Rating: NR
Genre:
Comedy
Release Date: 05/30/2006
SubTitles: English/French/Espanol
Dubbed: English
Sound: DD1
Run Time: 113 Minutes
Flags: Suitable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Warner Home Video
The
George S. Kaufman/
Moss Hart Broadway hit
The Man Who Came to Dinner was inspired by the authors' mutual friend, waspish critic/author Alexander Woollcott. Generously bearded ex-Yale professor
Monty Woolley, no mean curmudgeon himself, plays the Woollcott character, here rechristened
Sheridan Whiteside. While on a lecture tour in Ohio, Whiteside slips on the ice outside his hosts' home; until his broken leg heals, the hosts (
Grant Mitchell and
Billie Burke) are forced to put up (and put up with) the imperious Whiteside. This means enduring an unending stream of Whiteside's whims, caprices and vitriolic bon mots, as well as his long-distance phone calls, eccentric guests and a variety of critters, ranging from penguins to octopi. Like the real Woollcott, Whiteside insists upon stage-managing the lives of everyone around him. He is particularly keen on discouraging a romance between his faithful secretary Maggie Cutler (top-billed
Bette Davis) and local newspaper editor Bert Jefferson (
Richard Travis). Once he realizes he's gone too far in this respect, Whiteside is forced to reunite the lovers. That's only one aspect of a three-ring-circus plotline that accommodates a Lizzie Bordenish axe murderess, takeoffs of Woollcott intimates
Harpo Marx,
Noel Coward and
Gertrude Lawrence, and a general practitioner who's willing to let his patients suffer for a chance to pitch his interminable memoirs to Whiteside. Featured in the cast are
Jimmy Durante as "Banjo" (the
Harpo clone),
Reginald Gardiner as the Noel Coward-like Beverly Carlton,
Anne Sheridan as the predatory Gertrude Lawrence counterpart Lorraine Sheldon, and
Mary Wickes as the long-suffering Nurse Preen ("You have the touch of a love-starved cobra!") The script, by the
Epstein brothers, manages to retain most of the play's best lines and situations, even while expanding Bette Davis' role to justify her start status; it's a shame, though, that we are robbed of Sheridan Whiteside's imperishable opening line, "I may vomit!"
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide