Memorial Day, when heroes should be remembered with reverence for fighting not only for our country, but for the very idea of democracy.
Robert Cummings in Saboteur (1942) has an inspirational showdown of words with Otto Kruger.
Discussion of old movies and the culture that made them.
Memorial Day, when heroes should be remembered with reverence for fighting not only for our country, but for the very idea of democracy.
Robert Cummings in Saboteur (1942) has an inspirational showdown of words with Otto Kruger.
Happy National Classic Movie Day! I celebrate the continuing relevance of classic films. Here, Spencer Tracy in Judgment at Nuremberg (1961). I celebrate when movies took a stand.
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Jacqueline T. Lynch is the author of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. and Movies in Our Time - Hollywood Mirrors and Mimics the Twentieth Century and Hollywood Fights Fascism and Christmas in Classic Films. TO JOIN HER READERS' GROUP - follow this link for a free book as a thank-you for joining.
And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.
It is also here in paperback from Ingram.
From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books. From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation.
Buy this or any of my books online here at Bookshop.org.
This is my entry in the “Make ‘Em Laugh” blogathon hosted by the Classic Movie Blog Association. Have a look here for more great bloggers.
The hijinks are, of course, frequently hysterical, and it
comes as a surprise that comedies such as theirs that, based on simple human
foibles and predictable reactions, must launch from an ironic
sophistication. Though their characters have
childlike mentality, their creators are masters of the human condition.
The human reactions may be predictable; the action is anything but. Gags roll on one after another with often surprising outcomes. Just the opening routine with them finally settling down to their seats ends with the loud and unexpected slap of their wooden chairs together when Stan pushes his chair up against Oliver’s, painfully trapping Ollie’s hand. Their timing, as always, is something amazing.
Of course, his wife is out duck hunting. Stan sits with Mae and Ollie until his wife
comes home because he is locked out, and he contents himself by eating their wax
fruit. Later, when Mae is frustrated
with Stan, she yells, “You wax eater!”
When Dorothy returns with a brace of ducks and her shotgun
over her shoulder, we may feel worried for Stan, yet it turns out she has
easily given her consent to Stan going to his lodge convention. Weaponry or no,
she has a soft heart. It is Ollie who
has the problem getting out of the house.
Mae wants him to take her to the mountains for a vacation.
Made in the depths of the Great Depression, it’s interesting
to note that there is no reflection of hard times in this adventure. Their duplex apartments are modest, but they
seem to have all the up-to-date furnishings and household equipment. We don’t know what occupations Stan and Ollie
have, but they are apparently well off enough to take vacations. Especially when Ollie fakes an illness which
requires him, he says, to go to Hawaii for a rest cure. Hawaii?
Mae is fooled, and allows Ollie to go on a cruise to Honolulu for his health. She doesn’t go because she gets seasick, but is okay with Stan going along to take care of Ollie.
Ty Parvis sings “Honolulu Baby,” as part of the floor show
(which Stan and Ollie pick up on and you will never get out of your head for
the next day or two), and Charita Alden is a principal dancer showing off the
alure of a grass skirt. They may not
have made it to Honolulu on the ship, but Honolulu came to them.
And stop by the CMBA site for more blogs in the “Make
‘Em Laugh” blogathon!
Jacqueline T. Lynch is the author of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. and Movies in Our Time - Hollywood Mirrors and Mimics the Twentieth Century and Hollywood Fights Fascism and Christmas in Classic Films. TO JOIN HER READERS' GROUP - follow this link for a free book as a thank-you for joining.
And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.
It is also here in paperback from Ingram.
From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books. From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation.
Buy this or any of my books online here at Bookshop.org.
Happy National Cartoonists Day to my twin brother, John!
Over in The Great Gildersleeve's neighborhood, the cast prepares for a more spiritual Easter, with plans to attend the Easter Sunrise Service, at which Birdie, played by the wonderful Lillian Randolph, is to have a solo in the choir. Intentions are good, but, for corn's sake, we know how Gildy, played by Harold Peary, messes up. This episode was broadcast April 9, 1952.
