NOTE IMDb
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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueCongresswoman returns to college to reignite romance with president, facing rival and her controversial film threatening his job.Congresswoman returns to college to reignite romance with president, facing rival and her controversial film threatening his job.Congresswoman returns to college to reignite romance with president, facing rival and her controversial film threatening his job.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
Leah Baird
- Party Guest
- (non crédité)
George Bunny
- Janitor
- (non crédité)
Mary Carver
- Joan Wintner
- (non crédité)
Beulah Christian
- Party Guest
- (non crédité)
James Conaty
- Party Guest
- (non crédité)
Frank Conlan
- Frank
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
This was one of Crawford's last films under her Warner Brothers contract and was probably here first big box-office failure since her MGM days eight years earlier. The film is not too bad, but not as good as "Mildred Pierce," "Possessed" or "Flamingo Road." Crawford plays a congress woman who returns to her alma mater to receive an honorary degree, but finds romance with professor Robert Young.
Despite the low rating and mixed reviews, there was no doubt about seeing 'Goodbye, My Fancy' anyway as part of my quest to see as much of Joan Crawford's filmography as possible. Crawford gave so many great performances, as well as some not so good ones during her twilight period, and Eve Arden was always a plus to any film she was in. Vincent Sherman was an uneven director but did do some very good films such as 'Mr Skeffington' and 'The Damned Don't Cry'.
'Goodbye My Fancy' is not one of those very good films. Actually thought it was towards being of Crawford's weaker films, though she did do worse, and am going to agree with those that felt that she was miscast. That's being said with a heavy heart. It does have its good things, namely two good performances that remarkably rises above their material, but 'Goodbye My Fancy' fails to live up to its potential and Crawford deserved a lot better than this.
Shall start off with talking about the good things. It looks good, the one exception being Arden's frightful hair here that does not flatter her. Crawford looks typically elegant and the photography is at its best luminous. Arden has some nice witty lines.
The two good performances come from Arden and Robert Young. There was no surprise that Arden would be good, she very seldom disappointed and despite deserving better she brought a dry wit and elegance to what she is given. Young has a rather underwritten character but remarkably his acting wasn't bland, actually found it very distinguished and easy to like with him being by far the most rootable of the three leads.
As said already, Crawford didn't work for me. She tries hard, too hard in fact, and the role needed a lighter touch than what she actually gave it. Here she overacts and it overbalances the film in my view, it was like she thought she was acting in a melodrama. Worse was Frank Lovejoy, who really got on my nerves fast to the extent that one is at a loss in understanding what anybody sees in him. Lurene Tuttle could have done with a toning down, too shrill. Very few of the characters are easy to get behind, Matt especially is just obnoxious, due to being annoying or dull. Woody held my attention most and that is namely down to how Arden played her.
Moreover, the script could have done with a lot more bite and also subtlety, as well as wit. Too filmed play-like and on the too heavy side. The story tended to be dull and the primary subplot felt underdeveloped. Will agree too that the ending is a real let down, very contrived with a final decision that doesn't make sense in the slightest and feels like a cheat. Sherman directs with too much of a heavy hand and fails to do any kind of reigning in, while also being quite leaden.
In conclusion, rather lacklustre with two good performances and nice production values but Crawford fans best look elsewhere. 4/10
'Goodbye My Fancy' is not one of those very good films. Actually thought it was towards being of Crawford's weaker films, though she did do worse, and am going to agree with those that felt that she was miscast. That's being said with a heavy heart. It does have its good things, namely two good performances that remarkably rises above their material, but 'Goodbye My Fancy' fails to live up to its potential and Crawford deserved a lot better than this.
Shall start off with talking about the good things. It looks good, the one exception being Arden's frightful hair here that does not flatter her. Crawford looks typically elegant and the photography is at its best luminous. Arden has some nice witty lines.
The two good performances come from Arden and Robert Young. There was no surprise that Arden would be good, she very seldom disappointed and despite deserving better she brought a dry wit and elegance to what she is given. Young has a rather underwritten character but remarkably his acting wasn't bland, actually found it very distinguished and easy to like with him being by far the most rootable of the three leads.
