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The Winning Team (1952)
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Synopsis
Ronald Reagan delivers one of his best screen performances as baseball great Grover Cleveland Alexander in The Winning Team. The title refers to the mutually supportive relationship between Alexander and his loving wife Aimee (top-billed
Doris Day
); with this in mind, is it any surprise that the real Aimee Alexander served as the film's technical advisor. While the basic milestones of Alexander's career are adhered to, the film is a typical Hollywood blend of fact and fancy-plenty of fancy. While playing in the minors, Alexander is is hit on the heat by a batted ball, resulting in the dizziness and double vision that would ever after plague him. After toting up a record of 28 wins with the Philadelphia Phillies, Alex is traded to the Cubs, but World War 1 intervenes. On the battlefield, Alex suffers a recurrence of his double vision; and when he plays his first postwar game with the Cubs, he collapses on the field. Warned that his seizures will persist if he doesn't retire, Alex swears the doctor to secrecy. When the dizzy spells continue, Alex turns to drink. Branded an "alky", he descends to the depths of a House of David-style team, thence to the humiliation of carnival side shows. With the help and support of both Aimee and his old pal Rogers Hornsby (
Frank Lovejoy
), Alex stages a spectacular comeback, striking out Yankee Tony Lazzeri during the 1926 World Series and leading his team to victory. The script rearranges the chronology of Alexander's life, suggests incorrectly that the Lazzeri strikeout was the last play in the deciding Series game, and-most amusingly-depicts the unloveable Rogers Hornsby as a 100 % sweetheart. Otherwise, The Winning Team provides an excellent showcase for Ronald Reagan-though in later years he expressed some reservations about the script, noting that, by adhering to Warner Bros' insistence that the word "epilepsy" never be spoken, the picture confused audiences as to the true nature of Alexander's affliction. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Cast
Dorothy Adams
Ma Alexander
Walter S. Baldwin
Pa Alexander
Larry Blake
Detective
Doris Day
Aimee Alexander
Bonnie Kay Eddie
Sister
Frank Ferguson
Sam Arrants
Pat Flaherty
Bill Klem
Tom Greenway
Foreman
Gordon Jones
Glasheen
Frank Lovejoy
Rogers Hornsby
Frank Marlowe
Taxi Driver
Eve Miller
Margaret
Fred Millican
Catcher
James Millican
Bill Killefer
Kenneth Patterson
Dr. Conant
Ronald Reagan
Grover Cleveland Alexander
Hugh Sanders
McCarthy
Russ Tamblyn
Willie Alexander
Production Crew
Douglas Bacon
Art Director
Sidney Hickox
Cinematographer
David Buttolph
Composer (Music Score)
Leah Rhoads
Costume Designer
Lewis Seiler
Director
Alan Crosland, Jr.
Editor
Gordon Bau
Makeup
Bryan Foy
Producer
Merwin Gerard
Screen Story
Seeleg Lester
Screenwriter
Ted Sherdeman
Screenwriter
William L. Kuehl
Set Designer
Merwin Gerard
Short Story Author
Merwin Gerard
Short Story Author
H.F. Koenekamp
Special Effects
Year: 1952
Runtime: 98
Country: USA
MPAA Rating:
Category: Feature
Genre
Drama
Produced by
Warner Brothers
© 2008 Spout LLC. Portions of content provided by All Movie Guide.