The Odyssey Home

sunset at seaI viewed a dvd of John Ford‘s lovingly crafted adaptation of Eugene O’Neill’s The Long Voyage Home (1940) the other day with new eyes. If you haven’t seen this movie before, you may want to catch the broadcast of it on Monday, May 5th at 2:15 PM EDT on TCM.

I revisited this movie because of my uncle’s pointed remark some decades ago, advising me to see this then nearly forgotten movie someday. It was, according to him, “probably among the most beautiful movies ever made.” Seen now with adult eyes, I think I can comprehend a fraction of the pull that this story must’ve had for him. When news came that he had died a few days ago at 94, it struck me that I’d never seen my Uncle Charles more than a handful of times in my life. Consequently I can’t say that I knew him well, and certainly not as well as his youngest sister or his five children remember him. Still, he looms large in my memory for the imprint he left on my imagination and heart. I was his youngest niece and all I knew was that when he was around, the air crackled with the electricity of his good talk, good humor, and his passions for art and the natural world, particularly the ocean, a subject that he painted repeatedly, capturing its serene glory and wild fury on canvas, along with the vulnerability of the tenacious few who lived on the water.

His fondness for the ocean came from a lifetime of intimate acquaintance with this element. Chas had been a midshipman at the Annapolis Naval Academy in the ’30s before having the courage to break the news to his family and the Navy that he really wanted to be a painter, (a career choice that came after two valiant tries to master the required mathematics) . He then became an artist and illustrator after studying at the The Art Students League in New York under such legendary instructors as Harvey Dunn and George Bridgeman.  The parting glass in The Long Voyage HomeIn between those youthful adventures, he served in the Navy as a seaman in the North Atlantic during the pre-Pearl Harbor period of highly dangerous “unofficial” cat and mouse games between U.S. naval ships and Nazi U-Boats. He knew first hand how small a man could feel on the vast ocean, and how free and peaceful he might also feel riding the seas. Most of all, he had an appreciation for the play of light and shadow, color, and shape–especially on the ocean. Having lived on the Atlantic and now on the shore of a Great Lake for the last two decades, I’d like to hope that my eye has begun to be sensitive to the power and beauty of water and the people near her and on her too.

The film, drawn by Dudley Nichols from Eugene O’Neill ‘s short, early plays, The Moon of the Caribees, In The Zone, Bound East for Cardiff and The Long Voyage Home, is the story of the lonely men of the S.S. Glencairn, during a dangerous voyage carrying ammunition from the West Indies to London in the early months of the Second World War. The men, cut off from the land by their work and the war, are adrift, bored and tense, unable to control their fate or confront their situation without giving up hope. As one character says, “When a man goes out to sea, he should give up thinking about shore…Land don’t want him no more.” While the ensemble playing of the excellent cast is among the best work of its time–maybe rivaling only the films made by the director John Ford just before and after this movie, The Grapes of Wrath (1939) and How Green Was My Valley (1941), the overall storyline remains tenuously connected as a series of episodes redeemed by several great scenes, fine acting and some magnificent photography.

As a John Ford film, you might expect to see his stock company of actors: John Wayne, Ward Bond, Barry Fitzgerald,John Wayne in The Long Voyage Home his brother Arthur Shields, John Qualen, and the sublime Mildred Natwick (in her first movie).

Working with Ford shortly after his breakthrough role in Stagecoach (1939), John Wayne plays his slightly dim, naive character beautifully. Many forget that in his youthful roles, the coltish Wayne had a face filled with an expressive vulnerability, with a sensitivity and gentleness that only occasionally emerged in later parts under Ford‘s masterful direction. Playing a simple Scandinavian who is regarded as a child by his shipmates, the actor’s Swedish accent is shaky, (to be fair, he did not have much time to perfect it), but his awkwardness makes him the most open of all the characters. Ward Bond was often relegated to small roles that sometimes border on caricature in Ford pictures, (an exception would be Ford’s 1950 Wagon Master). He was very often, according to several sources, a perennial whipping boy for the intimidating director, but in this bleak look at rootless men, he is one of the men most capable of a warm, greedy enjoyment of life until his lung is punctured during a storm. Ward Bond's death scene while Thomas Mitchell & John Wayne look on In an extended death scene, as life ebbs painfully from Bond’s character of Yank, he pours his heart out to Thomas Mitchell. In Bond‘s near monologue he touches on the still painful topic of a man he killed in a fight long ago, his hope for some form of absolution, names his heir (a “sweet kid” from a Welsh pub), and relishes a last cigarette. Given the dramatic scope of this scene alone, it seems remarkable to me that so few commentators mention Bond’s work here. Perhaps the actor’s ubiquitous presence in movies of the time made the quality of his acting seem commonplace. Maybe familiarity sometimes breeds blindness too.