As said already, Crawford didn't work for me. She tries hard, too hard in fact, and the role needed a lighter touch than what she actually gave it. Here she overacts and it overbalances the film in my view, it was like she thought she was acting in a melodrama. Worse was Frank Lovejoy, who really got on my nerves fast to the extent that one is at a loss in understanding what anybody sees in him. Lurene Tuttle could have done with a toning down, too shrill. Very few of the characters are easy to get behind, Matt especially is just obnoxious, due to being annoying or dull. Woody held my attention most and that is namely down to how Arden played her.
Moreover, the script could have done with a lot more bite and also subtlety, as well as wit. Too filmed play-like and on the too heavy side. The story tended to be dull and the primary subplot felt underdeveloped. Will agree too that the ending is a real let down, very contrived with a final decision that doesn't make sense in the slightest and feels like a cheat. Sherman directs with too much of a heavy hand and fails to do any kind of reigning in, while also being quite leaden.
In conclusion, rather lacklustre with two good performances and nice production values but Crawford fans best look elsewhere. 4/10
Goodbye My Fancy finds Joan Crawford taking over a role popularized by fellow film star Madeline Carroll on stage as a member of the House Of Representatives coming back to her former college to accept an honorary degree. She's invited by college president and former boyfriend Robert Young.
There's a lot of history here and this is the only degree she'll have from the College Of New Hope for women located in rural New England. Back in the day apparently Crawford was a wild child, at least wild by those standards back then. She got into a compromising situation with Young and she took the fall by herself and got expelled for it. In the interim Young in addition to rising to the presidency of the college married a woman who died and has a daughter, Janice Rule, who is going to be one of the graduates at the ceremony Crawford gets her degree.
Crawford went into journalism and then politics. She's combining the two at this point having produced a documentary about the current social problems of Europe and how Fascism by curtailing free speech contributed mightily to them. She's hoping to show the film while she's at the college.
Her opponent in this endeavor is the chairman of the board Howard St. John who also happens to be now married to Crawford's former roommate Lurene Tuttle. He's got the part that actors like Eugene Palette and Charles Dingle normally were cast in, the arrogant, self righteous right wing blowhard who thinks he ought to be controlling the educational process. Not that he's against free speech mind you, but he feels that kids should not be exposed to this kind of serious work. He in fact donated the campus movie theater and he'd like for them to show entertainment that he approves of, such as his favorites Abbott&Costello.
Young's dependent on St. John's good will for his job. But one who isn't and is also a rival for Crawford is Frank Lovejoy, a Time&Life war photographer who is covering this event. He'll expose Young's timidity if for no other reason than to shame him in front of Joan.
Goodbye My Fancy was written by Fay Kanin and ran for 446 performances on Broadway during the 1948-49 season and was directed by Sam Wanamaker who also played the Frank Lovejoy part. The college president was played by another former movie name, Conrad Nagel.
The play took home a Tony Award for Shirley Booth who played Crawford's Congressional aide and has some really funny Eve Arden type lines. When the film came out the Eve Arden part was played by Eve Arden.
The play draws heavily on themes expressed in James Thurber's The Male Animal. If anything it's more serious here because whereas in The Male Animal, trustee Eugene Palette objected to the content in reading Nicolo Sacco's letter in class, St. John just objects to the idea of material that is mind challenging in the classroom in general. What does this imbecile think they're going to college for. In fact there's a minor role played by Morgan Farley as a physics professor who is intending to leave the college because of the limits he's being put under and Farley plays it well.
Coming out as it did during the House Un-American Activities Committee days and after Joe McCarthy started finding Communists in all kinds of places, Goodbye My Fancy was quite the courageous project for Warner Brothers at the time. It's a timeless tribute to the value of free speech and the marketplace of ideas that a university is supposed to be.
This is a film that I think needs a remake. Can you see some trustee on a university today throwing his weight around and maybe filling the campus cinema with reruns of Saturday Night Live in order that students not concentrate on serious issues?
I think it could be done.
