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Mon secrétaire travaille la nuit

Original title: Take a Letter, Darling
  • 1942
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
625
YOUR RATING
Robert Benchley, Fred MacMurray, and Rosalind Russell in Mon secrétaire travaille la nuit (1942)
ComedyRomance

A struggling painter takes a job as a secretary to a female advertising executive. While working to obtain an account from a tobacco company, they end up falling in love.A struggling painter takes a job as a secretary to a female advertising executive. While working to obtain an account from a tobacco company, they end up falling in love.A struggling painter takes a job as a secretary to a female advertising executive. While working to obtain an account from a tobacco company, they end up falling in love.

  • Director
    • Mitchell Leisen
  • Writers
    • Claude Binyon
    • George Beck
  • Stars
    • Rosalind Russell
    • Fred MacMurray
    • Macdonald Carey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    625
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mitchell Leisen
    • Writers
      • Claude Binyon
      • George Beck
    • Stars
      • Rosalind Russell
      • Fred MacMurray
      • Macdonald Carey
    • 13User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 3 Oscars
      • 3 wins & 3 nominations total

    Photos7

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    Top cast64

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    Rosalind Russell
    Rosalind Russell
    • A.M. MacGregor
    Fred MacMurray
    Fred MacMurray
    • Tom Verney
    Macdonald Carey
    Macdonald Carey
    • Jonathan Caldwell
    Constance Moore
    Constance Moore
    • Ethel Caldwell
    Robert Benchley
    Robert Benchley
    • G.B. Atwater
    Charles Arnt
    Charles Arnt
    • Fud Newton
    • (as Charles E. Arnt)
    Cecil Kellaway
    Cecil Kellaway
    • Uncle George
    Kathleen Howard
    Kathleen Howard
    • Aunt Minnie
    Margaret Seddon
    Margaret Seddon
    • Aunt Judy
    Dooley Wilson
    Dooley Wilson
    • Moses
    George Reed
    George Reed
    • Sam French
    Margaret Hayes
    Margaret Hayes
    • Sally French
    Sonny Boy Williams
    • Micky Dowling
    John Holland
    John Holland
    • Secretary
    Eddie Acuff
    Eddie Acuff
    • Man Who Picks Teeth
    • (uncredited)
    Georgia Backus
    Georgia Backus
    • Saleslady
    • (uncredited)
    Karin Booth
    Karin Booth
    • Blonde Stenographer
    • (uncredited)
    Virginia Brissac
    Virginia Brissac
    • Mrs. Dowling - Landlady
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Mitchell Leisen
    • Writers
      • Claude Binyon
      • George Beck
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.8625
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    Featured reviews

    dougdoepke

    First Half-Hour Sparkles

    The first half-hour sparkles. Tom (Mac Murray) is hired as a male secretary to what turns out to be a female (Russell) advertising executive. Worse, A.M. (that's her name) insists the tall good-looking secretary act as her beck-and-call escort. Remember, those were the days of strictly defined gender roles that were being transgressed by the arrangement. Hence, it's a setup with all sorts of entertaining complications. Meanwhile, Tom sees his masculinity slipping away, playing second-fiddle to a woman even if she is a generous paymaster. Those early scenes crackle with amusing by-play and are beautifully performed by two of Hollywood's best. I just wish the versatile Mac Murray had gotten the recognition his talent deserves.

    However, once the focus shifts to complications with the Caldwells (Carey & Moore), the movie settles into more familiar and less sparkling terrain. Nonetheless, the results remain a fine example of studio craftsmanship from the '40's. Screenwriter Binyon, for example, was renowned for the wit and satirical abilities that show up here, while director Leisen certainly had the right touch for the frothy material. Note, for example, how many of his scenes don't end with a conventional cut-away from cast principals. Instead, Leisen ends the nightclub scene with two extras engaged in some card-playing business, or the scene that ends with a bellhop extra walking a dog up the hallway. These are colorful touches from a director who obviously cares.

    Anyway, in my book, the movie's an imaginative little comedy from the studio that certainly knew how to do them, Paramount.
    10hi_juli

    Delightful -- a 1942 movie, but it is very contemporary!

    'Take a Letter, Darling' has both great actors (Fred MacMurray, Rosalind Russell) and a fun, timeless plot [this film could easily be applied to the here-and-now]. It relates a touchingly humorous story of love and jealousy and is a tribute to the romantic notion that true love never runs smooth. Elegantly done and a pleasure to watch.
    7bkoganbing

    Bearding

    It's too bad that director Mitchell Leisen wasn't working today and making Take A Letter Darling. If he did there would be a whole lot more explicit gender bending in this one.

    Not that this film isn't good. In fact it's witty and bright and shows Rosalind Russell at her best. In her autobiography Russell describes this film as the first in her career woman roles. I'm supposing she isn't counting His Girl Friday, I guess Russell thought that Hildy Johnson had a job as a reporter as opposed to a career. After all she was trying all through the film to get away on her elopement and honeymoon with Ralph Bellamy.

