The Petty Girl
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Henry Levin
Robert Cummings
Joan Caulfield
Elsa Lanchester
Melville Cooper
Audrey Long
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Artist George Petty fails to interest automobile magnate B. J. Manton in his idea for advertising his newest car with drawings of attractive women, but Manton's daughter Connie likes the drawings and the artist, and even though she is married, makes George her protegé. She encourages him to take up serious painting, and soon he becomes a successful portrait painter and acquires a penthouse, good clothes and a butler. Meanwhile, attractive young Victoria Braymore, a professor at Braymore College, plans a trip to a conference in New York, where she will answer criticisms that Braymore is old-fashioned. Victoria has been reared by a group of older professors since the death of her parents when she was a child, and her guardians, concerned about the dangers of the city, send a professor, Victoria's friend, Dr. Crutcher, as her chaperon. George spots Victoria in an art museum and tries to pick her up. After Victoria refuses to speak with a man she does not know, George pretends to be a former student of Dr. Crutcher's and so charms the professor that she pretends to believe his lie. George then invites Victoria to dinner, and when she refuses to go without Dr. Crutcher, asks his butler to be Dr. Crutcher's date. At dinner, the butler, whom George introduces as his Uncle Ben, proceeds to get very drunk. While Ben keeps Dr. Crutcher amused, George and Victoria go to a nightclub which features a scantily dressed model, who poses for the artists in the audience. After a drink is spilled on Victoria's dress, she asks the powder room attendant to iron it dry. While she is waiting in her slip, the club is raided, and the police mistake her for the model. The following morning her picture and a report about her arrest is on the front page of the newspaper. When Victoria returns to Braymore, George follows her and gets a job there as a handyman. George's efforts to spend time alone with Victoria are made more difficult by the surveillance of suspicious Professor Whitman. When the professor sees Victoria sneak out to George's room so that he can sketch her, she summons the others and George is forced to leave. The next day, after her guardians discuss what disciplinary measures should be taken, Victoria sweetly announces that she is in love and plans to follow George to New York. In New York, Victoria tries to convince George to give up his serious paintings and stick to drawing the "Petty Girl," as she dubs his sexy drawings of women. When an angry George throws her out, Victoria sneaks his painting of her into the art museum. The resulting publicity lands Victoria a job in burlesque, but before the first performance, George delivers an injunction forbidding her to appear publicly as the Petty Girl. Learning that Connie is giving a party for George, Victoria decides that the injunction does not prevent her from appearing privately and imports her entire act to the party. Manton is so impressed by Victoria's number that he offers George an advertising contract. George realizes that Victoria has been right about his talent and reconciles with her.
Director
Henry Levin
Cast
Robert Cummings
Joan Caulfield
Elsa Lanchester
Melville Cooper
Audrey Long
Mary Wickes
Frank Orth
John Ridgeley
Raymond Largay
Ian Wolfe
Frank Jenks
Tim Ryan
Mabel Paige
Kathleen Howard
Sarah Edwards
Everett Glass
Douglas Wood
Edward Clark
Movita Castañeda
Lyn Thomas
Philip Van Zandt
Dorothy Vaughn
Gino Corrado
Eugene Borden
Wendy Lee
Tito Vuolo
Richard Avonde
Jean Frischer
John Bleifer
Pat Flaherty
Ray Teal
Paul Bryar
Harry Harvey Jr.
William Page Frambes
Earle Hodgins
Wheaton Chambers
Henry Hall
Mary Newton
Earl Dewey
Paul E. Burns
Alphonse Martell
Tom Stevenson
Loren Raker
Gonzalo C. Carreno
Joan Deloris Bade
James Griffith
Don Dillaway
Russell Hicks
Paul Cramer
James Fairfax
Peter Mcgiveney
Carlos De La Rivera
Herbert Heywood
Vivian Mason
Dorothy Abbott
Eloise Farmer
Betsy Crofts
Tippi Hedren
Jany Pope
Joey Pope
Eileen Howe
Shirley Ballard
Jetsy Parker
Wanda Stevenson
Barbara Freking
Carol Rush
Lois Hall
Joan Larkin
Lucille Lamarr
Mona Knox
Shirley Whitney
Claire Dennis
Jean Willes
Marjorie Stapp
Jack Santoro
Alfred Paix
Richard La Marr
George Hoagland
Jack Barnett
Jack Chefe
Sandee Mariott
Elaine Towne
Carli Elinor
Crew
Harold Arlen
Clay Campbell
Al Clark
Francis Cugat
George Duning
Frank Goodwin
Charles Gould
Walter Holscher
Helen Hunt
William Kiernan
Eugene Loring
Jean Louis
Mary Mccarthy
Johnny Mercer
Nat Perrin
Nat Perrin
William Snyder
Morris Stoloff
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
The Petty Girl
The Petty Girl features original songs with music by Harold Arlen and lyrics by Johnny Mercer including "Fancy Free," "Calypso Song" and the exuberant title song featured in the film's finale.
Watch for 20-year-old Tippi Hedren in a small uncredited role as one of Petty's models. The Petty Girl marked her first feature film appearance, and she wouldn't appear onscreen again until 13 years later when she landed the lead in Alfred Hitchcock's classic The Birds (1963).
The highly fictionalized The Petty Girl may bear little resemblance to the real life of artist George Petty, but the film is nevertheless a delight. "The Petty Girl is an apocryphal account of how Calendar Artist George Petty awakened to his talent for drawing biologically improbably cheesecake," said Time magazine in its review. "A freehand farce with some pleasant tunes by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer, the movie is just as implausible as Petty girls-and almost as well-turned and diverting."
Producer: Nat Perrin
Director: Henry Levin
Screenplay: Nat Perrin; Mary Mc Carthy (story)
Cinematography: William Snyder
Art Direction: Walter Holscher
Music: George Duning, Werner R. Heymann
Film Editing: Al Clark
Cast: Robert Cummings (George Petty, aka Andrew 'Andy' Tapp), Joan Caulfield (Prof. Victoria Braymore), Elsa Lanchester (Dr. Crutcher), Melville Cooper (Beardsley - Petty's butler aka Uncle Ben), Audrey Long (Mrs. Connie Manton Dezlow), Mary Wickes (Prof. Whitman).
C-88m.
by Andrea Passafiume
The Petty Girl
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The film's working title was Girl of the Year. George Petty first drew "The Petty Girl" around 1930 for a Midwestern brewery's "near-beer" advertisement. In 1933, The Petty Girl first appeared in Esquire. According to a October 12, 1942 Hollywood Reporter news item, the rights to "The Petty Girl" were first sold to RKO. That company planned to hold a nationwide search for an unknown actress to play the title role and had enlisted Petty as a technical advisor. According to a September 7, 1946 Los Angeles Examiner news item and a September 16, 1946 Hollywood Reporter news item, Al Bloomingdale, who was to have produced the film for RKO, sold the property to Columbia. According to a January 2, 1947 Hollywood Reporter news item, Ann Miller was slated to star in the film. A August 9, 1949 Hollywood Reporter news item notes that Henry Levin replaced Charles Vidor as director after the latter was suspended for breach of contract. The film marked the motion picture debut of Tippi Hedren. Hedren, who was the "Ice box" Petty girl model, did not make another film until The Birds, the 1963 Alfred Hitchcock-directed picture in which she had the lead role (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1961-70; F6.0416).