Unfaithfully Yours (1948 film)
Unfaithfully Yours | |
---|---|
theatrical poster | |
Directed by | Preston Sturges |
Produced by | Preston Sturges |
Written by | Preston Sturges |
Starring |
Rex Harrison Linda Darnell Rudy Vallée Barbara Lawrence |
Music by | Alfred Newman (musical director) |
Cinematography | Victor Milner |
Edited by | Robert Fritch |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Twentieth Century-Fox |
Release dates |
November 5, 1948 (NYC) December 10 (general) |
Running time | 105 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | just under $2 million[1] |
Unfaithfully Yours is a 1948 American screwball comedy film written and directed by Preston Sturges and starring Rex Harrison, Linda Darnell, Rudy Vallée and Barbara Lawrence. The film is a black comedy about a man's failed attempt to murder his wife, whom he believes has been unfaithful to him. Although the film, which was the first of two Sturges made for Twentieth Century-Fox, received mostly positive reviews, it was not successful at the box office.[2]
Plot
Sir Alfred de Carter (Rex Harrison) is a world-famous symphony conductor who returns from a visit to his native England and discovers that his rich and boring brother-in-law, August Henshler (Rudy Vallée), has misunderstood Alfred's casual instruction to watch over his much younger wife Daphne (Linda Darnell) while he was away, and instead hired a detective named Sweeney (Edgar Kennedy) to follow her. Alfred is livid, and ineptly attempts to destroy any evidence of the detective's report.
Eventually, despite his efforts, he learns the content of the report directly from Sweeney: while he was gone, his wife was spied late at night going to the hotel room of Alfred's secretary, Anthony Windborn (Kurt Kreuger), a man closer in age to her own, where she stayed for thirty-eight minutes.
Distressed by the news, Alfred quarrels with Daphne before proceeding to his concert, where he conducts three distinct pieces of romantic-era music, envisioning revenge scenarios appropriate to each one: a complicated "perfect crime" scenario in which he murders his wife and frames Windborn (to the Overture to Rossini's Semiramide), nobly accepting the situation and giving Daphne a generous check and his blessing (to the Prelude to Wagner's Tannhäuser), and a game of Russian roulette with a blubbering Windborn, that ends in de Carter's Suicide (to Tchaikovsky's Francesca da Rimini.)
After the concert, Alfred tries to stage his fantasy of murdering his wife, but is thwarted by his own ineptness, making a mess of their apartment in the process. When Daphne returns home, he realizes that she really loves him, and learns that she is innocent of Sweeney's charges: she had gone to Windborn's room in search of her sister Barbara (Barbara Lawrence), August's wife, who was having an affair with Windborn, and became trapped there when she saw Sweeney spying on the room. Alfred begs Daphne's forgiveness for his irrational behavior, which she gladly gives, ascribing it to the creative temperament of a great artist.[3][4]
Cast
- Rex Harrison as Sir Alfred de Carter
- Linda Darnell as Daphne de Carter
- Rudy Vallée as August Henshler
- Barbara Lawrence as Barbara Henshler
- Kurt Kreuger as Anthony Windborn
- Lionel Stander as Hugo Standoff
- Edgar Kennedy as Detective Sweeney
- Al Bridge as House Detective
- Julius Tannen as O'Brien
- Torben Meyer as Dr. Schultz
- Georgia Caine as Dowager (uncredited)
- Robert Greig as Jules, the Valet (uncredited)
- Max Wagner as Stage Manager (uncredited)
- Cast notes
- As with the films he made at Paramount, Preston Sturges makes use of his unofficial "stock company" of character actors, including: Al Bridge, Georgia Caine, Robert Greig, J. Farrell MacDonald, George Melford, Torben Meyer, Frank Moran and Max Wagner. In addition, Rudy Vallee, Edgar Kennedy and Lionel Stander appeared in Sturges' previous film, The Sin of Harold Diddlebock.
- Jimmy Conlin, one of Sturges' regular actors, played the role of Daphne's father, but the character was cut before the film was released.[2]
Music
Each of Alfred's three fantasy revenge scenarios is accompanied by music appropriate for the mood of the particular scene, which is underscored throughout. Rex Harrison is shown rehearsing and directing real musicians from known orchestras.
- Overture to the opera Semiramide by Gioacchino Rossini, about a femme fatale as Alfred envisages his wife to be.
- Overture to the opera Tannhäuser und der Sängerkrieg auf Wartburg by Richard Wagner, about renunciation of carnal love for a higher and more spiritual goal, as Alfred sees himself in that situation.
