Suddenly, It's Spring


1h 27m 1947
Suddenly, It's Spring

Brief Synopsis

A WAC officer returns from the war to find her husband wants a divorce.

Film Details

Also Known As
Sentimental Journey
Genre
Comedy
Romance
Release Date
Mar 21, 1947
Premiere Information
New York opening: 26 Feb 1947
Production Company
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
New York City--LaGuardia Airport, New York, United States; San Pedro Harbor, California, United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 27m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
7,863ft (9 reels)

Synopsis

In 1945, WAC Captain Mary Morely, who is called "Captain Lonelyhearts" because of her expertise in counseling couples separated by war on how to stay together, returns home. She is met at the docks by her husband Peter, who is carrying divorce papers for her to sign so that he can marry his pushy girl friend, Gloria Faye. Peter and Mary, who made up the law firm of Morely & Morely before the war, have not seen each other since 1941. In a heated moment years earlier, Mary, who was absorbed in her career, suggested that Peter and she separate, but now she regrets her words. During her first night home, Mary dresses up to meet Peter in a nightclub, and asks Jack Lindsay, one of his clients, to take Gloria there. Mary then sneaks out of the club with Jack, who is attracted to her, and dresses in lingerie in anticipation of Peter's return home. Peter, however, leaves the divorce papers for her to sign, and the next day she leaves for a new assignment at Fort Sheridan, Illinois. Peter and Jack follow her on the train west, and Peter repeatedly gets off the train to call Gloria and report that Mary has yet to sign the divorce papers. Also on board is a young WAC whose husband, who was unable to serve, resents her newfound pride in her military work. By convincing him that the Army teaches a woman how to be a woman, Mary sexually intrigues the husband so much that he takes his wife back. Peter, inspired by the idea that Mary is now more of a woman than ever, begins to renew his passionate love for her. Jack wants Mary for himself, so he advises Peter to act like a swaggering, cigar-smoking boor in the hope he will repulse Mary. Mary is saddened by Peter's desperate attempts to get rid of her, so she relents just as Gloria arrives and finds Peter and Mary in a bridal suite in Illinois. On the day Peter moves out of their apartment, Mary points out a closet full of discarded objects from their marriage. Overcome with sentiment, Peter transforms himself into the boor again for Gloria and leaves her. He then reconciles with Mary in a swank restaurant as she is dining with Jack. In the cab back home, Peter asks Mary what she told the husband the army does to women--and she kisses him to demonstrate.

Cast

Paulette Goddard

WAC Captain Mary Morely

Fred Macmurray

Peter Morely

Macdonald Carey

Jack Lindsay

Arleen Whelan

Gloria Fay

Lilian Fontaine

Mary's mother

Frank Faylen

Harold Michaels

Frances Robinson

Captain Rogers

Victoria Horne

Lieut. Billings

Georgia Backus

Major Cheever

Jean Ruth

WAC Corp. Michaels

Roberta Jonay

WAC sergeant

Willie Best

Porter on train

Griff Barnett

Conductor on train

Isabel Randolph

Dowager in elevator

Charles Moore

Black man in lobby

Michael Brandon

Captain Jergens

William Newell

Pier manager

Frances Morris

Red Cross worker

George Chandler

Newspaper photographer

Herschel Graham

Newsreel cameraman

John Kellogg

Newsreel man

Jerry James

A.T.C. officer

Jac Lucas Fisher

Transportation officer

Paul Oman

Violinist

Mary Benoit

WAC

Joleen King

Waitress

Fredric M. Santley

Waiter

Mike P. Donovan

Conductor, Harman station

Lucius Brooks

Red Cap

Ricky Riccardi

Bellhop

Harry Anderson

Door attendant

Billy Vernon

Bus boy

George Sorel

Maitre d'

Franklin Parker

Reporter

Isabel Withers

Reporter

George Lynn

Reporter

Perc Launders

Reporter

Martin Chiapetti

Waiter captain

John Vosper

Waiter captain

Tom Stevenson

Waiter captain

Crane Whitley

First house detective

Stanley Blystone

Second house detective

Paul Lees

Elevator operator

John Benson

Elevator operator

Ella Ethridge

Woman in elevator

Helen Dickson

Woman in elevator

Beulah Parkington

Woman in elevator

Jack Davidson

Man in elevator

Emory Parnell

Man in elevator

James Dundee

Cab driver

Billy Vincent

Cab driver

George Barton

Workman

Charles Quirk

Workman

William Hall

M.P. in phone booth

James Millican

M.P.

