Bringing Up Baby is a
1938 screwball
comedy film directed by
Howard
Hawks and starring
Katharine
Hepburn and
Cary Grant. The movie
tells the story of a scientist winding up in various predicaments
involving a woman with a unique sense of logic and a
leopard named Baby. The supporting cast includes
Charles Ruggles,
Barry Fitzgerald,
Walter Catlett, and
May
Robson.
Adapted by
Dudley Nichols and
Hagar Wilde from a story by Hagar Wilde,
Bringing Up Baby was an infamous box office catastrophe,
causing Hawks to be fired from his next
RKO film
(
Gunga Din, also starring
Cary Grant) and forcing Hepburn to buy
out her contract. As time went on, however, the movie gained more
and more attention and is now revered as a sophisticated classic
decades ahead of its time, and it continues to generate revenue for
Hepburn's
estate.
Plot
David Huxley (
Cary Grant) is a
mild-mannered
paleontologist
beleaguered by problems. For the past four years, he has been
trying to assemble the skeleton of a
Brontosaurus but is missing one bone (an
"
intercostal clavicle"). To add to the stress, he is about to
get married to a dour woman, Alice Swallow (Virginia Walker) with a
severe personality and must make a favorable impression upon a Mrs.
Random (
May Robson), a wealthy woman who
is considering donating one million dollars to his museum. The day
before his planned wedding, David meets Susan Vance (
Katharine Hepburn) by chance on a golf
course. She is a free-spirited young lady and, unknown to him at
first, happens to be Mrs. Random's niece.
Susan's
brother Mark has sent her a tame leopard
from Brazil
named
"Baby", which she is supposed to give to her aunt. Susan
believes David is a
zoologist rather than
a paleontologist and she practically stalks him in order to get
David to go to her country home in Connecticut to help her take
care of Baby. Complications arise as Susan decides that she has
fallen in love with David and she endeavors to keep him at her
house for as long as possible to prevent him from marrying his
colleague.
While David is there, Susan's dog George (
Asta)
steals and buries the last dinosaur bone that David needs to
complete his
Brontosaurus skeleton at the museum. Susan's
aunt, Mrs. Elizabeth Random arrives. She is unaware of who David
really is because Susan has introduced him as a man named "Mr.
Bone". Baby runs off, as do George and a decidedly untame leopard
from a nearby circus that Susan and David had inadvertently let
loose from its cage, thinking it was Baby. Now Susan and David must
find Baby, George, and the dinosaur bone, while ensuring that Mrs.
Random donates her million dollars to the museum. To accomplish
this, they must first get out of the county jail, where they have
been mistakenly locked up by a befuddled town constable, Constable
Slocum (
Walter Catlett) for breaking
into the house of Dr. Fritz Lehman (
Fritz
Feld). Susan tells the constable that they are all gangsters in
"The Leopard Gang"; she refers to herself as "Swingin' Door Susie"
and David as "Jerry the Nipper" (a name Cary Grant's character was
called by Irene Dunn in the movie
The Awful Truth, also starring
Asta). David then tells the constable that she is
making up everything "from motion pictures she's seen."
Eventually, Alexander Peabody (
George Irving) shows up to
verify everyone's identity, and after Baby and George stroll into
the station, Susan, who has sneaked out of a window, unwittingly
captures the circus leopard, although David saves her (by using a
chair to shoo the leopard into a jail cell and then locking it
inside). A few weeks later, Susan finds David, who has been jilted
by Alice, working on his brontosaurus reconstruction at the museum.
After presenting him with his bone, which George finally had
returned, Susan informs David that she is donating a million
dollars that Elizabeth has given to her to the museum. Then while
perched on a tall ladder that scales the dinosaur, she extracts a
confession of love from David. Although the excited Susan causes
the one-of-a-kind reconstruction to collapse in a heap, David
laughs at his misfortune and embraces his bride-to-be.
Cast
- Katharine
Hepburn as Susan Vance, a ditzy socialite
- Cary Grant as Dr.