Have a listen to the shenanigans while you're preparing for the holiday.
As today is Passover, I had hoped to find an old-time radio tribute to that holiday, but the only show, radio or TV, that seemed to visit Passover as a topic was The Goldbergs, which of course, ran on radio from 1929 through 1946, and then enjoyed a popular run on TV from 1949 to 1956. I couldn't locate the episode called, "The Passover Seder," but I'll keep trying. If you know of any other old-time radio or classic TV episodes that feature Passover, I'd love to hear about it.
Since Christ was actually observing a Passover meal at The Lord's Supper, one would think discussion of Passover would have a bigger place in modern Easter observances, with a little less emphasis on bunnies, chocolate or otherwise.
Not that I have anything against chocolate bunnies. Heaven forfend.
I suppose there's always The Ten Commandments (1956). I usually watch that when I'm eating my chocolate Easter bunny.
We had a look at the movies based on Our Miss Brooks and The Great Gildersleeve, here.
*******************************
Jacqueline T. Lynch is the author of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. and Movies in Our Time - Hollywood Mirrors and Mimics the Twentieth Century and Hollywood Fights Fascism and Christmas in Classic Films. TO JOIN HER READERS' GROUP - follow this link for a free book as a thank-you for joining.
And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.
It is also here in paperback from Ingram.
From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books. From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation.
Buy this or any of my books online here at Bookshop.org.
Hugh Beaumont, who played Ward Cleaver, the father on Leave it to Beaver (1957-1963), was one such actor who began his film career in 1940 (we covered his role in The Blue Dahlia – 1946 here), and played a variety of supporting roles in big films, starring roles in B-movies, and lots of uncredited parts. He was in his late forties when Leave it to Beaver gave him steady work, made him a household name, and for generations afterward, made him the number one dad on TV.
When television dawned in the living rooms of (some) American homes at the end of the 1940s and early 1950s, popular shows were geared more to the Greatest Generation, the ones who were buying the TV sets. After a day of work, they would unwind with comic Milton Berle on The Texaco Star Theater, Jackie Gleason on The Honeymooners, or the brilliant, Your Shows of Shows with Sid Caesar, Carl Reiner, Imogene Coca, and a cast that couldn’t be beat.
These were mostly sketch comedies, but even The Honeymooners, which could be considered a sit-com, did not feature children in the cast. These were shows for grownups, the stars were their contemporaries, and though kids could enjoy them, the shows did not spotlight their experience, their world.
As the fifties progressed, more family sit-coms appeared,
but even Make Room for Daddy, centered more on star Danny Thomas than on
his children. One could say Robert Young
of Father Knows Best, at least got equal time with his kids, mostly. By the time Leave it to Beaver
appeared in the fall of 1957, television began more and more to showcase, and
to market to, the young Boomers.
Even Beaver and Wally never seem to know much about their
parents and are always surprised they had a life before the kids came
along. The Boomers usurped the Greatest
Generation in part due to their parents’ doting on the kids, and also living in
the moment after what were likely difficult childhoods in the Great Depression
and the world blowing up when they came of age.
They were forward-looking people, who wanted orderly quiet now, and as a result, unless their children
were persistent in asking about “the old days,” they might never know.
I was drawn more to the adults. I even liked Fred Rutherford. I liked Mrs. Rayburn, the principal. I still do.
She’s one of my favorites on the show.
I especially liked Ward and June. I think I felt sorry for him with his several reminisces of having a strict, somewhat mean-sounding father, and so he went over backwards to try to be lenient with his sons. Ward actually resembled my father a little, though in personality was nothing like him. They were both tall, lean, and had the same haircut. My father served in the South Pacific during World War II, and so did Ward.
Ward served in the U.S. Naval Construction Battalions, called
“CB” or Seabees. Formed in 1942, it supported
Navy and Marines, and is now the U.S. Naval Construction Forces.
