Monsters and Matinees: The Handsome Face of Horror in ‘I Married a Monster from Outer Space’

The Handsome Face of Horror in ‘I Married a Monster from Outer Space’

When classic movie fans think of the faces of horror, we rightly go to some of the most iconic creatures in film history: the Universal monsters and the images that have defined the look of vampires, Frankenstein’s monster and other creatures for nearly 90 years; grotesque aliens and horrific mythological creatures.

But let’s look at it in another way – a disturbing way – and consider when the face of horror is attractive, familiar and even loving. Like … what if you married a monster from outer space?

One of the great publicity shots in I Married a Monster from Outer Space shows
Gloria Talbott being carried by an alien.

It happened – at least in the effective 1958 sci-fi horror film I Married a Monster from Outer Space. Seeing this movie again recently was a reminder of this subtle and insidious type of monster.

It was one of many films in the 1950s that fed off growing Cold War fears and anxieties about communism invading America with stories about alien invasions. Often these films had aliens taking over human bodies so we couldn’t see the horror right in front of us.

The best example of this film paranoia would be Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), Don Siegel’s terrifying and masterful story of a small California town taken over by pod people. I find this film so unnerving that it’s difficult to watch.

Instead, I wimp out and watch movies that are easy to shake off.

There’s something not right with these two usually friendly guys in It Came from Outer Space. (That’s Russell Johnson from Gilligan’s Island on the right.)

Like It Came from Outer Space (1953) with aliens who crash in the desert and temporarily take over human bodies, but don’t mean any harm – for now.

Or Invaders from Mars (1953) with little David who sees a spaceship land near his house and then convinces a town – and the military – that evil aliens have taken over the bodies of his loving parents and respected townsfolk.

And especially the underrated I Married a Monster from Outer Space about a newlywed who realizes something is not right with her husband.

* * * * *

The film opens with Bill (the tall, dark and handsome Tom Tryon) enjoying drinks with the boys the night before his wedding.

A glowing alien limb grabs Bill (Tom Tryon) in I Married a Monster from Outer Space.

On his way home, he pulls over thinking he has hit someone and is grabbed by a grotesque glowing limb, enveloped in a billowing cloud of smoke and disappears all to a creepy musical cue.

The next morning, Marge (Gloria Talbott and her super short bangs) is nervously awaiting Bill who is late for their wedding. When he arrives, he’s out of sorts but everyone brushes it off. It’s downhill from there.

The honeymoon night is a disaster with Bill inexplicably cold toward his confused new bride. Things don’t improve. On their first anniversary, Marge is writing to her mother about her “horrible” marriage that has left her frightened and bewildered. “Bill isn’t the same man I fell in love with – he’s almost a stranger.”

Oh Marge, you have no idea how right you are.

She does more than wonder as inexplicable things pile on like Bill’s furious reaction to the anniversary gift of a sweet little dog and the dog’s quick demise. (Clearly the movie rule that you don’t hurt animals didn’t exist in the 1950s.) Marge seems to buy his excuse about what happened, but smartly doesn’t let it drop.

“If it weren’t so silly, I would say you’re Bill’s twin brother from some other place,” she tells him.

She’s getting closer.

Marge is horrified to see an alien emerge from her husband’s body in
I Married a Monster from Outer Space.

Growing more troubled, Marge follows Bill out of the house, boldly running after him through the woods in a night gown and coat where she watches in horror as her husband is shrouded in that familiar smoke from which a creature emerges in front of a spaceship. The alien and its human hybrid face each other and it’s eerie even if the superimposed alien form isn’t too scary.

Marge seeks help but is stymied as male friends and the police all act in the same odd way and tell her to just go home. We can feel her growing paranoia as she realizes how far things have gone: she can’t make a long-distance phone call, can’t send a telegram and is stopped from leaving town.

Marge (Gloria Talbott) realizes she’s on her own when even her godfather the police chief refuses to help in I Married a Monster from Outer Space.

Is there anyone she can trust? There is and his idea for finding help is genius and even ironic from the aliens’ viewpoint. But is it enough and how will other complications play into things? No spoilers here.

* * * * *

A low-budget film with big-budget aspirations

I Married a Monster Space was made for only $125,000 and released with low expectations. It’s never gotten the fair shake it deserves most likely because of the campy title and matching publicity material. (Sorry, but an alien never carries the bride in her wedding gown.)

Yet it gives us more than we expect with a strong heroine, solid acting, two-dimensional aliens, surprisingly good filmmaking and a sci-fi yarn that delivers on suspense. (Moments where the alien’s face flickers briefly on its human’s is chilling.)

During a lightning storm, the alien’s true face is revealed over its human host.

The trio of director Gene Fowler Jr., writer Louis Vittes and cinematographer Haskell Boggs gives the film higher production values than we are used to in sci-fi B-movies.

Framing of scenes is wonderfully tense with architectural arches often closing in on Marge, mirroring what is happening in her life. Physical distance is exaggerated between the young couple in their home.

This is one of the scenes that effectively uses darkness in I Married a Monster from Outer Space. You can see Marge’s silhouette on the left while on the right, Bill’s arm is raised up ready to turn on the light to startle her – and viewers.

The fact aliens can see in the dark is used for dramatic effect with shadows and entire scenes in darkness. Light is used as a jump scare as when Bill turns on a light to show his wife he’s been watching her in the dark.

The way Marge is written is refreshing. We expect the young housewife to be meek and spend the film screaming as similar characters have been portrayed in movies of the time. But she is smarter and tougher than she seems, as she looks for explanations into her husband’s strange behavior. She’s not afraid to ask questions and to confront him.

In one effective scene, Bill finds Marge in the dark and wants to turn the lights on to which she responds “you don’t need any.”

When he asks what she knows, Marge doesn’t hold back.

“I know you’re not Bill. You’re some thing that has crept into Bill’s body. Something that can’t even breathe the same air we do,” she answers

When Bill asks, “Aren’t you afraid to be telling me all this?” we’re thinking the same thing.

Yes, she is afraid but is resilient. Love, it seems, can make you fearless and Talbott plays the scene to great effect.

Marge (Gloria Talbott) doesn’t sit by quietly as she notices the many changes in her husband.

Presenting Marge that way elevates the film as well as actress Talbott who has been labeled a Scream Queen in sci-fi and horror films. She shows she’s better than that.

I like that the story makes the aliens multidimensional. They are desperate creatures who face extinction from an unstable sun that has killed all the women on their planet. The yuck factor is that they’ve come to Earth so human women can breed their children. Since it’s a 1950s film, it is only talked about in theory as Bill shares it’s not possible yet.

They also aren’t immune to human emotions and that comes through in the one honest conversation between Bill the alien and Marge.

Bill: “Something happened that we hadn’t foreseen. Along with these bodies, we inherited other things as well …. human desires, emotions.”

Marge: “Are you telling me you’re learning how to love.?”

Bill: “I’m telling you I’m learning what love is.”

Well that was unexpected.

And that’s the appeal of I Married a Monster from Outer Space. You may think you know what you’re getting in a film with such a sensational and direct title, but it has its surprises making it a marriage worth watching.

How you know them

Gloria Talbott. Gloria started as a child actress in films like A Tree Grows in Brooklyn but was given the title of Scream Queen after starring in such films as The Daughter of Dr. Jekyll (1957), The Cyclops (1957) and The Leech Woman (1960). One of her most notable performances was as Jane Wyman’s daughter in All that Heaven Allows (1955).

Tom Tryon became a successful author.

Tom Tryon. The handsome actor starred in a variety of films including The Longest Day and The Cardinal as well as television work in Western shows and as the title character in Texas John Slaughter movies for The Wonderful World of Disney. But you may know his name more as an author. He left acting in 1969 to write horror and mystery stories and was a success with such novels as “The Other” (1971), which he adapted for film, and “Harvest Home” (1973).

Gene Fowler Jr. The producer and director had a long career as a film editor for the likes of Fritz Lang and Samuel Fuller and those skills are evident in I Married a Monster from Outer Space. Although he won a Golden Globe and four Emmy awards, he remains best known as director of I Was a Teenage Werewolf (1957).