A familiar actor of another kind shows up in this movie in a different role than usual. South African-born Ian Hunter, whose posh accent, bland handsomeness and height may have caused him to spend far too many years in Hollywood standing around in black tie and tails waiting for Kay Francis or Margaret Lindsay to ditch him for someone raffishly attractive, was experiencing a brief respite from those cardboard lover parts in 1940. In director Frank Borzage’s Strange Cargo (1940), Hunter brought a haunting soulfulness to his role as Cambreau, the Christ-like convict who escapes Devil’s Island with Clark Gable, Peter Lorre and Joan Crawford, among others. Ian Hunter (in background) with WayneAs the tormented Smitty in The Long Voyage Home, Hunter gives the best performance of his career. He plays an intelligent, softspoken man whose alcoholism, bitter, self-imposed isolation and longing for oblivion are briefly and sharply interrupted by the mistaken belief of his shipmates that he is a spy. With his sole allies a bottle of booze and the rather dry, compassionate friendship doled out by Donkey Man (Arthur Shields), Smitty is confronted with his shipmates’ suspicions. Rifling through his belongings they find his letters from his estranged wife, which reveal that he was a naval officer who lost his commission due to his drinking. His last vestige of privacy and dignity violated by the now contrite crew, Hunter, who has few lines of dialogue throughout the film, contorts with rage and shame as the bland, painful truth about him is revealed. Ian Hunter is largely forgotten today though he worked in film from 1924 to 1963. Yet in the two roles discussed here, his earlier, droll appearance in 1938′s classic version of The Adventures of Robin Hood (as another man with a secret), and his interesting later character role in Fortune Is a Woman (1957), he revealed an actor who was capable of so much more than most of his one dimensional roles allowed him to play. I have always found him an intriguing, cryptic figure in movies, as well as an example of the studio system’s sometimes capricious waste of potential.

The true “star” of this vehicle may actually be the way we see the story. It is the cinematography of Gregg Toland, in continued collaboration with director John Ford, with whom he helped to create the dramatic yet realistic look of The Grapes of Wrath. One of the striking features of The Long Voyage Home is that, while the movie was set at sea, it was photographed largely in a studio. Except for the opening sequences when the local women smuggle booze on board and a party ensues on the deck of the ship, the sequence during the storm at sea, and the end when a coffin is taken off the ship at the dock, most of the time the characters were photographed in tight interior spaces with lighting emanating from the floor, and ceilings (made of muslin to allow for sound recording). Toland and Ford, according to the director’s biographers, worked seamlessly together, choosing camera angles together with the advantage of Ford’s painterly eye. Toland & Ford's storm at seaToland also experimented further with the development of his ideas, such as the use of Technicolor arcs for black and white photography, recently introduced Kodak Super XX film stock (4x faster than previous film without increased graininess) and other techniques which allowed the film to achieve a clarity of vision most commonly known as “deep focus” and which is perhaps best known today for its appearance in Citizen Kane (1941). While a critic such as David Thomson rejects the film as “arty,” there is also an immediacy and a messy humanity in this 67 year old film, especially in the storm scenes when the deck is angled and the raging water is allowed to wash over the camera, drawing the viewer into the scene visually and dramatically. The result of this collaborative, innovative atmosphere was a ravishingly beautiful sight on screen. My only regret after viewing this movie? That I couldn’t have seen it with my Uncle Charlie on a big screen in a real theatre.

