The Front
Pages From The Distaff Side-Rosalind Russell And Cary Grant’s “His Girl
Friday”-(1940)-A Short Film Review
DVD Review
By Sam
Lowell
His Girl
Friday, starring Rosalind Russell, Cary Grant, Ralph Bellamy, directed by
Howard Hawks, from a play by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, 1940
Recently in
reviewing another later (1960) Cary Grant vehicle, The Grass Is Greener, where he plays a cuckolded English Earl whose
wife’s affections were stolen by an arriviste American oil man (played by also
hunk Robert Mitchum) I noted that as a rule Cary Grant, the epitome of
maleness, handsomeness, suaveness and whatever else matters to the majority
females that made up the 1940s and 1950s audiences did not lose the woman (and
in that vehicle he didn’t either but it was a close call when the deal went
down). In the film under review Howard Hawk’s adaptation of Ben Hecht and
Charles MacArthur’s screwball comedy, The Front Page, he almost let another
dame get away, let his ex-wife Hildy beat it to upstate New York. So maybe I
was a little wrong about Cary’s ability to swoop women off their feet-and keep
them swooped (is that the right past tense, oh well).
Here’s the
play and it may be familiar to those who saw the play or the later screen
version with Jack Lemon and Walter Matthau except, a very big except the ‘‘ace”
reporter is a woman, a female Hildy, played by rough and tumble, give as well
as he received, Rosalind Russell, which allows the male-female tussle that
drives the film to go forward. Tussle because one, Hildy had given Walter,
Walter Burns, the mad monk editor-in-chief/owner of a New York City newspaper,
his walking papers, no go, done, and two, she is now engaged and ready to let
the rough and tumble life of an ace reporter fall by the wayside. Engaged to
Bruce Baldwin, a nice safe middle of the road insurance man, played by Ralph
Bellamy.
But see
Walter, since the nasty divorce had gotten “religion,” well maybe had gotten
religion, since he is remorseful about the bad way he treated Hildy and wants
her back. The hook: the hook for any good and resourceful journalist- a big
career-making or enhancing front page story. The bait for the hook- covering
the execution of a small time grafter whose upcoming date with death is being
played by the political establishment for the impending elections as the final
nail in the coffin for the anarchist plague that had descended upon the city.
The felon nothing but a snook and so Walter lures Hildy into looking into what
the whole plan is all about. Gets her in so deep she can’t even think about
poor ordinary nice guy Bruce and his very average life plans. In the end the
snook gets a reprieve and the local politicos have egg all over their faces for
their cover-ups. And Hildy and Walter go about their merry way. As for Bruce,
well, he is on his way back to Albany-alone. You know Cary had this one in the
bag from the beginning when you think about it. Just don’t let your good woman
loose around him-okay.
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