…..

 Toni Ruberto for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Toni’s Monsters and Matinees articles here.Toni Ruberto, born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., is an editor and writer at The Buffalo News. She shares her love for classic movies in her blog, Watching Forever. Toni was the president of the former Buffalo chapter of TCM Backlot and now leads the offshoot group, Buffalo Classic Movie Buffs. She is proud to have put Buffalo and its glorious old movie palaces in the spotlight as the inaugural winner of the TCM in Your Hometown contest. You can find Toni on Twitter at @toniruberto.

Posted in Classic Movie Hub, Horror, Monsters and Matinees, Posts by Toni Ruberto | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Noir Nook: 10 Things About The Asphalt Jungle (1950) That You May Not Know

Noir Nook: 10 Things About The Asphalt Jungle (1950) That You May Not Know

Of all of the noirs I’ve seen in my lifetime, one of the absolute best, in my estimation, is The Asphalt Jungle (1950). It has so much going for it – a stellar ensemble cast, hard-hitting dialogue, a simple but riveting story, and a perfect noir ending.

Helmed by John Huston, the film focuses on an intricately planned jewelry heist involving a motley crew of criminals. The mastermind is Erwin “Doc” Reidenschneider (Sam Jaffe), who has recently been released from prison and is determined to carry out one last job. With the help of a skittish bookie named Cobby (Marc Lawrence), Doc assembles a team comprised of Gus Minissi, the getaway driver (James Whitmore), safecracker Louis Ciavelli (Anthony Caruso), and Dix Handley (Sterling Hayden), a “hooligan” to serve as the muscle of the group. Also on hand is Alonzo Emmerich (Louis Calhern), an attorney who’s responsible for fencing the stolen jewels. On the distaff side, we have Doll Conovan (Jean Hagen), who is hopelessly devoted to Dix, and Angela Phinlay (Marilyn Monroe), Emmerich’s mistress (who creepily calls him “Uncle Lon”).

This month’s Noir Nook celebrates this first-rate offering from the film noir era by serving up 10 things you may not have known about this famous film.

1. The film received nearly universally rave reviews upon its release. However, notoriously acerbic New York Times critic Bosley Crowther still managed to throw some shade on the production. While acknowledging that director John Huston had “filmed a straight crime story about as cleverly and graphically as it could be filmed,” he maintained that the picture was “corrupt” because it encouraged the audience to “hobnob with a bunch of crooks . . . and actually sympathize with their personal griefs.”

Strother Martin Asphalt Jungle (1950)
Strother Martin

2. Asphalt Jungle marked the big-screen debut of Strother Martin.
He would later appear in such films as True Grit (1969) and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), along with a slew of TV shows, but he may be best known for telling Paul Newman that “what we have here is failure to communicate” in Cool Hand Luke (1969). An excellent swimmer and diver, Martin won the National Junior Springboard Division Championship at the age of 17, attended the University of Michigan as a member of the diving team, and served in the U.S. Navy as a swimming instructor during World War II. After he moved to California to become an actor, he worked for a time as a swimming instructor to Marion Davies and the children of Charlie Chaplin.

3. John Huston’s first choice to play the part of Angela was Lola Albright, who was not available.
In looking at her filmography, she appeared in five films in 1950, the year The Asphalt Jungle was released; perhaps this is why she wasn’t available. She is perhaps best known for playing singer Edie Hart, the girlfriend of TV private eye Peter Gunn.

4. The wife of Louis Ciavelli was played by Teresa Celli.
She was born Teresa Levis in Dysart, Pennsylvania, but her family moved to Italy after her father inherited an estate there. Teresa took her professional name from her great-grandmother, Duval Celli, an opera singer. While in Italy, Teresa was seen in both opera and dramatic productions. After her return to the United States, she made her radio debut on NBC’s Star Theater with Frank Sinatra, and her first appearance on the big screen was in the 1949 noir Border Incident. Celli was married from 1951 to 1965 to actor Barry Nelson; after The Asphalt Jungle, she appeared in only three more films.

5. The film earned four Academy Award nominations, for Best Supporting Actor (Sam Jaffe), Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay for John Huston and Ben Maddow, and Best Black and White Cinematography for Harold Rosson. (Harold Rosson, incidentally, was the third husband of actress Jean Harlow.) The film was bested in every category – by George Sanders in All About Eve for Best Supporting Actor; Joseph Mankiewicz in All About Eve for both Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay; and Robert Krasker in The Third Man for Best Black and White Cinematography.

6. Actor Frank Cady, perhaps best known for his role as Mr. Drucker in Green Acres, played a small role in the film’s first scene, where he is viewing a police line-up. He was also seen in small parts in several other noirs, including He Walked By Night (1948), The Crooked Way (1948), D.O.A. (1949), Convicted (1950), and Ace in the Hole (1951).

7. The score for the film was written by Miklos Rozsa, who also wrote the scores for such features as Spellbound (1945), A Double Life (1947), and Ben-Hur (1959). In Asphalt Jungle, however, his melodic composition was used sparingly and was only heard for about six minutes in the entire film.

Helene Stanley Asphalt Jungle (1950)
Helene Stanley

8. Helene Stanley portrayed the young lady whose mesmerizing jive dancing leads to Doc Reidenschneider’s downfall.
Born Dolores Diane Freymouth, Stanley’s screen debut came at the age of 14 when she appeared in Girls Town (1942). She served as the live-action reference for Disney’s Cinderella (1950), Princess Aurora in Sleeping Beauty (1959), and Anita, the young wife in 101 Dalmatians. In a bit part in All the King’s Men (1949), she played John Derek’s girlfriend, who is killed in a car crash with the drunken Derek at the wheel. She has only two lines (“Come on, Tommy, let’s go faster! Come on!”), and then she’s seen lying on the side of the road after the accident. Stanley was also married to low-level mobster Johnny Stompanato from 1953 to 1955. Three years after their divorce, Stompanato was stabbed to death in the home of screen star Lana Turner. Stanley later married a Beverly Hills physician and retired from show business after the birth of her son in 1961.

9. The film was based on a 1943 novel by W.R. Burnett, who also wrote the source novels for numerous films, including Little Caesar (1931), High Sierra (1941), Nobody Lives Forever (1946), and Yellow Sky (1948).

James Seay Asphalt Jungle (1950)
James Seay

10. Several internet sources, including the Internet Movie Database, state that Asphalt Jungle marked the big-screen debut of Jack Warden.
I beg to differ, however. Try as I might, on numerous occasions, I have never spotted him. Warden was, however, the star of the 1961 TV series by the same name. Also, there is an actor in the film – James Seay – who bears more than a passing resemblance to Warden. I suspect that the resources have either confused Warden with his association with the television series or mistaken him for Seay. Or possibly both.

And that’s it! I hope this list contained at least a few tidbits that you didn’t already know. Stay tuned for future Noir Nooks for trivia on your favorite noirs!

– Karen Burroughs Hannsberry for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Karen’s Noir Nook articles here.

Karen Burroughs Hannsberry is the author of the Shadows and Satin blog, which focuses on movies and performers from the film noir and pre-Code eras, and the editor-in-chief of The Dark Pages, a bimonthly newsletter devoted to all things film noir. Karen is also the author of two books on film noir – Femme Noir: The Bad Girls of Film and Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. You can follow Karen on Twitter at @TheDarkPages.

If you’re interested in learning more about Karen’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

Posted in Noir Nook, Posts by Karen Burroughs Hannsberry | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Silver Screen Standards: The Night of the Hunter (1955)

Silver Screen Standards: The Night of the Hunter (1955)

The Night of the Hunter (1955) is such a haunting and unusual film that I often wonder what else Charles Laughton might have produced had he directed any more movies, but if he was only going to direct once at least we got this picture to show for it. Laughton’s grim fairy tale of murder and madness in the Depression-era plays like a dark picture book, full of images that linger in the mind of the viewer long after the movie ends. Adapted from the 1953 Southern Gothic thriller by Davis Grubb, the film explores evil, loneliness, and courage in its story of two children pursued by a maniacal serial killer who wants the stolen money their father died to obtain for them. Striking performances from Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, and Lillian Gish provide the most memorable scenes, but young Billy Chapin holds the story together as John Harper, whose realistic responses to trauma contrast with the dreamlike scenery around him. The result is a movie that creeps into your psyche and stays there, just like those old stories about lost little children and the monsters who want to swallow them whole.

