Smart Blonde

Smart Blonde

Theatre trailer
Directed by Frank McDonald
Produced by Jack L. Warner
Hal B. Wallis
Screenplay by Kenneth Gamet
Don Ryan
Starring Glenda Farrell
Barton MacLane
Music by Heinz Roemheld
Cinematography Warren Lynch
Edited by Frank Magee
Production
company
Release dates
  • January 2, 1937 (1937-01-02)
Running time
59 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Smart Blonde is a 1937 American mystery film directed by Frank McDonald. Starring Glenda Farrell as Torchy Blane, a smart, sassy, wisecracking female reporter teaming up with her boyfriend, detective Steve McBride to solve the killing of an investor who just bought a popular local nightclub. This is the first of nine "Torchy Blane" films by Warner Bros.[1][2] It was released on January 2, 1937.

Plot

Torchy Blane (Glenda Farrell) a reporter for the Morning Herald interviews Tiny Torgenson (Joseph Crehan) on the train. He is purchasing the Million Club and various gambling and sporting enterprises from his friend Fitz Mularkey (Addison Richards). Fitz has decided to quit the business due to his upcoming marriage to Marcia Friel. When Torchy and Tiny arrives at the train station, as they leave Union Station, Tiny is shot and killed. His murder was witness by Torchy and she calls her newspaper with the story.

Torchy goes with her boyfriend detective Steve McBride (Barton MacLane) who is in charge of investigating the murder case, to the Million Club and tells Fitz Mularkey about Tiny's murder. Fitz being very good friends with Tiny wants to catch the murderer himself before the police can, but Steve advises him to do otherwise. While Steve investigates, Torchy learns from the club's hat check girl Dixie (Jane Wyman) that the club singer Dolly Ireland (Wini Shaw) was in love with Fitz and that Fitz's right-hand man and bodyguard, Chuck Cannon, was angry about losing his job. Steve suspects the other bidders for the business for Tiny's murder, but Torchy suspects Chuck. She persuades Steve to look for Chuck, and while they are at Chuck's apartment, Fitz shows up and demands to know about the police investigation on the case. Steve later learns that Chuck and Dolly were seen at Union Station just before Tiny was killed.

Meanwhile, Torchy have afternoon tea with Fitz's fiancée Marcia, who asks Torchy to convince Fitz to sell his business to anyone who wants to buy it. Chuck is later found dead in his hotel room. Steve immediately suspects Fitz, when the evidence leads to him being the killer. Fitz is confronted by steve, but escapes. Steve doesn't believe Fitz is the killer and is covering for someone else. When the forensics report states that Chuck's gun did not kill Tiny, Steve questions Marcia, who tells him that because Chuck threatened her, she is afraid that Fitz killed him to protect her. Torchy becomes suspicious when Marcia and her brother Lewis Friel (Robert Paige) tell conflicting stories about their parents. Torchy, Steve, and Gahagan (Tom Kennedy) go to Marcia's apartment to find Fitz. That's when Torchy exposed Marcia and her brother being phonies, and are two con artist out to steal Fitz's money. Lewis killed both Tiny and Chuck. They killed Tiny because he will recognize Marcia as an imposter, and Chuck because he was blackmailing them after finding out who they really are. Lewis is shot by Fitz and Marcia is arrested. Later, Fitz decides to keep the business and proposed to Dolly, and Steve proposes to Torchy.

Cast

Production

In 1936, Warner Bros. began to develop an adaptation of the MacBride and Kennedy stories by detective novelist Frederick Nebel. For the film version, Kennedy is changed to a woman named Teresa "Torchy" Blane and is now in love with MacBride's character.[3] Director Frank MacDonald immediately knew who he wanted for the role of Torchy Blane. Glenda Farrell had already played newspaper reporters in earlier Warner Bros. films Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933) and Hi, Nellie! (1934). She was quickly cast in the title role, with Barton MacLane as Steve McBride. Farrell and MacLane would star in seven of the nine Torchy Blane movies.

The film was based on Nebel's short story "No Hard Feelings" published in the Black Mask magazine. The story was later adapted again as the 1941 film A Shot in the Dark. The movie's working title during filming was No Hard Feelings. The music and lyrics for the song "Why Do I Have to Sing a Torch Song" was written by M. K. Jerome and Jack Scholl.[4]

Home media

Warner Archive released a boxed set DVD collection featuring all nine Torchy Blane films on March 29, 2011.[5]

Reception

Frank S. Nugent of The New York Times writes in his movie review: "In Smart Blonde, in which Glenda Farrell imitates a reporter and Barton MacLane libels the homicide squad, we have a murder mystery solved by an endless succession of door-openings and shuttings, taxi-hailings, jumping in and out of automobiles, and riding up and down in elevators. Mr. Shaw's pet antipathies are present, too, as well as one shot of Miss Farrell swinging aboard a moving train. For all this activity the film is a static and listless little piece which never made us at all curious about the killer of Tiny Torgensen, night club operator, and Chuck Cannon, who had been Suspect No. 1 until he also died of lead poisoning. I seem to remember having seen the story in pictures before; strange that the same mistake should have been made again."[6]

Torchy Blane series

References

  1. "SMART BLONDE (1937)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  2. Backer, Ron (August 25, 2012). Mystery Movie Series of 1930s Hollywood. McFarland. p. 260. ISBN 0786469757.
  3. "Smart Blonde (1936)". All Movie. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  4. "Smart Blonde". American film Institute: catalog of feature films. Retrieved September 15, 2016.
  5. KEHR, DAVE (May 7, 2010). "The Torchy Blane Collection". The New York Times. Retrieved October 1, 2016.
  6. FRANK S., NUGENT (January 9, 1937). "MOVIE REVIEW: THE SCREEN". The New York Times. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
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