Showing posts with label Katharine Alexander. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katharine Alexander. Show all posts

Monday, June 8, 2020

The Girl From 10th Avenue (1935)

The Girl From 10th Avenue - 1935
Our next film is 1935's "The Girl From 10th Avenue", a movie in which a man and woman are married after an evening of drinking, and come to realize how much they mean to each other.

The film's cast includes Bette Davis, Ian Hunter, Colin Clive, Alison Skipworth, John Eldredge, Phillip Reed, Katharine Alexander, and Helen Jerome Eddy.


A high society wedding is happening in New York City.  A large crowd has gathered outside the church to see the happy couple.


An drunken man staggers through the crowd and steps on the foot of a bystander.


The man is Geoffrey Sherwood, who was a former flame of the bride.  The crowd listens to his drunken ramblings with amusement.  The woman whose foot he's stepped on is Miriam Brady, a working girl who is looking to catch a glimpse of the couple while on her lunch break.


Miriam hears talk in the crowd of getting a policeman to take Geoffrey away to a mental hospital so he won't disturb the proceedings.  She gets him away and invites him for a drink, which he gladly accepts.


The bride and groom (John and Valentine Marland) come out of the church.  The first thing Valentine does is ask the groomsmen about Geoffrey.  She then gets into the car that will take her and her new husband to their wedding reception.


The groomsmen, who happen to be friends of Geoffrey's, track him and Miriam to a restaurant.  Seeing what kind of a state Geoffrey is in, they offer Miriam $100 to keep an eye on him so that he doesn't get into trouble.


For the rest of the day they continue drinking, and Geoffrey tells her his life story.  The next day, the two find they have been married by a justice of the peace.


Miriam offers to give Geoffrey back the ring.  But he tells her to keep it.  They agree to stay married, but Miriam says that Geoffrey can leave anytime he wants to.  During the next several weeks, Miriam gets Geoffrey to sober up and stop taking alcohol, making a huge improvement with him.


She also works on herself.  She enlists the help of her landlady, Mrs. Martin, an ex-Florodora showgirl.  With Mrs. Martin's assistance, she transforms herself into being a well-read and well-bred lady.


After several weeks, Valentine comes to Geoffrey's office and tells him that she and her husband have been living apart, and she wants Geoffrey back.


On an outing one day, Miriam runs into Geoffrey's friends, as well as Valentine's husband John.


John tells Miriam that his wife is after Geoffrey, but that Geoffrey hasn't made any advances towards her.


When Miriam confronts Geoffrey about it, he tells her to leave the situation alone.  Finding herself in love, Miriam doesn't know what to do about it.


She tries to figure out what to do.  She tells Mrs. Martin that she's going to confront Valentine.  "I'm going to give that dame a shock!" she announces.  Mrs. Martin advises her to remember her manners and newly acquired good breeding when dealing with Valentine.


The next day, Valentine is at the Waldorf giving a party for a friend and chatting about the poor girl that Geoffrey married.



When Miriam walks in, it surprises Valentine, who can't take her eyes off of her.  Mrs. Martin remarks to Miriam, "Some woman is breaking her neck trying to look at you."  When Valentine quickly turns around, Miriam and Mrs. Martin smile to each other, knowing they are getting under her skin just by being there.


It further annoys Valentine when one of her friends remarks on Miriam.  "She has an interesting look.  She's just the sort of person you want to know," says Valentine's friend.


Miriam gets up and introduces herself to Valentine.  During the course of the conversation, Miriam lets Valentine know that she knows all about how she's after Geoffrey.  She does it in a very polite way.


When Valentine tries to get up to leave, Miriam tells her, "if you do, I'll put this grapefruit right in your face."  She doesn't say it rudely, just firm enough for Valentine to know she means business.


Instead of it being Miriam, Valentine herself causes a scene when she picks up the grapefruit and throws it at Miriam, causing herself great embarrassment.


Valentine is horrified at her own outburst.  Miriam just smiles and says, "Sometimes I do that, but my aim is better."  Afterwards, Miriam and Mrs. Martin walk triumphantly out of the Waldorf together.


