The following essay is Thrilling Days of Yesteryear’s contribution to the Christmas Movie Blogathon, currently being hosted by Family Friendly Reviews from December 20-22. For a list of participants and the films discussed, click here.
In 1949, Paramount Pictures dusted off an old Damon Runyon property that they had previously filmed fifteen years earlier as Little Miss Marker, a vehicle for Adolphe Menjou and budding child star Shirley Temple. The studio tailored the material for their reigning box office champ, comedian Bob Hope, pairing him with comic actress Lucille Ball in the first of four films they would make together. Sorrowful Jones (1949—the Hope version) did very well in theaters, and the following year the studio retooled another Runyon tale, The Lemon Drop Kid (1951), for Hope. (The original version was released in 1934, starring Lee Tracy and Helen Mack.)
Bob plays a racetrack tout named Sidney Milburn, whose
fondness for the titular confectionary has earned him the nickname “The Lemon
Drop Kid.” He’s working a Florida
racetrack, convincing bettors that he’s an expert on the ponies when in
actuality he knows nothing about
horse flesh. This will prove to be his
undoing: he’s talked the girlfriend of racketeer Moose Moran (Fred Clark) into
switching the horse he had her bet $2,000 on…and because the horse comes in
dead last, Moose wants a refund of the money he would have won had it been bet
on the proper nag: $10,000.
The Kid pleads with Moran to let him have until Christmas
Eve to raise the ten large, and since Moose is a gambling man, he agrees not to
have his goon Sam the Surgeon (Harry Bellaver) go to work on Sidney. Back in New York, The Kid gets reacquainted
with old friends in his long-suffering fiancée, nightclub hoofer Brainey Baxter
(Marilyn Maxwell), and elderly newspaper vendor Nellie Thursday (Jane
Darwell). The Kid works a scheme where
he pretends to be a Santa Claus collecting money for charity…something that
guarantees him a reservation in The Grey Bar Hotel fairly quickly, since he’s
picked up for not having a license. But
when he sees that Nellie has been arrested as a result of a fight with her
landlord (he’s dispossessed her), Milburn gets an idea: he’ll borrow a closed Long
Island casino owned by Moose and open up a nursing home for elderly ladies like
Nellie—that will allow him to continue his street corner activities and raise
the money he owes the Moose.
The Kid populates the casino-turned-rest-home with elderly
women in need of shelter, then rounds up a few of Nellie’s male friends to man
the kettles as Santas—Straight Flush Tony (Jay C. Flippen), Gloomy Willie
(William Frawley), Little Louie (Sid Melton), Singin’ Solly (Ben Welden) and other
Runyonesque mugs—and the money starts pouring in…something that has attracted
the attention of Oxford Charlie (Lloyd Nolan), Brainey’s boss at the
nightclub. Charlie figures that since
wherever Nellie is hanging up her yarn constitutes “The Nellie Thursday Home
for Old Dolls” (as The Kid’s charity is known), he’ll have his henchmen put the
snatch on the ladies and move them into his mansion in order to muscle in on
the racket. The Kid’s dishonest ruse is
eventually revealed to Brainey, Nellie and the rest…and even though it means that
Moose will have him fitted for a pair of concrete wing-tips, Sidney schemes to
retrieve the money (disguised as an old lady) and bring the long arm of the law
to arrest Charlie, Moose and their respective goons.
Both Sorrowful Jones
and The Lemon Drop Kid were attempts
by Bob Hope to do feature film comedies radically different from his usual
vehicles (as was 1950’s Fancy Pants,
a remake of Ruggles of Red Gap)—but
the end results won’t please any Damon Runyon fans, because the author’s
trademark vernacular for his characters—in fact, the oddball collection of
“guys and dolls” in general—is sadly missing in these two films, as is the
unique New York atmosphere that permeated his tales (Lemon Drop Kid might take place in New York…but it could be L.A. or
Toronto for all we know). If you’re a
Bob Hope fan, however—both comedies are highly entertaining diversions…with Lemon Drop Kid gaining the inside edge
because of its seasonal background.