The Night of the Hunter (1955) Robert Mitchum
Harry Powell (Robert Mitchum) pretends to be a preacher, but the tattoos on his knuckles suggest his more sinister nature.

Classic movie fans don’t need an introduction to Robert Mitchum, Lillian Gish, or Charles Laughton, but the contributions of all three are surely enough to lure almost any film fanatic to The Night of the Hunter. Mitchum’s performance is deeply unnerving, a combination of real menace, delusion, and buffoonery that might seem unbelievable if it weren’t so horribly common in real life. Harry Powell has killed so many women he can’t keep count, and we understand from his twitchy knife hand that the killing is a compulsion that exists entirely outside his need for funds. He would kill women for nothing, but killing the ones who are lonely enough to marry him gives him the money to keep going.

His God is a monstrous version of the blood-soaked destroyer of the Old Testament, meting out hellfire and punishment on widows and children while vindicating the wrath of a tyrannical patriarch (the poet William Blake imagined this image of God as “Nobodaddy,” which makes a provocative comparison with “Daddy Powell,” too). Lillian Gish brings balance to this dark vision of God with her role as the stalwart Rachel Cooper, whose God is the protector of children like Moses, Jesus, and John Harper. Rachel is the nurturer whose love is unconditional, even to the hopelessly lovestruck Ruby. Kindness, comfort, and courage shine through her wise face in every scene; she is more than a match for the false prophet Harry Powell, which ought to give us all hope for the world.

Between them, we have Shelley Winters’ portrayal of the martyred Willa, a victim of Harry’s violence and greed but also of her community’s foolish devotion to patriarchal norms and gullibility. She loves her children in a helpless, paralyzed sort of way, but she’s incapable of fighting for them and lies down to await the knife like a sacrificial lamb, leaving John and Pearl to face Daddy Powell alone. Her good intentions, like those of the kindly but drunken Uncle Birdie (James Gleason), are useless in the struggle against real evil. Winters, however, invests her with a sense of quiet tragedy that attracts our sympathy, especially when contrasted with the despicable busybody Icey Spoon (Evelyn Varden).

The Night of the Hunter (1955) Lillian Gish protects kids
Rachel Cooper (Lillian Gish) fearlessly defends her adopted children from Harry over the course of a long night, during which she tells them stories from the Bible to distract and encourage them.

When I watched this movie with my husband recently, he commented on the ending and how long it was, going on well beyond the downfall of Harry Powell, but the extended denouement of The Night of the Hunter makes more sense when we consider that John Harper is really the protagonist of this story, although the adult stars get top billing, and this is not a noir film even if many of the classic noir elements are in play.

The Night of the Hunter (1955) Billy Chapin and Sally Jane Bruce
John and Pearl Harper (Billy Chapin and Sally Jane Bruce) hide from the murderous Harry Powell in the basement before their dramatic first escape from his clutches.

For most of the picture, John is being threatened, damaged, and traumatized while his innate courage and intelligence, as well as his devotion to Pearl, keep him in motion. He barely has time to sleep, much less process the horror of his situation or the scope of his losses. He’s too busy trying to keep himself and his sister alive. The arrest of Harry Powell doesn’t repair the damage done to John’s psyche; in fact, it reinforces that damage by making John repeat the horror of seeing his real father arrested at the beginning of the film. A noir story might have ended there, with fatal justice for Harry but a bleak endpoint for John. Instead, we get several more scenes in which John is slowly put back together as a person by Rachel Cooper’s love and protection. He is integrated into a functional, loving family, albeit one made of other displaced children taken into Rachel’s care. When Rachel faces the camera and tells us that little children abide, she is assuring us that John will be alright, and we need to hear that because otherwise, the story would be too dark to bear. It might not, in the real world, always be true, but we need to hear it in order to have hope, that saving grace that always lights our darkest times, and the sweet, beatific face of Lillian Gish compels us to believe her. The story ends there to tell us that good outlasts evil and that bad times don’t last forever, which is also how fairy tales tend to end, not just with the punishment of the wicked but the salvation and uplifting of the innocent.

The Night of the Hunter (1955) Robert Mitchum and Shelley Winters
Harry Powell (Robert Mitchum) prepares to cut the throat of his bride, Willa (Shelley Winters), who has realized at last that Harry just wants the money her late husband stole.

If you’re interested in the inner workings of fairy tales, use The Night of the Hunter as a leaping off point for further studies with books like Bruno Bettelheim’s The Uses of Enchantment (1976) or even the poetry of Ann Sexton in her 1971 collection, Transformations. For more classic movies with fairy tale roots, try The Blue Bird (1940), Jean Cocteau’s 1946 version of Beauty and the Beast, or The Red Shoes (1948), to name just a few. For a darker double feature with Robert Mitchum, follow up with Cape Fear (1962). The Night of the Hunter is available on a very handsome Blu-ray edition from Criterion Collection with a number of special features, including extensive outtakes and behind the scenes footage from Charles Laughton.

— Jennifer Garlen for Classic Movie Hub

Jennifer Garlen pens our monthly Silver Screen Standards column. You can read all of Jennifer’s Silver Screen Standards articles here.

Jennifer is a former college professor with a PhD in English Literature and a lifelong obsession with film. She writes about classic movies at her blog, Virtual Virago, and presents classic film programs for lifetime learning groups and retirement communities. She’s the author of Beyond Casablanca: 100 Classic Movies Worth Watching and its sequel, Beyond Casablanca II: 101 Classic Movies Worth Watching, and she is also the co-editor of two books about the works of Jim Henson.

Posted in Posts by Jennifer Garlen, Silver Screen Standards | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Marilyn: Behind the Icon – Let’s Make Love

Monroe’s Last Completed Musical-Comedy:
Let’s Make Love (1960)

lets make love poster

Marilyn Monroe is the greatest farceuse in the business,” Fox film producer Jerry Wald asserted. “A female Chaplin.” In the summer of 1959, Wald approached Monroe with The Billionaire, a musical comedy by Norman Krasna who had scripted the sophisticated Indiscreet (1958) for Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant. Professionally, Monroe was hot, and Fox wanted to capitalize on the success of its own star who’s last two films were made for rival studios. In fact, Monroe hadn’t worked on the Fox lot since Bus Stop (1956).

image removed
Marilyn Monroe and George Cukor

Fox wanted Billy Wilder to direct, clearly hoping to recreate the magic of Some Like It Hot, but he was editing The Apartment at Paramount. George Cukor, another director on Monroe’s approved list, was the next choice. Cukor, a talented gay man known as a “women’s director,” had a string of successes including The Women (1939), The Philadelphia Story (1940), and A Star is Born (1954).

image removed
George Cukor and Marilyn Monroe

“[Marilyn] had this absolutely unerring touch with comedy,” Cukor would later say. “In real life she didn’t seem funny, but she had this touch. She acted as if she didn’t quite understand why it was funny, which is what made it so funny.”

lets make love title treatment

Retitled Let’s Make Love, the film is a backstage story about a French billionaire, Jean-Marc Clement (Yves Montand), who learns his Casanova reputation is being satirized in an off-Broadway musical. Dismissing his attorney’s (Wilfrid Hyde-White) urge to shut down the production, the billionaire instead heeds the advice of his public relations agent (Tony Randall) and visits the theater during rehearsals to show good humor. At the theater, he is mistaken for an inexperienced actor auditioning for his part. Dazzled by the production’s leading female performer, Amanda Dell (Monroe), the billionaire accepts the part of the playboy to court her and pretends to be “Alex Dumas.”

marilyn monroe lets make love 1

Amanda, who attends night school, is serious about self-improvement and voices a strong prejudice against wealthy playboys. She is more interested in the art of acting, men who are awkward with women, and the show’s male singer (Frankie Vaughan). Amanda begins to coach this would-be impersonator whose disguise prevents him from relying upon money and power to impress her. The billionaire hires famous virtuosos in comedy, singing and dancing (Milton Berle, Bing Crosby, and Gene Kelly) to assist him in stirring Amanda, but discovers he is utterly untalented.

