Stage Mother (1933 film)
{{short description|1933 film by Charles Brabin}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Stage Mother
| image = Stage Mother (1933) Lobby Card.jpg
| alt =
| caption = 1933 Lobby Card
| director = Charles Brabin
| producer = Hunt Stromberg
| screenplay = John Meehan
Bradford Ropes
| based_on = {{Based on|Stage Mother (1933 novel)|Bradford Ropes}}
| starring = Alice Brady
Maureen O'Sullivan
| music = Arthur Freed
Nacio Herb Brown
Fred Fisher
| cinematography = George J. Folsey
| editing = Frank E. Hull
| studio = Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
| distributor = Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Loew's
| released = {{Film date|1933|09|29}}
| runtime = 85 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
}}
Stage Mother is a 1933 American pre-Code drama film directed by Charles Brabin and starring Alice Brady and Maureen O'Sullivan. The film is about a frustrated vaudeville performer who pushes her daughter into becoming a star dancer; selfishness, deceit and blackmail drive mother and daughter apart until a reconciliation at the end of the film. The screenplay was written by John Meehan and Bradford Ropes, based on the 1933 novel of the same name by Ropes.
Plot
Four years after her vaudevillian husband's death, Kitty Lorraine, a frustrated former performer, marries comic Ralph Martin and returns to the stage, leaving behind her four-year-old daughter Shirley with her former in-laws. Fed up after ten years of Ralph's drinking, Kitty divorces him and sends for her now 14-year-old daughter. Two years of training allows Shirley to land a featured role in a touring music revue. Upon Shirley's return to New York City, Kitty blackmails the revue's manager into breaking Shirley's contract so she can take the starring role in a Broadway revue.
During tryouts in Boston, Shirley returns to her family home and meets Warren Foster, an artist now living there. She takes advantage of her mother's sudden illness to continue seeing Warren, eventually staying the night with him. When Kitty intercepts a love letter from Warren to Shirley, she blackmails Warren's parents for $10,000. Warren angrily denounces Shirley.
Shirley next takes up with Al Dexter, a candidate for mayor. When his political operatives get wind of the relationship they pay Kitty $25,000 to sail with Shirley to Europe. On board ship, Shirley meets Lord Reggie Aylesworth. Worried that the class-conscious Reggie will abandon her, Shirley denies that Kitty is her mother, claiming she is merely a stage mother. Reggie proposes and Shirley accepts, blithely informing Kitty both of the lie and that she will not be welcomed in her new home. A contrite Kitty hands over another intercepted love letter from Warren and gives Shirley her blessing for a happy life.[https://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/430/stage-mother#synopsis Overview for Stage Mother (1933)]
Cast
{{ Cast listing |
- Alice Brady as Katherine 'Kitty' Lorraine
- Maureen O'Sullivan as Shirley Lorraine
- Franchot Tone as Warren Foster
- Phillips Holmes as Lord Reggie Aylesworth
- Ted Healy as Ralph Martin
- Russell Hardie as Frederick 'Fred' Lorraine
- C. Henry Gordon as Ricco
- Alan Edwards as Al Dexter
- Ben Alexander as Francis Nolan
- {{IMDb name|id=0011161|name=Lowden Adams}} as Dexter's Butler
- Luis Alberni as Hors D'Oeuvres Waiter
- Sam Ash as Mr. Mark Thorne
- Hank Bell as Mustached Man With Badge
- Margaret Bert as Nurse
- Nora Cecil as Miss Gilford - Kitty's Music Store Boss
- Elspeth Dudgeon as Music Store Customer
- Jay Eaton as Mr. Sterling the Dance Instructor
- Bill Elliott as Audience Member / Dexter's Party Guest
- John Elliott as Politician
- Larry Fine as Music Department customer
- Bud Geary as Orderly
- Ruth Gillette as Blonde
- June Gittelson as Laughing Fat Woman
- Harrison Greene as Stage Manager
- Lillian Harmer as Fred's Mother
- Aggie Herring as The Landlady
- Harry Holman as Mr. Rumley
- Mary Ann Jackson as Auditioning Child Dancer
- Gladden James as Audience Member
- Lew Kelly as Jake - Stagehand
- Alice Lake as Audience Member
- John Larkin as The Porter
- Buddy Messinger as Fellow in Third Row
- Greta Meyer as Dancing Girl's Mother
- Bert Moorhouse as Navy Officer
- Edmund Mortimer as Shipboard Extra / Audience Extra
- Frank O'Connor as Man at Gangplank
- Garry Owen as Jerry - Stagehand
- Bradley Page as Tom Banton
- Shirley Jean Rickert as Shirley Lorraine as a child
- Tom Ricketts as Fred's Father
- Henry Roquemore as Messenger
- Phillips Smalley as Music Store Manager
- Larry Steers as Dexter's Party Guest
- Carl Stockdale as Stagehand
- Carl Switzer as 'Irish Eyes' singer
- Guy Usher as Theater Owner
- Leo White as Percy - Audition Manager
- Beal Wong as Stage Extra
- Tammany Young as Taxi Driver
}}
Production
File:Stagemothertrailer1.jpgStage Mother was based on the novel of the same name by Bradford Ropes, whose earlier book 42nd Street had been adapted into the successful 1933 film.Barrios, p. 108
The film includes the songs "Beautiful Girl" and "I'm Dancing on a Rainbow" with words and music by Nacio Herb Brown and Arthur Freed, and "Any Little Girl, That's a Nice Little Girl, Is the Right Little Girl for Me" with words and music by Fred Fisher.[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0024609/soundtrack Stage Mother music]
Reception
Mordaunt Hall for The New York Times finds many of the film's scenarios "utterly implausible" but praises Brady for making them somewhat believable. He credits Brady's acting and Brabin's direction with making Stage Mother "infinitely more acceptable than most others of its type".[https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9E02E3D91631E333A25753C3A96F9C946294D6CF Alice Brady and Maureen O'Sullivan as Mother and Daughter in the New Film at the Capitol.]
Film historian Richard Barrios identified Stage Mother as an example of the presentation of "coded" homosexual imagery in early film. The Motion Picture Production Code banned overt portrayals of homosexuality but the Code was laxly enforced until July 1, 1934, when Joseph Breen took over. The character of Mr. Sterling, Shirley's dance instructor, typifies the motion picture homosexual. Posing with hands on hips, Sterling lisps his way through his scene with Kitty and Shirley and even exchanges dialogue with Kitty implying that she will fix him up with other men in the theatre.
Notes
References
- Barrios, Richard (2003). Screened Out: Playing Gay in Hollywood from Edison to Stonewall. Psychology Press. {{ISBN|0-415-92328-X}}.
External links
- {{IMDb title|tt0024609}}
- {{TCMDb title|430}}
{{Charles Brabin}}
Category:American LGBTQ-related films
Category:American musical drama films
Category:Films based on American novels
Category:Films directed by Charles Brabin
Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
Category:LGBTQ-related musical drama films
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:1930s musical drama films
Category:1930s LGBTQ-related films