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IMDbPro

Should Ladies Behave

  • 1933
  • Passed
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
247
YOUR RATING
Lionel Barrymore, Alice Brady, and Conway Tearle in Should Ladies Behave (1933)
ComedyDrama

An unhappy couple watch as their daughter throws herself at an older man because he is a sophisticated artist. The daughter doesn't know that her aunt is the man's lover. At a weekend retrea... Read allAn unhappy couple watch as their daughter throws herself at an older man because he is a sophisticated artist. The daughter doesn't know that her aunt is the man's lover. At a weekend retreat, everything comes to a head when the mother plans to run off with the artist while a you... Read allAn unhappy couple watch as their daughter throws herself at an older man because he is a sophisticated artist. The daughter doesn't know that her aunt is the man's lover. At a weekend retreat, everything comes to a head when the mother plans to run off with the artist while a young man pursues the daughter.

  • Director
    • Harry Beaumont
  • Writers
    • Paul Osborn
    • Bella Spewack
    • Sam Spewack
  • Stars
    • Lionel Barrymore
    • Alice Brady
    • Conway Tearle
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    247
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Harry Beaumont
    • Writers
      • Paul Osborn
      • Bella Spewack
      • Sam Spewack
    • Stars
      • Lionel Barrymore
      • Alice Brady
      • Conway Tearle
    • 11User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos9

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    Top cast10

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    Lionel Barrymore
    Lionel Barrymore
    • Augustus Merrick
    Alice Brady
    Alice Brady
    • Laura Merrick
    Conway Tearle
    Conway Tearle
    • Max Lawrence
    Katharine Alexander
    Katharine Alexander
    • Mrs. Winifred Lamont
    Mary Carlisle
    Mary Carlisle
    • Leone Merrick
    William Janney
    William Janney
    • Geoffrey Cole
    Halliwell Hobbes
    Halliwell Hobbes
    • Louis
    Miki Morita
    • Tokyo, Merrick's Gardener
    • (uncredited)
    Earl Oxford
    Earl Oxford
    • Singer
    • (uncredited)
    Paul Stanton
    Paul Stanton
    • Oscar McFarrey
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Harry Beaumont
    • Writers
      • Paul Osborn
      • Bella Spewack
      • Sam Spewack
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    5.8247
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    Featured reviews

    7marcslope

    Quintessential Lionel and Alice, and not bad

    Lionel Barrymore largely made a career out of playing gruff, grumpy anhedoniacs; Alice Brady made hers out of playing flighty upper-class twits. Both were capable of other things, but in this pleasantly pre-Code romantic comedy from a Paul Osborn play, both drag out their usual bags of tricks. He harrumphs and lets his facial muscles sag and crosses his arms, and she giggles and defies logic. They're an unhappily married late-middle-age couple whose daughter is about to be swept up by the cad Brady remembers loving 20 years ago, who is now having an affair with her sister. It's pretty frank about all the adultery, and there's a bracing twist ending. One wants a more dashing rake than Conway Tearle, but Katharine Alexander is amusingly tart and Eve Arden-ish as the sister, and Mary Carlisle is fine as the naive young miss. Casual racism and an insipid Freed-Brown song dot this fun nonsense, and there are serious moments of actual truth scattered about it--loved the scene where Brady finally must Be a Mom, and she steps up to the plate admirably.
    10ScenicRoute

    An affirmationof the importance of conventional morality

    I rewatched this after seeing it at least 10 years ago, when my great pre-code TCM love-affair began. As a student of European culture, I think this movie is important. As indicated in other reviews, the sexual revolution has already happened, yet because it is 1933 (rather than post-1950s), this Anglophonic elite is still trying to observe the pieties of conventional morality, all of which have since been self-consciously discarded except among the religious. Here you have affirmation of why these conventions are important and why we abandon them at our peril. Katherine Alexander has a more touching part that what was usually afforded Eve Arden in that she expresses wistful regret for what might have been (none of that in Arden) had she been a little less unconventional and is genuinely moving in her relatively small part. Conway Tearle is unconvincing as a Picasso-like mensch (perhaps if Leone had been a young man?), but he is but a foil, so his fey performance becomes irrelevant. What really matters is Alice Brady, who in the previous favorable reviews is still not getting the due I think she deserves. There is liberated (no better illustrated than in the braless Adrian gown noted in an earlier review) soul in Alice, and her character, while appearing to be two-dimensional, is truly rich, and Alice affirms, throughout and at the end, how happiness is achieved in this compromise we call life. And Lionel is three-dimensional from start-to-finish, fully engaged in his part as a man with clear interests for his own happiness and that of his loved ones. The lessons of this play (for it is a play) are timeless, but are given with that teaspoon of sugar (comedy) so necessary to really impart them, and Brady's, Barryomore's, and Alexander's performances make this great.
    9aimless-46

    For Screwball Comedy and Alice Brady Lovers

    While not quite as intensely funny as "Bringing Up Baby", this early screwball comedy" should remind most viewers of that film. Rather that the humor coming from Cary Grant's exasperation in dealing with Katherine Hepburn, it comes from Augustus' (Lionel Barrymore) exasperation in dealing with his airhead wife Laura (Alice Brady).

