Jump to content

Thirty-Day Princess

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 15:39, 13 January 2021 (Task 18 (cosmetic): eval 3 templates: hyphenate params (1×); del |ref=harv (2×);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Thirty Day Princess
theatrical poster
Directed byMarion Gering
Written byStory:
Clarence Budington Kelland
Adaptation:
Sam Hellman
Edwin Justus Mayer
Screenplay:
Preston Sturges
Frank Partos
Produced byB.P. Schulberg
StarringSylvia Sidney
Cary Grant
Edward Arnold
CinematographyLeon Shamroy
Edited byJane Loring
Music byHoward Jackson
Rudolph G. Kopp
John Leipold
Harry Ruby
Karl Hajos
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
May 18, 1934
Running time
74 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Thirty Day Princess is a 1934 pre-Code comedy film directed by Marion Gering and starring Sylvia Sidney, Cary Grant and Edward Arnold. The film was based on a story of the same name by Clarence Budington Kelland (which appeared in Ladies' Home Journal in 1933),[1] adapted by Sam Hellman and Edwin Justus Mayer, and written by Preston Sturges and Frank Partos.

Plot

On her way to New York to find financial backing for her impoverished country, the Ruritanian Kingdom of Taronia, Princess "Zizzi" Catterina (Sylvia Sidney) falls ill with the mumps and has to be quarantined for a month. In desperation, financier Richard Gresham (Edward Arnold), who is planning to issue $50 million in Taronian bonds, hires unemployed lookalike actress Nancy Lane (Sidney again) to impersonate the princess, and offers her a large bonus if she changes the mind of the chief opponent of the financial transaction, newspaper publisher Porter Madison III (Cary Grant).

Cast

Production

Production on Thirty Day Princess was to have begun on 28 February 1934, but was delayed because of the illness of William Collier Sr., who was scheduled to play the role of the "Managing editor". Collier was replaced and production began on 1 March.[2][3]

Although Preston Sturges received a writing credit for the film's screenplay, he wrote in his autobiography that "not much" of his work was actually used. Sturges also said of B.P. Schulberg that "as a producer, [he] was accustomed to accepting praise for pictures as generals accept praise for the valor of their soldiers, and it thus seemed logical to him that the writers should feel the same general sense of shared accomplishment." Thirty-Day Princess was released on 18 May 1934.[3]

Reception

The film received a mixed reception. Meyer Levin of Esquire remarking that the director was "no man for comedy", and Cy Caldwell of New Outlook calling it a "jolly and amusing romantic comedy" in which Grant, Edward Arnold, Vince Barnett and others "render good support".[4] Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times wrote, "This amiable light affair has a generous share of imaginative turns, and it is further endowed with a highly competent supporting cast."[5]

Grant biographer Geoffrey Wansell notes that Grant was "required to do little more than spend most of his time wearing white tie and tails." He states that some of the more scathing reviews of the film "infuriated" Grant and that he subsequently demanded to choose his own roles. Wansell claims that Paramount retaliated by loaning him to United Artists.[6]

References

  1. ^ TCM Screenplay info
  2. ^ TCM Notes
  3. ^ a b TCM Overview
  4. ^ Deschner 1973, pp. 70–1.
  5. ^ Mordaunt Hall (May 12, 1934). "The Screen In Review; Sylvia Sidney and Cary Grant in a Film of a Clarence Budington Kelland Story--Other Pictures". The New York Times.
  6. ^ Wansell 2013, p. 36.

Sources