Monday, January 17, 2022

On This Day... The Philadelphia Story (1941)

Released today back in 1941, The Philadelphia Story was Cary Grant's 38th full length feature film.



Summary:

After getting a divorce from C. K. Dexter Haven (Cary Grant), Philadelphia heiress, Tracy Lord (Katharine Hepburn), prepares to marry George Kittredge (John Howard). 


Days before her wedding, however, Haven and reporter, Macaulay Connor (James Stewart), show up at her doorstep. From there, Tracy is forced to choose among her past love, her present love, and her new love.


Cast:

Cary Grant...C. K. Dexter Haven
Katharine Hepburn...Tracy Lord
James Stewart...Macaulay Connor
Ruth Hussey...Elizabeth Imbrie
John Howard...George Kittredge
Roland Young...Uncle Willie
John Halliday...Seth Lord
Mary Nash...Margaret Lord
Virginia Weidler...Dinah Lord
Henry Daniell...Sidney Kidd
Lionel Pape...Edward
Rex Evans...Thomas


Did You Know?

Cary Grant only agreed to appear in the film as long as he got top billing. As Katharine Hepburn was dubbed "box office poison" at the time, this demand was readily agreed to.  His salary, $137,000, a huge amount at the time, he donated in its entirety to the British War Relief Fund.

Cary Grant was given the choice of which of the two male lead roles he wanted to play.


During the conversation between Mike and Dexter at Dexter's mansion, Mike hiccuped and Dexter said, "Excuse me." This was ad-libbed by Cary Grant, and caused James Stewart to reply, "Huh?" and smile. Grant then turned his head to stifle his laughter and said, "Nothing."


Quotes:

George Kittredge: But a man expects his wife to...
Tracy Lord: Behave herself. Naturally.
C. K. Dexter Haven: To behave herself naturally.
[George gives him a look]
C. K. Dexter Haven: Sorry.

Tracy Lord: Dexter, say something.
C. K. Dexter Haven: Well, I...
Tracy Lord: Oh, Dexter, I'm such an unholy mess of a girl.
C. K. Dexter Haven: Well, that's no good. That's not even conversation.


Tracy Lord: You seem quite contemptuous of me all of a sudden.
C. K. Dexter Haven: No Red, not of you, never of you.

Elizabeth Imbrie: We've come for the body of Macaulay Connor.
C. K. Dexter Haven: I'm so glad you came. Can you use a typewriter?
Elizabeth Imbrie: No, thanks, I've got one at home.

C. K. Dexter Haven: Of course, Mr. Connor, she's a girl who is generous to a fault.
Tracy Lord: To a fault.
C. K. Dexter Haven: Except to other people's faults.

Margaret Lord: The course of true love...
Macaulay Connor: ...gathers no moss.


Lobby Cards and Posters:





Directed by George Cukor.
Produced and Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Running time: 112 minutes.



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36.


Tuesday, January 4, 2022

On This Day...Enter Madame (1935)

 Cary Grant's 18th full length film, Enter Madame, was released on this day in 1935.



Summary:

Gerald Fitzgerald (Cary Grant) is an avid fan of opera.  He loves watching talented and beautiful Lisa Della Robbia (Elissa Landi). When they accidentally meet, the two end up falling in love. Having married quickly, Gerald soon starts to realize he is second place to his wife's career and it isn't much fun.


Cast:

Elissa Landi...Lisa Della Robbia
Cary Grant...Gerald Fitzgerald
Lynne Overman...Mr. Farnum
Sharon Lynn...Flora Preston (as Sharon Lynne)
Michelette Burani...Bice
Paul Porcasi...Archimede
Adrian Rosley ...Doctor
Cecilia Parker...Aline Chalmers
Frank Albertson...John Fitzgerald
Wilfred Hari...Tamamoto
Torben Meyer...Carlson
Harold Berquist...Bjorgenson
Diana Lewis...Operator
Richard Bonelli...Scorpia in 'La Tosca'
Ann Sheridan...Flora's Shipboard Friend (as Clara Lou Sheridan)


Did You Know?

Enter Madame was based on a play written by Gilda Varesi Archibald, Charles Brackett and Dorothea Donn-Byrne.  Charles Brackett also contributed to the writing of such films as Sunset Boulevard (1950) and Journey to the Center of the Earth (1959).

Featured Clara Lou Sheridan in an early role.  Clara Lou Sheridan would later change her name to Ann Sheridan, eventually starring along side Cary Grant in 'I Was a Male War Bride'.


Quotes:

Mr. Farnum: Think you can take it?
Gerald Fitzgerald: What do you mean?
Mr. Farnum: I mean, have you any idea what it's like being married to an opera singer?
Gerald Fitzgerald: Sure. I think I'm the luckiest man in the world.
Mr. Farnum: You'll have to be.
Lisa Della Robbia: Farnum, what a horrible thing to say.
Mr. Farnum: I'm not talking against you, madame. It's your job.

