Sally and Saint Anne (1952) is a
sweet and silly souvenir of a time when movies unabashedly basked in a warm
glow of nostalgia even if the story was intended to be current and
modern. We have the strange feeling watching this that the filmmakers
knew they were preserving an era, and we, the audience in the future, are the
proverbial fly on the wall. As such, we may enjoy it more than the
original audience did.
The following is an excerpt from my book, ANN BLYTH: ACTRESS. SINGER. STAR.
Though one could call this a family movie, in a time when most films were
suitable for the whole family this quiet little gem is unfettered by the
dubious yoke of being wholesome. It is
wholesome, too, but it is also a sly parody of doctrine, dogma, and a boldly
tongue-in-cheek look at the peculiarities of the highly ritualistic Catholic
faith. As such, it is as courageously unselfconscious about what it is as
is the main character—a teenage girl pursuing an unselfconscious friendship
with a saint to whom she prays, and her family of screwballs unselfconsciously
pursuing their own happiness.
Sally and Saint Anne... was the last film she made for
Universal-International. She gets top billing here. Her contract
ended in December 1952. Columnist Louella Parsons noted: “She started
there when she was fourteen, and everyone from William Goetz [studio head] to
the gateman has wonderful things to say about her.”
She ages from about twelve years old to eighteen in this film,
with remarkable authenticity. It helps that, Ann being small to begin
with, several of her friends are taller, but Ann also moves with the gangly
awkwardness of a pre-teen, bounces with happiness, droops with disappointment,
and her young face registers a parade of unharnessed and unfiltered thoughts
and emotions. Most especially that voice, which we’ve noted as malleable
in several films, here changes instantly like flicking a light switch when she
grows up—yet her performance is without gimmick and completely natural.
We can hardly believe she was twenty-three years old at the time.
She roller skates quite well (she doesn’t do any tap dancing on skates like
Gene Kelly, but it’s still pretty good), and when an errant football goes
astray on the playground, she catches it in the old breadbasket while
continuing a conversation with her friends, and fires it back like Joe Namath.
If you catch a glint of shine on Ann’s teeth, it’s the braces. It had
to have been somebody’s idea of a gag to put faux braces on the most perfect
set of natural teeth in Hollywood.
As the film opens, we see by the graphic on a passing newspaper delivery
truck that we are in a small town called Middleton and so we know from the
beginning this is an ordinary place of no great consequence. Despite
Saint Anne getting billing in the title, this is no religious epic; it’s more
like a buddy picture. There aren’t really any miracles in the movie,
either, except the very real miracle how a girl blossoms into a young lady.
Ann is tearing through her parochial school looking for her missing
lunchbox. Another girl, busily eating her own lunch, shrugs her shoulders
and laconically tells her to pray to St. Anthony, “Finding things is his
racket,” and “He’ll do anything for a few Hail Marys.” A delightfully casual, if not irreverent
reflection on Catholic protocol.
Recess will be over soon, and she’s wasted enough time, so Ann heads next
door to the church, and in a businesslike manner, yanks the chapel veil out of
her school uniform pocket and plunks it on her head as she genuflects upon
entering and heads up the long aisle to plea bargain with the statue of St.
Anthony. But the bell rings and she can’t make it, and she gets overrun
by other girls rushing back to class, so Ann glances up at the closest statue
to her, Saint Anne, and says, “Will you help me find my lunchbox, please? I was gonna pray to St. Anthony, but I
haven’t got time.”
It’s not a very flowery prayer, but yet reverent because she really believes
she’s asking for the aid of somebody who really can help. As she heads
back to class, one of the nuns tells her she’s wanted in the office of the
Mother Superior. It’s not because Herman Shumlin and Lillian Hellman are
waiting there wanting her to read for a part in Watch in the Rhine.
There, on Mother Superior’s desk she sees her lunchbox and she’s thrilled
the prayer worked so quickly. However, it was actually returned by John
McIntire, who plays a Snidely Whiplash sort of comic villain in this role that
he really sinks his teeth into, especially his garish, gold snaggle-tooth,
which is why he is called Goldtooth McCarthy. He found the lunchbox on
the back of his ice truck, where Ann had stolen a ride. He is an oily,
conniving fellow, recently become a ward alderman and he has a longstanding
feud with Ann’s family.
For her punishment, Ann has to write “I must not steal rides on motor
vehicles” on the blackboards that line all four sides of her classroom.
We have to pity the poor set dresser that had to really write all that. After school, madder than a wet hen and
spitting nails, Ann stomps back to church, smacks the chapel veil on her head,
and has it out with Saint Anne like a very angry customer at a complaint
department. She calls Saint Anne a “snitcher” and with tears of
frustration in her voice, she gives one last parting shot, “And another thing,
instead of making trouble for kids, you’d do better to give that McCarthy a
black eye!”
