Friday, September 17, 2021

Libeled Lady (1936)

 
Libeled Lady - 1936

Coming up next is 1936's "Libeled Lady", the story of a newspaper story gone horribly wrong and the efforts to make a libeled lady drop her suit against the periodical.

The film's cast includes Jean Harlow, William Powell, Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy, Walter Connolly, Charley Grapewin, Cora Witherspoon, Hattie McDaniel, and George Chandler.

Newspaperman Warren Haggerty has been called into the office after a story printed in the paper has major repercussions.  Unfortunately for Warren, this takes place as he is preparing to leave for his wedding!

Warren tells his fiancĂ©e, Gladys (who has stormed into the newspaper office full of fury), that he has to take care of this first.  If he doesn't fix this, he'll be out of a job and they won't be able to get married at all.  Gladys is furious!

The story involves high society girl Connie Allenbury.  It was alleged that she broke up a marriage and stole a husband while at a party in London.  Naturally, the story is false, and she is now suing the newspaper for $5 million (Today that is roughly $100 million).  So, Warren gets the only man he knows who can get them out of the suit: Bill Chandler.

The scheme involves Bill marrying Gladys (which she very much objects to), sailing to London, and then sailing back to the USA with the Allenburys.  While on the way home, he plans to frame Connie Allenbury with the exact circumstances that were printed in the paper: husband stealer.


Naturally, the marriage officiant is surprised when Gladys reserves her best kiss for Warren instead of her new husband, Bill.  Bill explains that Warren is a very old friend of the family.

Of course, things have to look legitimate.  So, Warren has a telegram sent to Bill calling him to London right away.  This is all done in front of witnesses.  Gladys is quite the actress, portraying a wife whose husband is being taken from her on their wedding night.



So, Bill travels to London and then sails home to the USA with the Allenburys.  Connie seems to think he's got an angle and doesn't really want to give him the time of day.

Back at home, Bill incurs the wrath of Gladys, who thought she'd be headed to Reno for a divorce by now.  Bill explains that while he may have struck out on the boat, he's got another chance now.  Mr. Allenbury, a fishing enthusiast, has invited him for a weekend fishing trip.  On the boat, Bill learned all he could about the sport of fishing to fool Allenbury.


Connie remains skeptical.  "I know a first-class angler when I see one.  Yes, and a first-class man, too," says Mr. Allenbury.  Connie replies, "If he's first-class, I'll travel steerage."


The whole fishing scene is quite hilarious.  Bill reads from a "how to" book as he goes and ends up getting completely soaked.


It happens again when he hooks a big one.  Allenbury knows he's a good fisherman when he finds out that the fish Bill caught is a "walleye", which Allenbury had been trying to get for two years.




Bill and Connie spend a lot of time together and fall in love.  This makes Bill dig in his heels about the real reason he came up on the fishing trip.

Warren goes over to the Allenbury place to appeal to Connie to drop the suit.  He is surprised to see Bill there with no intention of holding up his end of the bargain.

Nobody seems to have a thought for poor Gladys, who is furious when she finds out that her husband is seeing Connie seriously.  She's fallen for him herself.

While Gladys is busy having a beauty treatment, Warren confronts her about the Bill/Connie romance.  She's ready for a showdown.

Connie asks Bill to marry her right away.  He doesn't hesitate.  The two are married that very night.

Gladys arrives and confronts them.  However, Bill has told Connie the whole story.  He also consulted the Hall of Records.  Gladys was previously married to a Mr. Joe Simpson, and then filed for a Mexican divorce.  Mexican divorces were declared illegal, so she is still married to Mr. Simpson.  Therefore, there marriage is null and void, leaving him free to be with Connie.

Gladys has the final word when she tells them all she knew her Mexican divorce from Joe Simpson was no good.  She went to Reno and got a second divorce.  She also tells Bill that he can look that up in the Reno Hall of Records.  It seems that Bill is a bigamist.

Eventually, Gladys realizes that she is in love with Warren and not Bill.  The situation is resolved to everybody's satisfaction.

Except for one thing: someone's got to explain the whole situation to Connie's father!

Cast rundown:

Jean Harlow - Libeled Lady
   Jean Harlow....................................Gladys Benton

William Powell - Libeled Lady
   William Powell.................................Bill Chandler

Myrna Loy - Libeled Lady
   Myrna Loy.......................................Connie Allenbury

Spencer Tracy - Libeled Lady
   Spencer Tracy..................................Warren Haggerty

Walter Connolly - Libeled Lady
   Walter Connolly................................J.B. Allenbury

Charley Grapewin - Libeled Lady
   Charley Grapewin.............................Hollis Bane

Cora Witherspoon - Libeled Lady
   Cora Witherspoon.............................Mrs. Burns-Norvell

Hattie McDaniel - Libeled Lady
   Hattie McDaniel................................Maid

George Chandler - Libeled Lady
   George Chandler...............................Bellhop

And that's it for Libeled Lady.  Jean Harlow and William Powell were romantically involved at the time of production.  Harlow wanted to play Connie Allenbury so that she and Powell could end up together.  However, studio executives knew that that William Powell/Myrna Loy combo was such a hit that audiences wanted to see THEM end up together.  Harlow was already attached and could not back out.  However, she eventually said that she liked the film and found she was more suited to the role of Gladys.  Originally, Rosalind Russell was to play Connie Allenbury and Lionel Barrymore was to play J.B. Allenbury.

