"Keep your voice up and your dress down," someone tells Jack Benny in
Charley's Aunt (1941). It's good advice, for Benny spends most of the movie
dressed as a woman, "Donna Lucia," the aunt of his Oxford classmate Charley. The
year is 1890, and Benny plays Babbs Babberley, currently in his tenth year at the
university. His two roommates, Jack and Charley, want to woo their girlfriends
(including Anne Baxter in her third feature), but the girls' stuffy guardian (Edmund
Gwenn) is in the way. When Charley's real Aunt Donna Lucia is delayed, they
blackmail Benny into posing as her instead. As if that isn't funny enough, the real
Donna Lucia (Kay Francis) eventually shows up, leading to truly hilarious set-pieces
in this entertaining film. It's now out on DVD from Fox Home Entertainment and is
well worth a look for Jack Benny fans.
The film is based on a famous, venerable British play by Brandon Thomas which
has been staged and filmed so many times that it's impossible to keep count. It
debuted on the London stage in 1892 and stayed in the public eye, in one form or
another, for many decades. In 1948, a musical version called Where's
Charley? opened on Broadway, and that show was adapted into a movie
in1952.
This Jack Benny version hardly feels stagy at all, thanks to Archie Mayo's expert
direction which keeps things moving right along. Mayo was not known as an
influential stylist, but he was a darn good shooter, extremely experienced, whose
other credits included Illicitz (1931), Under 18 (1931), The Mayor of
Hell (1933), The Petrified Forest (1936) and the infamous lost film
Convention City (1933). When Charley's Aunt was released in August
1941, Mayo said, "Its greatest value today is that it will provide wholesome laughter
at a time when the world needs some relief from more grim happenings."
Another reason Charley's Aunt feels so lively is no doubt because the story's
amusing comic twists and contrasts had been well worked out over so many
previous incarnations. It contains frequently hilarious physical comedy, clever
dialogue and some comic fadeouts reminiscent even of a Marx Brothers movie. A
kissing scene between Benny and the two ladies, as their beaus watch helplessly, is
side-splittingly funny.
Benny does not use a British accent for the movie, except for the odd "shan't,"
which actually makes it even funnier. His "Aunt" costume was apparently
reproduced from the one used in the original 1892 stage show. Benny didn't make
many movies, but he was at his peak at this time. His next picture was the Ernst
Lubitsch masterpiece, To Be or Not to Be (1942), one of the funniest comedies
ever made.
Film historian Randy Skretvedt's dry commentary track is a disappointment. It
doesn't attempt to be scene-specific, which is not necessarily a problem, but he
devotes far too much time to esoteric details of the actors' lives and the property's
history, and feels too much like just a list of facts. If you want to hear a specific list
of every single adaptation of this show and who starred in it, and a blow-by-blow
account of Benny's rise in showbiz, you'll enjoy it, but this reviewer found it all a bit
too much and too unrelated to this specific movie. Skretvedt is pretty good,
however, on what made Benny such an innovator of radio.
Fox Home Entertainment has packaged Charley's Aunt with liner notes and
some lobby card reproductions. On the DVD itself, aside from the commentary track,
can be found a stills gallery and a fun promotional short called Three of a
Kind. It features Tyrone Power, Randolph Scott and Jack Benny meeting for
lunch at the Fox studio commissary. Power and Scott describe their new roles in
A Yank in the RAF and Belle Starr, and Benny listens enviously to their
descriptions of their he-man roles, trying to hide the fact that he is about to don a
dress and wig for his new movie. That proves hard to do when an assistant keeps
showing up asking for Benny's approval on various parts of his costume! Very funny
stuff.
The film print used for the transfer shows occasional wear but is mostly fine. Audio
is clear, available in mono and stereo.
For more information about Charley's Aunt, visit Fox Home
Entertainment. To order Charley's Aunt, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Jeremy Arnold
Charley's Aunt - Jack Benny in CHARLEY'S AUNT on DVD
by Jeremy Arnold | June 28, 2007
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