Len Hendry

M.P.

Eddie Johnson

Photographer

Eddie Coke

Photographer

Pat Mcveigh

Photographer

Joe Gilbert

Photographer

Eddie Acuff

Chester Clute

Film Details

Also Known As
Sentimental Journey
Genre
Comedy
Romance
Release Date
Mar 21, 1947
Premiere Information
New York opening: 26 Feb 1947
Production Company
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
New York City--LaGuardia Airport, New York, United States; San Pedro Harbor, California, United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 27m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
7,863ft (9 reels)

Articles

Suddenly It's Spring


A specialized subgenre of romantic comedy centered around divorce was a staple of screwball comedy, the humorous battle-of-the-sexes style that flourished between roughly the mid 1930s and the early 1940s. Tweaking the Production Code's dictates to preserve the sanctity of marriage, couples are brought to the brink of divorce - sometimes even going through with it - usually over some silly misunderstanding, only to be reunited in the film's final act when they realize what has been obvious to the audience all along, that they are meant for each other. Handling the subject this way allowed filmmakers to comically skirt notions of infidelity and sexual misadventure without actually breaking Hollywood's internal censorship rules. The greatest expression of the trope is Leo McCarey's The Awful Truth (1937), and it can be found in such other movies as I Love You Again (1940), My Favorite Wife (1940), and His Girl Friday (1940).

Paramount trotted the formula out again with a postwar twist in Suddenly It's Spring, in which Paulette Goddard, as an Army marital-relations expert known as "Captain Lonelyhearts," returns from overseas escorting some G.I. war brides and tries to salvage her relationship with her estranged husband, played by Fred MacMurray. As always, there are complications in the form of the Other Woman (Arleen Whelan here) and Other Man (Macdonald Carey); the style's perennial losers Gail Patrick and Ralph Bellamy must have been relieved their careers had taken them beyond such typecasting by this point.

Scripter P.J. Wolfson (1903-1979) was an old hand at this sort of thing, having come up with other comedies of divorce and remarriage in The Bride Walks Out (1936) and the provocatively titled He Stayed for Breakfast (1940) and Our Wife (1941). One of the studio's highest-paid screenwriters, Wolfson was snapped up by Hollywood after the success of his bleak, gritty novel Bodies Are Dust (1931), which Universal bought with the intention of filming but never did, likely because its dark and rather nonlinear storyline was too radical even for the pre-Code era. Once described as "a pulp Emile Zola, a noir Frank Norris," Wolfson also wrote a violent abortion-themed novel, a racy romance, and a story of a construction worker who lusts for his brother's wife. His film output was something quite different, including the Joan Crawford showbiz melodrama Dancing Lady (1933), the Astaire-Rogers musical Shall We Dance (1937), and the John Wayne Colonial America adventure Allegheny Uprising (1939). The few films he wrote that may have satisfied his taste for the dark and lurid included the horror story Mad Love (1935), with scenes of torture, guillotining, and strangulation that got it banned in several countries, and Public Enemy's Wife (1936), whose story of an escaped con out to kill his ex-wife's new husband feels like an extreme version of his marital comedies. Late in his career Wolfson produced the TV sitcoms I Married Joan and Love and Marriage.

Suddenly It's Spring was a fairly minor blip in the careers of Goddard and MacMurray. She bracketed this slight comedy with roles in Jean Renoir's The Diary of a Chambermaid (1946) and Alexander Korda's film version of the Oscar Wilde play An Ideal Husband (1947). After the dark doings of the film noir par excellence Double Indemnity (1944), MacMurray sandwiched this one in between a couple of antic rural-set comedies, Murder, He Says (1945) and The Egg and I (1947). This was the third film to pair the longtime Paramount contract players after The Forest Rangers (1942) and Standing Room Only (1944). They appeared in two other films, the all-star anthologies Star Spangled Rhythm (1942) and On Our Merry Way (1948), but they had no scenes together.

