Nothing Sacred



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Synopsis:
"This is New York, Skyscraper Champion of the World...Where the Slickers and Know-It-Alls peddle gold bricks to each other...And where Truth, crushed to earth, rises again more phony than a glass eye..." With this jaundiced opening title, scripter Ben Hecht introduces his classic comedy Nothing Sacred. Fredric March plays Wally Cook, a hotshot reporter condemned to writing obituaries because of his unwitting complicity in a fraud. Anxious to get back in the good graces of his editor Oliver Stone (Walter Connolly), Cook pounces on the story of New England girl Hazel Flagg (Carole Lombard), who is reportedly dying from radiation poisoning. Actually, Hazel isn't dying at all; she's been misdiagnosed by Moscow's eternally drunk doctor (Charles Winninger). But when Cook offers to take her on an all-expenses-paid trip to New York in exchange for her exclusive story, it's too good an offer to pass up. Once in the Big Apple, Hazel is feted as a heroine by the novelty-seeking populac; she enjoys the adulation at first, but soon (and with the help of gallons of alcoholic beverages) suffers the pangs of conscience. She confesses her deception to Cook, who by now has fallen in love with her. Cook and Stone conspire to keep the public from discovering the truth, eventually dreaming up a phony suicide. Travelling incognito to avoid arrest, Wally and Hazel marry and go on a honeymoon, secure in the knowledge that New York City has forgotten all about her and moved on to their next fad. Brimming with witty, acerbic dialogue and hilarious bits of physical business, Nothing Sacred is among the best "screwball" comedies of the 1930s. The musical score by Oscar Levant both mocks and celebrates the George Gershwinesque musical style then in vogue. As an added bonus, the film is lensed in Technicolor (avoid those two-color reissue prints), allowing modern viewers to see what New York City looked liked back in 1937. Nothing Sacred was later adapted into a Broadway musical, Hazel Flagg, which in turn was filmed by Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis as Living It Up (1954), with Lewis in the Carole Lombard role.

~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Full Cast & Crew

Director Credit
William Augustus Wellman Director
Cast Credit
Hedda Hopper Dowager
Ray Scott Quintet Orchestra
Billy Barty Little Boy
Bill Dunn Electrician
Nora Cecil Schoolteacher
Jinx Falkenburg Katinka
Hans Steinke Wrestler
Monica Bannister "Pocahontas"
Everett Brown Policeman
Kathrun Sheldon Downer's Nurse
John Qualen Swedish Fireman
Lee Phelps Electrician
Troy Brown Ernest Walker
Ernest Whitman Policeman
Art Lasky Mug
Hattie McDaniel Mrs. Walker
Shirley Chambers "Lady Godiva"
Margaret Brainard Hamilton Drug Store Lady
George Chandler Photographer
Charles Richman Mayor
Ann Doran Telephone girl
Monty Woolley Dr. Vunch
Vera Mackey Miss Sedgewick
A.W. Sweatt Office boy
Cyril Ring Pilot
Claire Du Brey Miss Rafferty, Nurse
Olin Howlin Baggage Man
Ben Morgan Wrestler
Carol Lombard Hazel Flagg
Fredric Ernest McIntyre Bickel Wally Cook
Karl Winninger Dr. Enoch Downer
Walter Connolly Oliver Stone
Siegfried Rumann Dr. Emile Egglehoffer
Frank Fay Master of Ceremonies
Raymond Scott and His Quintet Orchestra
"Slapsie Maxie" Rosenbloom Max Levinsky
Alexander Schoenberg Dr. Kerchinwisser
Alex Novinsky Dr. Marachuffsky
Aileen Bisbee Mrs. Bullock
Production Credits Credit
David Oliver Selznick Producer
Art Department Credit
Lyle Wheeler Art Director
Edward Boyle Set Designer
Film Camera Credit
Howard Greene Cinematographer
W. Howard Greene Cinematographer
Visual Effects Credit
Jack Cosgrove Special Effects
Wardrobe Hair Makeup Credit
Travis Banton Costume Designer
Walter Plunkett Costume Designer



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