 Its A
Wonderful Movie by Stephen
Schochet
| | Its A Wonderful Life (1946) began as a short
story called The Greatest Gift. Writer Philip Van Doren
Stern was unable to sell it to a publisher, so he sent the tale out as a
long Christmas card to friends. His agent subsequently sold the fable to
RKO pictures, where it went through several transformations. In one
version a losing political candidate contemplated suicide, only to have
an angel convince him to stick around and do good works. Finally it fell
into the hands of Director Frank Capra who cried when he read it, said
it was the story he had been looking for all his life, and purchased it
to be the first project for his new production company, Liberty Films.
To play the unassuming savings and loan clerk, Capra wanted
Jimmy Stewart who he had previously worked with in You Can't Take It
With You (1938) and Mr. Smith Goes To Washington (1939). But coming back
from World War II, the thirty-seven year old Stewart was no longer the
easy going man-about-town he had been in the thirties. The former
Academy Award winner for The Philadelphia Story (1940) had led a
thousand men in bombing missions in the European theater in hard to
maneuver B-24s. The loud engines damaged his hearing, in later years
people when people would greet him and he would fail to respond, some
would mistake his deafness for a cold personality. He was uncertain
after five years away from the screen if he still wanted to be in the
movies. Sometimes the profession seemed so humiliating. In 1943, when
Stewart had tried to stay in the best hotel in Madrid, he was turned
away because he was an actor. He went back to the air force base, got
his Lieutenant Colonel's uniform and then they let him in.
When
he returned to Southern California in 1945 Stewart took things easy. He
refused to re-sign with his old studio MGM, despite tearful requests to
do so from the hammy Louis B. Mayer. He was content to spend time flying
kites and building model planes with Henry Fonda. When Frank Capra came
to make his pitch Stewart looked bored, out of it, causing the Director
to lose confidence. "Well Jim, it's about a savings and loan clerk
who wants to commit suicide. There's an angel named Clarence who shows
him what life would have been like without him. . . aw forget it, it's a
stupid idea." Capra was turning to leave when Stewart put his hand
on his shoulder. "Frank, if you want me, I'm your man." At
least that's how the film's publicists told it.
Stewart was
morose and insecure as filming began. Since he went off to serve,
Hollywood had found new leading men, like Kirk Douglas and Gregory Peck,
who were seven years younger than he was. Some scenes called for the now
graying actor to still be in high school. He felt ridiculous and
considered plastic surgery. But he was helped greatly by his co-star
Donna Reed who encouraged him throughout. In the romantic scene where
George (Stewart) and Mary (Reed) declared their love for each other,
Capra joked that Stewart was so nervous he wrapped a phone chord around
them so he wouldn't run away. James was also helped by the film's
villain Lionel Barrymore, who in real-lefe was confined to wheelchair because of
crippling arthritis. "Son, I want you to cheer up. Don't you know
you make people happier being a movie star than you ever did shooting at
them in a plane."
In the 1930's Capra had toiled at Columbia
Pictures which was ruled by the autocratic Harry Cohn, long considered
the meanest man in Hollywood. The Mogul kept the entire studio
electronically bugged, displayed a huge portrait of Mussolini in his
office, and used an electrified chair to give unsuspecting victims
sudden jolts. Capra had sat in it once, received a shock and angrily
smashed the chair to bits. When filming began on Its A Wonderful Life,
Capra was happy to be free of Cohn, but nervous. Now his own money was
part of the investment. Known for making movie sets fun places to work,
he was at first crabby and irritable with his cast and crew. Filming a
snowy, Christmas movie in over one hundred degree heat in Encino did not
help morale. Many of the heavily dressed actors fainted. But there were
nice moments. One scene required Mary to throw a rock through an old
mansion window and make a wish. Capra had a marksman ready off camera
but to his delight Reed shattered the glass on her own. She turned to
him and said," Why so surprised? Don't you think an Iowa farm girl
would know how to play baseball?"
As the shoot progressed
Capra regained his confidence. He disdained special effects when
Clarence Oddbody the angel (Henry Travers) did his magic, preferring to
tell the story through his actor's faces. The Director started to
believe he was making the greatest movie ever. As his mood lightened the
Company enjoyed picnics and singing on the set which were hallmarks of
Capra's earlier films.
Too dark, the Country wanted comedy like
Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. Too dated, Wonderful Life came off like a
depression film rather than a post war movie. For whatever reason the
three million dollar production failed to make its money back. Capra
chose to fold his tent shortly after the movie's release calling Liberty
Films," The quickest way to go broke a man ever devised."
Stewart panicked. The ex-war hero received a phone call from his agent.
"Donna Reed loved working with you. She wants to do it again."
"No way. That girl is jinxed." June Allyson became his leading
lady of choice playing his wife five times. Decades later he would
praise the performance of a bemused Donna Reed for making Wonderful Life
great. "My God," she told her friends. "He sure didn't
say that when it came out."
Years passed. From that point on
Capra, unwilling to either risk his own money or work for somebody else
directed very few movies. Stewart decided to portray a stronger image
on screen. He refused to play in war movies saying they were
unrealistic, choosing instead hard, gritty Westerns like The Man From
Laramie (1954) which helped to make him rich and surpass John Wayne as
the nation's number one box office star. Reed restored her career by
winning an Academy Award for playing a prostitute in From Here To
Eternity (1953) and then became one of television's most wholesome
mothers. And Its A Wonderful Life fell into the public domain in 1973
because no one renewed it's copyright. The forgotten film was shown
repeatedly on almost every cable television station, finally got a huge
viewership, and became a perennial Christmas Classic.
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Stephen Schochet is the author of the upcoming book
Hollywood Stories: Short Entertaining Anecdotes About the Stars and
Legends of the Movies. He is also the author of two acclaimed
audiobooks
Tales of Hollywood: Hear the Origins of Hollywood!
and
Fascinating Walt Disney: Hear How Walt Disney's Dreams Came
True!
These entertaining gift items are available at Amazon,
Barnes and Noble, 1-800-431-1579 or wherever books are sold.
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