Bretaigne Windust Movies
From the second half of the 1930s into the mid-'40s, Bretaigne Windust was one of the most successful and celebrated directors on Broadway, acclaimed for his ability with authors as diverse as Ibsen, Chekov, Shakespeare, Robert Sherwood, Howard Lindsay, and Russel Crouse. Although his screen career was less substantial, he did direct (or, in one instance, co-direct) one of the better comedies of the late '40s and one of the most violent crime films of the early '50s.Born Ernest Bretaigne Windust in Paris in 1906, he was the son of the English violin virtuoso Ernest Joseph Windust and the former Elizabeth Amory Day, a singer from New York City. The first language that Windust spoke was German, the language of the governess who largely raised him in early childhood -- he next learned French (which he spoke with a German accent) and then English (which he initially spoke with a French accent). His living situation wasn't much less complicated with the outbreak of World War I, as the family fled Paris to England just ahead of the Battle of the Somme. It was while living in London that Windust's interest in theater was sparked, and he spent many of the London air raids playing director with his miniature theater. He was a perennially poor student, mostly owing to his family's gypsy-like existence in England and the upheavals of the war. The family returned to Paris after the war, but the end of his parents' marriage in 1920 and his mother's decision to move to America brought Windust across the Atlantic in his mid-teens. In keeping with his mother's social standing (her father was a top surgeon and department chief at Columbia University's School of Medicine, and a distant relative of Clarence Day, of Life With Father fame), he attended private schools and lived in a relatively rarified upper-class atmosphere. He sang as a boy soprano and attended Columbia University and Princeton University. It was as a member of the Theatre Intime players at the latter institution that he first excelled, rising to their presidency. He planned to become an actor, resisting his family's hopes that he might be a career diplomat, and in 1928 co-founded the University Players of New Falmouth, MA, whose ranks included Henry Fonda, James Stewart, Margaret Sullavan, José Ferrer, Kent Smith, Myron McCormack, Mildred Natwick, and Joshua Logan. Their summer seasons of theater in the hinterlands are the stuff of legends, though Windust did almost no acting with them; rather, he found his calling as a director. By 1929, the year of his graduation, he'd joined the Theatre Guild in New York as an assistant stage manager.
In 1932, Windust directed the London production of Eugene O'Neill's Strange Interlude, and after working on a few smaller American productions, turned to acting for a time, enjoying good reviews for his performance in The Distaff Side. Then the call came from Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, who enlisted him as the director of their version of The Taming of the Shrew, which was a major success. He appeared in the stage version of Idiot's Delight, starring the Lunts, but that production closed out his career as an actor. As a director, Windust worked with the Lunts again on Amphitryon 38 (from his own translation from the French), and directed Tallulah Bankhead in The Circle. His first big hit, however, was Life With Father, the Russel Crouse/Howard Lindsay play based on the childhood remembrances of Clarence Day Jr., himself a distant relative of Windust -- the play opened in the fall of 1939 and received rave reviews, earning a long run (and, later, a Hollywood adaptation). Next up for Windust was Arsenic and Old Lace, which was even more successful and a remarkable achievement in dark comedy; Strip for Action, a comedy about burlesque, completed Windust's hat trick, giving him three simultaneous hits running on Broadway in the opening years of the 1940s. Those works also kept him busy well into the decade, preparing road company productions of the first two plays.
It wasn't long before Hollywood beckoned. Windust earned his first big-screen credit at Warner Bros. as the dialogue director in the drama Stallion Road (1947), directed by James V. Kern and starring Ronald Reagan. A year later, he helmed a pair of Bette Davis vehicles, the first an overly talky melodrama entitled Winter Meeting and the second a highly inspired romantic comedy with screwball elements, entitled June Bride. The success of the latter bore out Windust's own assessment of comedy as his true strength -- but somehow, all Warner Bros. could come up with for him to direct was dramas such as Perfect Strangers (1950) and The Enforcer (1951). Between those films, Windust did get to direct the Everett Freeman/Harry Kurnitz comedy Pretty Baby (1950), starring Betsy Drake and Edmund Gwenn. By 1952, he was working at RKO -- hardly in the best time of its history -- doing the The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky as part of the compilation film Face to Face (1952).
