butch freckles
26 October 2002
Warning: Spoilers
This 1948 MGM comedy is enlivened by the sight gags utilised by director Norman Taurog, and the performance of June Allyson as Martha Terryton, a Vermont school teacher who is made an illustrator for `wild' New York children's book writer `Uncle Bumps' aka Greg Rawlings (Van Johnson).

The screenplay by Albert Beich employs the standard contemptuous ploy of a man deceiving a `prudish' woman in order to romance her. Greg pretends to be the father of 8 year old delinquent orphan Danny (Butch Jenkins) to improve Martha's perception of him, after their initial meeting where she has been repelled by his advances. This set up is made to be exposed as the climax, with the middle section devoted to supplying reasons that will help Martha make the right choice. The romance is given another angle in that she has an `understanding' ie engagement with school manual training teacher Bruce Johnson (Richard Derr) so that he exists as the sane alternative to Greg.

What gives the screenplay an unintentional subtext is our hindsight of Johnson's sexual preference, with the word `gay' used in its original innocent context. The subtext is particularly noticeable in the scenes between Greg and his publisher John McGrath (Hume Cronyn), from the actors performances (note how Cronyn squeals at the sight of a small snake) and one scene shot on a balcony. Johnson is bare-chested wearing a swimming costume, and Taurog frames the actors so that the line of the balcony ledge makes Johnson appear to be naked next to Cronyn. The subtext can also be read in Greg's fetishist attraction to Martha's long hair, and when Martha shows Greg her sketches of Bruce, where he asks `No nudes?'. Johnson's different behavior toward the Allyson as the prudish virgin and Arlene Dahl as Tilly, Greg's alleged `married' vampy girlfriend. Like the later Rock Hudson and even Cary Grant, Johnson's less stereotypically masculine persona plays off better with a less stereotypically female.

Beich's narrative allows for physical comedy, including much leg kicking by Danny, water splashing, prat falls, Greg being injured by Bruce's use of Greg's typewriter, traps at a woodland camping site, a snoring fat man on a bus, ants at a wedding, Martha offering her forehead for Bruce to kiss because of the disparity in height between Allyson and Derr, and `wild' driving, featuring terrible rear projection. John's car needing to be towed after it has stalled during his search for Greg provides for a nice link when Greg borrows the car of the tow truck business, and John's car is attached with John still inside. There is also a witty sea-themed bar with a mermaid cigarette girl, a waiter dressed in a deep-sea diver's outfit, and a gag with a fake octopus. Beich also gets a laugh from the first meeting between Greg and Danny, where they observe each others freckles.

Beich and Taurog also have fun playing with Allyson's persona. At first she makes Martha's pouting prudishness funny, her mouth somewhat reminiscent of Judy Garland in her good girl roles. What makes Greg's `No nudes?' line so funny is Martha's `Certainly not!' reaction. Allyson's sociopathic smiling is paralled with her hilarious faux-crying after Greg has got her drunk, and she also scores laughs from her parody of Dahl's vamp acting, including wearing duplicate clothes. As if to mock Greg, Martha gets her haircut for her make-over, though before that she wears a provocative Helen Rose sheer blouse under a white suit, which gives the impression of being low-cut.

Taurog does wonders with an obviously small budget. The black and white photography may have been made to down play the freckles of Johnson and Jenkins, but it merely makes them look bruised. Jenkins is very likeable, but Johnson becomes tiresome, and Dahl acts like she studied baby vamp under Lana Turner.
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