Beauty on Parade
Cast & Crew
Lew Landers
Robert Hutton
Ruth Warrick
Lola Albright
John Ridgely
Hillary Brooke
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Twenty years earlier, as Marian Medford, beautiful Kay Woodstock's mother won a local beauty contest. After she stepped down to marry Jeffrey Woodstock, Marian's runner-up, Gloria Barton, went on to win the national title and marry a millionaire. Over the years, Marian has constantly reminded Jeffrey that she gave up her career for marriage. Now she is determined to live out her dream through Kay. Against Jeffrey's wishes, Marian convinces Kay to enter a beauty contest. After she wins, Kay is interviewed by reporter Gil McRoberts and his photographer, Sam Short. Gil is cynical about beauty pageants and advises Kay that the best thing for her to do is marry and settle down. Marian, however, persuades Kay's fiancé, lifeguard Johnny Fennel, to postpone their marriage so that Kay can continue to enter contests. With Marian at her side, Kay makes the rounds, winning contest after contest. By the time she becomes a contestant in the Miss U.S.A. pageant, Jeffrey, who has been abandoned by his obsessed wife, is ready to end his marriage. Things end happily, however, when Kay wins the contest, but abdicates because she married Gil the day before. Marian is brought to her senses and returns home to Jeffrey.
Director
Lew Landers
Cast
Robert Hutton
Ruth Warrick
Lola Albright
John Ridgely
Hillary Brooke
Wally Vernon
Jimmy Lloyd
Donna Gibson
Frank Sully
Robert C. Hasha
Lillian Bronson
Ray Walker
Fred Sears
Lelah Tyler
Robert B. Williams
Pat Gleason
Harry Cheshire
Earle Dewey
William Norton Bailey
Ken Harvey
Crew
Mischa Bakaleinikoff
George Bricker
Jack Corrick
Vincent Farrar
Jack Goodrich
Victor Greene
Wallace Macdonald
George Montgomery
Arthur E. Orloff
Arthur E. Orloff
Aaron Stell
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Ruth Warrick (1915-2005) - Ruth Warrick, (1915-2005)
She was born on June 29, 1915 in St. Joseph, Missouri. After attaining a degree in theatre from the University of Kansas City, she left for New York, where in 1938, she joined the Mercury Theater troupe, headed by a young artist on the rise by the name of Orson Welles. When Welles prepared to film Citizen Kane (1941) he took several players from his Mercury Theater (Joseph Cotten, Everett Sloan, Agnes Moorehead) and of course, Ruth Warrick. She made her film debut in Welles' cinematic epic as Emily Norton Kane. Indeed, to many film buffs, Warrick's icy charms are indispensable to the celebrated montage sequence opposite Welles at the breakfast table; particularly when he broaches the subject of her husband's infidelity:
Emily Kane: Charles, people will think...
Charles Kane: What I tell them to think!
Warrick received fine reviews for her performance, and she had good roles in her next two films The Corsican Brothers (1941), with Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and Journey Into Fear (1942), opposite Joseph Cotton. Sadly, Hollywood, not knowing what to do with a well-trained, mature actress like Warrick, began to cast her into routine, forgettable fare: Mr. Winkle Goes to War (1944), China Sky (1945), and Swell Guy (1946). Disney's Song of the South (1947), was a box-office hit, and was her best film in a while, but overall, the material she received over the next few years, simply wasn't worthy of her talents.
Things turned around for her in the mid-50s, when Warrick discovered the medium of television. She had regular roles on The Guiding Light (1953-54), As the World Turns (1956-60), Father of the Bride (1960-61), and was unforgettable as the sinister housekeeper, Hannah Cord, in Peyton Place (1965-67). Yet it was her 35-year run in the role of Phoebe Wallingford in All My Children (1970-2005), that Warrick achieved her greatest triumph. As the rich, intrusive matriarch of the fictitious, affluent town known as Pine Valley, Warrick found a role that could be at once gloriously hammy and quietly conniving - qualities that highlighted her renown versatility as an actress. To honor her contribution to television, Warrick received a lifetime achievement award from the Daytime Emmys last December. She is survived by three children, a grandson, and six great-grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Ruth Warrick (1915-2005) - Ruth Warrick, (1915-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
The Hollywood Reporter review notes that the film makes "judicious use of newsreel shots of past beauty contests."