Tugboat Annie (1933) - Turner Classic Movies

Tugboat Annie


1h 27m 1933
Tugboat Annie

Brief Synopsis

A lady tugboat captain tries to help two young lovers come together.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Drama
Release Date
Aug 4, 1933
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Distribution Company
Loew's Inc.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the "Tugboat Annie " short stories by Norman Reilly Raine in The Saturday Evening Post

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 27m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
9 reels

Synopsis

Annie Brennan, known in Secoma as one of the best skippers in the Pacific Northwest, finds her boat Narcissus frequently outmaneuvred by rival Red Severn. Her son Alec adores his mother and wants to quit school to take care of her, convinced that his alcoholic father Terry can't. Annie, however, loves Terry, and although they frequently fight, she thinks that when sober he is the finest man in the world. Schooling and hard work later enable Alec to become the youngest ship's master on the Pacific Coast. He works for a company now owned by Severn, and he and Severn's daughter Pat plan to marry. Annie and Terry are delighted, but Terry's happiness over Alec still cannot keep him away from drinking. When Alec helps his father get a job with Severn, Terry loses it when he drunkenly corners Severn in his office. Convinced that Terry will never change, Alec begs his mother to leave her husband and allow him to take care of her, but she refuses. Forcing her to choose between them, Alec leaves when she says that she must stay with Terry. A short time later, Terry's negligence results in an accident that causes them to lose ownership of the Narcissus . They then find themselves sailing her as a garbage scow under someone else's ownership. Several months later, Alec still refuses to see his parents, even though Pat tries to bring them together. When his ship, the Glacier Queen , is endangered by a large storm, Annie and Terry go to its rescue. Although the boilers on the Narcisssus are at the breaking point, Terry fixes them in time to save both ships, but, in doing so, is seriously burned. While he is recovering from his burns, Terry promises once again to give up drinking. Although she knows better, Annie is happy to have her family together again and to have the whole world know what a fine man Terry is.

Film Details

Genre
Comedy
Drama
Release Date
Aug 4, 1933
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Distribution Company
Loew's Inc.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the "Tugboat Annie " short stories by Norman Reilly Raine in The Saturday Evening Post

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 27m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
9 reels

Articles

Tugboat Annie


They were one of the most unlikely romantic teams in Hollywood history. Large and unlovely Marie Dressler and gruff, pug-faced Wallace Beery were well past middle age when they became movie stars and fan favorites in the early 1930s. The careers of both had been languishing before the coming of sound, but talking pictures made the most of their unique personalities and talents. In their first film together, Min and Bill (1930), Dressler and Beery proved that they not only had star quality individually, but that they had great chemistry together. With Tugboat Annie (1933), their second film as a team, it appeared that they were beginning what would be a successful film series.

Based on the Saturday Evening Post stories about a female tugboat captain and her alcoholic but loveable husband, Tugboat Annie was more than a little reminiscent of Min and Bill, with its working class denizens of the waterfront. The plot has the couple's son (Robert Young) ashamed of his drunken father, and Annie trying to make a living and keep the family together.

A vaudeville headliner and movie star in the 'teens, Dressler's career was pretty much over a decade later, when her old friend, M-G-M screenwriter Frances Marion persuaded the studio's production head Irving Thalberg to cast Dressler in The Callahans and the Murphys (1927) with Polly Moran. The film was not a success, but Dressler plugged away in supporting roles. It wasn't until the advent of talkies that she became a star, thanks to her warmth and versatility; she was equally good in comic and dramatic roles. By the time she won an Academy Award for her performance in Min and Bill, she was M-G-M's highest-paid star and number one at the box office, according to an exhibitors' poll. She would hold that position for three consecutive years.

Like Dressler, her onscreen partner Wallace Beery had been working as a freelance character actor for more than a dozen years, playing mostly heavies, before he was signed by M-G-M and his fortunes changed. Beery won his own Oscar for The Champ (1931). Re-teaming him with Dressler was a logical move, and a film based on Norman Reilly Raine's colorful characters was ideal for them.

To direct Tugboat Annie, Thalberg borrowed Mervyn LeRoy from Warner Bros, where he had made hits such as Little Caesar (1931) and I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932). When production began on Tugboat Annie, Dressler was already seriously ill with the cancer that would take her life the following year. LeRoy was aware of her illness and accommodated the schedule so she could work only three hours a day. On one occasion, according to LeRoy, Beery grew impatient waiting for Dressler to arrive, grumbling, "Get the old bag in here. I'll be in my dressing room." LeRoy scolded him, and Beery apologized. From then on, Beery was kind and considerate to his co-star.

