His Girl Friday
His Girl Friday | |
---|---|
Directed by | Howard Hawks |
Screenplay by |
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Based on | The Front Page 1928 play by Ben Hecht Charles MacArthur |
Produced by | Howard Hawks |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Joseph Walker |
Edited by | Gene Havlick |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 92 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
His Girl Friday is a 1940 American screwball comedy film directed by Howard Hawks, starring Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell and featuring Ralph Bellamy and Gene Lockhart. It was released by Columbia Pictures. The plot centers on a newspaper editor named Walter Burns who is about to lose his ace reporter and ex-wife, Hildy Johnson, newly engaged to another man. Burns suggests they cover one more story together, getting themselves entangled in the case of murderer Earl Williams as Burns desperately tries to win back his wife. The screenplay was adapted from the 1928 play The Front Page by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. This was the second time the play had been adapted for the screen, the first occasion being the 1931 film which kept the original title The Front Page.
The script for His Girl Friday was written by Charles Lederer and Ben Hecht, the latter of whom is not credited for his contributions. The major change in this version, introduced by Hawks, is that the role of Hildy Johnson is a woman. Filming began in September 1939 and finished in November, seven days behind schedule. Production was delayed because the frequent improvisation and numerous ensemble scenes required many retakes. Hawks encouraged his actors to be aggressive and spontaneous. His Girl Friday has been noted for its surprises, comedy, and rapid, overlapping dialogue. Hawks was determined to break the record for the fastest film dialogue, at the time held by The Front Page. He used a sound mixer on the set to increase the speed of dialogue and held a showing of the two films next to each other to prove how fast his film was.
His Girl Friday was #19 on American Film Institute's 100 Years ... 100 Laughs and was selected in 1993 for preservation in the United States National Film Registry of the Library of Congress as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[2][3] The film is in the public domain because the copyright was not renewed; the play it was based on remained under copyright for several decades until it expired in 2024, fully releasing the film from remaining copyright.[4]
Plot
[edit]Walter Burns, the hard-boiled editor for The Morning Post of Chicago, learns his ex-wife and former star reporter, Hildegard "Hildy" Johnson, is about to marry insurance man Bruce Baldwin and settle down as a housewife in Albany. Walter, determined to sabotage these plans, entices a reluctant Hildy to cover one last story: the execution of Earl Williams, a white bookkeeper portrayed as a shy, confused man, convicted of murdering a black policeman. Walter is committed to stop the execution, claiming it is a political move to get the Mayor reelected, since the victim is "of color". Hildy agrees on the condition that Walter buy a $100,000 life insurance policy from Bruce so he can receive a $1,000 commission. In the meantime, she bribes the warden to let her interview Williams in jail. She induces the convicted man to make a compelling argument in his defense, that he was not fully aware of his own actions when he shot the police officer.
Walter does everything he can to keep Hildy from marrying Bruce, eventually accusing her fiancé of stealing a watch, forcing Hildy to bail him out of jail. Exasperated, Hildy quits, but when the convicted man escapes, her journalistic instincts take over. Walter frames Bruce again, and he is immediately sent back to jail. Hildy realizes that Walter is behind the shenanigans, but she prioritizes covering the rapidly escalating Williams story over bailing Bruce out again.
On the run, Williams sneaks into the deserted press room and holds Hildy at gunpoint; the lure of a big scoop proves too tempting for her to resist. Williams's girlfriend Mollie comes looking for him. When the other reporters return, Hildy hides the fugitive in a rolltop desk. Mrs. Baldwin, Hildy's future mother-in-law, enters and berates her for the way she is treating Bruce. Upon being harassed for Williams's whereabouts by the reporters, Mollie jumps out of the window. The reporters rush out, saving Williams from being found. Walter arrives and has his henchman Louie kidnap Mrs. Baldwin.
Bruce comes into the press room, having wired Albany for his bail and asking for his mother's whereabouts. Hildy is so consumed with writing the story that she hardly notices; Bruce realizes his cause is hopeless and leaves. A disheveled Louie returns, revealing that he had hit a police car while driving away with Mrs. Baldwin and is unsure if she survived in the accident.
Meanwhile, the mayor and sheriff, portrayed as crooked, are informed that the "reds" in the city are gathering in support of the execution. The sheriff has no issues against the "reds", so he suggests to try to get closer to such voters; the Mayor explains that all that is needed is their approval to keep their jobs in the upcoming election. So, when a messenger brings them a reprieve from the governor, they try to bribe the man to go away and return later, after it is too late.
