This week, we watched a movie none of us had seen before (or, quite frankly, even really heard of): Call it a Day (1937).
The movie tells the story of one fairly odd day in the life of the
Hilton family, a middle-class English family. Olivia plays the older
daughter, Catherine, who is posing as a model for family friend Paul
Francis (Walter Woolf King). Only problem is, she is madly enamored of
him, and he is terrified to be alone with her. Mother Dorothy (Frieda
Inescort) is being pursued by a would-be Lothario (Roland Young), and
father Roger (Ian Hunter) is in a similar situation when his client Beatrice
Gwynn (Marcia Ralston) decides HE would make an excellent night's
diversion. Silly, perhaps, but also diverting, and with a satisfying
conclusion.
Though given top
billing, Ms. de Havilland really has a secondary part. The main action of the plot
is devoted to Dorothy as she tries to keep Frank at bay. But Olivia is wonderful as a heart-sore teen, who is stuck on a
married man. The rapport between her and Bonita Granville (as her
younger sister, Ann) is perfect. Young Ann is in love with art; when
Paul gives her a Dante Gabriel Rossetti sketch (because she is a fan of
the Pre-Raphaelites), her offer to loan it to Catherine is touching.
And logical - she won't give it up, but loves her sister enough to let
her borrow the precious sketch (and as I Pre-Raphaelite fan myself, I
envied her that picture!!). An interesting note - the part that Olivia
played here was played on the West Coast stage by her sister, Joan
Fontaine.
We should also mention the performance of Roland Young - who would have envisioned Topper
as such a lech! He is very funny as the brother of Dorothy's friend,
who develops an immediate interest in this mother of three when he
meets her in a market. The interactions between the two of them - especially the scene in which she tries to induce the busy members of her family to stay in for dinner
when Frank shows up in an attempt to win his beloved away from her
husband, are VERY well done.
We heartily recommend this under-viewed movie. Well worth a look!
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