The Jackpot

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Jackpot
The Jackpot - 1950- Poster.png
Directed byWalter Lang
Written byHenry Ephron
Phoebe Ephron
Produced bySamuel G. Engel
StarringJames Stewart
Barbara Hale
James Gleason
Natalie Wood
CinematographyJoseph LaShelle
Edited byJ. Watson Webb Jr.
Music byLionel Newman
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
November 1, 1950
Running time
85 minutes
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1,525,000[1][2]

The Jackpot is a 1950 American comedy film directed by Walter Lang, with James Stewart and Barbara Hale in the lead roles. It features a young Natalie Wood.

The screenplay was based on a John McNulty article, "The Jackpot", in The New Yorker (February 19, 1949), about the true experiences of James P. Caffrey of Wakefield, Rhode Island who won $24,000 worth of merchandise on August 28, 1948 from the CBS radio quiz program, Sing It Again.[3][4]

The film is mostly forgotten today, but was a successful vehicle for Stewart at the time. A radio adaptation, broadcast April 26, 1951, on NBC's Screen Directors Playhouse, received much press coverage because Stewart's co-star was Margaret Truman, making her debut as a radio actress for a fee of $2,500. She received mixed reviews, and noted that her father "enjoyed it".[5]

Plot[]

Bill Lawrence (Stewart), employed at a midwest department store, supports a wife (Hale) and two teenage kids (Wood, Tommy Rettig) on an annual salary of $7,500. Answering a phone call, he wins $24,000 worth of merchandise from a radio quiz program and is overwhelmed by prizes which range from the useful to the absurd, including a side of beef, 7,500 cans of soup, 1,000 fruit trees, a Palomino pony, a portable swimming pool, a diamond ring, a French maid, an interior decorator (Alan Mowbray) and portrait painter Hilda Jones (Patricia Medina).

All is well until Lawrence is told he must sell the prizes in order to pay an income tax of $7000. When he tries to raise the money by selling the merchandise at the department store, his boss (Fred Clark) fires him. When he tries to fence the diamond ring in Chicago, he's arrested. Complicating matters, his wife suspects him of having an affair with Greenwich Village artist Hilda. Dealing with these problems, he gets help from reporter Harry Summers (James Gleason), who had been writing newspaper articles about Lawrence and his winnings. Bandleader Harry James made an uncredited appearance as a radio vocalist.

Cast[]

Awards[]

Scripters Henry and Phoebe Ephron, the parents of eventual writer/director Nora Ephron, were nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award.

Home media[]

The film was released to DVD via the manufacture on demand (MOD) 20th Century Fox Cinema Archives on December 6, 2012.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Top Grosses of 1950". Variety. January 3, 1951. p. 58.
  2. ^ Aubrey Solomon, Twentieth Century-Fox: A Corporate and Financial History Rowman & Littlefield, 2002 p 223
  3. ^ Crowther, Bosley. "The Life of Comedy", The New York Times, December 3, 1950.
  4. ^ McNulty, John. The New Yorker, February 19, 1949.
  5. ^ Lewiston Evening Journal, April 27, 1951.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""