Mary Stevens, M.D. (1933) - Turner Classic Movies

Mary Stevens, M.D.


1h 12m 1933
Mary Stevens, M.D.

Brief Synopsis

A woman doctor decides to have a baby without benefit of marriage.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Release Date
Jul 22, 1933
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
The Vitaphone Corp.; Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 12m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
8 reels

Synopsis

Dr. Mary Stevens is in love with Don Andrews, a fellow physician, but he is attracted to, and eventually marries, Lois Rising, the beautiful but selfish daughter of politician Walter Rising. Don receives a political appointment, but his marriage quickly deteriorates, and as Lois becomes bored, Don begins to drink. He is indicted for graft and leaves town while his father-in-law attempts to extricate him from the charges. At a resort, Don unexpectedly meets Mary, who is now a very successful pediatrician. They rekindle their old love, have an affair, and Don agrees to divorce Lois. When they return to New York, Rising has cleared Don and in return demands that he remain married to Lois. Mary, who is pregnant, leaves for Paris, has her baby, and returns by ship. When her baby and two others contract polio, she manages to save the other two, but her own baby dies. By the time she reaches New York, Don has resigned and has gotten his divorce, but Mary, in her grief, decides to commit suicide. She is stopped by her devoted nurse Glenda, who convinces her to help a baby who has swallowed a pin. Mary extracts the pin, saving the child, and her own purpose in life is restored. Finally, Don and Mary are both free to marry and start a new life together.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Release Date
Jul 22, 1933
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
The Vitaphone Corp.; Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 12m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
8 reels

Articles

Mary Stevens, M.D.


Kay Francis was at the pinnacle of her popularity in 1933, the year she starred in Mary Stevens, M.D. and four other Warner Bros. films. Recognized as the movies's outstanding clotheshorse and a favorite of fan magazines, she would soon be named as the studio's highest-paid female star. Taking time out from her usual languishing in satins and furs, Francis plays a pediatrician in Mary Stevens,M.D. (1933), a spicy pre-Code drama. After becoming professionally successful despite prejudices of the day against female doctors, Dr. Stevens has an illicit affair and travels to Europe to give birth in secret. She faces both professional and personal crises on the trip home, when her nursing of sick babies in steerage leads to her own baby becoming gravely ill.

The scene in which Dr. Stevens regains her purpose in life is quite startling. Called to the rescue when her janitor's small son swallows a safety pin, she saves the day by removing a hairpin and poking it down the child's throat to remove the offending object. "Wonder what a man would have done with this," the character muses. "What, indeed?" asks Jeanine Basinger in her book A Woman's View. "Without hairpins - without fashion - he would have been lost."

By the end of the 1930s, Francis had lost her fan base and her prestige at Warner Bros., where a less glamorous but more volatile actress named Bette Davis began getting all the plum parts and studio attention. Finishing out her Warners contract in ignominious B-movies, Francis did nothing to salvage her once-glorious career. "I can't wait to leave Hollywood," she said in an interview. "I want to get fat, I want to do nothing. I want to sit on my back porch in a rocker and not even think."

Producer: Hal B. Wallis
Director: Lloyd Bacon
Art Direction: Esdras Hartley
Costume Design: Orry-Kelly
Screenplay: Rian James, Robert Lord (from a novel by Virginia Kellogg)
Cinematography: Sidney Hickox
Editing: Ray Curtiss
Music: Leo F. Forbstein, Bernhard Kaun
Cast: Kay Francis (Mary Stevens), Lyle Talbot (Don Andrews), Glenda Farrell (Glenda Carroll), Thelma Todd (Lois Rising), Una O'Connor (Arnell Simmons). BW-72m.

by Roger Fristoe
Mary Stevens, M.d.

Mary Stevens, M.D.

Kay Francis was at the pinnacle of her popularity in 1933, the year she starred in Mary Stevens, M.D. and four other Warner Bros. films. Recognized as the movies's outstanding clotheshorse and a favorite of fan magazines, she would soon be named as the studio's highest-paid female star. Taking time out from her usual languishing in satins and furs, Francis plays a pediatrician in Mary Stevens,M.D. (1933), a spicy pre-Code drama. After becoming professionally successful despite prejudices of the day against female doctors, Dr. Stevens has an illicit affair and travels to Europe to give birth in secret. She faces both professional and personal crises on the trip home, when her nursing of sick babies in steerage leads to her own baby becoming gravely ill. The scene in which Dr. Stevens regains her purpose in life is quite startling. Called to the rescue when her janitor's small son swallows a safety pin, she saves the day by removing a hairpin and poking it down the child's throat to remove the offending object. "Wonder what a man would have done with this," the character muses. "What, indeed?" asks Jeanine Basinger in her book A Woman's View. "Without hairpins - without fashion - he would have been lost." By the end of the 1930s, Francis had lost her fan base and her prestige at Warner Bros., where a less glamorous but more volatile actress named Bette Davis began getting all the plum parts and studio attention. Finishing out her Warners contract in ignominious B-movies, Francis did nothing to salvage her once-glorious career. "I can't wait to leave Hollywood," she said in an interview. "I want to get fat, I want to do nothing. I want to sit on my back porch in a rocker and not even think." Producer: Hal B. Wallis Director: Lloyd Bacon Art Direction: Esdras Hartley Costume Design: Orry-Kelly Screenplay: Rian James, Robert Lord (from a novel by Virginia Kellogg) Cinematography: Sidney Hickox Editing: Ray Curtiss Music: Leo F. Forbstein, Bernhard Kaun Cast: Kay Francis (Mary Stevens), Lyle Talbot (Don Andrews), Glenda Farrell (Glenda Carroll), Thelma Todd (Lois Rising), Una O'Connor (Arnell Simmons). BW-72m. by Roger Fristoe

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Notes

According to Warner Bros. records, Una O'Connor was borrowed from Fox. In 1936, when Warner Bros. submitted a request to the censorship office to reissue the film, Joseph Breen denied them a Code certificate.