A psychiatrist, Dr. Susan Lane, is leaving a military hospital after spending two weeks working with patients there. Before she leaves, she encounters a patient reading a comic strip by Michael Kent. The comic's character, the Nixie, encourages people to act on their impulses by whistling in their ear. Dr. Lane explains to the patient that it's not good to act on their impulses. Colonel Brady, another psychiatrist, mentions to Dr. Lane that her confidence as a professional comes from some problem that she has repressed.
Later, at Grand Central Station, Dr. Lane picks up her train ticket and gets knocked down by another customer who apologizes. Several bumps and bruises later, she leaves and the customer—who turns out to be comic writer Michael Kent—picks up his ticket. At the last minute, the clerk—acting on his impulse because of the Nixie—switches Kent's ticket to be the same compartment as Dr. Lane's ticket.
On the train, Kent and Dr. Lane bump into each other again while at the bar.[1] He continues to get on her nerves as the days pass. One day, he tricks her into marrying him.
The original working title for the film was Some Call It Love and was later changed to She Wouldn't Say Yes.[3] Production for the film began on May 8, 1945 and went through July 14. 1945.[4] Rosalind Russell had previously worked with director Alexander Hall on several films including My Sister Eileen from 1942[5] and This Thing Called Love from 1940.[6]
Rosalind Russell was cast in the part of Dr. Susan Lane, an unmarried psychiatrist, happy to be single. Russell had a prolific film career with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer starting in 1934, when she signed a seven-year contract with them.[7] She had been nominated for an Academy Award three years earlier as Best Actress in a Leading Role for her part in My Sister Eileen.[8]Lee Bowman played the part of Michael Kent, a cartoonist in the military that pens a comic strip, The Nixie, which encourages people to follow their impulses. The release date of the film caused an anachronism in the plot: the traveling Kent character is en route to Japan, via San Francisco, and mentions at least three times he is "off to war"—but the war ended three months earlier.
Release
She Wouldn't Say Yes was released to theatres on November 29, 1945.[1][9] The film was adapted as a radio play for Screen Directors Playhouse and broadcast on June 2, 1950.[10] The radio play was released as an audiobook on cassette in 1977.[10]
Home media
She Wouldn't Say Yes was first released to the home video market on video cassette.[11] The movie was released to DVD on August 4, 2009[9] as part of the Icons of Screwball Comedy, Volume 1 set along with
If You Could Only Cook, Too Many Husbands, and My Sister Eileen.[12]
^ ab
Russell, Rosalind; Averback, Hy (1977). She Wouldn't Say Yes (Audiobook on Cassette). Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA: Metacom. OCLC12814678. Retrieved February 17, 2013.