The great San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906 was a tragedy for Mervyn Leroy. While he and his father managed to survive, they lost everything they had. To make money, Leroy sold newspapers and entered talent contests as a singer. When he enter vaudeville, his act was LeRoy and Cooper – Two Kids and a Piano. After the act broke up, he contacted his cousin, Jesse L. Lasky, and went to work in Hollywood. He worked in costumes, the film lab and as a camera assistant before becoming a comedy gag writer and part-time actor in silent films. His next step was as a director, and he turned out his first effort, No Place to Go (1927), before scoring his first unqualified hit with Harold Teen (1928). Earning $1,000 per week by the end of that year, he was nicknamed “The Boy Wonder” of Warners, where his pictures were profitable lightweights. His motto, to paraphrase Shakespeare, was “Good stories make good movies.” LeRoy rounded out the decade assigned to more lightweights, such as Naughty… read more
Kinda terrible. Even for 1940 this film was hopelessly old-fashioned and dated. Vivien is of course very beautiful and she gives one of her typically poetic, passionate performances as a character who is far more innocent then Scarlett O'Hara, Lady Hamilton or Blanche DuBois, but this character is absurdly written. The screenwriters seem to have gotten innocence confused with total stupidity. Robert Taylor is ludicrously cast as an upper-class Brit, and so Vivien has to struggle even further to make the romance even seem conceivable. MGMs over-production doesn't help her either.