“Home is the sailor, home from sea…”
Sources:
Bordwell, David, Film Art: An Introduction, McGraw-Hill, 2003.
Eyman, Scott
, Print the Legend: The Life and Times of John Ford, Simon and Schuster, 1999.
McBride, Joseph, Searching for John Ford: A Life, Faber & Faber, 2004.
Thomson, David, The New Biographical Dictionary of Film, Alfred A. Knopf, 2002.

Looking at Boyer

In a rare meeting late in the lives of the stars of Leo McCarey’s Love Affair (1939), (which can be seen on TCM this Thursday, March 20th at 4: 30PM ET), Irene Dunne reportedly mentioned to Boyer that she had recently seen the film once again. Unexpectedly moved after so much time since the production, Ms. Dunne was said to have commented to to her co-star, “You know, Charles, you were really good.” With what may have been one of his characteristic Gallic shrugs and a small smile, his reply was said to have been “Ah, so you finally looked at me.” Maybe it’s time we all looked a bit more carefully at him again. READ MORE

Thelma Ritter: All About Birdie

Thelma Ritter, nursing a hangover in Pillow TalkOn days like this, when the wind blows across from Canada and the thermometer never creeps much above 12 degrees, I look for my favorite winter hat. It’s a shapeless black felt one, but cozy, durable, and it never seems to mind if I wind up stuffing it into my coat pocket. I call it my “Thelma Ritter” hat because, like the actress, (who was born and died in the month of February), it is unpretentious and always welcome, even if it will never be chic. And I’d miss it if it were gone.

Like Miss Ritter, who was nominated for a remarkable six Academy Awards® in twelve years*, that hat is familiar, yet remarkably versatile in its useful life. Despite the fact that she usually played variations of a Shakespearean “wise fool”, she often played a person whose keen awareness of her place in our supposedly classless society made her secure enough in it to voice her opinions without fear. As a matter of fact, her essential characters are often too exhausted not to be wholly honest. READ MORE

Claude Rains: The Virtuoso

It was 1932 and Claude Rains was disenchanted.

Claude RainsHe was at a crossroads in his life and his career. He’d tried his best to find work in the new fad, the Talkies, but the camera apparently disliked him. A recent screen test for RKO to play the part of Hilary Farfield in a film adaptation of Clemence Dane‘s A Bill of Divorcement had seemed promising. In his effort to show the extent of what he could do, Rains had pulled out all the stops for the test by performing scenes from two of his tour de force stage performances from The Man Who Reclaimed His Head and Shaw’s Man of Destiny. In retrospect, Rains knew that he’d made “the worst screen test in the history of movie-making.” The dramatically flamboyant part in the movie of Dane’s play went to John Barrymore. READ MORE

A Glimpse of the Culinary Adventures of Old Hollywood

“Santa Claus has the right idea: visit people once a year.” ~ Victor Borge
Don’t get me wrong. I love my family. However, the month of December, no matter one’s spiritual beliefs or family traditions, is fraught with such a heady mixture of anticipation, ephemeral hopes, memories of past joys and pain, and just plain effort, that the day after Christmas is almost welcome with its mixture of exhaustion and ennui.

December 26th marks a day to spend with family, a return to work, and in some shopaholics, prompts one more mad dash to the mall to return or cash in those material goods gleaned from the day before. Some of us, after visiting with family members, gladly count ourselves among the less hardy souls who find some solace in the week-long “limbo” that seems to occur after Christmas and before the New Year. READ MORE

A Visit to Carvel

I’ve been to Carvel, USA and come back to tell the tale.

Maybe it was the L-tryptophane semi-coma induced by Tom Turkey on Thanksgiving Day. Or perhaps it was the desultory feeling induced by that “day-after-a-holiday” fog that colored my judgment, but something led me to check out a few of the 16 Andy Hardy movies aired by TCM last week. I thought that these movies lost their allure for me about the time that I stopped reading about the adventures of Archie and Jughead in comic books—but the Hardy series, along with the Henry Aldrich, Nancy Drew and others marked the emergence of adolescence in the 1930s as a commercial and social force in America. These films still have some effective moments, despite the distance between us and the era when they were made.

