Life According To The
Mayfair Swells-Dick Powell’s “Happiness Ahead” (1934)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Frank Jackman
Happiness Ahead, starring
crooner cum actor Dick Powell, Josephine Hutchison, 1934
I am not exactly sure
why I drew this film review assignment, an area which I haven’t dealt with much
over the past several years doing mostly political commentary during that time.
I have a sneaking suspicion current site manager Greg Green, who is the guy who
after all makes the assignments of late, has an idea that I will make some
pithy social and political comments about the time frame and content of this Happiness Ahead I am stuck with reviewing.
A title which while it was produced in the heart of the 1930s Great Depression
(I noted the National Recovery Act, NRA, logo a sure fire way to tell the
times) could have been the campaign theme of any President or presidential
candidate from Franklin Delano Roosevelt to Donald J. Trump.
In any case I am sure
Greg was not under the impression that he was trying to “broaden my horizons”
with this assignment like he had increasingly tried to use as a reason among
the younger writers. He knows, and if he does not I am here to tell him, that I
was looking to mine political gold from such socially conscious 1930s films
which were a specialty of Warner Brother films when he was reviewing B-film horror
movies as a stringer for the American
Film Gazette. Now if he assigned this beast under the sign of a 1930s “slice
of life” nugget to be gleaned then all is forgiven and he will have hit the
nail on the head as to why today’s readers would give a damn about this soapy
romance posing as a tribute to the possibilities of the American Dream even when
the soup kitchens were lengthening, banks were going bust, houses where being
foreclosed, shanty camps were establishing new postal zones, and most germane,
New York City financiers were jumping out of freshly “massaged” skyscraper
windows.
Wow the reader might ask
all out of a film which is about the budding romance of a daughter of the
Mayfair swells out slumming and an up and coming white collar go-getter and side
door Johnny crooner in the pocket of Jerome Kern, Cole Porter, Irving Berlin,
Jack Sampson and the like. Well, yes, since as I mentioned Warner Brothers was
in love with these social uplift sagas as long as they had enough boy meets girl,
or is it girl meets boy here, to avoid some right-wing agents’ accusations of Communist
International allegiance. Ms. Smith, in really Joan Bradford, played by 1930s
film sweetheart Josephine Hutchison, of the very, very Mayfair swells Bradfords
who first reached these shores on the old tug The Mayflower and who had
ridden out the first rush of the Great Depression pretty well since Father
Bradford not only did not jump out of some Windex skyscraper window but is
around to advise his young daughter on the dangers of upsetting high society mother
and her “plans” for an upscale marriage and doing what she damn well pleased
attempts a jail break-out from the stifling confines of New York high society and
a horrible marriage to some male scion of another such family. Fair enough.
One New Year’s night Joan
goes slumming amongst the ordinary folk and winds alone in a Chinese jazz joint
where she “meets” Bob, get this Bob Lane, all-American Bob Lane, played by
crooner Dick Powell last seen in this space as Phillip Marlowe getting knocked around,
drugged and kicked in the teeth by some evil high society forces who don’t want
him to find his Velma for the Moose in the film adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s
Farewell, My Lovely dubbed Murder, My Sweet on the screen. One
thing leads to another and they get dated up although dear Joan has to go
through about six ruses to “prove” she is just ordinary folk. Joan is so
starved for reasonable social interaction she plays along for a while even
going with Bob to totally plebian roller skating and such holy goof stuff to be
at one with the masses.
Naturally, and that is exactly
the right word, this pair are smitten. Big problem though is that while Bob is
a go-getter right at that moment he is nothing but a cheapjack office manager
for a company who washes the windows of half the skyscrapers in New York City.
He has dreams though of running his own window washing company and there is the
rub. No dough, or not enough dough and Mother Bradford of the very, very
Bradfords is not going to have a window-washer for a son-in-law. That is when
Joan to help things along made what looked like a fatal mistake by getting her
Daddy Warbucks father to front the necessary dough and thereby incurring the
manly wrath on one Robert Lane who finally gets wise to who his sweetie really
is. I hope you were paying attention because I already told you this was a boy
meets girl story and therefore requires the adequate happy ending, here happiness
ahead ending of the title. Bob a little miffed but still head over heels for
Joan (which you can tell is true since every once in a while a song telegraphs
his desires) and after working out man to man a deal with her father the deal
is done. Hope this has broadened your horizons.
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