The Sainted Sisters

The Sainted Sisters
1948 Theatrical Poster
Directed byWilliam D. Russell
Written byHarry Clork
N. Richard Nash
Based onAdaptation by Mindred Lord, story The Sainted Sisters of Sandy Creek by Elisa Bialk, and play adaptation by Bialk and Alden Nash
Produced byRichard Maibaum
StarringVeronica Lake
Joan Caulfield
Barry Fitzgerald
George Reeves
CinematographyLionel Lindon
Edited byEverett Douglas
Music byVan Cleave
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • April 30, 1948 (1948-04-30) (U.S.)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Sainted Sisters is a 1948 American comedy film starring Veronica Lake and co-starring Joan Caulfield, Barry Fitzgerald, George Reeves, William Demarest and Beulah Bondi. The film was distributed by Paramount Pictures and is notable for being the last film Veronica Lake made under her contract with the studio.

Plot

After escaping New York City with the loot from a successful scam they pulled, sisters Letty and Jane Stanton decide to hide out in a small town in Maine close to the Canada–US border. Robbie McCleary takes them in, only to discover the large surplus of money mysteriously appearing.

The girls reluctantly get involved in a charity program and unwittingly become the local celebrities of the town, something that causes a problem when their fame attracts attention outside the small town and the people affected by their previous scams begin to catch up with them.

Cast

Production

Elisa Bialk wrote a short story, The Sainted Sisters of Sandy Creek. It was adapted into a play by Bialk and Alden Nash, which was to be produced by the Theatre Guild in 1944 as a possible vehicle for Tallulah Bankhead. However the play was never produced.[1]

Film rights were bought by Paramount in July 1946. They originally announced Betty Hutton would star from a Mindred Lord script, co-starring Diana Lynn (sister), John Lund (minister) and Sterling Hayden (cop), with Val Lewton to produce and Mitchell Leisen to direct in early 1947.[2]

However Hutton and Leisen wound up instead working on Dream Girl and the project was postponed. It was re-activated later in 1947 with Hutton still down as star; George Marshall was to direct and Richard Maibaum was to produce from an N. Richard Nash and Mary McCall script. William Demarest, Sterling Hayden, Barry Fitzgerald and Joan Caulfield were to support Hutton.[3]

Hutton dropped out to go on maternity leave and was replaced by Veronica Lake; George Marshall was replaced as director by William Russell. Sterling Hayden refused to play his role and was put on suspension. His role was taken by George Reeves. Filming started in October 1947.[4]

This was the last film Veronica Lake made under her contract with Paramount. She had previously been one of their top stars throughout the early 1940s.

Reception

Diabolique said "maybe this would’ve worked if Betty Hutton had been able to play the lead, as originally intended. Instead Paramount went with Lake who is disastrously miscast, lacking sparkle and verve in a part that needs, well, Hutton – or even Diana Lynn. Joan Caulfield has some game as her sister but is mostly just pretty. Mind you, neither have much of a character to play."[5]

References

  1. ^ Zolotow, Sam (24 October 1945). "Joe E Brown Signs for Harvey". New York Times. p. 26.
  2. ^ Brady, Thomas (24 January 1947). "Fox to Make Film of Chicago Women". New York Times. p. 18.
  3. ^ Brady, Thomas (27 Aug 1947). "Paramount Role to Betty Hutton". New York Times. p. 19.
  4. ^ Brady, Thomas (10 October 1947). "Van Heflin to Star". New York Times. p. 32.
  5. ^ Vagg, Stephen (11 February 2020). "The Cinema of Veronica Lake". Diabolique Magazine.