Geoffrey hears about the encounter at the Waldorf and is upset with Miriam.  He packs his things and leaves.  Miriam says she never wants to see him again.


He does some thinking before going to see Valentine.  He tells her that it's over between them.


He rushes home to Miriam and presents her with a much better ring than the one he bought from the justice of the peace.  They smile and walk into their apartment together.

Cast rundown:


   Bette Davis.....................................Miriam Brady


   Ian Hunter......................................Geoffrey Sherwood


   Colin Clive.......................................John Marland


   Alison Skipworth..............................Mrs. Martin


   John Eldredge..................................Hugh Brown


   Phillip Reed......................................Tony Hewlett


   Katharine Alexander..........................Valentine Marland


   Helen Jerome Eddy...........................Miss Mansfield

And that's all for The Girl From 10th Avenue.  At just over an hour, this is a relatively short film.  It's well worth watching for the confrontation scene between Miriam and Valentine at the Waldorf.

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Sunday, January 19, 2020

Double Wedding (1937)

Double Wedding - 1937
Coming up next is 1937's "Double Wedding" starring William Powell and Myrna Loy.  Powell and Loy were a popular team, and that is proved again in this comedy about a man who lives in a trailer (Powell) falling in love with a stern businesswoman (Loy).

The supporting players include Florence Rice, John Beal, Jessie Ralph, Edgar Kennedy, Sidney Toler, Katharine Alexander, and Donald Meek.


The film begins at this trailer.  It's the home of Charlie Lodge (Powell), a bohemian who has ideas to direct a film.  Charlie says of his trailer, "After all, a man's home is his castle, even if it is on wheels!"


Inside the cramp and cluttered trailer, Charlie directs a scene between two young lovers, Irene and Waldo, but they soon must return home before the Irene's older sister, Margit (Loy), finds them missing, as she disapproves of her sister's theatrical ambitions.


They find ways around Margit, rehearsing after she has gone to bed.  One night she finds out what they're up to and intends to put a stop to it.  Margit tells Charlie that he can name his price if he'll leave Irene alone.  He says he doesn't want money.  He only wants one thing: to paint Margit.


She reluctantly agrees, and Margit and Charlie begin to spend a lot of time together.  Previously, when alone with business associate Mrs. Kensington-Bly, Margit said, "Men and marriage and all that sort of thing take up too much time."  Mrs. Kensington-Bly smiled and replied, "Look, babe, you only have to run a dress shop.  Catherine the Great had fifty million Russians on her hands, and she had plenty of time left over."  Soon, Margit begins to fall in love with Charlie.


Through a lot of misunderstandings, Margit comes to believe that Charlie and Irene love each other and want to get married.  She finds out that the ceremony is to take place at his trailer.  She barges in and confronts them.  Only, it's a ruse.  Irene really loves Waldo.  And Charlie is in love with Margit.  Pretty soon quite a few people show up for the wedding.


The scene just gets more and more crowded as people flock to the little trailer to find out what's going on.


Seeing the crowd, a man even starts selling hamburgers and hot dogs to the bystanders.


Things get completely out of hand and a fight erupts, both inside and outside the trailer.  Through it all, Charlie and Margit finally get together, though by the end of the film, both are unconscious due to all the fighting.  The whole wedding scene is laugh-out-loud hilarious.

Cast rundown:


   William Powell....................................Charlie Lodge


   Myrna Loy..........................................Margit Agnew


   Florence Rice......................................Irene Agnew


   John Beal...........................................Waldo Beaver


   Jessie Ralph.......................................Mrs. Kensington-Bly


   Edgar Kennedy....................................Spike


   Sidney Toler........................................Keogh


   Katharine Alexander.............................Claire Lodge


   Donald Meek.......................................Judge Blynn

And that's all for Double Wedding.  It's a fun Powell/Loy collaboration.  And as I stated previously, the final wedding scene is extremely humorous.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.