Louise Fuller (Grace Moore), an opera star of some note, is deported from the United States after she overstays her visa limits. Louise is eager to get back to the States - she has promised to assist her beloved tutor and uncle, Walter Mitchell (Henry Stephenson) by appearing in a music festival being held in his honor. The list for a visa is long - she'll have to wait for a year, unless she can find an American to marry. Enter artist Jimmy Hudson (Cary Grant), a foot-loose and fancy free young man, who initially disdains her snobbish demeanor. Our film this week is When You're in Love (1937). With Cary Grant in a film, what's not to love? Well, this film, quite frankly. It's not that it is bad; it's that it is banal, and above-the-title Grace Moore really is no actress; she was an opera singer that the studio was trying to make a star. While she is an wonderful singer, with a very expressive voice and demeanor WHEN she is singing, as an actress, she's a dud. Her lines are delivered with an almost flat tone; she never really seems interested in the action. As a result, she and Mr. Grant don't click.
Ms. Moore appeared in nine films between 1930 and 1939. Born in Tennessee (she was called "The Tennessee Nightingale"), she started her career on Broadway in 1913 (she would appear in 9 plays between 1913 and 1932); working her way from the chorus to featured performer in a number of musical reviews (like the Ziegeld Follies of 1931). After a couple of films in 1930, she signed a contract with Columbia in 1934. She was nominated for an Oscar for best actress for her work in One Night of Love (1934). By 1939, she was through with films, and working more steadily in opera companies. Married once to Spanish actor Valentín Parera, she died in a plane crash near Copenhagen (Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden was also killed in the crash). A scholarship is named for her at the University of Tennessee School of Voice.
Cary Grant had just begun a new contract with Columbia (TCM article), which may account for him being billed below Ms. Moore and below the title (in his next films, TopperThe Toast of New York, and The Awful Truth, he was still billed under his co-stars, but above the title). He really does his best to bring some exuberance to the film, and mostly he succeeds. But it's impossible to work around that fact that he's acting against someone who just doesn't project emotion very well. It is amusing that he is playing the American (with his delightful English-ish accent) while Ms. Moore is supposed to be Australian - with an American accent). One of his most delightful scenes is with the couple who raised him after his parents' deaths. His affection for them is transmitted right through the screen.
Also in the cast is Aline MacMahon. She's wasted in this film; while she gets some good lines, she just doesn't get enough screen time. Similarly, Thomas Mitchell and Henry Stephenson are given very little to do. It's a shame when you have actors of their caliber who are not permitted to perform up to their abilities.
This was Robert Riskin's first directing gig; he'd written the screenplay for the film as well. Producer Harry Cohn was hoping that Riskin would break out Cary Grant in the way his scripts for It Happened One Night and Mr. Deeds Goes to Town had for Clark Gable and Gary Cooper. Perhaps it was the loss of his collaborator, Frank Capra, but the magic didn't work for this picture, and it ended up losing money (Cary Grant: A Biography by Marc Eliot).
The costumes by Bernard Newman are very lovely.The music includes several opera pieces, two songs by Jerome Kerns and Dorothy Fields, and a really terrific version of Ms. Moore singing (and Cary Grant playing the piano) of Cab Calloway's "Minnie the Moocher" (a preview of the film did not, in fact, include that number (AFI catalog).
The film opened at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. The New York Timesreview by Frank S. Nugent called it "a glib reworking of an ancient operatic formula." The Hollywood Reporter, however, enjoyed it, calling it "a signal triumph for the foremost diva of the screen..."