After Williams is discovered in the desk, Walter and Hildy are handcuffed by the sheriff. However, the messenger returns with the reprieve, just in time to save Williams from the gallows. Walter uses the messenger's statements to blackmail the mayor and sheriff into releasing him and Hildy. Hildy receives a call from Bruce, again in jail because of counterfeit money that was unknowingly transferred to him by Hildy from Walter. Hildy breaks down and admits to Walter that she was afraid that he was going to let her marry Bruce without a fight.
After bailing Bruce out of jail again, Walter asks Hildy to remarry him and promises to take her on the honeymoon they never had in Niagara Falls. Then Walter learns that there is a strike in Albany, which is on the way to Niagara Falls. Hildy agrees to honeymoon in Albany, accepting that Walter will never change.
Cast
[edit]- Cary Grant as Walter Burns
- Rosalind Russell as Hildy Johnson
- Ralph Bellamy as Bruce Baldwin
- Gene Lockhart as Sheriff Hartwell
- Porter Hall as Murphy
- Ernest Truex as Bensinger
- Cliff Edwards as Endicott
- Clarence Kolb as the Mayor
- Roscoe Karns as McCue
- Frank Jenks as Wilson
- Regis Toomey as Sanders
- Abner Biberman as Louie
- Frank Orth as Duffy
- John Qualen as Earl Williams
- Helen Mack as Mollie Malloy
- Alma Kruger as Mrs. Baldwin
- Billy Gilbert as Joe Pettibone
- Pat West as Warden Cooley
- Edwin Maxwell as Dr. Eggelhoffer
- Marion Martin as Evangeline (uncredited)
Production
[edit]Development and writing
[edit]While producing Only Angels Have Wings (1939), Howard Hawks tried to pitch a remake of The Front Page to Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures. Cary Grant was almost immediately cast in the film, but Cohn initially intended Grant to play the reporter, with radio commentator Walter Winchell as the editor.[5] Hawks' production that became His Girl Friday was originally intended to be a straightforward adaptation of The Front Page, with both the editor and reporter being male.[a] During auditions, Howard Hawks' secretary, a woman, read reporter Hildy Johnson's lines. Hawks liked the way the dialogue sounded coming from a woman, resulting in the script being rewritten to make Hildy female and the ex-wife of editor Walter Burns played by Cary Grant.[7] Cohn purchased the rights for The Front Page in January 1939.[8]
Although Hawks considered the dialogue of The Front Page to be "the finest modern dialogue that had been written", more than half of it was replaced with what Hawks believed to be better lines.[9] Some of the original dialogue was left the same, as were all of the characters' names with two exceptions: Hildy's fiancé (now no longer a fiancée) was given the name Bruce Baldwin,[8] and the name of the comic messenger bringing the pardon from the governor was changed from Pincus to Pettibone.[10] Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures approved Hawks' idea for the film project. Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, the writers of the original play, were unavailable for screenwriting. Consequently, Hawks considered Gene Fowler as the screenwriter, but he declined the job because he disliked the changes to the screenplay Hawks intended to make.[8] Hawks instead recruited Charles Lederer, who had worked on the adaptation for The Front Page, to work on the screenplay.[11] Though he was not credited, Hecht assisted Lederer in the adaptation.[12] Additions were made at the beginning of the screenplay by Lederer to give the characters a convincing backstory; it was decided that Hildy and Walter would be divorced with Hildy's intentions of remarriage serving as Walter's motivation to win her back.[13]
During writing, Hawks was in Palm Springs directing Only Angels Have Wings, but stayed in close contact with Lederer and Hecht.[8] Hecht helped Lederer with some organizational revisions, and Lederer finished the script on May 22. After two more drafts completed by July, Hawks called Morrie Ryskind to revise the dialogue and make it more interesting. Ryskind revised the script throughout the summer and finished by the end of September before filming began. More than half of the original dialogue was rewritten.[8] The film lacks one of the well-known final lines of the play, "the son-of-a-bitch stole my watch!", because films of the time were more censored than Pre-Code Hollywood films, and Hawks felt that the line was too overused. Ryskind developed a new ending in which Walter and Hildy start fighting immediately after saying "I do" in the wedding they hold in the newsroom, with one of the characters stating, "I think it's gonna turn out all right this time." However, after revealing the ending to a few writers at Columbia one evening, Ryskind was surprised to hear that his ending was filmed on another set a few days later.[14] Forced to create another ending, Ryskind ended up thanking the anonymous Columbia writer, because he felt that his ending and one of his final lines, "I wonder if Bruce can put us up", were better than what he had written originally.[14] After reviewing the screenplay, the Hays Office saw no issues with the film, besides a few derogatory comments towards newsmen and some illegal behavior of the characters. During some rewrites for censors, Hawks focused on finding a lead actress for his film.[15]
