The Girl Said No (1930 film)
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The Girl Said No | |
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Directed by | Sam Wood |
Written by | A. P. Younger (story) Sarah Y. Mason Charles MacArthur (dialogue) |
Produced by | Sam Wood |
Starring | William Haines Leila Hyams |
Cinematography | Ira H. Morgan |
Edited by | Frank Sullivan |
Production company | |
Release date |
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Running time | 90-93 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Girl Said No is a 1930 pre-Code American romantic comedy film starring William Haines and Leila Hyams. In the film, a young college graduate goes to extreme lengths to win the girl he loves.
Plot
[edit]Tom Ward, a cocky young football hero, returns home after graduation determined to conquer the world. He begins a flirtation with Mary Howe, secretary to his rival, McAndrews, and in a restaurant he bribes a waiter to spill soup on her employer. Although offered a local banking job, Tom stakes his fortunes on a scheme to sell bonds to wealthy old Hattie Brown, a befuddled spinster, and achieves the difficult task while posing as a doctor by getting her drunk. Finally, desperate over Mary's engagement to McAndrews, Tom kidnaps her from the altar. In a chase finale she is convinced that he loves her.
Cast
[edit]- William Haines as Tom Ward
- Leila Hyams as Mary Howe
- Polly Moran as Polly
- Marie Dressler as Hettie Brown
- Ralph Bushman as J. Marvin McAndrews
- Clara Blandick as Mrs Ward
- William Janney as Jimmie Ward
- William V. Mong as Samuel A. Ward
- Frank Coghlan as Eddie Ward
- Phyllis Crane as Alma Ward
Production
[edit]After the box office success of Anna Christie (1930) and the rave reviews that not only Greta Garbo received for her performance but also her co-star Marie Dressler, M-G-M management decided to cast the latter actress in The Girl Said No. Although Dressler was happy to have a new assignment from the studio, she had to hide her disappointment over the script and her role.
According to biographer Betty Lee in Marie Dressler: The Unlikeliest Star, "It seemed fairly obvious..that although M-G-M was impressed with Dressler's potential...the top office did not know how to handle their unique new contract player. [Studio head] Louis B. Mayer, who had already informed his minions that he wanted Dressler to be marketed as a mother figure who was also a battered version of life's wars, asked her to lunch in his private bungalow on the Culver City lot. Not only did Dressler appear to be a substantial mother figure in real life, M-G-M's boss was also aware that the actress exuded an easy air of upper-class panache. She was, he decided, a far classier individual than the Hollywood glamour girls he often professed to disdain."
Dressler would go on to star in a total of seven films in 1930 and win an Academy Award for her performance in Min and Bill (1930), opposite Wallace Beery.
External links
[edit]
- 1930 films
- 1930 romantic comedy films
- American romantic comedy films
- American black-and-white films
- Films directed by Sam Wood
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
- Films with screenplays by Charles MacArthur
- 1930s English-language films
- 1930s American films
- English-language romantic comedy films
- 1930s romantic comedy film stubs