On Sunday, when Ann is late for church, her father, mother, and three older
brothers are already in the pew. The
Mass is half over, and Ann tries to sneak into a packed, quiet church in very
squeaky shoes, like she’s walking a tightrope. Anyone who’s ever had to
do this knows her agony. The priest is trying to read announcements and
Ann’s monstrous squeaks tearing through his speech and echoing through the
church is hysterical. Finally she gets close to where her family is
sitting and her mother grabs her roughly and yanks her into the pew.
The priest, played by George Mathews, is a curmudgeon, not one of the
typical movie jovial or saintly fellows, no Bing Crosby, Spencer Tracy, or Pat
O’Brien. He’s just a guy trying to get his job done, squeaky shoes or no,
and she’s stealing his thunder. He tells us it is the first Sunday after
Easter, and one of the quiet joys of this movie is that it takes place in
spring. There is a gentle restfulness, the delightful sunshine and the
anticipation of the warmer weather to come. That wonderful
end-of-the-school-year feeling we may recall from childhood.
Collecting herself after her public embarrassment, Ann glances up at the
statue of Saint Anne, and repeats her insult, “Snitcher!” and turning, being
shushed by her mother, looks across the church and sees John McIntire sitting
in his own pew—with a black eye.
The explosive smile of awestruck happiness on her face is something
wonderful, and she snuggles down in her pew, stealing delighted glances at
Saint Anne. She is not amazed at an apparent miracle—hardly; she has been
spoon-fed on tales of miracles and the lives of the saints since she made her
First Communion—she’s just tickled to pieces that she got to go to the head of
line for favors for once in her life. This is a girl who’s always late,
always losing things, always in trouble at school. Suddenly, a big-time
saint answers her prayer—she thinks—and it’s like not having to wait in the
long line at an exclusive nightclub because the star has come out onto the
sidewalk and walked arm-in-arm with you inside and escorted you to the best
table in the house. You are Somebody.
She solidifies her new relationship with her now amiga saint by buying a smaller, but still hefty, statue of Saint
Anne for her bedroom and creates a little shrine on a small table with a votive
candle. Saint Anne becomes her roomie, the friend who came for a
sleepover and stayed.
More miracles happen. Not big miracles, maybe not miracles at all, but
to a twelve-year old, getting all her work done on time and not being kept
after school could seem pretty miraculous. The other girls at school have
problems, too, and they ask Ann to put in a good for word for them. Her
reputation is growing around town. But she’s no Bernadette of Lourdes
(besides, Jennifer Jones already got that job, though Ann would play her on
radio); she freely admits of her prayers, “It don’t always work.”
But we have the feeling she just likes an excuse to chat with her
patron. She writes requests in a pocket notebook and brings the matters
up with Saint Anne. Her moments of prayer are really more like gossipy
conversations with a girlfriend (“I had such a good day today, Saint Anne!”),
and it’s poignant and funny that she can so freely unburden herself to the
image of a saint, as naturally as if she were talking to a favorite aunt.
Then the transformation comes from girl to young woman. One moment she
wonders when she will be allowed to get her braces off, because then she will
be a woman, she thinks, and the camera pans down to her notebook beside the
statue. Then, as if continuing her prayer, her voice deepens, resonates
with not just emotional, but actually vocal maturity, her diction is ladylike,
and the single notebook has become a stack of them as the camera pans up on a
now taller (she’s looking Saint Anne in the eye) young woman, a high school
senior, with the loveliness and poise we could not have imagined when she was a
kid wishing black eyes on people.
She talks to Saint Anne about a new problem now. Goldtooth McIntire,
still an alderman, has increased his political power and his wealth, and he
backed a city plan to construct a new highway through town—right where their
house is. Their house will be torn down.
Though this problem will hang over their heads until the end of the movie,
this is still a story made up of a string of small everyday moments. A
glamorous new friend from Boston comes into her life, played with snobbish
sophistication by Kathleen Hughes, who, as soon as they get past the gates of
school at the end of the day, wantonly puts her hair up and applies
makeup. Ann curiously, and bit enviously, watches her friend’s expertise
with lipstick.
The drugstore soda fountain, and the wonderfully dorky soda jerk played by
Robert Nichols who works the counter like a Las Vegas showman is introduced,
and then the handsome guy back from college, played by Palmer Lee (also
known as Gregg Palmer) on whom Ann has a crush—but he goes for the high-tone
friend, leaving Ann out in the cold.
Other scenes involve the daily troubles of Ann’s family of misfits: her
father, played by Otto Hulett, a blustering working man who fantasizes about
choking John McIntire. Her mother,
played by Frances (Andy Griffith’s Aunt Bee) Bavier, is funny, sweetly vague
and a bit dotty, but Mama rules the roost, constantly peeling apples or
potatoes. “You were the only one born in the hospital, Sally. Maybe
that’s what makes you so different from the boys.”
