Design for Living (film)

Design for Living (film)
Design for Living
Directed by Ernst Lubitsch
Produced by Ernst Lubitsch
Written by Ben Hecht
Based on the play by Noël Coward
Starring Fredric March
Gary Cooper
Miriam Hopkins
Edward Everett Horton
Music by John Leipold
Cinematography Victor Milner
Editing by Frances Marsh
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date(s) December 29, 1933 (1933-12-29)
Running time 91 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Design for Living is a 1933 American comedy film produced and directed by Ernst Lubitsch. The screenplay by Ben Hecht is based on the 1933 play of the same name by Noël Coward. It concerns a trio of artistic Americans in Paris and their complicated three-way relationship.

The film stars Fredric March, Gary Cooper, Miriam Hopkins and Edward Everett Horton. Criticism was mixed, with some critics praising the film, but many were ambivalent about its great departure from Coward's play. Coward said, "I'm told that there are three of my original lines left in the film – such original ones as 'Pass the mustard'."[1]

Nevertheless the film was a box office success, ranking in as one of the top ten highest grossing of 1933. Also the three lead actors; March, Cooper and Hopkins all received notable attention from this film as they were all at the peak of their careers.

Contents

Plot

While en route to Paris via train, commercial artist Gilda Farrell meets artist George Curtis and playwright Thomas Chambers, fellow Americans who share an apartment in the French capital. Gilda works for advertising executive Max Plunkett, who has had no success in his efforts to engage her in a romantic relationship. Tom and George each realizes the other is in love with Gilda, and although they agree to forget her, they cannot resist her when she comes to visit. Unable to choose between the two, she proposes she live with them as a friend, muse, and critic with the understanding they will not have sex.

Gilda arranges for a producer to read Tom's play and he goes to London to oversee the staging of his work. During his absence, Gilda and George become involved romantically, much to Tom's consternation. One night at the theatre he meets Max, who tells him George has become highly successful. Tom returns to Paris and discovers George has vacated their apartment and moved into a penthouse with Gilda. George is in Nice painting a portrait, and Gilda and Tom rekindle their affair.

George returns and, realizing his former roommate and current lover have been trysting while he was away, orders the two to get out. Gilda decides to end the men's rivalry by marrying Max in Manhattan, but is so upset when she receives potted plants from her former beaux she fails to consummate the marriage. When Max hosts a party for his advertising clients, Tom and George crash the event and hide in Gilda's bedroom. Max finds the three laughing on the bed and orders the men out, and a brawl ensues, prompting all the guests to depart. Gilda announces she is leaving her husband, and she, Tom, and George decide to return to Paris and their unusual living arrangement.

Cast

Production

In the late 1920s and early 1930s, Coward wrote a succession of popular hit plays.[2] On Broadway, Design for Living was a popular and critical hit starring Lynn Fontanne, Alfred Lunt and Coward, and its risqué ménage-à-trois theme made it controversial.[3][4] Design for Living was one of more than a dozen of Coward's plays made into feature films.[4]

Ernst Lubitsch initially asked Samson Raphaelson to write the screenplay, but he had no interest in adapting Coward.[5] The director then turned to Ben Hecht, and they opted for a loose adaptation of Coward's plot, completely rewriting the play.[6] In the original, the three main characters were sophisticated, urbane and cynical. Hecht changed the men's names, and the trio became naïve and exuberant, living the bohemian life worry-free in the middle of the Great Depression.[7][8]

Lubitsch hoped to cast Ronald Colman and Leslie Howard as the male leads, but Colman demanded too much money and Howard didn't want to risk comparisons to the play's original cast. The director originally cast Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. as George, but the actor contracted pneumonia and had to withdraw just before filming began,[5] and he was replaced by Gary Cooper. Lubitsch cast Paramount contract player Fredric March as Tom. According to the New York State Writers Institute website, a highlight of the film is the scene where, while struggling at his playwriting, he begs Miriam Hopkins, as Gilda, to smack him between the shoulder blades.[7] Gilda was a role well-tailored for Hopkins' talents.[9] Comic character actors Edward Everett Horton and Franklin Pangborn completed the principal cast.[7]

Before officials began enforcing the Production Code in 1934, leading to censorship of sexuality from films, Paramount and other studios produced many with sexual or controversial content, including films starring Mae West, W. C. Fields and Marlene Dietrich and the fantasy films of Josef von Sternberg. From 1929 to 1934, Lubitsch "made Paramount the nec plus ultra of sophisticated sexiness,"[7] joyously weaving adult sexuality, cosmopolitan flair and a disdain for convention into his films, which included The Love Parade, Monte Carlo, Trouble in Paradise, The Smiling Lieutenant, and One Hour with You.[7] Censorship difficulties arose with Design for Living due to sexual discussions and innuendos in the film.[10] The Hays Office eventually approved it for release, but the film later was banned by the Legion of Decency, and in 1934 it was refused a certificate by the PCA for re-release under the strict new rules.[11] The film's risqué subject matter also attracted press notice.