Casting
[edit]Hawks had difficulty casting His Girl Friday. While the choice of Cary Grant was almost instantaneous, the casting of Hildy was a more extended process. At first, Hawks wanted Carole Lombard, whom he had directed in the screwball comedy Twentieth Century (1934), but the cost of hiring Lombard in her new status as a freelancer proved to be far too expensive, and Columbia could not afford her. Katharine Hepburn, Claudette Colbert, Margaret Sullavan, Ginger Rogers, and Irene Dunne were offered the role, but turned it down. Dunne rejected the role because she felt the part was too small and needed to be expanded. Jean Arthur was suspended by the studio when she refused to take it. Joan Crawford reportedly was considered.[16] Hawks then turned to Rosalind Russell, who had just finished MGM's The Women (1939).[17] Russell was upset when she discovered from a New York Times article that Cohn was "stuck" with her after attempting to cast many other actresses. Before Russell's first meeting with Hawks, to show her apathy, she took a swim and entered his office with wet hair, causing him to do a "triple take". Russell confronted him about this casting issue; he dismissed her quickly and asked her to go to wardrobe.[17]
Filming
[edit]After makeup, wardrobe, and photography tests, filming began on 27 September 1939. The film had the working title of The Bigger They Are.[18]
The film is noted for its rapid-fire repartee, using overlapping dialogue to make conversations sound more realistic, with one character speaking before another finishes. Although overlapping dialogue is specified and cued in the 1928 play script by Hecht and MacArthur,[19] Hawks told Peter Bogdanovich:
"I had noticed that when people talk, they talk over one another, especially people who talk fast or who are arguing or describing something. So we wrote the dialogue in a way that made the beginnings and ends of sentences unnecessary; they were there for overlapping."[20]
To get the effect he wanted, as multi-track sound recording was not yet available at the time, Hawks had the sound mixer on the set turn the various overhead microphones on and off as required for the scene, as many as 35 times.[18] Reportedly, the film was sped up because of a challenge Hawks took upon himself to break the record for the fastest dialogue on screen, at the time held by The Front Page.[21] Hawks arranged a showing for newsmen of the two films next to each other to prove how fast his dialogue was.[22]
Hawks gave the actors the freedom to improvise some of their lines and actions, as he did with his comedies more than his dramas.[21] In her autobiography Life Is a Banquet, Russell wrote that she thought she did not have as many good lines as Grant, so she hired her own writer to "punch up" her dialogue. With Hawks encouraging ad-libbing, she was able to slip her writer's work into the movie. Only Grant was wise to this tactic and greeted her each morning with "What have you got today?"[23] Her ghostwriter gave her some of the lines for the restaurant scene, which is unique[clarification needed] to His Girl Friday. It was one of the most complicated scenes to film; because of the rapidity of the dialogue the actors actually ate very little during the scene. Hawks shot this scene with one camera a week and a half into production, and it took four days to film instead of the intended two.[24] The improvisations made it difficult for the cinematographers to know what the characters were going to do. Russell was also difficult to film because her lack of a sharp jawline required makeup artists to paint and blend a dark line under her jawline while shining a light on her face to simulate a more youthful appearance.[22]
Hawks encouraged aggressiveness and unexpectedness in the acting, breaking the fourth wall a few times in the film. At one point, Grant broke character because of something unscripted that Russell did and looked directly at the camera, saying "Is she going to do that?" Hawks decided to leave this scene in, although it does not appear in the final cut.[22]
Owing to the numerous ensemble scenes, many retakes were necessary. Having learned from Bringing Up Baby (1938), Hawks added some straight supporting characters in order to balance out the leading characters.[24]
Arthur Rosson worked for three days on second unit footage at Columbia Ranch.[citation needed]
Filming was completed on 21 November 1939, seven days past schedule.[citation needed]
Unusually for the time period, the film contains no music except for the music that leads to the final fade out of the film.[25]
Ad-libs by Grant
