Lecherous bosses make it difficult for an attractive secretary to keep jobs, so she decides to appear considerably more homely in hopes of holding onto work.Lecherous bosses make it difficult for an attractive secretary to keep jobs, so she decides to appear considerably more homely in hopes of holding onto work.Lecherous bosses make it difficult for an attractive secretary to keep jobs, so she decides to appear considerably more homely in hopes of holding onto work.
- Alonzo
- (as Frederic Clarke)
- Henderson
- (as William Davidson)
- Drunken Neighbor
- (uncredited)
- Pedestrian
- (uncredited)
- Purity League Manager
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Davies plays a secretary who gets sick of the men she works for hitting on her all the time - so sick, in fact, that she makes herself into a homely frump and goes to work for Robert Montgomery, who plays an author in need of someone efficient so that he can finish his book.
Davies' transformation is very good, but I have to admit that I didn't find her so much of a knockout normally that no man could keep his hands off of her. It was really a role for someone like Jean Harlow.
The interesting thing is, Davies was 40 at the time. It was unusual in those days for an actress to still be playing starring roles by then and only superstars with clout could get away with it.
Norma Shearer retired at 40, as did Greta Garbo; by the time Joan Crawford was 38, MGM was giving her junk, and she was drummed out of the studio.
Davies is very good, and the film is cute, with good performances from the rest of the cast. Davies' acting abilities come as no surprise to me, as I have enjoyed many of her performances. She was a bright presence as well.
"Ever Since Eve" goes down easily. It's not a masterpiece, not a classic screwball comedy, but it's very enjoyable.
Marion Davies is a delight, every bit as fun as Carole Lombard. I've never seen her in a movie, and always heard she was a mediocre actress. But she's actually quite good, perfect for this role.
On the one hand, this is an incredibly dated movie. On the other hand - is it? Sexual harassment is certainly still a problem in the workplace, though how a woman looks is no protection against it or invitation for it, as this movie implies. But the scene where Marion Davies, in frumpy disguise, isn't helped as she enters a hotel and doesn't get a very nice reception from the front desk clerk, but beautiful "Sadie Day" gets helped and warmly welcomed - has anything really changed from then until now?
It was also startling, and refreshing, to see black British actor Frederick Clarke as the urbane butler, though I held my breath when a character was furious with him started to insult him with a word that started with "n" - and sighed with relief that the word turned out to be "nincompoop."
Did you know
- TriviaMarion Davies's last movie.
- GoofsThe scene in which Freddy is watching Marge remove her 'Sadie' wig to reveal her fluffy blond hair involves a well-done substitution splice, presumably because to get the Sadie wig to fit realistically, Marion Davis' real hair would have been tightly slicked or tied down.
- Quotes
President of the Purity League: Mr. Mason? Miss Winton? What on earth? What's going on
Marge Winton: Oh, just the usual office routine. Mr. Mason was giving me dictation. But, he was a little too fast!
Purity League Manager: Miss Winton choose to misunderstand purely a friendly gesture.
President of the Purity League: Miss Winton this is disgraceful! I'm sure Mr. Mason meant no harm.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Breakdowns of 1938 (1938)
- SoundtracksEver Since Eve
(1937) (uncredited)
Music by M.K. Jerome
Lyrics by Jack Scholl
Played during the opening and closing credits
Played by the band at the Equator Club and sung by an unidentified guitarist and chorus
Played as background music often
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Evers Sine Eve
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1