It has been argued by one or two classic film fans of my
acquaintance that The Lemon Drop Kid
really isn’t a true Christmas film…but since this is my blog and not theirs, I
say bah and feh. What could be more
Christmasy than the idea of multiple Santa Clauses shaking down individuals for
spare change in order to help little old ladies? (In theory, anyway.) The main reason why the movie has the
Christmas cachet it does is because it introduced the holiday carol standard Silver Bells, written by tunesmiths Jay
Livingston and Ray Evans. We know them
as the men who also gave us such immortal classics as the Oscar-winning Buttons and Bows (from Bob Hope’s 1948
smash The Paleface), Mona Lisa, Whatever Will Be, Will Be (Que Sera, Sera) and the Theme from
Mister Ed. (Okay, that last one didn’t
win an Academy Award.)
The Lemon Drop Kid,
though released in March of 1951, had originally been filmed in 1950—and in October
of that year, Silver Bells started to
attract some attention on the music charts with a version recorded by Hope’s
“Road” partner Bing Crosby and Carol Richards.
As such, Bob and Marilyn Maxwell were brought back into the studio to
re-do the song sequence in the film, which was staged as a more
elaborate number. Though Bing’s version
became the more popular, the song would eventually be co-opted by Bob (well, it’s
only fair, seeing as how Bing got the girl most of the time), who made the song
a highlight of his traditional Christmas television specials. (The story goes that the song was originally
called Tinkle Bells, but was changed
when Livingston’s wife patiently explained to him the double meaning of the
word “tinkle.”)
Sidney Lanfield is credited with directing The Lemon Drop Kid—he was a favorite
director of Bob’s, also helming the earlier Sorrowful Jones and such Hope classics as My Favorite Blonde (1942) and Where
There’s Life (1947). Frank Tashlin
directed some of Kid, too—he was
asked by the star to do some “rewrites” on the movie (which is why he gets
credit for the screenplay along with Edmund Hartmann, Robert O’Brien and Irving
Elinson) but Tashlin said no dice unless he could direct, too (he ultimately
did the new Silver Bells sequence). The slapstick chase sequence in the
film—where the Kid tries to get away from Charlie’s men by borrowing a Boy
Scout’s bicycle, followed by some gags inside a hotel as Kid evades a
policeman—seems to have Tashlin’s fingerprints all over it as well (it’s
similar in tone to the all-out chases featured in such Tashlin-scripted
comedies as The Fuller Brush Man, The Good Humor Man and Kill the Umpire).
I’m an enthusiastic Bob Hope fan—still, I’m not going to try
and convince you that Bob plays anyone else in this movie but the usual
“cowardly custard” persona of most of his comedy films. He’s got good gags, but he benefits more from
a swell cast; this picture was Marilyn Maxwell’s first outing with Bob (she
also appears in 1953’s Off Limits
and 1963’s Critic’s Choice) after
doing many overseas shows with him in both World War II and the Korean War for
the USO. (Arthur Marx wrote in the
biography The Secret Life of Bob Hope that
Marilyn’s long love affair with the comedian was so well-known in the Hollywood
community many referred to her as “Mrs. Hope.”
Ultimately, you must make the call.)
I like Maxwell in a lot of movies: Lost
in a Harem (1944) is a fave (her co-stars in that, Abbott & Costello,
featured her as the vocalist on their radio program) and she does nice work in Champion (1949) and New York Confidential (1955)…and I also
think she’s swell in the Tashlin-directed Rock-a-Bye
Baby (1958).
I’ve always marveled at how menacing Fred Clark could be as
a movie heavy because he doesn’t seem like the kind of a guy you would really
be scared of in real life—but he acquits himself nicely as gangster Moose Moran
(nicely blending menace and humor), as does Lloyd Nolan as racketeer Oxford
Charlie (I like that there’s a subtle suggestion that he’s carrying a torch for
Maxwell’s character when he’s positively gobsmacked that she’s infatuated with
a loser like The Kid). Although there
are a lot of first-rate character folks in this (Flippen, Bellaver, Melton,
Welden, Frances Pierlot, Tom “Heil myself!” Dugan) only William Frawley gets to
share really big laughs with the star; his response to a little girl who wants
to know if he (Santa) is going to bring her a doll on Christmas Eve (“No, my
doll’s workin’ Christmas Eve”) is hysterical, and then there’s his hilarious
response to The Kid when it’s discovered in the line for Santa inspection that
Gloomy Willie has concealed a little hooch:
Is that Tor? |
KID: Santa Claus don’t drink!
WILLIE: Oh, no…then how come he’s
always fallin’ down chimneys?!!