Tugboat Annie was one of the top moneymakers of 1933, beloved by public and critics alike. Mordaunt Hall wrote in the New York Times, "That grand actress, Marie Dressler, delivers an even more effective characterization than usual.... Not only is Miss Dressler's part more satisfactory than those she had in her previous pictorial ventures, but the story, with all its rambunctious mirth and its spells of sentiment, is superior to other vehicles." Variety raved, "One of those rare naturals in the picture business - a flicker that sells itself immediately the stars' names go into the lights. Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery are both soft and sweet for business, and when there's a picture to back them up, as in this instance, there is no question at all about the results."

There was talk of a sequel, but Dressler was too sick. Time magazine, in a laudatory cover story on Dressler (it called her "indisputably the most valuable performer in Hollywood") shortly after the film's premiere, mentions that she had an operation for a tumor the previous winter, and "works less than she used to do." Tugboat Annie was one of her final movies. She died the following year.

After Dressler's death, Beery was frequently teamed with Marjorie Main in a vain attempt to recapture the chemistry he'd had with Dressler. The character of Tugboat Annie lived on in two films, Tugboat Annie Sails Again (1940), with Marjorie Rambeau and Alan Hale, and Captain Tugboat Annie (1945) with Jane Darwell and Edgar Kennedy. A Canadian-produced TV series, The Adventures of Tugboat Annie (1957-61), featured Minerva Urecal in the title role. And Norman Reilly Raine's Tugboat Annie stories continued in the Saturday Evening Post until Raine's death in 1971. None of these incarnations, however, could rival the indelible impression left by Dressler in one of her best roles.

Producer: Irving Thalberg
Director: Mervyn LeRoy
Screenplay: Zelda Sears, Eve Greene (both adaptation); Norman Reilly Raine (additional dialogue and stories)
Cinematography: Gregg Toland
Art Direction: Merrill Pye
Music: Paul Marquardt (uncredited)
Film Editing: Blanche Sewell
Cast: Marie Dressler (Annie Brennan), Wallace Beery (Terry Brennan), Robert Young (Alexander 'Alec' Brennan), Maureen O'Sullivan (Patricia 'Pat' Severn), Willard Robertson (Red Severn), Tammany Young (Shif'less), Frankie Darro (Alec as a child), Jack Pennick (Pete), Paul Hurst (Sam).
BW-85m. Closed captioning.