Suddenly It's Spring had the distinct advantage of being directed by one of Paramount's leading filmmakers, Mitchell Leisen. A multi-talented sculptor, illustrator, and designer of sets, costumes, and interiros, Leisen was known for sparkling romances, including Hands Across the Table (1935) and the more dramatic Swing High, Swing Low (1937), both starring MacMurray and Carole Lombard. He directed MacMurray in nine films altogether; this was the last. Heavily dependent on scripts written for him by Preston Sturges and Billy Wilder before those two turned to directing in the early 40s, Leisen's career began to wane in the postwar period and he left Paramount to freelance in 1951, finishing out his career in television in the 1950s and 60s.

Although not the height of either the stars' or the director's careers, this picture was popular enough to be broadcast in two 30-miunte radio adaptations, one in 1948 starring most of the original cast and again in 1949 with MacMurray recreating his role. The film was also reissued to theaters in 1948.

The film also features 61-year-old Lilian Fontaine in her third screen appearance (spelling her name with a double L in the credits here), mother of Joan Fontaine and Olivia de Havilland.

The cinematography is by Daniel L. Fapp, who later won an Academy Award for West Side Story (1961).

Although titles are generally not copyrighted, Paramount went into arbitration with David O. Selznick over the use of Suddenly It's Spring. Selznick wanted it for the title of the movie that became The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947).

According to the studio's in-house PR publication, the film's nightclub set was constructed from panels of the ballroom of the 60-year-old Vanderbilt mansion in New York City, which had been purchased by Paramount in 1945 and was once the largest private ballroom in the United States. Shots of the luxury liner the Queen Mary were filmed at San Pedro Harbor, and the scene of the break-away phone booth was shot at LaGuardia Field, New York.

Director: Mitchell Leisen
Producer: Claude Binyon
Screenplay: P.J. Wolfson, Claude Binyon, story by Wolfson
Cinematography: Daniel L. Fapp
Editing: Alma Macrorie
Art Direction: Hans Dreier, John Meehan
Music: Victor Young
Cast: Paulette Goddard (Mary Morely), Fred MacMurray (Peter Morley), Macdonald Carey (Jack Lindsay), Arleen Whelan (Gloria Fay), Lillian Fontaine (Mary's mother), Frank Faylen (Harold Michaels).