For opera lovers, this film is worth a look - you can fast forward to the musical numbers (which mostly have nothing to do with the plot) and watch Ms. Moore sing, which is certainly worth doing. You can watch her doing "Minnie the Moocher" - she is really good! We'll leave you with a snippet from When You're in Love's premier on GET-TV, which was able to show a restored copy of the film:
Sisters Myra (Ann Dvorak) and Olga (Aline MacMahon) run a gas station/diner/motel deep in the desert of the American Southwest. Isolated from the rest of the world (except for the customers who are always heading somewhere else), Olga is protective of her younger sister. She forbids her from socializing with men, especially Steve Laird (Theodore Newton), much to Myrna's fury. Olga's life is disrupted by the arrival of George (Preston Foster), a man who was once Olga's lover. Our film this week is Heat Lightning (1934). Aline MacMahon is always remarkable, and this film is no exception. When we meet Olga, her face is closed. She interacts with strangers on a business level only. She is not unfriendly, but distant and cautious. With the arrival of George (who Olga - and only Olga - calls Jerry), Ms. MacMahon changes her whole demeanor. The suspicion begins to slowly melt into affection, and finally into the hope for a resumption of their earlier relationship. Some of this is accomplished with costuming, as Olga literally lets down her lush hair (George had commented on the beauty of her thick, long hair), but most accomplished with Ms. MacMahon's eyes and posture. This was the first picture in which she received star billing, and she makes the most of it. Ann Dvorak's part is relatively small, but the last scenes in which she appears are very strong and truly heartbreaking. Myra's early rebellion and the results that revolt make it appear that the sisters will end up very much alike. The emptiness in Ms. Dvorak's face tell us the future of Myra far better than words could.
We're not used to seeing Lyle Talbot (Jeff) play a weakling, but he does here. By the end, he develops a small amount of backbone, but primarily he is under the thumb of the domineering - and nasty - George. We previously discussed his impressive film career when we viewed A Lost Lady, but this was a new side to a decidedly versatile, and underrated, actor. Frank McHugh (Frank) is also playing a somewhat different part from his usual sidekick roles. He's a chauffeur to Mrs. Feathers Tifton (Glenda Farrell) and Mrs. Tinkle Ashton-Ashley (Ruth Donnelly), two new divorcees, on their way home (with LOTS of expensive jewelry) from Reno. Surprisingly, Mr. McHugh is also the current object of both their affections! Mr. McHugh is amusing and effective with relatively little screen time. But seeing him as an object of lust does take some getting used to. As is often the case, Glenda Farrell doesn't get enough to do, though her interplay with Ruth Donnelly is especially fun. They are a good combination; in the end, Ms. Donnelly gets the better lines and the stronger part.
The script is intriguing, in that the backstory is supplied in tiny spoonfuls - you get just enough to understand Olga, and no more. It's script writing by insinuation, and is effective. You keep watching the movie to find out more, as you are given just a tad more information about Olga's life in the city. While several of the characters seem extraneous - the girls who arrive with "Popsy" (Harry C. Bradley), for example - it's evident by the end of the story that each of these visitors is telling us more about Olga and her decision to live in the desert. As you can see, it's an amazing group of character actors - Jane Darwell also appears in the opening scene as Gladys, wife to henpecked husband Herbert (Edgar Kennedy), a couple motoring through the desert with a really unreliable jalopy. It's another humorous interlude, but fascinating as well - Olga is a skilled mechanic, better than most men - even in the precode era, it's not usual to see a woman who is skilled at a trade.
The story was based on the play, Heat Lightning which was on Broadway for a month in 1933. and starred Jean Dixon as Olga. In 1941, there was remake (of course, drastically altered. The remake was, after all, well within the code) as Highway West (1941) (AFI catalog). Reviewer Mordaunt Hall of the New York Times was not enthusiastic about the film in his review, but did like Ms. MacMahon, saying "she gives a believable performance the rôle is not well suited to her". We disagree; there is not a part written which Ms. MacMahon cannot in some way make suit herself.
Released in March of 1934 (just 4 months before the Code began to be strongly enforced), the picture has not been widely circulated since then, as it was on the Legion of Decency's Banned List (TCM article). We think that it's a shame it - and its star - are not better known, and really recommend a viewing. Here's a trailer to get you started:
Mary Herries (Aline MacMahon) is a wealthy woman with an impressive art collection, and a desire to live in solitude. She has family and friends who visit occasionally, but is quite happy being on her own. She is also a Kind Lady (1935) and finds it hard to resist helping those in need. When street artist Henry Abbott (Basil Rathbone) appears at her doorstep with a sob story, she invites him in for some hot tea and a sandwich, gives him some money, and a warm coat for his wife. It's not long before Abbott reappears, this time with wife Ada (Justine Chase) in tow, and wheedles his way back into the house. But is he as innocuous as he puts on? This is a suspenseful yarn that reminded us of the equally chilling My Name is Julia Ross. Both films focus on a strong female lead being preyed upon by strangers - attempting to mold the heroine to their desires. The story is unsettling - though it's not in any way gory, it's a tale that keeps you on the edge of your seat fearing for the safety of Mary Herries. With Aline MacMahon heading the cast, you know you can't go wrong. She's playing a woman much older than her years - when the play opened on Broadway in 1935, it starred Grace George as Mary. Ms.George was 56 at the time (Ms.George would also play the part on Broadway in a 1940 revival); Ms. McMahon is 20 years younger when she took the part of a woman we know is well into her 50s. Ms. MacMahon brings a determination to the part that makes the audience root for her. Sure, she is a softie, but she's not a weakling. She stands up to Abbott on multiple occasions, and never stops trying to get out of his clutches. For an excellent biography of Ms. MacMahon, visit this Filmstruck post.