This is going to be a rather obscure nitpick on my part…but
on Bob Hope’s radio program, second banana Jack Kirkwood would often appear on
the show around the holidays and play a street corner Santa that Hope kept
running into. His greeting to Bob—“Put
somethin’ in the pot, boy…”—became a popular catchphrase, and I can’t believe
Paramount passed up the chance to include Jack in the Santa shenanigans. (Particularly since Kirkwood has a meaty role
in Bob’s Fancy Pants, playing the
part that Charlie Ruggles did in the Ruggles
of Red Gap original.)
TOR!!! |
The Lemon Drop Kid mixes humor and sentiment in just the right amount (the old ladies are irresistible, and the scene where Darwell’s character is reunited with her husband is great without getting too gooey), and Hope’s character of the rapscallion who decides to make good because of the spirit of the season is certainly one of his most offbeat (even if he’s not entirely successful in the part). I try to make it a habit to watch the film every year (it plays just as well in the other eleven months, too) and since The Greatest Cable Channel Known to Mankind™ has been featuring it every year it reminds me how much I enjoy the film. I defy you to get Silver Bells out of your head the next time you make its acquaintance.
9 comments:
I got a real nostalgic thrill at the mention of Jack Kirkwood's catch phrase, which I hadn't thought of in years. Hope's radio show was a staple at our house when I was a kid, and I used to go around saying "Put something in the pot, boy" all the time.
I wrote about Damon Runyon when I recently wrote about GUYS AND DOLLS, and I briefly mentioned this movie, so I'm kinda disappointed to find out they don't talk in the trademark Runyon vernacular here - not that I could imagine Bob Hope talking that way anyway. Still, this doesn't sound too bad.
I haven't seen "The Lemon Drop Kid" is ages. It used to air around these parts, but local stations seem to only have spots for infomercials and TCM Canada doesn't appear to have the rights. Grrrrr.
I remember liking the movie because Hope always cracks me up, but feeling it fell short of what it could have been. I wanted to like it more.
In an interview on TVOntario's "Saturday Night at the Movies" years ago Jay confirmed that "tinkle bells" story. He said that he and Ray hadn't concerned themselves too much with toilet training their tots.
I got a real nostalgic thrill at the mention of Jack Kirkwood's catch phrase, which I hadn't thought of in years.
One of Kirkwood's relatives contacted me back at the old Salon blog some time after I had written about Jack and his antics on the Hope program. He was nice enough to send me some photos, which have apparently disappeared into the Nostalgia Vortex that occupies my bedroom.
I wrote about Damon Runyon when I recently wrote about GUYS AND DOLLS, and I briefly mentioned this movie, so I'm kinda disappointed to find out they don't talk in the trademark Runyon vernacular here - not that I could imagine Bob Hope talking that way anyway. Still, this doesn't sound too bad.
It's kind of hard to top Guys and Dolls, though I have always had a soft spot for Money from Home, in which Martin & Lewis do Runyon (Sheldon Leonard is in that movie, so there's your bona fides right there). But I don't think that Kid or Sorrowful Jones are bad movies -- they're just not all that true to Damon Runyon.
I haven't seen "The Lemon Drop Kid" is ages. It used to air around these parts, but local stations seem to only have spots for infomercials and TCM Canada doesn't appear to have the rights. Grrrrr.
Ugh. I feel your pain, Our Lady of Great Caftan. Kid disappeared from TV radar quite a few years ago around these parts, too...it's only recently that TCM has been showing it.
Hope's films from this period are terrific (with a certainly cowboy related one among my all-time favorites), and this is a good one. It doesn't hot a home run, however, though anything with Bill Frawley in a Santa outfit has something going for it.
You've got me wanting to see it again, which is sort of the point with the movie blog thing, ain't it? Nice work.
And happy holidays.
with a certainly cowboy related one among my all-time favorites
As Maurice Chevalier would say: "Ah, yes...I remember eet well."
And Frawley is reason enough to watch the movie even if Hope isn't particularly a favorite. That line to the little girl never fails to break me up.
I saw this film this December and loved it! My favorite part is Bob dressed as an old doll!
I didn't know Fancy Pants was a remake of Ruggles of Red Gap.
Thanks for the informative post!
Don't forget to read my contribution to the blogathon! :)
Greetings!
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