Day-Time Wife
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Gregory Ratoff
Tyrone Power
Linda Darnell
Warren William
Binnie Barnes
Wendy Barrie
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
It is the second wedding anniversary of Ken and Jane Norton, but there is trouble in their lovers' paradise. Despite all the hints Jane leaves for her husband, Ken has completely forgotten the occasion. Jane has a surprise party at their apartment to commemorate the event, but Ken's secretary Kitty Frazier, calls to say that Ken will be working very late that night. Jane decides to move the party to Ken's office, but when they arrive, only the cleaning ladies are at work. Jane's much-married friend Blanche finds expensive perfume in Kitty's desk, and when Ken arrives home late that night with its scent, Jane is forced to face the fact that her husband has gone astray. Jane does not want a divorce, however, and decides to find out what mystical power secretaries hold over their bosses. Jane becomes the secretary of architect Bernard Dexter, who immediately becomes infatuated with her. Complicating matters further, Ken is trying to sign a large roofing contract with Dexter, and Jane does not want Ken to know that she is working. When Jane finally agrees to go to lunch with Dexter, she learns the secret of a secretary's fascination for her boss: like Ken, Dexter finds his wife "beautiful...but a solved crossword puzzle." When Dexter gives Jane an expensive sable fur, she does not know what to do until the receptionist, Miss Applegate, comes up with a solution. Jane pawns the coat, then gives Ken the ticket, telling him she found it and wants him to redeem it. The next day, when Ken brings home a moth-eaten rabbit wrap instead of the coat, Jane has just about had enough. Ken then agrees that he has been ignoring her and they plan a night out on the town. The next day Ken meets with Dexter, who insists that they go out together, with "no wives." Then, when Jane reads Ken's message cancelling their evening, Jane agrees to go out with Dexter. Ken is shocked when he arrives with Kitty and finds Dexter with Jane. Ken says nothing, for fear of losing his possible contract with Dexter. The four go to Dexter's penthouse apartment after dinner, where Jane sees Ken being kissed by Kitty. Just then, Mrs. Dexter arrives, thinking she has finally caught her cheating husband red-handed. Jane immediately solves the problem by telling her that she is Ken's wife and that this is an innocent dinner party. To prove the point, Dexter is forced to sign Ken's roofing contract. Jane, Ken and Kitty leave, returning to the Norton's apartment, though Kitty is led to believe that it is Jane's. Jane puts Ken on the living room's davenport, and when he sneaks back into the bedroom, Kitty overhears Ken call her "an old slice of watermelon." Banished again from the bedroom, Ken tries to sleep on the davenport. As an angry Kitty leaves, she bashes Ken over the head with a high-heel, knocking him out. Jane, deciding to forgive Ken, goes to the living room and wakes him up, but Ken thinks Jane hit him until they find Kitty's broken heel. In the bathroom, as Jane bandages his head, the two make up, agreeing that Jane will no longer be "a day-time wife."
Director
Gregory Ratoff
Cast
Tyrone Power
Linda Darnell
Warren William
Binnie Barnes
Wendy Barrie
Joan Davis
Joan Valerie
Leonid Kinskey
Mildred Gover
Renie Riano
Frank Coghlan Jr.
Alex Pollard
Mary Gordon
Otto Han
Marie Blake
Robert Lowery
David Newell
Crew
Art Arthur
Richard Day
Raymond Griffith
Robert Harari
Sam Hellman
Roger Heman
Arthur Von Kirbach
Thomas Little
Francis Lyon
Peverell Marley
Cyril J. Mockridge
Royer
Fred Spencer
Rex Taylor
Joseph C. Wright
Darryl F. Zanuck
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Day-Time Wife
20th Century Fox initially cast actress Loretta Young in the role of Jane. However, when Young rejected the idea of getting second billing, Fox decided to use it as an opportunity to try out their new up-and-coming starlet Linda Darnell opposite Tyrone Power for the first time. Darnell was just a teenager at the time on the cusp of stardom while Power was an established matinee idol trying his hand at comedy after years of performing mostly in dramas. Darnell tried to act sophisticated on the set, but everyone was painfully aware that she was still essentially a schoolgirl despite her mature beauty. "I would be kissing Tyrone Power," said Darnell some years later, "and the school teacher would come and tell me it was time for my history lesson. I never before or since have been so embarrassed."
Luckily, audiences embraced the pairing of Darnell and Power. Day-Time Wife was the first of four films that they made together over the next few years at Fox.
Director: Gregory Ratoff
Screenplay: Art Arthur, Robert Harari (screenplay); Rex Taylor (story); Sam Hellman (contributor to screenplay, uncredited)
Cinematography: Peverell Marley
Art Direction: Richard Day, Joseph C. Wright
Film Editing: Francis Lyon
Cast: Tyrone Power (Ken Norton), Linda Darnell (Jane), Warren William (Bernard Dexter), Binnie Barnes (Blanche), Wendy Barrie (Kitty), Joan Davis (Miss Applegate), Joan Valerie (Mrs. Dexter), Leonid Kinskey (Coco), Mildred Gover (Melbourne), Renie Riano (Miss Briggs).
BW-72m.
by Andrea Passafiume
Day-Time Wife
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Working titles of this film were First Kiss, Part Time Wife and A Deal in Hearts. Material in the Twentieth Century-Fox Produced Script Collection at the UCLA Theater Arts Library indicate that Walter Bullock contributed changes in early drafts of the screenplay. Fox story material also indicates that the character of Kitty's boyfriend was removed under the insistance of studio chief Darryl Zanuck. A Hollywood Reporter production chart lists John Halliday in the cast, but his participation in the completed film has not been confirmed. According to a Twentieth Century-Fox press release, Zanuck was so impressed by Darnell's performance that he decided to give her credit over the title, though it was only her second film. Other press releases claim that filming was scheduled to conclude on Friday, the 13th, but associate producer Raymond Griffith insisted that it end the next day, for superstitious reasons.