It's a Gift
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Norman Mcleod
W. C. Fields
Kathleen Howard
Jean Rouverol
Julian Madison
Tom Bupp
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In New Jersey, inept storekeeper Harold Bissonette is constantly badgered by his domineering wife Amelia, his obnoxious son Norman and his lovestruck daughter Mildred. When his Uncle Bean dies, Harold uses his $5,000 inheritance to buy an orange ranch in California through Mildred's boyfriend, John Durston, but does not tell Amelia. In the meantime, life's little details continually frustrate Harold. After several catastrophes at his store, variously involving a child, a blind man and molasses, he goes home to a wife who nags throughout the night. Harold tries to sleep on the balcony, where noisy neighbors, children and the milkman contrive to keep him awake. When John finds out that the ranch is no good for growing oranges, he tells Harold, who refuses to believe him. Harold packs up his family and they journey to California in a broken-down "flivver," running into a number of escapades en route. The property in California turns out to be a run-down shack surrounded by acres of dirt and weeds. Amelia furiously takes the children and begins walking off, leaving Harold behind with his faithful dog. Just then their neighbor, Clarence Abernathy, drives up to tell Harold that two racetrack owners are coming to buy Harold's property. The men offer him $25,000 for the land, but despite Amelia's harassment, Harold holds out until he gets $44,000 for Abernathy's commission and a successful orange ranch for himself. In the end, Harold leads a leisurely life as owner of Bissonette's Bluebird Oranges, gaining the peace he so needs while his wife and children attend social functions.
Director
Norman Mcleod
Cast
W. C. Fields
Kathleen Howard
Jean Rouverol
Julian Madison
Tom Bupp
Baby Le Roy
Tammany Young
Morgan Wallace
Charles Sellon
Josephine Whittell
T. Roy Barnes
Diana Lewis
Spencer Charters
Guy Usher
Del Henderson
Jerry Mandy
James Burke
Billy Engle
William Tooker
Edith Kingdon
Patsy O'byrne
Jane Withers
Jack Mulhall
Chill Wills And The Avalon Boys
Crew
Claude Binyon
Charles Bogle
Lou Breslow
Emanuel Cohen
Jack Cunningham
Hans Dreier
John B. Goodman
Howard J. Green
Earl S. Hayman
William Le Baron
Harry Ruskin
Henry Sharp
John Sinclair
Paul Gerard Smith
Eddie Welch
Garnett Weston
Adolph Zukor
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
It's a Gift
It's a Gift is basically a reprise of Fields' greatest hits from his vaudeville days reworked into a narrative with the hapless Bissonette at the center. Several skits came directly from Fields' revue, The Comic Supplement, including 'The Drug Store', "The Picnic Sketch,' and "The Back Porch' (This is the famous skit where Bissonette is harassed by an obnoxious salesman and others while trying to get some sleep on his back porch). The bedroom sketch (also known as 'The Nagger') was originally presented in Follies of 1925 and the shared bathroom sequence, where Bissonette almost cuts his own throat shaving due to his daughter's hyperactive hair brushing, was included in the silent film, The Potters. There are also many plot similarities to It's the Old Army Game (1926), an earlier Fields' silent film, but the recycling of the material works beautifully in It's a Gift, preserving the comedian's most hilarious routines on film forever.
The working title for It's a Gift was originally Back Porch and the script was full of Fields' fondness for odd sounding words and names such as Jasper Fitchmueller, the customer who comes into Bissonette's store and demands "kumquats." Fields was equally fond of using pseudonyms for his screenplays and submitted It's a Gift to the studio under the name of Charles Bogle. As expected, the Breen Office studied the screenplay closely and came up with a long list of objections, such as "Mr. Field's routine gag about being wet by a spray and turning around and kicking the dog should not be used' or "The daughter's line: 'Father, please stop at the first clean gas station should be deleted." Some concessions were made but It's a Gift remains remarkably true to Fields' original conception.