[edit]Grant's character describes Bellamy's character by saying "He looks like that fellow in the movies, you know ... Ralph Bellamy!" According to Bellamy, the remark was ad-libbed by Grant.[16] Columbia studio head Harry Cohn thought it was too cheeky and ordered it removed, but Hawks insisted that it stay. Grant makes several other "inside" remarks in the film. When his character is arrested for kidnapping, he describes the horrendous fate suffered by the last person who crossed him: Archie Leach (Grant's birth name).[26] Another line that people think is an inside remark is when Earl Williams attempts to get out of the rolltop desk he's been hiding in, Grant says, "Get back in there, you Mock Turtle." The line is a "cleaned-up" version of a line from the stage version of The Front Page ("Get back in there, you God damned turtle!") and Grant also played "The Mock Turtle" in the 1933 film version of Alice in Wonderland.[18]
Release
[edit]Release of the film was rushed by Cohn and a sneak preview of the film was held in December, with a press screening on January 3, 1940.[25] His Girl Friday premiered in New York City at Radio City Music Hall on January 11, 1940, and went into general American release a week later.[27][28]
Reception
[edit]Contemporary reviews from critics were very positive. Critics were particularly impressed by the gender change of the reporter.[25] Frank S. Nugent of The New York Times wrote "Except to add that we've seen The Front Page under its own name and others so often before we've grown a little tired of it, we don't mind conceding His Girl Friday is a bold-faced reprint of what was once—and still remains—the maddest newspaper comedy of our times."[29] The Variety reviewer wrote "The trappings are different—even to the extent of making reporter Hildy Johnson a femme—but it is still Front Page and Columbia need not regret it. Charles Leder (sic) has done an excellent screenwriting job on it and producer-director Howard Hawks has made a film that can stand alone almost anywhere and grab healthy grosses."[30] Harrison's Reports wrote "Even though the story and its development will be familiar to those who saw the first version of The Front Page, they will be entertained just the same, for the action is so exciting that it holds one in tense suspense throughout."[31] Film Daily wrote "Given a snappy pace, a top flight cast, good production and able direction, the film has all the necessary qualities for first-rate entertainment for any type of audience."[32] John Mosher of The New Yorker wrote that after years of "feeble, wispy, sad imitations" of The Front Page, he found this authentic adaptation of the original to be "as fresh and undated and bright a film as you could want".[33] Louis Marcorelles called His Girl Friday "le film américain par excellence".[34]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 99% based on 100 reviews, with an average rating of 9.00/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "Anchored by stellar performances from Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell, His Girl Friday is possibly the definitive screwball romantic comedy."[35]
In the 2012 Sight & Sound poll of the greatest films of all time, His Girl Friday appeared on several lists, including those of critic David Thomson[36] and director Quentin Tarantino.[37]
Interpretation and Themes
[edit]Story
[edit]The title His Girl Friday is an ironic title, because a girl "Friday" represents a servant of a master, but Hildy is not a servant in the film, but rather the equal to Walter. The world in this film is not determined by gender, but rather by intelligence and capability. At the beginning of the film, Hildy says that she wants to be "treated like a woman", but her return to her profession reveals her true desire to live a different life.[38] In His Girl Friday, even though the characters remarry, Hawks displays an aversion to marriage, home, and family through his approach to the film. Specific, exclusionary camera work and character control of the frame and the dialogue portray a subtle criticism of domesticity. [39] The subject of domesticity is fairly absent throughout the film. Even among the relationships between Grant and Russell and Bellamy and Russell, the relationships are positioned within a larger frame of the male-dominated newsroom.[39] The film, like many comedies, celebrates difficult, tumultuous love rather than secure, suburban love through its preference for movement and argument rather than silent poise.[40] Film critic Molly Haskell wrote that the scene near the end of the film when Hildy sheds tears was not included to expose her femininity, but to express the confusion she felt due to the collision of her professional and feminine natures. The feminine side of Hildy desires to be subservient and sexually desirable to men, while the other side of Hildy desires assertion and to forfeit the stereotypical duties of a woman. Her tears represent her emotional helplessness and inability to express anger to a male authority figure.[41]