Her three brothers, an unsuccessful musician and composer, played by Lamont
Johnson; an unsuccessful magician, who can’t even do a decent card trick,
played by Jack Kelly; and an unsuccessful boxer, played by a punch-drunk Hugh
O’Brian, training there in the living room with perpetual family guest Hymie,
played by King Donovan.
Most especially, there is grandpa, played by Edmund Gwenn. He took to
his bed twenty years ago, but he’s not sick. He’s just contemplative and
sees no reason to get up. The priest comes to pay a sick call, trying to
get him to make his peace with the Lord, and they always end up fighting,
because Grandpa loves to egg him on with irrelevant philosophical
arguments. The priest is grouchily
dubious about Ann’s taking petitions for prayer, but asks her to request a new
church roof, all the same. “I can put you down for a week from Tuesday,
Father. If anyone drops out, I’ll push it up.”
Grandpa solves the problem of them losing their home. He owns an empty
lot across town, and decides they will move their beloved house to that
lot. The menagerie is a bit like the Sycamore family of You Can’t Take it With You, and soon
they will have one more hanger-on: the local heartthrob Palmer Lee, home from
college.
Especially endearing is the exchange between Ann and Mr. Shapiro, the local
grocer, played by Joe Mell. His wife’s expecting and he desperately wants
a boy this time because he’s already got three daughters. Ann writes down
his wish in her notebook. “One boy. Mr. Shapiro.” He’s officially on her list of petitions to
St. Anne.
He’s a jovial guy who shakes his head at her innocence. “Why would an
Irish saint go out of her way for a guy like me?”
“Mr. Shapiro, Saint Anne was the grandmother of Jesus.”
He shrugs, “So?”
“So she isn’t Irish at all. She’s Jewish.”
Mr. Shapiro gives her fond grins and free pickles. But Saint Anne
takes a back seat for a while as Ann tackles her current woe of lovesickness on
her own and undergoes another transformation. Jealous of her Boston snob
ex-friend, who is latching onto the college boy on whom Ann has a crush, she
listens to Grandpa’s advice and gussies up for the country club dance.
The soda jerk is taking her.
Pop tells her and her date that she must be home by 11:30, because the house
movers are coming tonight—it being easier to move a house, apparently, when
there is less traffic. An older woman
friend, very chic (who recently got engaged because Ann filed the request on
her behalf with Saint Anne), makes Ann over into a Vogue fashion plate. We know Ann is now considered sexy
because the minute she steps out the door, we can hear the sultry moaning of a
saxophone. A saxophone always indicates
the presence of a femme fatale in classic films. Very handy, in case
we’ve missed the point.
She wows them at the country club. A couple of quite funny scenes:
first, Ann’s dorky date, who is apparently a hepcat, manhandles her into a
frenetic dance, in which after a few stunned and clumsy moments, she actually
follows him pretty well. They are the center of attention. She
artfully attempts to maintain her pretended sophistication while involved in
the silliest of ballroom calisthenics. College Boy is bowled over at her
sexiness, and departs with her to the bar, where she orders a martini because
she sees the word printed on a cocktail napkin.
Fortunately, the bartender, new on the job, is a friend of her
brother’s. He looks after her, and puts plain water in her martini
glass. When she realizes this, after an anxious sip, she smiles with
relief and catches his wink. She boldly toasts the young man she is
trying to impress, “Down the hatch!” and bolts the water like a sailor.
Then she orders a double.
**************************
For more on the delightful Sally and Saint Anne, and her career, have a look at my book -- Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star.
Also available in eBook at:
...and a variety of other online shops!
For more on my other books and plays, please see my website: JacquelineTLynch.com
"Lynch’s book is organized and well-written – and has plenty of amusing observations – but when it comes to describing Blyth’s movies, Lynch’s writing sparkles." - Ruth Kerr, Silver Screenings
"Jacqueline T. Lynch creates a poignant and thoroughly-researched mosaic of memories of a fine, upstanding human being who also happens to be a legendary entertainer." - Deborah Thomas, Java's Journey
"One of the great strengths of Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. is that Lynch not only gives an excellent overview of Blyth's career -- she offers detailed analyses of each of Blyth's roles -- but she puts them in the context of the larger issues of the day."- Amanda Garrett, Old Hollywood Films
"Jacqueline's book will hopefully cause many more people to take a look at this multitalented woman whose career encompassed just about every possible aspect of 20th Century entertainment." - Laura Grieve, Laura's Miscellaneous Musings''
"Jacqueline T. Lynch’s Ann Blyth: Actress. Singer. Star. is an extremely well researched undertaking that is a must for all Blyth fans." - Annette Bochenek, Hometowns to Hollywood