HIGH, WIDE, AND HANDSOME


'''High, Wide, and Handsome''' is a 1937 Hollywood film starring Irene Dunne, Randolph Scott, Alan Hale, Sr., Charles Bickford, and Dorothy Lamour. In 2006, the same name was also briefly used as a working title for what became ''.
The 110-minute movie was directed by Rouben Mamoulian, and written by Oscar Hammerstein II and George O'Neil, with lyrics by Hammerstein and music by Jerome Kern. It was released by Paramount Pictures.
The film is set in rural western Titusville, Pennsylvania. In 1859, railroad tycoon Walt Brennan wants to take over the land of several oil-drilling farmers, led by Peter Cortlandt (with whom Irene Dunne's character, Sally Watterson, falls in love). Brennan wants to use the land to build a railroad. The townspeople block the plan, assisted by a herd of circus elephants, and instead construct their own oil pipeline.
In a deliberate nod to Kern and Hammerstein's classic musical ''Show Boat'', which had been filmed with Irene Dunne the year before, Dunne's lovable father Raymond Walburn is the owner of a traveling musical medicine show (much like Cap'n Andy), and Dunne is its star; in addition, Dorothy Lamour sings a torch song, much as Helen Morgan did in ''Show Boat''.
The movie includes the classic Kern-Hammerstein song ''Can I Forget You?'', as well as ''The Folks Who Live on the Hill''. Director Mamoulian saw to it (with Kern and Hammerstein's help) that most of the songs were firmly integrated into the plot of the film and advanced the storyline.
The film was not a success when released, partly because it was shown in roadshow format, which caused it to lose more money than it normally would have.

Contents
Cast
References

Cast



Irene Dunne as Sally Watterson

Randolph Scott as Peter Cortlandt

Dorothy Lamour as Molly Fuller

Elizabeth Patterson as Grandma Cortlandt

Raymond Walburn as Doc Watterson

Charles Bickford as Red Scanlon

Akim Tamiroff as Joe Varese

Ben Blue as Zeke

William Frawley as Mac

Alan Hale, Sr. as Walt Brennan

Irving Pichel as Mr. Stark

Stanley Andrews as Lem Moulton

James Burke as Stackpole

Roger Imhof as Pop Bowers

Lucien Littlefield as Mr. Lippincott

References





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