IMDb RATING
7.1/10
694
YOUR RATING
A man who tries to help a woman trap a husband so she can adopt a child falls for her himself.A man who tries to help a woman trap a husband so she can adopt a child falls for her himself.A man who tries to help a woman trap a husband so she can adopt a child falls for her himself.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Sam Ash
- Mustached Man on Bus
- (uncredited)
Trevor Bardette
- Mr. Wilson
- (uncredited)
Rosemary Blong
- Chorus Girl
- (uncredited)
Douglas D. Coppin
- Bit
- (uncredited)
Sally Corner
- Mrs. Wilson
- (uncredited)
Patsy Creighton
- Cookie
- (uncredited)
Hal K. Dawson
- Davidson
- (uncredited)
Mary Jo Ellis
- Ruth
- (uncredited)
Mary Emery
- Customer
- (uncredited)
Donald Gordon
- Bit
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
In this cute but slightly kookie comedy, The Mating of Millie feature Evelyn Keyes as a career woman with zero romantic experience. She may notice her good-looking neighbor, but she knows he'll never look at her in a hundred years. Glenn Ford is a bus driver who randomly decides to quit his job; Evelyn admires his gumption and gives him her business card so she might find a job for him. Also randomly, another of her neighbors is a neglectful mother who prefers to spend her nights partying rather than taking care of her adorable son, Jimmy Hunt. Evelyn absolutely adores Jimmy and enjoys taking care of him whenever he's left alone. After his mother dies, Jimmy is sent to an orphanage. Evelyn tries to adopt him but is told that as a single woman, she's ineligible. So goes her search for a husband, and the rest of the movie! Will she rope Glenn into a wedding ring, or her neighbor, or the orphanage director?
Yes, the screenplay is a bit uneven, but overall it was a cute movie. Evelyn is a poor man's Deborah Kerr, and she does her best with a transformation from librarian to party girl. Glenn is pretty cute as a playboy, and as always, his comic timing is great. I'm a hard sell when it comes to kids, but Jimmy won me over. I would fight to adopt him if I were in Evelyn's shoes, too!
Yes, the screenplay is a bit uneven, but overall it was a cute movie. Evelyn is a poor man's Deborah Kerr, and she does her best with a transformation from librarian to party girl. Glenn is pretty cute as a playboy, and as always, his comic timing is great. I'm a hard sell when it comes to kids, but Jimmy won me over. I would fight to adopt him if I were in Evelyn's shoes, too!
Pleasant romantic comedy stars the beautiful and charming Evelyn Keyes as a businesswoman who wants to adopt the son of a recently deceased neighbor. But to do this she needs a husband. Her first choice is Glenn Ford, but he's not the marrying kind. So he agrees to help her find a mate. You can pretty much guess where it's going to go from here but there are some funny and touching moments along the way. Keyes is terrific and we get some early Ford here, showing some of his lighter side. Later on he would become typecast as a gruff serious type in his western and film noir roles. He was excellent in those but it's nice to see some of his range here.
One scene I want to talk about in particular. It's a cute bit where Ford sneaks a peek through Keyes' diary, only to find it's all blank. He then breaks the fourth wall by looking at the camera and saying "nothing ever happened to her." It's a funny scene and a different type of comedy than the rest of the movie, which is more traditional. One has to wonder if they had thrown in more novelties like that if the movie would be more well-remembered today.
One scene I want to talk about in particular. It's a cute bit where Ford sneaks a peek through Keyes' diary, only to find it's all blank. He then breaks the fourth wall by looking at the camera and saying "nothing ever happened to her." It's a funny scene and a different type of comedy than the rest of the movie, which is more traditional. One has to wonder if they had thrown in more novelties like that if the movie would be more well-remembered today.
In this likable movie yes: He is. And also cast against type is the title character. Evelyn Keyes wrote one of the very first racy autobiographies and was married numerous times, to exciting men. Yet here she is a stern businesswoman. And her nickname is Butch! The title itself sounds like the title of a monograph my for an animal husbandry course. It couldn't be less romantic. Indeed, Millie's reason for wanting to be -- well, mated is originally not romantic at all. She wants to adopt a neighbor's child.
She thinks Ford would be a good husband, which she learns she must have. But she finds two other suitors. They seem quite unlikely, as cast.