A commonality in many Howard Hawks films is the revelation of the amorality of the main character and a failure of that character to change or develop. In His Girl Friday, Walter Burns manipulates, acts selfishly, frames his ex-wife's fiancé, and orchestrates the kidnapping of an elderly woman. Even at the end of the film, Burns convinces Hildy Johnson to remarry him despite how much she loathes him and his questionable actions. Upon the resumption of their relationship, there is no romance visible between them. They do not kiss, embrace, or even gaze at each other. It is evident that Burns is still the same person he was in their previous relationship as he quickly waves off the plans for the honeymoon that they never had in pursuit of a new story. Additionally, he walks in front of her when exiting the room, forcing her to carry her own suitcase despite Johnson already having criticized this at the beginning of the film. This hints that the marriage is fated to face the same problems that ended it previously.[42]
Hawks is known for his use of repeated or intentional gestures in his films. In His Girl Friday, the cigarette in the scene between Hildy and Earl Williams serves several symbolic roles in the film. First, the cigarette establishes a link between the characters when Williams accepts the cigarette even though he does not smoke. However, the fact that he doesn't smoke, and they don't share the cigarette shows the difference between and separation of the worlds in which the two characters live.[43]
The film contains two main plots: the personal and the professional. Walter induces Hildy to get back in the beat in the paper’s attempt to scoop the story of murderer Earl Williams; the concurrent plot is Walter attempting to scuttle Hildy’s upcoming marriage. [44] The speed of the film results in snappy and overlapping dialogue among interruptions and rapid speech. Gesture, character and camera movement, as well as editing, serve to complement the dialogue in increasing the pace of the film. There is a clear contrast between the fast-talking Hildy and Walter and slow-talking Bruce and Earl. The average word per minute count of the film is 240 while the average American speech is around 140 words per minute. There are nine scenes with at least four words per second and at least two with more than five words per second.[45] Hawks attached verbal tags before and after specific script lines so the actors would be able to interrupt and talk over each other without making the necessary dialogue incomprehensible.[46]
Film theorist and historian David Bordwell explained the ending of His Girl Friday as a "closure effect" rather than a closure. The ending of the film is rather circular, and there is no development of characters, specifically Walter Burns, and the film ends similarly to the way in which it starts. Additionally, the film ends with a brief epilogue in which Walter announces their remarriage and reveals their intention to go cover a strike in Albany on the way to their honeymoon. The fates of the main characters and even some of the minor characters such as Earl Williams are revealed, although there are minor flaws in the resolution. For example, they do not discuss what happened to Molly Malloy after the conflict is resolved. However, the main characters’ endings were wrapped up so neatly that it overshadows the need for the minor characters' endings to be wrapped up. This creates a "closure effect" or an appearance of closure.[47]
Editing style
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (August 2022) |
This section possibly contains original research. (August 2022) |
His Girl Friday is a movie intentioned for speed: it set the record on fastest words spoken per minute in a movie.[48] A second to appreciate the moment is a foregone luxury in the whirlwind nature of the publishing business. Dissecting one of the scenes from the movie to best display the editing style, consider the specific scene where Earl Williams escapes. Howard Hawks emphasizes the pace difference between Hildy’s two possible lives, by having plot elements and staging mirror the editing, where slow and languid moments are interspersed with sub-second shots of newsworthy freneticism. To emphasize the contrast of rhythm between Hildy’s domestic life with Bruce versus her dynamic life with Walter, the director mirrors with editing techniques like lengthier contemplative shots versus rapid fire shots, matches on action versus elliptical shots with continuous diegetic sound, and scenes with one element of focus versus several different objects and sounds splitting our attention.[49]
The scene opens with two lengthy (10 second) shots of Hildy describing her life outside the newsroom—the shots reinforce the idea that the life with Bruce will be predictable and slowly paced. As Hildy looks off away from the camera for the first time, literally turning her back on the newspaper life for just an instant, her attention is snapped back to the newsroom as shots are fired. Immediately, the editing reflects the newfound fast pace: from slow pans to static shots with the only movement being Hildy’s slow walking, the movie immediately shifts to dynamic shots with several people’s movements on the street, as well as gunshots, ducking, spotlight-exaggerated lighting shifts, and shouting with the men in the window. The medium shots of the frantic news reporters are in contrast with a now obscured long shot of Hildy—while previously she was the main character and source of sound, the director makes it clear that she will be suddenly relegated to the background when the action is happening: her background presence is obscured by a frosted window, and her sounds obscured by the frenzy of the gunshots and shouting.[50]