Which brings us to Basil Rathbone, an actor who can make even the most heinous villain appealing. Watching Mr. Rathbone play the part (which on Broadway was performed by Henry Daniell, another able malefactor) is like watching a spider spin his web - you want to run, but you can't take your eyes from him. One scene towards the middle of the film is impressive - The Doctor (Murray Kinnell, playing a character who makes Abbott look like a saint) informs him of an "accident." Rathbone's reaction spells out his disgust at the event and his realization that all their plans have changed, and become far more deadly. Rose (Ms. Herries maid) as ably portrayed by Nola Luxford, is a woman who has seen her mistress's sympathies go to people she finds undeserving before. Her distrust of Abbott is evident from the moment she meets him, and Ms. Luxford makes her the only one in the house with the nerve to go to Mary with her concerns. When the film was remade in 1951, the part of Rose would go to Doris Lloyd, who plays Mary's sister Lucy Weston in this version (TCM article).
Frank Albertson (Peter Santard) again gets to play the good guy, as Mary's nephew-in-law-to-be (he is about to marry her niece, Phyllis (Mary Carlisle)). The immediate affection that Mary and Peter have for each other is important to the plot. It's not just that she offers to give the couple one of her prized art works as a wedding gift. Peter is genuinely concerned at Mary's silence and it is his tenacity that brings the film to a satisfactory ending. As previously mentioned, the film returned to Broadway in 1940; appearing in the part of Ada was Dorothy McGuire in one of her earliest stage roles. The 1951 film remake starred Ethel Barrymore and Maurice Evans as Mary and Abbott. The story also made its way to television on two occasions: Ford Theatre (December 1949) starred Fay Bainter and Joseph Schildkraut; and Broadway Television Theatre featured Sylvia Sidney (November 1953) (AFI catalog). This is an excellent film - certainly worth your viewing. We hope at some point to catch (and discuss) the Ethel Barrymore remake. In the meantime, please consider seeking this one out.
After escaping from San Francisco following a murder conviction, Dan Hardesty (William Powell) is arrested in Hong Kong by Steve Burke (Warren Hymer), a police officer tasked with returning Dan to the U.S. for execution. Dan is determined to escape from the ship during the voyage home, but a complication arises in the form of Joan Ames (Kay Francis), a pleasure cruiser to whom he is immediately attracted. But there is a further complication - Joan is dying, and this cruise is, for her, a One Way Passage (1932) This is perhaps one of Kay Francis' best dramatic roles. She sympathetic as a woman who has little time to live, and has decided to live a shorter, more interesting life, rather than just sit in bed and wait for the inevitable. Ms. Francis, without any backstory, provides that history to the audience simply with her demeanor. We know that Joan has heretofore lived the life an an invalid; informed that the end is now truly near, she has one last chance to experience the world before she leaves it. It seems the film was a favorite of Ms. Francis' as well - it was one that she would regularly show to her beaus to acquaint them with her work (Kay Francis: I Can't Wait to be Forgotten: Her Life on Film and Stageby Scott O'Brien).
Equally excellent is William Powell as a decent man about to be executed for murder. Dan Hardesty has killed a man, though according to his friend Skippy (Frank McHugh), the victim "needed killing". We get no more information than that. But, we know that Dan is ethical - while attempting to escape from Steve, he plunges them both into the water. But when he realizes that Steve cannot swim, he puts off his escape attempt to rescue his captor. With that simple gesture, we know all we need to know about the integrity of Dan.
