Second Honeymoon
Theatrical release poster
Directed byWalter Lang
Written byKathryn Scola
Darrell Ware
Story byPhilip Wylie
Produced byRaymond Griffith
StarringTyrone Power
Loretta Young
Stuart Erwin
CinematographyErnest Palmer
Edited byWalter Thompson
Music byCyril J. Mockridge
Production
company
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • November 13, 1937 (1937-11-13)
Running time
84 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Second Honeymoon is a 1937 American screwball romantic comedy film directed by Walter Lang and starring Tyrone Power, Loretta Young and Stuart Erwin. Based on a story by Philip Wylie it was distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox. A comedy of remarriage, it was overshadowed by the similar The Awful Truth released the same year.[1]

In 1942, Twentieth Century-Fox released another film based on the same source, entitled Springtime in the Rockies, which was directed by Irving Cummings and starred Betty Grable, John Payne, Carmen Miranda and Cesar Romero.

Plot

The newly remarried Vicky (Loretta Young) is on vacation in Palm Beach with her second husband Bob Benton (Lyle Talbot) a Yale-man. One night Vicky finds her first husband Raoul McLiesh (Tyrone Power) on the terrace of the ballroom, and they skip between kissing as if they never divorced and the distant way of two not married people. As he is introduced to her second husband Bob, they have a certain complicity against Vicky, and McLiesh not only finds himself with a valet - Leo MacTavish (Stuart Erwin) - but also with a raccoon, sent him from Bob. He decides to stay at the hotel as his first wife seems more beautiful than ever. The next evening McLiesh brings a young girl - a cigarette-girl met on the road somewhere, Joy (Marjorie Weaver), who makes Vicky jealous, as her husband flirts with her. While businessman husband Bob has to leave, Vicky and Raoul get closer.

"You're the only real thing that ever happened to me. Don't let me go this time, please don't!", Vicky says one night to Raoul. And while Raoul's valet Leo McTavish marries Joy, Bob, Vicky and Raoul are in a storm of emotions trying to find their way to one or another.

Cast

References

  1. Dick p.100

Bibliography

  • Dick, Bernard F. Hollywood Madonna: Loretta Young. University Press of Mississippi, 2011.


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