Mickey Rooney in Broadway to Hollywood (1933)

Is it possible that even in the 21st century, the simple, wholesome power of that small-town America composed of families with deep, almost spiritual ties, still beckons, if only for the running time of the movie, to that surprisingly durable hope for “wholeness” that perches in the human heart? When the little B movie, A Family Affair was made in 1937, it was intended to ride the coat tails of a previous MGM successful adaptation of Eugene O’Neill’s Ah, Wilderness transformed into a gentle valentine to an idealized home life on screen by Clarence Brown.

At the time when the highly successful series Hardy series began at the studio, the Munich Pact, The Spanish Civil War and the Nanking Massacre were big news. After the Roosevelt administration tried to reinvigorate the American market for several years, the economy took an unexpected nosedive in 1937, leading to a jump in unemployment from 14.3% in 1937 to 19.0% in 1938. Historians will tell us that several of the “isms” that have bedeviled us in the last 200 years, from romanticism, and communism to fascism were partly due to a desire for human beings to find a way of coping with the nearly constant, often overwhelming change of the average person’s life in this period.

Fortunately for us in some ways, I suppose, the response in this country to our problems was often to escape into the movies. After all, according to the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), the average movie ticket price by 1929 had risen to an unheard of 35¢, but one good thing about the Depression was that it brought that ticket to dream down to a much more sensible 25¢ once again.
A shrewd businessman and a dreamer, I suspect that studio head Louis B. Mayer understood that there might be a profit in making movies that gave Americans a brief glimpse of an imagined ideal life. Mayer‘s observant grandson, Daniel Selznick, once said that his grandfather saw the films that he produced “as artifacts of Americana and really saw them as shaping the taste of the country—[he] consciously hoped that they would shape the taste of the country.”

Mickey Rooney with Cecilia Parker, Lewis Stone, Sara Haden and Fay Holden in Andy Hardy Meets a Debutante (1940)

Frankly, I thought that I had very little interest in Andy Hardy himself, as embodied in an unfettered Mickey Rooney, though I was always interested in the other actors who popped up throughout the series and the settings the movies created for the audience. As it turned out, I couldn’t possibly bear to watch the entire Hardy Family “canon” over the two days, but my family and I found ourselves leaving the movies running in the background as a sort of video wallpaper in the background of the usual hubbub of the Thanksgiving holiday. As a result, even my glib assessment of the remarkable Mr. Rooney shifted a bit. He was–and is–a superb actor. And in MGM’s carefully crafted films, he is surrounded by skilled actors at every level.

I’m not entirely sure that this isn’t an apocryphal story from the imagination of Billy Wilder, but the filmmaker once recalled the time in the late ’30s when he and his writing partner Charles Brackett were working on a script at MGM for Ernst Lubitsch for the movie Ninotchka. Reportedly, their office “windows gave onto a little bridge which connects this old building with the new Thalberg Building. We looked out the window because there was screaming going on, and Louis B. Mayer held Mickey Rooney by the lapel. He says ‘You’re Andy Hardy! You’re the United States! You’re the Stars and Stripes. Behave yourself! You’re a symbol!’”

Mayer and Rooney with others use Judy Garland's birthday for a photo op. Rooney would later say that such occasions ended as soon as the cameramen left.

Clearly, if Wilder‘s memory is to be believed, on this occasion the flesh and blood “symbol”, (who was only, after all, a highly paid, extremely talented, greatly indulged teenage boy working very hard at the time), had done something that contradicted the wholesome vision of the studio’s driving force and upset Mr. Mayer‘s dream of America. While I’m as likely as anyone to dismiss the Andy Hardy films as a “confected rather than a reflected” reality about America, I was reminded recently—after several years of avoiding viewing any Andy Hardy movies—that, like it or not, I can still get caught up in the small tragedies and triumphs of  the Hardys.