In their sixth film together, Ms. Francis and Mr. Powell are a dynamic team. Their chemistry is palpable, and their camaraderie is apparent. This film would prove to be their biggest box-office hit, yet it was also their last film together (TCM article). Powell would soon leave Warner Brothers for MGM, and The Thin Man series, while Ms. Francis remained at Warners. If you are interested in some of their other films together, start with Jewel Robbery (1932) - their interplay is remarkable.
One Way Passagealso has the advantage of co-starring the remarkable Aline MacMahon (Barrel House Betty aka Countess Berilhaus) in the cast. As a con artist who starts off using her wiles to distract Steve from Dan, but ends up falling in love with Steve, she's terrific. Ms. MacMahon is an actress who makes everyone around her look better. As a result, Warren Hymer (who is usually, to my mind, an uninteresting actor) shines as Steve. He becomes more than just the dumb cop he usually plays. In his book Mothers, Mammies and Old Maids: Twenty-Five Character Actresses of Golden Age Hollywood, Axel Nissen says that "because she didn't look like anyone [Aline MacMahon] could play everyone" and that is certainly the case here. You believe that she is could be a countess, even though you know almost immediately that she is not. Ms. MacMahon can play anything or anyone. For a brief bio on this wonderful actress, visit our post on Heroes for Sale (another film in which she basically stole every scene).
The screenplay for One Way Passage won the Oscar for Best Writing - Original Story in 1933 for Walter Lord. Director Tay Garnett allegedly felt he deserved credit for some of the writing, which he did not receive (AFI catalog). The costuming by Orry-Kelly is lovely; he was also tasked with making Kay Francis look ill, which he succeeds in doing by giving her lovely, flowing gowns that hint at frailty. Mr. Kelly would return to costume the 1940 remake, 'Til We Meet Again, this time starring George Brent and Merle Oberon as the doomed lovers. Also returning for the remake - Frank McHugh!.
Surprisingly, the New York Timesreview by Mordaunt Hall actually praised the film, stating that it "offers quite a satisfactory entertainment. It has an original idea and the characters stand out..." We would be much more effusive in our praise, but regardless, this is a film for fans of both Ms. Francis and Mr. Powell. We'll leave you with a brief scene - the meeting of Joan and Dan:
Marlene Dietrich plays a stage actress who falls in love with a baby and runs off with him in The Lady is Willing (1942). Elizabeth 'Liza' Madden (Dietrich) is walking home from the theatre one evening when she happens upon an altercation. A baby has been found abandoned in a building and the neighborhood is in a tizzy. A police officer hands Liza the baby, and it is love at first sight. So, since the baby has no parents to speak of, Liza simply takes him home, and begins the role of Mom. Of course, Liza quickly discovers that it's not that easy for a single woman to adopt a baby, much less a woman who is up to her ears in debt. You see, Liza has a lovely apartment, wonderful clothing, and lots of debts. She has a tendency to financially support relatives and friends - or dead-beats, as her assistant, Buddy (Aline MacMahon), calls them. So, Liza must marry, and marry fast or little Corey (David James) will be taken from her. She approaches Dr. Corey McBain (Fred MacMurray) to take on the dad role (Yes, there is a reason for the fact that Dr. and baby have the same name). In exchange, he can switch from his specialty of pediatrics to what he really loves, research. Of course, it will be a marriage in name only, and of course, Corey and Liza will begin to want a more lasting relationship. This is a cute film; while not great literature, it was fun to see Marlene Dietrich doing a comedy. Being, Dietrich, she is still intense, but she also makes the character likeable, if not a trifle naive. And while Liza is not the brightest bulb in the pack (for example, she has a lot of trouble understanding Mr. Micawber's basic rule for financial happiness: “Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pound ought and six, result misery."), she has a kind and loyal heart. Naturally, she also has a magnificent apartment (thanks to production designer Lionel Banks) and spectacular gowns (by Irene). Amusingly, when she needs another apartment, she is easily able to get the one next door. As New Yorkers, we found that quite funny (though, I have to admit, it was a lot easier to find housing in NYC in 1942 than it is today). A bit of trivia about the clothing: In this TCM article,
we learn that Dietrich injured her ankle very early in the production
and was required to wear a cast. She twisted her ankle attempting to
protect the little David James, whom she was holding at the time. Thus,
for most of the film, she is wearing long evening gowns or slacks.
