Film Review
Four cute penguins, one octopus, one Egyptian sarcophagus, one sourpuss
from Hell and Bette Davis in a bobble-hat - it's not what you would
expect to find on many people's Christmas list but this is what Santa
delivers in
The Man Who Came to
Dinner, one of the liveliest and funniest American comedies of
the 1940s. Davis was so convinced that a film adaptation of Moss
Hart and George S. Kaufman's stage play
The Man Who Came to Dinner would be
a surefire winner that she browbeat Jack Warner into submission to give
her the supporting role of Maggie. The problem then was: who to
take the lead role that Monty Woolley had played so brilliantly on
stage. Woolley's lack of film experience and homosexuality ruled
him out, and Davis's preference John Barrymore was a non-starter
because of his chronic drink problem, so Warners cast their net far and
wide. Having considered Charles Laughton, Laird Cregar, Orson
Welles and Cary Grant, the studio gave in to the inevitable and finally
offered the part to Woolley. And it's as well they did. To
do otherwise would have been sacrilege.
Monty Woolley
is The Man Who Came to Dinner, not
just the title character but the heart and soul of this screwiest of
screwball comedies. His character's endless barrage of acerbic
verbal assaults on anyone who comes within spitting distance is
tirelessly funny, and you end up resenting the digressions to scenes in
which he does not appear. Woolley's character, Sheridan
Whiteside, was based on the real-life critic Alexander Woollcott, and
the actor - a former Yale professor and close buddy of Cole Porter -
presumably modelled his characterisation on Woollcott, a man who was
famously hard to please and always armed to the teeth with lethal
put-downs. It's hard to think of another American comedy in which
the main character has such a dominant role over the proceedings, and
Woolley's presence is so overpowering that it almost threatens to burst
through the screen. The actor absolutely revels in the role and
relishes every line, making this a comedy tour de force that is still
hilarious after fifty viewings.
Working alongside such a human dynamo as Monty Woolley is a pretty
thankless task for everyone concerned, although Bette Davis was
apparently grateful for the opportunity to appear in a comedy after a
run of sombre and humourless melodramas. You wouldn't notice it
from her performance but Davis absolutely loathed working with Woolley,
presumably because she was still hankering after John Barrymore for the
lead role. Whilst Woolley claims a virtual monopoly in the comedy
department, Davis turns in a pleasing performance as an unusually
amiable character, although she is at her best when the feisty old
Bette we all know and love surfaces in her confrontation scenes with
Woolley.
Ann Sheridan is better served by the comedy but like Davis she is all
but crushed by Wolley's larger than life persona, not the first actress
to be sacrificed on the blood-stained altar of another actor's
ego. Reginald Gardiner is about the only cast member to avoid
being crushed to death by Woolley's charisma, although to do this he
has to resort to the cruellest but most deserving impression of
Noël Coward imaginable ("How can one man possibly be as clever as
I am?"). Alas, as for poor Billie Burke - it's just another
lamb to the slaughter - watching her share a scene with Woolley is like
watching cute little kittens being fed into a meat grinder.
William Keighley directs the film competently but with no particular
flair; he had previously directed Davis in
The Bride Came C.O.D. (1941),
another rare comedy outing for the actress in which she is head-butted
by James Cagney and ends up having cactus spines removed from her rear
quarters. (You can see why she preferred drama.)
The Man Who Came to Dinner owes its
genius not to Keighley but to a brilliant script that is ablaze with
quick-fire dialogue and the unremitting gusto of a lead performer who
is the human equivalent of a stampede of wild buffalo. Just
where do the octopus and four cute little penguins come in?
You'll have to watch the film to find that out...
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
A critic, public speaker and bon vivant, Sheridan Whiteside is one of
America's top radio personalities. During a busy lecture tour, he
allows himself to be talked into having dinner at the house of a
prominent Ohio family, the Stanleys. Before he can cross the
threshold, he slips on the icy steps and sustains a serious back
injury. Confined to a wheelchair, he must remain at the Stanleys'
house until he is fit enough to walk. In no time at all he has
taken over the household, threatening to sue his hosts if he does not
get his way. Whiteside expects unquestioning obedience from all
who have the honour to serve him, so he is duly nonplussed to learn
that his long suffering assistant Maggie Cutler has fallen in love with
a newspaperman, Bert Jefferson. It so happens that the latter has
aspirations of being a playwright and so Maggie passes on a play he has
written to Whiteside for his opinion. When Maggie announces
she intends to leave him so she can marry Bert, Whiteside decides that
he must do the only decent thing a man in his position can do, which is
to completely derail the budding romance. The critic's back
injury turns out to be not so serious as was first thought, but it
suits Whiteside's purpose to remain an invalid a little longer.
First he summons actress Lorraine Sheldon, on the pretext of offering
her the lead role in Bert's play. When she sees through her
employer's game Maggie concocts a ruse to drive Lorraine away.
Unfortunately, the canny Whiteside is one step ahead of her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.