The Mating Season (film)
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The Mating Season | |
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French film poster |
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Directed by | Mitchell Leisen |
Produced by | Charles Brackett |
Written by | Charles Brackett Richard Breen Walter Reisch Caesar Dunn (play) |
Starring | Gene Tierney John Lund Miriam Hopkins Thelma Ritter |
Music by | Joseph J. Lilley |
Cinematography | Charles Lang |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | 1951 |
Running time | 101 min |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
The Mating Season is a 1951 classic screwball comedy film made by Paramount Pictures. It was directed by Mitchell Leisen and produced by Charles Brackett from a screenplay by Charles Brackett, Richard Breen and Walter Reisch, based on the play Maggie by Caesar Dunn. The cinematography was by Charles Lang and the music score by Joseph J. Lilley. This film is an updated version of his earlier screwball comedies of the 1930's.
The film stars Gene Tierney, John Lund. The film's supporting cast including Miriam Hopkins, and Thelma Ritter. The film's cast includes Larry Keating, Cora Witherspoon, Jan Sterling and James Lotimer.
Thelma Ritter was nominated for a Supporting Actress Academy Award for her performance.
[edit] Summary
Ellen McNulty (Thelma Ritter) is forced to sell her hamburger stand, so she decides to visit her son Val, who lives in another city. Val McNulty (John Lund) has recently married a socialite, Maggie (Gene Tierney). To help her out, her husband hires a maid and promises to send her over right away. In the meantime, Ellen arrives. Maggie, her daughter-in-law, mistakes her for the maid. Ellen begins to tell Maggie who she really is, but she is worried that saying anything might cause Maggie embarrassment, so she doesn't reveal who she is and decides to pretend to be a maid. The next morning Ellen arrives with her things. She wakes Maggie up and when she realizes that her son didn't explain everything yet, she keeps pretending to be a maid. She tells him that she will only be underfoot if she lives in the house as a mother-in-law. She eventually talks him into the idea but he doesn't like it very much.Maggie's mother (Miriam Hopkins) decides to come for a visit and she is nothing like Maggie. She is a snob and she doesn't like Val one bit. While helping Mr. Kalinger, Ellen realizes that Kalinger Jr. is taking credit for work actually done by Val. She tells Mr. Kalinger the truth. Mr. Kalinger then invites Val and Maggie to the party. At the party, Maggie gets into an argument with an important female guest (Cora Witherspoon) after the woman insults her, and Maggie storms out. Val, realizing that this woman carries a lot of influence, forces Maggie to call the party to apologize to the woman. She does so unwillingly, leading to another fight. The next morning, Val and Maggie make up and steal away in a closet for a kiss. Ellen's friends are at the door and ask to speak to "Mrs. McNulty". At this point it is revealed that Ellen is Val's mother. Maggie is furious with Val for hiding his mother's identity from her. She and her mother leave for a hotel. Maggie later confronts Val at his office. Val tries to explain himself but Maggie won't listen. She tells him that he has become a snob and that she is moving to Mexico.Mr. Kalinger decides to get Val and Maggie together. Mr. Kalinger convinces Maggie to come to the hotel bar with him for a good bye drink, knowing that Val will be there for a party. When Maggie sees Val, she again scolds him for trying to hide his mother and leaves the bar. Val leaves the party and rushes to retrieve his mother. He brings her back to the party and begins introducing her to the 'snobs'. Maggie, who has come back to the bar, witnesses Val introducing his mother to the woman who had insulted her at the earlier party. Ellen tells Maggie's mother that it is time for both of them to leave the apartment.