Henry Fonda made his feature film debut in Victor Fleming's gentle 1935 comedy The Farmer Takes a Wife. Reprising his critically acclaimed stage role, Fonda plays Dan Harrow, a man who takes a job working on the Erie Canal during the 1850s in order to earn enough money to buy a farm. Along the way he meets Molly (Janet Gaynor), a pretty cook on a canal boat. Dan wants to marry Molly, but she isn't sure that she wants to leave her exciting life on the canal to be a farmer's wife.

The Farmer Takes a Wife originated as a novel called Rome Haul by Walter D. Edmonds published in 1929. In 1934 the book was adapted into the successful Broadway play The Farmer Takes a Wife by Marc Connelly and Frank B. Elser. The play starred Henry Fonda and June Walker.

The Fox Film Corporation (which eventually became 20th Century Fox) bought the rights to the play for Janet Gaynor, one of the studio's most popular actresses at the time. Gaynor was an established Academy Award®-winning star when she agreed to make The Farmer Takes a Wife. The mature role of Molly promised to be a challenging departure from the wholesome ingénue parts she usually played.

Even though Henry Fonda had originated the role of Dan Harrow on Broadway and had received a great deal of critical praise for it, Fox initially didn't want him for the film because he had never appeared onscreen before and was unknown to mass audiences. Instead, the studio pursued such big name movie stars as Gary Cooper and Joel McCrea. It was only when they proved to be unavailable that Fox decided to take a chance on an unknown and gave the role to Henry Fonda. Soon the 30-year-old Fonda, who was under contract at the time to producer Walter Wanger, was on a train bound for Hollywood to make his film debut as a leading man.

Henry Fonda was extremely focused when he arrived on set to begin filming The Farmer Takes a Wife. Costar Janet Gaynor later recalled that, "Cameras and camera angles enthralled him. He studied them and everything else on the set. He was a serious young man and interested in almost everything that happened on the lot. Big red-headed Charlie Bickford was cast as the heavy. He and I would gossip and play practical jokes, but Henry would have none of it." Jane Withers, who plays Della, found Fonda's trepidation endearing. "It was Henry's first picture," she said according to Michael Sragow's 2008 book Victor Fleming: An American Movie Master, "and I was there his first day. He was shaking all over; he was a nervous wreck, and my heart went out to him."

Fonda, who had spent his entire career in stage productions up to that point, soon discovered that acting for the camera was very different. When director Victor Fleming gave him the shooting script to study, Fonda was confused by the presence of what he thought was a new character named "Dolly." In his 1981 autobiography My Life Fonda said, "(It) puzzled the hell out of me. Now I know who the two leads are, Dan and Molly. But suddenly, they've written in a third character. 'Dan and Molly go into the hotel. Dolly with them.' Show you how dumb I was, and I'm serious, I never for the longest time figured out what...Dolly was doing in there. She was always there, but never opened her goddamn mouth!" What Fonda didn't realize at the time was that "Dolly" was a common film industry term for a certain type of camera movement that Fleming wanted to use and wasn't a character at all.

Victor Fleming also had to break Fonda of his stage acting habits, which were too broad for the camera. According to Fonda, Fleming pulled him aside on the first day of shooting. "Hank," he told Fonda, "you're mugging a bit."
"I'm what!" said Fonda, knowing that "mugging" was one of the worst criticisms an actor could get.
"Mugging."
"That's a dirty word."
"I know it is," said Fleming, "and it really isn't your fault. You're playing the farmer the way you did in the theater. You're playing to the back row of the orchestra and the rear row of the balcony. That's stage technique."

Fonda, who wasn't used to acting in films, quickly made adjustments. "That's the biggest message I ever got in Hollywood," he said. "I just pulled it right back to reality because that lens and that microphone are doing all the projection you need. No sense in using too much voice, and you don't need any more expression on your face than you'd use in everyday life...That was the big lesson for me, and I will always bless Victor Fleming for being kind enough to tell me, rather than let me go and have somebody else say it in a review."

Critics had a positive response to The Farmer Takes a Wife, and its success easily catapulted Henry Fonda into instant movie stardom. "A good deal of what delighted us so hugely in the stage version...has found its way into the photoplay," said the New York Times. "...the film still is able to recapture the sentimental warmth and the pungent charm of the most lovable of recent American folk plays...Mr. Fonda, in his film debut, is the bright particular star of the occasion. As the virtuous farm boy, he plays with an immensely winning simplicity which will quickly make him one of our most attractive screen actors."

The New York Herald Tribune said, "Charm and atmospheric color are two qualities that it is difficult for the screen to capture successfully and because The Farmer Takes a Wife manages both of them attractively, it deserves approval as an excellent motion picture...The producers of the film were wise enough to retain Henry Fonda, of the stage cast, in his original role...Mr. Fonda is that rarity of the drama, a young man who can present naïve charm and ingratiating simplicity in a characterization and yet never fail to seem both manly and in possession of his full senses." The New York Sun said, "If The Farmer Takes a Wife is a satisfactory film, then the screen debut of Henry Fonda seems something more than that. Mr. Fonda is a tall, lanky young man with a boyish face, a low voice and a quiet manner particularly effective. One of Mr. Fonda's most outstanding assets is his appearance of sincerity."

The Farmer Takes a Wife was remade in 1953 as a musical starring Dale Robertson and Betty Grable in the leads.

Producer: Winfield R. Sheehan
Director: Victor Fleming
Screenplay: Edwin J. Burke; Marc Connelly, Frank B. Elser (play); Walter D. Edmonds (novel "Rome Haul")
Cinematography: John F. Seitz
Music: Arthur Lange
Film Editing: Harold Schuster
Cast: Janet Gaynor (Molly Larkins), Henry Fonda (Dan Harrow), Charles Bickford (Jotham Klore), Slim Summerville (Fortune Friendly), Jane Withers (Della), Andy Devine (Elmer Otway), Roger Imhof (Sam Weaver), Margaret Hamilton (Lucy Gurget), Siegfried Rumann (Blacksmith), John Qualen (Sol Tinker), Kitty Kelly (Ivy), Robert Gleckler (Freight Agent).
BW-91m.

by Andrea Passafiume