Frank Capra gets all the credit for crafting true-blue Americana tales like It Happened One Night (1934) and Mr. Smith Goes To Washington (1939), but much of what's thought of as "the Capra style" owes a debt to his screenwriter Robert Riskin, whose stories of decent, hardworking everymen made them populist favorites. Here, in a story that's shot through with the gendered economic realities of the Depression, the everyman is a woman (Fay Wray) who becomes a successful lawyer while her husband (Gene Raymond) can't get his career jump-started. When he quits in disgust to become a nightclub singer, will the lady lawyer have to abandon career for marriage to keep her husband out of the clutches of a sloshed torch singer (Claire Dodd)? While directed by Edward Buzzell (later director of Marx Brothers movies The Circus (1939) and Go West (1940) Riskin was quite involved: extant working copies of the shooting script include his notes on shots and camera angles. And while this movie is overshadowed in Wray's biography because it came out the same year as King Kong, this tale of marital dischord can't overshadow how Wray and Riskin were happily wed in 1942.
By Violet LeVoit
Ann Carver's Profession
Brief Synopsis
A female lawyer is torn between her career and her husband's ego.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Edward Buzzell
Director
Fay Wray
Ann [Carver]
Gene Raymond
["Lightning"] Bill [Graham]
Claire Dodd
Carole [Rogers]
Jessie Ralph
Terry
Claude Gillingwater
[Judge] Bingham
Film Details
Also Known As
Professional Women, Rules for Wives
Genre
Drama
Release Date
May
26,
1933
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 8m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
6,234ft
(7 reels)
Synopsis
Popular football star "Lightning" Bill Graham marries Ann Carver after both graduate from Hampden University. Although Ann receives her law degree and passes the bar exam, she decides to keep house for Bill, who is employed as a draftsman. Although Bill is ambitious to prove himself beyond his football talent, attractive looks and good singing voice, it is actually Ann who becomes successful. After proving herself to former Judge Bingham and his son by handling an important case, she is hired by them and wins an acquittal for a client's wealthy playboy son in a breach of promise lawsuit filed against him. Other spectacular legal victories follow, and Ann becomes the darling of the media, while Bill's career stagnates. As Ann's job makes enormous demands on her time, she and Bill spend less time together. Ashamed that his wife's income provides most of the family money, Bill quits his job to earn more crooning at the Club Mirador, a nightclub where their college friend, Jim Thompson, is a band leader. When Ann mistakenly believes that her husband is romantically inclined toward the club's sexy, alcoholic singer, Carole Rogers, Ann publicly embarrasses him. Unable to cope with the idea that he cannot support his wife, Bill leaves and moves into his own apartment, where Carole, having lost her job due to her alcoholism, continues to make a play for him. Disgusted with her alcoholic condition, Bill leaves for the club. Her drunkenness causes her to fall, and her necklace catches on a sofa, choking her to death. Bill finally makes the headlines as the district attorney's office accuses him of murder. Judge Bingham convinces Bill to let Ann plead his case. She eloquently tells the jury that Bill's troubles are her fault and that he left her when she did not return the love he had given her so willingly. Announcing before the court that this will be her last case, she begs the jury not to convict Bill and claims that reasonable doubt exists in this case. After Bill is acquitted, he and Ann reconcile. As Ann cheerfully helps her husband pursue his career, Bill becomes successful as an architect when his plans are published in House and Garden and Vanity Fair .
