***The Class Struggle Continues...-Katherine
Hepburn and Cary Grant’s The Philadelphia
Story
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
The Philadelphia Story, starring
Katherine Hepburn, Cary Grant, James Stewart, directed by George Cukor, 1940
No question the late 1930s and early 1940s, that period from
the hard edges of the then Great Depression and the war clouds of World War II,
was a great age, a golden age, of screwball romantic comedy. And when one wants
to list off the names of those who produced such witty material then the names
of Preston Sturgis and George Cukor the director of the film under review, The Philadelphia Story, readily come to
mind. Here Cukor has taken an old boy-girl romance linked to the edges of the
class struggle and let the very professional actors he employed go through their
paces. And laugh (and ever romance)- craving audiences loved the work.
Here is the way the thing worked out. A high society Philadelphia
woman (meaning very high society indeed), played by Katherine Hepburn, a woman moreover
once scorned, decided to remarry after a disastrous (and short-lived) first marriage.
Showing that she was no prude, and filled with a democratic spirit the
prospective bridegroom was not from old society like the first husband but an
up-from-hunger self-made man, a man of the “people.” Enter the first husband,
played by Cary Grant at his most elegant, who is not quite finished with his red-headed
ex-wife.
Old Cary was still in love with Katherine and was ready to
move might and main to get her back. But time was short because the wedding was
only a couple of days away. His hook to getting Katherine back was via showing
the new guy up as nothing but an old pill (excuse that quant expression). And
so his scheme brought in a scandal rag newspaper
reporter (complete with female assistant- a witty photographer), played by
James Stewart, to cover the story in order to save her from being mixed-up a scandal
provided by an errant father.
If you can believe this Cary pulls the thing off. See his
problem with Katherine which he couldn’t conquer when they were married was that
underneath her high society demeanor was a “nice girl” who just needs a couple
of lessons in humility. And using old brother Stewart he was able to set actions
in motions that show Katherine what she was really made of and to show her what
an old pill that potential bridegroom would have been (sorry, again on that old
pill thing). And so you can guess who will be standing at the altar when Katherine
does see the error of her ways? All of this done with lots of droll gag lines, great
mannerisms and facial expressions, especially by Hepburn, a little smaltz (by
one and all), and some great photography. Yes, this one is directly from the golden
age.
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