The movie is fun and stylish. Keyes is fitted out in the most unrevealing clothes imaginable. This is true even when she is glamorized. They're pretty but look like slimmed-down versions of clothing Margaret Dumont might have worn.
She thinks Ford would be a good husband, which she learns she must have. But she finds two other suitors. They seem quite unlikely, as cast.
The movie is fun and stylish. Keyes is fitted out in the most unrevealing clothes imaginable. This is true even when she is glamorized. They're pretty but look like slimmed-down versions of clothing Margaret Dumont might have worn.
Evelyn Keyes plays the title role in The Mating Of Millie who is a very successful career woman with a nice job in the personnel office of a large Los Angeles department store. She occasionally looks after the neighbor's kid Jimmy Hunt in her bungalow complex. But when his mother is killed in a traffic accident and sent to an orphanage like the one Keyes grew up in, her maternal instincts are aroused.
Her problem is that back in those days the authorities would not let her adopt as a single parent so she has to look for a husband. She's got three candidates in mind, an unorthodox bus driver Glenn Ford, an advertising executive neighbor Willard Parker, and the head of the orphanage where Hunt is who is quite taken with her Ron Randell.
The Mating Of Millie is a nice family comedy with a minimum of heart tugging, but enough to remember why you wanted to see this film. The film is really Evelyn's picture and her best scenes are with Jimmy Hunt. Mabel Paige as the landlady in the bungalow court also has a nice role. In fact Ron Randell's such a nice guy as the orphanage head, it makes you wonder why anyone would want to leave.
Nothing terribly special here, but nice entertainment.
Her problem is that back in those days the authorities would not let her adopt as a single parent so she has to look for a husband. She's got three candidates in mind, an unorthodox bus driver Glenn Ford, an advertising executive neighbor Willard Parker, and the head of the orphanage where Hunt is who is quite taken with her Ron Randell.
The Mating Of Millie is a nice family comedy with a minimum of heart tugging, but enough to remember why you wanted to see this film. The film is really Evelyn's picture and her best scenes are with Jimmy Hunt. Mabel Paige as the landlady in the bungalow court also has a nice role. In fact Ron Randell's such a nice guy as the orphanage head, it makes you wonder why anyone would want to leave.
Nothing terribly special here, but nice entertainment.
"The Mating of Millie" is a light comedy romance and drama set sometime after the end of World War II in California. After serving in the war, Glenn Ford's Doug Andrews can't seem to settle down into a job he likes. Evelyn Keyes' Millie McGonigle is a personnel executive in the huge Bullard's department store where she has worked her way up from a stocking clerk in a short time. These two meet by chance when Doug is fed up with a bus full of people who won't move to the back of the bus to stand, and he parks it and walks away from the job.
Millie lives in a bungalow apartment complex, and knows her neighbors, including a woman who has a little boy who likes Millie, and vice versa. After the woman is run over by a truck, Tommy is put in a homeless children's home awaiting any next of kin or ultimate adoption. That's when the mating of Millie gets into gear as she needs of be married in order to adopt Tommy.
Doug tries to help her by getting her to shed her business-suit persona. As she meets and attracts two very eligible bachelors, wedding bells appear on the horizon. But, without noting any of the rest of the cast, one can guess how this will end. It's a sweet little story, light comedy and enjoyable family film.
Millie lives in a bungalow apartment complex, and knows her neighbors, including a woman who has a little boy who likes Millie, and vice versa. After the woman is run over by a truck, Tommy is put in a homeless children's home awaiting any next of kin or ultimate adoption. That's when the mating of Millie gets into gear as she needs of be married in order to adopt Tommy.
Doug tries to help her by getting her to shed her business-suit persona. As she meets and attracts two very eligible bachelors, wedding bells appear on the horizon. But, without noting any of the rest of the cast, one can guess how this will end. It's a sweet little story, light comedy and enjoyable family film.
Did you know
- TriviaFifth of six films to feature Glenn Ford and Evelyn Keyes, the others being: The Lady in Question (1940), Les aventures de Martin Eden (1942), Flight Lieutenant (1942), Les desperados (1943), and Cinq millions dans une poubelle (1949).
- ConnectionsReferenced in Boston Blackie's Chinese Venture (1949)
- How long is The Mating of Millie?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Mating of Millie
- Filming locations
- I. Magnin Building, 3240 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USA(Millie McGonigle's office building, renamed the Bullards Building for the movie)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 27m(87 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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