Ward’s mention of getting into a fight over a photo of Lana
Turner was in season 6, episode 29, “Eddie's Sweater.”
In “The Visiting Aunts” (December 18, 1958, season 2,
episode 13), Ward recollects wryly of
Aunt Martha and her friend, whose husband is always referred to as “The General,”
came to their wedding and was surprised that June was marrying a Seabee, as if
that wasn’t good enough for an Army man.
June, we learn in “Mother’s Day Composition” (April 30, 1960,
season 3, episode 31), volunteered at a USO during the war and served
coffee and donuts. This was not quite as impressive as Beaver’s friend Richard’s
mother, who was a WAC private, then a corporal, and eventually became a captain. In
“Kite Day” (June 10, 1961, season 3, episode 37) we learn his father flew a
P-38 in the war. Beaver scoffs, “Ah,
those are so old, they don’t even make models of them anymore.”
So much for past glory.
Even Eddie Haskel (Ken Osmond was great in this memorable role) suffered
shame when in “Summer in Alaska” (May 9, 1963, Season 6, episode 33), Wally
recalls that when they were kids, Eddie bragged that his father was a
three-star general in the war, but they found out otherwise when they discovered
Mr. Haskel’s air raid helmet in a closet, proving he was a civilian air raid
warden during the war.
During the war, anyone doing his bit was considered
patriotic, but to the kids growing up later in peacetime, only the most heroic
actions would be worth bragging about.
We come to “Beaver’s Hero” (April 9, 1959, season 2, episode 28), when
the boys discover the secrets of their father’s wartime footlocker.
Beaver replies, “You mean there was a lot of them?”
“There’s two of them that I heard about.”
Beaver responds, “I think it was the one that President
Eisenhower was in.”
“Yeah, that’s the one Dad was in, too.”
Beaver asks his mother, “Was Dad and Mr. Eisenhower in the
same war?”
June says yes and Beaver replies, “It’s something having
your father in the same war with the president.”
This, his ignorance, I found stretching credulity as a
child, as those of us who had parents in World War II certainly knew about the war, because being only 20 or 25 years ago was still part of the social memory. Also, we watched Combat when we were kids and took turns
playing Vic Morrow and Rick Jason. I can
recall wearing plastic World War II-style helmets and throwing plastic grenades
over a fence into a neighbor’s yard, and the bunch of us running to “hit the
dirt” on someone else’s front lawn, covering our heads and making “ka-pow”
noises. When it was safe to stand, we had
to climb over the fence into the neighbor’s yard to retrieve the plastic
grenades. Something which I never saw
Vic Morrow or Rick Jason do, by the way.
So there were times I found Wally and Beav’s self-involved ignorance
rather frustrating. But, to continue…
Back in class, Judy Hensler (played by Jeri Weil), brags
that her father was a hero who flew his own plane in World War II. Gilbert’s uncle was a Marine sergeant who was
“almost a general.”
(I like how the teacher calls the kids by their surnames and
“ladies and gentlemen.” I didn’t run into
that until college.)
Beaver tells the kids his father was a hero, that he has a trunk in the garage full of guns and grenades, “and all kinds of stuff he took off of enemy guys.” Judy accuses him of being a liar, which makes her very smart, because he is.
He finds a T-square and thinks it’s a sword. There is a tripod for surveying, that he
thinks is the “bottom of some kind of machine gun,” and a transit, which Beaver
thinks is a gun barrel. With each item,
Beaver spins a fantasy narrative, but Wally has his doubts, and Ward
interrupts. He laughs at an old photo of himself the boys have dug out of the
trunk. He and a buddy, both bearded, are
wearing grass skirts on some South Pacific island base and mugging for the camera. My dad had a couple silly photos of his pals,
too. He sent a grass skirt home to my mother.
