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==Plot==
==Plot==
[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] newspaper magnate Kay Thorndyke ([[Angela Lansbury]]) intends to make her lover, aircraft tycoon Grant Matthews ([[Spencer Tracy]]), [[President of the United States]] with her as the [[power behind the throne]]. Thorndyke plans to use her newspaper chain's influence to [[brokered convention|deadlock]] the [[1948 Republican National Convention]], so it will choose Matthews as a compromise [[dark horse]] candidate instead of [[Thomas E. Dewey|Dewey]], [[Robert Taft|Taft]], or another.
[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] newspaper magnate Kay Thorndyke ([[Angela Lansbury]]) intends to make her lover, aircraft tycoon Grant Matthews ([[Spencer Tracy]]), [[President of the United States]] with her as the [[power behind the throne]]. Thorndyke plans to use her newspaper chain's influence to [[brokered convention|deadlock]] the [[1948 Republican National Convention]]. Thorndyke plans to use her hired political top-guns plans to pre-position Mathews to “break” her engineered deadlock of the 1948 convention by making Mathews the Party’s consensus nominee. And it is the Thorndyke press’ publicity campaign selling Mathews that is to achieve this pre-positioning It is also is the principal action feature of the film. The Party is to choose Matthews as a compromise [[dark horse]] candidate instead of [[Thomas E. Dewey|Dewey]], [[Robert Taft|Taft]], or another.


Matthews is skeptical of the idea of running for president, but Thorndyke, Republican strategist Jim Conover ([[Adolphe Menjou]]), and campaign manager Spike McManus ([[Van Johnson]]) persuade him to run. Matthews reunites with estranged wife Mary ([[Katharine Hepburn]]) for the campaign. Despite knowing about Thorndyke and her husband's affair, Mary agrees to support him in public because of his idealism and honesty and she does not know about Thorndyke's role in the campaign.
Matthews is skeptical of the idea of running for president, but Thorndyke's hired guns, Republican strategist Jim Conover ([[Adolphe Menjou]]), and campaign manager Spike McManus ([[Van Johnson]]) persuade him to run. Matthews reunites with estranged wife Mary ([[Katharine Hepburn]]) for the campaign. Despite knowing about Thorndyke and her husband's affair, Mary agrees to support him in public because of his idealism and honesty and she does not know about Thorndyke's role in the campaign.


The politically naïve Matthews makes a controversial speech in [[Wichita, Kansas|Wichita]] denouncing [[big labor]]. Before he makes another controversial speech in [[Detroit]] denouncing [[big business]], Thorndyke secretly persuades him to moderate his tone to help his chances for the nomination. With her and Conover's help, Matthews makes deals with various [[special interest]]s for their support.
The politically naïve Matthews makes a controversial speech in [[Wichita, Kansas|Wichita]] denouncing [[big labor]]. Before he makes another controversial speech in [[Detroit]] denouncing [[big business]], Thorndyke secretly persuades him to moderate his tone to help his chances for the nomination. With her and Conover's help, Matthews makes deals with various [[special interest]]s for their support.

Revision as of 16:16, 6 February 2012

State of the Union
Theatrical release poster
Directed byFrank Capra
Written byRussel Crouse (play)
Howard Lindsay (play)
Myles Connolly
Anthony Veiller (screenplay)
Produced byFrank Capra
Anthony Veiller
StarringSpencer Tracy
Katharine Hepburn
CinematographyGeorge Folsey
Edited byWilliam W. Hornbeck
Music byVictor Young
Production
company
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
April 30, 1948
Running time
111 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

State of the Union is a 1948 film adaptation written by Myles Connolly and Anthony Veiller of the Russel Crouse, Howard Lindsay play of the same name. Directed by Frank Capra and starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, the film is Capra's first and only project for MGM Pictures. The screenplay deviated most from the play in its absence of the play's sardonic wit and more controversial themes.

Originally, actress Claudette Colbert was cast as Mary, the wife of Grant Matthews (played by Spencer Tracy), but rumors of disagreements with Capra and a reported "back" injury led to the weekend casting of Hepburn, Tracy's longtime companion. Other behind the scenes tensions were between Adolphe Menjou, a onetime member the McCarthyist group Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals, and his former co-star Katharine Hepburn, as well as Hepburn and the much younger Angela Lansbury.

The film was produced entirely by Capra's own company, Liberty Films. In order to cast MGM contract player Tracy in the film, the latter studio bought the distribution rights. In fact, many of the major actors in the film were under contract with MGM also.

Capra bought the film after its initial theatrical release. After Capra's company folded, Liberty Films' assets were acquired by Paramount Pictures. It has since had limited availability on VHS home video and until recently has been unavailable on DVD. EMKA, Ltd./NBC Universal currently owns the rights to the film due to it being a part of Paramount's pre-1950 library. Universal Studios Home Entertainment released a DVD version on August 29, 2006.

Plot

Republican newspaper magnate Kay Thorndyke (Angela Lansbury) intends to make her lover, aircraft tycoon Grant Matthews (Spencer Tracy), President of the United States with her as the power behind the throne. Thorndyke plans to use her newspaper chain's influence to deadlock the 1948 Republican National Convention. Thorndyke plans to use her hired political top-guns plans to pre-position Mathews to “break” her engineered deadlock of the 1948 convention by making Mathews the Party’s consensus nominee. And it is the Thorndyke press’ publicity campaign selling Mathews that is to achieve this pre-positioning It is also is the principal action feature of the film. The Party is to choose Matthews as a compromise dark horse candidate instead of Dewey, Taft, or another.

Matthews is skeptical of the idea of running for president, but Thorndyke's hired guns, Republican strategist Jim Conover (Adolphe Menjou), and campaign manager Spike McManus (Van Johnson) persuade him to run. Matthews reunites with estranged wife Mary (Katharine Hepburn) for the campaign. Despite knowing about Thorndyke and her husband's affair, Mary agrees to support him in public because of his idealism and honesty and she does not know about Thorndyke's role in the campaign.

The politically naïve Matthews makes a controversial speech in Wichita denouncing big labor. Before he makes another controversial speech in Detroit denouncing big business, Thorndyke secretly persuades him to moderate his tone to help his chances for the nomination. With her and Conover's help, Matthews makes deals with various special interests for their support.

Before a nationwide fireside chat from the Matthews' home, Mary learns of Thorndyke's continuing relationship with her husband and sees the deals that he has made. Matthews realizes that he has betrayed his and Mary's ideals. On live radio, he denounces both his backers and himself as frauds, withdraws as a candidate while promising to seek bipartisan reform, and asks for his wife's forgiveness. When his backers attempt to turn off the speech, he angrily calls out, "Don't cut me off, I paid for that microphone!". That line was used similarly by Ronald Reagan at a 1980 New Hampshire debate.

Cast

Film Role Play
Spencer Tracy Grant Matthews Ralph Bellamy
Katharine Hepburn Mary Matthews Ruth Hussey
Van Johnson Spike McManus Myron McCormick
Angela Lansbury Kay Thorndyke Margalo Gillmore
Adolphe Menjou Jim Conover Minor Watson
Lewis Stone Sam Thorndyke not featured
Howard Smith Sam I. Parrish Herbert Heyes
Charles Dingle Bill Noland Hardy Victor Sutherland
Maidel Turner Lulubelle Alexander Maidel Turner
Raymond Walburn Judge Alexander G. Albert Smith
Margaret Hamilton Norah Helen Ray
Art Baker Radio Announcer not featured
Florence Auer Grace Orval Draper Aline McDermott
Irving Bacon Buck Swanson not featured

Template:Katharine Hepburn filmography