Preston Sturges (1898 - 1959)


Perhaps more than any other director Preston Sturges injected a crazy style which helped people forget a world war. His films were very sharply satirical and often quite daring for their time. Starting as a writer in the Thirties on films like The Power and the Glory (1933) and Easy Living (1937) he became the epitome of the writer-director auteur, his films crackle with wisecracks and swift, rippling dialogue.

Sturges directed a series of excellent films at Paramount in the early Forties beginning with The Great McGinty (1940) which were very successful. The arrival of sound and the growth of the studio system resulted in the producers dominating the industry. Directors wanting to make films their own way unless they were a select band usually had a battle on thier hands. Sturges parodied this in Sullivan's Travels (1941) in which Joel McCrea argues with the producers about whether to make a slapstick comedy or his preferred option a highbrow drama. Eventually after experiencing life in a chain gang McCrea decides on the comedy : " There's a lot to be said for making people laugh. You know that's all some people have.
It isn't much but it is better than nothing."


The Miracle of Morgan's Creek (1943) satirised the perennial nightmare of the soldier, sailor or airman that his wife or girlfriend will be sleeping around and getting pregnant in his absense. Hail the Conquering Hero (1944) put excitement about bravery under the spotlight by telling the story of a young man played by Eddie Bracken who has been invalidated out of the army without fighting. He returns to his home to a hero's welcome and seems unable to tell the truth. The fuss is climaxed by a campaign to elect him mayor, the truth is revealed but the innate goodness of Bracken means the people still want him.

After the war Sturges style of comedy seemed to go out of style. He left Paramount and worked for a time with Howard Hughes, a combination that resulted in a lacklustre comeback for Harold Lloyd in The Sin of Harold Dibblebock (1946). He made a couple of films at 20th Century Fox in the late 40s but they weren't successful and that was really the end of his Hollywood career.

Filmography

1930    FAST AND LOOSE    dialogue
1931    STRICTLY DISHONORABLE    director
1933    CHILD OF MANHATTAN    director
1933    THE POWER AND THE GLORY    screenwriter, story
1934    THIRTY DAY PRINCESS    screenwriter
1934    WE LIVE AGAIN    screenwriter
1935    DIAMOND JIM    screenwriter
1935    THE GOOD FAIRY    screenwriter
1936    ONE RAINY AFTERNOON    song composer
1937    EASY LIVING    screenwriter
1937    HOTEL HAYWIRE    screenwriter, story
1938    IF I WERE KING    screenwriter
1938    PORT OF SEVEN SEAS    screenwriter
1939    NEVER SAY DIE    screenwriter
1940    CHRISTMAS IN JULY    director, screenwriter
1940    THE GREAT MCGINTY    director, screenwriter
1940    REMEMBER THE NIGHT    screenwriter, story
1941    THE LADY EVE    director, screenwriter
1941    SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS    director, screenwriter, story
1942    THE PALM BEACH STORY    director, screenwriter
1942    STAR SPANGLED RHYTHM    performer
1944    THE GREAT MOMENT    director, screenwriter
1944    HAIL THE CONQUERING HERO    director, producer, screenwriter
1944    THE MIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK    director, producer, screenwriter
1947    I'LL BE YOURS    screenwriter
1947    THE SIN OF HAROLD DIDDLEBOCK/ MAD WEDNESDAY    director, producer, screenwriter
1948    UNFAITHFULLY YOURS    director, producer, screenwriter, story
1949    THE BEAUTIFUL BLONDE FROM BASHFUL BEND    director, producer, screenwriter
1951    STRICTLY DISHONORABLE    from play
1954    LETTERS FROM MY WINDMILL/ LES LETTRES DE MON MOULIN    English subtitles
1956    THE BIRDS AND THE BEES    screenwriter
1956    THE FRENCH, THEY ARE A FUNNY RACE/ LES CARNETS DU MAJOR THOMPSON    director, screenwriter
1958    PARIS HOLIDAY    performer
1958    ROCK-A-BYE BABY    from story "The Miracle of Morgan's Creek"


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Written content of the Golden Age of Hollywood Website (except where indicated) copyright Derek McLellan, 2007.