I still have it. Generations have used it for costumes. My sister
labeled the bag it’s in, “Mother’s Grass Skirt,” which, provocative-sounding,
makes me laugh every time I see it.
“How many guys did you kill in the war, Dad?” Beaver asks, finally getting to what is the
meat of the matter for him.
Ward tells him he didn’t kill anyone. Explains the Seabees,
and that his primary job was building airfields and bases.
Beaver wonders, disappointed, “Gee, Dad, was all you did in
the war was see if the ground was level?”
Ward answers, with a somewhat weary tone in his voice,
remembering, “I sure did a lot it, Beaver.
Acres and acres.”
Now Beaver has a dilemma; his friends will know he is a
liar, and also find out that his dad was not a war hero, which is probably the
bigger shame for him. He tells Wally, “How
was I supposed to know that all Dad did in the war was measure dirt.”
Mr. Willet calls and asks Beaver to bring his father’s war souvenirs
to class, but not to bring anything dangerous.
“You’d better check with your father.”
Good idea.
To help cover for the Beav, Wally writes a false letter from
Ward to June, dating it from the war period, to document his bravery, which is
typically funny. It’s not the first phony note Wally has written for him. “Dear Mom…”
“Wally, he calls her June.”
Wally writes Ward’s position from Wake Island, because he
cannot spell Guadalcanal. He writes how
Ward captured 65 prisoners, and the general said, “Good goin’, Ward.”
Ultimately, Beaver decides not to use it and throws it
away. Ward finds the letter and calls
Mr. Willet to explain, and the teacher, with great delicacy, decides to change
the focus of the class to the Louisiana Purchase and move off World War II. Nice guy.
Beaver answers, “Yeah, but a guy likes to think his father
was.”
“Well, you see Beaver, they put a man where they thought he
could do the best job. Now, I was an
engineer, so I could do a better job with tools than I could with guns. There were lots of fellows in the Seabees who
were heroes, but I just didn't happen to be one of them.”
Beaver responds, considerately, “You know, Dad, I’ll bet you were the best
dirt leveler in the whole Seabees.”
I’ll bet he was,
when he wasn’t hanging up basketball hoops for his bearded buddies.
Hugh Beaumont was
actually a Methodist minister, who was a conscientious objector during World War
II, and served as an Army medic. As
mentioned previously on this blog, Lew Ayres, who was also a conscientious objector,
volunteered for the U.S. Army Medical Corps and served as a medic and
chaplain’s aide in the South Pacific under fire, earning three battle stars. I
don’t know if Beaumont served stateside or overseas. Even during the run of Leave
it to Beaver, he served part-time in various churches as a lay minister.
Richard Deacon, our
beloved Fred Rutherford, also served in the U.S. Army Medical Corps, and had studied
medicine in college before turning to acting.
The war touched everyone in that generation, in one way or
another. Most of them put it aside
pretty quickly and moved on, just as they'd put the Great Depression behind them, like Ward and June, in their comfortable suburban
home, trying to make the kids' childhoods easier than theirs, and two boys who didn’t know how lucky they were.
Have a look at some other terrific posts in the 12th Annual Favourite TV Show Episode Blogathon over at A Shroud of Thoughts.
*******************************
Jacqueline T. Lynch is the author of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. and Movies in Our Time - Hollywood Mirrors and Mimics the Twentieth Century and Hollywood Fights Fascism and Christmas in Classic Films. TO JOIN HER READERS' GROUP - follow this link for a free book as a thank-you for joining.
And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.
It is also here in paperback from Ingram.
From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books. From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation.
Buy this or any of my books online here at Bookshop.org.
This is
obviously a timely message for our present era, but the script was based on the
1955 play by Robert E. Lee and Jerome Lawrence, whose message was more about
the repression of McCarthyism than creationism, who used the famous standoff of
the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial to reflect on not only the right of free speech,
but of the very right to think for oneself.
“An idea is a
greater monument than a cathedral,” goes one line in this strong, literate
script.