Yves Montand marilyn monroe lets make love 1

The plot’s premise borrows from the previous year’s hit Pillow Talk in which a man pursues a woman disinterested in his playboy reputation by disguising himself as more sensitive and approachable. Even Some Like It Hot was a more skewed variation on the formula.

marilyn monroe Yves Montand lets make love 2

Contenders for the role of Clement included Gregory Peck, Yul Brynner, Cary Grant, James Stewart, Charlton Heston, Rock Hudson. As casting finalized, Monroe’s husband, playwright Arthur Miller, arranged her introduction to the French actor and vocalist Yves Montand performing in a concert tour in New York, who would become her co-star. Monroe campaigned for Montand’s casting and won. Although he was born near Florence, Italy, the film’s trailer promoted Montand as “the greatest gift France has sent to us since the Statue of Liberty.” With his prominent nose, Montand bore a slight resemblance to Joe DiMaggio.

Yves Montand lets make love 1

“Next to my husband and along with Marlon Brando,” Monroe told the press at a reception she hosted at the studio’s Café de Paris commissary, “I think Yves Montand is the most attractive man I’ve ever met.”

tony randall marilyn monroe lets make love 1

Tony Randall, cast as Clement’s publicist Alex Coffman, found success in the aptly titled Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957), Pillow Talk, and The Mating Game (1959).

frankie vaughan marilyn monroe lets make love 1

Frankie Vaughan, “the singing idol of England,” plays Tony Danton, a cabaret singer in Amanda’s production. Vaughan released more than eighty recordings over the course of his career, mostly covers of American songs.

Wilfrid Hyde-White marilyn monroe lets make love 1

As Clement’s protective attorney Mr. Wales, Wilfrid Hyde-White, was a British actor best remembered for his role in My Fair Lady (1964). He amused Monroe with a story he heard of a man visiting the wilds of Africa who told a savage tribesman that he was from America, and the head-hunter responded, “America—Marilyn Monroe.”

yves montand bing crosby lets make love 1

Screen legends Milton Berle, Bing Crosby, and Gene Kelly portray themselves in cameos as the comedian, singer and dancer who coach Clement.

yves montand, gene kelly, milton berle, marilyn monroe lets make love

Cukor, accompanied by songwriters Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen and musical director, Lionel Newman, traveled to the Monroe’s Manhattan apartment to audition the musical score. Using her white baby grand piano, the team sang four original songs created for the film: “Specialization,” “Incurably Romantic,” “Hey You with the Crazy Eyes,” and “Let’s Make Love.” The four men had a rare glimpse of Monroe as a stepmother when, in middle of a song, she jumped up and attended to her young stepson and his best friend.

marilyn Monroe records the let's make love soundtrack musical numbers
Monroe records the film’s soundtrack musical numbers.
marilyn monroe my heart belongs to daddy let's make love

Monroe’s opening number, a Beatnik version of Cole Porter’s standard “My Heart Belongs to Daddy.” The six-minute sequence was on the scale of “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend” and “Heat Wave”. Immortalized by Mary Martin, the song was updated to include jazzy “ba-da-da” back-up male vocals. The melody of the chorus is in a minor key while the bridge is in major. Monroe delivered staccato phrasing with precise pitch.

marilyn monroe lets make love blue sweater

As the number begins, the camera focuses on a series of firehouse poles as Monroe’s legs appear from above, opening and closing as she shimmies down a pole and into frame before whispering, “Boys!” Ten male dancers in casual beige outfits join her. Wearing a bulky blue Aran sweater over a black leotard body suit and black pumps, Monroe announces, “My name is…Lolita, and I’m not supposed to play…with boys.” This phrase calls to mind Nabokov’s controversial novel. Furthering the literary allusion, Monroe plays with jacks and crawls across the floor between the spread legs of a row of male dancers.

marilyn monroe lets make love 3

As in “Diamonds,” the male dancers chase, lift, and carry her around the stage. It is a vigorously acrobatic number, probably the most difficult of her career. Cukor shot the sequence slowly in fifteen second takes while Monroe mimicked the dance moves modeled off-set by Jack Cole. When Cole accidentally caught his foot in a camera dolly, Monroe grimaced and clutched her chest in exact imitation of her choreographer. The number took eleven days to complete

jack cole marilyn monroe let's make love

Monroe appreciated Cole’s patience. She sent him a greeting card and enclosed a check for $1500 and a note that read, “I really was awful, it must have been a difficult experience, please go someplace nice for a couple of weeks and act like it all never happened.” A few days later, Cole received another card with a check for $500 and an inscription that said, “Stay three more days.” Cole responded with a telegram: “The universe sparkles with miracles but none among them shines like you. Remember that when you go to sleep.”

marilyn monroe let's make love 4

The blue sweater, ordered from Ireland for $75 by costume designer Dorothy Jeakins, created more delays on the set than Monroe than the Hollywood writer’s strike that stalled production. Monroe was slender, having lost the weight gained during her pregnancy in late 1958; however, Fox executive Buddy Adler complained that she looked pregnant in the blue sweater. The sweater gave the illusion of middle fullness as it was sewn into Monroe’s black leotard to prevent it from riding up during the highly physical dance moves.

marilyn monroe let's make love 5
“I got tired of being ignorant,” Amanda explains of her reason for working toward a high school diploma. “I never knew what people were referring to.”
yves montand marilyn monroe let's make love 3
Amanda coaches Clement (posing as an actor) on how to impersonate the playboy billionaire in Method acting style by “becoming” the role. She scorns the billionaire as a “crude” and “rich louse” and disapproves of him expecting women “to drop dead with the honor” of his interest. Intrigued, Clement asks Amanda on a date, but she declines to study for a geography exam.
marilyn monroe yves montand let's make love 5
Clement notices Amanda knitting between scenes and asks what she is creating. “I haven’t decided yet,” she says, displaying an unidentifiable mass. “It keeps my hands busy.”
yves montand marilyn monroe let's make love 6
After rehearsal, Amanda goes for a jog, Clement is smitten by her spontaneity.
marilyn monroe let's make love 8
After a stage kiss, Amanda realizes she is falling in love with her co-star. 
marilyn monroe lets make love 9
Amanda supports Tony after he relapses on alcohol.
marilyn monroe lets make love 10
When “Alex” realizes Amanda loves him, he admits being an imposter. Amanda believes his acting approach has gone too far.
marilyn monroe let's make love 11
When Clement serves the producer of the off-Broadway musical receive a notice of the injunction, “Alex” suggests that the producer send Amanda directly to the billionaire’s headquarters to charm him into dropping the injunction.
marilyn monroe yves montand lets make love 8
When “Alex” sits behind Clement’s desk, goes through his mail, and pages his secretary, Amanda becomes alarmed, assuming her Method-acting coaching of Alex has convinced him that is, indeed, the billionaire.
vyes montand marilyn monroe lets make love 9
Alex reveals his identity.
marilyn monroe yves montand, life magazine, album cover

Fox promised “The Best Entertainment Offer You’ve Had in Years!” and organized a premiere in Reno, where Marilyn was scheduled to film The Misfits. Rather ominously, the city experienced an electrical blackout on the evening of the event. The premiere was canceled and never rescheduled.

yves montand marilyn monroe lets make love 10

With all its deficits, the film is average; but the public expected a Marilyn Monroe film to produce above average results. Regardless, Monroe is delightful and approachable in the role. She speaks in her natural voice, her manner is natural and unaffected, she portrays Amanda as an approximation to the real Monroe.

marilyn monroe lets make love 12

New York World-Telegram and Sun noticed the public’s positive response to her musical performance during a screening: “Marilyn Monroe is geared for some of the loudest laughter of her life…It is a gay, preposterously and completely delightful romp…Marilyn actually dares comparison with Mary Martin by singing ‘My Heart Belongs to Daddy’ in the first scene. The night I saw it, the audience broke into the picture with applause.” Conversely, crusty Bosley Crowther commented in the New York Times, “Who (aside from his mother) would ever have expected to see Milton Berle steal a show, without much effort, from Marilyn Monroe and Yves Montand?”

yves montand marilyn monroe lets make love 16

Let’s Make Love received an Oscar nomination for best scoring of a musical. However, it received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Musical Motion Picture and a nomination for Best Written American Musical by the Writers Guild of America.

frankie vaughn marilyn monroe 2

…..

