Stage Door Movie Review
Stage Door Review

"Stage Door" Overview

Rating: NR
1937
Cast and Crew
Director : Gregory La CavaProducer : Pandro S. Berman
Screenwiter : Edna Ferber,George S. Kaufman,Morrie Ryskind,Anthony Veiller
Starring : Katharine Hepburn,Ginger Rogers,Eve Arden,Lucille Ball,Ann Miller,Andrea Leeds
Stage Door deserves its own solid gold time capsule. This is one for the ages,
a hyperwitty comedy/drama written by the brilliant Edna Ferber and George S.
Kaufman who took their play from the Broadway stage to the RKO soundstage and
put it in the capable hands of director Gregory La Cava and an all-star cast of
the most dazzling leading ladies of the 1930s. No, they don’t make ‘em like
this anymore.
Justifiably famous for a rapid-fire script jam-packed with barbed remarks and
caustic retorts, the film makes you stifle your laughter so you don’t miss the
next oncoming zinger. At one point, an exasperated Terry Randall (Katharine
Hepburn) says to the delightfully bitchy Jean Maitland (Ginger Rogers), “It'd
be a terrific innovation if you could get your mind to stretch a little further
than the next wisecrack.” Indeed.
Most of Stage Door’s action takes place in a New York theater-district boarding
house for aspiring young actresses. Day after day the young women head out on
auditions and come home wearily to their ersatz sorority house to chat and joke
about their unlucky breaks or to get all dolled up for a night out on the town
with the potential sugar daddies who are always sniffing around.
Jean is the Queen Bee of the moment, and she’s mighty displeased having to
welcome a new roommate in the form of Hepburn’s Terry, a rich, stuck-up poseur
with a highfalutin’ accent who’s just arrived from Connecticut (hey, just like
Hepburn’s real life story). Terry is out to prove to her traditional family
that she can make it as an actress, and she successfully parries every one of
Jean’s constant insults with rapier-like remarks of her own. It’s some of
cinema history’s sharpest, fastest insult flinging.
Rounding out the gang is a very young Lucille Ball (fascinating to see), Eve
Arden playing the type of wise-ass sidekick she’d play dozens of times in her
career, 17-year-old Ann Miller, and Oscar-nominee Andrea Leeds as Kaye, the
dreamy hopeful with a heart of gold who just has to get a part. She just has
to!
As the girls tackle the big city, they find themselves caught in casting couch
situations and dodging the nefarious advances of all kinds of unscrupulous
theater types. They stick together through thick and thin, and their humor
seems to be their ultimate defense mechanism. They’ll do anything to keep their
spirits up because the reality of their situation is so challenging and
downright ugly.
Only the standoffish Terry stands outside the circle. Eventually she lands a
leading role in a turgid drawing-room melodrama that features that famous
speech, “The calla lilies are in bloom again. Such a strange flower, suitable
to any occasion. I carried them on my wedding day and now I place them here in
memory of something that has died." Anyone who has ever imitated Hepburn knows
this soliloquy, and it’s interesting to note that it was actually lifted from a
famous Broadway flop called “The Lake” in which Hepburn had starred a few years
earlier.
Of course, when Terry wins the part, several other people lose, including the
fragile, innocent Kaye. Tragedy ensues, and the story takes a sharp turn into
high drama in its final minutes.
Stage Door is totally rewarding from start to finish. Like many movies of its
time that came from the stage, it looks a bit stiff, like a filmed play almost
inevitably will, but that doesn’t detract one bit from the whipsmart dialogue
that races by almost faster than you can process it. In the first half of the
20th century, only All About Eve matches it for its combination of brilliant
female performances and a near-perfect script. If you love movies, Stage Door
is mandatory viewing.
The DVD adds the musical short "Ups and Downs" and a radio production starring
Rogers and Rosalind Russell.
These doors are open.
Reviewer: Don Willmott



