Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueTwo doctors, Mary and Don, set up practices together. Don marries wealthy Lois and faces legal troubles. Mary becomes successful but has an affair with Don. Their unborn child dies at sea. M... Tout lireTwo doctors, Mary and Don, set up practices together. Don marries wealthy Lois and faces legal troubles. Mary becomes successful but has an affair with Don. Their unborn child dies at sea. Mary overcomes depression and finds purpose.Two doctors, Mary and Don, set up practices together. Don marries wealthy Lois and faces legal troubles. Mary becomes successful but has an affair with Don. Their unborn child dies at sea. Mary overcomes depression and finds purpose.
- Walter Rising
- (as Charles Wilson)
- French Official
- (uncredited)
- Jane Simmons
- (uncredited)
- 'Captain' the Policeman
- (uncredited)
- Fireman
- (uncredited)
- Alice - Andrews' Maid
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
It's a great film for women's roles and their are three good ones here. The title tole is played by Kay Francis as a doctor who operates a pediatric clinic along with her nurse Glenda Farrell. Another physician played by Lyle Talbot is interested in her, but he's slightly married to Thelma Todd.
Although I'm not quite clear about his role, Talbot is also involved in politics, Todd's father is a bigshot political boss and is discouraging any thought of divorce. Thelma even fakes a pregnancy to keep Talbot tied to her.
That comes as bad news for Francis who gets pregnant for real, although you would think a doctor would take precautions. She has the kid and quits her clinic and takes a job as a ship's doctor, the better to keep away from the respectable folks who knew her when. After this the film gets really melodramatic for all concerned.
The cast performs their roles in earnest and Glenda Farrell rivals Joan Blondell in getting all the wisecracking dame roles at Warner Brothers that Blondell couldn't do.
When people say that Mary Stevens, MD is a women's picture that is meant in every sense of the word.
Mary Stevens is a compelling character. I'm intrigued by her story. On the other hand, I couldn't care less about Don. I don't see their implied chemistry. They start off more like brother and sister. That's all I see in them. I don't care about his issues. She could be a great character for a TV show. Oh yeah! This was before TV.
Kay plays the titular Mary, going through medical school with a guy she has loved since childhood, Don Andrews (Warner workhorse Lyle Talbot). They open a medical practice together, but Don is more interested in taking the easy way up, and he has affection for Mary but not love, which he has made no secret about. So he marries socialite Lois Cavanaugh, portrayed almost unrecognizably by Thelma Todd, and with that marriage comes a patronage job with the city.
But as Mary works hard at her practice, Don is skimming some then lots off the top from his patronage job and drinking heavily because his marriage with Lois is not working out. Mary takes over for him during an operation because he wanders into the OR blind drunk. When they accidentally meet up at a resort where he is hiding from an indictment - which he tells her all about - and she is recovering from overwork they spend a night together. Now, Don is honestly fooled - his wife lies and says she is having a baby to prevent the divorce he wants so that he can marry Mary. But how can Mary reconcile the fact that Don said the two have been through with one another a long time with her getting pregnant? Being a doctor she must know how these things happen! Plus there is a little matter of him being a drunken embezzler. Like I said before - Yikes! Mary you can do much better! But wait there's more that you'll have to find out about yourself when you watch it.
There are some great touches in this one. Glenda Farrell is more of the second lead than Lyle Talbott is here. He barely gets to act in this one. Glenda, as Mary's nurse and best friend, has a load of precode one liners. And then there is the teenage patient of Mary's who already has ulcers worrying about the state of the economy and banking system during the Depression, and not because he is hungry.
Even though this has lots of heavily trodden precode tropes, Kay Francis and Glenda Farrell make it worthwhile.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMary tells Mrs. Nussbaum that her son will get over his "worry" if he keeps taking his "phosphates". "Weak nerves" was a common diagnosis of the time that covered a variety of mental and physical complaints such as anxiety, depression, the blues, listlessness, and irritability. Many tonics to treat weak nerves included phosphorous because it was believed to be essential for repairing brain and nerve tissue.
- GaffesWhen a depressed Mary is sitting on the sofa, Don brings her a glass of water and a pill to help her sleep. In the following shot he is again approaching the sofa with the glass of water and pill, but from further away.
- Citations
Glenda Carroll: And you said you couldn't do it.
Mary Stevens: [after saving a choking baby's life using her hairpin] I was just wondering, they say medicine is a man's game. I wonder what a man would have done in a case like this.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Complicated Women (2003)
- Bandes originalesWhy Can't This Night Go On Forever?
(1932) (uncredited)
Music by Isham Jones
Played during the opening credits and often throughout the picture
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Доктор Мэри Стивенс
- Lieux de tournage
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 12 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1