Upon revealing that Earl Williams has escaped, the movie then shifts from multi-second shots to sub-second shots as the news editors enter maximum monkey mode. As gunshots provide a diegetic backdrop of time, ellipses shots become more obvious; the first reporter immediately cuts from reaching the table to talking on the phone. The next 5 shots are also sub-second close-ups of newsmen yelling into phones. As she is slowly drawn into this world again, Hildy begins to occupy more of the frame—going from a long shot to a medium shot as the newsmen stream past her. Once the men are gone, the longest shot of the sequence ensues: 16 seconds as she closes the distance she created from her old life, shedding her coat, symbolizing her chilly life in Albany, to reveal the reporter-ready dress underneath, the person she truly is. She fully reunites with it as she picks up the phone to talk to Walter, then rushes out of the room with the same fervor as the news folk. The camera cements this final switch as the dolly moves out, and a crossfade ensues on her running out, unlike all the prior cuts.[51]
Finally it concludes using shots of gates opening, cars streaming out, and people running. Here, Hawks’ shots are not just fast—they are explicit about being faster than time. A diegetic siren delineates unit seconds as cars screech, but the film shows the abbreviated ellipses shot of the gate closing, skipping the time with a shot of guards running. This sequence is faster than real time, and the contrast with the siren shows how time in the news reporters world is faster paced than the world around them. Hildy joins the chaos shouting "HEY!", providing a final contrast to the start of the scene where she described the idyllic and calm city life she was originally headed for.[52]
Throughout this sequence, Hawks is explicit about the passage of time and focus of characters through his edits and mocks the slow Albany life Hildy begins with by showcasing the romantic frenzy of news life through shot timing, continuity of action, and shifting attention-grabbing elements.[53]
Women reporters
[edit]According to Pauline Kael, all female reporters in newspaper films are based on Adela Rogers St. Johns.[54]
Legacy
[edit]His Girl Friday (often along with Bringing Up Baby and Twentieth Century) is cited as an archetype of the screwball comedy genre.[55] In 1993, the Library of Congress selected His Girl Friday for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.[56] The film ranked 19th on the American Film Institute's 100 Years ... 100 Laughs, a 2000 list of the funniest American comedies.[57] Prior to His Girl Friday, the play The Front Page had been adapted for the screen once before, in the 1931 film, also called The Front Page, produced by Howard Hughes, with Adolphe Menjou and Pat O'Brien in the starring roles.[58] In this first film adaptation of the Broadway play of the same title (written by former Chicago newsmen Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur), Hildy Johnson was male.[29]
His Girl Friday was dramatized as a one-hour radio play on the September 30, 1940, broadcast of Lux Radio Theatre, with Claudette Colbert, Fred MacMurray and Jack Carson.[59] It was dramatized again with a half-hour version on The Screen Guild Theater on March 30, 1941, with Grant and Russell reprising their film roles.[60][61] The Front Page was remade in a 1974 Billy Wilder movie starring Walter Matthau as Walter Burns, Jack Lemmon as Hildy Johnson, and Susan Sarandon as his fiancée.[62][63]
His Girl Friday and the original Hecht and MacArthur play were adapted into another stage play His Girl Friday by playwright John Guare. This was presented at the National Theatre in London from May to November 2003, with Alex Jennings as Burns and Zoë Wanamaker as Hildy.[64][65] The 1988 film Switching Channels was loosely based on His Girl Friday, with Burt Reynolds in the Walter Burns role, Kathleen Turner in the Hildy Johnson role, and Christopher Reeve in the role of Bruce.[66] In December 2017 Peter Giser, the artistic director of the Snowglobe Theatre, an independent theatre based in Montreal, Canada, adapted the script for the stage, expanded some characters, and made the play more accessible to modern audiences. It was performed that December after Snowglobe obtained copyright status of this adapted version.[67]
Director Quentin Tarantino has named His Girl Friday as one of his favorite movies.[68] In the 2004 French film Notre musique, the film is used by Godard as he explains the basic of filmmaking, specifically the shot reverse shot. As he explains this concept, two stills from His Girl Friday are shown with Cary Grant in one photo and Rosalind Russell in the other. He explains that upon looking closely, the two shots are actually the same shot, "because the director is incapable of seeing the difference between a man and a woman."[69]
Rosalind Russell's performance as Hildy Johnson was cited[citation needed] as the model for the character of Lois Lane in the Superman franchise.
