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The Young Philadelphians

The Young Philadelphians is a 1959 American legal drama film directed by Vincent Sherman and starring Paul Newman, Barbara Rush, Robert Vaughn and Alexis Smith.[3] The film is based on the 1956 novel The Philadelphian, by Richard P. Powell.[4]

The Young Philadelphians
Theatrical release poster
Directed byVincent Sherman
Screenplay byJames Gunn
Based onThe Philadelphian
1956 novel
by Richard P. Powell
Produced byJames Gunn
StarringPaul Newman
Barbara Rush
Alexis Smith
Robert Vaughn
CinematographyHarry Stradling
Edited byWilliam H. Ziegler
Music byErnest Gold
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • May 19, 1959 (1959-05-19) (Philadelphia)
[1]
Running time
136 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2.8 million (est. US/ Canada rentals)[2]

Plot edit

It is 1924. Newlywed Kate Judson Lawrence is distraught to discover on her wedding night that her upper-class Philadelphia Main Line husband, William never really wanted to marry her, when he says, "It was my mother who wanted this marriage, to give her a grandson. But I can't love you, Kate, I can't love anyone."

After William leaves her that night, she seeks comfort from longtime working-class friend and former beau Mike Flanagan. The next day, Kate learns that William died of an apparent suicide in a car wreck. Nine months later, Kate gives birth to a son, Anthony Judson "Tony" Lawrence. She is visited by William's mother, who has become aware that Flanagan was Tony's father. She offers money to Kate if she will not raise her son as a Lawrence, but she refuses, and is cut off from the family money.

Years later, Tony is a smart, ambitious Princeton University student working his way through college for Flanagan as a construction worker, aiming to become a lawyer. One day, he encounters socialite Joan Dickinson when she has a minor car accident. They soon fall in love, though Joan is expected by nearly everyone in her lofty social circle to marry millionaire Carter Henry. Their mutual friend, Chester "Chet" Gwynn, warns her not to let social pressure separate her from the one she loves as it did him.

They decide to elope. However, Joan's father Gilbert Dickinson persuades Tony to postpone the wedding by offering him invaluable career help and a job at the highly esteemed law firm of which he is a full partner. Believing Tony has allowed himself to be bought, a disillusioned Joan sails to Europe. When Carter follows her, she marries him. Devastated and angry, Tony realizes that Joan's father wanted her to marry into another wealthy family, and only offered Tony help with his career in the hope of breaking them up. Tony then devotes himself to working his way up the social ladder and learning the game of the wealthy.

Fellow student Louis Donetti tells Tony about a wonderful opportunity he has to assist John Marshall Wharton in writing a law book. Tony becomes acquainted with Wharton's much younger wife Carol and steals the job from his classmate. Living and working at Wharton's mansion, Tony impresses his employer with his expertise. Carol becomes attracted to him. She comes to his bedroom one night, but he cunningly defuses the dangerous situation by asking her to divorce her husband and marry him, knowing that she will be unwilling to do that.

Wharton offers Tony a job at his own prestigious firm. Tony accepts, deciding to specialize in the relatively new area of tax law, where there is more opportunity for rapid advancement. When the Korean War starts, interrupting his career, Tony serves as a JAG officer. Others are not as fortunate. Chet Gwynn loses an arm in combat, and Carter Henry is killed, leaving Joan a widow.

Upon returning home, Tony gets a lucky break. Forced to work over the Christmas holiday, he is available when the very rich Mrs. J. Arthur Allen needs her will amended. With his specialized knowledge, he shows her how to avoid paying a great deal of taxes. Mrs. Allen responds by designating Tony to manage her finances, instead of her longtime lawyer Gilbert Dickinson. Tony also begins mending his relationship with Joan. Success after success follows, and Tony becomes well known and respected by the Philadelphia elite.