What’s the story behind Monroe’s costume that got much mileage? Monroe wore two of her own dresses in the production. One is the designer Jean-Louis’s sheath with bolero jacket which she frequently wore to events from 1958-1962.

marilyn monroe black dress let's make love

Does Monroe wear the silver gown from the premiere of Some Like It Hot? In the Specialization number that highlights the careers of Elvis Presley, Maria Callas and Van Cliburn, Monroe dons a spangled silver gown adorned with bugle beads that she had worn to the premiere of Some Like It Hot in March 1959.

marilyn monroe silver gown lets make love

Did Monroe have a birthday party on set? Monroe celebrated her 34th birthday on set and receive a string of pearls from George Cukor. She was photographed with the children of cast and crew invited to the event.

marilyn monroe celebrates 34th birthday on the set of let's make love

Did Arthur Miller polish the script? The writer’s strike of 1960 delayed production, so Monroe’s husband rewrote key scenes.

marilyn monroe lets make love 16

A pivotal scene—obviously scripted by Miller—establishes the emotional connection between Amanda and Clement. The scrapped dialogue could likely have been a conversation in the Miller living room on East Fifty-Seventh Street. When Amanda explains that she wants to be “wonderful” and entertain people, Clement cynically suggests only one in a hundred audience members really cares about her acting—the rest are “foolish, perspiring strangers” for whom she is working “like a slave.” Amanda describes the exhilaration she feels during a good performance and her connection to the audience: “You’re home. Like in a family.” “How well I know,” Marilyn printed next to this last line on her working copy of the script, which describes how an audience’s feedback makes her feel lifted off the ground and in a home. She changed the words “ground” to “earth” and “home” to “sheltered.” In the margin, she scribbled, “how true.”

yves montand, gene kelly, marilyn monroe drinking coffee on the set of let's make love

Why all the publicity photos of the film’s stars drinking coffee? That was Monroe’s media campaign to save the small business of a coffee and concession vendor. She inscribed this photo of herself and the vendor, “There’s nothing like your coffee.” During production, Fox studio was terminating the contract of its coffee vendor, one man’s livelihood. Monroe wielded her power and protested the termination, demanding that he remain; there are a series of photos of her and her co-stars drinking coffee at the vendor’s portable stand which traveled to the sound stages. Monroe won, and the coffee vendor stayed.

marilyn monroe and coffee vendor on set of let's make love
marilyn monroe lets make love ending

…..

–Gary Vitacco-Robles for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Gary’s Marilyn: Behind the Icon articles for CMH here.

Gary Vitacco-Robles is the author of ICON: The Life, Times and Films of Marilyn Monroe, Volumes 1 2, and writer/producer of the podcast series, Marilyn: Behind the Icon.

Posted in Films, Marilyn: Behind the Icon, Posts by Gary Vitacco-Robles | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Maureen O’Hara: The Biography – Book Giveaway (Sept)

“Maureen O’Hara: The Biography”
We have FOUR Books to Give Away this month!

“Aubrey Malone turns back the veil on O’Hara’s closely guarded private life to reveal a truly fascinating, spirited, and down-to-earth woman behind the glamorous movie star.”—News OK

It’s time for our next book giveaway contest! And we’re super excited about this one! That said, CMH is very happy to say that we will be giving away FOUR COPIES of Maureen O’Hara: The Biography by Aubrey Malone, courtesy of University Press of Kentucky, from now through Oct 3.

In order to qualify to win one of these prizes via this contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, Oct 3 at 6PM EST. However, the sooner you enter, the better chance you have of winning, because we will pick a winner on four different days within the contest period, via random drawings, as listed below. So if you don’t win the first week that you enter, you will still be eligible to win during the following weeks until the contest is over.

  • Sept 12: One Winner
  • Sept 19: One Winner
  • Sept 26: One Winner
  • Oct 3: One Winner

We will announce each week’s winner on Twitter @ClassicMovieHub, the day after each winner is picked around 9PM EST — for example, we will announce our first week’s winner on Sunday Sept 13 at 9PM EST on Twitter. And, please note that you don’t have to have a Twitter account to enter; just see below for the details.

…..

And now on to the contest!

ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, Oct 3, 2020 at 6PM EST — BUT remember, the sooner you enter, the more chances you have to win…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

2) Then TWEET (not DM) the following message*:
Just entered to win the “Maureen O’Hara: The Biography” #BookGiveaway courtesy of @KentuckyPress & @ClassicMovieHub You can #EnterToWin here: http://www.classicmoviehub.com/blog/maureen-ohara-the-biography-book-giveaway-sept/

THE QUESTION:
What is one of your favorite Maureen O’Hara movies and why? And if you’re not too familiar with her work, why do you want to win this book?

*If you do not have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

ALSO: Please allow us 48 hours to approve your comments. Sorry about that, but we are being overwhelmed with spam, and must sort through 100s of comments…

About the Book: From her first appearances on the stage and screen, Maureen O’Hara commanded attention with her striking beauty, radiant red hair, and impassioned portrayals of spirited heroines. Maureen O’Hara is the first book-length biography of the screen legend hailed as the “Queen of Technicolor.” Following the star from her childhood in Dublin to the height of fame in Hollywood, film critic Aubrey Malone draws on new information from the Irish Film Institute, production notes from films, and details from historical film journals, newspapers, and fan magazines. Malone also examines the actress’s friendship with frequent costar John Wayne and her relationship with director John Ford, and he addresses the hotly debated question of whether the screen siren was a feminist or antifeminist figure. This breakthrough biography offers the first look at the woman behind the larger-than-life persona, sorting through the myths to present a balanced assessment of one of the greatest stars of the silver screen.

Click here for the full contest rules. 

Please note that only Continental United States (excluding Alaska, Hawaii, and the territory of Puerto Rico) entrants are eligible.

And — BlogHub members ARE eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

Good Luck!

And if you can’t wait to win the book, you can purchase the on amazon by clicking here:

 …..

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Books, Contests & Giveaways, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | Tagged , , | 32 Comments

What’s Streaming in Sept on the CMH Channel at Best Classics Ever? Angel and the Bad Man, The Hitch-Hiker, His Girl Friday and More

Our Sept Picks on the Classic Movie Hub Channel
Over 40 Titles Streaming Free All Month Long!

It’s that time again… We have our monthly free streaming picks for our Classic Movie Hub Channel at Best Classics Ever (BCE) – the mega streaming channel for classic movies and TV shows! This is all part of our partnership with Best Classics Ever (BCE), in which we’ll be curating monthly picks on our CMH Channel – plus giving away lots of annual streaming subscriptions as well!

That said, here are just some of our Sept picks (over 40 titles in all) available for free streaming on the CMH Channel. All you need to do is click on the movie/show of your choice, then click ‘play’ — you do not have to opt for a 7-day trial.

In celebration of September Birthdays, we’re featuring Gene Autry, Gail Russell, George Raft and more.

Our Fan Favorites this month include Santa Fe TrailAnd Then There Were None, Father’s Little Dividend, My Man Godfrey, Royal Wedding, Angel and the Badman and more:

This month’s dramas include:

And don’t forget to check out some of our ‘All in Good Fun’ titles including.

And for some Friday Fright Night,we’re featuring horror classics starring Boris Karloff and Vincent Price, plus the silent classics Nosferatu and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari:

And more !