Though I admit that there were moments when I shared Mr. Mayer‘s urge to throttle the hypekinetic Mr. Rooney as Andy Hardy during the recent marathon, my regard for his real artistry in his non-Andy roles in National Velvet, The Human Comedy, The Comedian, Requiem for a Heavyweight and The Black Stallion has deepened considerably over time, so I thought I might try to see if my perception of Andy Hardy had also changed.  Alas, a little of the Mickster powerhouse still goes a long way in most of the Hardy movies, especially when a movie script starts to flag a bit.

Mickey Rooney as the horse trainer in The Black Stallion (1979), a role that reminded everyone--even AMPAS--that he was a fine actor. Rooney was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar. (He should have won, though Melvyn Douglas was got the nod for Being There)

Perusing Rooney’s official website to verify a factoid for this article, I was amused to see that one of the quotes chosen to include there was one from comedian Dana Carvey, who appeared in a sitcom with Rooney several years ago.  Carvey, whose riff about the showbiz legend has been a very funny staple of his comedy routine in the past, has mentioned the actor’s amusing flair for profanity in between asking God to bless the same people he’d just cursed, is quoted on Rooney‘s website as saying:

“Mickey Rooney was a real colorful character, told us great stories. He used to walk around and say, ‘I was the No. 1 star in the world, hear me? The world!’ And that’s when he was alone in his dressing cubicle.”

I have to like a man who can see the humor in that affectionate jibe at his own legendary status!  Based on the Robert Osborne one-on-one interview with Mickey Rooney, he is a man whose tumultuous life leaves him apparently able to forgive and forget much, especially his own and others foibles, and he does so in such a good natured, technicolored way. I’ve read that Rooney, while genial, is reticent with most interviewers and biographers when discussing his career and the people he’s known, in part because he has written his own memoir, which supposedly will someday be published. I like to think that it might also be because he might be following a path of “never complain, never explain” in this, his ninth decade.

The Depression era Hardy family sharing their responsibilities (and swapping gender roles) in one of the later vehicles.

It is easy to mock but underneath the impossible idealistic view of life in Rooney‘s Hardy movies is an undeniable pull. That tug may not be toward any supposed upper middle class reality that once was—most kids could only dream of owning a car as Andy did and even finishing high school was beyond the reach of many moviegoers, not to mention going to college. Having seen more Hardy movies than I’ve ever seen–or can stand to see again–over the last week, I think it’s not just the wish fulfillment that the Andy Hardy movies offered audiences, but a shared sense of longing that runs through the series that gives it some continued power.

Still, the wiseacre in me had several questions that popped into my head during the 2 day Hardy-a-thon, that I feel compelled to ask:

Do you think George Seitz, the pioneering director of most of the Hardy films, whose credits went back to The Perils of Pauline (1914), ever mentioned the idea of “Less is More” to Mickey?

If Judge Hardy and Emily (Mother) met as freshmen in college, how come Lewis Stone seems ancient compared to his wife?

Fay Holden with Judy Garland grabbing a breath of fresh air in Andy Hardy's world

If Emily (Mother) Hardy (Fay Holden) went to college, what could she possibly have majored in? Domestic Science? Quantum Physics? Cake decorating?

Could Mrs. Hardy’s real problem be that she is having an identity crisis due to the fact that she has so many titles and so few people address her by her actual name of Emily?

She’s “mother” to both her children and her husband, and only occasionally is called by her real name by either her sister or her husband, much less anyone else!

Have they ever considered having Mrs. Hardy evaluated for an arterial flow problem since she tends to speak in non sequiturs, i.e. in Andy Hardy Comes Home, her sister Milly asks Emmie if she’s ever dreamed about a trip around the world. Emmie’s vague reply: “Oh no. I’d like to go somewhere else.” I’m telling you, this lady’s elevator doesn’t go to the top floor.

What’s the backstory of Aunt Milly (played most memorably by Sara Haden)?  If she’s an English teacher with her own income, does she have to live with the Hardys?


Sara Haden

Have you ever noticed that when the more self-absorbed members of the Hardy family are—as usual—ignoring some important news that the Judge is dying to share with his loved ones, she is the person who asks him gently to explain what he’s getting at? Is there a bit of romantic tension between the Judge and his sister-in-law? Is it possible she’s pining for Jim Hardy (Lewis Stone)?

Has anyone ever written a master’s thesis on the evolution of the Andy Hardy figure from the personification of a quasi-rural, Jeffersonian America to the Cold Warrior Salesman he appears to be in the last and saddest Hardy movie, Andy Hardy Comes Home (1958)? Well, I’m hardly equipped to write such a thesis, but, as Mrs. Lowman said in that Arthur Miller play about another sort of salesman, attention must be paid—and for a few pages, perhaps it might be paid to a few aspects of the Hardy series.

Like that fatal potato chip prior to the Thanksgiving feast, after I started to watch the first Hardy family movie, A Family Affair (1937), however, the decision to  stop watching was a bit harder. Though not initially planned as a series but simply as a B movie featuring some engaging A players such as Lionel Barrymore and Spring Byington as Judge and Mrs. Hardy, this first movie has a more voluble Judge Hardy and a more vibrant Emily (Mother) Hardy because of the leads’ personalities. Lionel, like all the Barrymores, remains a fascinating figure for me, even when the material is rather thin and Byington, though given little to do but fuss, was an endearing presence.

After literally and figuratively digesting the contents of the films and the day’s celebration, it finally dawned on me that there were two primary reasons why I felt compelled to turn back to the Hardy films for two days. One was, as I attempted to explain above, surprisingly, Mr. Rooney, and the other was Lewis Stone. The actor most closely identified with the Judge, Lewis Stone, who began playing the part in the next film in the series, You’re Only Young Once (1937) remains an intriguing figure. Btw, according to legend, Lionel Barrymore and Lewis Stone are the only two actors who managed to remain on the MGM payroll long enough to be fully vested to receive a pension from the studio, (though neither would live long enough to enjoy much of that pension).

A younger Lewis Stone, who had a long career in silents and on the stage prior to becoming identified with Judge Hardy.

Lewis Stone (1879-1953), who always looked more grandfatherly than fatherly as Judge Hardy, (he was about 59 when he began the role), had reportedly turned gray by the time he was 20. His pensive, slow-moving, sometimes dour manner in this part makes him occasionally seem crotchety, but as the moral fulcrum of the story, his magisterial words and actions seem to help set the world right by the time The End appears. More importantly, in dramatic terms, Stone’s quiet, deliberative nature contrasts well with his screen son’s nervous energy. Stone does seem to embody an older, slower America too, while Rooney is clearly meant to personify the unbridled, sometimes foolishly optimistic spirit of America in the 20th century. Both characters seem to learn from one another throughout the series.One aspect of the arc of the series that surprised me, was that despite his calm appearance, it’s interesting how much trouble the ol’ Adjudicator, Judge Hardy, finds himself in during several of the Hardy’s adventures.

In the earlier Hardy films in which he appears, made as the Depression dragged on in America,  Stone‘s character shows some very poor judgment, being hoodwinked by con men, almost removed from the bench and investigated for his finances and decisions on more than one occasion. Despite the upper middle class trappings of the Hardy home and the esteem that is publicly expressed toward the judge’s honor and perception, Judge Hardy inevitably faces ruin of some sort in these early entries, such as Judge Hardy’s Children (1938), The Hardy’s Ride High (1938), and Judge Hardy and Son (1939)—sometimes due in part to the mischief of his dunder-headed offspring, but often due to the judge’s own flawed insight into human nature. Surely, this aspect of the early plots helped to endear the fallible Judge to often hard-pressed audiences, even though it made me wonder about his ABA rating.

The part of Judge Hardy has come to overshadow Lewis Stone‘s earlier roles, but the contemplative part was more of an anomaly in the actor’s remarkably long career than one might realize. His parts on stage and in earlier films were more often men of the world, and in some roles, Mr. Stone–believe it or not–was positively dashing.

Lewis Stone as the leading man in The Prisoner of Zenda (1922)

Becoming an actor after leaving college to serve in the Spanish-American War, Stone became a popular and romantic stage actor, originating the role of the white explorer-hero in the stage play of Bird of Paradise on Broadway in 1912 opposite a very young Laurette Taylor as the doomed South Seas native girl. This story, which was later filmed twice in the sound era in 1932 and 1951, was described by a contemporary review in the New York Times as colorful and romantic as well as ground breaking in its treatment of intermarriage among the races.