Directed by
Stanley Kramer, the film is rich in atmosphere with the setting of a small
Southern town almost lyric in its storytelling.
I love the slow-moving camera that glides around characters in a scene
without sharp, abrupt cuts.
We begin with
the tick-tock of the clock on the courthouse, and the march of a sheriff,
joined by others including a minister, to the jailhouse to retrieve the prisoner
for his trial. There is no one else on
the streets, and its almost like a “high noon” showdown in a western.
There is no desperado
in the jail, however, just young Dick York, a high school science teacher who has
taught his class about evolution from Charles Darwin’s Descent of Man.
We will soon see that it is something of a show trial rather than a criminal
indictment; the creationists have enticed a nationally known public speaker to
prosecute the case, and an equally nationally known lawyer arrives to defend Dick
York.
Gene Kelly
plays a smart-aleck reporter, whose newspaper has provided the services of
Spencer Tracy as a means to showcase the event and sell papers.
The characters
played by Spencer Tracy, Fredric March, Florence Eldridge, Gene Kelly, and Dick
York are, of course, all based on real-life people. They are given fictional names here, perhaps
to keep the story more of a parable than a documentary. The real figures are William Jennings Bryan,
who like his fictional counterpart played by March is a three-time unsuccessful
candidate for president, was a Secretary of State under President Wilson, and a
noted orator whose “Cross of Gold” speech in 1896 pushing for keeping the U.S.
off the gold standard monetary system made him a giant of nineteenth-century
American politics. He, like his fictional counterpart, also supported women’s
right to vote, which makes him a fascinating contradiction.
The so-called
Scopes Monkey Trial occurred in Dayton, Tennessee, in a blistering hot week of
July 1925. Here in the movie, a local
funeral parlor passes out fans with their advertising to the people in the
courtroom. Later in the film, the two
combatant counsels get permission to peel off their suit coats. (In the real
trial, the proceedings were finally allowed to take place outdoors due to the awful
heat in the courtroom.)
Because the
teaching of evolution is taken as a blasphemy by creationists who take the
Bible as literal, and is illegal in Tennessee, the story quickly becomes, as it
did in 1925, a fight to preserve religious teaching from being pushed aside in
relevance by scientific thought. We
begin the story, as the men march to from the courthouse, one of them wearing a
clerical collar, we hear an acapella rendition of “Give Me That Old-Time
Religion.” It sung as a slow, stately
dirge by Leslie Uggams. This is just a voiceover, however. We do not see her, nor do we see any people
of color in this movie. Another
interesting contradiction.
In the
courtroom, Mr. Tracy and Mr. March, both of nimble minds despite their tired
bodies, hash out not so much the Constitutional ideas of separation of church
and state, or the First Amendment, but rather confine themselves almost entirely
to biblical logic and illogic.
Mr. March
states with authority that the world began in 4,004 B.C. on October 4th
at 9:00 a.m., and Mr. Tracy after some thrust and parry, gets Mr. March to
admit that the day at the time of creation might not have been a precise 24
hours. One day might have lasted years,
or eons.
Because they
are old colleagues and know each other well, the twists and turns of their
minds is like playing chess with a familiar opponent.
This is where March
does most of his mugging and scenery chewing, but how close this came to the
real William Jennings Bryan, I really don’t know. He is, at least in the film, an example of a
highly intelligent man who enjoys an argument, but with God on his side, anyone
who opposes him must be morally deficient.
The townspeople, already disposed to find fault with Dick York’s
teaching evolution in his science class to their teenagers, is gleeful to see
his lawyer marked as a heretic.
However, in
confidence, she has told him that Dick York left the church. A student of his drowned two years
previously, a 13-year-old boy, and Preacher Claude Akins said the boy was
damned because he had not been baptized.
This infuriates Dick York, and pains the boy's parents, who are in the
courtroom. His father is played by Noah
Beery.
