Film
906: His Girl Friday
Trivia: The
famous in-joke about Ralph Bellamy's
character ("He looks like that actor...Ralph Bellamy!") was almost
left on the cutting room floor: Harry Cohn,
the studio head, saw the dailies and responded in fury at the impertinence, but
he let Howard Hawks leave it in, and it has
always been one of the biggest laughs in the film.
One of
the first, if not the first, films to have characters talk over the lines of
other characters, for a more realistic sound. Prior to this, movie characters
completed their lines before the next lines were started.
In the
play the film was based on ("The Front Page"), the part of Hildy was
played by a man. When director Howard Hawks
was planning to make the film, he was going to cast a man. While auditioning
actors, a secretary would read the lines belonging to Hildy. Hawks loved the
words coming from a woman so much, they decided to rewrite the part for a
woman.
Rosalind Russell thought, while shooting, that she didn't
have as many good lines as Cary Grant
had, so she hired an advertisement writer through her brother-in-law and had
him write more clever lines for the dialog. Since Howard Hawks allowed for spontaneity and ad-libbing, he,
and many of the cast and crew didn't notice it, but Grant knew she was up to
something, leading him to greet her every morning: "What have you got
today?"
Rosalind Russell resented the fact that she wasn't the
first choice to play Hildy for director Howard Hawks. She showed up to the audition with her hair
wet from swimming.
Voted
#10 in Total Film's 100 Greatest Movies Of All Time list (November 2005).


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