Noir Nook: Minor But Memorable

Minor But Memorable

There are characters in film noir that are bigger than life, that are in nearly every scene and who tower over the movie itself like the eponymous inferno.

And then there are those that you hardly see at all – characters so minor that they often don’t even warrant a last name (or a name at all) – and yet, they’re unforgettable.

This month’s Noir Nook takes a look at three of these characters: Madge in The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946), Girl at Bar in Shield for Murder (1953), and Sally in Sweet Smell of Success (1957).

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Madge (Audrey Totter) in The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946)

Audrey Totter

The Postman Always Rings Twice tells the tale of Cora Smith (Lana Turner) and Frank Chambers (John Garfield), illicit lovers who team up to murder Cora’s husband, played by Cecil Kellaway. As it turns out, both Cora and Frank get off scot-free (due to some courtroom machinations that, even after all these years and countless viewings, I still don’t quite understand), but that doesn’t mean there’s smooth sailing ahead. The two become adversaries, each threatening to turn the other one in, and when Cora leaves town for a family emergency, well – you’ve heard the old saying, “When the cat’s away, the mice will play”?

In this case, the mouse – that’s Frank – finds a lovely plaything in the person of Madge, who he meets in the parking lot of the train station. She was having a bit of a problem getting her car started, but she didn’t have any problems starting Frank’s motor, if you know what I mean. A brief mention about her thin skirt and the hot leather of the car seat, and he was off to the races.

Madge, like many a minor character, was only in one scene, with a handful of lines, but she made them count. She practically purred when she was talking to Frank, even if all she was doing was complaining about her job as a hash slinger or labeling Frank an “outlaw [who] can’t stand captivity.” Within just a few minutes, she’d made such an impression on Frank that he was proposing a trip with her to Tijuana, Mexico. She made an impression on us, to – and on the critic from the Hollywood Reporter, who wrote: “Audrey Totter, going the small part of a rather loose pick-up . . . proves again that she has a great future, with easy command of what made our top screen sirens stars.”

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Girl at Bar (Carolyn Jones) in Shield for Murder (1953)

Carolyn Jones

One of my favorite lesser-known noirs, Shield for Murder stars Edmond O’Brien (who was also making his directorial debut) as Barney Nolan, a police detective who murders a bookie and relieves the corpse of a cool $25,000. But he’s not exactly pals with Lady Luck – his back-alley homicide was witnessed by a nearby resident, the bookie’s boss wants his money back, and the entire case is being investigated by a young detective (John Agar) to whom Barney serves as mentor and friend.

Stressed by his attempts to cover up his crime while evading the hoods on his trail, Barney visits a bar in a local restaurant, where he hopes to collect his thoughts (or maybe drown them). There, he encounters a young blonde with a knowing smile and come-hither eyes that run up and down Barney like a searchlight (as Olga from The Women [1939] would say). Sidling up next to Barney, she starts in with a line of patter that can best be described as eclectic. She teaches him how to “look tough” in the mirror. She flips her hair and confesses that her mother always thought she had “too much spirit.” And before you can say “Jack Robinson,” she and Barney are sitting cozily together in a booth. (By the way, even though the film credits her as “girl in bar,” we learn when she introduces herself to Barney that her name is Beth.)

Beth is a . . . shall we say . . . interesting young woman; between the mysterious bruise on her arm (“Somebody gave it to me, I guess,” she half-explains) and the way her hand forms into a claw on Barney’s face when she kisses him, we don’t know where this thing might end up. (We never find out, though, since Barney upends the evening by pistol-whipping two thugs in the middle of dinner.)

Along with Marla English, who played Barney’s girlfriend, Carolyn Jones was singled out by the critic for the L.A. Daily News; although he misspelled her name as “Carilyn,” he wrote that Jones and English “contribute just the right amount of femme charms to their roles, and although they don’t get much chance to really emote, both gals show promise.”

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Sally (Jeff Donnell) in Sweet Smell of Success (1957)

Jeff Donnell

In Sweet Smell of Success, Burt Lancaster is all-powerful, Walter Winchell-like columnist J.J. Hunsecker, and Tony Curtis (in what is arguably the best performance of his career) is Sidney Falco, a sniveling, sycophantic, weasel of a man who will do anything to get ahead. And for Sidney, getting ahead means earning the favor of Hunsecker.

Sidney’s “office” (which has a nameplate taped onto the door and a bedroom in the back) is presided over by Sally, who serves as Sidney’s Girl Friday. She’s not the kind of glamour-girl assistant you might think a man like Sidney would have; her face is free of make-up, her clothes are ill-fitting, and her hairstyle is unattractive. She’s certainly efficient, though, and is adept at fielding a variety of calls, from dissatisfied clients to vendors trying to collect past-due bills.

Unfortunately for Sally, she’s clearly in love with Sidney – and she couldn’t have picked a worse candidate for her affections. When Sally points out to Sidney that he’s been left out of Hunsecker’s column for five consecutive days, Sidney snarkily snaps, “May I rent you out as an adding machine?” When she tells Sidney she wishes that she could help him, he responds, “You can help with two minutes of silence.” And when he refers to her “meaty, sympathetic arms,” he actually reduces her to tears. In just a short amount of time, Sally manages to evoke an assortment of reactions from the viewer; as we watch her look at Sidney with those liquidy, puppy-dog eyes, we want to simultaneously shake her, roll our eyes in annoyance, and give her a massive hug.

In the L.A. Examiner, Jeff Donnell was praised for her “good job” and the reviewer for the New York Times included her along with several other minor characters when he noted the “competent touches in their brief appearances.”

The next time you see The Postman Always Rings Twice, Shield for Murder, or Sweet Smell of Success, give an extra look to Madge, Beth, and Sally. All told, their appearances in these films probably don’t occupy a total of 10 minutes, but they’re undeniably unforgettable.

And deserve to be remembered.

– 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:

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Silver Screen Standards: Witness for the Prosecution (1957)

Witness for the Prosecution (1957)

On my most recent visit to London, I went to see a stage production of Agatha Christie’s 1953 play, Witness for the Prosecution, and of course I had to rewatch the 1957 film adaptation again as soon as I got home so that I could see how they compared to one another. The 1957 film, directed by Billy Wilder and nominated for six Academy Awards, differs from the play in some significant ways but still earned Christie’s approval at its release. Perhaps, like most of us, she was won over by the outstanding performances of some of classic Hollywood’s greatest talents, including Tyrone Power, Marlene Dietrich, Charles Laughton, and Elsa Lanchester. Those performances ensure that Witness for the Prosecution remains as gripping and effective today as it was in 1957, especially if you don’t spoil the ending for a first-time viewer.

Tyrone Power, Witness for the Prosecution
Tyrone Power plays the defendant, Leonard Vole, who is accused of murdering a rich widow to get her money.

Tyrone Power stars as Leonard Vole, who asks barrister Sir Wilfrid Robarts (Charles Laughton) to defend him in the English courts against the charge of murdering a wealthy widow (Norma Varden). Having recently suffered a near fatal heart attack, Sir Wilfrid at first refuses but then becomes fascinated by the details of the case, including the involvement of Vole’s enigmatic wife, Christine (Marlene Dietrich). When Christine unexpectedly appears as a witness for the prosecution during Vole’s trial, Sir Wilfrid struggles to understand her motivation and defend his client against seemingly damning evidence.

Charles Laughton, Witness for the Prosecution
Sir Wilfrid (Charles Laughton) is an experienced barrister who hopes to prove Vole’s innocence in spite of the evidence against him.

Christie published the original version of this plot a century ago as a 1925 short story titled “Traitor’s Hands.” She changed the name to “The Witness for the Prosecution” in 1933 and made additional changes to the ending when she wrote the play (which is the same as the ending for the 1957 film). The play is very much a courtroom drama, but the film adaptation presents several key scenes that take place at other times and locations. We see how Leonard and Christine met during the war, and we see how Leonard met the dead woman, Emily French, and her suspicious housekeeper, Janet MacKenzie (Una O’Connor). We are even able to accompany Sir Wilfrid in search of a mysterious person offering last-minute evidence during the trial, which provides the film with one of its most memorable scenes. More importantly, the film makes Sir Wilfrid a heart attack patient and adds the completely new character of his nurse, Miss Plimsoll (Elsa Lanchester). I didn’t miss her character when I watched the stage production, but the stage version of Sir Wilfrid has no need for her, while Laughton’s fussy, temperamental take on the barrister really benefits from the adversarial relationship with the relentless nurse. By the time they appeared in this film, their tenth together, Laughton and Lanchester had been married for nearly thirty years, and their easy comedic sparring is so natural and delightful that it’s hard to imagine the movie without it. Both Laughton and Lanchester earned Oscar nominations for their performances, while Power and Dietrich were both shut out.

Elsa Lanchester and Charles Laughton, Witness for the Prosecution
Nurse Plimsoll (Elsa Lanchester) and Sir Wilfrid bring a lot of comic action to this dark story with their battle over Sir Wilfrid’s activities.

Despite the Oscar snubs, Power and Dietrich both deliver some of their best work thanks to the meaty, dramatic roles they have to play. In his last finished film before a fatal heart attack at the age of 44, Power looks haggard, a darker and world-weary version of the dashing heartthrob who had wooed audiences in the 1930s and early 40s. Power always wanted to be more than a pretty face and campaigned hard for films like Nightmare Alley (1947), and Witness for the Prosecution offers a final testament to the actor’s ability to tackle such roles. Dietrich was deeply disappointed when her performance yielded no Oscar nomination, but unlike Power she would live to make other great pictures, including Touch of Evil (1958), Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), and even an Oscar-nominated documentary about her life called Marlene (1984). As Christine (renamed from “Romaine” in the play), Dietrich is a mesmerizing, inscrutable sphinx, drawing us and Sir Wilfrid in because we never know what she’s really thinking. Her greatest contributions to the picture come in the most shocking scenes, which I won’t discuss here except to say that anyone who hasn’t seen the movie yet needs to do so immediately in order to appreciate Dietrich’s commitment and talent. It’s much easier to avoid spoilers by praising the supporting performers who populate the background of Leonard and Christine’s story, especially Norma Varden as the lovestruck Mrs. French and the great Una O’Connor as her loyal but cantankerous housekeeper. There are a lot of women in Leonard’s life, and he seems to inspire strong feelings in all of them, ranging from adoration to absolute loathing.

Marlene Dietrich, Witness for the Prosecution
Marlene Dietrich gives an outstanding performance as the mysterious Christine.

If, like me, you’re a fan of Agatha Christie film adaptations, check out And Then There Were None (1945), Murder She Said (1961), Murder on the Orient Express (1974), and The Mirror Crack’d (1980). After Witness for the Prosecution, Billy Wilder’s next directorial efforts would be Some Like It Hot (1959) and The Apartment (1960), both of which also earned him nods for Best Director, with The Apartment actually bringing wins for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Writing. Revisit Tyrone Power’s younger days with Alexander’s Ragtime Band (1938), The Mark of Zorro (1940), or Blood and Sand (1941), or see Marlene Dietrich’s only Oscar-nominated performance in Morocco (1930). For more of Charles Laughton and Elsa Lanchester together onscreen, see The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933), Rembrandt (1936), Tales of Manhattan (1942), and The Big Clock (1948). If you get the chance to visit London, don’t miss the fantastic stage production of Witness for the Prosecution in the historic courtroom at County Hall, where it has been running since 2017. Even better, make it an Agatha Christie double bill and see The Mousetrap at St. Martin’s Theatre, as well, but remember not to give away the endings for either show!

— 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.

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Monsters and Matinees: The Evil Queen was a Beast Hidden within a Beauty

The Evil Queen was a Beast Hidden within a Beauty

Her lips are as red as a rose, her skin as white as snow and though we can’t see her hair, the dark wimple wrapped around her head and throat is as black as ebony.

In the 90 years since she was introduced in Walt Disney’s 1937 animated classic Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, she has remained an iconic image that is referenced today, most recently in the new 2025 live-action Disney film.

But make no mistake, I’m not talking about sweet young Snow White, but rather her stepmother, the magnificent Evil Queen.

The Evil Queen is a stunning beauty who lives up to her name in Walt Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

Fairy tale beginnings

When the Brothers Grimm introduced her in their 1812 fairy tale, it was simply with the word beautiful. (She was also proud and haughty, quite unattractive attributes.)

Fast forward more than a century when Disney chose Snow White as his first full-length animated feature. In the “storybook” introduction that opens his film, she is called the “vain Queen” – and she has good reason for that.

The Queen is stunning in her gold crown, oversized white collar, flowing black cape and regal blue-purple gown. Her pale skin is colored by the same rosy cheeks and red lips as Snow White. Her oval eyes are impeccably enhanced with deep purple eyeshadow, long lashes and thin, but pronounced, eyebrows.

She is breathtaking.

As the first character in the film, she’s also immediately unsettling with a coldness radiating from that beauty. Something is off. She is calm but stern as she talks to the slave in the mirror, looking for affirmation that she is the “fairest one of all.” But this time, for the first time, she isn’t.

That’s when her deep blue eyes turn green with jealousy and anger, conjuring strong winds that whip around her. Though her posture is erect in the way that royals hold themselves, her expressive eyes speak volumes as she glares in a way that makes you think “if looks could kill…”

A queen as a monster

What is the Evil Queen doing in a column about classic film monsters? Because she is one – a monster that is a beauty and a beast in one.

Her murderous soul orders the chilling murder of a child without hesitation. If she must eat a human heart to get what she wants, so be it. She’s driven by vanity and arrogance without apology.

No explanations, no backstory to soften her evilness as happens in some modern variations like the well-made TV series “Once Upon a Time.”

The Evil Queen is one of my favorite villains, even outside of the Disney universe. I’ve been thinking about her again with the new Disney film starring Gal Gadot in the role. As with any Snow White adaptation, I’m interested in how the Evil Queen looks and is portrayed. Gadot’s Queen is a dark, gothic figure with an impressive crown. Costume designer Sandy Powell based her design on the original film’s iconic appearance of the Evil Queen because “I think it’s a really striking look,” she said in a video shared by Disney.

How did we get here?

The look of the witch on film has come a long way since this depiction of an old hag in the 1932 Silly Symphonies Babes in the Woods.

The changing face of the witch

For centuries, witches were presented in literature as grotesque creatures with pointy hats and broomsticks. Films of the early 19th century depicted witches as a mix of frumpy, silly women or as caricatures of that witch on the broomstick with warts and a snaggle tooth.

That’s how she appears in the 1932 Walt Disney’s Silly Symphonies short Babes in the Woods – a take on Hansel and Gretel – where the witch also had chin whiskers, a crooked nose with a wart and wears a tattered black cape and large brown hat.

Early film witches could be comical like the “Evil Queen” in Betty Boop in Snow-White.

In the 1933 short film Betty Boop in Snow-White, from Max Fleischer’s Fleischer Studios, she was homely, a bit plump and comical with a face that bears a resemblance to, of all characters, Olive Oyl (who also was drawn by the Fleischer studio).

For Walt Disney’s Snow White, his first full-length animated film, he gave his illustrators a great deal of leeway to experiment – while also giving some direction, of course. They would create drawings where she was chunky and comical (an ode to queens of the royal variety) and “a high-collar stately beautiful type,” according to the book Walt Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs & The Making of the Classic Film.

In an early 1934 outline for the film, Disney described her as “a mixture of Lady Macbeth and the Big Bad Wolf – Her beauty is sinister, mature, plenty of curves. …”

That’s her, all right.

Two women who look similar to Disney’s Evil Queen are the title character in the 1935 sci-fi film She (portrayed by Helen Gaughan), left, and Uta von Ballenstedt, a noblewoman in Medieval Germany whose likeness is immortalized in a 13th century statue (at right). They are worthy of being an inspiration.

Inspiration for the queen

Though I obviously love the queen’s look, I never thought about the inspiration for her monstrous beauty until a few years ago. I was watching the 1935 sci-fi fantasy She for the first time – and there she was: Disney’s Evil Queen, except she was the title character – She Who Must Be Obeyed is the full name – played by the stately Helen Gaughan.

Of the multiple theories about the Queen, She is near the bottom of the list because it’s the one that has never been officially confirmed. Trust me, you’ll see the similarities.

The moment I saw She on her throne, I pictured the Evil Queen. Her pale face with thin eyebrows and deep lips is framed by a black wimple beneath the large crown. She’s dressed in a deep-colored robe with an ornamental jewel at the base of her neck.

Beyond the clothing and makeup, she recalls the Evil Queen in the way she stands, moves and holds her head high with confidence that borders on arrogance. And like the Evil Queen, she erupts when provoked in the slightest way. She was made two years before Snow White and it seems clear to me that someone at Disney was inspired by this film and there’s nothing wrong with that.

If She is not a widely regarded inspiration for the Evil Queen, who is? There are three popular theories.

This portrait shows masks by Polish illustrator Władysław Teodor “W.T.” Benda, whose work was referenced in early character sketches of the Evil Queen. (Courtesy of Genthe photograph collection, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division)

Masks of WT Benda:In the first outline of Disney’s Snow White in August of 1934, the masks of Polish illustrator Władysław Teodor “W.T.” Benda, were mentioned as an inspiration. Walt Disney was a fan of the Polish illustrator whose dramatic masks were used in magazines and in theater. Cold and mysterious, they held a unique beauty from the dark eyebrows, long lashes and red lips that provided bold detail to an otherwise pale face. Sound familiar? Yes, those are the same striking details of the Evil Queen.

A German beauty:For her wardrobe and overall appearance, look to Uta von Ballenstedt, a noblewoman in Medieval Germany. She is captured eternally in a famous 13th century painted statue with a fabulous upturned high collar, large golden crown with a wimple around her face and neck and a cape majestically wrapped around her shoulders. She has a softness about her beauty that the Evil Queen lacks, but you can still see the similarity. The statue stands today outside of Naumburg Cathedral in Germany, where it is a popular selfie spot, partially because of the link to the Evil Queen.

Actresses who inspired the look of the Evil Queen included Greta Garbo, left, Joan Crawford and Gale Sondergaard (fittingly pictured in a test for the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz). Note all women have high-arched eyebrows, dramatic eye makeup and deep-colored lips – like the Evil Queen.

Hollywood stars:The one-word description of the Queen as being “beautiful” in the original fairy tale gave much room for interpretation to the illustrators. So why not look to the glamorous Hollywood actresses of the time for inspiration? And they did.

Greta Garbo, Joan Crawford, Marlene Dietrich and Gale Sondergaard are the actresses most often mentioned as reference, and you can see that in EQ by looking at their faces. In the 1920s and ‘30s, actresses often had their eyebrows plucked and redrawn in a pencil-thin line. Their eyes and lips were heavy with makeup, their beauty cool and mysterious. They carried themselves like royalty, with a sexy swagger, and they had an unmistakable magnetism and sultry magnetism.

The Evil Queen’s cold beauty and dark heart influenced how the witch is portrayed on film.

Her role in Hollywood

The Disney animators could not have realized how their version of the Evil Queen would change the depiction of the witch on film. It’s a topic discussed in the 2020 documentary “Witches of Hollywood.” In the Disney film, the witch was not the traditional hag (until she changed herself into one), but an empowered woman (evil, but empowered).

She also was the first witch on film who was beautiful and evil; “more than one thing,” as author Dianca London puts it.

“She’s not just the beautiful kind of cold, mean queen, or the hag in the woods – she’s both,” London said. “And she has the ability to shift between the two things at her own will which I think is a new and exciting thing.”

Heather Green, author of Bell Book and Camera, said the Disney film is significant in that it has two important witch figures: the recognizable crone, as well as the “very first fantasy vamp witch.”

“She is a woman who is out for her own power, who is more interested in her beauty and her sexuality than in anything else. And she’s seeking to destroy a young girl to achieve that,” Green said. “For the first time in American film, we saw a very, very powerful, beautiful alluring woman as a witch.”

Yes, the Evil Queen gave permission for evil not to look monstrous. With her wicked nature hidden beneath her beauty, you didn’t see evil coming for you.

That’s something now common in movies, but it started with the Evil Queen and that cinematic legacy is her crowning achievement.

 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 and is a member and board chair of the Classic Movie Blog Association. Toni was the president of the former Buffalo chapter of TCM Backlot and led 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 or on Bluesky at @watchingforever.bsky.social

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Classic Movie Travels: Frank Morgan

Classic Movie Travels: Frank Morgan

frank morgan portrait
Frank Morgan

Francis Phillip Wuppermann was born on June 1, 1890, in New York, New York, to Josephine Wright and George Diogracia Wuppermann. His father was born in Venezuela and of Spanish and German descent, while his mother was born in the United States and was of English descent. Francis was the youngest of 11 children, with five brothers and five sisters. His family had earned considerable wealth through the distribution of Angostura Aromatic Bitters via the Angostura-Wuppermann Corporation, marketing bitters for use in drinks and cocktails.

As a young boy, Wuppermann sang soprano in his church’s choir. He also took on odd jobs, including selling toothbrushes and advertisements, and bronco-busting—breaking a wild horse or bronco for riding.

Wuppermann attended Cornell University, where he was active in the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and Glee Club. He soon pursued an interest in acting on stage, following in the footsteps of his brother, Ralph. While working in vaudeville, he changed his last name from Wuppermann to Morgan. His first stage performance was in Mr. Wu in 1914, followed by numerous appearances in other shows, including The Lullaby, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Topaze, The Band Wagon, and Hey Nonny Nonny!

In 1914, Morgan married Alma Muller. They had one son named George. The couple remained married until Morgan’s passing in 1949.

From 1916 to 1936, Morgan appeared in various silent films. His screen debut occurred in The Suspect (1916). Next, he worked in Raffles, the Amateur Cracksman (1917) with John Barrymore. Of his many siblings, he was closest to his brother, Carlos. While Carlos’ passing was initially deemed a suicide while serving in the United States Army’s Corps of Intelligence Police in Germany, it was later revealed that he was murdered by a fellow soldier. Carlos was a writer and actor, and Morgan appeared in his deceased brother’s play The Triumph of X (1921) on Broadway.

John Barrymore and Frank Morgan in Reunion in Vienna (1933)

Once he became a contract player for MGM, Morgan appeared in Hallelujah, I’m a Bum (1933) alongside Al Jolson. He received an Academy Award nomination for Best Leading Actor for his performance as Alessandro, Duke of Florence, in The Affairs of Cellini (1934). He soon appeared in The Good Fairy (1935) with Margaret Sullavan, The Great Ziegfeld (1936) with William Powell and Myrna Loy, and Dimples (1936) with Shirley Temple.

In The Wizard of Oz (1939), Morgan carried out the titular role in addition to four other roles: Professor Marvel, the Gatekeeper, the “horse of a different color” carriage driver, and the Palace Guard. Morgan secured the role after the studio tired of W.C. Fields continually negotiating his potential pay for the part. 

frank morgan wizard of oz

In 1939, Morgan was involved in a serious car accident in New Mexico. While he and his family survived, his chauffer did not.

While in the throes of his film career, Morgan also performed in radio. He co-starred with Fanny Brice in The Frank Morgan-Fanny Brice Show. When Brice left the program in 1944, Morgan continued for a year with The Frank Morgan Show. In 1947, he starred in the radio series The Fabulous Dr. Tweedy and also recorded several children’s records, including Gossamer Wump.

Over the years, Morgan proved to be an asset to the studio in not only bumbling, comedic roles but also in portraying more serious and downtrodden characters. He could be seen in Saratoga (1937), The Shop Around the Corner (1940), The Mortal Storm (1940), and The Human Comedy (1943). Morgan also received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor in Tortilla Flat (1942). In addition, Morgan appeared in a compilation film called The Great Morgan (1946), theoretically playing himself albeit in familiar bumbling roles. In the film, Morgan jumps at the chance to produce a film, but it all goes awry when he edits several unrelated musical and comedy film clips together into his own film. This was considered to be a lost film until 1980, when one print was discovered, followed by yet another.

Morgan was known to drink in his dressing room. He occasionally carried a black brief case to work, fully stocked with a mini bar.

Morgan’s final film role was in Key to the City (1950), filmed in 1949 and released after his death. Morgan had actually filmed some scenes as Buffalo Bill for the musical Annie Get Your Gun (1950) when he passed away in his sleep from a heart attack on September 18, 1949. He was replaced by Louis Calhern in the role. Morgan was 59 years old. He was buried in the Wuppermann family plot in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. In 2003, his son was buried in the same family plot.

Today, there are some extant tributes and points of interest relating to Morgan’s life and career.

In 1900, Morgan and his family lived at 35 W. 124th St., New York, New York. By 1917, they relocated to 236 W. 70th St., New York, New York. Both of these homes have since been razed.

In 1920, Morgan, Alma, and George resided at 5 St. Lukes Pl., New York, New York, with servant Maria Johnson. This home stands today.

5 St. Lukes Pl., New York, New York
5 St. Lukes Pl., New York, New York

In 1927, Morgan and his family resided at 430 E. 57th St., New York, New York, per his application for joining the Sons of the American Revolution. This building also stands.

430 E. 57th St., New York, New York
430 E. 57th St., New York, New York

By 1940, Morgan and his family had relocated to 1025 Ridgedale Dr., Beverly Hills, California. Also in residence with them were a nurse (Ruth Halppner), maid (William White), cook (Elma Martin), and chauffeur (Annanzo White). This home also stands.

1025 Ridgedale Dr., Beverly Hills, California
1025 Ridgedale Dr., Beverly Hills, California

Morgan has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, honoring his work in motion pictures and radio. They are located at 1708 Vine St. and 6700 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, California, respectively.

Frank Morgan walk of fame star
Hollywood Walk of Fame Star

The pants Morgan wore to portray Professor Marvel in The Wizard of Oz (1939) are on display at Movie Madness Video in Portland, Oregon.

–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.

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Western RoundUp: Final Resting Places, More Western Filmmakers 3

More Western Filmmakers Final Resting Places

This month it’s time for another of my periodic tributes to Western filmmakers as we visit their final resting places throughout the Los Angeles area.

During my visits to these sites over the years I’ve spent time reflecting on the enjoyment each person’s work has given me, especially in the Western genre. I hope following along here enables readers across the country and around the world to do likewise.

In this column we’ll start with Oscar-winning actor Burt Lancaster, who appeared in numerous Westerns over his long career, including Vengeance Valley (1951), The Kentuckian (1955), and The Unforgiven (1960); I reviewed Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), in which he played Wyatt Earp, in my column in 2023. Lancaster died in 1994 at the age of 80, and his cremated remains are interred in an unassuming little spot in Westwood Memorial Park.

Burt Lancaster final resting place
Burt Lancaster

Back in 2018 I reviewed another Wyatt Earp film, Tombstone: The Town Too Tough to Die (1942). The actor who portrayed Earp in that film, Richard Dix, died in 1949, age 56, and is buried at Forest Lawn Glendale. He’s interred next to his son Richard, who sadly died in a logging accident a few years later. Richard Dix’s other Westerns include Cimarron (1931), an Oscar winner for Best Picture, as well as The Conquerors (1932), The Arizonian (1935), and The Kansan (1943), among others.

Richard Dix final resting place
Richard Dix

I included Oscar-winning actor Edmond O’Brien in my 2019 column here on “Unexpected Western Leads.” While viewers might first think of him as a “city” type who was in numerous well-known crime and film noir titles, he appeared in a significant number of Westerns, most notably John Ford’s The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1961) and Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch (1968). My favorite O’Brien Western is a little-known Western called Cow Country (1953) which I’ve enjoyed numerous times. He died in 1985 at the age of 69 and is buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.

Edmond O'Brien final resting place
Edmond O’Brien

Like Edmond O’Brien, Ricardo Montalban was in a John Ford Western, in this case Cheyenne Autumn (1964), and also like O’Brien, Montalban is buried at Holy Cross. Montalban also appeared in William Wellman’s Across the Wide Missouri (1951), where he unfortunately suffered an accident that would leave him with lifelong back issues. Montalban was 88 when he died in 2009; he was preceded in death by his longtime wife Georgiana, who was the younger half-sister of Loretta Young.

Ricardo Montalban final resting place
Ricardo Montalban

I’ve visited the graves of several other cast members of Across the Wide Missouri, including Richard Anderson. Anderson, perhaps best known today for his TV roles on The Six Million Dollar Man and The Bionic Woman, had his second movie role in a Monte Hale Western, The Vanishing Westerner (1950). He was also in John Sturges’ Escape From Fort Bravo (1953). Anderson died at 91 in 2017 and is buried at Westwood Memorial Park.

Richard Anderson final resting place
Richard Anderson

Another cast member of Across the Wide Missouri, John Hodiak, was sadly only 41 when he died of a heart attack in 1955. He’s buried interred in the mausoleum at Calvary Cemetery in East Los Angeles. Hodiak’s other Westerns included the classic Judy Garland musical The Harvey Girls (1946); a favorite Robert Taylor “Cavalry Western,” Ambush (1950); and Conquest of Cochise (1953), in which he played the title role.

John Hodiak final resting place
John Hodiak

Like Richard Anderson, three-time Oscar nominee Eleanor Parker appeared in the excellent Cavalry Western Escape From Fort Bravo (1953). She also played the lead opposite Robert Taylor in the comedic Western Many Rivers to Cross (1955) and was Clark Gable’s leading lady in The King and Four Queens (1956). In 2013 she died in Palm Springs at the age of 91 and is buried at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills.

Eleanor Parker final resting place
Eleanor Parker

Richard Conte had an early career role in the MGM Western Big Jack (1949) opposite Wallace Beery. He only made a couple of Westerns, including Universal’s Riders of Vengeance (1952), but I wanted to include him here as he’s such a favorite. He also appeared in the military Western They Came to Cordura (1959) with Gary Cooper. He died in 1975 at the age of 65 and is at Westwood Memorial Park.

Richard Conte final resting place
Richard Conte

Director Frank Lloyd had a long career beginning in silent movies, including filming silent versions of Zane Grey Westerns. His sound-era Westerns included Wells Fargo (1937) starring real-life husband and wife Joel McCrea and Frances Dee; the delightful The Lady From Cheyenne (1941) with Loretta Young as a Wyoming settler crusading for women’s suffrage; the “Northerner” Alaska-set film The Spoilers (1942) starring John Wayne, Randolph Scott, and Marlene Dietrich; and his final film, The Last Command (1955), about the Battle of the Alamo. Several sources list Lloyd’s birth year as 1886, while his gravestone says 1888. He died in 1960 and is buried at Forest Lawn Glendale.

Frank Lloyd final resting place
Frank Lloyd

Finally, we return once more to Westwood Memorial Park, the final resting place of director Louis King. Like Frank Lloyd, King’s early directing career included silent Westerns. He made several modern-era Westerns which might also be called “horse” or “ranching” films, including Thunderhead, Son of Flicka (1945), Smoky (1946), and Green Grass of Wyoming (1948). He also directed Dick Powell and Evelyn Keyes in the fine Mrs. Mike (1948), set on the Canadian frontier, and his final film was Massacre (1956) starring Dane Clark. King, who was the younger brother of better-known director Henry King, was 64 when he died in 1962.

Louis King final resting place
Louis King

For additional photos of the burial sites of Western filmmakers, please visit my columns from May 2019February 2022November 2, 2022November 29, 2022April 2023November 2023March 2024, and July 2024.

– 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.

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Silents are Golden: A Closer Look At: True Heart Susie (1919)

A Closer Look At: True Heart Susie (1919)

True Heart Susie and her beloved pet cow
True Heart Susie and her beloved pet cow

Some of the best films of the silent era weren’t necessarily grand epics, experimental dramas, or high-budget adventures. Some were simple, quiet stories, focusing on just a few carefully-sketched characters. One film that always comes to my mind right away is True Heart Susie (1919), a sweet melodrama by D.W. Griffith that was later described by its star Lillian Gish as a “rural poem.”

This was one of several nostalgic melodramas Griffith directed in the late 1910s in between more prestigious projects like Hearts of the World (1918) and Broken Blossoms (1919). Starring Lillian Gish, Robert Harron and Clarine Seymour, its intimate story and country setting are infused with nostalgia for times gone by. Today, there’s an added charm in knowing that when True Heart Susie was made in 1919, much of that “old-fashioned” world still existed in a sense.

True Heart Susie (1919), Lillian Gish and Robert Harron
Lillian Gish and Robert Harron

The story revolves around the sweet and naive Susie (Lillian Gish), a “plain girl” who lives with her aunt in a little house in the country. Young William Jenkins (Robert Harron), who Susie secretly loves, lives across the street. He dreams of going to college to become a minister, but can’t afford the expense. Susie wants William to achieve his dreams and decides to sell her beloved pet cow and give him the money anonymously. William is overjoyed, believing the money came from a wealthy benefactor he’d met in town.

William completes his studies and returns home a full-fledged minister, much to Susie’s joy. At the local soda fountain he talks earnestly with her about how young men want to be “plain and simple” girls, not “painted and powdered” types. Susie is sure that her dream of marrying William will soon come true–until one fateful day when she sees him with the fun-loving and decidedly painted-and-powdered Betty Hopkins (Clarine Seymour).

True Heart Susie (1919), Kate Bruce, Clarine Seymour and Robert Harron
Kate Bruce, Clarine Seymour and Robert Harron

At the time of True Heart Susie Gish had worked in films for eight years. From her first role with her sister Dorothy in the short Biograph drama An Unseen Enemy (1912) to appearances in prestige pictures like Intolerance (1916), her delicate, emotional performances had made her one of Hollywood’s finest talents. In her autobiography she recalled that by the time of True Heart Susie D.W. Griffith often welcomed her suggestions for her characters. While a “quaint,” quiet character like Susie can be a challenge to bring to life, Gish rose to the occasion. She seemed to understand Susie almost instinctively, using a slightly stilted way of walking to emphasize her character’s naivete and adding little flashes of humor at just the right moments. The majority of Gish’s costumes involved pinafores, slightly out-of-date–dresses, and funny little hats. She’s a deeply sympathetic figure, and the audience feels for her throughout her various ups and downs.

True Heart Susie (1919), Lillian Gish
Lillian Gish

Robert Harron is also excellent as the bashful William. An Irish Catholic lad from New York City, Harron had joined Biograph in 1908 as an errand boy and soon started appearing on screen in bit parts. Thanks to his hardworking, genial nature he became one of the studio’s most reliable actors. As his career progressed under D.W. Griffith’s tutelage he began to show astonishing versatility, his finest role arguably being “The Boy” in Intolerance. In True Heart Susie he’s convincing as both a gawky young boy and a self-assured minister, and he and Gish have a winsome chemistry.

True Heart Susie (1919), Robert Harron
Robert Harron

Clarine Seymour was a relative newcomer to the Griffith studio. Born in Brooklyn, she started acting in Thanhouser films to help support her family and soon hopped over to Pathé and then to the Rolin Film Company. Her first film for Griffith was The Girl Who Stayed at Home (1919), where she played “Cutie Beautiful” and was charmingly paired with Robert Harron. Small and spunky with big saucer eyes, she was very much a “flapper type” just before flappers would start dominating the theater screens. She makes a strong impression as the flighty, fun-loving Betty who unknowingly becomes Susie’s romantic rival.

True Heart Susie (1919), Clarine Seymour
Clarine Seymour

With its warm, homey cinematography and sentimental storytelling that never feels overdone, True Heart Susie’s reputation has aged like fine wine throughout the years. It was filmed not long after the debut of United Artists, which Griffith helped found alongside Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin and Douglas Fairbanks. It was also released right on the heels of Griffith’s much-admired Broken Blossoms (1919), which is still considered an artistic masterpiece today. Perhaps inevitably, True Heart Susie was a bit overshadowed by Broken Blossom’s success. But today it’s a much-admired highlight in Griffith’s filmography, with particular praise going toward Gish’s performance

True Heart Susie (1919), Lillian Gish and Robert Harron
Lillian Gish and Robert Harron

Griffith would pair Gish and Harron one more time in The Greatest Question (1919), another melodrama with a rural setting. Seymour starred in The Idol Dancer (1920), a drama of the South Seas co-starring Richard Barthetlmess. And Harron would be loaned to Metro to be the star of what was supposed to be a four-picture deal.

Unfortunately, neither Harron nor Seymour would live to see their careers progress through the impending Jazz Age. Seymour would fall ill and pass away from an intestinal obstruction during the filming of Griffith’s Way Down East (1920). Harron’s life was claimed by a self-inflicted gunshot wound (thought to be accidental). Only one film had been completed for his deal with Metro, a light comedy called Coincidence (1920). Gish alone would go on to have a very lengthy and legendary career on both screen and stage. To the end of her life she spoke fondly of her time at the Griffith studio, proud of her work and a bit wistful for an era long gone by.

True Heart Susie (1919), Lillian Gish, flowers
Lillian Gish

–  

–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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Noir Nook: 75th Anniversary Noir – 2025 Edition

75th Anniversary Noir – 2025 Edition

If it’s February at the Noir Nook, it’s time to take a look at the 75th anniversary release of some of my favorite noirs. And 1950 served up a veritable smorgasbord of first-rate shadowy features! I always single out four films each year on which to shine the anniversary spotlight, but whittling down the outstanding releases from 1950 was like pushing a boulder up a steep hill – not impossible, but darned difficult!

I finally managed to decide on my Final Four, but I also have to give the nod to some of the many fine films that didn’t make the cut: The Asphalt Jungle, The Damned Don’t Cry, D.O.A., No Man of Her Own, and Shakedown. You can put all of these films in a bag, shake ‘em up, and select any one – you simply cannot go wrong. But in the meantime, here’s my look at the four features from 1950 that I absolutely love the best.

…..

The Breaking Point

The Breaking Point, Patricia Neal and John Garfield
The Breaking Point, Patricia Neal and John Garfield

This feature, starring John Garfield, Phyllis Thaxter, and Patricia Neal, was the second of three film adaptations of Ernest Hemingway’s 1937 novel, To Have and Have Not. (The first, with the same name as the novel, was released in 1944 and starred Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall, and the third, The Gun Runners, starred Audie Murphy and was released in 1958.) The story focuses on Garfield’s character, Harry Morgan, an ex-Naval officer who lives with his wife, Lucy (Thaxter), and two daughters, and operates a charter fishing boat in Newport Beach, California. Barely able to make the payments on his boat, Morgan is pressured into an illegal operation by a shady lawyer (Wallace Ford) and his life is complicated further by the presence of Leona Charles (Neal), a sexy passenger with eyes for Morgan. Also on hand, providing a combination of reasonable objections and loyal support is Morgan’s right-hand man, Wesley Park (Juano Hernandez).

The Breaking Point doesn’t get a lot of attention, and that’s a real shame. It has a first-rate pedigree: direction by the great Michael Curtiz, a fabulous cast, and the stamp of approval from Hemingway himself, who considered it to be the best adaptation of any of his books. I really can’t say enough about how good this movie is, from start to finish – and speaking of the finish, the ending is one of the most gut-punching in all of film noir and one you won’t soon forget.

Favorite quote: “All I got left to peddle is guts. I’m not sure I got any. I have to find out.” – Harry Morgan

…..

Gun Crazy

Gun Crazy, John Dall and Peggy Cummins
Gun Crazy, John Dall and Peggy Cummins

Based on a short story, “Deadly is the Female,” written by MacKinlay Kantor and published in the Saturday Evening Post, Gun Crazy tells the story of ill-fated lovers Annie Laurie Starr (Peggy Cummins) and Bart Tare (John Dall), who go together, as Bart observes, “like guns and ammunition.” After a unique meet-cute at a carnival where Annie works as a sharpshooter, the two fall in love and get married, but when they can’t make ends meet, they’re pushed into a life of crime (with Annie doing the shoving). They start out with small-time thefts, but eventually advance to bank robberies and an intricate payroll heist – and Annie’s penchant for shooting first and never asking questions leaves a trail of dead bodies in their wake. It’s a love story that’s doomed from the start.

Whether they’re eating (very tasty-looking) burgers at a diner, shooting up a gumball machine during a robbery of a Travelers Aid kiosk, or doing simultaneous U-turns in the middle of a road because they can’t bear to part, Annie and Bart are positively riveting. Director Joseph Lewis (who also helmed the noir gems My Name is Julia Ross [1945] and The Big Combo [1955]) does a masterful job of spinning a tale that makes us root for those crazy kids to make it safely to Mexico and live ever after happily.

Favorite quote: “I’ve been kicked around all my life, and from now on, I’m gonna start kicking back.” – Annie Laurie Starr

…..

Night and the City

Night and the City, Richard Widmark
Night and the City, Richard Widmark

Directed by Jules Dassin and set in London, this feature shines the spotlight on Harry Fabian (Richard Widmark), a small-time grifter whose life revolves around his determination to get rich quick, by whatever means necessary. His latest scheme centers on becoming a wrestling promoter, with an aging Greco-Roman wrestler named Gregorius (Stanislaus Zbyszko) as his prime attraction. The problem is, outside of Harry’s natural penchant for screw-ups, his business is shakily financed through a backdoor deal with his boss’s wife Helen Nosseross (Googie Withers), and Gregorius’s mobster son Kristo (Herbert Lom) is none too happy about his father’s exploitation by Harry. The plot is superbly supported by Gene Tierney as Mary Bristol, Harry’s long-suffering girlfriend; Francis L. Sullivan as Harry’s vindictive boss, Phillip; and Mike Mazurki as a wrestler under Kristo’s employ.

For my money, Night and the City gives us Richard Widmark’s best performance, as he brings to life a character who is alternately pitiable, admirable, and repugnant. As the centerpiece of the film, he’s got his fingers in all sorts of tangled human connections, from the estrangement between Gregorius and Kristo, to the miserable marriage of Phillip and Helen Nosseross, and his own tenuous relationship with Mary. The film is fascinating on so many levels and delivers a shocking climax that’ll practically leave you breathless.

Favorite quote: “Harry. You could have been anything. Anything. You had brains. Ambition. You worked harder than any 10 men. But the wrong things. Always the wrong things.” – Mary Bristol

…..

Sunset Blvd.

Sunset Blvd, Gloria Swanson and William Holden
Sunset Blvd, Gloria Swanson and William Holden

William Holden stars in this film as Joe Gillis, a down-on-his-luck screenwriter whose luck is so down that he can’t sell his work and he’s just one step ahead of the men who are trying to repossess his car. While fleeing the repo men, Joe serendipitously (or not, as it happens) turns into the driveway of one Norma Desmond (Gloria Swanson), an eccentric, isolated, former silent film star who gives “living in the past” a whole new meaning. Viewing Norma as the foundation for an easy payday, Joe agrees to move into her house and edit the massive screenplay she’s writing for her return to the silver screen. Unfortunately, for Joe, the best laid plans of mice and men often go awry, and he soon learns that all that glitters isn’t gold. (Did I put enough cliches into that?) Adding to the film’s action are Max Von Mayerling (Erich von Stroheim), Norma’s chauffeur, right-hand man, and first husband; and Betty Schaefer (Nancy Olson), a would-be writer who falls in love with Joe.  

Arguably one of cinema’s most iconic films, Sunset Blvd. is one of those features that I simply cannot see too many times. It’s chock full of unforgettable lines, scenes, and sets, and helmed by one of my favorite directors, Billy Wilder. And in addition to the leading quartet of performers, the cast includes small but standout performances by Fred Clark, as a Paramount Studios producer with stomach issues; Lloyd Gough, as Joe’s unsympathetic and unhelpful agent; and, of course, as Norma’s card-playing partners (who Joe dubs “The Waxworks”), Buster Keaton, Anna Q. Nilsson, and H.B. Warner. It’s a stellar production in every way.

Favorite quote: “We didn’t need dialogue. We had faces!”

What are some of your favorite noirs from 75 years ago? Leave a comment and let me know!

– 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:

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Silver Screen Standards: The Major and the Minor (1942)

The Major and the Minor (1942)

I’m not sure you could make a picture like The Major and the Minor (1942) today, and given the Lolita undertones of the story that might be a good thing, although writer and director Billy Wilder couldn’t have predicted the arrival of Nabokov’s controversial novel more than a decade after this movie first appeared. Wilder, of course, wasn’t afraid to present his audiences with absurd and/or risqué situations, and this screwball comedy has both in spades. It’s a wacky, fast-paced directorial debut for the iconic Hollywood writer, whose collaborations with Charles Brackett had already proven their creative talent with screenplays for Midnight (1939), Ninotchka (1939), and Ball of Fire (1941). Fresh from her Oscar-winning performance in Kitty Foyle (1940), Ginger Rogers proves once again that she can carry a picture without dancing or Fred Astaire, and this is really her movie, although we get enjoyable supporting performances from Ray Milland, Diana Lynn, and even Rogers’ real-life mother, Lela Rogers, here making her only onscreen acting appearance.

The Major and the Minor, Ginger Rogers, Station
Unable to afford the adult fare back to her hometown, Susan (Ginger Rogers) disguises herself as a child to get a half-price ticket.

Ginger Rogers stars as Susan Applegate, a young woman tired of being perpetually propositioned at her jobs in New York City and resigned to taking the train back to her small hometown. Unfortunately, her emergency reserve is not enough to cover an adult fare, so she disguises herself as a rather mature pre-teen and calls herself “Su-Su.” When gallant Major Philip Kirby (Ray Milland) comes to her aid, Susan is immediately attracted to him and wants to tell him the truth, but complications arise to prevent her revelation. Philip takes Susan to his home at a military academy, where she meets his manipulative fiancée, Pamela (Rita Johnson), her quick-witted sister, Lucy (Diana Lynn), and a whole campus of teenage Romeos in training.

The Major and the Minor, Ray Milland and Ginger Rogers Train
While fleeing suspicious train conductors, Susan meets kindly military school instructor Philip Kirby (Ray Milland), who believes her to be a child in need of assistance.

Obviously, a grown man being attracted to a twelve-year-old girl is a grossly inappropriate situation, but the audience always knows that Susan is really an adult, and Philip never suggests or attempts anything to undermine our sense of him as a good guy. In fact, he’s the only male of any age to behave himself when left alone with Susan, which is why she likes him in the first place. Having fled New York because of all the adult men who acted like heels, Susan discovers at the academy that they pick up their bad habits early, with every boy there trying his best to court and kiss her. One of them (Frankie Thomas) even turns out to be the son of Albert Osborne (Robert Benchley), the lecherous New Yorker whose attempts convinced Susan to leave the city. In a world full of such swine, it’s little wonder that Susan likes the decorous Philip, but of course Philip believes her to be absolutely out of bounds. The audience is never fooled for a minute, especially with Rogers being in her early 30s and playing a woman in her early 20s who is trying to disguise herself as a girl on the verge of her teens, but it’s fun to watch Rogers attempt the deception with her impression of girlish behavior and her improbable stories about being from “Swedish stock.”

The Major and the Minor, Diana Lynn and Ginger Rogers
The best friend Susan makes at the academy is her rival’s teenage sister, Lucy (Diana Lynn), who helps Susan maintain her ruse and navigate life at the school.

As much as I like Ray Milland, for me the other MVP in this picture is actual teenager Diana Lynn, who plays Lucy with all the wit and sharp commentary of a Pre-Code Ginger Rogers. Lucy is supposed to be a “real” twelve-year-old girl, although Lynn was actually 16 at the time and just starting her film career after gaining fame as a child prodigy pianist. Lucy, a student of biology and the smartest person Susan meets throughout the entire movie, immediately sees through the Su-Su disguise but becomes an ally in Susan’s ruse. With her scientific and worldly knowledge, Lucy serves as a foil to the childish Su-Su idea of adolescent girlhood and the handsy stupidity of the boys, but she also provides Susan with a much-needed friend. Lucy already knows that her older sister is a rotten egg, but Susan’s arrival gives Lucy an opportunity to undermine Pamela’s intention to make Philip miserable for life. Once they’re together, they remind me of the pals Rogers and Una Merkel play in 42nd Street (1933), with a snappy camaraderie that quickly deepens into real friendship. Susan might bring the screwy aspect of screwball comedy into play with her hastily assumed disguise, but Lucy brings the fiendish, chaotic intelligence needed to vanquish rivals and ensure a happy ending. It’s a crucial role in the picture, and I can’t imagine any young actress handling it better than Lynn does.

The Major and the Minor, Ray Milland, Eye
With one eye closed, Philip (Ray Milland) can almost see past the Susu façade and recognize the grown woman he finds so mysteriously appealing.

Billy Wilder would turn to darker fare for his next several films, but he reunited with Ray Milland to make The Lost Weekend (1945), which earned Oscars for both Milland and Wilder and won Best Picture. Ginger Rogers can, of course, be found in her numerous pictures with Fred Astaire, but for more of her other comedies try Bachelor Mother (1939) and Monkey Business (1952). She and Milland reunite for Lady in the Dark (1944), while Rita Johnson also appears with Milland in The Big Clock (1948). Diana Lynn plays a female version of Ray Milland’s character in the gender-swapped 1995 remake, You’re Never Too Young, in which Jerry Lewis is the adult who poses as a child. As a teen, however, Lynn has another memorable role in The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (1943).

— 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.

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Classic Movie Travels: Louise Fazenda

Classic Movie Travels: Louise Fazenda

Louise Fazenda
Louise Fazenda

Louise Fazenda was born on June 17, 1895, in Lafayette, Indiana. She was the daughter of Joseph Fazenda and Nelda Schilling Fazenda. Louise was born in the ground floor northwest room of her maternal grandparents’ house on North Salisbury Street, while her mother was visiting her brother. Louise’s father was a merchandise broker from Mexico and her mother was a native of Chicago, Illinois.

The family soon moved to California, where Joseph operated a grocery store. Fazenda attended Los Angeles High School and St. Mary’s Convent. After school, she delivered groceries for her father’s business by a horse-drawn wagon. While appearing in a high school performance, she was discovered by a talent agent working for Mack Sennett.

Louise Fazenda acting

Fazenda began her film career in 1913, namely in bit parts. She later became a character actress and displayed a knack for slapstick comedy in silent films. During this period, she worked with numerous other comedy greats, including Ben Turpin, Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle, and more. She left the film industry for a brief period to perform in vaudeville.

In 1917, she married director and writer Noel M. Smith. They divorced in 1926.

In the following year, she married Warner Bros. producer Hal B. Wallis. At the time, he was working as a publicist. She accepted his proposal in a speech before the National Press Club in Washington, closing her talk by saying, “I appreciate you newspapermen. In fact, I have such an appreciation of newspapermen that I think I’ll marry one when I get back to California.” The couple had one son: Harold “Hal” Brent Wallis. Fazenda and Wallis remained married until her passing.

Louise Fazenda and Hal B. Wallis
Louise Fazenda and Hal B. Wallis

By the time sound entered films, Fazenda was securing more serious roles, including an antiwar film called The Road Back (1937). Her last film would be The Old Maid (1939), capping her career at roughly 265 films.

Fazenda and Wallis traveled extensively. They also boarded two British children during World War II. They lived on a 30-acre property in the San Fernando Valley.

Fazenda passed away from a cerebral hemorrhage in Beverly Hills, California, on April 17, 1962. She was 66 years old. At her funeral, stories of her volunteer work caring for children at UCLA Medical Center in addition to rooming and boarding children during World War II were shared. She was interred at Inglewood Park Cemetery in Inglewood, California.

Fazenda’s birthplace was located at 1104 N. Salisbury St., West Lafayette, Indiana. In 1900, Fazenda and her parents resided at 629 Kohler St., Los Angeles, California. In 1920, Fazenda and her family resided at 1132 Lemoyne St., Los Angeles, California. All of these homes have since been razed.

In 1930, she and Wallis resided at 5402 W. 9th St., Los Angeles, California. Her parents lived next door at 5400. Today, her home stands, but the one at which her parents resided does not.

Louise Fazenda home 5402 W. 9th St., Los Angeles, Californi
5402 W. 9th St., Los Angeles, California

In 1940, she, Wallis, and their son resided at 5100 Woodman Ave., Sherman Oaks, California. In addition, a maid (Anne Baffish), butcher (Edward McGuigan), cook (Martha McGuigan), and governess (Louisa Baker) resided with them. This home does not exist.

Fazenda is honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, celebrating her work in motion pictures. It is located at 6801 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, California.

Louise Fazenda Hollywood Walk of Fame Star

–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.

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Monsters & Matinees: Caught in the Silly Grasp of ‘The Giant Claw’

Caught in the Silly Grasp of ‘The Giant Claw’

Monsters, by their very name, are supposed to be monstrous. Perhaps hideous like The Hideous Sun Demon, or beastly like Beast from 20,000 Fathoms. Just throw an exclamation point on a film title like Them! or Tarantula! so we know something terrible is coming. Just give us a monster – it’s why we watch.

But there’s the chance if the monster lets us down through no fault of its own – bad design, poor effects or lame powers – it can taint our film experience. That means low-budget B-movie monsters – a favorite of mine – are at a disadvantage from a lack of resources. (I like to think filmmakers do the best with their creativity and budget, so I’ll forgive the shortcomings of the B-movie monsters.)

What a face! That’s the title creature in The Giant Claw.

That brings us to The Giant Claw. I’m not talking about the grocery store arcade game where you lower the big claw into a pile of soft toys and nearly always come up empty, but the 1957 sci-fi film from the prolific duo of director Fred F. Sears and producer Sam Katzman (more on them later).

I only discovered the film in recent years while researching actress Mara Corday and was intrigued by the promise of the title. What was The Giant Claw? Was it a killer bear? (One of my phobias.) A predatory lion? A surprisingly fast-moving sloth?

No. It’s a big bird – just one big bird. And when you see it, please hold back the laughter. This creature isn’t monstrous, it’s goofy looking. As film historian and critic Leonard Maltin has been widely quoted as saying “Big bird is laughable.”

With a wild tuft of hair, big eyes and funny beak, the beast in The Giant Claw could be called the Goofy Claw.

That’s true, but I still had an immediate soft spot in my B-movie heart for the film and its Goofy Claw title creature. I think of the film and smile because our big bird could be the homeliest monster on film, and I say that with affection. After the initial shock of meeting GC – we’ll call her GC for short since it works for both giant and goofy claw – I was rooting for her (we learn she is a girl bird later).

GC has a hilarious tuft of unruly hair sticking off the top of her oversized head, a snarled beak that makes it look like she’s trying too hard to be tough, and big bug eyes like you’ll find on children’s toys. I can’t help picturing GC as a huggable plush toy that I would buy right now if I could. She’s such a quirky, bizarre bird that she looks like she could use a hug (which we could do if she was a plush stuffed toy). We won’t talk about the odd cackling noise she makes – this poor bird can’t catch a break.

Despite the funny looking monster, this is a serious sci-fi film. There’s a narrator (the voice of our director Fred F. Sears) who pops in throughout to explain things, plenty of scientific mumbo-jumbo about atoms and anti-matter, and bold, exciting proclamations (“That bird is from a god-forsaken anti-matter galaxy!” “It was a flying battleship!”).

Sally (played by Mara Corday) can hold her own against Mitch (Jeff Morrow).

* * * * *

Pilot and engineer Mitch MacAfee (played by Jeff Morrow) spots a UFO while on a radar test flight at the North Pole. The folks tracking him from below – including mathematician Sally Caldwell (played by Mara Corday) – don’t see anything on radar. Technically, Mitch didn’t see it either. It was just a big blur that got too close. “Something like a cloud, but moving too fast,” he says. Because of his persistence, three fighter jets are scrambled to find his UFO, but all are tragically lost with no proof of anything in the air. (The viewer sees what happened though.)

After that accident, the military isn’t happy with Mitch and sends him back to New York with Sally. Their small plane is attacked by a UFO (is it the same one?) and crashes in the Adirondacks. They’re helped by friendly French-Canadian farmer Pierre (Lou Merrill) who discovers something wrong near his barn and yells about la Carcagne, a legendary creature with the face of a wolf and body of a woman with wings who foreshadows death. What does this have to do with GC? Not much except to increase the tension as a terrified Pierre repeatedly yells “la Carcagne, la Carcagne.” He is afraid of something he doesn’t understand, much like what the world will soon be feeling.

Even after a smattering of reports about UFOs and lost planes, the military still has trouble believing Mitch since – and I will repeat – there’s nothing on the radar. (What is up with that?) The few who have seen it describe as a blur, just like Mitch, and that’s how it’s often presented to the viewer as a way to show its speed and those out of focus scenes are funnier than GC.

A jet can’t fly fast enough to escape the clutches of The Giant Claw.

It takes an odd feather in plane wreckage for authorities to finally believe there’s something like a giant bird in the sky. Now they ask questions. How is the bird evading the radar? Why does the feather defy chemical analysis? What is this feathered nightmare on wings that can fly around the world faster than Superman leaving death and destruction in its path?

Clearly, it’s up to Mitch and the super smart Sally to answer those questions and save the world. But first, let’s talk about our two main characters.

In a room full of men, Mara Corday is the one who figures out how to stop the beast in the sky. Standing next to her is Jeff Morrow. That’s familiar face Morris Ankrum at the far right.

Mitch is not the most likable guy. He’s apt to lose his cool and often talks down to others including Sally who he calls “Mademoiselle Mathematician.” That doesn’t stop him from hitting on her, even kissing her while she’s sleeping on a plane in one creepy scene.

Where Morrow is dour and lacks the charm that could tame his arrogance, Corday infuses Sally with spunk and quiet confidence. She did the same with her characters in her two sci-fi films before this – Tarantula! (1955) and The Black Scorpion (1957). In this trio of films, she played a smart woman who could hold her own and doesn’t sit around waiting to be saved. She certainly won’t take anything from Mitch, even amusingly using his “Mademoiselle Mathematician” nickname against him. You’ll be rooting for her as she uses her smarts surrounded by men as she figures out how to deal with the big bird in the sky.

The film progresses as we expect. There are more sightings of big bird, attacks on trains and anything else that moves and people running in terror in recognizable spots around the world. With Sally’s math, Mitch devises a machine that could disrupt big bird’s shield. But, in good B-movie fashion, it’s never been tried before so there will be suspense of whether it will work as GC heads to New York City.

So you may be distracted by our big bird, but the film around it is everything we expect in a 1950s sci-fi B-movie and that makes it watchable.

In the end, I found the two females – Sally and GC – the most memorable part of The Giant Claw. Now if I could just get my stuffed plush movie collectible.

Mama bird protects her egg from those pesky humans in The Giant Claw.

MORE ON THE FILM

Sears/Katzman combo. Director Fred F. Sears and producer Sam Katzman worked on at least 18  movies together – 14 of them over just two years. That includes the genre films Earth vs. Flying Saucers (1956), the underappreciated and aptly title werewolf film The Werewolf (1956) and The Night the World Exploded (1957), plus the 1956 musicals Rock Around the Clock and Don’t Knock the Rock both starring Bill Haley and the Comets. In his career, Sears directed 51 films but sadly died at age 44 in November 1957 before all his films were released.

The look of The Giant Claw. Katzman originally planned to go all out and spend much of his budget on the creature and bring on stop-motion animation master Ray Harryhausen to create the flying wonder. Budget constraints nixed the idea. So instead of another Harryhausen stop-motion wonder, the big bird was created as a marionette – a puppet – as is obvious to viewers. It was a shock, however, to the cast and crew, who didn’t get a look at the creature until they saw the movie in a theater. Star Jeff Morrow has shared that he was watching the film in his hometown and was so embarrassed at the audience laughing at the bird that he left early.

 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 and is a member and board chair of the Classic Movie Blog Association. Toni was the president of the former Buffalo chapter of TCM Backlot and led 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 or on Bluesky at @watchingforever.bsky.social

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