. |
Emissaries from heaven are not conspicuously exceptional on the screen, the movies having coyly incarnated any number of these supernatural types, ordained by their fanciful creators to right the wrongs of this world (not to mention the bookkeeping errors that seem to occur up above). And certainly communion with angels is traditional at Christmastime, which is the season when most of us mortals need angelic reassurance anyhow. So there is nothing especially surprising about the miracle that occurs in Samuel Goldwyn's "The Bishop's Wife," which opened last night at the Astor—except that it is superb.And that is very surprising, in view of the realistic fact that it is a sentimental whimsey of the most delicate and dangerous sort. All of us know that angels don't walk the earth like natural men—and definitely not in the image of that debonair rascal, Gary Grant. And most of us have some dark misgivings about the tact of the makers of films when they barge into the private area of a man's communication with his God.But you need have no anxieties in the case of "The Bishop's Wife." It is as cheerful and respectful an invasion of the realm of conscience that we have seen. And it comes very close to being the most enchanting picture of the year — a judgment to which its many merits will shortly make a strong bid. That is because its incursion is on a comparatively simple and humble plane and its whimsey is sensitively syphoned from the more human and humorous frailties of the flesh.We are not going to make an analysis of the many subtle comments in this tale of a full-bodied guardian angel who answers a young bishop's prayer for guidance and spiritual comfort in the midst of a crisis in his life. We are not going to state any morals which this charmingly casual angel proves in drawing the bishop's wrought attention from a new cathedral to the richer services of life—and, particularly, to a fresh fulfillment of his family responsibilities.
We are not going to mouth about these matters, because the picture itself refrains—and that is one of the most endearing of its many endearing young charms.In shaping this warm and winning fable from a Robert Nathan book, Robert Sherwood and Leonardo Bercovici have written with beautiful belief that a point clearly made in performance doesn't have to be hit a dozen times nor a moral quietly manifested put into a hundred solemn words.
And so there is no heavy pounding of the lesson of humanity, of the futility of ostentation, of the special possessiveness of a man's love. Nor is there any such pounding in Henry Koster's directorial style.Smoothly and with artful invention he has induced Mr. Grant to give one of his most fluent and beguiling performances as the angel, "Dudley," who fixes things. And he has got out of David Niven a deliciously dexterous and droll characterization of a sorely pressed young bishop who can't quite cotton to this messenger from on high. Elsa Lanchester, too, is encouraged in an exquisitely faceted role of a twitterly little housemaid who flirts with this angelic gent, and Monty Woolley is actually human as an old dodo who is morally re-inspired. James Gleason, Sara Haden and Gladys Cooper are rich in smaller parts. Weakness is only evident in Loretta Young's unctuousness as the bishop's wife. She is the one artificial, inconsistent and discordant note.Of course, there are probably some people who are going to say that this film encourages a futile illusion with its hope of miraculous aid. But they—if they do—will be missing its most warmly inspiring point which is—but wait a minute That's for you to recognize and enjoy. We cannot recommend you to a more delightful and appropriate Christmas show.
With Loretta Young and Monty Woolley. |
THE BISHOP'S WIFE;
screen play by Robert E. Sherwood and Leonardo Bercovici;
from the novel by Robert Nathan;
directed by Henry Koster;
produced by Samuel Goldwyn for release through RKO Radio Pictures. Inc.
At the Astor.
Dudley . . . . . Cary Grant
Julia Brougham . . . . . Loretta Young
Henry Brougham . . . . . David Niven
Professor Wutheridge . . . . . Monty Woolley
Sylvester . . . . . James Gleason
Mrs. Hamilton . . . . . Gladys Cooper
Matilda . . . . . Elsa Lanchester
Mildred Cassaway . . . . . Sara Haden
Debby Brougham . . . . . Karolyn Grimes
Maggenti . . . . . Tito Vuolo
Mr. Miller . . . . . Regis Toomey
Mrs. Duffy . . . . . Sara Edwards
Miss Trumbull . . . . . Margaret McWade
Mrs. Ward . . . . . Ann O'Neal
"...it is Cary Grant’s playing that rescues the role of the angel named Dudley from the ultimate peril..."
With Loretta Young. |
The Bishop's Wife - Review is taken from 'The Films of Cary Grant' by Donald Deschner (1973):
"Robert Nathan’s early novel (1928), The Bishop’s Wife, has been revived by Samuel Goldwyn (with help on the script from Robert Sherwood and Leonardo Bercovici) to honor the current boom in cinema angels. Unlike the majority of his predecessors, however, Mr. Nathan’s angel is not beyond descending to diabolical methods to achieve his heavenly purposes, and the gleam in his eye is scarcely seraphic.
If the angel is considerably less tedious than most, it is, first of all, because the miracles he is called upon to perform are onerous neither to him nor to his audience. A flick of the hand and a bottle of brandy refills perpetually; a smile and every woman within its range feels divinely beautiful. Certain other of his feats, conceived with a heavier hand, are retrieved from disaster by the direction of Henry Koster who wisely refrains from bearing down full weight on the script. But it is Cary Grant’s playing that rescues the role of the angel named Dudley from the ultimate peril of coyness. With nothing more than a beaming countenance and an air of relaxation that is certainly not of this world, he achieves a celestial manner without so much of a hint of wings on his dark blue suit. An expert cast is on hand to show by reflection what Cary Grant has refrained from making irksomely explicit. David Niven’s prelate is a wistful and absent-minded character who is scarcely a match for Dudley. As the Bishops’ wife, Loretta Young is sufficiently lovely to make even an angel fall; and in lesser roles Monty Woolley, James Gleason and Elsa Lanchester react to Dudley’s miraculous passage with characteristic gaiety.
The Bishop had prayed to God for guidance in how to separate Mrs. Hamilton, a rich parishioner, from sufficient money to build a cathedral. God sent him Dudley and Dudley had soon resolved his dilemma by threatening Mrs. Hamilton with the name of her long-lost lover. Now, Dudley convinces both her and the Bishop that God could better be served by abandoning the cathedral project in favor of helping the needy. This is a refreshingly practical notion and comes with the lure of novelty from a screen which has heretofore thrown its weight – in the manner of The Bells of St. Mary’s – in favor of building churches. For this reason alone The Bishop’s Wife should commend itself to the public."
- Hermine Rich Isaacs, Theatre Arts Magazine
New Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36 - Number 51 - The Bishop's Wife (Lobby Card Style) |
Part Of
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Quote From Today - 13 November 2022
On This Day - 13 November 2021