- Dinner at Eight (film)
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Dinner at Eight
Film posterDirected by George Cukor Produced by David O. Selznick Screenplay by Frances Marion
Herman J. MankiewiczStarring Marie Dressler
John Barrymore
Wallace Beery
Jean Harlow
Lionel Barrymore
Billie BurkeMusic by William Axt Cinematography William H. Daniels Editing by Ben Lewis Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Release date(s) August 29, 1933 Running time 113 minutes Country United States Language English Budget $435,000 Dinner at Eight is a Pre-Code 1933 comedy of manners/drama produced by MGM Studios. The film was adapted to the screen by Frances Marion and Herman J. Mankiewicz from the play by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber, with additional dialogue supplied by Donald Ogden Stewart. Produced by David O. Selznick, it was directed by George Cukor.
Contents
Synopsis
Although it can technically be called a romantic comedy, Dinner at Eight is a study of people during the Great Depression. The movie addresses topics that include wealthy people dealing with the loss of money and prestige; relationships between men and women involving power, blind love, selfishness, and unselfishness; and relationships between the wealthy and those who work for them.
One week before her next society dinner, Millicent Jordan (Billie Burke) receives word that Lord and Lady Ferncliffe, whom she and her husband Oliver (Lionel Barrymore), a New York shipping magnate, had met in England the previous year, have accepted her invitation. Overjoyed by this social coup, Millicent is oblivious to Oliver's lack of enthusiasm about the dinner and her daughter Paula's (Madge Evans) preoccupation about the impending return of her fiancé, Ernest DeGraff (Phillips Holmes), from Europe. Millicent fusses about finding an "extra man" as escort for her single female guest, former stage star Carlotta Vance (Marie Dressler), who resides in Europe.
Meanwhile Oliver faces distressing news about his shipping business, which has been struck hard by the Depression. He is concerned that someone is secretly trying to buy the company stock. Carlotta, a former lover of Oliver, visits him at his office and confesses that she is nearly broke and very eager to sell her stock in the Jordan Shipping Line. She asks Oliver to buy it from her but he is not financially able to do so.
While conversing with Carlotta, Oliver is visited by Dan Packard (Wallace Beery), a rough-talking, nouveau-riche mining magnate. Oliver confides his financial struggles to Dan and asks him to take over some of his stocks until business improves. With blustering hesitation, Dan agrees only to consider Oliver's proposition, then goes home to brag to his brassy, gold digger wife Kitty (Jean Harlow) that the Jordan Line is a valuable asset and he intends to devour it through crooked stock purchases.
Unknown to Dan, Oliver has convinced Millicent to invite the Packards to her dinner in the hope that it will end Dan's hesitation to buy the stock. The ill-mannered but socially ambitious Kitty has eagerly accepted the invitation but Dan refuses to go, believing he is soon to be appointed to a cabinet position in Washington and, therefore, far above the Jordans. He changes his mind at the mention of the Ferncliffes, the richest couple in England. Another of Millicent's guests, Dr. Wayne Talbot (Edmund Lowe), has been carrying on a clandestine affair with Kitty while making a pretense of tending to her feigned illnesses.
On the eve of her dinner, Millicent, still short an extra man, telephones Larry Renault (John Barrymore), a washed-up silent movie star, and extends a last-minute invitation, utterly unaware that Paula is having a covert love affair with him. At Paula's urging, Larry, a three-time divorcé and hardened alcoholic, accepts the invitation, but advises the much younger Paula to forget him and return to Ernest. After Paula stubbornly refuses to take Larry's admonitions seriously, she is seen leaving his room by Carlotta, who is staying at the same hotel.
Larry is visited by his agent, Max Kane (Lee Tracy), who tells him that the stage play he was planning to star in has lost its original producer. Max breaks the news to Larry that the play's new producer, Jo Stengel (Jean Hersholt), wants another actor in the lead but is willing to consider Larry for a bit part. Although crushed, Larry agrees to think over the offer, then desperately sends a bellboy to pawn a few of his possessions for a bottle of alcohol.
The next day, Dr. Talbot is discovered by his wife Lucy (Karen Morley) in a compromising telephone call with Kitty and confesses that, in spite of his love for her, he is addicted to women and needs help to overcome his weakness. Talbot then rushes to see Oliver, who has come to the Doctor's office with severe chest pains.
Although Talbot tries to hide his prognosis of terminal thrombosis of the heart, Oliver deduces the seriousness of his illness. When he returns home, the weakened Oliver tries to explain to Millicent his need for rest, but she is too hysterical to hear because, among other minor disasters, the Ferncliffes have cancelled and are on their way to Florida. Although anxious to tell Millicent about Larry, Paula, too, is turned away by her upset mother and faces the prospect of confronting Ernest alone.
