Ginger Rogers went country for Professional Sweetheart (1933), her first film at RKO, the film studio that
would make her a star. This is not to say she plays a hillbilly; instead, due to unexpected circumstances, she abandons her urban lifestyle for a rural one. When the film opens she's a radio star known as "The Purity Girl of the Air," who sings songs and pitches Gregory
Ratoff's line of washcloths. When Rogers decides she'd like a livelier
social life, Ratoff picks a Kentucky rube (Norman Foster) to serve as her
public escort (for publicity reasons) only to learn that his star has fallen for the hick and wants to
follow him back to the hills. The confusion that follows as he tries to
win back his star is heightened by the comic antics of such seasoned character
actors as ZaSu Pitts, Frank McHugh, Allen Jenkins, Edgar Kennedy and
Franklin Pangborn.
Professional Sweetheart was one of several comedies produced in the thirties that poked fun
at the growing popularity of radio, where stars often bore no resemblance
to the characters they played on the air. Known for her witty barbs and satiric humor, former newswoman Maurine Dallas Watkins was hired by RKO to write the script. Watkins
had been a one-play wonder on Broadway, but what a play. She used her
experiences as a courtroom reporter to create Chicago, a trenchant
expos¿f justice as show business that still delights audiences as the
basis of the hit stage and screen musical of the same name. The play also
provided Rogers with one of her best starring vehicles, Roxie Hart,
in which she played the chorus girl wannabe who would later prove a potent
star role for Gwen Verdon on stage and Renee Zellweger on screen.
But that was almost a decade away when Rogers took on the role of Glory
Eden. She had been knocking around the movies since the coming of sound,
with a brief break to star on Broadway in the Gershwin musical Girl
Crazy. Rogers had played leads in low-budget films and supporting
roles in bigger pictures, most noticeably as a wise-cracking chorus girl in
42nd Street and Gold Diggers of 1933 (both 1932). She'd even
teamed with Foster before, though they had only flirted in 1930's Young
Man of Manhattan, while established star Claudette Colbert got him in
the final clinch.
After Rogers' success in the Warner Bros. musicals,
Harry Cohn, head of production at Columbia Pictures, had asked her to test
for a contract. He turned her down because he thought her smile too big,
but that didn't stop him from making a pass at her. When Rogers threatened
to tell his wife, he backed off, but he was a good enough sport to send her
test to RKO, where executives were looking for a new leading lady. They
signed Rogers to a three-picture deal at $1,600 a week. Oddly, they
weren't that impressed with her singing. For the only time in her career,
she was dubbed. The real singer of "My Imaginary Sweetheart" was Etta
Moten, a black singer who had soloed impressively on "Remember My Forgotten
Man" in Gold Diggers of 1933. It was the only real gripe Rogers had about making Professional Sweetheart. Regarding her dubbing, she wrote (in her autobiography Ginger My Story), "I was amazed and annoyed. I had been singing professionally on the stage and screen for years and thought it ridiculous to hear someone else's voice coming out of my mouth."
Professional Sweetheart went through two other titles --
Careless and The Purity Girl -- before it hit the screen. It
also got a new title in England. Censors there thought Professional
Sweetheart sounded like a film about the world's oldest profession, so
they called it Imaginary Sweetheart. But whatever the title, the
film brought Rogers strong reviews and a chance to re-team with Foster
later that year in Rafter Romance. By that time, RKO had decided to
make her a permanent fixture and signed her to a seven-year contract at
$1,100 a week -- less money but more security. The move paid off a few
pictures later when Rogers stepped in for the honeymooning Dorothy Jordan
to play Fred Astaire's dancing partner in Flying Down to Rio (1933),
the film that made her a star.
Producer: H.N. Swanson
Director: William A. Seiter
Screenplay: Maurine Watkins
Based on a story by Watkins
Cinematography: Edward Cronjager
Art Direction: Van Nest Polglase, Carroll Clark
Score: Edward Eliscu, Harry Akst, Max Steiner
Principal Cast: Ginger Rogers (Glory Eden), Norman Foster (Jim Davey), ZaSu
Pitts (Elmerada de Leon), Frank McHugh (Speed), Allen Jenkins (O'Connor),
Gregory Ratoff (Ipswich), Edgar Kennedy (Kelsey), Lucien Littlefield (Ed,
Announcer), Franklin Pangborn (Childress), Betty Furness (Blonde Reporter),
Sterling Holloway (Scribe), Akim Tamiroff (Waiter).
BW-74m.
by Frank Miller
Professional Sweetheart
by Frank Miller | August 26, 2003

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