Jean Harlow died in June 1937, less than a year after this film was released.  At her interment in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Glendale, Harlow was buried wearing the gown she had worn in this film.

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Thursday, September 16, 2021

Six Of A Kind (1934)

 
Six Of A Kind - 1934

Coming up next is 1934's "Six Of A Kind", a story of a couple who embark on their second honeymoon.  As they travel by car from the East Coast of the USA to Hollywood, they encounter one catastrophe after the other.  The first trouble begins before they even leave their hometown!

The film's cast includes Charles Ruggles, Mary Boland, W.C. Fields, George Burns, Gracie Allen, Alison Skipworth, and Irving Bacon.

Married for twenty years, Pinky and Flora Whinney are excited about their upcoming second honeymoon.  They plan on driving from their home on the East Coast to Hollywood.  The entire trip will take two weeks, enabling them to spend 24 hours in Tinseltown.

Flora surprises Pinky by having an advertisement placed in the newspaper.  She wants another couple to drive with them so that they can save on expenses.  Pinky isn't at all thrilled with the idea.

The people that answer the ad aren't exactly a traveler's dream.  George and Gracie have some interesting conversations.  When Gracie tells George that she's got a niece with three feet, he tells her that she's probably got an aunt that sees with her mouth.  "Yeah, I have," replies Gracie.  "She sees if the soup is hot."

Unbeknownst to Pinky, his suitcase is swapped by an embezzler at the bank where he works.  Concealed within the suitcase is $50,000.  The embezzler plans on making a switch once the Whinneys are out of town.  Pinky has told everyone where they are going and exactly how they are going to get there.

The trouble is, the embezzler didn't count on George and Gracie, who insist on taking over the planning of the entire trip, including the route.  They even bring Gracie's dog, Rang Tang Tang!


The first hiccup comes when Pinky and Flora find out that their traveling companions aren't married.  No hotel will rent a room to them unless everything is on the up and up.  So, the guys have to bunk together, and so do the girls.  Pinky and Flora are heartbroken that their trip is going this way.



A near disaster occurs when Flora poses for a photograph that Gracie is taking.  Gracie keeps telling her to move backwards, unaware that a large canyon is behind Flora.  Well, Flora falls onto a tree branch and has to be hoisted up.  Things don't go well at first with the rescue.

Flora is able to get back up safely.  However, Rang Tang Tang comes up and pushes George right over the edge and onto the same tree branch.



When asking for directions in Nevada, the group is held up by a pair of thieves, who take all of their money and jewelry but neglect to look in the suitcases.

As they pull into the next town, bad things keep happening.  A flat tire is about par for the course on this trip.


Mrs. Rumford, the owner of the hotel they stop at, isn't happy that they have no money.  Pinky sends a telegram to his bank asking them to wire some money.  However, they have been frantically trying to locate him and the $50,000 he has in the suitcase.  Now they know where he is, and the race is on.  Will the authorities or the embezzler get to him first?

Mrs. Rumford insists on keeping a suitcase as collateral for the rooms.  She asks the local sheriff to be with her when she opens it for inspection.  "Are you busy?" she asks.  "I'm about as busy as a pickpocket at a nudist colony," he says sarcastically.

They are shocked when they discover all the cash inside the suitcase.  "Why should a man carry fifty thousand dollars cash in a suitcase?" asks Mrs. Rumford.  "Just to tempt honest people," comes the sheriff's reply.


Inside the suitcase are also a bunch of letters written between the embezzler and his girlfriend...things that make it look that Pinky is indeed a scheming embezzler who can't wait to be rid of his wife.

Everything turns out for the best.  The embezzler is caught, and the Whinneys are granted an additional thirty days on which to enjoy their honeymoon.

Cast rundown:

Charles Ruggles - Six Of A Kind
   Charles Ruggles...............................J. Pinkham Whinney

Mary Boland - Six Of A Kind
   Mary Boland....................................Flora Whinney

W.C. Fields - Six Of A Kind
   W.C. Fields......................................Sheriff John Hoxley

George Burns - Six Of A Kind
   George Burns..................................George Edwards

Gracie Allen - Six Of A Kind
   Gracie Allen.....................................Gracie Devore

Alison Skipworth - Six Of A Kind
   Alison Skipworth..............................Mrs. K. Rumford

Irving Bacon - Six Of A Kind
   Irving Bacon....................................Hotel Desk Clerk

And that's it for Six Of A Kind.  This is a completely fun film.  Short too! (63 minutes)  It's also enjoyable if you find the comedic stylings of Burns and Allen to your liking.  There's also a hilarious billiards sketch featuring W.C. Fields, in which he tells how he got the nickname "Honest John".

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