Saratoga (film)

Last updated
Saratoga
Saratoga poster.jpg
Theatrical poster
Directed by Jack Conway
Screenplay by Anita Loos
Robert Hopkins
Story byAnita Loos
Robert Hopkins
Produced byBernard H. Hyman
Starring Clark Gable
Jean Harlow
Cinematography Ray June
Edited by Elmo Veron
Music by Edward Ward
Production
company
Distributed by Loew's Inc.
Release date
  • July 23, 1937 (1937-07-23)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1.1 million [1]
Box office$3.252 million (worldwide rentals) [1] [2]

Saratoga is a 1937 American romantic comedy film starring Clark Gable and Jean Harlow and directed by Jack Conway. The screenplay was written by Anita Loos. Lionel Barrymore, Frank Morgan, Walter Pidgeon, and Una Merkel appear as featured players; Hattie McDaniel and Margaret Hamilton appear in support. It was the sixth and final film collaboration of Gable and Harlow.

Contents

Jean Harlow died before filming was finished, and it was completed using stand-ins. Saratoga was MGM's most successful film of 1937 and became the highest-grossing film of Harlow's career.

Plot

The bank is taking the stud from Grandpa Clayton (Lionel Barrymore) and the family's Brookvale Farm in Saratoga. Bookie Duke Bradley (Clark Gable), a longtime friend, stops it by buying him back. Snooty granddaughter Carol (Jean Harlow), a bombshell seeking to acquire a European patina, calls from an English estate. She announces her engagement to the wealthy Wall Street mogul Hartley Madison (Walter Pidgeon), a former pony player who once took Duke for $50,000. Duke takes the call, and breaks the news to her father, Frank Clayton (Jonathan Hale), and Grandpa. Broke, Frank gives Duke the deed to Brookvale to pay his gambling debts. At the races, Duke takes bets and meets Hartley and Carol. Duke is desperate to draw Hartley back to the track. Carol is adamantly against it. Duke greets attractive old friend Fritzi (Una Merkel) with a kiss. During a race, Frank collapses and dies.

Carol asks Duke to sell her back the farm, but Duke assures her he won't foreclose on Grandpa. They quarrel about her marrying for money. Fritzi tells Duke that her new husband, cold cream magnate Jesse Kiffmeyer (Frank Morgan), is allergic to horses. To ensure she still gets the one she wants, Dubonnet, Duke finesses Jesse's sneeze at a horse auction into the winning bid on it. Grandpa tells Duke that Carol is selling her horse, Moonray; she tells Duke she needs money to pay him off. Deftly avoiding Carol's sucker play, Duke bids Hartley up to $14,000 at the auction, then drops out, doubling the slap by guaranteeing that as an owner Hartley will come back to the track. Hartley asks Grandpa to train Moonray.

Carol studies horses and wins money from Duke. They spend much time together at the tracks and traveling between them the length of the Atlantic seaboard by rail. In the process Carol begins to thaw towards Duke, initiating a push-pull relationship. Seeking to get Harley down to Florida to bet, Duke calls on him in New York and tells him Carol needs help with her nerves. Hartley flies down with Dr. Bierd (George Zucco), who says Carol is "emotional", a euphemism for raging sex hormones going unanswered. He insists she should marry soon or avoid seeing Hartley. The tempestuousness, however, is all about her affection for Duke and his fluctuating allegiances.

Laying bait to get Hartley to stick around, Duke gets him to wager and win $6,000. Carol tells Hartley not to bet with Duke, insisting he's just out to swindle him. After convincing Hartley to leave, Carol then asks him to stay. Hartley bets with Duke and loses $5,000.

On a train Duke dines with Fritzi and Jesse, who is madly jealous of Duke, believing he's carrying on with Fritzi. She knows Duke is in love with Carol, and Duke says he plans to win enough money to marry her and be able to run Brookvale farm properly. Carol tells Duke she loves him and intends to break off her engagement to Hartley. When Duke objects to losing him as a pigeon, she gets angry. At the races, Hartley loses.