David Huxley (alias Mr. Bone), a mild-mannered paleontologist
- Charles Ruggles
as Maj. Horace Applegate, big game hunter
- Walter Catlett
as Constable Slocum, who arrests most of the cast
- Barry
Fitzgerald as Aloysius Gogarty, a heavily stereotyped Irish-American gardener
- May Robson as Aunt
Elizabeth Random, Susan's snobbish aunt
- Fritz Feld as Dr.
Fritz Lehman
- Leona Roberts as Mrs. Hannah Gogarty, wife of
Aloysius
- George
Irving as Dr. Alexander Peabody, Mrs Random's
lawyer
- Tala Birell as Mrs.
Lehman
- Virginia Walker as Alice Swallow, David's
shrewish fiancée
- John Kelly as Elmer
- Asta as George, a dog
- Nissa as both of the leopards
- Ward Bond as
Motorcycle cop at jail (uncredited)
- Jack Carson as
Circus Roustabout (uncredited)
- Karl 'Karchy' Kosiczky as Midget
(uncredited)
Use of word "gay"
Arguably, this was the first work of fiction, aside from
pornography, to use the word "
gay" in a
homosexual context.
Robert Chapman's
The Dictionary of American Slang reports
that the adjective "gay" was used by homosexuals, among themselves,
in this sense since at least 1920. Donald Webster Cory writes in
The Homosexual in America (1951):
- "Psychoanalysts have informed me that their homosexual patients
were calling themselves gay in the nineteen-twenties, and certainly
by the nineteen-thirties it was the most common word in use by
homosexuals themselves."
Cory continued that it was such an insiders' term that "an
advertisement for a roommate can actually ask for a gay youth, but
could not possibly call for a homosexual." According to Vito Russo,
the script actually had David (Grant) saying to Aunt Elizabeth
Random (Robson), in an attempt to explain why he is wearing Susan's
marabou-trimmed negligee, "I... I suppose you think its odd, my
wearing this. I realize it looks odd... I don't usually... I mean,
I don't own one of these."However Grant
ad-libbed his own line, "Because I just went
gay, all of a sudden."
Russo has pointed out that this was an
indication that people in Hollywood
, at least in Grant's circles, were already familiar
with the slang connotations of the word. However, neither
Grant himself nor anyone involved in the film ever confirmed this.
The term "gay" did not become widely familiar to the general public
until the
Stonewall riots in
1969.
Legacy; awards and honors
In 1990,
Bringing Up Baby was selected for preservation in the
National Film Registry by the
Library of
Congress
as being "culturally, historically, or
aesthetically significant", the second year that the registry
started preserving films. Entertainment Weekly voted the
film number twenty-four on its list of the greatest films. In 2000,
readers of
Total Film magazine
voted it the forty-seventh greatest comedy film of all time. It is
also consistently on the
Internet Movie Database's list of
top 250 films.
Premiere ranked Cary
Grant's performance as Dr. David Huxley #68 on their list of
The 100 Greatest Performances of All Time. They also
ranked the character of Susan Vance #21 on their list of
The
100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.
American Film
Institute recognition
Trivia
The 1987 movie
Who's
That Girl? starring
Madonna is loosely based on this film,
as is the 1972
Barbra Streisand
classic
What's Up,
Doc?, directed by
Peter
Bogdanovich. In fact, Bogdanovich, in the commentary track for
Bringing Up Baby, discusses how the coat ripping scene in
What's Up, Doc? was based directly on the scene in which
Grant's coat (and then Hepburn's dress) is torn in
Baby.
The nightclub scene where Hepburn's dress is torn and Grant walks
behind her is recycled in Hawks' 1964 comedy film
Man's Favorite Sport.
Notes
- The story has a leopard being sent to Susan from Brazil,
despite the fact that leopards are Old World animals, and Brazil is jaguar territory.
-
http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/7142/Bringing-Up-Baby/overview
- TCM Overview
- Censored Films and Television at University of Virginia
online
- John
Boswell, Christianity, Social Tolerance, and
Homosexuality, 1980, Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
page 43
- [1]
- [2]
- Vito Russo,
The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuality in
the Movies [revised edition] Harrow & Row, 1987. p.
47
- [3]
- [4]
External links