Director
Edward Buzzell
Director
Cast
Fay Wray
Ann [Carver]
Gene Raymond
["Lightning"] Bill [Graham]
Claire Dodd
Carole [Rogers]
Jessie Ralph
Terry
Claude Gillingwater
[Judge] Bingham
Frank Albertson
Jim [Thompson]
Arthur Pierson
Ken
Frank Reicher
The General
George Baxter
Chedo
David Newell
Adjutant
Frank Conroy
Baker
Robert Barrat
Mr. Simmons
Edward Keane
Mr. Harrison
Diane Bori
Irma Chappelle
Film Details
Also Known As
Professional Women, Rules for Wives
Genre
Drama
Release Date
May
26,
1933
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 8m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
6,234ft
(7 reels)
Articles
Ann Carver's Profession -
By Violet LeVoit
Ann Carver's Profession -
Frank Capra gets all the credit for crafting true-blue Americana tales like It Happened One Night (1934) and Mr. Smith Goes To Washington (1939), but much of what's thought of as "the Capra style" owes a debt to his screenwriter Robert Riskin, whose stories of decent, hardworking everymen made them populist favorites. Here, in a story that's shot through with the gendered economic realities of the Depression, the everyman is a woman (Fay Wray) who becomes a successful lawyer while her husband (Gene Raymond) can't get his career jump-started. When he quits in disgust to become a nightclub singer, will the lady lawyer have to abandon career for marriage to keep her husband out of the clutches of a sloshed torch singer (Claire Dodd)? While directed by Edward Buzzell (later director of Marx Brothers movies The Circus (1939) and Go West (1940) Riskin was quite involved: extant working copies of the shooting script include his notes on shots and camera angles. And while this movie is overshadowed in Wray's biography because it came out the same year as King Kong, this tale of marital dischord can't overshadow how Wray and Riskin were happily wed in 1942.
By Violet LeVoit
Fay Wray (1907-2004)
She was born Vina Fay Wray, in Cardston, Alberta, Canada on September 15, 1907. Her family relocated to Arizona when she was still a toddler so her father could find employment. When her parents divorced, her mother sent her to Hollywood when Fay's eldest sister died in the influenza epidemic of 1918. The reasoning was that Southern California offered a healthier climate for the young, frail Wray.
She attended Hollywood High School, where she took some classes in drama. After she graduated, she applied to the Hal Roach studio and was given a six-month contract where she appeared in two-reel Westerns (25 minutes in length), and played opposite Stan Laurel in his pre-Oliver Hardy days.
She landed her first big role, as Mitzi Schrammell, in Erich von Stroheim's beautifully mounted silent The Wedding March (1928). It made Wray a star. She then starred in some excellent films: The Four Feathers (1929), the early Gary Cooper Western The Texan (1930), and one of Ronald Coleman's first starring roles The Unholy Garden (1931), all of which were big hits of the day.
For whatever reason, Wray soon found herself in a string of thrillers that made her one of the great screamers in Hollywood history. The titles say it all: Doctor X, The Most Dangerous Game (both 1932), Mystery of the Wax Museum, The Vampire Bat (both 1933) and, of course her most famous role, that of Ann Darrow, who tempts cinema's most famous ape in the unforgettable King Kong (also 1933).
Wray did prove herself quite capable in genre outside of the horror game, the best of which were Shanghai Madness with Spencer Tracy; The Bowery (both 1933), a tough pre-Hays Code drama opposite George Raft; and the brutal Viva Villa (1934), with Wallace Beery about the famed Mexican bandit. Yet curiously, the quality of her scripts began to tank, and she eventually found herself acting in such mediocre fare as Come Out of the Pantry (1935), and They Met in a Taxi (1936).
With her roles becoming increasingly routine, the last of which was the forgettable comedy Not a Ladies Man (1942), she decided to trade acting for domesticity and married Robert Riskin, who won two Best Screenplay Oscars® for the Frank Capra comedies It Happened One Night (1934) and Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936). When Riskin died in 1955, Wray found herself working to keep busy and support her three children. She landed supporting parts for films like The Cobweb (1955), Hell on Frisco Bay (1956) and Tammy and the Bachelor (1957). She also found work in television on such popular programs as Perry Mason and Wagon Train before she retired from acting all together in the mid-'60s.
