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Idiot's Delight
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Synopsis
Robert E. Sherwood's Pulitzer Prize-winning play Idiot's Delight starred Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne on Broadway. Set in a lavish alpine hotel bordering an Italian air base, the story throws together several disparate people, each in his or her own way affected by the World War that threatens to erupt at a moment's notice. The only person who doesn't seem to have a political or economic stake in world affairs is Harry Van, a two-bit American entertainer who is stranded in the hotel with his travelling all-girl troupe, "Les Blondes." Harry is convinced that the alluring Irene, the foreign-accented "travelling companion" of munitions tycoon Achille Weber, is actually an American girl with whom he'd had a one-night stand years earlier, but Irene laughs off his insinuations. Eventually, Irene turns to Harry for comfort when Weber proves too disgustingly warmongering for her tastes. When war breaks out and the hotel is targeted for bombing, Harry makes sure that everyone gets to safety; he himself stays behind with Irene, with whom he has fallen in love. The two sing a hymn as the hotel is blown to oblivion. When Idiot's Delight was filmed in 1939, Norma Shearer did her best Lynn Fontanne imitation as Irene, while Clark Gable remained Clark Gable in his interpretation of Harry Van (his song-and-dance rendition of "Puttin' on the Ritz" is a classic of sneering insouciance). The film underwent an extensive "MGM-izing": while the pre-European affair between Harry and Irene is never dramatized in the play, the film shows Harry and Irene commiserating in a long prologue set in a seedy vaudeville house--and, in keeping with censorship restrictions, it is made abundantly clear that, while Harry befriends Irene, he does not sleep with her. The munitions manufacturer, here played by Edward Arnold, is depicted as an aberration, and not representative of "honest" business moguls (many of whom were close personal chums of MGM head Louis B. Mayer). And, while the ending of the play does not tell us whether or not Harry and Irene survive the bombing, the film permits the lovers a sun-streamed happy ending. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Edward Arnold Achille Weber
Clark Gable Harry Van
Charles Coburn Dr. Waldersee
Laura Hope Crewes Mme. Zuleika
Virginia Dale Francine
William Edmunds Dumptey
Fritz Feld Pittatek
Virginia Grey Shirley Laughlin
Bernadene Hayes Edna Creesh
Lorraine Krueger Bebe
Joan Marsh Elaine Messiger
Joseph Schildkraut Capt. Kirvline
Norma Shearer Irene Fellara
Paula Stone Beulah Tremeyne
Peter Willes Mr. Cherry
Burgess Meredith Quillery

Production Crew

Cedric Gibbons Art Director
Wade B. Rubottom Art Director
George King Choreography
George King Choreography
William H. Daniels Cinematographer
Herbert Stothart Composer (Music Score)
Adrian Costume Designer
Clarence Brown Director
Robert J. Kern Editor
Herbert Stothart Musical Direction/Supervision
Robert E. Sherwood Play Author
Hunt Stromberg Producer
Robert E. Sherwood Screenwriter
Edwin B. Willis Set Designer
Gus Kahn Songwriter
Year: 1939
Runtime: 107
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Feature

Genre
Drama

Produced by
MGM

Release
by MGM