Lewis Stone fencing with Stuart Holmes in The Prisoner of Zenda (1922)

After making his successful debut in film by 1915, Stone soon became one of the most courtly figures on the silent screen, even with a mid-career interruption due to his service in World War One. Back on screen after the war, he appeared in the dual role of the Ruritanian prince and his cousin in The Prisoner of Zenda (1922), (shown at right). Some critics felt that Lewis Stone‘s characterization provided the elegant blueprint for Ronald Colman‘s ’30s version. The following year Mr. Stone’s appearance opposite Ramon Novarro in Metro director Rex Ingram’s version of Sabatini’s Scaramouche (1923) cemented his reputation for filling courtly roles with a brio that Hardy viewers might find startling. Stone‘s oily performance as the despicable The Marquis de la Tour d’Azyr who feels nothing for disdain for those who would fight for the Rights of Man in a revolutionary age gave the actor a chance to evince a talent for playing a believable villain. Both films have appeared occasionally on TCM Silent Sundays and may again prove interesting viewing and Scaramouche is now on DVD.

One adventurous role that looks as though it might have been quite a show was Stone’s appearance in director Alexander Korda‘s second film in Britain, The Private Life of Helen of Troy (1927). A comic take on the Helen of Troy story, Lewis played Menelaus in the First National production opposite Maria Corda in the title role. Miss Corda was a star in Korda’s native Hungary and the director’s wife at the time. Both she and Mr. Stone were cited by Variety for their nimble acting. Unfortunately, as with so many silent films, only about 27 minutes of this movie is said to exist in the vaults of the British Film Institute and are currently too fragile to be projected.

Lewis Stone with Maria Corda in Alexander Korda's The Private Life of Helen of Troy (1927)

Still, as we can imagine, based on the Korda reputation and the elaborate costume and sets seen in this the above image, Mr. S. cut quite a figure. Satirizing ancient myth and the eternal battle of the sexes,  Korda reportedly crafted this movie in the same irreverent vein as his later biopics, The Private Life of Henry VIII (1934) and Rembrandt (1936). The New York Times praised the topical humor throughout the send-up, singling out Stone for giving “a capital performance as the nonchalant Menelaos. He snores, he  yawns, he hates wars; but there you are, if a country demands it one  must.”

Lewis Stone in his Oscar-nominated role as Count Pahlen in the lost silent, The Patriot (1928)

Another extraordinary silent film, now believed lost, except for fragments in archives, was the “intense and vivid” The Patriot (1928), directed by Ernst Lubitsch and featuring Emil Jannings, Lewis Stone, Neil Hamilton, and Florence Vidor. This film, a portrait of the 18th century Russian Czar, Paul I, received exceptionally enthusiastic reviews, praised for its subtlety and scope, and was nominated for five Oscars: Best Film, Best Actor, Lewis Stone, Best Director, Ernst Lubitsch, Best Art Direction and Best Screenplay, (only the screenplay won an Oscar). As you can see in the enthusiastic trailer below, and in Mordaunt Hall’s rhapsodic review in The New York Times, found here, The Patriot was entertainment on a large scale.

The Patriot  Trailer Ernst Lubitsch, 1928

The Patriot Trailer Ernst Lubitsch, 1928

This movie requires Adobe Flash for playback.

Stone‘s raffish side had further workout in the seven films in which he played opposite Greta Garbo, who was at her most  mysterious in A Woman of Affairs (1928), Wild Orchids (1929), and Romance (1930).  Like a male dancer whose role on stage is often to provide a frame for the prima ballerina, Stone‘s characters provide a setting for Garbo‘s artistry. In several of these films, he often plays a man of the world who may be Garbo‘s rich older “benefactor,” an adviser or an occasional stumbling block in her quest toward romantic self-fulfillment in these flicks, as he did very effectively in the early talkie, Mata Hari (1931), pictured below.

Greta Garbo as Mata Hari (1931) with Lewis Stone.

