Warner Bros. created a mother-love story to rival Madame X (1929, 1937, 1966) or Stella Dallas (1925, 1937) with the 1932 drama Illegal. In addition to tugging at the heartstrings with its tale of an abandoned wife who goes into crime to raise her daughters properly, it features powerhouse performances from its two female stars.

The story for Illegal was created by producer Irving Asher, who managed Warner's Teddington Studios in England from 1932 until 1938, when he created his own company to produce the aviation adventure Q Planes (1939). Helping him complete the screenplay was Roland Pertwee, one of many outstanding British screenwriters who worked at Teddington through the years. He would go on to write Kicking the Moon Around (1938), which marked Maureen O'Hara's screen debut, and Madonna of the Seven Moons (1945), the British film industry's bid to produce an historical romance to rival Hollywood. His son, Jon, would become the third Doctor Who on the long-running BBC series. Asher assigned the direction to William McGann, a U.S. director imported from Hollywood to help get Warner's British studio up and running. He would return to the Burbank lot in 1933, but though he continued at Warner's, he would never rise above their B picture unit. Eventually, he moved into the special effects department, winning an Oscar® nomination for helping Bette Davis play scenes with herself in A Stolen Life (1946).

For Illegal they created one of the screen's most self-sacrificing women. Evelyn Dean (Isobel Elsom) throws out her abusive husband after he has squandered her first husband's fortune. To support her daughters she invests what little she has left in an illegal gambling club, sending the girls to boarding school so they will never know the shame of her profession. When the police close the club and put her in prison, the girls, now grown, take it over and turn it into an honest business to pay her back for her years of sacrifice.

The mother was a plum role for Elsom, a stage veteran who had entered the movies in 1915 at the age of 18 and starred in Warner Bros.' first British production, Stranglehold (1931). Her greatest success came with the play Ladies in Retirement, which she took to Broadway and then filmed in 1941, playing a vain, retired actress tormenting her housekeeper (Ida Lupino played the role on film). From that point, she remained in Hollywood, playing the widow who escaped unharmed from Charles Chaplin's lady killer Monsieur Verdoux (1947), the grande dame foil to Jerry Lewis in such films as The Errand Boy (1961) and Who's Minding the Store? (1963) and Mrs. Eynsford-Hill in the film version of My Fair Lady (1964).

At the start of her career was Margot Grahame, cast as Elsom's more reckless daughter. The showy role, which gave her the chance to sing for the customers while wearing slinky gowns, was part of Grahame's rise to stardom in England, where she would soon be billed as their answer to Jean Harlow. Where Harlow as dubbed "The Platinum Blonde," Grahame would be "The Aluminum Blonde." As she became the highest-paid star in British films, she naturally caught Hollywood's eye, winning an RKO contract in 1935. There, her most famous role was as the prostitute for whom Victor McLaglen betrays the IRA in The Informer (1935). In addition, she played Milady de Winter in The Three Musketeers (1935) and the French society girl in love with Jean Lafitte (Fredric March) in The Buccaneer (1938). After that, she returned to England, dying her hair red and concentrating on stage work. By that point, she had lost her momentum as a film star, and her remaining roles -- including The Crimson Pirate (1952), with Burt Lancaster; The Beggar's Opera (1953), with Laurence Olivier; and Saint Joan (1957), her last picture -- were a far cry from her days as England's top female star.

Producer: Irving Asher
Director: William C. McGann
Screenplay: Irving Asher, Roland Pertwee
Cinematography: Willard Van Enger
Art Direction: J.T. Garside
Music: Billy Gerhardi
Cast: Isobel Elsom (Mrs. Evelyn Dean), Ivor Barnard (Albert), D.A. Clarke-Smith (Franklyn Dean), Margot Grahame (Dorothy Turner), Moira Lynd (Ann Turner), Edgar Norfolk (Lord Alan Sevington).
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by Frank Miller