Archimede: Those truffles have come from my farm in Tuscany. Rigoletto and I hunted for them last June. He with his nose and I with my stick - to hit him on the nose when he find the truffle. He loves truffles, Rigoletto
Flora Preston: Mercy! Who is Rigoletto? Your son?
Archimede: No. My pig, Madame
[laughs]
Archimede: A great hunter of truffles, my Rigoletto
Flora Preston: What a strange name for a pig
Archimede: Why not, Madame? He enjoys it, poor fellow. It gives him some style before the other pigs. My cow, I name her Aida; my ox: Don Giovanni. Oh, they're all very pleased.



Posters and Lobby Card:





Directed by Elliot Nugent.
Produced by Paramount Publix.
Running time: 83 minutes.

Artwork by Rebekah Hawley of Studio 36.


Monday, January 3, 2022

On This Day... Sylvia Scarlett (1936)

 Released today back in 1936, Sylvia Scarlett was Cary Grant's 21st full length feature film.


Summary:

When her father (Edmund Gwenn) decides to flee to England, young Sylvia Scarlett (Katharine Hepburn) decides to become Sylvester Scarlett to try and protect her father in his new life, with the questionable help of Jimmy Monkley (Cary Grant) and Maudie Tilt (Dennie Moore).


Cast:

Katharine Hepburn...Sylvia Scarlett a.k.a. Sylvester
Cary Grant...Jimmy Monkley
Brian Aherne...Michael Fane
Edmund Gwenn...Henry Scarlett
Dennie Moore...Maudie Tilt - the Maid (uncredited)



Did You Know?:

After a disastrous preview, director George Cukor introduced the Marseilles scene as an introduction to the original film, thus showing the feminine Sylvia Scarlett, with tresses and in a skirt, before showing the tom-boyish side of the character.

Despite the poor reviews of the movie, most critics noted the performance of Cary Grant. It has since been recognized as one of Grant's break-out performances.


Henry tells Jimmy the thirty yards of lace he is smuggling is worth 50 quid (pounds). That would equate to $250 at the time or $4,730 in 2019.


Quotes:

Sylvia Scarlett: Well, we're all fools sometimes. Only you choose such awkward times.

Sylvia Scarlett: You've got the mind of a pig.
Jimmy Monkley: It's a pig's world.


Posters:

Directed by George Cukor.
Produced and Distributed by RKO Radio.
Running time: 94 minutes.



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36.


Saturday, January 1, 2022

On This Day... Destination Tokyo (1944)

Released today back in 1944, Destination Tokyo was Cary Grant's 44th full length feature film.



Summary:

In the early days of World War II, under the command of Captain Cassidy (Cary Grant), the U.S.S. Copperfin sails for Tokyo Bay. 


The submarine's secret mission is to enter the bay without being detected.  They must then place a landing party ashore to obtain vital information for the upcoming Doolittle air raid on Tokyo.


Cast:

Cary Grant...Capt. Cassidy
John Garfield...Wolf
Alan Hale...'Cookie' Wainwright
John Ridgely...Reserve Officer Raymond
Dane Clark...Tin Can
Warner Anderson...Andy
William Prince...Pills
Robert Hutton...Tommy Adams
Tom Tully...Mike Conners
Faye Emerson...Mrs. Cassidy
Peter Whitney...Dakota
Warren Douglas...Larry
John Forsythe...Sparks
John Alvin...Sound Man
Bill Kennedy...Torpedo Gunnery Officer

Trailer:


Did You Know?

The Copperfin submarine was an exact scale model of a real US Navy submarine. However, for reasons of military security, equipment and operating mechanisms were of varying kinds and varieties not found on US submarines so the enemy could not get an accurate picture of what the interior of a Navy submarine looked like.

Two members of the real-life US Navy submarine Wahoo were consultants and technical advisers on this film, according to a story in the "New York Herald Tribune". They were crew member Andy Lennox and Lt. Cmdr. Dudley Walker Morton. As a way of saying "thank you" the chili and canned pumpkin used by "Cookie" is labeled as being made by "Lennox".


Tony Curtis, in an interview aired on TCM, recounted the day when he went into a theater and watched this film and saw Cary Grant peer through a periscope at Tokyo Bay. That moment "took his breath away" and inspired him to become an actor. Other reports state that Grant inspired Curtis to join the navy. Grant and Curtis would later star together in the World War II submarine comedy Operation Petticoat (1959).

In the scene where the planes get ready for takeoff from the aircraft carrier to attack Tokyo, the music incorporates the first four notes from Beethoven's Fifth Symphony (dah-dah-dah-daaaa). During WWII the notes were a sign for victory because they translate into the letter V in Morse Code (three dots and a dash).


Quotes:

Worker on Golden Gate Bridge: [as the USS Copperfin, returning from its perilous mission, transits beneath the Golden Gate Bridge, inbound for San Francisco] Hey Eddie, ya' think that sub saw any action?
Other worker on Golden Gate Bridge: [Dismissively] Nah... Probably just out for a couple of practice dives.

Reserve Officer Raymond: How'd you happen to volunteer for the submarine service, Captain?
Capt. Cassidy: [Coyly] Well, when I was a kid, I used to get a kick outta' swimming underwater.

Wolf: [During a particularly fierce depth-charging of the 'Copperfin'] I wonder how the invasion of Europe is getting along?