There is a brief glimpse of the magnificent Dietrich legs, but nothing
more than that. But it is a small price to pay to see some of the
clothing she gets to model. This brief YouTube Video gives you a picture
of the fall that caused the injury and the resulting cast:
Fred MacMurray is also very good as the pediatrician who dislikes children. Corey McBain is
initially hard to figure out. He's cold and somewhat aloof, but
once we meet his ex-wife, Frances (Arline Judge),
and find out that his deeper ambition is to be a researcher, his
alienation is much more understandable. His soberness acts as a lovely
contrast to Dietrich's exuberance. But, for us, the standout performance in the film is Aline MacMahon. She is always so good, sharp but affectionate. Her regard for Liza is obvious, but not forced or phony. As usual, MacMahon gets some
of the best lines in the film, and even without words, she is a riot (watch the clip from the film below to get a look her some of her excellent silent moments. The film is filled with excellent character moments. Charles
Lane as ambulance-chasing lawyer K. K. Miller is at his abrasive best. Elizabeth Risdon as the child services worker Mrs. Cummings brings some interesting perspectives to what could be just an old-maid villain. A married, working woman with children, Mrs. Cummings is a caring professional, who understands the yearning for a baby. We found it Interesting that she is
"permitted" to work in an era when married women, especially were often banned from jobs. (Though released in 1942, The Lady is Willing was actually filmed in 1941, prior to U.S. involvement in World War II.)
The film also has some aspects that fly in the face of censorship. When Lawyer Miller arrives with a couple who claim to be baby Corey's parents, Dr. McBain proposes a blood test to determine parentage. Or, he queries, is the wife afraid that the test will prove her husband is not the father! Liza's Broadway co-star, Victor, seems to be interested in her, but when McBain comments on Victor's bestowing a kiss on Liza, she remarks that "he kisses everyone". Could Victor be gay? We should add that we were impressed with Victor (Roger Clark), who proves to be a true friend to Liza in the end. The one drawback to the story was the sub-plot of McBain's ex-wife. The storyline is contrived and the film would have been much stronger without her. She felt like she stepped in from another movie; she never quite fit the picture we had of McBain, and her impact could have been compensated for in a more imaginative way. We refer you back to the TCM article listed above for a story about Dietrich making a play for MacMurray during the filming (he wasn't interested). The article also contains a summary of a rather scathing review from The New York Times. We felt that Mr. Crowther was not seeing the same film we were. Variety, on the other hand, enjoyed it, as did our group. We hope you have the opportunity to judge for yourself.
This week, we begin a brief look at children during the Second World War with two outstanding flims. Our first film is The Search,
a quasi-documentary about a little refugee boy after the war. Ivan
Jandl gives a wonderful performance as Karel/James, a child whose only
memories of life have been been his years at Austhwitz.
His story is told parallel to that of his mother, Hanna Malik (Jarmila
Novotna), who, since her release from a camp, has been wandering
throughout Europe trying to find her only surviving relative - her
little son.
This is an immensely powerful
tale. The pain of mother and child is told without melodrama; we learn
very little of what they actually suffered, but their suffering is
apparent, most prominently displayed by the haze which now protects
Karel from the world. In the midst of this, "Steve" Stevenson
(Montgomery Clift, in his first starring role) appears. This scarecrow
of a child intrigues Steve, and he brings the boy home with him. He
feeds him, bathes him, clothes him, and begins to teach him. And begins
to love him. Clift's performance, like that of all our actors, is both
subtle and controlled. We read his emotions in his eyes. Again, there
is no over-dramatics in his performance - just pure, human emotion.
Finally,
we tip our respective hats to the ever wonderful Aline MacMahon as Mrs.
Murray, the head of the UNRRA camp in which both Karel and Hanna find
themselves. She is all calmness and restraint as she listens to horror
stories told with frightening matter-of-factness by children who should
be worried about their homework, not whether they can survive another
day. Watch her as she listens to her translator relate the story of a
young girl who learned of her mother's death when she was forced to sort
the clothing of victims of the Nazi death chambers. It will bring
tears to your eyes. This trailer will give you just a brief impression of the impact of this impressive film:
A couple of interesting pieces of trivia: Jarmila
Novotna was an opera singer, as well as an actess, and Ivan Jandl spoke no English - he learned his lines phonetically.
