Skiddo, Take
It On The Lam, Frail-Barbara Stanwyck and Garry Cooper’s Ball Of Fire
DVD Review
By Zack
James
Ball Of
Fire, starring Barbara Stanwyck, Gary Cooper, Dana Andrews, directed by Howard
Hawks, 1941
In 1941,
depending on the month, Europe needed and then America needed a few laughs,
something to take their minds for a couple of hours off the grim work ahead in
a world that had been taken over by the night-takers. And no one could do
better than to take in at their local theater the film under review, Barbara
Stanwyck and Gary Cooper’s Ball of Fire, to
while away a couple of hours. When one thinks of romantic screwball comedies
from that era one usually thinks automatically of Preston Sturgis (whose Sullivan’s Travels was recently reviewed
in this space) or George Cukor (whose The
Philadelphia Story was reviewed in this space a while back) but here the auteur
Howard Hawks works some cinematic magic taking a hand at comedy.
And comedy
it is from first to last. Here’s how it played out. A group of professors, you
know the usual shoulder to the wheel stuffy suspects from academia who have
their heads in the clouds knocking into every earth-bound object in their way,
had been commissioned by a private foundation to write an encyclopedia. You
know write up the totality of the human experience in about twenty or thirty
volumes for future high school and college students to refer to when doing
assorted term papers (now mercifully superseded by Wikipedia and the like
although the temptation to crib whole sections by those self-same lazy students
has probably not abated). Said work to be done in a spacious New York City
brownstone and done at an apparently leisurely pace. Naturally when writing up
the totality of human experience in twenty or thirty volumes a certain division
of labor is necessary. The question of language, the English language of
course, had been assigned to the youngest of the professors. Potts from Ivy
League Princeton, played by long tall Gary Cooper last reviewed in this space
while defending a town’s honor in High
Noon. Since he will become one of the central figures we will key in on
him. Potts’ (I refuse to call the august Cooper “Pottsy” as others will) area
of work just then was on American slang (expressions which probably got
transmitted world-wide as such things goes once an expression gains a critical
mass). He had prepared a beautiful article fully footnoted, with secondary
references noted as well, probably a big bibliography to boot, but after
running into a trash-man he had an epiphany. His damn beautifully footnoted and
referenced article was way out of date, the slang went out with his
grandfather’s spats. Tear that thing up, no question.
Here was
Potts’ new take. He will, fortunate to be in the Big Apple, to be in New Jack
City, to be, well, you know New York, run around town to local gin mills to
hear what the heavy drinkers have to say, maybe the racetrack over in Long
Island to take note of the touts, listen to cabbies gabbing, check out the
crippled newsies hawking their wares, sit at a table in the Automat overhearing
what workaday lunch talk poured forth, and fatally, take in a nightclub act to
see what slang popular dance and serious jazz were up to. All duly noted. That
fatal last locale was not really fatal fatal but led to his comeuppance, of
sorts. See it was at that unnamed nightclub that one staid proper Professor
Potts ran smack daub into one nightclub singer Sugarpuss O’Shea (yeah, I know,
where did they get that one), played by a fetching bouncy filled to the gills
with slang young Barbara Stanwyck who was last seen in this space beguiling one
Fred MacMurray into murder most foul, murder for hire, in the film adaptation
of James M. Cain’s Double Indemnity. Sugarpuss certainly had all the answers and
while she could not sing worth a damn (at least according to my sources Stanwyck
was lip-synching that Drum Boogie
while showing off some nice gams on stage) she could dance to the beat of Gene
Krupa’s drums (no fakery there, no fakery on the whole orchestra blowing like Gabriel
blew his horn way back when).
The problem
for a gal like Sugarpuss though, a gal who grew up on the wrong side of the
tracks, on her way up in this hard old world she didn’t meet many professor
types. Probably had lost her virtue on the way up too. In fact she was shacked
up with a no good gunsel, a hood, a mobster, a bad guy named Joe Lilac (played
by Dana Andrews last mentioned here as the good guy cop in Laura in a fairly small role), who the police would have liked to
have a moment with, would like to get seriously under the lights in the
precinct basement for a bunch of unsolved murders of bad guy New York citizens
but citizens nevertheless, who was walking around free as a bird. And the
reason that our Joe could walk around in that condition was that under his
orders Sugarpuss, who had information that might be helpful to the fuzz, had
taken a powder, had gone on the lam. On the lam straight to the Professors’
digs.
Of course
the cover story was that Sugarpuss, along with assorted other denizens of New
York life, of Damon Runyon’s New York, newsies, pug-uglies, touts, working
stiffs, were furthering the quest for academic excellence under the guidance of
Professor Potts. Naturally though a guy who has had his head in the clouds, has
been hanging around with seven other stuffed shirt professors with their
collective noses to the grindstone to long was clueless about worldly nightclub
performers. And certainly clueless about that jasmine scent, that fresh bath soap
smell, that glimmer in her hair, those well-turned gams, that has him in a dither
every time he was within five feet of her.
So naturally our professor threw all caution to the wind and fell for
Sugarpuss head over heels. She, for her part, has a little twinkle in her eye
for him but mainly she was playing him for a fool to cover for her darling Joe.
Oh yeah,
back to Joe who had the big legal problem if Sugarpuss surfaced soon anywhere
near New York City. On advice of counsel, wise advice under other circumstances
if you were rooting for the Professor to sweep Suagarpuss off her feet, Joe proposed
to her under the theory that a wife could not testify against her husband. Nice
play. Nicer still for a girl from the wrong side of the tracks among the
fellahin was the huge rock he lays on her as an engagement ring. Any girl, high
society or tramp, from a wrong gee or not, from wrong side of town or not,
would have to take that rock-laden proposal seriously. So Sugarpuss did,
figured to finally ride the blind to easy street. Then damn it didn’t naïve old
Potts gum up the works and propose marriage to her as well. With a dinky Woolworth’s
dime-store ring that might as well have come from a crackerjacks box, maybe
did, and which any sensible frail would blow off as some much bad air.
But see there
was something about Potts that had gotten under her skin, had Sugarpuss feeling
a little out of sorts, something she couldn’t put into words later when she went
big for him. Stuff about him getting drunk on buttermilk, the way he blushed
when he was around her, his inability to kiss worth a damn. Go figure with dames,
right. But that was later, later after Joe Lilac had made his big goof-ball
play. Joe was in a rush to get married, to get back above ground, but Sugarpuss
was, as frills will for no known to man reason, stalling. Joe decided to speed
things up, decided to foul her game, by telling the Professor the facts of
life, that he was being played for a sucker by Sugarpuss, was being strung along.
That was that once Joe dropped the other shoe.
Well not
quite because Joe didn’t get to be king of the hill in the tough New York underworld
by being some Professor named Potts from Princeton’s patsy and so he has his
boys strong-arm the professors in their brownstone quarters in order to get
Sugarpuss to do his bidding. Wrong move by Joe as the profs used their collective
non-violent wisdom to take care of his henchmen. Then take off for Jersey to
stop the wedding, of course getting there just in time to stop the ceremony, and
just in time to let the police round up Joe and his cronies. And so the
Professor and his tart, okay, okay his gal with the heart of gold lived happily
ever after. Well almost, almost happily ever after because naturally being a
twist Sugarpuss had to balk one last time thinking she was a tramp unworthy of
the good professor. A little “didn’t know how to kiss” kiss on his part left
things looking up as the screen fated. Hey, this one is a good one for 2015 as it
was in 1941, hell, we still have the night-takers about and we still can use a
couple of hours of escape. This one is aces, pure aces.
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