One night, Tony is called to the police station to pick up Chet, his disheveled, drunken friend. Donetti (now a public prosecutor) has Chet taken into custody and charged with the first-degree murder of Morton Stearnes, Chet's uncle and tight-fisted guardian of his inheritance. Chet insists on Tony defending him, fearing that his relatives, particularly family patriarch Dr. Shippen Stearnes are more interested in avoiding a scandal than proving his innocence. Despite having no experience with criminal law, Tony reluctantly agrees. His work is further complicated when Shippen Stearnes threatens to reveal that Tony's real father is Mike Flanagan if Tony embarrasses the Stearnes clan. When Joan offers to hire a reliable attorney, Tony realizes that she fears that he has sold out once again.

At the trial, Tony discredits the testimony of Morton Stearnes' butler. He gets Shippen to admit that Morton had a brain tumor and was mentally depressed, and that he might have committed suicide. The jury finds Chet not guilty. After the trial, Tony and Joan reconcile.

Cast edit

Production edit

Newman was not happy with the work he had been doing on film, despite his Academy Award nomination for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and had wanted to return to the stage, but he was forced to perform in Young Philadelphians by the contract he signed with Warner Brothers when he began making movies in 1955.[5] Newman's biographer Shawn Levy describes the film as a "dreary nightmare" for the actor. He was opposed to making the film, and made that argument unsuccessfully to director Vincent Sherman. He only agreed to do the film so that Warner Brothers would give him time off to appear on stage in Tennessee Williams's new play Sweet Bird of Youth, and the play's producers moved the opening of the play to accommodate him.[6]

For Vincent Sherman, the film marked a return to Warner Brothers after an eight-year absence during which he had gone to Europe to make movies. The film also helped launch the career of Robert Vaughn, who was nominated for an Academy Award for his performance.[5]

The film was Newman's mother's favorite, and his biographer Lawrence J. Quirk believes that was because the character was very much like Newman in real life.[6] Newman himself acknowledged that the role was "much closer to me as a human being" than most of the roles he played.[6]

While he was making the film, Newman complained about the "wretched" script. At nights during filming, he and Vaughn worked with a writer to improve it, and he described the film as "just a glorified cosmopolitan soap opera."[6]

According to film historian Peter Hanson, the script was ostensibly written by Ben L. Perry, who reported for work at Warner Brothers studios every day to disguise the fact that it was actually being written by the blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo. Newman and Sherman, not knowing that Trumbo had written the script, tried to hire him to rewrite the script. Trumbo declined, citing other commitments, to avoid betraying the secret arrangement.[7]

Young Philadelphians, Quirk points out, was "franker on the subject of homosexuality in some ways" than Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, in which Newman also starred, because it is strongly suggested that the William Lawrence character was gay.[8]

The film had its premiere at the Stanley Theatre in Philadelphia on May 19, 1959.[1][9] In its opening week, it finished second at the US box office, behind Some Like It Hot.[10]

Reception edit

The film has a 71% rating on the Rotten Tomatoes review aggregate site.[11]

New York Times critic A.H. Weiler described the film as "sudsy" and said that "Although 'The Young Philadelphians' appears to be striving mightily to say something trenchant it only makes a surface social commentary." He called the film "an all-too-frequently pallid drama" and said it proves "that the trials and tribulations of the rich, like those of the poor, can be undramatic."[12]

Writing in the Los Angeles Times, film critic Philip K. Scheuer praised Vaughn but said that the performances were otherwise not exceptional in a film that "chuffs and chugs along the Main Line for 130 minutes." Scheuer asserted that even the climactic trial sequence was overlong.[13]

New York Daily News critic Dorothy Masters wrote that the essence of the Powell novel "seems to have vaporized" in coming to the screen. Sherman's direction, she said, "evokes more awe than empathy."[14]