See also
[edit]- Public domain film
- List of American films of 1940
- List of films in the public domain in the United States
References
[edit]Informational notes
- ^ A "girl Friday" is an assistant who carries out a variety of chores. The name alludes to "Friday", Robinson Crusoe's native male dogsbody in Daniel Defoe's novel. According to Merriam-Webster's, the term was first used in 1940 (the year the film was released).[6]
Citations
- ^ Mankiewicz, Ben and Muller, Eddie (July 23, 2020) Intro to the Turner Classic Movies presentation of the film
- ^ "Librarian Announces National Film Registry Selections (March 7, 1994) - Library of Congress Information Bulletin". www.loc.gov. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
- ^ "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
- ^ Jackson, Matthew (March 6, 2017). "11 Classic Films in the Public Domain". mentalfloss.com. Retrieved January 4, 2019.
- ^ McCarthy 1997, p. 278.
- ^ "Girl Friday". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
- ^ Phillips 2010, p. 308.
- ^ a b c d e McCarthy 1997, p. 279.
- ^ Mast 1982, pp. 208–209.
- ^ Birmingham 1984, p. 261.
- ^ Grindon 2011, p. 96.
- ^ Martin 1985, p. 95.
- ^ Grindon 2011, p. 97.
- ^ a b McCarthy 1997, p. 281.
- ^ McCarthy 1997, pp. 281–282.
- ^ a b "His Girl Friday (1940) - Notes". TCM.com. Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved June 14, 2020.
- ^ a b McCarthy 1997, p. 282.
- ^ a b c Miller, Frank. "His Girl Friday".
- ^ Hecht, Ben, & Charles MacArthur, The Front Page, 1928. Samuel French, Inc.
- ^ Bogdanovich 1997.
- ^ a b McCarthy 1997, p. 283.
- ^ a b c McCarthy 1997, p. 284.
- ^ New York : Random House, 1977. ISBN 978-0-394-42134-6 OCLC 3017310
- ^ a b McCarthy 1997, p. 285.
- ^ a b c McCarthy 1997, p. 286.
- ^ Fetherling 1977, p. 85.
- ^ Cohn, Herbert (January 12, 1940). "'His Girl Friday' Makes Gay Music Hall Comedy". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. p. 11. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
- ^ "At the Logan Wednesday". The Logan Daily News. January 22, 1940. Retrieved June 27, 2018.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ a b Nugent, Frank S. (January 12, 1940). "THE SCREEN IN REVIEW; Frenzied's the Word for 'His Girl Friday,' a Distaff Edition of 'The Front Page,' at the Music Hall--'The Man Who Wouldn't Talk' Opens at the Palace". The New York Times. Retrieved October 29, 2018.
- ^ "His Girl Friday (review)". Variety. New York: Variety, Inc. January 10, 1940. p. 14.
- ^ "'His Girl Friday' with Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell and Ralph Bellamy". Harrison's Reports: 3. January 6, 1940.
- ^ "Reviews of the New Films". Film Daily: 5. January 5, 1940.
- ^ Mosher, John (January 13, 1940). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. New York: F-R Publishing Corp. p. 59.
- ^ Bordwell 1985, p. 188.
- ^ "His Girl Friday (1940)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
- ^ "David Thomson". Sight & Sound. Archived from the original on August 18, 2016.
- ^ "Quentin Tarantino". Sight & Sound. Archived from the original on February 12, 2016.
- ^ Grindon 2011, p. 105.
- ^ a b Danks 2016, pp. 35–38.
- ^ Haskell 1974, p. 126.
- ^ Haskell 1974, pp. 133–134.
- ^ Dibbern 2016, p. 230.
- ^ Neale 2016, p. 110; McElhaney 2006, pp. 31–45
- ^ Bordwell 1985, p. 158.
- ^ Grindon 2011, p. 103.
- ^ Mast 1982, p. 49.
- ^ Bordwell 1985, p. 159; Dibbern 2016, p. 230
- ^ His Girl Friday (1940) - IMDb, retrieved October 22, 2021
- ^ Bottomore, Stephen (1990). "Shots in the Dark – The Real Origins of Film Editing". Early Cinema: 104–113. doi:10.5040/9781838710170.0014. ISBN 9781838710170.
- ^ Lederer, Charles (1939). "Shooting Draft: His Girl Friday Screenplay".
- ^ Scott, A. O.; Dargis, Manohla (April 8, 2020). "He Said, She Said, We Said, You Said". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 22, 2021.
