Showing posts with label Robert Cummings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Cummings. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Princess O'Rourke (1943)

 
Princess O'Rourke - 1943

Coming up next we have 1943's "Princess O'Rourke", the story of an exiled foreign princess living in America.  She falls for an average American guy and now has to convince her handlers that he's the right man for her.

The film's cast includes Olivia de Havilland, Robert Cummings, Charles Coburn, Jack Carson, Jane Wyman, Harry Davenport, Gladys Cooper, Minor Watson, Julie Bishop, Frank Puglia, Ferike Boros, Nydia Westman, Nana Bryant, and Fala.

Exiled Princess Maria (of an unknown foreign country) is living in America.  To make sure the royal line continues, she's instructed to get married and do so quickly.  The trouble is: she's not interested in any of the pre-approved candidates.


On an incognito trip across the country from New York to California, the princess (traveling as Mary Williams) is given sleeping pills to help calm her nerves.  Not only does she take what she's given, she keeps taking the pills like they are candy, accepting them from everyone who passes by.

When the plane is diverted back to New York because of bad weather, "Mary" is by now fast asleep and nothing can rouse her.  The plane's crew don't have any idea who she is or how to help her.

One of the pilots, Eddie O'Rourke, helps her out.  He takes her to his apartment, where she sleeps off the incredible amount of sleeping pills she's taken.



After checking in with her staff the next day, "Mary" spends the day with Eddie and his friends, Dave and Jean Campbell.  Jean takes her to a Red Cross meeting, where she volunteers to be a "dummy" and get bandaged by practicing nurses.


When the group wants to know more about her background, "Mary" tells them that she's a war refugee on her way to San Francisco to work as an upstairs maid.


The two couples go dancing, and Eddie and "Mary" start to fall in love with each other.


By the end of the evening, Eddie impulsively asks "Mary" to marry him.  She hesitates but is ultimately persuaded to say yes to his proposal.

When Princess Maria tells her staff about the engagement, they decide that it would be good for her to marry an American, which will strengthen relations between their two countries.  One of her staff, Holman, has already done some investigating about Eddie through a Secret Service agent who has been following them.  And it seems that Eddie comes from a family that produces a large number of male children, something that delights Holman, who persuades Maria's father, the King, to give the union his blessing.

Naturally, Eddie has to be told the truth of the situation.  And when he finds out that "Mary Williams" is actually a princess, he is absolutely flabbergasted.  The surprises don't stop there.  President Franklin D. Roosevelt has invited the couple to The White House to personally give them his good wishes.

On the way down to Washington, Eddie is given a tutorial in what is expected of a future "prince consort" by a member of the State Department.  Naturally, he struggles with grasping all the nuances of the position.




Once at The White House, Maria introduces Eddie to the president's dog, Fala.  She gives him a personal tour of the upstairs living quarters and even shows him the Lincoln Bedroom where the Emancipation Proclamation was signed.

As Eddie learns more about what is expected of him as Maria's husband, he finds out that he must give up his American citizenship, something he isn't prepared to do for any reason.  "I'm not giving up any American citizenship.  I've never gotten over how lucky I was to be born here in the first place," he says.  Eventually, Holman forces Eddie to leave The White House and he locks Maria in the Lincoln Bedroom.



While locked in the Lincoln Bedroom, Maria writes a letter to President Roosevelt.  She slips it through the door so Fala can take it to his master.

The next thing you know, Eddie is back at The White House, and so is a Supreme Court justice.  Maria agrees to live a quiet life with Eddie, and the two are married in the greatest secrecy, so as not to let Holman find out about it.

As their leaving The White House, Eddie bumps into someone whom he assumes is a guard.  He apologizes, and he and his new bride make their exit.


As their running across the lawn to begin their new life, Eddie says he hopes that the guard can keep quiet.  Maria tells him that that was no guard.  That was the president.  A startled Eddie says, "The president?  Holy mackerel, I tipped him a buck!  And he took it!"

Cast rundown:

Olivia de Havilland - Princess O'Rourke
   Olivia de Havilland...............................Princess Maria

Robert Cummings - Princess O'Rourke
   Robert Cummings................................Eddie O'Rourke

Charles Coburn - Princess O'Rourke
   Charles Coburn....................................Holman

Jack Carson - Princess O'Rourke
   Jack Carson........................................Dave Campbell

Jane Wyman - Princess O'Rourke
   Jane Wyman.......................................Jean Campbell

Harry Davenport - Princess O'Rourke
   Harry Davenport..................................Supreme Court Judge

Gladys Cooper - Princess O'Rourke
   Gladys Cooper.....................................Miss Haskell

Minor Watson - Princess O'Rourke
   Minor Watson......................................Mr. Washburn

Julie Bishop - Princess O'Rourke
   Julie Bishop........................................Stewardess

Frank Puglia - Princess O'Rourke
   Frank Puglia........................................Cafe Proprietor

Ferike Boros - Princess O'Rourke
   Ferike Boros........................................Mrs. Anna Pulaski

Nydia Westman - Princess O'Rourke
   Nydia Westman...................................Mrs. Bowers

Nana Bryant - Princess O'Rourke
   Nana Bryant........................................Mrs. Mulvaney

Fala - Princess O'Rourke
   Fala...................................................Himself

And that's it for Princess O'Rourke.  Originally, the stars were to be Loretta Young and Fred MacMurray.  It was during this film that Olivia de Havilland began fighting with Warner Bros.  Ultimately, the "de Havilland Law" went into effect as a direct consequence.  By special arrangement from President Roosevelt, the cast and crew were given limited access to The White House for filming.


President Roosevelt even allowed his dog Fala to portray himself.  A Fala "double" named Whiskers was also used in places when the real Fala was unavailable.

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Friday, August 28, 2020

Dial M For Murder (1954)

Dial M For Murder - 1954
Coming up next, we have 1954's "Dial M For Murder", another Hitchcock film, in which we find a man scheming to murder his unfaithful wife.  When she survives the attack, he must turn the tables and shift the blame and suspicion towards her.

The film's cast includes Ray Milland, Grace Kelly, Robert Cummings, John Williams, and Anthony Dawson.


American Margot Wendice is in love, but not with her husband.  She's been having an affair with crime writer Mark Halliday.  On a visit to London, Mark pays a visit to Margot and her husband.


Margot tells Mark that one of the love letters that he had written to her was stolen, and she fears that someone knows of their indiscretions.


When Margot's husband Tony comes home from work, he tells Margot that he's got some late work to do and won't be able to join them for dinner.  He tells Margot to take Mark out for a night on the town without him.  Reluctantly, they decide to go.



Once they are gone, Tony calls up an old college friend named Swann.  Once Swann gets to the Wendice apartment, Tony reveals how he knows everything about Margot and Mark's romance and now he wants to murder Margot.


Tony blackmails Swann into doing the dirty work for him.  They discuss the specifics of the crime and part ways.




They agreed upon day arrives and Swann finds his way into the Wendice apartment once Tony is gone for the night.  When Margot answers the phone (Tony is on the other end of the line), Swann makes his move.



Unfortunately for Swann, Margot fights back.  She reaches around for something to fight off her attacker with and comes up with a pair of scissors.  She plunges the scissors into Swann's back, causing his death.



By the time the police arrive later to inspect and follow up on the attack, Tony has arranged evidence and tweaked facts so that Margot is implicated in a murder/cover-up, in which she allegedly murdered Swann to stop him from revealing the truth of her relationship with Mark.



When Mark arrives on the scene, it seems to corroborate everything that Tony has set in motion.  Margot is arrested for murder and taken to jail.  She's later sentenced to death.


Several months later, Mark comes to Tony with his suspicions of how Margot couldn't have perpetrated the crime.  Tony dismisses Mark's theory, but when the police get involved, Tony seems to get tripped up when answering some pretty simple questions.



When Tony is out, Margot is brought from prison and told that it is their suspicion that Tony engineered the attack on her.  She can't quite believe it's true.  However, they need her in order to make Tony confess.



When Tony comes home and sees Margot, he realizes that he's been caught.



He frantically looks around for an escape route, but realizes he is trapped.  Tony is arrested for the crime and must now take Margot's place on death row.

Cast rundown:


   Ray Milland.............................Tony Wendice


   Grace Kelly..............................Margot Wendice


   Robert Cummings....................Mark Halliday


   John Williams..........................Chief Inspector Hubbard


   Anthony Dawson.....................Swann

And that's it for Dial M For Murder.  During the scene where Margot answers the telephone at night, Hitchcock had an expensive robe for Grace Kelly to wear.  She refused, saying that no woman would answer the phone in the middle of the night wearing such a robe.  She told him she would answer the phone in her nightgown.  Hitchcock agreed and let her have her way.  When he saw the finished product, he decided to let Grace make all the decisions about her costumes in their future films together.


Of course, Hitchcock appears in the film in a cameo.  In this particular film, he appears in a photo with Swann and Tony when they are discussing how they know each other.

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