Next week, we visit with an earlier film about children in the War. Please join us.
This week, we look at Gold Diggers of 1933, another Busby
Berkeley musical. It looks at the Depression through the eyes of
showgirls who are trying to survive as theatricals close under them.
Enter Brad Roberts (Dick Powell), a young man eager to break into show
business as a songwriter. He agrees to finance a show, as long as it
features his music and stars his love, Polly Parker (Ruby Keeler). Brad
is, it seems, quite wealthy, the younger son of a family that has agreed
to his ambitions as long as he changes his name. However, once his
older brother Lawrence (played by William Warren) finds out that young
Brad is planning on marrying a showgirl, mayhem ensues. Carol's friend
Polly (Joan Blondell) is mistaken by Lawrence for Carol, and Polly
decides to play along.
During the musical numbers, Billy Barty is
back, again as a child in the "Pettin' in the Park" number, oogling all
the lovely ladies. The number ends with the famous scene of him handing
a can opener to Dick Powell, so he can cut the "protected" Ruby Keeler
out of her tin armor. But as racy as the number is, perhaps the
interaction among Joan Blondell, William Warren, Aline MacMahon (as
Trixie Lorraine, another showgirl) and Guy Kibbee ("Fanny", the object
of Trixie's golddigging). The girls con expensive hats out of the men -
retribution for their mission to break up Brad and Carol. And let's not
forget the lovely Fay (Ginger Rogers), whose last name is Fortune, and
who, quite frankly, is looking for one.Of course, all comes right in
then end - Brad get Carol, Polly gets Lawrence, and even Trixie get
"Fanny".
We were surprised that, in this lighthearted romp, the
number that ended the musical is "Remember My Forgotten Man". Its somber
tone is in direct contrast to the rest of the movie, and that it ends
the movie is a statement in and of itself. Coming out in the middle of
the Depression, it reminds the audience of the environment to which they
must return. Here is that scene:
And so, next week we pick up with a more serious story. Hope you'll visit with us again.
Heroes for Sale is nearly unrelenting in the intensity
of pain that the character of Tom Holmes (Richard Barthelmess) goes
through. A soldier in the first World War, who is severelywounded in an
enemy action, he ends up addicted to morphine when his German doctor can
only relieve his pain rather than remove the shrapnel in his body. He
returns to America to find that his fellow soldier George (Grant
Mitchell) has been given awards for bravery for leading the action in
which Tom was injured, while George hid in a foxhole, paralyzed with
fear. George attempts to help his friend, as much out of fear of being
revealed as anything else, until Tom's addiction becomes known, at which
point Tom is fired from his bank job and put into a rehabilitation
center.
Cured of his drug problem, Tom starts over, marries
(Loretta Young as Ruth), becomes successful, only to have everything
taken away from him yet again. He loses his job, his wife, his son and
finally ends up one of the depression homeless, primarily because he
refuses to live upon the pain of his fellow man.
William Wellman
never lets up in this story. Just when you think Tom will make it,
something else happens to him. Richard Barthelmess is wonderful as Tom.
We felt for him at every moment. He had had a remarkable career in
silents, which continued into the 1930's, finally petering out
(unfortunately) in the 1940's. We had previously seen him in Only Angels Have Wings, and looked forward to seeing him in a lead role; he was not a disappointment.
Unlike the previously discussed Midnight Mary, Loretta Young plays an innocent girl in Heroes for Sale, someone who loves her husband and son
with her whole heart. Young is quite good in what is really a small part.
Besides Barthelmess, though, the other actor of real interest is Aline MacMahon as Mary Dennis. Of particular note is a
scene during which she realizes that Tom has feelings for Ruth. Watch her face -
Aline MacMahon will break your heart.
Ms. MacMahon began her career in 1931, and continued working until 1975. She had started on Broadway, appearing in The Madras House in 1921 - she would continue to work on the New York stage until 1975. She spent her film career in supporting roles, like Trixie Lorraine in Gold Diggers of 1933 and Mrs. Murray in The Search. Married once (from 1928 until her husband's death in 1975), she retired in after completing For the Use of the Hall. She died in 1991, aged 92.
Here's a scene with the always wonderful Aline MacMahon and Richard Barthelmess:
Next week, we conclude this particular precode set with Wild Boys of the Road.