Lobby Cards:




Directed by Delmer Daves.
Produced and Distributed by Warner Brothers.
Running time: 135 minutes.



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36.


Thursday, December 30, 2021

On This Day...Madame Butterfly (1932)

Cary Grant's 7th film, and the last film release of the year, Madame Butterfly, was released on today's date back in 1932. 


Summary: 

While on shore-leave in Japan, Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton (Cary Grant) and his friend,  Lieutenant Barton (Charles Ruggles), stop in at a local establishment to check out the food, drink and girls.  On meeting Cho-Cho San (Sylvia Sidney) Pinkerton immediately falls in lust. Barton advises Pinkerton that he can 'marry' this Japanese girl and freely enjoy himself, then sail on back to America unshackled, since in Japan abandonment equates to divorce.



 The years pass and Cho-Cho San still eagerly awaits the return of her husband and the opportunity to surprise him with their son.  When Pinkerton does finally arrive back in Japan to apologise to Cho-Cho San for his behaviour, he has his American bride by his side. 


Cast:

Sylvia Sidney...Cho-Cho San
Cary Grant...Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton
Charles Ruggles...Lt. Barton
Irving Pichel...Yomadori
Helen Jerome Eddy...Cho-Cho's mother
Edmund Breese...Cho-Cho's grandfather
Louise Carter...Suzuki
Sándor Kállay...Goro
Judith Vosselli ...Madame Goro
Sheila Terry...Mrs. Pinkerton
Dorothy Libaire...Peach Blossom
Berton Churchill...American Consul
Philip Horomato...Trouble


Quotes:

Madame Goro: So this is Cho-Cho-San; what distinction, what eyes, what teeth. And you speak also the English?
Cho-Cho San: Yes, I learned from visiting scholar. She teach me very high class Brooklyn accent.


Cho-Cho San: [Cho-Cho San has found Adelaide's photo in Pinkerton's trunk. She brings it to him with the pipe cleaners] I found them like this
Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton: Thank you very much, Cho-Cho San
[he puts the photo aside]
Cho-Cho San: She very beautiful, that American lady
Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton: Oh, I guess she'd pass in a crowd
Cho-Cho San: She some lady you know very well?
Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton: Sure, sure. We've known each other for years
Cho-Cho San: She love you very much, perhaps?
Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton: No, of course not
Cho-Cho San: [she picks up the photo and points to the inscription that reads 'To Bin with all my love always'] What this writing say?
Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton: Oh, that. That just says 'lots of luck'
Cho-Cho San: Oh. But maybe you very much in love with her?
Lieutenant B.F. Pinkerton: How can I have room in my heart for anyone but Madame Butterfly?



Taglines:

1933 Marches on!...with the great romantic drama of East and West NOW a MODERN love story! (Print Ad-Daily Star, ((Long Island City, NY)) 30 January 1933)

IT WILL BRING THUNDEROUS ACCLAIM...for a great love story done with consummate passion! (Print Ad- Greenfield Recorder, ((Greenfield Mass.)) 30 December 1932)

PARAMOUNT'S FOREMOST SCREEN PRODUCTION FOR 1933 
(Print Ad-Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, ((Pittsburgh, Penna.)) 8 February 1933)



Lobby Cards and Posters:




Directed by Marion Gering.
Distributed by Paramount Publix.
Running time: 86 minutes.



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36.


Saturday, December 25, 2021

On This Day... Every Girl Should Be Married (1948)

 Released today back in 1948, Every Girl Should Be Married was Cary Grant's 53rd full length feature film.



Summary:

A wilful woman, Anabel Sims (Betsy Drake), concocts an elaborate scheme to trap a handsome pediatrician, Dr Madison Brown (Cary Grant), into marriage.



Cast:

Cary Grant...Dr. Madison Brown
Franchot Tone...Roger Sanford
Diana Lynn...Julie Howard
Betsy Drake...Anabel Sims
Alan Mowbray...Mr. Spitzer
Elisabeth Risdon...Mary Nolan
Richard Gaines...Sam McNutt
Harry Hayden...Gogarty
Chick Chandler...Soda Clerk
Leon Belasco...Violinist
Fred Essler...Pierre
Anna Q. Nilsson...Saleslady


Did You Know?

In a scene in his office between himself and his nurse-employee, Cary Grant performs a dead-on impression of his co-star Betsy Drake - whom he would soon marry in real life.

Based on a short story by Eleanor Harris that was published in the October 1947 edition of the Ladies' Home Journal.


Quotes:

Dr. Madison Brown: How in the world did Eve ever get Adam when she had no other woman to help her with the subtle little touches?


Roger Sanford: I've been married three times. I like marriage. My wives didn't but I do.


Julie Howard: Anabelle! Do you mean you're going to deliberately set out to trap him?
Anabel Sims: Well, I know it's dreadful but this is the kind of thing men force us to do.


Anabel Sims: You don't happen to know any millionaires, do you?
Julie Howard: If I did I'd avoid 'em.




Lobby Cards and Posters:




Directed by Don Hartman.
Distributed by RKO Radio.
Running time: 84 minutes.



Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36.