Daily Archives: November 29, 2013

Pygmalion (1938)

Pygmalion
Directed by Anthony Asquith
Written by George Bernard Shaw
1938/UK
Gabriel Pascal Productions
Repeat viewing

 

 

[box] Prof. Henry Higgins: Yes, you squashed cabbage leaf, you disgrace to the noble architecture of these columns, you incarnate insult to the English language, I could pass you off as the Queen of Sheba![/box]

This may be the best adaptation of George Bernard Shaw’s play.  I love this film!

Professor Henry Higgins (Leslie Howard) bets that he can pass Cockney flower seller Eliza Doolittle (Wendy Hiller) off as a duchess with six months of training in phonetics. With Wilfred Larson as Alfred P. Doolittle and Esme Percy as Count Aristid Kaparthy.

Leslie Howard makes a splendid Henry Higgins but the real revelation is Wendy Hiller in her second film.  With Hiller, Eliza is keeping her Cockney soul under check at all times whereas Audrey Hepburn always seems to me as a born princess struggling to escape her flower girl disguise.  The other performances are of a very high standard.  Asquith does an excellent job of opening up the story so it does not seem unnecessarily stagey.  I had a smile on my face throughout.  Very warmly recommended.

George Bernard Shaw and the adaptors of his play won the Academy Award for Best Screenplay, making Shaw the only Nobel Prize winner to also have an Oscar.  Shaw said “It’s an insult for them to offer me any honour, as if they had never heard of me before – and it’s very likely they never have. They might as well send some honour to George for being King of England.”  Pygmalion also received nominations in the categories of Best Picture, Best Actor (Howard) and Best Actress (Hiller).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EADz07k_wXU

“Trailer” – Professor Higgins makes Eliza an offer she can’t refuse

Sweethearts (1938)

SweetheartsSweethearts poster
Directed by W.S. Van Dyke
Screenplay by Dorothy Parker and Alan Campbell based on a story by Fred De Grasac et al
1938/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

First viewing

Sweetheart, today will never fade
Like an eternal serenade
For love will end the way it starts
Forever we’ll be sweethearts — lyric by Robert C. Wright & Chet Forrest

The singing is the high point of this movie.

Gwen Marlowe (Jeanette MacDonald) and Ernest Lane (Nelson Eddy) play sweethearts in the long-running Broadway show of that name and are happily married in real life.  A film studio is trying to lure them to Hollywood.  Stakeholders in the Broadway show resort to desperate measures to split up the team to prevent their departure.  With Frank Morgan as a Broadway producer, Mischa Auer as a playwright, and Ray Bolger as a dancer.

Sweethearts 1

Despite the sterling cast of character supporting actors, I thought the comedy fell flat.  The story also takes quite awhile to get going.  The first hour or so is filled with flimsy excuses for one musical number after another.  Ordinarily I would not object but here the tunes are not very catchy.  There is a nice number featuring Ray Bolger’s loose-limbed dancing at the very beginning.  MacDonald and her red hair look very good in color.

Sweethearts won an Honorary Academy Award for its Technicolor cinematography.  It was nominated in the categories of Best Sound Recording and Best Music, Scoring.

Jeanette goes clothes shopping for Hollywood (1938 fashion on parade)