Blondie in Society


1h 17m 1941
Blondie in Society

Brief Synopsis

Dagwood brings home a pedigreed Great Dane which an important company client wants and which Blondie enters in the big dog show. A highlight of this film is the canine burping display.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Release Date
Jul 17, 1941
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the comic strip "Blondie" created by Chic Young, owned and copyrighted by King Features Syndicate, Inc. (1930--).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 17m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Mirrophonic Recording)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
6,879ft

Synopsis

Dagwood Bumstead returns home from work one afternoon to find the police waiting to question him because his wife Blondie has found a $50 check, forged with his signature and made out to Cliff Peters. When Dagwood explains that he wrote the check as a loan to his old friend, Blondie becomes irate because she had been saving for a hair permanent and a new bicycle for their son, Baby Dumpling. After Blondie badgers her husband into collecting the loan, Dagwood goes to visit Cliff at the dog kennels his friend owns. There, Cliff talks Dagwood into accepting a Great Dane named Chin-up as security for the debt. When her husband returns home with the gigantic canine which proceeds to devour every bit of food in the house, Blondie is horrified. The next day, Dagwood pays a business call to Waldo Pincus, the owner of a land development company. Upon discovering that Pincus is a Great Dane fancier, Dagwood tells him about Chin-up and Pincus makes an appointment to see the dog at Dagwood's office the next day. Upon arriving home from work that evening, Dagwood is confronted by a hoard of angry neighbors brandishing bills for the damage that Chin- up has caused. The next day, Pincus appears at Dagwood's office at the J. C. Dithers Construction Company. When Pincus learns the name of Dagwood's employer, he calls Dithers a swindler and insults Chin-up. Offended, Dagwood threatens to enter Chin-up in the upcoming dog show and defeat Pincus' champion dog. Furious, Dithers fires Dagwood and after Dagwood leaves the office, Pincus offers Dithers a business deal in exchange for preventing Chin-up from entering the show. After Chin-up swallows one of the company's blueprints, Dagwood takes him to the vet to have his stomach pumped. Unable to pay the bill, Dagwood is forced to leave the canine there as collateral. When Dagwood arrives home without his pet, Blondie assumes that he has sold the animal and begins to spend the profits, and Dagwood is afraid to tell her the truth. When the vet calls the next day to demand his fee, Blondie becomes hysterical over Dagwood's deception and visits an attorney about a divorce. After the lawyer convinces Blondie to reconcile with her husband and be more tolerant of Chin- up, she returns home. The next morning, Dagwood is packing up his desk when Dithers offers to rehire him if he promises not to enter Chin-up in the show. After Dagwood agrees, Dithers proposes buying the dog as a gift for Pincus, and the two proceed to the vet's office. They arrive just as Blondie, who has convinced the vet to reduce the bill, strides out with Chin-up. At home, Blondie sees a notice in the paper offering $500 to the winner of the Great Dane Specialty Show. Knowing that Chin-up has a history of falling asleep at dog shows, Blondie ponders how to make him a champion and while lost in thought, she begins to sing "In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree." When Chin-up strikes a show stance upon hearing the tune, Blondie, who is unaware of her husband's bargain with Dithers, enters the dog in the competition. The day of the show, Pincus thinks he has been betrayed when he sees Blondie register Chin-up. When Blondie leaves the dog in a stall while she goes to talk to the registrar, Dithers gives the animal to Pincus. Upon returning to the arena, Blondie finds Chin-up in Pincus' stall, but leads the dog to the ring anyway. When Chin-up lies down in the midst of the show, Blondie convinces a visiting boys's choir to sing the song "Trees." Inspired by the tune, Chin-up springs to his feet and wins the championship. After Chin- up is awarded the prize money, an argument erupts among the vet, Blondie, Dagwood, Pincus and Dithers as to who owns the dog. When the dispute escalates into a brawl, the police intervene. The ownership of the dog is settled when Pincus offers Dagwood $1,000 for the animal, and Blondie adds the provision that Dithers rehire her husband and pay for her permanent and Baby Dumpling's bike.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Release Date
Jul 17, 1941
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the comic strip "Blondie" created by Chic Young, owned and copyrighted by King Features Syndicate, Inc. (1930--).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 17m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Mirrophonic Recording)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
6,879ft

Articles

Blondie Films


The characters and domestic comedy plot of the comic strip "Blondie" were the basis of a popular 28-film series of B movies produced by Columbia Pictures between 1938 and 1950. The Chic Young strip debuted in newspapers in September 1930, following the relationship of a flapper called "Blondie Boopadoop" who marries wealthy playboy Dagwood Bumstead. The Bumsteads disapprove of Blondie and disinherit Dagwood when the couple marries, so he goes to work at a construction company owned by Mr. Dithers. 

The first film, Blondie (1938) was a surprise hit, and the studio decided to turn it into a series, but after five years, Columbia had grown tired of the Bumsteads. The audience's negative response to the cancellation was so strong that the studio was forced to bring it back. The Blondie series ended when Columbia could not agree on a new licensing contract with King Features, the syndicate that owned the rights to the comic strip. Blondie had another life on radio and then briefly on television later in the 1950s.

The movie series starred Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake as Blondie and Dagwood. After doing several radio episodes, Singleton left the show and was replaced by Alice White, Ann Rutherford, and Lake's real-life wife, Patricia van Cleve. Pamela Britton played the title character opposite Lake in the 1958 TV series. Singleton later provided the voice of Jane in the 1960s TV series The Jetsons and Jetsons: The Movie (1990).

The comic strip appears in newspapers to this day, drawn by Dean Young, son of Chic Young, who drew the strip until he died in 1973.

Blondie in Society (1941) airing 11/6/21 at 9:15 pm
Blondie Plays Cupid (1940) airing 11/6/21 at 8:00 pm
Blondie’s Blessed Event (1942) airing 11/6/21 at 10:45 pm

Blondie Films

Blondie Films

The characters and domestic comedy plot of the comic strip "Blondie" were the basis of a popular 28-film series of B movies produced by Columbia Pictures between 1938 and 1950. The Chic Young strip debuted in newspapers in September 1930, following the relationship of a flapper called "Blondie Boopadoop" who marries wealthy playboy Dagwood Bumstead. The Bumsteads disapprove of Blondie and disinherit Dagwood when the couple marries, so he goes to work at a construction company owned by Mr. Dithers. The first film, Blondie (1938) was a surprise hit, and the studio decided to turn it into a series, but after five years, Columbia had grown tired of the Bumsteads. The audience's negative response to the cancellation was so strong that the studio was forced to bring it back. The Blondie series ended when Columbia could not agree on a new licensing contract with King Features, the syndicate that owned the rights to the comic strip. Blondie had another life on radio and then briefly on television later in the 1950s.The movie series starred Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake as Blondie and Dagwood. After doing several radio episodes, Singleton left the show and was replaced by Alice White, Ann Rutherford, and Lake's real-life wife, Patricia van Cleve. Pamela Britton played the title character opposite Lake in the 1958 TV series. Singleton later provided the voice of Jane in the 1960s TV series The Jetsons and Jetsons: The Movie (1990).The comic strip appears in newspapers to this day, drawn by Dean Young, son of Chic Young, who drew the strip until he died in 1973.Blondie in Society (1941) airing 11/6/21 at 9:15 pmBlondie Plays Cupid (1940) airing 11/6/21 at 8:00 pmBlondie’s Blessed Event (1942) airing 11/6/21 at 10:45 pm

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

The onscreen credits of this film May have been altered for re-release by King Features Syndicate. According to a Hollywood Reporter news item, Lou Breslow was originally assigned to write the screenplay for the picture, but the extent of his contribution to the released film has not been determined. For additional information on the series, please consult the Series Index and see the entry for Blondie! in AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1931-40; F3.0391.