Actions Panel
Sass Mouth Dames Film Club series 22
Megan McGurk introduces four classic woman's pictures from the first half of the 1940s.
When and where
Date and time
Location
Brooks Hotel Cinema Brooks Hotel 59 Drury Street D02 C521 Dublin 2 Ireland
Map and directions
How to get there
Refund Policy
About this event
Take a Letter, Darling (1942)Screens 5 January at 7.00
Office politics are turned upside down in this whip-smart comedy from Mitchell Leisen. Rosalind Russell plays an advertising executive who lands multi-million accounts, but she needs a man on her arm to appear non-threatening to the wives and sweethearts of men in business. Fred MacMurray becomes her personal secretary and soon feels de-sexed by the subordinate role. Roz cornered the market on career gal roles during the 1940s.
Lady of Burlesque (1943)Screens 12 January at 7.00
Barbara Stanwyck could do anything, and that includes break-dancing and singing about her G-string. William Wellman directs the ultimate crossover in woman’s pictures: Barbara Stanwyck plays Gypsy Rose Lee, America’s most celebrated burlesque queen, who had a name so red-hot, the censors wouldn’t even allow it to appear on the big screen.
No Time for Love (1943)Screens 19 January at 7.00
Due to the war effort, the man shortage was at an all-time high by 1943. You know the song about how they’re either too young or too old? Director Mitch Leisen knew what women wanted was to see burly bare-chested men roll around in the mud. The women were horny, and Claudette Colbert showed them what to do about it when she snapped photos of Fred MacMurray looking like a caveman.
Lady on a Train (1945)Screens 26 January at 7.0
Deanna Durbin’s pictures in the 1930s were such box office hits that she singlehandedly kept the lights on at Universal studio when she was only a child. It’s a cinch she could solve a murder mystery. She gives a glorious performance as a singing detective. I feel compelled to mention Deanna’s wardrobe by Howard Greer. She wears so many mad hats you simply don’t want to miss.