Windust's most enduring movies were June Bride, which is perhaps the best comedy that Bette Davis ever did, and The Enforcer. The latter, based on the prosecution of the gang known popularly as "Murder Inc.," was one of the most violent films of its era, and although Windust had sole directorial credit, it is universally agreed today that Raoul Walsh -- an old hand at crime and action films -- shared the direction with him. Windust closed out his screen career at Universal's television unit, directing episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Wagon Train, and Leave It to Beaver. He also directed The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1957), a television production starring Van Johnson that was later licensed for theatrical release by K. Gordon Murray, thus exposing it to millions of pre-teens who were too young to have seen the original broadcast. Bretaigne Windust died in 1960 in New York City. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
When they both receive invitations for an upcoming cotillion, Beaver and Larry are forced into taking dancing lessons by their respective parents. And, as expected, both boys hate attending those lessons. After a grueling first session, Beav and Larry agree to skip their second lesson and spend the time hiding behind a barn. Surely, their parents will be none the wiser -- or will they? This was the only Leave It to Beaver episode directed by Bretaigne Windust, whose previous credits included several "grown-up" movies starring the likes of Bette Davis and Humphrey Bogart. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Madge Blake, Rusty Stevens, (more)
Scotland Yard inspector Benson (played by future "James Bond" Roger Moore) seems determined to monitor every movement made by Lady Gwendolyn Avon (Hazel Court). Benson informs his superiors that he is convinced that Lady Gwendolyn plans to smuggle a valuable emerald necklace out of the country, and then sell it so she won't have to pay the taxes on it. The story takes an unexpected turn when the necklace is stolen by a "person or persons unknown." ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Singer-comedian Dennis Day is herein cast against type as miserly Alexander Gifford, who after coming into a huge sum of money secretly deposits the cash in five different banks to keep it a secret from his wife, Jennifer (Alice Backes). Alas, she does find out, and tells him that she will divorce him unless she's allowed to freely spend the money. Planning to have his wife murdered, Alexander balks when he discovers that most professional hitmen charge an exorbitant fee -- so he decides to cut corners by pulling off the dirty deed himself. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
The Pied Piper of Hamelin was originally filmed as a television special, then released theatrically outside the United States. The story is the familiar one: the town of Hamelin, plagued by rats, hires a mysterious piper (Van Johnson) to rid the town of rodents. The piper does so, on the promise that he'll be paid a handsome fee. But the duplicitous burgomeister (Claude Rains), on the advice of his Laurel-and-Hardy council (Doodles Weaver and Stanley Adams), reneges on his promise. In revenge, the piper lures all of Hamelin's children off to parts unknown. In a departure from the original, there's a happy ending this time. Most of the dialogue is spoken in rhyme (quite amusingly by Rains), while the songs are adaptations of Edvard Grieg tunes. In the musical department, Kay Starr comes off best as the grieving mother of one of the missing kids. Because it was filmed in color, The Pied Piper of Hamelin has remained in TV syndication into the 1990s. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
RKO's Face to Face joined the "multistoried film" bandwagon set in motion by the Somerset Maugham omnibus films of the late 1940s. Produced by Huntington Hartford, Face to Face consists of two classic American short stories, each running approximately 45 minutes. Directed by John Brahm, "The Secret Sharer" is adapted from the Joseph Conrad story by Aeneas McKenzie. James Mason stars as a young, inexperienced sea captain who forms a symbiotic relationship with an imperiled sailor (Michael Pate). The second half of the film consists of Stephen Crane's "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky," adapted by James Agee and directed by Bretaigne Windust. In this story, a frontier sheriff (Robert Preston), returning from his honeymoon with his bride (Marjorie Steele) in tow, must deal with an old and dreaded enemy (Minor Watson). Both the individual components of Face to Face were later reissued as separate films, with additional footage added to pad out the running times. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- James Mason, Gene Lockhart, (more)