    But in Take A Letter Darling, Russell is a partner with Robert Benchley in an advertising agency. She can't keep a secretary and for good reason, she's got some specific night work requirements for a secretary and she demands the male gender as requirement number one.

    In the gay world that Mitchell Leisen was part of, it's called hiring a beard. So many did it back in the day when the closet ruled. Many of the gay stars were always paired with public female dates lest there be any whispers about their sexuality. I'm sure it was the same in the business world.

    Russell hires free spirited artist Fred MacMurray to squire her around and keep jealous wives at bay and to deter husbands from getting any ideas about some after office frolicking. In fact she sends MacMurray out to a favorite men's shop of hers where she gets him outfitted the same way Gloria Swanson took care of William Holden in Sunset Boulevard.

    In real life Russell would have hired a gay man for her purposes, but since the mere mention of gay was out of the question, the heterosexist MacMurray is hired. They double team husband and wife George Reed and Margaret Hayes to land one account.

    But an even bigger challenge presents itself with brother and sister tobacco heirs, Macdonald Carey and Constance Moore. Carey's been married four times already and Moore is a mint julep sucking southern belle who looks at MacMurray like a Virginia ham.

    Take A Letter Darling holds up very well today although a knowledge of the mores of the times would certainly help younger viewers. This is definitely a film that could stand a remake, a more honest and explicit film about the practice of bearding.
    7Doylenf

    Enjoyable romantic comedy with the Mitch Leisen touch...

    ROSALIND RUSSELL and FRED MacMURRAY have seldom had their flair for light comedy seen to better advantage than in TAKE A LETTER, DARLING in which the battle of the sexes involves Russell's career woman falling in love with her male secretary--really more of a personal assistant here and one she hires to make deals with clients and their wives.

    MacMurray comes to resent the position he's placed in and there's some genuine wit and satisfactory situations resulting when Russell uses him to make her various deals. Predictably, she falls in love with him and it takes the whole story for the two to finally meet on common ground after a series of misunderstandings and plot complications involving MACDONALD CAREY and CONSTANCE MOORE as a brother and sister team who are both schemers who can match Russell any day.

    It's all very brisk, very '40s style in the way the situations are resolved. ROBERT BENCHLEY has a more subdued role than usual in comic support.

    But the chemistry between MacMurray and Russell is what keeps the whole thing bubbling along to a predictable enough conclusion.

    MACDONALD CAREY has one of his better roles as "the other man" who has already had four wives and decides Russell should be his fifth.

    Summing up: Amusing and well worth your time with a clever script by Claude Binyon.
    7blanche-2

    Russell and her male secretary

    1942's "Take a Letter, Darling" is a fun look at life in the '40s, and no one could play a career woman like Rosalind Russell. Tough, intelligent, sophisticated and glamorous, she fits easily into a man's world. In this film, directed by Mitchell Leisen, A.M. MacGregor (Russell) is the active partner in an advertising firm with Atwood (Robert Benchley), but she has both man and woman trouble. Men make passes and wives are jealous. To get around this, she hires a male secretary, Tom Verney (MacMurray) who in reality is an artist trying to save money to move to Mexico and paint. He takes notes, does research for her and, most importantly, poses as her fiancé at business dinners.

    Verney is wary of the job from the beginning and plays along reluctantly. When A.M. learns the often-married Jonathan Caldwell (MacDonald Carey) is looking for a new advertising company for his tobacco company, she also learns he hates women. She maneuvers a meeting but learns that his sister (Constance Moore) has to approve the campaign. Enter Verney - but when the sister turns out to be young, beautiful, and invites Verney to the southern plantation - A.M. finds she's jealous.

    Good movie, good fun, terrific cast, if somewhat predictable.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Claudette Colbert was scheduled to star, but after she had to replace Carole Lombard in "The Palm Beach Story" following her fatal plane crash, it opened up the part for Russell.
    • Quotes

      Mr. Horner: Mr. Verney, may I remind you that we have been dressing Miss MacGregor's... secretaries for years. She demands a form-fit coat. This one fits you perfectly.

      Tom Verney: What'll you do if I hold out for a larger one?

      Mr. Horner: Unfortunately for you, I should be forced to telephone Miss MacGregor.

      Tom Verney: [Crosses his arms across his chest and the coat rips up the middle of the back] Go ahead and call her.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits are shown as a series of pen-and-ink storyboards, on which a female hand writes "OK".
    • Soundtracks
      Aquellos ojos verdes

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 10, 1947 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Take a Letter, Darling
    • Filming locations
      • Big Bear Lake, Big Bear Valley, San Bernardino National Forest, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

    Contribute to this page

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    Robert Benchley, Fred MacMurray, and Rosalind Russell in Mon secrétaire travaille la nuit (1942)
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    By what name was Mon secrétaire travaille la nuit (1942) officially released in India in English?
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