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Direction George Cukor
Script Herman Mankiewicz, Frances Marion, Donald Ogden
Actors Marie Dressler, John Barrymore, Wallace
Beery, Jean Harlow, Lionel Barrymore
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A masterfully-directed, poignant melodramatic
comedy by director George Cukor and producer David O. Selznick,
Dinner at Eight (1933) was filled with a tremendous cast of
stars (inspired by the previous year's Grand Hotel (1932)) - who
are all invited to a Manhattan formal dinner party during the
height of the Depression. [Three of the stars, John and Lionel
Barrymore, and Wallace Beery appeared in both films.] Many of
the stars in the film first became known in silent cinema,
including John and Lionel Barrymore, and Marie Dressler.
The MGM film was based on the popular, dialogue-rich Broadway
hit by George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber. The witty romantic
comedy is filled with choice lines of dialogue, and revolves
around various relationships between the characters. Suicide,
financial ruin, love, infidelity, economic pressures, class
conflict, the dawn of the talkies, divorce, aging and fading
careers, and alcoholism affect their interactions.
The screenplay for the film was written by Herman Mankiewicz,
Frances Marion, and Donald Ogden Stewart. It was poorly remade
as a TV movie in 1989 starring Marsha Mason, Lauren Bacall, and
Harry Hamlin. The 1932 film received no Academy Award
nominations.
The party is being hosted by social-climbing Millicent Jordan (Billie
Burke), wife of soon-to-be-bankrupt shipping magnate Oliver
Jordan (Lionel Barrymore). The film looks at the tangled and
changed lives of the high society guests, from the time the
invitations are given out for "dinner at eight" at the Jordans
to the time of the party itself.
Park Avenue snob Millicent wants to play the perfect hostess,
but as she prepares for the perfect dinner, she becomes very
aggravated about everything going wrong, and is unaware of her
husband's impending bankruptcy and serious heart condition, or
her 19 year old daughter Paula's (Madge Evans) affair with
drunken, washed-up, married ex-matinee idol Larry Renault (John
Barrymore) from the silent era, even though she has a fiancee (Phillips
Holmes). [John Barrymore's life, including his alcoholism and
acting decline, are semi-mirrored in the film.]
One of the invited guests is aging, witty, 1890s celebrated
actress Carlotta Vance (Marie Dressler), a one-time stage star
who takes to wearing furs. Discussing her dire financial straits
with ex-beau Jordan, she wishes to sell back her Jordan stock to
restore herself. She also explains why she won't return to the
stage: "I'll have my double chins in privacy."
Also invited are a mismatched couple, the brash, amoral, sexy,
platinum blonde, socially-ambitious, nouveau-riche ex-hatcheck
girl Kitty Packard (Jean Harlow) and her self-made, corrupt
tycoon husband Dan Packard (Wallace Beery), who is secretly
gobbling up Oliver's shipping line. Millicent resists the
suggestion of her husband that the Packards come for dinner (to
help Jordan out of his financial difficulties), but reluctantly
agrees:
You're joking! Ask that common little woman to the house with
that noisy, vulgar man? He smells Oklahoma!
Kitty is often propped up in bed, wearing a silky white negligee,
eating chocolates that she spits out when finding one she doesn't
like. She resorts to both baby talk and brassy insults in one
breath, while bickering with her husband. Packard doesn't want
to attend the dinner, and tells her:
Aw, go lay an egg.
On the day of the dinner, Kitty and Dan have a particularly
violent, shouting argument as they get ready. "I've told you a
million times not to talk to me when I'm doing my lashes." They
call each other "windbag" and "piece of scum" among other things.
She admits to a secret love affair - with Dr. Wayne Talbot (Edmund
Lowe). Countering, she threatens to expose his crooked business
deals if he doesn't stop his attack on Jordan's business:
When I tell about (your dirty business affairs), I'll raise a
pretty stink. Politics? You couldn't get into politics. You
couldn't get in anywhere. You couldn't even get into the men's
room at the Astor!
She demands that she be escorted to the party, declaring: "I'm
going to be a lady if it kills me."
As the guests arrive and go in for dinner, a number of
revelations and changes occur, due to a suicide. In deep despair,
Renault has killed himelf by gassing himself in his sealed hotel
room. But he first rips up Paula's photo, and carefully
positions himself under a lamp to show his famous profile to
best advantage.
Carlotta tells Paula of Renault's suicide:
That's the unfortunate thing about death. It's so terribly
final.
Carlotta counsels Paula about men:
If there's one thing I know, it's men. I ought to. It's been my
life's work.
Millicent learns of her husband's heart condition and vows to be
a better wife. And Packard ends his business threats toward
Jordan.
The well-known closing lines of the film are set up when Kitty
makes conversation with Carlotta on their way into dinner,
promptly served at eight:
Kitty: I was reading a book the other day.
Carlotta (staggering at the thought): Reading a book!
Kitty: Yes. It's all about civilization or something, a nutty
kind of a book. Do you know that the guy said that machinery is
going to take the place of every profession?
Carlotta (eyeing Kitty's costume and shapely physical charms):
Oh, my dear, that's something you need never worry about.
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