Critical reception

Mordaunt Hall of The New York Times said the film "may be only a skeleton of the parent work, but it has the same familiar rattle.... Notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Coward's clever lines were tossed to the four winds and that the whole action of the story is materially changed, Mr. Lubitsch, who knows his motion picture as few others do, has in this offering... fashioned a most entertaining and highly sophisticated subject, wherein his own sly humor is constantly in evidence. He has been ably aided and abetted by Mr. Hecht in this slaughter of the Coward play, and, if the original was sharper and brisker than the picture, the latter is filled with clever fun and the story, still with a decided Parisian flair, moves along swiftly and surely."[6]

Time Out London observed, "Noël Coward's teacup wit and elegance hardly suits the beer glass temperament of his screen adapter Ben Hecht.... The script galumphs when it should glide, and neither the director nor the stellar cast can bring this would-be soufflé about a bohemian ménage-à-trois... to the right fluffy consistency."[12]

DVD release

The film was released on DVD on May 31, 2005 as part of The Gary Cooper Collection, which also includes The Lives of a Bengal Lancer, Peter Ibbetson, The General Died at Dawn, and Beau Geste.

References

  1. ^ Richards, Dick, The Wit of Noël Coward. Sphere Books 1970, p. 86
  2. ^ Lahr, John, Coward the Playwright. London: Methuen 1982. ISBN 0-413-48050-X, p. 93
  3. ^ Lesley, Cole, The Life of Noël Coward. Cape 1976. ISBN 0-224-01288-6, pp. 160–61
  4. ^ a b Hoare, Philip, Noël Coward, A Biography. Sinclair-Stevenson 1995. ISBN 1-85619-265-2, p. 251
  5. ^ a b Turner Classic Movies
  6. ^ a b New York Times review
  7. ^ a b c d e Analysis of the film at New York State Writers Institute website, State University of New York
  8. ^ Vineberg, Steve. "Re-Design: Coward’s great play, Lubitsch’s great film", Boston Phoenix, July 2001
  9. ^ Kuersten, Erich. "Miriam Hopkins & the Pre-Code Menage-a-trois", Bright Lights After Dark, March 09, 2008
  10. ^ Design for Living at the TV Guide movie database
  11. ^ Information from the Internet Movie Database
  12. ^ Time Out London review

Further reading

  • Dickens, Homer, The Films of Gary Cooper. Secaucus, New Jersey: The Citadel Press 1971 ISBN 0-806-50010-7

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Design for Living — This article is about the play. For the film of the same name, see Design for Living (film) Lunt, Coward and Fontanne in Design for Living Design for Living is a comedy play written by Noël Coward in 1932. It concerns a trio of artistic… …   Wikipedia

  • Design for Living — Filmdaten Deutscher Titel: Serenade zu dritt Originaltitel: Design for Living Produktionsland: USA Erscheinungsjahr: 1933 Länge: 88 Minuten Originalsprache: Englisch …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Design for Living — Sérénade à trois Sérénade à trois Titre original Design for Living Réalisation Ernst Lubitsch Acteurs principaux Gary Cooper Fredric March Miriam Hopkins Edward Everett Horton Scénario Noel Coward (pièce) Ben Hecht …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Design for Death — Directed by Richard Fleischer Produced by Sid Rogell Theron Warth Written by Theodor S. Geisel (Dr. Seuss) Helen Palmer …   Wikipedia

  • V for Vendetta (film) — V pour Vendetta (film) Pour les articles homonymes, voir V pour Vendetta (homonymie). V pour Vendetta …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Easy Living (film) — Infobox Film name = Easy Living image size = 215px caption = title card writer = Vera Caspary (story) Preston Sturges starring = Jean Arthur Edward Arnold Ray Milland director = Mitchell Leisen producer = Arthur Hornblow music = Ralph Rainger Leo …   Wikipedia

  • An Ideal for Living — Infobox Album Name = An Ideal for Living Type = ep Artist = Joy Division Released = June 1978 Recorded = December 14, 1977 Genre = Punk rock Length = 12:47 Label = Enigma PSS139 Producer = Joy Division Reviews = *Allmusic rating|3|5… …   Wikipedia

  • Design U — Genre Design Created by Tim Alp Starring Maureen Ross Neilson, Ernst Hupel, Melanie Martin, Baron Bryant, Christina Maureen Rice, William Mood, Blair Varden, Penny Southam, Ramón Robleto, Tyler Hamilton, Jeff Palmer, Lucie Soulard Theme music… …   Wikipedia

  • Living machines — are a form of biological wastewater treatment designed to mimic the cleansing functions of wetlands. They are intensive bioremediation systems that can also produce beneficial by products such as methane gas, edible and ornamental plants, and… …   Wikipedia

  • Living Newspaper — is a term for a theatrical form presenting factual information on current events to a popular audience. Historically, Living Newspapers have also urged social action (both implicitly and explicitly) and reacted against naturalistic and realistic… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”