- Twentieth Century (film)
Infobox Film
name = Twentieth Century
image_size = 225px
caption = theatrical poster
director =Howard Hawks
producer = Howard Hawks
writer = Unproduced Play:
Charles Bruce Millholland
Play & Screenplay:Charles MacArthur Ben Hecht
Uncredited:Gene Fowler Preston Sturges
starring =John Barrymore Carole Lombard
music =Howard Jackson Louis Silvers Harry M. Woods
cinematography =Joseph H. August
editing = Gene Havlick
distributor =Columbia Pictures
released = 3 May fy|1934
"(NYC premiere)"
11 May "(US)"
runtime = 91 minutes
country = FilmUS
language = English
budget =
gross =
imdb_id = 0025919"Twentieth Century" is a fy|1934 American
screwball comedy film , set on the "20th Century Limited ", a luxury train travelling fromChicago toNew York City .Ben Hecht andCharles MacArthur adapted their Broadway play of the same nameibdb title|11702|Twentieth Century] – itself based on the unproduced play "Napoleon of Broadway" by Charles Bruce Millhollandimdb title|0025919|Twentieth Century] – with uncredited assistance fromGene Fowler andPreston Sturges . The film was directed byHoward Hawks , starsJohn Barrymore andCarole Lombard , and featuresWalter Connolly ,Roscoe Karns andEdgar Kennedy .Along with
Frank Capra 's "It Happened One Night ", also released in 1934, "Twentieth Century" is considered to be a prototype for the screwball comedy.Plot
Among the passengers on the luxurious "Twentieth Century Limited" travelling from
Chicago to New York City'sGrand Central Terminal , is the flamboyant and egomaniacal Broadway impresario Oscar Jaffe (John Barrymore ). Oscar is a bigger ham than most actors, who has built a successful career through drive and talent, but after a string of dismal flops he's bankrupt and desperately in need of a hit. On the train, which he's taking to duck his creditors, he chances to meet Lily Garland (Carole Lombard ), a former shopgirl named "Mildred Plotka" who Oscar had discovered as a chorus girl and molded into a star – as well as his lover – but who escaped from his jealously obsessive control of her life and career by answering the call ofHollywood . Oscar is determined to woo his former star back to the stage, and perhaps into his bed, but the temperamental Lily wants nothing to do with him, either professionally or romantically. [IMDB [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0025919/plotsummary Plot summary] ] [Allmovie [http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:51294 Overview] ] [TCM [http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title.jsp?stid=27561&category=Full%20Synopsis Full synopsis] ]Cast
Cast notes:
*Etienne Girardot was the only actor from the original Broadway cast of "Twentieth Century" to appear in the film.Production
The genesis of "Twentieth Century" was "Napoleon of Broadway", a play by Charles Bruce Millholland about his experiences in working for the legendary and eccentric Broadway producer
David Belasco . [TCM [http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title.jsp?stid=27561&category=Trivia Trivia] ] His play was not produced, but it became the basis for the Hecht-MacArthur comedy, which played for 152 performances on Broadway beginning on29 December fy|1932, and which they later adapted for the big screen.Director
Howard Hawks was not the first choice to helm the film:Roy Del Ruth andLewis Milestone had been set to direct before Hawks got the job. Columbia tried to getWilliam Frawley from the Broadway cast, but instead borrowed Roscoe Karns from Paramount instead.TCM [http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title.jsp?stid=27561&category=Notes Notes] ]Carole Lombard was not the first choice for "Lily Garland". Columbia boss
Harry Cohn negotiated withEugenie Leontovich , who played the part on Broadway, and then consideredGloria Swanson andMiriam Hopkins . Other reports say that Cohn also approachedIna Claire ,Tallulah Bankhead ,Ruth Chatterton ,Constance Bennett ,Ann Harding ,Kay Francis andJoan Crawford for the part. However, Hawks believed that in Lombard lay a brilliant actress that had yet to be unleashed on film. He convinced Columbia to borrow her fromParamount Studios . Columbia reluctantly agreed and Lombard was brought in.During her initial reading with
John Barrymore he looked to Hawks with an expression that showed he did not believe in Hawks' intiative. The rest of the production went dryly, with Lombard staggering through one scene after another and playing the same stoic characters that she had been taught to portray. Hawks took her aside and asked her what she was being paid for the film. Lombard told him and Hawks asked her what she would do if a man said "something" about her, coming up with an example from the back of his mind. Lombard said, "I would kick him in the balls." Hawks said, "Well, Barrymore said that, so why don't you kick him?" Of course Barrymore had said nothing of the sort, but the plan worked and after Lombard yelped a few profanities, she continued through the shoot with an unforgettable vigor. For the rest of her career, before beginning a film, Lombard would always sell atelegram to Hawks saying, "I'm going to kick him!" Also for the cast,The film made lifelong friends out of Lombard and Barrymore. When Barrymore's career was fumbling, Lombard raised hell to get him to work on her film "True Confession (1937)".
Preston Sturges was hired to write the screenplay around late November fy|1933, but was removed from the project a week later because he hadn't made sufficient progress. Columbia then tried to getHerman Mankiewicz to write it, withFelix Young to produce."Twentieth Century" – a title which Columbia considered changing because they feared that many Westerners would not be familiar with the name of the train – was in production from
22 February to24 March fy|1934. [IMDB [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0025919/business Business data] ]During the filming, there were some problem with the censors at the
Hays Office , who were concerned about the religious angle in the comedy of the film, and requested that it be toned down.Joseph I. Breen , who ran the Office, worried that "there will be serious difficulty in inducing an anti-Semitic public to accept a [motion picture] play produced by an industry believed to be Jewish in which the Passion Play is used for comedy purposes." The Office ultimately asked that one line be removed, which it was. They also requested that it be made less clear where Oscar jabs Lily with a pin.The film was premiered in New York on
3 May fy|1934 and went into general release on11 May . [IMDB [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0025919/releaseinfo Release dates] ] Its success propelled Carole Lombard into the front ranks of film commediennes.Bozzola, Lucia [http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:51294~T1 Allmovie review] ]Notes
External links
*imdb title|0025919|Twentieth Century
*tcmdb title|27561|Twentieth Century
*amg movie|1:51294|Twentieth Century
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.