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Lady for a Day
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Directed by Frank Capra.
May Robson plays Apple Annie, a slatternly Broadway apple peddler. Annie has a curious setup whereby she is able to finagle other street merchants and beggars to pony up part of their weekly earnings to her--yet she never seems to spend any of the money on herself. This is because Annie has a daughter named Louise (Jean Parker), who has been supported in luxury all her life by her mother. Louise has no idea who Annie really is; so far as she knows, her mother is Mrs. E. Worthington Manville, a Manhattan society matron. When Louise sends Annie a letter telling her that she's become engaged to a young Spanish nobleman named Carlos (Barry Norton), Annie is aghast: once Louise brings her fiance to New York, the jig will be up. Coming to the rescue is high-rolling gambler Dave the Dude (Warren William), who considers Annie his good-luck charm. With the help of his nightclub-thrush girlfriend Missouri Martin (Glenda Farrell), Dave arranges a huge society reception for Louise -- and a complete fashion makeover for Annie. To do this, a few strong-arm methods are required, notably the kidnaping of several society reporters; also, it's necessary to pass off down-and-out Judge Blake (Guy Kibbee) as Annie's well-connected husband. Lady for a Day is the film with which Frank Capra hoped to enter the Big Leagues by taking home a shelf-full of Academy Awards. His subsequent embarrassment at the 1934 Oscar ceremonies has now passed into Hollywood legend, but he made up for this debacle with his Oscars sweep for It Happened One Night. Lady for a Day was remade by Capra as 1961's Pocketful of Miracles, with Bette Davis as Apple Annie. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Lady for a Day (1933, USA, Fran ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"Lady for a Day could be the archetypal Capra film. It features a sentimental and improbable story, but is presented in such a believable way that you buy and care about what happens to characters. The plot summary that follows sounds terrible, but the movie really works. Apple Annie (May Robson) is a near elderly woman who wanders the streets of New York at the height of the depression selling apples, just a step above homeless. For years, she has upheld an elaborate ruse: she sent her daughter (Jean Arthur) away to Spain as a child to be raised in convent, and has written her for years, claiming to be a rich socialite. Now however, she is engaged to be married to Carlos (Barry Norton) the son of a Spanish Count (Walter Connolly), and would like to come visit her mother in New York. Oh no! Feeling sorry for her, Dave the Dude (William Warren) a local gangster, pays to buy her some rich clothes and put her up in a hotel, and finds a pool shark (Capra regular Guy Kibbee) to play her ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Lady for a Day is a top-grade example of the sort of optimistic, rags-to-riches entertainment popular during the Depression of the 1930s. As in many Depression-era comedies, European aristocracy is the main target of barbs. Director Frank Capra is too patriotic to take many pot-shots at the American rich, though his vindication of the common man seemed to be just what the public wanted. The acting is crisp, particularly May Robson in the central role of Apple Annie. Hollywood would continue to retell this sort of story; indeed, Capra's last film, 1961's Pocketful of Miracles, was a direct remake of Lady. Perhaps the strangest remake was Jackie Chan's 1989 martial-arts comedy, Qiji. ~ Richard Gilliam, All Movie Guide
 



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