Humphrey Bogart plays Martin Ferguson, a prosecutor about to put Albert Mendoza (Everett Sloane), the head of a murder-for-hire ring, on trial. But the night before the trial, his key witness, Joe Rico (Ted de Corsia), dies in a fall out of the window of the room in which he's been guarded, part of an abortive escape attempt to keep from testifying. His case in shambles, Ferguson and detective Captain Nelson (Roy Roberts) try to piece the entire four-year investigation back together from square one, trying to find something that might give them another way to prosecute Mendoza. The main body of the movie is told in flashback, starting when a small-time hood named Duke Malloy (Michael Tolan, then billed as Lawrence Tolan) walks into a police station to turn himself in for killing his girlfriend -- and says that someone made him kill her. He babbles to the bewildered detectives about "hits" and "contracts" and men nicknamed Philadelphia, Big Babe, and Smiley. The body isn't found, but they arrest Malloy, who hangs himself in his cell. That dead end leads, almost by accident, to Philadelphia Tom Zaca (Jack Lambert), an asylum inmate who has to be put under sedation at the mention of Malloy's name. They find another suspect's body burning in his building's incinerator, and then Big Babe Lazick (Zero Mostel), a two-bit hood, hiding in a church in mortal fear of his life. He begins weaving a tale of a murder-by-contract ring and its head operator, Joe Rico, of a murder contract that Duke Malloy never filled on a girl who had to change her name, of mistaken identity and the murder of the girl's cab-driver father, and the connection between that and a murder that they both witnessed eight years earlier. In the midst of all of those interlocking stories (spread across ten years), there's something Ferguson missed -- when he had Rico to testify -- that he has to sort out from the reams of testimony and evidence, and he has to figure it out before Mendoza does, or lose the last witness he has. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Humphrey Bogart, Zero Mostel, (more)
Best known to posterity as the third wife of Cary Grant, Betsy Drake enjoyed a substantial film career during the postwar era. In Pretty Baby, Drake plays Patsy Douglas, an enterprising young lady who always assures herself a seat on the subway by carrying a doll wrapped in baby bunting. Through a series of complications that could only happen in a movie, it is eventually assumed that the "baby" is genuine. Patsy's bosses, advertising executives Sam Morley (Dennis Morgan) and Barry Holmes (Zachary Scott), hope to use Patsy's bundle of joy to land an important client, grouchy baby-food tycoon Cyrus Baxter (Edmund Gwenn). Most of the film is a not-so-subtle swipe at radio and TV advertising, considered a rich source of humor back in 1950. Cast in a tiny role as a receptionist is future "June Cleaver" Barbara Billingsley. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Dennis Morgan, Betsy Drake, (more)
The Ben Hecht-Charles MacArthur Broadway comedy Ladies and Gentlemen formed the basis of the Warner Bros. laughspinner Perfect Strangers. The title characters are Terry Scott and David Campbell, played by Ginger Rogers and Dennis Morgan. She's a divorcee, he's a husband and father. Terry and David are thrown together by fate -- or rather, the LA judicial system. While serving as jurors on a murder trial, the two fall in love. Ironically, the woman on trial allegedly killed her husband because he'd asked for a divorce. The seriocomic tension develops on two levels: will juror Isobel Bradford (Margolo Gillmore) be able to sway the others to vote for the death penalty, and will Terry and David continue to pursue their romance at the expense of the happiness of others? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Ginger Rogers, Dennis Morgan, (more)
June Bride is based on Feature for June, a play by Eileen Tighe and Graeme Lorimer. Bette Davis plays the businesslike editor of a fashionable woman's magazine, who plans a feature on a "typical" midwestern marriage. She assigns her aide (and former fiance) Robert Montgomery to cover the story, a task he feels is beneath him. Even so, Montgomery keeps his mouth shut as Davis and her assistants Fay Bainter and Mary Wickes descend upon the hapless family of the bride and re-arrange the household so that it will be more "appealing" to the magazine's devoted readers. Unable to stand any more of this, Montgomery devilishly upsets the apple cart: he convinces the younger sister (Betty Lynn) of the bride (Barbara Bates) to elope with the groom (Raymond Roe), for whom the sister carries a torch. Infuriated by Montgomery's intervention, Davis fires him on the spot. She later relents, realizing that the change in marital plans will make an even better story than her original concept. In so doing, Davis finally admits that she's still in love with the cheeky Montgomery. One of the better Bette Davis vehicles of the late 1940s, June Bride is chock full of brisk, bright dialogue and appealing characters. Debbie Reynolds makes her film debut in the teeny-tiny part of a friend of the bride. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Bette Davis, Robert Montgomery, (more)
The most memorable aspect of Winter Meeting, and the one that stirred up the most publicity, was its teaming of two Davises: Bette Davis and Jim Davis (whose only "A"-picture starring role this was). Bette D. plays disenchanted poetess Susan Grieve, while Jim D. is cast as disillusioned war hero Slick Novak. Inexorably drawn to one another, these two lost souls fall in love while discussing their inner demons. Ultimately, both Susan and Slick decide to go their separate ways, though both have grown and matured during their brief affair. Adapted from a novel by Ethel Vance, Winter Meeting falls short of being the "important" picture Warner Bros. hoped it would be: even so, Bette and Jim Davis work quite well together, making one wonder why Jim D. didn't go farther in films (though he did become a star of sorts late in life as Jock Ewing on TV's Dallas). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Bette Davis, Jim Davis, (more)