March gets her
on the stand and twists her words to break her, until his wife, Florence Eldridge, from the
gallery, shouts his name to stop. Is he
trying to get the fiancée to repent of loving Dick York and shame her as her
father tried to earlier, or does he just really want to win this case? Is it his religious zeal or his
competitiveness that turns him to cruelty?
Beyond the scenery
chewing, the other aspects of March’s portrayal I find distracting is his heavy
makeup and obvious skull cap to replicate William Jennings Bryan’s baldness.
Spencer Tracy
manages to mock Fredric March enough to the point where even the devout gallery
snickers at March and applauds Tracy, and that evening when March and Florence Eldridge retire to
their hotel room, he is an exhausted and frustrated man, hurt at being laughed
at in court. We wonder if he is
emotionally stable.
Mr. Kelly
teases Tracy, and they have a brief war of words, and Kelly learns and delights
in the contradictions he has discovered in Tracy.
All the three principal men in this story have their contradictions, and we leave it to Florence Eldridge’s summation when Donna Anderson confronts her about her husband’s cruel fanaticism: “My husband is neither a saint nor a devil, and he makes mistakes…if he’s been wrong, at least he stands for something.”
One of Kelly’s
lines I love: “It’s a newspaperman’s duty to comfort the afflicted and afflict
the comfortable.”
Inherit the
Wind, (which Tracy quotes from the Bible, “he that troubleth his own house
shall inherit the wind” Proverbs 11:29) is one of the films from that pivotal era
I mentioned in this
post on A Face in the Crowd (1957):
There was…
“…something
noticeably different about movies in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
There is no name for them, at least not that I know of, but they are pointedly
liberal in their message. Films like Inherit the Wind, Twelve
Angry Men, Judgment at Nuremberg, The Miracle Worker, To Kill a Mockingbird,
Seven Days in May, are different from the cynical noir of the late 1940s
and early 1950s, as if in the wake of crumbling of McCarthyism, an era when
liberals were politically and legally persecuted, when the Silent Generation
marched cautiously, blindly toward the New Frontier, the writers—who were the
most persecuted under McCarthyism, came out from the noir shadows and said, 'Enough. Our turn in the sun now.'”
Inherit the
Wind, which comes out of the McCarthy era, is really about free speech,
including, but not only, the right to quote from other than the Bible. As Tracy says, “It is a good book, but it is
not the only book.”
I recall an
incident from when I was in college, I think it was in 1980. I had a geology class, and the professor
cheerfully announced that anyone in class who may have had deep religious beliefs
need not be unsettled by the Big Bang theory of the creation of the universe,
because it could have been God who created the Big Bang.
I was shocked
by his announcement. I had been raised
to go to church and considered myself religious, yet I found nothing upsetting
by learning about science. It never
occurred to me that a college professor in a very progressive state (Massachusetts)
would feel the need to placate anyone about science possibly refuting their literal interpretation
of the Bible.
No one in class, as I remember, made any comment or reacted, so perhaps I was the only one surprised. Along with church, I was also raised on the notion of separation of church and state.
I thought he was a good teacher, and I enjoyed
the class, and soon we were engrossed in talking about another Big Bang, as that was the
year Mount Saint Helens erupted. He
never mentioned anything about that being in the Bible.
*******************************
Jacqueline T. Lynch is the author of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. and Movies in Our Time - Hollywood Mirrors and Mimics the Twentieth Century and Hollywood Fights Fascism and Christmas in Classic Films. TO JOIN HER READERS' GROUP - follow this link for a free book as a thank-you for joining.
And it is here in eBook, paperback print, and hardcover, from Amazon.
It is also here in paperback from Ingram.
From Cherry Ames, to Meet the Malones, from Dave Dawson to Kitty Carter - Canteen Girl, the Silent Generation spent their childhood immersed in geopolitical events through the prism of their middle grade and young adult books. From the home front to the battlefield, these books are a window on their world, and influenced their hard-working, conformity-loving generation.
Buy this or any of my books online here at Bookshop.org.