6/10
A secretary is not to be toyed with....
13 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Long before they were referred to as "secretaries", "girl Friday's", "administrative assistants" or even "typists", those who worked on those new fangled writing machines were simply called "typewriters". Graduating from a New York typewriters school, valedictorian Betty Grable is sent to Boston where she is informed by her new boss that he (Dick Haymes) expected a man. Fortunately, he has a suffragette aunt (Anne Revere) who has controlling interest in the firm, and that gets Grable the job. Now if she can just get her boss's respect, prevent office manager Gene Reynolds from sneering at her, and find a suitable place to live where a "typewriter" who happens to be a woman isn't confused for being a Jezebel, she'll make it just fine.

And fine she does make it. She moves in to the boarding house of a bunch of self-acknowledged outcasts, run by rebellious Boston socialite Elizabeth Patterson who was ostracized for her unconventional ways. When Haymes attends a suffragette meeting with her, the stage is set for a romance between the two, even though that is against "rule #6". Grable expects his socialite mother (Elisabeth Risdon) to be a judgmental snob and prepares a series of society aimed insults for her with amusing results. Miss Pilgrim is an instant Boston celebrity, loathed by some and loved by others, and when the line-up of suffragettes and their few male supporters are revealed, the visual result is hysterical, featuring a few whom in 1894 were obviously of the "love that not reveal its name" category. (Films after the production code came in rarely showed obviously gay or lesbian characters, and this is one of the few).

I wish there was less of the romance (featuring some unknown George Gershwin music that his brother Ira wrote new lyrics for) and more of the office setting and suffragette plot. That is more interesting, although the "scissors"/"knives" reference is truly hysterical and gives the impression that even if these two do get together, there will be no "pants wearing" in this family: it will be a marriage of equality-or else!

I felt sorry for Gene Reynolds here, typecast in his usual prickly fat man role of a chauvinist fool. But for Revere and Risdon, I really wanted to see more of them. As sisters-in-law in the film, they never even appear together, a loss for the script. Patterson and her band of delightful eccentrics add some needed comedy which includes a transaction between three of the tenants simply to feed their egos. A woman resident of Patterson's house who has been working on re-writing the dictionary wouldn't be out of place in this new rhetoric world where the English language has all but disappeared together.
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