The Hopeful Stakes, the biggest race of the season at Saratoga, is to be run. Hartley hires a new trainer for Moonray. Gambling everything, Duke accepts Hartley's $100,000 wager on Moonray to win, confident he will still triumph with top jockey Dixie Gordon (Frankie Darro) on Dubonnet. Carol secretly gets Jesse to turn over his contract with Dixie, shifting him upon Moonray so Duke will lose. Fritzi tells the still insanely jealous Jesse that if Duke wins, he will marry Carol, completely changing Jesse's tune but too late to reverse the fix. The race is close and contentious, with a jockey formerly bullied by Dixie standing up to him throughout. It ends in a photo finish. Dubonnet wins by a nose. Hartley realizes Carol has fallen for Duke and steps aside. On another train, Carol and Duke celebrate with their racing friends.

Cast

Cast notes:

Production

This photo of director Jack Conway, Jean Harlow and Clark Gable was taken only minutes before Harlow's collapse and was issued at the time her death was announced. Jack Conway Jean Harlow Clark Gable Saratoga 1937.jpg
This photo of director Jack Conway, Jean Harlow and Clark Gable was taken only minutes before Harlow's collapse and was issued at the time her death was announced.

Although screenwriter Robert Hopkins originally intended the script to be a vehicle for Harlow, [3] the studio at first attempted to borrow Carole Lombard from Paramount Pictures for the lead role, but could not do so because of contractual difficulties. [4] It was reported that Joan Crawford would star but by 1937, Harlow was reported as being cast. Walter Pidgeon was borrowed from Universal for the film. [3]

Background filming took place in Lexington and Louisville, Kentucky as well as in Saratoga Springs, New York. [3]

Lionel Barrymore tripped over a cable on set, breaking his hip for the second time in two years and reportedly breaking his knee cap. In 1951, he said that he needed a wheelchair because of the damage to his hip. [5]

At the time of filming, Harlow was suffering from myriad health issues and a tumultuous personal life. She was dealing with the aftermath of oral surgery to remove impacted wisdom teeth and had suffered sun poisoning in the months before filming. Unbeknownst to Harlow, she was also dying of renal failure caused by complications of scarlet fever that she contracted as a child. In 1936, she divorced her third husband, cinematographer Harold Rosson, whom she had married a year after her second husband, Paul Bern, died in 1932 by what was later ruled a suicide. During filming, Harlow was in a relationship with William Powell. While she was eager to marry Powell, he was resistant though the two were reportedly engaged. [4]

On May 29, 1937, Harlow collapsed on the set during a scene with Walter Pidgeon. [4] She was taken to Good Samaritan Hospital where, on June 7, she died of renal failure at the age of 26. [4] Although approximately 90% of the film was finished, MGM planned to shelve the footage with Harlow and reshoot her scenes with Virginia Bruce or Jean Arthur. However, Harlow's fans were adamant that her final film be released. MGM acquiesced and shot the remaining Harlow scenes with Mary Dees. Dees was shot from behind or with costumes that obscured her face, playing Harlow's part for the camera, while Paula Winslowe supplied Harlow's voice. [3] [4]

Box office

According to MGM records the film earned $2,432,000 in the US and Canada and $820,000 elsewhere, resulting in a profit of $1,146,000. [1]

Reception

The film was released on July 23, 1937, nearly seven weeks after Harlow's death. Saratoga was one of the year's highest grossing films due in part to Harlow’s death. [4] Critical reviews were generally positive, despite the reviewers commenting on the sadness of seeing Harlow so soon after her death. [4] Writing for Night and Day in 1937, Graham Greene gave the film a good review, claiming that it demonstrated "more than curiosity value". Greene noted that Harlow's acting achieved a high point in her career, and praised the film as having been "skilfully sewn-up [in such a way that] the missing scenes and shots lend it an air of originality which the correctly canned product mightn't have had: the story proceed[ing] faster, less obviously: the heroine less unduly plugged". [6]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study.
  2. "Which Cinema Films Have Earned the Most Money Since 1947?". The Argus . Melbourne. 4 March 1944. p. 3 Supplement: The Argus Weekend magazine. Retrieved 6 August 2012 via National Library of Australia.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Notes" on TCM.com
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Melear, Mary Anne. "Saratoga" on TCM.com
  5. "Lionel Barrymore", Wikipedia, 2020-12-11, retrieved 2020-12-11
  6. Greene, Graham (26 August 1937). "Saratoga/High, Wide and Handsome/His Affair". Night and Day . (reprinted in: Taylor, John Russell, ed. (1980). The Pleasure Dome. Oxford University Press. p. 163. ISBN   0192812866.)