There's a lot of history here and this is the only degree she'll have from the College Of New Hope for women located in rural New England. Back in the day apparently Crawford was a wild child, at least wild by those standards back then. She got into a compromising situation with Young and she took the fall by herself and got expelled for it. In the interim Young in addition to rising to the presidency of the college married a woman who died and has a daughter, Janice Rule, who is going to be one of the graduates at the ceremony Crawford gets her degree.
Crawford went into journalism and then politics. She's combining the two at this point having produced a documentary about the current social problems of Europe and how Fascism by curtailing free speech contributed mightily to them. She's hoping to show the film while she's at the college.
Her opponent in this endeavor is the chairman of the board Howard St. John who also happens to be now married to Crawford's former roommate Lurene Tuttle. He's got the part that actors like Eugene Palette and Charles Dingle normally were cast in, the arrogant, self righteous right wing blowhard who thinks he ought to be controlling the educational process. Not that he's against free speech mind you, but he feels that kids should not be exposed to this kind of serious work. He in fact donated the campus movie theater and he'd like for them to show entertainment that he approves of, such as his favorites Abbott&Costello.
Young's dependent on St. John's good will for his job. But one who isn't and is also a rival for Crawford is Frank Lovejoy, a Time&Life war photographer who is covering this event. He'll expose Young's timidity if for no other reason than to shame him in front of Joan.
Goodbye My Fancy was written by Fay Kanin and ran for 446 performances on Broadway during the 1948-49 season and was directed by Sam Wanamaker who also played the Frank Lovejoy part. The college president was played by another former movie name, Conrad Nagel.
The play took home a Tony Award for Shirley Booth who played Crawford's Congressional aide and has some really funny Eve Arden type lines. When the film came out the Eve Arden part was played by Eve Arden.
The play draws heavily on themes expressed in James Thurber's The Male Animal. If anything it's more serious here because whereas in The Male Animal, trustee Eugene Palette objected to the content in reading Nicolo Sacco's letter in class, St. John just objects to the idea of material that is mind challenging in the classroom in general. What does this imbecile think they're going to college for. In fact there's a minor role played by Morgan Farley as a physics professor who is intending to leave the college because of the limits he's being put under and Farley plays it well.
Coming out as it did during the House Un-American Activities Committee days and after Joe McCarthy started finding Communists in all kinds of places, Goodbye My Fancy was quite the courageous project for Warner Brothers at the time. It's a timeless tribute to the value of free speech and the marketplace of ideas that a university is supposed to be.
This is a film that I think needs a remake. Can you see some trustee on a university today throwing his weight around and maybe filling the campus cinema with reruns of Saturday Night Live in order that students not concentrate on serious issues?
I think it could be done.
A great movie with three of my favorite movie stars: Robert Young, Eve Arden and Joan Crawford. This movie makes no concessions whatsoever to "popular" taste. It doesn't insult one's intelligence. It makes a passionate plea for free speech. Some would surely call it communist propaganda. Joan Crawford was however absurdly miscast as a flaming liberal politician. The real Joan was, I think, conservative. She ended her life as the chair of Pepsi! But somehow she captivates. Her diction is solid, her acting measured, always dignified, and her movies are darn good (she never played the Queen of Sheba, or some other "historic" nonsense). Robert Young is impeccable too, far more impressive, intelligent, than a whole host of bigger stars, but his non-muscular persona confines him to the parlor. I can hardly believe he was an alcoholic.
I thought STORM CENTER (1955) was the first free speech movie. Still, the fact remains, that STORM CENTER is more direct, powerful, dramatic and dashing. Unfortunately, the censors seems to have had the last word about THAT anti-censorship film. STORM CENTER has never been shown on TV (as far as I know) and it is not available on video. Something should be done to bring back this and other forgotten classics.
I thought STORM CENTER (1955) was the first free speech movie. Still, the fact remains, that STORM CENTER is more direct, powerful, dramatic and dashing. Unfortunately, the censors seems to have had the last word about THAT anti-censorship film. STORM CENTER has never been shown on TV (as far as I know) and it is not available on video. Something should be done to bring back this and other forgotten classics.
