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This morning we get the four of the last Andy Hardy films, and the afternoon brings two Oscar-winners, The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer with the unique combination of Cary Grant and Shirley Temple, and Gigi with the incomparable Leslie Caron. This evening, we've got this month's star is the lovely Kay Francis. And blessedly, no jingoist, yeah-America films in any sort of phony "celebration" of September 11. Enjoy!
5:30am -- Festival of Shorts #26 (2000) TCM promotes two comedy shorts with ventriloquist Edgar Bergan,
"The Eyes Have It" (1931) Cast: Edgar Bergen, Charlie McCarthy, Christina Graver. Dir: Alfred J. Goulding. BW-10 mins
and "Africa Speaks...English" (1933) Cast: Edgar Bergen, Charlie McCarthy. Dir: Roy Mack. BW-12 mins
Northwestern University awarded Charlie McCarthy an honorary degree of "Master of Innuendo and Snappy Comeback". Edgar Bergen was an alumnus of the University.
6:00am -- The Courtship Of Andy Hardy (1942) A teenager dates a girl whose parents' divorce is being decided by his father. Cast: Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, Donna Reed. Dir: George B. Seitz. BW-95 mins, TV-G
Andy gets shanghaied into dating Donna Reed so that his father the judge will bail him out after Andy steals a car. Andy Hardy -- Grand Theft Auto?
7:45am -- Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble (1944) A college boy has to cope with a pair of beautiful twins. Cast: Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, Bonita Granville. Dir: George B. Seitz. BW-107 mins, TV-G
MGM originally intended to continue the Hardy family pictures without Mickey Rooney, who was overseas in the Army. The New York Times reported in February 1945 that author Booth Tarkington had been hired by MGM to write a film story to feature Lewis Stone, Fay Holden and Sara Haden in their usual roles. The film was never made and Mickey Rooney was back by the time the next Hardy family film went before the cameras.
9:45am -- Love Laughs At Andy Hardy (1946) A small-town boy returns to college after the war only to find his sweetheart engaged to another. Cast: Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, Bonita Granville. Dir: Willis Goldbeck. BW-93 mins, TV-G
Second to last of the 18 Andy Hardy films.
11:30am -- Andy Hardy Comes Home (1958) In a sequel to the popular film series, Andy Hardy returns to Carvel to negotiate a land deal. Cast: Mickey Rooney, Fay Holden, Cecilia Parker. Dir: Howard W. Koch. BW-80 mins, TV-G
The last of the Andy Hardy films, made 12 years after Love Laughs at Andy Hardy, and intended to be the beginning of a new series, with Andy as the wise father.
1:00pm -- Small Town Girl (1936) After marrying a drunken playboy, a young girl tries to capture his heart while he's sober. Cast: Janet Gaynor, Robert Taylor, James Stewart. Dir: William A. Wellman. BW-106 mins, TV-G
Was originally set to star Jean Harlow as Kay and Robert Montgomery as Bob.
2:47pm -- Short Film: One Reel Wonders: One Against The World (1939) Cast: Jonathan Hale, Claire McDowell, Charles Middleton. Dir: Fred Zinneman. BW-11 mins
This Passing Parade short dramatizes the events surrounding the first invasive surgical operation performed in the United States, performed by Dr. Ephraim McDowell on December 13, 1809.
3:00pm -- The Bachelor And The Bobby-Soxer (1947) A teenage girl's crush on a playboy spells trouble, particularly when he falls for her older sister. Cast: Cary Grant, Myrna Loy, Shirley Temple. Dir: Irving Reis. BW-95 mins, TV-G
Won an Oscar for Best Writing, Original Screenplay -- Sidney Sheldon (yes, that Sidney Sheldon!)
Memorable quote: Richard Nugent: Hey, you remind me of a man. Susan Turner: What man? Richard Nugent: Man with the power. Susan Turner: What power? Richard Nugent: Power of hoodoo. Susan Turner: Hoodoo? Richard Nugent: You do. Susan Turner: Do what? Richard Nugent: Remind me of a man...
This nonsense dialogue was also used in Houseboat (1958).
4:39pm -- Short Film: One Reel Wonders: The Gay Parisian (1941) In a Paris nightclub setting, the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo performs to the music of Jacques Offenbach. Cast: The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, Leonide Massine, Milada Mladova. Dir: Jean Negulesco. C-20 mins
An article in The New York Times of 2 December 1941 states: "An invited audience of newspaper and magazine writers and others will attend the world premiere today of two Warner featurettes starring the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo at Fefe's Monte Carlo. The films to be screened are "The Gay Parisian" with Léonide Massine, Milada Mladova and Frederic Franklin, and "Spanish Fiesta" with Massine, Tamara Toumanova and Franklin." It is doubtful there were any paying customers; the film was scheduled for release in 1942.
5:00pm -- Gigi (1958) A Parisian girl is raised to be a kept woman but dreams of love and marriage. Cast: Leslie Caron, Maurice Chevalier, Louis Jourdan. Dir: Vincente Minnelli. C-116 mins, TV-G
Won Oscars for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White or Color -- William A. Horning, E. Preston Ames, Henry Grace and F. Keogh Gleason, Best Cinematography, Color -- Joseph Ruttenberg, Best Costume Design, Black-and-White or Color -- Cecil Beaton, Best Director -- Vincente Minnelli, Best Film Editing -- Adrienne Fazan, Best Music, Original Song -- Frederick Loewe (music) and Alan Jay Lerner (lyrics) for the song "Gigi", Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture -- André Previn, Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium -- Alan Jay Lerner, and Best Picture
Features the song, "Say a Prayer for Me Tonight", which Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe had originally written for the 1956 stage musical "My Fair Lady," but which was deleted during out-of-town tryouts. Lerner was against including the song in "Gigi", but was effectively overruled by Loewe, producer Arthur Freed and director Vincente Minnelli. (The song contains the couplet, "'On to your Waterloo,' whispers my heart./ Pray I'll be Wellington, not Bonaparte" - arguably an odd sentiment for a French girl to express. In "My Fair Lady", the song was intended for Eliza Doolittle, who was, of course, English.)
7:00pm -- Private Screenings: Leslie Caron (1999) Robert Osborne hosts this TCM original series featuring an intimate interview with the exquisite actress Leslie Caron. Cast: Robert Osborne, Leslie Caron. Dir: Tony Barbon. C-47 mins, TV-G
Leslie Claire Margaret Caron was born on July 1, 1931. Her father, Claude Caron, was a French chemist, and her American-born mother, Margaret Petit, had been a ballet dancer back in the States during the 1920s. Leslie herself began taking dance lessons at age 11 until the Nazi occupation forced her and her brother to flee to Cannes with her grandparents. She later returned to Paris and attended the Convent of the Assumption. Continuing her dance training at the National Conservatory, she became a 16-year-old member of the Ballet des Champs-Élyées where she greatly impressed her teachers. Cast in the ballet "La Recontre" in 1948, Gene Kelly saw her in the production and was entranced. Luckily for her, he remembered that performance two years later when he returned to Paris in search for a dancing unknown to introduce in his newest musical film.
What's On Tonight: STAR OF THE MONTH: KAY FRANCIS
8:00pm -- Trouble In Paradise (1932) A love triangle ignites trouble between two jewel theives and their intended victim. Cast: Herbert Marshall, Miriam Hopkins, Kay Francis. Dir: Ernst Lubitsch. BW-82 mins, TV-G
The scenes in which Herbert Marshall is running up and down the stairs at Madame Colet's were done with a double who is only seen from the waist down. Mr. Marshall lost a leg in WWI and although it was almost impossible to notice that he used a prosthesis, he could not perform any action that called for physical agility.
9:30pm -- Cynara (1932) Infidelity threatens a lawyer's marriage when his fling decides to steal him from his wife. Cast: Ronald Colman, Kay Francis, Phyllis Barry. Dir: King Vidor. BW-78 mins
Based on a play and a novel, the film's obscure title comes from the refrain of an 1896 poem by Ernest Dowson, which was popular at the time: "I have been faithful to thee, Cynara, in my fashion." (That stanza of the poem begins "I have forgot much, Cynara! gone with the wind...", inspiring the title of another 1930s novel and movie. ;-) )
11:00pm -- A Notorious Affair (1930) A beautiful noblewoman gives up wealth and society for love of a two-timing musician. Cast: Billie Dove, Basil Rathbone, Kay Francis. Dir: Lloyd Bacon. BW-67 mins, TV-G
Based on the play Fame, written by Audrey and Waverly Carter, which originally opened in London, England, in March, 1929.
12:15am -- The Feminine Touch (1941) An author writing a book on jealousy discovers his wife is an expert on the subject. Cast: Rosalind Russell, Don Ameche, Kay Francis. Dir: W.S. Van Dyke II. BW-98 mins, TV-G
According to one of the user's comments on IMDB, "Francis wears one hat that looks like a rendition of the Mickey Mouse Club ears, except with taller ears and the entire hat covered in fur. It was one of the funniest things in the movie."
2:00am -- Street of Women (1932) A property developer is torn between his wife and his mistress. Cast: Kay Francis, Roland Young, Alan Dinehart. Dir: Archie Mayo. BW-59 mins, TV-G
Film debut of Gloria Stuart, the older Rose in Titanic (1997).
3:00am -- Give Me Your Heart (1936) A socialite has to give up the baby she bore to a married man. Cast: Kay Francis, George Brent, Patric Knowles. Dir: Archie Mayo. BW-88 mins, TV-G
The married man is played by Patric Knowles, best known (to me, at least) as Will Scarlett to Errol Flynn's Robin Hood in The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938).
4:30am -- Stolen Holiday (1937) A Paris fashion model marries a fortune hunter to protect him from the law. Cast: Claude Rains, Kay Francis, Ian Hunter. Dir: Michael Curtiz. BW-80 mins, TV-G
The movie is loosely based on the French bond scandal involving Serge Alexandre Stavisky. After the fraud was discovered he either committed suicide or was murdered by the French police.
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