…..

For those of you who aren’t familiar with the service, Best Classics Ever is a new mega streaming channel built especially for classic movie and TV lovers. The idea of the channel was to make lots of classic titles accessible and affordable for all. That said, there are hundreds of titles available for free streaming on the BCE homepage and the Classic Movie Hub Channel — plus, thousands of titles on the individual channels (Best Stars Ever, Best Westerns Ever, Best Mysteries Ever, Best TV Ever) via subscription ($1.99/mo. per channel or $4.99/mo. for everything).

You can read more about Best Classics Ever and our partnership here.

Hope you enjoy!

…..

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Best Classics Ever BCE, Classic Movie Hub Channel, Posts by Annmarie Gatti, Streaming Movies & TV Shows | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Classic Movie Travels: Virginia Bruce

Classic Movie Travels: Virginia Bruce – Fargo and Los Angeles

Virginia Bruce
Virginia Bruce

Virginia Bruce was a popular star of the 1930s and enjoyed success as an actress and singer. She was born to Earl and Margaret Briggs. Though born Helen Virginia Briggs on September 29, 1909, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, her family soon relocated to Fargo, North Dakota. Two years later, her younger brother, Stanley, was born. The two children grew up and received their education in North Dakota. Virginia harbored happy memories of life in the red brick house and ice skating on a nearby frozen pond during the winters. She also busied herself with swimming and horseback riding. 

Virginia also enjoyed playing the piano. When she found herself expelled for verbally retaliating at her history teacher just before graduation, the Fargo High School Choral Society struggled to find an accompanist as talented as she. As a result, Virginia was asked back and the choir won their contest. Virginia presented them with their award and also wound up receiving her diploma. 

Virginia Bruce young
a young Virginia

Soon after her 1928 graduation from Fargo Central High School, her family once again moved to Los Angeles with the intent of Virginia enrolling at the University of California—Los Angeles. There, her father worked as a salesman.  Initially, she wished to study music and cultivate her soprano voice but her parents encouraged her to seek work in films. She was discovered by director William Beaudine when Virginia accompanied her clothing designer aunt to a styling appointment with Beaudine’s wife. The meeting turned into an audition of sorts for Virginia, who entertained the Beaudines by playing piano and singing.

Virginia made her screen debut in 1929 in a bit part in Fugitives (1929), following the appearance with many more uncredited roles. She also worked on stage in the Broadway shows Smiles and America’s Sweetheart, returning to Hollywood in 1932. Virginia would find herself as one of the 20 original Goldwyn Girls, including Betty Grable, Paulette Goddard, and Ann Sothern.

Virginia Bruce and John Gilbert
Virginia Bruce and John Gilbert

During the production of Kongo (1932), she met and married actor John Gilbert. Their wedding was held in haste in Gilbert’s dressing room, with Irving Thalberg, Donald Ogden Stewart, Cedric Gibbons, and Dolores del Rio in attendance. Their marriage produced one daughter named Susan Ann. The couple divorced in 1934.

Virginia Bruce and her daughter, Susan Ann
Virginia and her daughter, Susan Ann

While working in films, Virginia was given the opportunity to showcase her vocal talents. She introduced the Cole Porter song, “I’ve Got You Under My Skin” in Born to Dance (1936), and also appeared in the hit musical film The Great Ziegfeld (1936). Though her roles gradually improved since her entrance into films, her career plateaued in 1936 with the death of friend and producer Irving Thalberg. Virginia soon found herself featured in B movies. In response, she occasionally appeared on the radio to partake in dramatic shows on the air.

Virginia Bruce
Virginia

In 1937, she married J. Walter Ruben and had a son, Christopher Ruben, with him in 1941. They remained together until his passing in 1942.

Virginia Bruce and her son, Christopher Ruben
Virginia and her son, Christopher Ruben

After a string of disappointing projects, Virginia retired from films in the 1960s. She emerged or a final appearance in Madame Wang’s (1981). In her later years, Virginia dedicated herself to a variety of political causes before passing away from cancer on February 24, 1982, at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital. She was 72 years old.

Her family home in 1928 still stands at 421 14th St. S in Fargo. This is the home today:

421 14th St., Fargo, ND Virginia Bruce
421 14th St., Fargo, ND

Unfortunately, her 1930s home at 4456 Lockwood Ave. in Los Angeles has been razed. This is the property today:

4456 Lockwood Ave., Los Angeles, California Virginia Bruce
4456 Lockwood Ave., Los Angeles, California

At this point, Virginia’s filmography and radio performances can continue to be enjoyed.

–Annette Bochenek for Classic Movie Hub

Annette Bochenek pens our monthly Classic Movie Travels column. You can read all of Annette’s Classic Movie Travel articles here.

Annette Bochenek of Chicago, Illinois, is a PhD student at Dominican University and an independent scholar of Hollywood’s Golden Age. She manages the Hometowns to Hollywood blog, in which she writes about her trips exploring the legacies and hometowns of Golden Age stars. Annette also hosts the “Hometowns to Hollywood” film series throughout the Chicago area. She has been featured on Turner Classic Movies and is the president of TCM Backlot’s Chicago chapter. In addition to writing for Classic Movie Hub, she also writes for Silent Film Quarterly, Nostalgia Digest, and Chicago Art Deco SocietyMagazine.

Posted in Classic Movie Travels, Posts by Annette Bochenek | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Marilyn: Behind the Icon – Ladies of the Chorus

Marilyn Monroe Steps Out of the Chorus Line in her First Starring Role: Ladies of the Chorus (1948)

Marilyn Monroe and Rand Brooks in Ladies of the Chorus (1948)
Marilyn Monroe and Rand Brooks in Ladies of the Chorus (1948)

“It was really dreadful.” This was Marilyn Monroe’s confession to French journalist Georges Belmont in 1960 of her first starring film, Ladies of the Chorus, released twelve years earlier. “I was supposed to be the daughter of a burlesque dancer some guy from Boston falls in love with. It was a terrible story and terribly, badly photographed; everything was awful about it. So, [Columbia] dropped me. But you learn from everything.”

Marilyn Monroe ladies of the chorus 1

Monroe’s debut as a musical comedy performer in Ladies of the Chorus was arguably far from dreadful. In the succinct, B-movie with a ten-day production schedule, she portrayed Peggy Martin, a burlesque chorus dancer with an overprotective mother, May (Adele Jergens), another dancer in the troupe. When headliner Bubbles LaRue quits, the stage manager asks May to take her place, but she concedes to her daughter. Peggy’s performance is classy, and the audience is smitten by her. Randy Carroll (Rand Brooks), a wealthy young man in the audience, is especially smitten and anonymously sends Peggy orchids by the dozens. When a florist, unaware of Peggy’s identity, disapproves of Randy sending orchids to a burlesque star, Peggy plays along with a sneer. Peggy and Randy begin dating, and Randy quickly proposes.

marilyn monroe ladies of the chorus montage 1

Protective May approves of Randy but fears his wealthy mother will disapprove of Peggy based on career as a burlesque star. In the past, when May was a young chorus girl, she married a wealthy young man from her audience who had fallen in love with her. After Peggy’s birth, the marriage was annulled because May’s mother-in-law rejected her. Hoping to spare her daughter from the pain she experienced in the past, May urges Randy to inform his mother of Peggy’s profession before introducing them. Randy cannot bring himself to do this, and his mother, Mrs. Carroll (Nana Bryant), hosts an engagement party and invites Peggy and May.

marilyn monroe ladies of the chorus 2

Entertainers invited to the event recognize the mother and daughter, and May is forced to disclose their profession to the guests, who all pass judgment. Spoiler alert: Mrs. Carroll wholeheartedly accepts Peggy and performs a song. She also delivers a bombshell by informing her guests that she, too, had been a chorus girl, but this is a tale told to soften her guests. In the end, Peggy and Randy proceed with marriage plans, and May settles down with her longtime boyfriend, the stage manager of her show.

marilyn monroe adele jergen ladies of the chorus
Monroe and Adele Jergens

Named “Miss World’s Fairest” at the 1939 New York World’s Fair, Adele Jergens (1917-2002) had been a Rockette at Radio City Musical Hall and understudied for burlesque’s Queen of Striptease, Gypsy Rose Lee. Jergens instinctively felt protective toward Monroe but thought she was bright and capable of taking care of herself.

marilyn monroe rand brooks ladies of the chorus 2

Having played Charles Hamilton, Scarlett O’Hara’s first husband in Gone With the Wind, Rand Brooks (1918-2003), in the role of Randy, had the distinction of giving Monroe her first screen kiss, undoubtably thrilling for the former Norma Jeane Baker who had seen the celebrated film at age thirteen. Brooks had a recurring role the Hopalong Cassidy series of film westerns and later made appearances on television in The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin, The Lone Ranger, and Maverick.

Natasha Lytess coached Monroe
Natasha Lytess coached Monroe for six years until the star transitioned to Lee and Paula Strasberg of New York’s Actor’s Studio

Columbia’s acting coach Natasha Lytess, soon to became Monroe’s on-set acting coach on subsequent films until production wrapped on The Seven Year Itch (1955), had recommended Monroe to casting director Harry Romm. Monroe auditioned by singing one of three songs designated to the second female lead. Romm found her irresistible and sent her to Columbia’s director of music and vocal instructor, Fred Karger, for refining.

marilyn monroe ladies of the chorus montage 5

Monroe performed three songs by Allan Roberts and Lester Lee with choreography by Jack Boyle. As part of a chorus, she sings “Ladies of the Chorus” in the film’s opening and breaks out in the solo, “Anyone Can See I Love You,” on the burlesque stage and in a reprise montage with Brooks. Finally, in “Every Baby Needs a Da-Da-Daddy,” Monroe foreshadows her Beatnik-inspired “My Heart Belong to Daddy” number in Let’s Make Love (1960). In the last number, she steps out of a giant picture album in a flowing gown of virginal white chiffon with a tight, spangled bodice. Poised and graceful, Monroe glows with promise as a future musical comedy queen.

marilyn monroe ladies of the chorus montage 4

“Every Baby Needs a Da-Da-Daddy” is Monroe’s first significant performance in a musical and strangely predictive. In a stylized set depicting a jewelry store with a neon sign in the shape of a diamond ring. Monroe’s long, sparkling gown with a slit up its side foreshadows her costume in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953). The song’s reference to Tiffany’s prophesized her iconic number, “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend,” in the same film. With graceful moves and silky hair styled in the coiffure of Columbia’s reigning queen, Rita Hayworth, Monroe is reminiscent of the latter’s “Put the Blame on Mame” number from the studio’s Gilda (1946). However, Monroe’s performance is far more virtuous. The studio clearly marketed her as a somewhat wholesome version of Hayworth — and a far cry from the siren image 20th Century Fox would later invent.

marilyn monroe ladies of the chorus 3

In Ladies of the Chorus, Monroe demonstrates the promise of star quality. She plays comedic and dramatic scenes with equal believability and speaks in her natural voice (albeit influenced by coaching in the industry’s preferred Transcontinental accent) not yet been replaced by a more breathy, artificial one. The backstory of Monroe’s affair with vocal coach Karger is coincidently reflected by the class difference in the plot’s lovers.

marilyn monroe ladies of the chorus 4

When production ended, Monroe’s short-term contract neared its expiration. Unfortunately, Columbia chose not to renew it. Reportedly, mogul Harry Cohn summoned Monroe to his office shortly before the ending of the contract to “negotiate” an extension, but she refused his advances. In My Story, Monroe recounted the incident without specifically naming Cohn. He allegedly showed her a framed picture of his yacht and said, “Will you come along on my yacht? I’m not inviting anyone else but you.”

“I’d love to join you and your wife on the yacht, Mr. Cohn,” Monroe replied.

“Leave my wife out of this,” he snapped. Insulted, Monroe fled and never worked at Columbia again.  

The incident motivated Monroe to deliver a sarcastic message to him when she achieved superstardom by mailing an autographed portrait sarcastically inscribed, “To my great benefactor, Harry Cohn.” Perhaps attempting to claim discovery of Monroe, Columbia recycled Monroe’s “Every Baby Needs a Da-Da-Daddy” number in Okinawa (1952).

marilyn monroe ladies of the chorus 5

Columbia released Ladies of the Chorus on October 22, 1948, and Monroe received her first reviews. All were positive. “One of the bright spots is Miss Monroe’s singing,” proclaimed Motion Picture Herald. “She is pretty and, with her pleasing voice and style, shows promise.” Variety announced: “Enough musical numbers are inserted, topped with nifty warbling of Marilyn Monroe. Miss Monroe presents a nice personality in her portrayal of the burly singer.”

marilyn monroe ladies of the chrous 6

Accompanied by the Karger family, Marilyn discreetly attended a public viewing of the film at the Carmel Theatre on Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood. She wore an oversized coat and dark glasses to maintain her anonymity.

After the critics’ and audience’s reactions to Marilyn Monroe, Cohn may have regretted dismissing her in his knee-jerk reaction to his bruised ego. Perhaps Monroe felt vindicated by her successes, but her mind was on recognition by those in her more distant past. “I kept driving past the theatre with my name of the marquee,” she wrote. “Was I excited! I wished they were using ‘Norma Jeane’ so that all the kids at the home and schools who never noticed me could see it.”

marilyn monroe vocal coach Fred Karger

Monroe’s relationship with vocal coach Fred Karger was outlived by her long connection to his mother and sister, Anne and Mary. Both women attended her funeral in 1962.

Anne and Mary Karger with Marilyn Monroe in early 1962
Anne and Mary Karger with Marilyn in early 1962.

…..

–Gary Vitacco-Robles for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Gary’s Marilyn: Behind the Icon articles for CMH here.

Gary Vitacco-Robles is the author of ICON: The Life, Times and Films of Marilyn Monroe, Volumes 1 2, and writer/producer of the podcast series, Marilyn: Behind the Icon.

Posted in Films, Marilyn: Behind the Icon, Posts by Gary Vitacco-Robles | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Western RoundUp: Frontier Gambler (1956)

Western RoundUp: Frontier Gambler (1956)

Last December I wrote about Noir-Tinged Westerns, frontier films such as Blood on the Moon (1948) and Pursued (1948) which have a distinctly dark film noir vibe.

This month I’m taking a look at Frontier Gambler (1956), a film that actually remakes a classic film noir, Laura (1944). Frontier Gambler was directed by Sam Newfield and filmed in black and white by Eddie Linden.

Frontier Gambler (1956)
Frontier Gambler (1956)

Laura, as many film fans are well aware, is the story of a beautiful woman, the titular Laura (Gene Tierney), who as that film opens is believed shot to death. The detective (Dana Andrews) investigating her death interviews several people in Laura’s orbit, including her mentor (Clifton Webb), her fiance (Vincent Price), and her relative (Judith Anderson), who also loves the fiance.

The more the detective learns about Laura — and stares at her portrait — the more he begins to fall in love with a woman who’s completely unattainable because she’s dead. Or so we think.

While Frontier Gambler gives no acknowledgment to either the 1944 film or the Vera Caspary novel which inspired it, screenwriter Orville Hampton’s heavy borrowing from the earlier film and/or novel is unmistakable.

Coleen Gray in Frontier Gambler (1956)
Coleen Gray in Frontier Gambler (1956)

As the Western begins, a gambling palace owner named Sylvia (Coleen Gray), nicknamed “the Princess” for her elegant appearance and demeanor, has just been shot and killed, after which her home was set on fire. Deputy Marshal Curt Darrow (John Bromfield) arrives in the frontier town to investigate her murder.

In short order we meet Roger Chadwick (Kent Taylor), who raised Sylvia after her parents were killed in an Indian attack, then fell in love with her; ranch owner Francie Merritt (Veda Ann Borg); and Francie’s inconstant lover Tony (Jim Davis). Roger, Francie, and Tony are clearly inspired by the Webb, Anderson, and Price characters in the original Laura story, with Deputy Darrow the Western version of Andrews’ detective.