    If you have never seen Brady you are in for a totally unexpected comic treat. By the 1930's she was basically a character actress and her role here is much like her later portrayal of the mother in "My Man Godfrey". It is a strange cross between Margaret Dumont and Una Merkel, sort of a pretentious and overly dramatic airhead.

    Like "Bringing Up Baby" most of the action in "Should Ladies Behave" takes place on an estate in rural Connecticut. There is some physical comedy, mainly from Barrymore's more extreme reactions. Most of the humor is subtle, coming from the clever stage play "The Vinegar Tree" by Paul Osborn. For example Brady supports her contention that two examples are vastly different by saying they are as far apart as alpha and beta. Watch for their hilarious attempt to play the game of 20 Questions.

    The story revolves around miscommunication among three couples; Augustus and Laura, her sister Winnie (Katharine Alexander) and Winnie's middle aged lover Max (Conway Tearle), and their daughter Leone (Mary Carlisle) and Leone's young boyfriend Geoffrey (William Janney).

    Carlisle was only 20 but she holds her own very well with the more experienced members of the cast. Her character is supposed to be 19 and her cynical father is trying to keep her from being spoiled by the evils of the world, symbolized by his keeping her childhood playhouse unchanged even though she is away at college.

    "Should Ladies Behave" deserves to be included with the best of the old screwball comedies. If you enjoy that kind of stuff you will be well rewarded by this undiscovered gem.

    Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
    7boblipton

    Miss Brady Twitters

    William Janney tells Mary Carlisle she's too unworldly to marry. So when her aunt Katharine Alexander visits with her 'friend' Conway Tearle, she proposes to run away with him, much to the displeasure of her parents, Alice Brady and Lionel Barrymore.

    There are many witty lines in this movie, and Miss Brady offers her usual delightful nitwit. However the show's theatrical background shows, particularly in Miss Carlisle's performance. Tearle remains the answer to the question no one asked, to wit "What if you needed Conrad Nagel, but bulkier?", while Barrymore's performance consists of him being disagreeable mst of the time. He result is a pre-code movie in which much i talked about, mostly unpleasantly, with enough bright spots to maintain interest.
    anythinggoes

    Not bad... Not that great either.

    I caught this on a Sunday on TCM. They were showcasing films of the great Lionel Barrymore. It didn't do very well at the box office, perhaps because it wasn't dirty enough to compete with the simultaneously released Mae West film, "She Done Him Wrong." Nevertheless, the action of the former took place at the hands of a rather dysfunctional but high class Connecticut family. It seems that when the matriarch married the patriarch, she was young, beautiful, and vivacious and he was older, dashing, and had more money than brains. He was in love with her, she was in love with another man, and the whole marriage started off on the wrong foot. Their daughter falls in love with a similarly endowed older man, whom the mother remembers as her former lover, who is now dating her thrice-married sister. It's sort of confusing to tell about, but a funny movie in most respects. I personally believe that "The Women" is better, but that's only because I really like "The Women." Another very good film to see, if you like this sort of awkward love triangle thing is "When Ladies Meet," starring Greer Garson, Joan Crawford and Robert Taylor, I believe.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Alice Brady and Katharine Alexander, who play sisters in the film, were actually sisters-in-law; Alexander was married to Brady's half-brother William A. Brady Jr.
    • Goofs
      When Augustus goes to Leone's bedroom, a moving shadow of the boom microphone is visible on the wall above her bed, upper left of the frame.
    • Quotes

      Augustus Merrick: I said if they had beds in the theater, it'd be a much more comfortable place to sleep in.

    • Alternate versions
      After the USA release, MGM ordered retakes for the British release to get around censor restrictions. Release of the picture in England was held up until the new footage was added.
    • Connections
      References Les invités de huit heures (1933)
    • Soundtracks
      Lovely Lady
      Music by Nacio Herb Brown

      Lyrics by Arthur Freed

      Played at a theater and sung by an unidentified couple on stage

      Reprised a cappella by Alice Brady

      Reprised a cappella by William Janney

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 1, 1933 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Vinegar Tree
    • Filming locations
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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