Accolades edit

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b The Young Philadelphians at the American Film Institute Catalog
  2. ^ "1959: Probable Domestic Take". Variety. January 6, 1960. p. 34.
  3. ^ "The Young Philadelphians". Turner Classic Movies. Atlanta: Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner). Retrieved November 5, 2022.
  4. ^ Powell, Richard P. (1956). The Philadelphian, a novel. New York City: Charles Scribner's Sons. ASIN B000WA4UPO.
  5. ^ a b Miller, Frank (September 6, 2011). "The Young Philadelphians". www.tcm.com. Retrieved 2023-08-15.
  6. ^ a b c d Levy, Shawn (2010-09-25). Paul Newman: A Life. Aurum. ISBN 978-1-84513-654-3.
  7. ^ Hanson, Peter (2015-08-13). Dalton Trumbo, Hollywood Rebel: A Critical Survey and Filmography. McFarland. pp. 133–134. ISBN 978-1-4766-1041-2.
  8. ^ Quirk, Lawrence J. (2009-09-16). Paul Newman: A Life, Updated. Taylor Trade Publications. pp. 97–98. ISBN 978-1-58979-438-2.
  9. ^ "A Home Town Debut". Variety. May 6, 1959. p. 15. Retrieved January 8, 2021 – via Archive.org.
  10. ^ "National Boxoffice Survey". Variety. May 27, 1959. p. 7. Retrieved December 22, 2020 – via Archive.org.
  11. ^ "The Young Philadelphians - Rotten Tomatoes". www.rottentomatoes.com. 1959-05-30. Retrieved 2023-08-14.
  12. ^ Weiler, A. H. (1959-05-22). "'Young Philadelphians'". New York Times. Retrieved 2023-08-14.
  13. ^ Scheuer, Philip K. (22 May 1959). "'Philadelphians' Travels Main Line". The Los Angeles Times. p. 11, Part II – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ Masters, Dorothy (22 May 1959). "Film Depicts Philly Society at Criterion". Daily News. p. 91. Retrieved 15 August 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ "The 32nd Academy Awards (1960) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved August 21, 2011.
  16. ^ "The Young Philadelphians". Golden Globe Awards. Retrieved August 13, 2023.
  17. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2016-08-19.

