Look Who's Laughing

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Look Who's Laughing
Look Who's Laughing lobby card.jpg
Directed byAllan Dwan
Written byJames V. Kern
Zeno Klinker (dialogue for Edgar Bergen)
Dorothy Kingsley (dialogue for Edgar Bergen)
Produced byAllan Dwan
Starring
CinematographyFrank Redman
Edited bySherman Todd
Music byRoy Webb
Production
companies
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
Distributed byRKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
Release date
  • November 21, 1941 (1941-11-21) (U.S.)[1]
Running time
approx. 79 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Look Who's Laughing (aka Look Who's Talking) is a 1941 film from RKO Radio Pictures. The film is built around a number of radio stars from the Golden Age of Radio and centers around radio personality Jim Jordan as Fibber McGee from the comic duo, Fibber McGee and Molly, who plans to build an aircraft factory in a small town. Look Who's Laughing was followed by Here We Go Again (1942), with many of the radio stars reprising their performances.[2]

Plot[]

In New York, Edgar Bergen does his last radio performance of the season, a doctor's sketch with his puppet, Charlie McCarthy, and his assistant, Julie Patterson (Lucille Ball). After the performance Bergen hosts an engagement party for Julie and his business partner, Jerry Wood. The next day, Bergen and Charlie are set for their summer vacation. Flying in his new aircraft, Bergen gets lost and lands in Wistful Vista, home of Fibber McGee and Molly.

Bergen's almost crash landing interrupts a meeting with Wistful Vista's Chamber of Commerce. Fibber, president, has just proposed the selling of the town's airstrip to Hilary Horton, owner of the Horton Aircraft Factory. The Commerce and townspeople thought Bergen's aircraft was carrying Horton.

Bergen and Charlie are welcomed with Fibber and Molly inviting them to stay at their home. Learning of Fibber's plans, Bergen offers to convince Hilary, his friend, to build his factory at Wistful Vista. Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve (Harold Peary), secretly working for Ironton Realty, a rival company wanting to purchase Horton's factory, gets a scoop of Fibber and Bergen's plans. He goes to Sam Cudahy (Charles Halton), owner of Ironton Realty, planning to back out of Cudahy's schemes. Threatened by blackmail, Gildersleeve tricks Fibber into paying for an elaborate luncheon to honor their guest. Gildersleeve's trickery continues when he meets Charlie McCarthy, fed up staying at Wistful Vista and wanting to find a way to leave town. Gildersleeve suggests that Charlie sends a fake telegram to Bergen saying that his former assistant, Julie Patterson (Lucille Ball), is ill. On the day Bergen is to fly Hilary Horton to Wistful Vista, he receives the telegram, thus suddenly changing his plans.

Bergen arrives back in New York, discovering Julie is well. Returning quickly to Wistful Vista with a protesting Julie in tow. Bergen's business partner, Jerry (Lee Bonnell), with his former fiancée and Julie's replacement, Marge (Dorothy Lovett), search for Julie. Meanwhile, Fibber, humiliated, resigned from the Chamber of Commerce. His house is also in foreclosure and Cudahy purchased the airstrip.

Charlie confesses to Julie that Gildersleeve suggested sending the fake telegram. Julie then devises a scheme to foil Cudahy into investing in some worthless land belonging to Fibber and for Gildersleeve to trade his land for the airstrip. Bergen successfully convinces Hilary to fly into Wistful Vista. Meanwhile, Jerry and Marge, still searching for Julie, have decided that they are still in love and get married. Back at the McGees', Molly discovers that Julie is in love with Bergen and advises her to "sabotage" him into marriage.

Everyone drives to the airstrip to meet Horton. As Fibber and Molly wait in Bergen's aircraft, he and Julie greet Jerry and Marge, who have just driven into town. When Fibber accidentally takes off, Julie and Bergen follow in another aircraft. Horton's aircraft is also coming and Fibber nearly crashes into him. Bergen climbs aboard the aircraft, and safely lands Fibber and Molly. After returning to the McGee house, Jerry and Marge announce their marriage. At that moment, Horton arrives and informs Bergen that he owns a controlling interest in the Horton company and can build a factory wherever he desires. So, with Fibber's good name restored, Julie embraces Bergen.

Cast[]

Production[]

Principal photography on Look Who's Laughing took place beginning on May 13, 1941 and ending late June 1941.[3] The working title of the film was Look Who's Talking. In the opening credits of Look Who's Laughing, "the two "O's" in the word "look" become eyeballs and the "O" in the word "who" turns into a laughing mouth."[4]

In a March 1, 1941 story on its pre-production, the New York Times headlined "Lucille Ball and Husband, Desi Arnaz, to Co-Star." Arnaz ended up being replaced. It would take ten more years to act with wife Ball, in TV's I Love Lucy in 1951.

Reception[]

Film historians Richard Jewell and Vernon Harbin in The RKO Story (1982) considered Look Who's Laughing, a surprise winner at the box office. "Released just after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, it had a certain topicality and lunatic attractiveness, but the precise reasons for the picture's sizeable box-office success must forever remain a mystery."[N 1] The film historians did pinpoint one performance, "Lucille Ball gave a standout performance as Bergen's secretary."[2]

Film reviewer Jim Craddock in a recent review of Look Who's Laughing in the VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever 2001 compendium was charitable about a film where radio stars conveniently drop into a town, writing, "Not much plot here, but it might be worth a look to fans of the stars, including Jim and Marion Jordan, better known as Fibber McGee and Molly."[5]

References[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Although Look Who's Laughing was released before the attack on Pearl Harbor, most of the screenings took place as America was going to war, giving the film a "topicality".[2]

Citations[]

  1. ^ "Detail view: 'Look Who's Laughing'." American Film Institute, 2019. Retrieved: June 25, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c Jewell and Harbin 1982, p. 164.
  3. ^ "Original print information: 'Look Who's Laughing' (1941)." TCM, 2019. Retrieved: June 25, 2019.
  4. ^ "Notes: 'Look Who's Laughing' (1941)." TCM, 2019. Retrieved: June 25, 2019.
  5. ^ Craddock 2001, p. 580.

Bibliography[]

  • Craddock, Jim, ed. VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever 2001. Detroit: Gale/Cengage Learning, 2001. ISBN 978-1-578-59120-6.
  • Jewell, Richard B. and Vernon Harbin. The RKO Story. New York: Arlington House, 1982. ISBN 0-517-54-656-6.

External links[]

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