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His Girl Friday

 
Movies:

His Girl Friday

 
  • Director: Howard Hawks
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Screwball Comedy, Media Satire
  • Themes: Work Ethics, Battle of the Sexes, Members of the Press
  • Main Cast: Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell, Ralph Bellamy, Gene Lockhart, Helen Mack, Porter Hall, Clarence Kolb, Roscoe Karns
  • Release Year: 1940
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 92 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

The second screen version of the Ben Hecht/Charles MacArthur play The Front Page, His Girl Friday changed hard-driving newspaper reporter Hildy Johnson from a man to a woman, transforming the story into a scintillating battle of the sexes. Rosalind Russell plays Hildy, about to foresake journalism for marriage to cloddish Bruce Baldwin (Ralph Bellamy). Cary Grant plays Walter Burns, Hildy's editor and ex-husband, who feigns happiness about her impending marriage as a ploy to win her back. The ace up Walter's sleeve is a late-breaking news story concerning the impending execution of anarchist Earl Williams (John Qualen), a blatant example of political chicanery that Hildy can't pass up. The story gets hotter when Williams escapes and is hidden from the cops by Hildy and Walter--right in the prison pressroom. His Girl Friday may well be the fastest comedy of the 1930s, with kaleidoscope action, instantaneous plot twists, and overlapping dialogue. And if you listen closely, you'll hear a couple of "in" jokes, one concerning Cary Grant's real name (Archie Leach), and another poking fun at Ralph Bellamy's patented "poor sap" screen image. Subsequent versions of The Front Page included Billy Wilder's 1974 adaptation, which restored Hildy Johnson's manhood in the form of Jack Lemmon, and 1988's Switching Channels, which cast Burt Reynolds in the Walter Burns role and Kathleen Turner as the Hildy Johnson counterpart. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

It's doubtful that one could find a movie as fast-paced as Howard Hawks' His Girl Friday, and next-to-impossible to find a film of the period more laced with sexual electricity. Decades after its release, the comedy-thriller adapted from Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's play The Front Page holds up as a masterpiece of pacing and performance, and even manages a few healthy swipes at some of officialdom's sacred cows. At the time, His Girl Friday was also a piece of groundbreaking cinema for the rules it broke: Hawks' version added an element of sexual tension that was about the only thing missing from the original play and the 1931 film version, in which main characters Walter Burns and Hildy Johnson are men engaged in a symbiotic/exploitative professional relationship. Hawks transmuted Hildy Johnson into the persona of Rosalind Russell, who was entering her prime as an archetype of the ambitious, energetic woman. Coupled with Cary Grant's cheerful nonchalance as the manipulative editor Walter Burns, the material -- which was fairly scintillating on its own terms -- took on a fierce sexual edge that made the resulting film a 92-minute exercise in eroticism masquerading as a comic thriller. Russell may never have had a better role than Hildy Johnson; she became a screen symbol for the intelligent, aggressive female reporter, decades before Candice Bergen's star turn as television's Murphy Brown. Amid all of the jockeying for superiority, and the sparring between Grant and Russell -- which, in many ways, anticipates the jousting between Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall in Hawks' own The Big Sleep, made four years later -- His Girl Friday found room to enhance some of the issues from the original play, including cynicism about government, the justice system and freedom of the press. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Cast

John Qualen - Earl Williams; Ernest Truex - Roy Bensinger; Cliff Edwards - Endicott; Frank Jenks - Wilson; Regis Toomey - Sanders; Abner Biberman - Diamond Louie; Frank Orth - Duffy; Alma Kruger - Mrs. Baldwin; Billy Gilbert - Joe Pettibone; Pat West - Warden Cooley; Edwin Maxwell - Dr. Egelhoffer; Irving Bacon - Gus; Wade Boteler - Jail Guard; Edmund Cobb - Cop; Ralph Dunn - Guard; Earl Dwire - Mr. Davis; Pat Flaherty; Eddie Hart; Marion Martin

Credit

Lionel Banks - Art Director, Robert Kalloch - Costume Designer, Howard Hawks - Director, Gene Havlick - Editor, Morris W. Stoloff - Composer (Music Score), Sidney B. Cutner - Composer (Music Score), Morris W. Stoloff - Musical Direction/Supervision, Joseph Walker - Cinematographer, Howard Hawks - Producer, Charles Lederer - Screenwriter, Ben Hecht - Play Author, Charles MacArthur - Play Author

Similar Movies

The Awful Truth; Bringing Up Baby; The Man Who Came to Dinner; Mr. & Mrs. Smith; Nothing Sacred; The Pajama Game; The Philadelphia Story; Switching Channels; Woman of the Year; Ace in the Hole; Everything Happens at Night; Laws of Attraction
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Wikipedia: His Girl Friday
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His Girl Friday

theatrical poster
Directed by Howard Hawks
Produced by Howard Hawks
Written by Play:
Ben Hecht
Charles MacArthur
Screenplay:
Charles Lederer
Starring Cary Grant
Rosalind Russell
Music by Sidney Cutner
Felix Mills
Editing by Gene Havlick
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) January 11, 1940 (NYC)
January 18 (general)
Running time 92 minutes
Country United States
Language English

His Girl Friday[1] is a 1940 screwball comedy film directed by Howard Hawks, an adaptation by Charles Lederer, Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur of the play The Front Page by Hecht and MacArthur. The variant in this version is that the role of Hildy Johnson was converted from being male to female.

The film stars Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell and features Ralph Bellamy. It is noted for the rapid-fire pace of its dialogue.

The film was #19 on American Film Institute's "100 Years, 100 Laughs" and has been selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. Today the film is in the public domain[2] (even though the 1928 play it is based on is still under copyright[3]), which hasn't prevented Columbia Pictures from issuing official video releases of the film.


Contents

Plot

Walter Burns (Cary Grant) is a hard-boiled editor for The Morning Post whose ex-wife and former star reporter, Hildegard "Hildy" Johnson (Rosalind Russell) is about to marry bland insurance man Bruce Baldwin (Ralph Bellamy) and settle down to a quiet life as a wife and mother in Albany, New York – but Burns intends to sabotage these plans. He entices the reluctant Johnson into covering one last story: the upcoming execution of convicted murderer Earl Williams (John Qualen).

Walter does everything he can to keep Hildy from leaving, including setting Bruce up so he gets arrested over and over again on trumped-up charges. He even kidnaps Hildy's stern mother-in-law-to-be (Alma Kruger). When Williams escapes from the bumbling sheriff (Gene Lockhart) and practically falls into Hildy's lap, the lure of a big scoop proves to be too much for her. She is so consumed with writing the story that she hardly notices as Bruce realizes his cause is hopeless and leaves to return to Albany.

The crooked mayor (Clarence Kolb) and sheriff need the publicity from the execution to keep their jobs in an upcoming election, so when a messenger (Billy Gilbert) brings them a reprieve from the governor, they try to bribe the man to go away and return later, when it will be too late. Walter and Hildy find out just in time to save Walter from being arrested for kidnapping.

Afterwards, Walter offers to remarry Hildy, promising to take her on the honeymoon they never had in Niagara Falls, but then Walter learns that there is a newsworthy strike in Albany, which is on the way to Niagara Falls by train.

Cast

Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell, and Ralph Bellamy

Production

His Girl Friday was originally supposed to be a straightforward remake of The Front Page, with both the editor and reporter being men. During auditions though, Howard Hawks' secretary read reporter Hildy Johnson's lines. Hawks liked the way the dialogue sounded coming from a woman, resulting in the script being rewritten to make Hildy female, and the ex-wife of editor Walter Burns.[4][5][6] Most of the original dialogue and all of the characters' names (with the exception of Bruce Baldwin, Hildy's fiance, who was of course a woman in the play) were left the same.

Hawks had a very difficult time casting this film. While the choice of Cary Grant was almost instantaneous, the casting of Hildy was a far more extended process. At first, Hawks wanted Carole Lombard for the role, whom he had directed in the screwball comedy Twentieth Century, but the cost of hiring Lombard in her new status as a freelancer proved to be far too expensive, and Columbia could not afford her. Katharine Hepburn, Claudette Colbert, Margaret Sullavan, Ginger Rogers and Irene Dunne were offered the role, but turned it down, Dunne because she felt the part was too small and needed to be expanded. Jean Arthur was offered the part, and was suspended by the studio when she refused to take it. Joan Crawford was reportedly also considered for the part.[5]

Hawks then turned to Rosalind Russell, who was annoyed by the fact that she had not been his first choice, even arriving at her audition with wet hair. During filming, Russell noticed that Hawks treated her like an also-ran, so she confronted him: "You don't want me, do you? Well, you're stuck with me, so you might as well make the most of it."[4] In her autobiography, Life Is A Banquet, Russell wrote that she thought her role did not have as many good lines as that of Cary Grant, so she hired her own writer to 'punch up' her dialogue. With Hawks encouraging ad-libbing on the set, Russell was able to slip her writers' work into the movie. Only Grant was wise to this tactic and greeted her each morning, saying, "What have you got today?"

The film had the working title of The Bigger They Are[6], and was in production from 27 September to 21 November 1939.[7] It premiered in New York City on 11 January 1940. It went into general American release on 18 January.[8]

His Girl Friday is noted for the rapid-fire pace of the repartee, using overlapping dialogue to make conversations sound more realistic, with one character speaking before another was finished. Hawks told Peter Bogdanovich:

"I had noticed that when people talk, they talk over one another, especially people who talk fast or who are arguing or describing something. So we wrote the dialogue in a way that made the beginnings and ends of sentences unnecessary; they were there for overlapping."[4]

To get the effect he wanted, Hawks had the sound mixer on the set turn the various overhead microphones on and off as required for the scene, as many as 35 times.[6]

Cary Grant's character describes Ralph Bellamy's character by saying "He looks like that actor...Ralph Bellamy!" According to Bellamy, the remark was ad libbed by Grant.[5] Columbia studio head Harry Cohn thought it was too cheeky and ordered it removed, but Hawks insisted that it stay. Grant also makes several 'inside' remarks in the film. When his character is arrested for a kidnap, he describes the horrendous fate suffered by the last person who crossed him: Archie Leach (Grant's real name).[4] When Earl Williams attempts to get out of the roll-top desk he's been hiding in, Grant says, "Get back in there, you Mock Turtle." The line is in the original version of The Front Page and Grant also played "The Mock Turtle" in the 1933 film version of Alice in Wonderland.[6]

The reporters phone in their updates

Awards and honors

American Film Institute recognition

Adaptation

His Girl Friday and the original Hecht and MacArthur play were later adapted into another stage play, His Girl Friday, by playwright John Guare. This was presented at the National Theatre, London, from May to November 2003, with Alex Jennings as Burns and Zoe Wanamaker as Hildy.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A "girl Friday" is an office assistant who has to carry out a variety of chores. The name alludes to "Friday", Robinson Crusoe's native male dogsbody in Daniel Defoe's novel. Cf. Merriam-Webster: girl Friday
  2. ^ Douglas Gomery (1992), Shared pleasures: a history of movie presentation in the United States (illustrated ed.), Univ of Wisconsin Press, p. 259, ISBN 9780299132149, http://books.google.com/books?id=YyFQNU_F5DMC&pg=PA259&dq=his+girl+friday 
  3. ^ Stephen Fishman (2008), Public domain: how to find & use copyright-free writings, music, art & more (4, illustrated, revised ed.), Nolo, ISBN 9781413308587, http://books.google.com/books?id=fRY4QBpLFGQC&pg=PT178&dq=the+front+page 
  4. ^ a b c d Osborne, Robert, Turner Classic Movie broadcast
  5. ^ a b c TCM Notes
  6. ^ a b c d Miller, Frank "His Girl Friday" (TCM article)
  7. ^ IMDB Business data
  8. ^ IMDB Release dates

External links



 
 

 

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