External links edit

young, philadelphians, 1959, american, legal, drama, film, directed, vincent, sherman, starring, paul, newman, barbara, rush, robert, vaughn, alexis, smith, film, based, 1956, novel, philadelphian, richard, powell, theatrical, release, posterdirected, byvincen. The Young Philadelphians is a 1959 American legal drama film directed by Vincent Sherman and starring Paul Newman Barbara Rush Robert Vaughn and Alexis Smith 3 The film is based on the 1956 novel The Philadelphian by Richard P Powell 4 The Young PhiladelphiansTheatrical release posterDirected byVincent ShermanScreenplay byJames GunnBased onThe Philadelphian1956 novelby Richard P PowellProduced byJames GunnStarringPaul NewmanBarbara Rush Alexis SmithRobert VaughnCinematographyHarry StradlingEdited byWilliam H ZieglerMusic byErnest GoldDistributed byWarner Bros PicturesRelease dateMay 19 1959 1959 05 19 Philadelphia 1 Running time136 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBox office 2 8 million est US Canada rentals 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 5 Accolades 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot editIt is 1924 Newlywed Kate Judson Lawrence is distraught to discover on her wedding night that her upper class Philadelphia Main Line husband William never really wanted to marry her when he says It was my mother who wanted this marriage to give her a grandson But I can t love you Kate I can t love anyone After William leaves her that night she seeks comfort from longtime working class friend and former beau Mike Flanagan The next day Kate learns that William died of an apparent suicide in a car wreck Nine months later Kate gives birth to a son Anthony Judson Tony Lawrence She is visited by William s mother who has become aware that Flanagan was Tony s father She offers money to Kate if she will not raise her son as a Lawrence but she refuses and is cut off from the family money Years later Tony is a smart ambitious Princeton University student working his way through college for Flanagan as a construction worker aiming to become a lawyer One day he encounters socialite Joan Dickinson when she has a minor car accident They soon fall in love though Joan is expected by nearly everyone in her lofty social circle to marry millionaire Carter Henry Their mutual friend Chester Chet Gwynn warns her not to let social pressure separate her from the one she loves as it did him They decide to elope However Joan s father Gilbert Dickinson persuades Tony to postpone the wedding by offering him invaluable career help and a job at the highly esteemed law firm of which he is a full partner Believing Tony has allowed himself to be bought a disillusioned Joan sails to Europe When Carter follows her she marries him Devastated and angry Tony realizes that Joan s father wanted her to marry into another wealthy family and only offered Tony help with his career in the hope of breaking them up Tony then devotes himself to working his way up the social ladder and learning the game of the wealthy Fellow student Louis Donetti tells Tony about a wonderful opportunity he has to assist John Marshall Wharton in writing a law book Tony becomes acquainted with Wharton s much younger wife Carol and steals the job from his classmate Living and working at Wharton s mansion Tony impresses his employer with his expertise Carol becomes attracted to him She comes to his bedroom one night but he cunningly defuses the dangerous situation by asking her to divorce her husband and marry him knowing that she will be unwilling to do that Wharton offers Tony a job at his own prestigious firm Tony accepts deciding to specialize in the relatively new area of tax law where there is more opportunity for rapid advancement When the Korean War starts interrupting his career Tony serves as a JAG officer Others are not as fortunate Chet Gwynn loses an arm in combat and Carter Henry is killed leaving Joan a widow Upon returning home Tony gets a lucky break Forced to work over the Christmas holiday he is available when the very rich Mrs J Arthur Allen needs her will amended With his specialized knowledge he shows her how to avoid paying a great deal of taxes Mrs Allen responds by designating Tony to manage her finances instead of her longtime lawyer Gilbert Dickinson Tony also begins mending his relationship with Joan Success after success follows and Tony becomes well known and respected by the Philadelphia elite One night Tony is called to the police station to pick up Chet his disheveled drunken friend Donetti now a public prosecutor has Chet taken into custody and charged with the first degree murder of Morton Stearnes Chet s uncle and tight fisted guardian of his inheritance Chet insists on Tony defending him fearing that his relatives particularly family patriarch Dr Shippen Stearnes are more interested in avoiding a scandal than proving his innocence Despite having no experience with criminal law Tony reluctantly agrees His work is further complicated when Shippen Stearnes threatens to reveal that Tony s real father is Mike Flanagan if Tony embarrasses the Stearnes clan When Joan offers to hire a reliable attorney Tony realizes that she fears that he has sold out once again At the trial Tony discredits the testimony of Morton Stearnes butler He gets Shippen to admit that Morton had a brain tumor and was mentally depressed and that he might have committed suicide The jury finds Chet not guilty After the trial Tony and Joan reconcile Cast editPaul Newman as Anthony Tony Judson Lawrence Narrator Barbara Rush as Joan Dickinson Alexis Smith as Carol Wharton Brian Keith as Mike Flanagan Diane Brewster as Kate Judson Lawrence Billie Burke as Mrs J Arthur Allen Owner Allen Oil Co John Williams as Gilbert Dickinson Robert Vaughn as Chester A Chet Gwynn Otto Kruger as John Marshall Wharton Partner at the law firm of Wharton Biddle Clayton Paul Picerni as Louis Donetti Robert Douglas as Morton Stearnes Frank Conroy as Dr Shippen