by Margarita Landazuri
Tugboat Annie

Tugboat Annie

They were one of the most unlikely romantic teams in Hollywood history. Large and unlovely Marie Dressler and gruff, pug-faced Wallace Beery were well past middle age when they became movie stars and fan favorites in the early 1930s. The careers of both had been languishing before the coming of sound, but talking pictures made the most of their unique personalities and talents. In their first film together, Min and Bill (1930), Dressler and Beery proved that they not only had star quality individually, but that they had great chemistry together. With Tugboat Annie (1933), their second film as a team, it appeared that they were beginning what would be a successful film series. Based on the Saturday Evening Post stories about a female tugboat captain and her alcoholic but loveable husband, Tugboat Annie was more than a little reminiscent of Min and Bill, with its working class denizens of the waterfront. The plot has the couple's son (Robert Young) ashamed of his drunken father, and Annie trying to make a living and keep the family together. A vaudeville headliner and movie star in the 'teens, Dressler's career was pretty much over a decade later, when her old friend, M-G-M screenwriter Frances Marion persuaded the studio's production head Irving Thalberg to cast Dressler in The Callahans and the Murphys (1927) with Polly Moran. The film was not a success, but Dressler plugged away in supporting roles. It wasn't until the advent of talkies that she became a star, thanks to her warmth and versatility; she was equally good in comic and dramatic roles. By the time she won an Academy Award for her performance in Min and Bill, she was M-G-M's highest-paid star and number one at the box office, according to an exhibitors' poll. She would hold that position for three consecutive years. Like Dressler, her onscreen partner Wallace Beery had been working as a freelance character actor for more than a dozen years, playing mostly heavies, before he was signed by M-G-M and his fortunes changed. Beery won his own Oscar for The Champ (1931). Re-teaming him with Dressler was a logical move, and a film based on Norman Reilly Raine's colorful characters was ideal for them. To direct Tugboat Annie, Thalberg borrowed Mervyn LeRoy from Warner Bros, where he had made hits such as Little Caesar (1931) and I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932). When production began on Tugboat Annie, Dressler was already seriously ill with the cancer that would take her life the following year. LeRoy was aware of her illness and accommodated the schedule so she could work only three hours a day. On one occasion, according to LeRoy, Beery grew impatient waiting for Dressler to arrive, grumbling, "Get the old bag in here. I'll be in my dressing room." LeRoy scolded him, and Beery apologized. From then on, Beery was kind and considerate to his co-star. Tugboat Annie was one of the top moneymakers of 1933, beloved by public and critics alike. Mordaunt Hall wrote in the New York Times, "That grand actress, Marie Dressler, delivers an even more effective characterization than usual.... Not only is Miss Dressler's part more satisfactory than those she had in her previous pictorial ventures, but the story, with all its rambunctious mirth and its spells of sentiment, is superior to other vehicles." Variety raved, "One of those rare naturals in the picture business - a flicker that sells itself immediately the stars' names go into the lights. Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery are both soft and sweet for business, and when there's a picture to back them up, as in this instance, there is no question at all about the results." There was talk of a sequel, but Dressler was too sick. Time magazine, in a laudatory cover story on Dressler (it called her "indisputably the most valuable performer in Hollywood") shortly after the film's premiere, mentions that she had an operation for a tumor the previous winter, and "works less than she used to do." Tugboat Annie was one of her final movies. She died the following year. After Dressler's death, Beery was frequently teamed with Marjorie Main in a vain attempt to recapture the chemistry he'd had with Dressler. The character of Tugboat Annie lived on in two films, Tugboat Annie Sails Again (1940), with Marjorie Rambeau and Alan Hale, and Captain Tugboat Annie (1945) with Jane Darwell and Edgar Kennedy. A Canadian-produced TV series, The Adventures of Tugboat Annie (1957-61), featured Minerva Urecal in the title role. And Norman Reilly Raine's Tugboat Annie stories continued in the Saturday Evening Post until Raine's death in 1971. None of these incarnations, however, could rival the indelible impression left by Dressler in one of her best roles. Producer: Irving Thalberg Director: Mervyn LeRoy Screenplay: Zelda Sears, Eve Greene (both adaptation); Norman Reilly Raine (additional dialogue and stories) Cinematography: Gregg Toland Art Direction: Merrill Pye Music: Paul Marquardt (uncredited) Film Editing: Blanche Sewell Cast: Marie Dressler (Annie Brennan), Wallace Beery (Terry Brennan), Robert Young (Alexander 'Alec' Brennan), Maureen O'Sullivan (Patricia 'Pat' Severn), Willard Robertson (Red Severn), Tammany Young (Shif'less), Frankie Darro (Alec as a child), Jack Pennick (Pete), Paul Hurst (Sam). BW-85m. Closed captioning. by Margarita Landazuri

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

The first "Tugboat Annie" story was published in The Saturday Evening Post in the July 11, 1931 issue, and others appeared frequently in that magazine until author Norman Reilly Raine's death in 1971. A book by Raine entitled Tugboat Annie was published in New York in 1934. Portions of the picture were shot on location in and around Seattle, WA. A news item in Hollywood Reporter on July 24, 1933, noted that director Sam Wood was assigned to reshoot part of this picture in place of Mervyn LeRoy, who was then preparing another picture for Warner Bros. Dressler had previously had co-starred with Wallace Beery in a similar role in Min and Bill, made for M-G-M in 1930 (see AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1921-30; F2. 3632), for which she received an Academy Award. They also appeared in M-G-M's multi-star 1933 film Dinner at Eight released shortly after this Tugboat Annie. The film was one of the top ten money-makers of 1933. The character "Tugboat Annie" was revived in a 1940 Warner Bros. film directed by Lewis Seiler entitled Tugboat Annie Sails Again (see below), starring Marjorie Rambeau and Alan Hale, and a 1945 Republic Pictures release entitled Captain Tugboat Annie directed by Phil Rosen, starring Jane Darwell and Edgar Kennedy. A series based on the Raine characters appeared on television in 1957 under the title The Adventures of Tugboat Annie, and starred Minerva Urecal.