- The tone poem Francesca da Rimini by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky,[5] referring to the infernal destiny awaiting an adulterous wife, such as Dante's character.
Production
Preston Sturges wrote the original screen story for Unfaithfully Yours in 1932 – the idea came to him when a melancholy song on the radio influenced him while working on writing a comic scene. Sturges shopped the script to Fox, Universal and Paramount who all rejected it during the 1930s.[2]
In 1938, Sturges envisioned Ronald Colman playing de Carter, and later initially wanted Frances Ramsden – who was introduced in Sturges' 1947 film The Sin of Harold Diddlebock – to play Daphne; but by the time casting for the film began, he wanted James Mason for the conductor and Gene Tierney for his wife.[2]
Studio attorneys were worried about the similarity between Sturges' character Sir Alfred de Carter, a famous English conductor, and the real-life famous English conductor Sir Thomas Beecham; they warned Sturges to tone down the parallels, but the similarity was noted in some reviews anyway.[2] (Beecham's grandfather was Thomas Beecham, a chemist who invented Beecham's Pills, a laxative. It is speculated that Sturges named his character de Carter after Carter's Little Liver Pills.)[6]
Unfaithfully Yours, which had the working titles of "Unfinished Symphony" and "The Symphony Story", went into production on February 18, 1948, and wrapped in mid April of that year.[7] By 28 June the film had already been sneak-previewed, with a runtime of 127 minutes, but the film's release was delayed to avoid any backlash from the suicide of actress Carole Landis in July. It was rumored that Landis and Rex Harrison had been having an affair, and that she committed suicide when Harrison refused to get a divorce and marry her. Harrison discovered Landis' body in her home.[2]
The film premiered in New York City on November 5, 1948, and went into general release on December 10.[8] The Los Angeles premiere was on December 14.[7] It was marketed with the tagline: Will somebody "get her" tonite?[9]
In February 1949, after the film was released, William D. Shapiro, who claimed to be an independent film producer,[10] sued Fox and Sturges with a claim that the story of the film was plagiarized from an unproduced screen story by Arthur Hoerl, which Shapiro had been intending to produce. The connection was supposedly composer Werner Heymann, who frequently worked with Sturges and whom Shapiro had interviewed to be the music director on his film.[2]
The studio-quality recorder that cut phonograph records seen in the film is similar to ones used to secretly tape Horowitz and Benny Goodman during their concerts at Carnegie Hall and on the NBC Radio studios at Rockefeller Center. These rough cuts were later mastered into LPs which came to be considered classics. Arthur Rubinstein owned three of these devices. They were difficult to use and required experienced technicians.
Reception
While rich with the sharp dialogue that became Sturges' trademark, the film was not a box office success. Critics usually attribute this to the darkness of the subject matter, especially for a comedy. The idea of a bungling murderer did not sit well with 1948 audiences, and the fact that none of the characters are especially sympathetic certainly did not help.
In 2008, director Quentin Tarantino placed the film at number 8 in his top 11 movies of all time.
Sturges, whose previous film, The Sin of Harold Diddlebock had been pulled from distribution shortly after being released, never fully recovered from the lukewarm reception given to Unfaithfully Yours, and many point to it as the movie which effectively ended his career. Despite this, it is considered today by many critics to be an outstanding film, as evidenced by a recent DVD release through the Criterion Collection.[4]
Home media
The Criterion Company released a DVD of the film, featuring additional audio commentary by Sturges scholars James Harvey, Diane Jacobs, and Brian Henderson.[11]
Remake
Twentieth Century-Fox remade the film in 1984 under the same title, with Dudley Moore, Nastassja Kinski, Armand Assante and Albert Brooks and directed by Howard Zieff.[2] The remake, however, eliminated the theme of three different pieces of music inspiring three different response or revenge scenarios.
See also
References
- ↑ James Curtis, Between Flops: A Biography of Preston Sturges, Limelight, 1984 p229
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 TCM Notes
- ↑ TCM Full synopsis
- 1 2 Erlewine, Stephen Thomas Plot synopsis (Allmovie)
- ↑ TCM Music
- ↑ Unfaithfully Yours at the Internet Movie Database
- 1 2 TCM Overview
- ↑ IMDB Release dates
- ↑ IMDB Taglines
- ↑ William D. Shapiro at the Internet Movie Database
- ↑ Lethem, Jonathan (July 11, 2005). "Unfaithfully Yours (1948)". The Criterion Collection.
External links
- Unfaithfully Yours (1948) at the Internet Movie Database
- Unfaithfully Yours (1948) at the TCM Movie Database
- Unfaithfully Yours (1948) at AllMovie