The classic porch sequence was shot at Lasky Ranch and is practically biographical due to the fact that Fields was a well-known insomniac in real life. The last sequence in the film was actually photographed at Fields' newly purchased seven acre estate in Encino, California, and provides a fitting close to the film which mirrors the real Fields: Bissonette is glimpsed sitting on his porch while his family drives away in a limousine for a social outing. As he waves goodbye to them, he pours himself a generous helping of gin and adds a few squeezes of juice from a recently plucked orange.
Producer: William LeBaron
Director: Norman Z. McLeod
Screenplay: Jack Cunningham, W.C. Fields (as Charles Bogle) (play The Comic Supplement), J.P. McEvoy
Cinematography: Henry Sharp
Original Music: Lew Brown (I) (uncredited), Buddy G. DeSylva (uncredited), Ray Henderson (uncredited)
Principal Cast: W.C. Fields (Harold Bissonette), Kathleen Howard (Mrs. Amelia Bissonette), Jean Rouverol (Mildred Bissonette), Julian Madison (John Durston, Mildred's fiance), Tommy Bupp (Norman Bissonette), Baby LeRoy (Baby Dunk).
BW-71m.
By Jeff Stafford
It's a Gift
Quotes
Vegetable man? Vegetable gentleman?- Harold
Do you know a man by the name of LaFong? Carl LaFong? Capital L, small a, Capital F, small o, small n, small g. LaFong. Carl LaFong.- Insurance Salesman
No, I don't know Carl LaFong - capital L, small a, capital F, small o, small n, small g. And if I did know Carl LaFong, I wouldn't admit it!- Harold
Ha ha. Do it again, Pop.- Norman
Shut up!- Harold
Hurt yourself, Dear?- Amelia
Shut...Umm no, Dear.- Harold
Now look what you've done!- Amelia
She ran right in front of the car!- Harold
It's a statue, you idiot.- Amelia
Seems pretty strange someone would call you from a maternity hospital in the middle of the night.- Amelia
They didn't call me from a maternity hospital. They called thinking this was the maternity hospital.- Harold
Trivia
The portrait of the late Uncle Bean is the same portrait of actor Donald Meek seen in Mrs. Wiggs Of The Cabbage Patch filmed the same year. In "It's A Gift" the portrait has a mustache drawn on it.
The final scene, on Bissonette's "orange ranch", was filmed at the house and property W.C. Fields was living in at the time of the filming. For his entire life, Fields rented living quarters, adamantly refusing to buy a house or land.
Notes
The working title of the film was Back Porch. Charles Bogle, who is credited as story writer, was a pseudonym of W. C. Fields. Several sources list Morgan Wallace's character as "Jasper Fitchmueller." Contemporary sources note the similarity between the storyline of this film and Fields's 1926 It's the Old Army Game (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1921-30; F2.2772). A contemporary reviewer in Variety felt that this film was inappropriate for "polite houses" due to several scenes, among them, the one in which Bissonette shares the bathroom mirror with his daughter. Modern sources include the following cast credits: Bud Fine (Driver), Eddie Baker (Yard attendant) and Buster, a dog. While the press book notes that this is Baby LeRoy's first speaking role in a film, the pressbook for the film Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen (see below) claims that the film documents the first word spoken by Baby LeRoy. According to a modern source, the porch scene was filmed at Lasky Ranch, and the last scene was shot at Fields's home in Encino, CA. In addition, modern sources note that actress Jean Rouveral apparently won her role in this film as part of Paramount's "Search for Beauty" contest. Modern sources also claim that gossip regarding Fields's "spiking" of Baby LeRoy's milk derived from the set of this film.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1934
Released in United States on Video October 1998
Released in United States September 2009
Shown at Toronto International Film Festival (Dialogues: Talking With Pictures) September 10-19, 2009.
Released in United States 1934
Released in United States September 2009 (Shown at Toronto International Film Festival (Dialogues: Talking With Pictures) September 10-19, 2009.)
Released in United States on Video October 1998