Film
973: Arsenic and Old Lace
Trivia: Cary Grant donated his
entire salary, $100,000, to the U.S. War Relief Fund.
Ronald Reagan and Jack Benny were offered
the role of Mortimer Brewster, but turned it down. Bob Hope was offered the
part and was eager to do it but Paramount Pictures refused to loan him out to
Warner Bros. for the project.
Cary Grant considered his
acting in this film to be horribly over the top and often called it his least
favorite of all his movies.
On
stage, Boris Karloff played the
monstrous Jonathan Brewster, Raymond
Massey's film character, who, in eerie-looking screen makeup,
resembled Karloff, which was a running gag throughout the picture. Because
Karloff was still appearing in the Broadway play during the film's production,
he was unable to do the picture.
When
Mortimer is sitting in the graveyard, one of the tombstones has the name Archie
Leach on it. Archie Leach is Cary Grant's
real name.
Jonathan
describes one of his killings and Dr. Einstein says "You can't count him.
He died of pneumonia," then Jonathan replies "He wouldn't have died
of pneumonia if I hadn't shot him." This connects to the United States
Presidents theme in the film. In 1881, President James Garfield was shot by a
drifter named Charles Guiteau. Garfield recovered from the wound, only to catch
pneumonia from tainted surgical tools, and died 79 days after the shooting.
Guiteau's courtroom defense was that Garfield died of pneumonia; the verdict
was, in effect, that Garfield wouldn't have died of pneumonia if Guiteau hadn't
shot him. Guiteau was sent to the execution dock in 1882.


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