Coleen Gray, John Bromfield, and Jim Davis in Frontier Gambler (1956)
Coleen Gray, John Bromfield, and Jim Davis in Frontier Gambler (1956)

Roger, like Waldo Lydecker in Laura, has groomed Sylvia to be his image of the perfect woman, then is frustrated when she wants her independence and shows interest in another man (Davis).

Roger echoes Waldo’s controlling personality, but there’s a certain creepy undertone unique to this version: Roger has basically raised Sylvia from childhood but then wants to trade in his paternal role for that of a lover.

I’ve always enjoyed Taylor, dating to seeing him in the classic “B” film Five Came Back (1939) as a young classic film fan, but there’s something distinctly unpleasant about his character and the unfatherly feelings he develops, though one might admit that Taylor nails the part as written.

Coleen Gray and Kent Taylor in Frontier Gambler (1956)
Coleen Gray and Kent Taylor in Frontier Gambler (1956)

Gray takes Sylvia from a frightened young girl to the self-assured, glamorous saloon owner nicknamed the “Princess,” complete with jewels in her hair. She gives a rather brittle performance as a woman who’s not particularly nice; truth be told, she’s outright manipulative, as she plays on Roger’s sympathy to obtain money to start a saloon which will be his competitor. That said, it’s easy enough to see how her personality developed, having withstood her parents’ murder and then grown up learning gambling on the one hand and following Roger’s exacting demands on the other.

At the end of the film, it’s suggested by Darrow that perhaps in the future Sylvia will be “herself,” meaning her own person, and one wonders if a more appealing, less tightly wound personality will go along with that.

Borg is appealing as the woman who loves Tony but is understanding of his foibles while acting as a friend to all. The cast also includes Margia Dean, Stanley Andrews, Frank Sully, Tracey Roberts, Pierce Lyden, and Rick Vallin.

Kent Taylor, Coleen Gray and John Bromfield in Frontier Gambler (1956)
Kent Taylor, Coleen Gray and John Bromfield in Frontier Gambler (1956)

Unlike Laura, there are multiple story threads that don’t really go anywhere; for instance, there’s initially some throwaway back story about Darrow’s father having a history in the town, but it never amounts to much. In addition to Darrow’s background, there’s also a story shoehorned in about a beleaguered newspaper owner (Roy Engel); the newspaperman and Tony have a shootout which makes Tony look quite the villain — but then Tony shifts to hero mode helping Darrow in the final scenes.

We also never really get any hints about Darrow harboring an attraction for the “dead” Sylvia, although a future relationship is hinted in the final moments. Instead, the film concentrates mostly on Sylvia’s relationships with Roger and, to a lesser extent, Tony. With just 71 minutes to tell the story, it’s a bit surprising the filmmakers didn’t drop the extraneous bits of plot and focus on developing the central relationships more completely. I suspect that these fairly random storylines were added to help differentiate the film from Laura.

Kent Taylor and Coleen Gray in Frontier Gambler (1956)
Kent Taylor and Coleen Gray in Frontier Gambler (1956)

Frontier Gambler is quite a low-budget film, with modest sets and location filming in nearby Newhall, but despite the lack of production values and the somewhat unfocused script, the cast and the repurposing of the classic Caspary story still give it considerable interest. As Laura is one of my favorite movies, I enjoyed seeing how various aspects of the story were used in a Western setting, as well as the ways the filmmakers deviated from the original.

Kent Taylor and Coleen Gray in Frontier Gambler (1956)
Kent Taylor and Coleen Gray in Frontier Gambler (1956)

I particularly enjoyed the chance to see a favorite actress, Coleen Gray, in a new-to-me film. When I had the good fortune to interview Gray in 2012 and told her of my admiration for another of her Westerns, Copper Sky (1957), she expressed some amazement that a relatively forgotten film like that — which she’d been proud of — was still being watched so many years later.

Frontier Gambler (1956) Lobby Card
Frontier Gambler (1956) Lobby Card

I’d like to think it would make her happy knowing that Frontier Gambler has now entertained a new viewer. I certainly wish that this film and Copper Sky would have authorized DVD releases so more classic film fans can easily watch and enjoy them.

– Laura Grieve for Classic Movie Hub

Laura can be found at her blog, Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings, where she’s been writing about movies since 2005, and on Twitter at @LaurasMiscMovie. A lifelong film fan, Laura loves the classics including Disney, Film Noir, Musicals, and Westerns.  She regularly covers Southern California classic film festivals.  Laura will scribe on all things western at the ‘Western RoundUp’ for CMH.

Posted in Posts by Laura Grieve, Western RoundUp | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

The Directors’ Chair: Rear Window

The Directors’ Chair: Rear Window (Hitchcock, 1954)

“REAR WINDOW” (1954) – CURIOSITY KILLED THE…

Jimmy stewart rear window broken leg in wheelchair
James Stewart, Rear Window

Holed up in his apartment with a broken leg, a photo journalist played by James Stewart, whiles away his recuperative time watching his neighbors in the building across the courtyard. He uses the vignette of their lives as his own private cinema. And let me tell you something, if Raymond Burr is a tenant, you know SOMETHING is rotten in Denmark…and Greenwich Village. Hitchcock makes a slow methodical case (in a slow methodical pace) for circumstantial evidence pointing to a man suspected of murdering and dismembering his wife.

rear window jimmy stewart with camera, jimmy stewart and thelma ritter

First Hitchcock draws in Stewart, along with us. Then he draws in wise- cracking nurse Thelma Ritter. The next into the fold is the glamorous Grace Kelly, more animated here than I’ve ever seen her. (Thank goodness. I’m just about at the end of my rope with her “ice~princess~still~waters~ run~deep” mode.)

grace kelly jimmy stewart rear window Best intro ever
Best intro ever. 

As Stewart’s steady girlfriend, Kelly’s focus is not outside the apartment, but inside, on Stewart and getting him lassoed by his…antlers to the altar. He’s resistant to everything she throws at him from her feminine arsenal. And such a nice feminine arsenal too.

rear window jimmy stewart grace kelly

ARounding out the cast is Doubting Thomas Wendell Corey with ice blue eyes and cold skepticism. He’s the detective friend who thinks Stewart is crying wolf.

thelma ritter, grace kelly, jimmy stewart in rear window Is curiosity contagious?
Is curiosity contagious?

Curiosity is no substitute for flat-footed police work. Ritter and Kelly take Stewart’s curiosity up another level as they up the ante with Nancy Drew- style investigative antics into Burr’s affairs. The reward for those efforts is to bring the Menace from across the courtyard, right to Stewart’s doorstep.

I don’t usually run with open arms to Rear Window as I do Hitchcock’s Psycho or Notorious or The Birds. For some reason, I need to be coaxed into watching this one. Then when I get into the swing of things, I’m totally in. I don’t know why. I can’t explain me to me, sometimes. I don’t know WHY I have reservations. Hitchcock has done something brilliant here. He creates smaller movies within the larger film with the stories of the tenants across the yard. And we are vested in their stories as well. Hitchcock makes that apartment building the visual, cinematic representation of what writers do when they create characters and weave their subplots throughout the main story. (He creates some suspense in the poignant Miss Loneyheart’s story. Will she or won’t she kill herself.)

rear window raymond burr
Who’s afraid of the big bad wolf?

But it’s really Burr as Boogey Man. There’s only one thing scarier than him showing up on Stewart’s doorstep. And that’s the shot of his darkened apartment with just the glowing light of his cigarette.

Hitchcock, how could I have doubted you.

…..

— Theresa Brown for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Theresa’s Directors’ Chair articles here.

Theresa Brown is a native New Yorker, a Capricorn and a biker chick (rider as well as passenger). When she’s not on her motorcycle, you can find her on her couch blogging about classic films for CineMaven’s Essays from the Couch. Classic films are her passion. You can find her on Twitter at @CineMava.

Posted in Films, Posts by Theresa Brown, The Directors' Chair | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments