The Palm Beach Story
The Palm Beach Story | |
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theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Preston Sturges |
Produced by |
Buddy G. DeSylva (uncredited) Paul Jones (assoc. producer) |
Written by | Preston Sturges |
Starring |
Claudette Colbert Joel McCrea Mary Astor Rudy Vallee |
Music by | Victor Young |
Cinematography | Victor Milner |
Edited by | Stuart Gilmore |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
November 2, 1942 (NYC) November 7 (US general) |
Running time | 88 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $950,000 (approx)[1] |
Box office | $1.7 million (US rentals)[2] |
The Palm Beach Story is a 1942 romantic screwball comedy film written and directed by Preston Sturges, and starring Claudette Colbert, Joel McCrea, Mary Astor and Rudy Vallée. Victor Young contributed the lively musical score, including a fast-paced variation of the William Tell Overture for the opening scenes. Typical for a Sturges movie, the pacing and dialogue of The Palm Beach Story are very fast.
Plot
Tom and Gerry Jeffers (Joel McCrea and Claudette Colbert) are a married couple in New York City who are down on their luck financially, which is pushing the marriage to an end. But there is another, deeper problem with their relationship, one that is hinted at in the prologue of the movie as the opening credits roll and then explained near the movie's end.
In the prologue Claudette Colbert appears bound and gagged in a closet, but then a second later in a wedding dress, seen by a maid who faints at every disturbance. The movie reveals much later that Colbert is playing identical twins, both of whom are in love with the intended groom played by Joel McCrea. The sister of the bride has just tied her up in an attempt to steal the wedding for herself. The pantomime is cross-cut with action showing McCrea hurriedly changing from one formal suit to another in the car as he rushes to the church. McCrea also is playing twins and the sibling is likewise in love with the tied up sister. He too is trying to steal the wedding. The end result is that the two siblings, not the original bride or groom, are married, and those two were not in love with each other.
The two remain married from 1937 until 1942 where the film resumes. Gerry decides that Tom would be better off if they split up. She packs her bags; takes some money offered to her by the Wienie King (Robert Dudley), a strange but rich little man who is thinking of renting the Jeffers' apartment; and boards a train for Palm Beach, Florida. There she plans to get a divorce and meet a wealthy second husband who can help Tom. On the train, she meets the eccentric John D. Hackensacker III (Rudy Vallée), one of the richest men in the world.
Because of an encounter with the wild and drunken millionaire members of the Ale and Quail hunting club, Gerry loses all her luggage; after making do with clothing scrounged from other passengers, she is forced to accept Hackensacker's extravagant charity. They leave the train and go on a shopping spree for everything from lingerie to jewelry – Hackensacker minutely noting the cost of everything in a little notebook, which he never bothers to add up – and make the remainder of the trip to Palm Beach on Hackensacker's yacht named The Erl King (a Sturges joke on the Hackensacker family business, oil).
Tom follows Gerry to Palm Beach by air, also with the impromptu financial assistance of the Wienie King. When Tom meets Hackensacker, Gerry introduces him as her brother, Captain McGlue. Soon, Hackensacker falls for Gerry, while his often-married, man-hungry sister, Princess Centimillia (Mary Astor), chases Tom, although her last lover, Toto (Sig Arno), is still following her around. To help further his suit with Gerry, Hackensacker agrees to invest in Tom's scheme to build an airport suspended over a city by wires.
Tom finally persuades Gerry to give their marriage another chance, and they confess their masquerade to their disappointed suitors. Even though he is disappointed, Hackensacker intends to go through with his investment in the suspended airport, since he thinks it is a good business deal and he never lets anything get in the way of business. Then, when Tom and Gerry reveal that they met because they are both identical twins – a fact which explains the opening sequence of the film – Hackensacker and his sister are elated. The final scene shows Hackensacker and Gerry's sister, and the Princess and Tom's brother, getting married.
The film ends where it began after the prologue, with the words "And they lived happily ever after...or did they?" on title cards.
Cast
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The Ale and Quail Club:
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Cast notes
- This was Sturges' second collaboration with Joel McCrea, following Sullivan's Travels from the previous year and they would work together again on The Great Moment, which was filmed in 1942 (but released in 1944). Although Claudette Colbert and Sturges had both worked on The Big Pond (1930) and the 1934 version of Imitation of Life, The Palm Beach Story was the only time they worked together on a movie Sturges wrote and directed.
- The Palm Beach Story was Rudy Vallee's first comedic role, and it garnered him a contract from Paramount,[3] as well as an award for Best Actor of 1942 from the National Board of Review.[4] He would go on to appear in Sturges' The Sin of Harold Diddlebock, Unfaithfully Yours and The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful Bend.
- Many members of Sturges' unofficial "stock company" of character actors appear in The Palm Beach Story, among them Al Bridge, Chester Conklin, Jimmy Conlin, William Demarest, Robert Dudley, Byron Foulger, Robert Greig, Harry Hayden, Arthur Hoyt, Torben Meyer, Frank Moran, Charles R. Moore, Jack Norton, Franklin Pangborn, Victor Potel, Dewey Robinson, Harry Rosenthal, Julius Tannen and Robert Warwick.
- This was the seventh of ten films written by Preston Sturges in which William Demarest appeared.[5]
Production
At least part of the initial inspiration for The Palm Beach Story may have come to Preston Sturges from close to home, since his ex-wife, Eleanor Hutton, was an heiress who moved among the European aristocracy, and was once wooed by Prince Jerome Rospigliosi-Gioeni, among others, and Sturges himself had shuttled back and forth between Europe and America as a young man. Indeed one incident in the film is based on something which happened to Sturges and his mother while traveling by train to Paris, when the car with their compartment was uncoupled while they ate dinner two cars away.[6]
The story Sturges came up with had the title Is Marriage Necessary?, and this, along with an alternative, Is That Bad?, became a working title for the film. Is Marriage Necessary? was rejected by the censors of the Hays Office, who also rejected the script that Paramount submitted to them because of its "sex suggestive situations...and dialogue." Changes were made, but the Hays Office continued to reject the script because of its "light treatment of marriage and divorce" and because of similarities between the John D. Hackensacker III character and John D. Rockefeller. More changes were made, including reducing the number of Princess Centimillia's previous marriages from eight to three (plus two annulments), before the script finally was approved.[3]
Claudette Colbert received $150,000 for her role, and Joel McCrea was paid $60,000.[6]
The second unit did background shooting at Penn Station in Manhattan.[7] The film premiered in New York City on 2 November 1942 and went into general release on 7 November.[8] The film was released on video in the U.S. on 12 July 1990 and re-released on 30 June 1993.[9]
Awards and honors
American Film Institute recognition
- 2000: AFI's 100 Years... 100 Laughs #77
See also
- List of films with a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, a film review aggregator website
References
Notes
- ↑ James Curtis, Between Flops: A Biography of Preston Sturges, Limelight, 1984 p162
- ↑ "101 Pix Gross in Millions" Variety 6 Jan 1943 p 58
- 1 2 TCM Notes
- ↑ Allmovie Awards
- ↑ Demarest appeared in Diamond Jim (1935), Easy Living (1937), The Great McGinty (1940), Christmas in July (1940), The Lady Eve (1941), Sullivan's Travels (1941), The Palm Beach Story (1942), The Miracle of Morgan's Creek (1944), Hail the Conquering Hero (1944) and The Great Moment (1944)
- 1 2 Stafford, Jeff "The Palm Beach Story" (TCM article)
- ↑ IMDB Filming locations
- ↑ IMDB Release dates
- ↑ "The Palm Beach Story (1942) - Misc Notes - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Palm Beach Story (1942 film). |
Wikiquote has quotations related to: The Palm Beach Story |
- The Palm Beach Story at the Internet Movie Database
- The Palm Beach Story at the TCM Movie Database
- The Palm Beach Story at AllMovie
- Archival NYTimes Review By Bosley Crowther, December 11, 1942
- Greatest Films- The Palm Beach Story Critique and thorough plot description/analysis.
- Sturges Urges at metroactive
- The Palm Beach Story at Portico
- The Palm Beach Story on Screen Guild Theater: March 15, 1943
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