In the late 1800s, Miss Pilgrim, a young typist, becomes the first female employee at a Boston shipping office. Although the men object to her at first, she soon charms them all, especially ... Read allIn the late 1800s, Miss Pilgrim, a young typist, becomes the first female employee at a Boston shipping office. Although the men object to her at first, she soon charms them all, especially the handsome young head of the company. Their romance gets sidetracked when she becomes in... Read allIn the late 1800s, Miss Pilgrim, a young typist, becomes the first female employee at a Boston shipping office. Although the men object to her at first, she soon charms them all, especially the handsome young head of the company. Their romance gets sidetracked when she becomes involved in the women's suffrage movement.
- Directors
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- Stars
- Cynthia's Mother
- (scenes deleted)
- Minor Role
- (scenes deleted)
- Cynthia's Father
- (scenes deleted)
- Cynthia's Sister
- (scenes deleted)
- Herbert Jothan
- (singing voice)
- (uncredited)
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- Writers
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Featured reviews
Betty Grable is in the title role and she's graduated from a secretarial school in New York and she gets assigned to Boston to a shipping firm headed by Dick Haymes. Haymes is a proper Bostonian of the time and believes the woman's place is in the home. Eventually he'd like to see Grable in his home, but not in the office. When he tries to reject her, his sister suffragette Anne Revere interferes and Betty starts a career there on this newfangled machine called a typewriter.
As the first one in Boston, a city loath to break any traditions she's a hero to the women's suffrage movement, not something Dick is ready to deal with. Of course it all works out in the end and in a most peculiar manner too.
Of these trunk songs that Ira Gershwin developed for the film, For You For Me Forevermore and Aren't You Kind Of Glad We Did became posthumous hits for brother George. Both are duets in the film sung by Grable and Haymes. Dick recorded them for Decca with his usual singing partner Helen Forrest, but Betty as per Darryl Zanuck's ban on his stars recording never put these down on wax. A pity too, they're both presented quite nicely.
The Shocking Miss Pilgrim got very good reviews but did not do well at the box office. Grable's fortune was her legs and we got barely a glimpse of them in this film.
Fortunately we can still enjoy a musical literally born in a trunk.
She's paired with the rather weak DICK HAYMES, although his baritone voice lends itself nicely to a couple of Gershwin songs--notably "Aren't You Glad We Did?" and "For You, For Me, For Evermore".
As with all of Fox's Grable films, it's nicely photographed in Technicolor and there are supporting players like ANN REVERE and GENE LOCKHART to add a genial touch to the proceedings. The story itself concerns itself with the proper place for women at a time when they were new to the work force and found it hard to be accepted in the all male society of the office, even if they did graduate from secretarial schools. The film deals neatly with these aspects and has a certain nostalgic charm.
Not one of Grable's box-office hits, probably because she was too covered up to be the glamorous Fox star of previous musicals, but modestly entertaining for fans of the genre.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Packard Business College was a real school in New York City, founded in 1858. It was still in operation at the time of this film and closed in 1954. 20th Century-Fox obtained the cooperation of the school and that of the Remington Museum who supplied the antique typewriters used in this film.
- GoofsMiss Pilgrim's hosiery and shoes are strictly 1946, not 1872.
- Quotes
Cynthia Pilgrim: I am a typewriter!
- Crazy creditsOpening credits are shown on a "sampler" something ladies used to make around the turn of the century.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Nowhere Boy (2009)
Details
- Release date
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- Also known as
- The Shocking Miss Pilgrim
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $2,595,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 25m(85 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1