Comments

Films of Henry Hathaway: Brigham Young (1940) — 14 Comments

  1. Fascinating post and commentary, Jim! I've yet to see this film. Honestly never had the interest to see it but sure do now! You've provided wonderful behind-the-scenes information that makes the film itself that much more compelling a prospect.

    Great read.

    Aurora

  2. I've never heard of Louis Bromfield before. What a shame that he should be unknown today while his peers still have books in print.

    Excellent review, Jim. This looks like a fascinating movie. I appreciate your taking the time to compare Hollywood's view of history to an historian's view of history.

    Mary Astor certainly does look maternal here. Hard to believe this is a year before "The Maltese Falcon"!

    Thanks for joining our blogathon. It would not have been complete without a post from the Cinedrome!

  3. Thanks, Dorian, for your comments, and for inviting me to join your (and Ruth's) Mary Astor Blogathon — and not incidentally, getting me off my duff to finally craft this tribute to Hathaway's Brigham Young.

    Welcome, jenni, and thanks for commenting! Yes, after Falcon Mary Astor did segue into character roles like the mother in Meet Me in St. Louis — a wise career move, since the "character" types can always find work. Playing Mary Ann Young, in fact, is actually where that segue began, a full year before her Brigid O'Shaughnessy in Maltese Falcon.

  4. I really enjoyed your post about this movie. Mary Astor, after her pivotal role in Maltese Falcon, seemed to have more of these maternal type of roles. Sounds like an interesting film to see.

  5. Jim, your account of how BRIGHAM YOUNG made it to the big screen provides us readers and classic movie fans a sweeping epic with plenty of fascinating behind-the-scenes information. Considering how many best-selling novels-turned movies still aren't always immune to being forgotten over time (I'm always irked that author Dorothy B. Hughes' novels aren't picked up for the movies enough, considering they turned THE FALLEN SPARROW and IN A LONELY PLACE into hit films; but I digress.) I'm glad to see that our gal Mary Astor got to share her experiences in the challenging shoot, having proven herself as an excellent writer as well as the author of two memoirs and her own original fiction. To paraphrase what John Huston said to Humphrey Bogart after he won his Best Actor Oscar for THE AFRICAN QUEEN, real crickets are worth it in the long run! 🙂 Thanks for a great post, Jim, and for joining our Mary Astor Blogathon!