Love Among The Smart
Set-William Powell and Myna Loy’s “The Libeled Lady ” (1936) –A Film Review
DVD Review
By Writer Greg Green
The Libeled Lady,
starring Myra Loy, William Powell, Spencer Tracy, Jean Harlow, 1936
[Those readers who have
been following the latest developments about the direction of this American Left History blog site over the
past period and have become aware of the conclusions that returning to the old
idea of covering all of the American experience and not just hone in on the
1960s experiences of most of the older writers and changing personal know that
I have been assigned the job of site administrator which means I will be
handing out the assignments and other projects in cooperation with the writers,
young and old. I come here from the on-line American
Film Gazette where I held basically the same position although there it was
called moderator. (Apparently in the “new age” of media, particularly social
media, the tradition terms “editor” or “gatekeeper” have fallen out of favor,
have fallen in bad odor.)
To get a feel for the
job I have taken up this assignment
which Sandy Salmon the film critic thought I might be interested in doing to
“test the waters” since I have very little experience with the older films that
have been the staple of this site. In the future nevertheless the tilt for
films will be much more contemporary which everybody, or almost everybody, has
agreed is necessary to lure a younger crowd not formed by the rush of the 1960s
when black and white films were like catnip to student audiences. P.S. I will
weigh in on whether my predecessor Pete Markin, whom I have known for years by
reputation and early on from the time he worked at the American Film Gazette when this site needed a cash infusion, was
purged or gently put out to pasture some other time. Greg Green]
Sam Lowell who was I have
heard the main culprit (not my term but Sandy Salmon’s) during his tenure as
film critic before he retired to write on occasion, very occasionally who drove
the overwhelming preponderance of old-time black and white films. In those days
before Alden Riley and a few stringers came on board with Sandy he did all the
reviews himself or were done under his guidance. So he was able to feast on the
films that he would watch as a young man in high school (that is where it
started) on Saturday afternoons at his local movie theater.
I would assume that the
film under review, The Libeled Lady,
would be one that he watched on those Saturday afternoons but for the life of
me I can’t understand why. Certainly it is not the collective talents of the
cast Jean Harlow, Myra Loy, William Powell and Spencer Tracy the last one the
only one whose work I am familiar with. So it must be the plot, the story line,
the screenplay writers because from what I have read this is supposed to be a
screw-ball comedy in an age and time when such fare was grist to the mill.
Maybe that bill of fare is what got my grandparents and maybe my parents
although they were probably too young to appreciate this through the Great
Depression that those same grandparents endlessly carped on whenever anybody
complained about anything, about not getting this or that unnecessary to them
object like that was a talisman to ward off all discussion.
Let’s see what you think of this, think of a
film that was on the short list for the Oscars in 1936. Mayfair swell (not my
term of choice but from Sam since I couldn’t think of a better one when we
talked about the upper class which dominates this film), Connie played by Ms.
Loy (I got used to following New York Times honorifics at American Film Gazette and will continue to do so here for now) sued
some low-rent New York City newspaper for libel over a false allegation that
she broke up some happy household. She decided to go big or don’t go at all and
claimed five million dollars would make her “whole” to use a legal expression.
The newspaper in the person of its managing editor, Warren, played by
redoubtable Mr. Tracy panicked and tried to lure ladies’ man and ace reporter
Bill, played by the inestimable Mr. Powell
better known according to Sam as the male duo in the Nick and Nora Charles The Thin Man series with Ms. Loy to run
a scam on Connie. The idea, pretty lame its seems even for a low-rent up
against it urban newspaper was to get Bill alone with Connie and have his
“wife” find them together. To blackmail Connie out of the law suit and out of
having to hand over those five very big ones.
I said lame and I meant
because there was one little problem with the weasely scheme. Bill was a
happily unmarried man with no wife and if anybody was asking, asking at least
for public consumption no mistress either. No nonsense the company comes first,
freedom of the press even when it lies Warren volunteers his girlfriend
something of a goofball flossy if you asked me Gladys, played by the ill-fated
Ms. Harlow. Here is where everything gets balled-up not funny. Bill and Gladys
marry, a marriage of convenience easily divorced once that onerous court case
is over. Problem though those is that while cruising back to America on a
luxury liner Bill and Connie fall in love and get married. No problem right
since Bill and the hapless Gladys are divorced. Problem Gladys has lost her yen
for Warren and wants Bill back. Then through some sleigh-of-hand divorce
foul-ups courtesy of the apparently frazzled screenwriters Bill and Gladys are
still married. Not to worry though once Bill and Connie put the squeeze play on
Gladys runs, no, walks back to her Warren. I hope to high heaven that Sam
didn’t spent his hard-earned dollar on this cuckoo of a film. Short-listed for
Mr. Oscar or not.
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