At the Packards, meanwhile, Kitty reveals to Dan in a fit of anger that she is having an affair. When threatened with divorce, however, Kitty tells her husband that, if he wants his Cabinet appointment instead of a career-stopping revelation from her about his crooked dealings, he must back down from his takeover of Oliver's line and treat her with more respect.
Just before he leaves for the dinner, Larry is visited by Max and Jo Stengel and drunkenly berates Stengel for insulting him with his paltry offer. After a frustrated Max denounces him for ruining his last career chance and the hotel management asks him to leave, Larry quietly turns on his gas fireplace and commits suicide.
At the ill-fated dinner, Carlotta confides Larry's demise in private to Paula, who is just about to break her engagement with Ernest. She counsels the young woman to remain with her fiancé. At the same time, Millicent learns from Talbot about Oliver's illness. Finally awakened to her selfishness, Millicent announces to Oliver that she is ready to make sacrifices for the family and become a more attentive wife. Then, as the beleaguered guests are about to go in to dinner, Dan, with prodding from Kitty, tells Oliver that he has put a stop to the takeover of the Jordan shipping line.
Primary cast
- Marie Dressler as Carlotta Vance, an aging actress dealing with the loss of prestige
- John Barrymore as Larry Renault, a washed-up, drunken actor
- Wallace Beery as Dan Packard, a successful, crooked, bully of a businessman
- Jean Harlow as Kitty Packard, a lonely, conceited woman
- Lionel Barrymore as Oliver Jordan, a kind businessman whose business is failing
- Lee Tracy as Max Kane, Larry Renault's desperate agent
- Edmund Lowe as Dr. Wayne Talbot, an unfaithful husband, doctor to the rich
- Billie Burke as Millicent Jordan, a shallow, wealthy socialite
- Madge Evans as Paula Jordan, the Jordans' slightly rebellious daughter
- Jean Hersholt as Jo Stengel, a theatrical agent
- Karen Morley as Lucy Talbot, Wayne Talbot's longsuffering wife
- Phillips Holmes as Ernest DeGraff, fiancé of Paula Jordan
- Edwin Maxwell as Mr. Fitch, the hotel manager
- Louise Closser Hale, as Hattie Loomis, a dinner guest
- Grant Mitchell, as Ed Loomis, a dinner guest
Awards and honors
American Film Institute recognition
- 2000: AFI's 100 Years... 100 Laughs #85
External links
- Dinner at Eight at the Internet Movie Database
- Dinner at Eight at AllRovi
- Dinner at Eight at the TCM Movie Database
Films directed by George Cukor 1930s Grumpy (1930) • The Virtuous Sin (1930) • The Royal Family of Broadway (1930) • Tarnished Lady (1931) • Girls About Town (1931) • What Price Hollywood? (1932) • A Bill of Divorcement (1932) • Rockabye (1932) • Our Betters (1933) • Dinner at Eight (1933) • Little Women (1933) • David Copperfield (1935) • Sylvia Scarlett (1935) • Romeo and Juliet (1936) • Camille (1936) • Holiday (1938) • Zaza (1939) • The Women (1939)1940s Susan and God (1940) • The Philadelphia Story (1940) • A Woman's Face (1941) • Two-Faced Woman (1941) • Her Cardboard Lover (1942) • Keeper of the Flame (1942) • Gaslight (1944) • Winged Victory (1944) • A Double Life (1947) • Edward, My Son (1949) • Adam's Rib (1949)1950s A Life of Her Own (1950) • Born Yesterday (1950) • The Model and the Marriage Broker (1951) • The Marrying Kind (1952) • Pat and Mike (1952) • The Actress (1953) • It Should Happen to You (1954) • A Star Is Born (1954) • Bhowani Junction (1956) • Les Girls (1957) • Wild Is the Wind (1957)1960s Heller in Pink Tights (1960) • Let's Make Love (1960) • Something's Got to Give (1962) • The Chapman Report (1962) • My Fair Lady (1964) • Justine (1969)1970s Travels with My Aunt (1972) • Love Among the Ruins (1975) • The Blue Bird (1976) • The Corn is Green (1979)1980s Rich and Famous (1981)Categories:- English-language films
- 1933 films
- American films
- American romantic comedy films
- Films set in New York City
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
- 1930s romantic comedy films
- 1930s comedy-drama films
- Films directed by George Cukor
- Black-and-white films
- Films made before the MPAA Production Code
- Great Depression films
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