To her credit, Wray did remain reasonably active after her retirement. She published her autobiography, On The Other Hand in 1989 and was attending many film festivals that honored her contribution to film, most notably in January 2003, when, at 95 years of age, she accepted in person her "Legend in Film" Award at the Palm Beach International Film Festival. Wray is survived by a son, Robert Riskin Jr.; two daughters, Susan and Victoria; and two grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Fay Wray (1907-2004)
"It was Beauty Who Killed the Beast!" An immortal
line from one of cinemas' great early romantic dramas,
King Kong (1933). The beauty in reference?
One of Hollywood's loveliest leading ladies from its
Golden Age - Fay Wray, who died on August 8 in her
Manhattan home of natural causes. She was 96.
She was born Vina Fay Wray, in Cardston, Alberta,
Canada on September 15, 1907. Her family relocated to
Arizona when she was still a toddler so her father could
find employment. When her parents divorced, her
mother sent her to Hollywood when Fay's eldest sister
died in the influenza epidemic of 1918. The reasoning was
that Southern California offered a healthier climate
for the young, frail Wray.
She attended Hollywood High School, where she took
some classes in drama. After she graduated, she
applied to the Hal Roach studio and was given a
six-month contract where she appeared in two-reel
Westerns (25 minutes in length), and played opposite
Stan Laurel in his pre-Oliver Hardy days.
She landed her first big role, as Mitzi Schrammell, in
Erich von Stroheim's beautifully mounted silent The
Wedding March (1928). It made Wray a star. She
then starred in some excellent films: The Four
Feathers (1929), the early Gary Cooper Western
The Texan (1930), and one of Ronald Coleman's
first starring roles The Unholy Garden (1931),
all of which were big hits of the day.
For whatever reason, Wray soon found herself in a
string of thrillers that made her one of the great
screamers in Hollywood history. The titles say it
all: Doctor X, The Most Dangerous Game
(both 1932), Mystery of the Wax Museum, The
Vampire Bat (both 1933) and, of course her most
famous role, that of Ann Darrow, who tempts cinema's
most famous ape in the unforgettable King Kong
(also 1933).
Wray did prove herself quite capable in genre outside
of the horror game, the best of which were Shanghai
Madness with Spencer Tracy; The Bowery
(both 1933), a tough pre-Hays Code drama opposite
George Raft; and the brutal Viva Villa (1934),
with Wallace Beery about the famed Mexican bandit.
Yet curiously, the quality of her scripts began to
tank, and she eventually found herself acting in such
mediocre fare as Come Out of the Pantry (1935),
and They Met in a Taxi (1936).
With her roles becoming increasingly routine, the last
of which was the forgettable comedy Not a Ladies
Man (1942), she decided to trade acting for
domesticity and married Robert Riskin, who won two
Best Screenplay Oscars® for the Frank Capra comedies
It Happened One Night (1934) and Mr. Deeds
Goes to Town (1936). When Riskin died in 1955,
Wray found herself working to keep busy and support
her three children. She landed supporting parts for
films like The Cobweb (1955), Hell on Frisco
Bay (1956) and Tammy and the Bachelor
(1957). She also found work in television on such
popular programs as Perry Mason and Wagon
Train before she retired from acting all together
in the mid-'60s.
To her credit, Wray did remain reasonably active after
her retirement. She published her autobiography,
On The Other Hand in 1989 and was attending
many film festivals that honored her contribution to
film, most notably in January 2003, when, at 95 years
of age, she accepted in person her "Legend in Film"
Award at the Palm Beach International Film Festival.
Wray is survived by a son, Robert Riskin Jr.; two
daughters, Susan and Victoria; and two grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The working titles of this film were Rules for Wives and Professional Women. According to the onscreen credits, Robert Riskin's original story was also entitled "Rules for Wives." According to Film Daily news items, Norman Foster and Edwin Stanley were cast to appear in the film, but their participation in the completed picture has not been confirmed. Although the writing credits differ, this film bears a striking resemblance in plot to Columbia's 1938 production The Lady Objects (see below).