By the time that Garbo appeared in Queen Christina (1933), Stone, and his roles had matured into that of a trusted attendant to the star. One film made with Garbo that offered Lewis Stone several moments to make his mark away from the star’s charisma, was in the ensemble film directed by Edmund Goulding, Grand Hotel (1932), based on the novel by Vicki Baum. As Doctor Otternschlag, the hotel doctor, whose face has been horribly marked by the First World War, is filled with ennui, unaware or unwilling to acknowledge the turmoil, trouble and triumphs of the characters surrounding him in the lobby of the gathering place where he hovers, a ghost-like presence who observes that “Grand Hotel… always the same. People come, people go. Nothing ever happens.”

Lewis Stone as Doctor Otternschlag in Grand Hotel (1932).

However, there were still some interesting parts awaiting the actor at Metro. Strictly Dishonorable (1931), based on a hit Broadway play by Preston Sturges, gave the actor a nice foreshadowing of his later part as a very playful, amusingly philosophical alcoholic judge in an ensemble cast led by Paul Lukas. The sophisticated film casts a tolerant  eye on the denizens of a speakeasy where the sober Judge Hardy would never be seen.

Lewis Stone counseling a flirtatious Sidney Fox in Strictly Dishonorable (1931)

One other pre-Hardy part that Lewis Stone played is, in my opinion, among his very best, blending the actor’s skill for projecting an introspective nature with some lively Western action. Directed by Richard Boleslawski, (a pioneering influence in introducing Stanislawski’s acting principles to this country), Three Godfathers (1936) is the second of at least three remakes of a Peter Kyne novel about a band of robbers who find themselves wandering in the desert, like the Magi at the first Christmas, though these bandits find themselves toting a newborn baby. The far more well known 1948 remake by John Ford, (who also directed a silent version in 1919 called Marked Men), stars John Wayne, Pedro Armendariz and Harry (Dobie) Carey, Jr. Given Ford’s painterly gifts, it is a magnificent desert tableau to look at, though, perhaps the material receives too sentimental a treatment by the director. Yet for those who’ve seen the grittier, low budget 1936 version, which stars Chester Morris, Walter Brennan and Stone,  there may be no contest in choosing a favorite version for some of us.

Chester Morris, Walter Brennan & Lewis Stone tend to the baby in 3 Godfathers (1936)

The ’30s version, photographed by one of the masters, Joseph Ruttenberg, is able to communicate the bleakness of the setting in a straight forward manner. This is perfect for the Depression era, tougher treatment giving the basic storyline a sharper edge with fewer sentimental frills. Chester Morris is outstanding in the leading part of the villain with the darkest nature of the three, both charming, brusque and dangerous. Brennan‘s rather sad, illiterate cowpoke is also touching and real, especially in his wonderful scenes  with Lewis Stone, who plays an educated man who, finding himself at a dead end in the desert, still turns to Schopenhauer and Shakespeare for some hoped-for perspective. Mulling over the path that led him to throw his life away as the bleakness of their circumstances becomes clearer, Stone‘s legacy to a hapless Brennan and a cold Morris is to remind them that they are still human. Encountering this previously unknown film (to me at least), a couple of years ago on TCM, I’ve never forgotten its power and the subtle, forgotten performance by Lewis Stone, who clearly, was more than Judge Hardy.

Upcoming Mickey Rooney movies on TCM can be seen here.

Upcoming Lewis Stone movies on TCM can be seen here.

Lewis Stone, taking a breather from his role as Menelaus, just outside the stage where The Private Life of Helen of Troy (1927) was filming.

Sources:

Eyman, Scott, The Lion of Hollywood: The Life and Legend of Louis B. Mayer. Simon & Schuster. 2005.
Gabler, Neal, An Empire of Their Own: How the Jews Invented Hollywood. Doubleday, 1988.
Thomson, David, The New Biographical Dictionary of Film. Alfred A. Knopf, 2002.

MovieMorlocks.com is the official blog for TCM. No topic is too obscure or niche to be excluded from our film discussions. And we welcome your comments on our blogs and bloggers.
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