Stearnes Adam West as William Lawrence III Anthony Eisley as Carter Henry Richard Deacon as George ArchibaldProduction editNewman was not happy with the work he had been doing on film despite his Academy Award nomination for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and had wanted to return to the stage but he was forced to perform in Young Philadelphians by the contract he signed with Warner Brothers when he began making movies in 1955 5 Newman s biographer Shawn Levy describes the film as a dreary nightmare for the actor He was opposed to making the film and made that argument unsuccessfully to director Vincent Sherman He only agreed to do the film so that Warner Brothers would give him time off to appear on stage in Tennessee Williams s new play Sweet Bird of Youth and the play s producers moved the opening of the play to accommodate him 6 For Vincent Sherman the film marked a return to Warner Brothers after an eight year absence during which he had gone to Europe to make movies The film also helped launch the career of Robert Vaughn who was nominated for an Academy Award for his performance 5 The film was Newman s mother s favorite and his biographer Lawrence J Quirk believes that was because the character was very much like Newman in real life 6 Newman himself acknowledged that the role was much closer to me as a human being than most of the roles he played 6 While he was making the film Newman complained about the wretched script At nights during filming he and Vaughn worked with a writer to improve it and he described the film as just a glorified cosmopolitan soap opera 6 According to film historian Peter Hanson the script was ostensibly written by Ben L Perry who reported for work at Warner Brothers studios every day to disguise the fact that it was actually being written by the blacklisted writer Dalton Trumbo Newman and Sherman not knowing that Trumbo had written the script tried to hire him to rewrite the script Trumbo declined citing other commitments to avoid betraying the secret arrangement 7 Young Philadelphians Quirk points out was franker on the subject of homosexuality in some ways than Cat on a Hot Tin Roof in which Newman also starred because it is strongly suggested that the William Lawrence character was gay 8 The film had its premiere at the Stanley Theatre in Philadelphia on May 19 1959 1 9 In its opening week it finished second at the US box office behind Some Like It Hot 10 Reception editThe film has a 71 rating on the Rotten Tomatoes review aggregate site 11 New York Times critic A H Weiler described the film as sudsy and said that Although The Young Philadelphians appears to be striving mightily to say something trenchant it only makes a surface social commentary He called the film an all too frequently pallid drama and said it proves that the trials and tribulations of the rich like those of the poor can be undramatic 12 Writing in the Los Angeles Times film critic Philip K Scheuer praised Vaughn but said that the performances were otherwise not exceptional in a film that chuffs and chugs along the Main Line for 130 minutes Scheuer asserted that even the climactic trial sequence was overlong 13 New York Daily News critic Dorothy Masters wrote that the essence of the Powell novel seems to have vaporized in coming to the screen Sherman s direction she said evokes more awe than empathy 14 Accolades editAward Category Nominee s Result Ref Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor Robert Vaughn Nominated 15 Best Cinematography Black and White Harry Stradling NominatedBest Costume Design Black and White Howard Shoup NominatedGolden Globe Awards Best Supporting Actor Motion Picture Robert Vaughn Nominated 16 Laurel Awards Top Male Supporting Performance 4th PlaceThe film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists 2008 AFI s 10 Top 10 Nominated Courtroom Drama Film 17 See also editList of American films of 1959References edit a b The Young Philadelphians at the American Film Institute Catalog 1959 Probable Domestic Take Variety January 6 1960 p 34 The Young Philadelphians Turner Classic Movies Atlanta Turner Broadcasting System Time Warner Retrieved November 5 2022 Powell Richard P 1956 The Philadelphian a novel New York City Charles Scribner s Sons ASIN B000WA4UPO a b Miller Frank September 6 2011 The Young Philadelphians www tcm com Retrieved 2023 08 15 a b c d Levy Shawn 2010 09 25 Paul Newman A Life Aurum ISBN 978 1 84513 654 3 Hanson Peter 2015 08 13 Dalton Trumbo Hollywood Rebel A Critical Survey and Filmography McFarland pp 133 134 ISBN 978 1 4766 1041 2 Quirk Lawrence J 2009 09 16 Paul Newman A Life Updated Taylor Trade Publications pp 97 98 ISBN 978 1 58979 438 2 A Home Town Debut Variety May 6 1959 p 15 Retrieved January 8 2021 via Archive org National Boxoffice Survey Variety May 27 1959 p 7 Retrieved December 22 2020 via Archive org The Young Philadelphians Rotten Tomatoes www rottentomatoes com 1959 05 30 Retrieved 2023 08 14 Weiler A H 1959 05 22 Young Philadelphians New York Times Retrieved 2023 08 14 Scheuer Philip K 22 May 1959 Philadelphians Travels Main Line The Los Angeles Times p 11 Part II via Newspapers com Masters Dorothy 22 May 1959 Film Depicts Philly Society at Criterion Daily News p 91 Retrieved 15 August 2023 via Newspapers com The 32nd Academy Awards 1960 Nominees and Winners Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved August 21 2011 The Young Philadelphians Golden Globe Awards Retrieved August 13 2023 AFI s 10 Top 10 Nominees PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 16 Retrieved 2016 08 19 External links editThe Young Philadelphians at the American Film Institute Catalog The Young Philadelphians at AllMovie The Young Philadelphians at IMDb The Young Philadelphians at the TCM Movie Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Young Philadelphians amp oldid 1170537728, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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