By Rob Nixon
Suddenly It's Spring

Suddenly It's Spring

A specialized subgenre of romantic comedy centered around divorce was a staple of screwball comedy, the humorous battle-of-the-sexes style that flourished between roughly the mid 1930s and the early 1940s. Tweaking the Production Code's dictates to preserve the sanctity of marriage, couples are brought to the brink of divorce - sometimes even going through with it - usually over some silly misunderstanding, only to be reunited in the film's final act when they realize what has been obvious to the audience all along, that they are meant for each other. Handling the subject this way allowed filmmakers to comically skirt notions of infidelity and sexual misadventure without actually breaking Hollywood's internal censorship rules. The greatest expression of the trope is Leo McCarey's The Awful Truth (1937), and it can be found in such other movies as I Love You Again (1940), My Favorite Wife (1940), and His Girl Friday (1940). Paramount trotted the formula out again with a postwar twist in Suddenly It's Spring, in which Paulette Goddard, as an Army marital-relations expert known as "Captain Lonelyhearts," returns from overseas escorting some G.I. war brides and tries to salvage her relationship with her estranged husband, played by Fred MacMurray. As always, there are complications in the form of the Other Woman (Arleen Whelan here) and Other Man (Macdonald Carey); the style's perennial losers Gail Patrick and Ralph Bellamy must have been relieved their careers had taken them beyond such typecasting by this point. Scripter P.J. Wolfson (1903-1979) was an old hand at this sort of thing, having come up with other comedies of divorce and remarriage in The Bride Walks Out (1936) and the provocatively titled He Stayed for Breakfast (1940) and Our Wife (1941). One of the studio's highest-paid screenwriters, Wolfson was snapped up by Hollywood after the success of his bleak, gritty novel Bodies Are Dust (1931), which Universal bought with the intention of filming but never did, likely because its dark and rather nonlinear storyline was too radical even for the pre-Code era. Once described as "a pulp Emile Zola, a noir Frank Norris," Wolfson also wrote a violent abortion-themed novel, a racy romance, and a story of a construction worker who lusts for his brother's wife. His film output was something quite different, including the Joan Crawford showbiz melodrama Dancing Lady (1933), the Astaire-Rogers musical Shall We Dance (1937), and the John Wayne Colonial America adventure Allegheny Uprising (1939). The few films he wrote that may have satisfied his taste for the dark and lurid included the horror story Mad Love (1935), with scenes of torture, guillotining, and strangulation that got it banned in several countries, and Public Enemy's Wife (1936), whose story of an escaped con out to kill his ex-wife's new husband feels like an extreme version of his marital comedies. Late in his career Wolfson produced the TV sitcoms I Married Joan and Love and Marriage. Suddenly It's Spring was a fairly minor blip in the careers of Goddard and MacMurray. She bracketed this slight comedy with roles in Jean Renoir's The Diary of a Chambermaid (1946) and Alexander Korda's film version of the Oscar Wilde play An Ideal Husband (1947). After the dark doings of the film noir par excellence Double Indemnity (1944), MacMurray sandwiched this one in between a couple of antic rural-set comedies, Murder, He Says (1945) and The Egg and I (1947). This was the third film to pair the longtime Paramount contract players after The Forest Rangers (1942) and Standing Room Only (1944). They appeared in two other films, the all-star anthologies Star Spangled Rhythm (1942) and On Our Merry Way (1948), but they had no scenes together. Suddenly It's Spring had the distinct advantage of being directed by one of Paramount's leading filmmakers, Mitchell Leisen. A multi-talented sculptor, illustrator, and designer of sets, costumes, and interiros, Leisen was known for sparkling romances, including Hands Across the Table (1935) and the more dramatic Swing High, Swing Low (1937), both starring MacMurray and Carole Lombard. He directed MacMurray in nine films altogether; this was the last. Heavily dependent on scripts written for him by Preston Sturges and Billy Wilder before those two turned to directing in the early 40s, Leisen's career began to wane in the postwar period and he left Paramount to freelance in 1951, finishing out his career in television in the 1950s and 60s. Although not the height of either the stars' or the director's careers, this picture was popular enough to be broadcast in two 30-miunte radio adaptations, one in 1948 starring most of the original cast and again in 1949 with MacMurray recreating his role. The film was also reissued to theaters in 1948. The film also features 61-year-old Lilian Fontaine in her third screen appearance (spelling her name with a double L in the credits here), mother of Joan Fontaine and Olivia de Havilland. The cinematography is by Daniel L. Fapp, who later won an Academy Award for West Side Story (1961). Although titles are generally not copyrighted, Paramount went into arbitration with David O. Selznick over the use of Suddenly It's Spring. Selznick wanted it for the title of the movie that became The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947). According to the studio's in-house PR publication, the film's nightclub set was constructed from panels of the ballroom of the 60-year-old Vanderbilt mansion in New York City, which had been purchased by Paramount in 1945 and was once the largest private ballroom in the United States. Shots of the luxury liner the Queen Mary were filmed at San Pedro Harbor, and the scene of the break-away phone booth was shot at LaGuardia Field, New York. Director: Mitchell Leisen Producer: Claude Binyon Screenplay: P.J. Wolfson, Claude Binyon, story by Wolfson Cinematography: Daniel L. Fapp Editing: Alma Macrorie Art Direction: Hans Dreier, John Meehan Music: Victor Young Cast: Paulette Goddard (Mary Morely), Fred MacMurray (Peter Morley), Macdonald Carey (Jack Lindsay), Arleen Whelan (Gloria Fay), Lillian Fontaine (Mary's mother), Frank Faylen (Harold Michaels). By Rob Nixon

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Paramount and David O. Selznick's company went into arbitration with the MPAA over the rights to the title Suddenly, It's Spring. The Selznick picture was retitled The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer. The film marked screenwriter Claude Binyon's first effort at producing. Binyon went on to direct several films between 1948 and 1953, after which he returned to screenwriting exclusively. According to Par News, the film's nightclub set was constructed from panels of the ballroom of the sixty-year-old Vanderbilt mansion in New York City, which had been purchased by Paramount in 1945 and was once the largest private ballroom in the United States. Shots of the S.S.Queen Mary were filmed at San Pedro Harbor, and the scene of the break-away phonebooth was shot at LaGuardia Field, New York. This film marked MacDonald Carey's return to the screen after three years in the Marines. Suddenly, It's Spring was reissued in August 1948.