Saturday's Children is a 1940 American drama film directed by Vincent Sherman and starring John Garfield, Anne Shirley, and Claude Rains. It is a third-time remake of the original Maxwell Anderson play with a previous version released in 1935 under the title Maybe It's Love.[1]
Plot[]
Twenty-two-year-old Bobby Halevy (Anne Shirley) falls in love with her fellow employee, Rims Rosson (John Garfield). Rosson is an idealistic dreamer and would-be inventor whose get-rich scheme is going off to Manila to turn hemp into silk. Their romance flourishes until Bobby is talked into tricking Rims into marriage. Living poor and on the verge of breaking up, the couple realizes that there is more to life than having a lot of money.
Cast[]
- John Garfield as Rims Rosson
- Anne Shirley as Bobby Halevy
- Claude Rains as Mr. Halevy
- Lee Patrick as Florrie Sands
- George Tobias as Herbie Smith
- Roscoe Karns as Willie Sands
- Dennie Moore as Gertrude Mills
- Elisabeth Risdon as Mrs. Halevy
- Berton Churchill as Mr. Norman
- Lucile Fairbanks as a nurse (uncredited)
- John Qualen as first carpenter (uncredited)
Production[]
Warners originally cast Priscilla Lane in the lead but Garfield was sure that the Lane Sisters would somehow have to be written in as well. He used his influence to get the studio to borrow Shirley from RKO. Julius Epstein thought Garfield's performance was the closest he came to playing his real self. Usually discontented with the way he was typecast by the studio, Garfield was unusually proud of his restrained characterization.[2]
Radio adaptation[]
Saturday's Children was presented on Screen Guild Players June 2, 1947. The 30-minute adaptation starred Garfield and Jane Wyman.[3]
Gallery[]
References[]
- ↑ Crowther, Bosley (May 4, 1940). "THE SCREEN; John Garfield and Anne Shirley Seen at Strand in 'Saturday's Children'". The New York Times. Retrieved September 8, 2011.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
- ↑ Swindell, Larry (1975). Body and Soul. New York: William Morrow & co., page 164–5. ISBN 0-688-02907-8.
- ↑ "Those Were the Days". Nostalgia Digest. 35 (2): 32–39. Spring 2009.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.
External links[]
- Saturday's Children at AllMovie
- Saturday's Children at the TCM Movie Database
- Saturday's Children at the American Film Institute Catalog
- Saturday's Children at Wikipedia
This page uses content from the English Wikipedia page Saturday's Children. The revision history lists the authors. The text on Warner Bros. Entertainment Wiki and Wikipedia is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License (CC BY-SA). |
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