"Goodbye, My Fancy" stars Joan Crawford, Robert Young, Eve Arden, and Frank Lovejoy and was made in 1951. It was originally a play by Fay Kanin that enjoyed a run of over a year. Madeleine Carroll starred.
Crawford in 1951 was 44, and in those days, after an actress turned 30, she went into supporting roles. It's to Crawford's credit that she stayed a leading lady well past 30, albeit in lesser films.
This film is actually a good one. Crawford plays a Congresswoman, Agatha Reed, who is invited back to her old college to receive an honorary degree. She is thrilled, for more than one reason.
Agatha has happy memories there and has never forgotten her old love and, though she doesn't state it, she's hoping to see him again. Also, she finds it amusing that she's been invited -- she was expelled from the school for staying out all night and didn't graduate.
Agatha and her able assistant (Eve Arden) travel to the college, dogged the entire way by a photographer (Frank Lovejoy) with whom Agatha had an involvement a few years back.
Agatha has filmed a documentary that she wants to show at the school. The film is about what happens when people are denied their freedoms, and deals with book burnings, persecution of teachers, etc. She is shocked to find that there is some question as to whether or not the film will be shown.
"Goodbye, My Fancy" is about going home again, and underneath Agatha having two men interested in her, it makes a statement about McCarthyism which was so rampant at the time. It's also about standing up for what you believe in and having integrity -- true ethics kick in when you've got something to lose.
I saw some comments about Crawford being miscast - I'm not sure why - she played strong career women for many years.
The casting is off, but it's not Crawford. It's partly the script and partly the casting. Robert Young is very good as the President -- handsome, charming, and formal.
Eve Arden is funny as the assistant, wisecracking her way through the role. Shirley Booth played the role on Broadway.
The role that's miscast is Frank Lovejoy as Matt Cole. The role called for a macho, attractive tough guy and instead we get the rather sloppy, wisecracking Lovejoy. The ending of the film seemed to come out of nowhere.
Otherwise, fairly enjoyable, good cast.
Crawford in 1951 was 44, and in those days, after an actress turned 30, she went into supporting roles. It's to Crawford's credit that she stayed a leading lady well past 30, albeit in lesser films.
This film is actually a good one. Crawford plays a Congresswoman, Agatha Reed, who is invited back to her old college to receive an honorary degree. She is thrilled, for more than one reason.
Agatha has happy memories there and has never forgotten her old love and, though she doesn't state it, she's hoping to see him again. Also, she finds it amusing that she's been invited -- she was expelled from the school for staying out all night and didn't graduate.
Agatha and her able assistant (Eve Arden) travel to the college, dogged the entire way by a photographer (Frank Lovejoy) with whom Agatha had an involvement a few years back.
Agatha has filmed a documentary that she wants to show at the school. The film is about what happens when people are denied their freedoms, and deals with book burnings, persecution of teachers, etc. She is shocked to find that there is some question as to whether or not the film will be shown.
"Goodbye, My Fancy" is about going home again, and underneath Agatha having two men interested in her, it makes a statement about McCarthyism which was so rampant at the time. It's also about standing up for what you believe in and having integrity -- true ethics kick in when you've got something to lose.
I saw some comments about Crawford being miscast - I'm not sure why - she played strong career women for many years.
The casting is off, but it's not Crawford. It's partly the script and partly the casting. Robert Young is very good as the President -- handsome, charming, and formal.
Eve Arden is funny as the assistant, wisecracking her way through the role. Shirley Booth played the role on Broadway.
The role that's miscast is Frank Lovejoy as Matt Cole. The role called for a macho, attractive tough guy and instead we get the rather sloppy, wisecracking Lovejoy. The ending of the film seemed to come out of nowhere.
Otherwise, fairly enjoyable, good cast.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOne of the first films to show a woman with a shoulder strap purse.
- GaffesAgatha picks up a cigarette and table lighter just before Dr. Pitt comes into her room. She stands and holds them both, the cigarette unlit for the remainder of the scene.
- Citations
Agatha Reed: We were a nice snapshot but never a family portrait.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Le point de rupture (1994)
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- How long is Goodbye, My Fancy?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Goodbye, My Fancy
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 312 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 47min(107 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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