- ^ "3. Chasing Film Narrative", Body Shots, University of California Press, pp. 85–103, December 31, 2019, doi:10.1525/9780520941199-007, ISBN 9780520941199, S2CID 226775454, retrieved October 22, 2021
- ^ "Editing procedure", Film and Video Editing, Abingdon, UK: Taylor & Francis, pp. 64–82, 1981, doi:10.4324/9780203427866_chapter_4, ISBN 978-0-203-44690-4, retrieved October 22, 2021
- ^ Haskell 1974, p. 134.
- ^ Brookes 2016, p. 2.
- ^ Clamen, Stewart M. "U.S. National Film Registry — Titles". Clamen's Movie Information Collection. Carnegie Mellon University. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
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- ^ McElhaney 2016, p. 199.
Bibliography
- Birmingham, Stephen (1984). "The rest of us" The rise of America's eastern European Jews. Boston: Little. ISBN 0316096474. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
- Bogdanovich, Peter (1997). Who the Devil Made it: Conversations With Legendary Film Directors. New York: The Ballantine Publishing Group. ISBN 9780307817457. Retrieved October 29, 2018.
- Bordwell, David (1985). Narration in the Fiction Film. Madison, Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299101701.
- Brookes, Ian, ed. (2016). Howard Hawks: New Perspectives. London: Palgrave. ISBN 9781844575411.
- Danks, Adrian (2016). "'Ain't There Anyone Here for Love?' Space, Place and Community in the Cinema of Howard Hawks". In Brookes, Ian (ed.). Howard Hawks: New Perspectives. London: Palgrave. pp. 35–38. ISBN 9781844575411.
- Dibbern, Doug (2016). "Irresolvable Circularity: Narrative Closure and Nihilism in Only Angels Have Wings". In Brookes, Ian (ed.). Howard Hawks: New Perspectives. Palgrave. p. 230. ISBN 9781844575411.
- Fetherling, Doug (1977). The Five Lives of Ben Hecht. Toronto: Lester and Orpen Ltd. ISBN 978-0919630857.
- Grindon, Leger (2011). The Hollywood romantic comedy: Conventions, history, controversies. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. doi:10.1002/9781444395969. ISBN 9781405182669.
- Haskell, Molly (1974). From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226318844.
- Martin, Jeffrey Brown (1985). Ben Hecht: Hollywood Screenwriter. Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI Research Press. ISBN 978-0835715713.
- Mast, Gerald (1982). Howard Hawks, Storyteller. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195030914.
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- McElhaney, Joe (2016). "Red Line 7000: Fatal Disharmonies". In Brookes, Ian (ed.). Howard Hawks: New Perspectives. London: Palgrave. p. 199. ISBN 9781844575411.
- McElhaney, Joe (Spring–Summer 2006). "Howard Hawks: American Gesture". Journal of Film and Video. 58 (1–2): 31–45. ProQuest 2170419.
- Neale, Steve (2016). "Gestures, Movements and Actions in Rio Bravo". In Brookes, Ian (ed.). Howard Hawks: New Perspectives. London: Palgrave. p. 110. ISBN 9781844575411.
- Phillips, Gene (2010). Some Like It Wilder: The Life and Controversial Films of Billy Wilder. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. p. 308. ISBN 9780813125701. Retrieved August 7, 2018.
- Schlotterbeck, Jesse (2016). "Hawks's 'UnHawksian' Biopic: Sergeant York". Howard Hawks: New Perspective. London: Palgrave. p. 68. ISBN 9781844575411.
Further reading
- Walters, James (2008). "Making Light of the Dark: Understanding the World of His Girl Friday" (PDF). Journal of Film and Video. 60 (3/4): 90–102. doi:10.1353/jfv.0.0014. JSTOR 20688604. S2CID 143677999.
- "Collection on His Girl Friday, 1940". BYU Library Special Collections.
External links
[edit]- His Girl Friday at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- His Girl Friday at IMDb
- His Girl Friday at the TCM Movie Database
- His Girl Friday at Rotten Tomatoes
- His Girl Friday is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive
- 1940 films
- 1940 comedy-drama films
- 1940s screwball comedy films
- American comedy-drama films
- American screwball comedy films
- American black-and-white films
- Comedy of remarriage films
- Films about capital punishment
- Films about journalists
- American films based on plays
- Films directed by Howard Hawks
- Films with screenplays by Charles Lederer
- United States National Film Registry films
- Films about journalism
- American feminist films
- Columbia Pictures films
- 1940s English-language films
- 1940s American films
- English-language comedy-drama films