Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAn oafish soldier receives a shirt but disregards the letter inside sent by a lovelorn secretary, prompting his bumbling friend to impersonate him in order to win her heart.An oafish soldier receives a shirt but disregards the letter inside sent by a lovelorn secretary, prompting his bumbling friend to impersonate him in order to win her heart.An oafish soldier receives a shirt but disregards the letter inside sent by a lovelorn secretary, prompting his bumbling friend to impersonate him in order to win her heart.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Ernie Adams
- Fireman
- (Nicht genannt)
Fred Aldrich
- Uncle
- (Nicht genannt)
Carmen Beretta
- Mother
- (Nicht genannt)
Margaret Bert
- Undetermined Secondary Role
- (Nicht genannt)
Barbara Billingsley
- Hospital Nurse
- (Nicht genannt)
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Marsha Hunt (Evie) works for a company that makes shirts for soldiers. After witnessing a fellow worker finding true love after slipping a note into a shirt consignment and communicating with an unknown man in uniform - he turns up at the office one day and they walk off together for a life of romance - she tries the same trick. She picks a shirt size - size 16 1/2 collar, writes a note, slips it into the pocket and waits to see what happens. John Carroll (Wolf) gets the shirt but isn't interested and throws the note away. However, his buddy Hume Cronyn (Johnny), who is a lot smaller than Carroll, retrieves the letter and starts to correspond with Hunt. What will happen when Cronyn comes face to face with Hunt, after all, he is not what she is expecting. Cronyn decides to pretend to be someone else and so begins a series of misunderstandings.
The film moves along nicely and the cast are good, particularly Hunt and Cronyn. Occasionally, Carroll mangles his words but you can still make out what he is saying. It's a heart-warming romance peppered with light humour and it succeeds as we find ourselves rooting for the small guy.
The film moves along nicely and the cast are good, particularly Hunt and Cronyn. Occasionally, Carroll mangles his words but you can still make out what he is saying. It's a heart-warming romance peppered with light humour and it succeeds as we find ourselves rooting for the small guy.
Crisply paced, expertly directed, and boasting jewel-like performances by Marsha Hunt and Hume Cronyn, A Letter for Evie stands out among the wartime romances of the 1942-45 era.
The plot is self-consciously breezy. A secretary for the Trojan Shirt Company, Evie O'Conner longs for romance. She places a "Dear Soldier" letter in the pocket of an extra-large shirt bound for the army training camps of Texas in the hopes that the soldier who finds it will be a strapping, heroic man. It falls into the hands of a decidedly short and bookish Private Johnnie McPherson. As they say in the business, hijinks ensue in a case of mistaken identity. But that's where the banality ends. In the guise of a light romp, Dassin explores themes of heroism, self-sacrifice, and honesty. In one plot point, Cronyn's comic turn pretending to be drunk to save Evie from the lecherous advances of his handsome army buddy is hilarious and deft.
This movie is difficult to find, but fans of the genre should make the effort.
The plot is self-consciously breezy. A secretary for the Trojan Shirt Company, Evie O'Conner longs for romance. She places a "Dear Soldier" letter in the pocket of an extra-large shirt bound for the army training camps of Texas in the hopes that the soldier who finds it will be a strapping, heroic man. It falls into the hands of a decidedly short and bookish Private Johnnie McPherson. As they say in the business, hijinks ensue in a case of mistaken identity. But that's where the banality ends. In the guise of a light romp, Dassin explores themes of heroism, self-sacrifice, and honesty. In one plot point, Cronyn's comic turn pretending to be drunk to save Evie from the lecherous advances of his handsome army buddy is hilarious and deft.
This movie is difficult to find, but fans of the genre should make the effort.
Evie O'Connor (Marsha Hunt) pines for a real man instead of her weak-lipped boyfriend. She sees another girl getting her man in uniform after being pen pals. She slips a note in one of the larger shirts being sent to the soldiers. Edgar 'Wolf' Larson (John Carroll) is tired of the female attention and ignores the note. His scrawny new friend John Phineas McPherson (Hume Cronyn) starts writing back as Wolf. When the soldiers get leave, John arrives at Evie's door as Edgar, Wolf's friend.
It's a WWII reimagining of Cyrano de Bergerac. I would have made Wolf a lot dumber. That would be funnier. Hume Cronyn has a good amount of appeal which does soften some of his lies. Although he does keep lying and that is a problem. I would like him to come clean.
It's a WWII reimagining of Cyrano de Bergerac. I would have made Wolf a lot dumber. That would be funnier. Hume Cronyn has a good amount of appeal which does soften some of his lies. Although he does keep lying and that is a problem. I would like him to come clean.
The plot is like a million others before and since, but it doesn't feel like it somehow. Perhaps it's because Marsha Hunt and Hume Cronyn are both so charming (I've never seen the often villain-ized Cronyn play a role like this before). The rest of the actors do a good job too, with John Carroll particularly well-cast. It's amusing and somewhat touching without being sappy. I wish it wasn't so seldom shown.
Why wasn't Marsha Hunt a bigger star? What a sweetie! And what a smile! Really well written take on the mistaken identity romantic comedy. The scene with the great Spring Byington where Johnny's identity was finally revealed went from laugh out loud funny to sad and touching. And the scene with Evie on the bed weeping her confusion when she finally learns the truth was equally well done: both by script writer and Marsha Hunt. Hume Cronyn was perfect. Who would have thought the actor so often cast as a weaselly villain could be such a romantic hero? I loved the last scene where Johnny heroically tries to "Tell her what she wants to hear" ends at last with the romantic resolution. By the way, that scene at the rest home with the friend of the dead soldier added a bit of depth not usually expected in such a generally frothy romance. Another example of how well this was written and played.
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- WissenswertesNorman Lloyd (DeWitt Pynchon) and Marsha Hunt (Evie O'Connor) both became centenarians. Lloyd celebrated his 100th birthday on November 8, 2014 while Hunt celebrated hers on October 17, 2017.
- PatzerWhen Evie says The Three Musketeers is a favorite of hers, John agrees and lists the three as "Athos, Porthos and d'Artagnan". Actually, in the novel the original three musketeers are Athos, Porthos and Aramis. D'Artagnan is the rookie (fourth) musketeer who joins their coterie.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Marsha Hunt's Sweet Adversity (2015)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
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- Auch bekannt als
- Una lettera per Eva
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirma
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 29 Minuten
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- Seitenverhältnis
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By what name was A Letter for Evie (1946) officially released in India in English?
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