Myrna Loy stars as a nightclub queen who captures the heart of a boxer with a wandering eye in the romantic comedy The Prizefighter and the Lady (1933).
Directed by W.S. 'Woody' Van Dyke, the film features exciting fight scenes and cameos
by real-life boxing stars of the day such as Max Baer (the title pugilist), Jess
Willard, Jim Jeffries and Jack Dempsey.
Originally, screenwriter Frances Marion, who had just won an Oscar® for
another boxing themed movie The Champ (1931), was given the assignment
at MGM to write a new story for Myrna Loy and Clark Gable to fit the title The
Sailor and the Lady. Howard Hawks was slated to direct and the story
department was instructed to deliver a typical Gable scenario: gruff but lovable
sailor falls for an upper class girl. Marion dismissed the story idea as warmed-over
pudding, but was ordered to proceed by studio head Louis B. Mayer. After working
on the script for weeks, Marion turned it in only to find out that Clark Gable was
no longer available to do the film. Instead, the studio had signed the real-life
boxer Max Baer to star, with the story's focus shifted to the world of the boxing
ring. Major re-writes were needed to accommodate this significant premise change
in the newly re-titled The Prizefighter and the Lady, and Marion
wanted nothing to do with it. "Gene Tunney (Heavyweight Boxing Champion 1926-28)
is my friend. He married a beautiful society girl - and they might think that I have
exploited their love affair," she pleaded with a studio supervisor as remembered
in her 1973 autobiography Off With Their Heads. "Just tear up
that manuscript and find another story - dozens of that genre have been published."
The studio supervisor reminded her not-so-nicely that she was contractually obligated
to do as the studio said, so she re-wrote the script to accommodate the new boxing
angle.
Since Gable was no longer available to star in The Prizefighter and the
Lady, director Howard Hawks begged off the project as well. Woody Van
Dyke, who was known for his speedy shooting style, was re-assigned to direct. MGM
asked Hawks to stay on board for a few weeks, however, in order to help Max Baer,
who had never been in a film before, with his acting. The results were excellent,
as Baer proved to be a natural in front of the camera. He shines in his winning
debut performance, and holds his own next to seasoned performers like Myrna Loy
and Walter Huston, who plays Baer's manager in the film.
Myrna Loy loved working with Woody Van Dyke. He had directed her once before in Penthouse (1933) and was one of her biggest supporters, proclaiming
early on that she was going to be a star. In her 1987 autobiography Being
and Becoming she remembers Van Dyke as the fastest director she had ever
worked with who "managed to give a personal stamp to everything he did." He was
also full of practical jokes on the lively set of The Prizefighter and
the Lady, including having chairs wired so that the actors got an awful
jolt when they sat down. Van Dyke directed Loy in a total of eight films, including
the one that made her a star: The Thin Man in 1934.
The Prizefighter and the Lady climaxes with a heavily hyped
fight scene between Baer's character and reigning real-life World Heavyweight Champion Primo Carnera. The shooting of this scene was an event on the set since Baer was a real-life contender for Carnera's Heavyweight title. People came from far and
wide to watch the thrilling fight being filmed. Former Heavyweight champion Jack
Dempsey was an added treat playing the referee. The following year, Max Baer did
beat Primo Carnera in the ring for real, and Baer became the new World Heavyweight
Champion of 1934.
The film was a hit, with Frances Marion's screenplay winning an Academy Award nomination. The critics praised Max Baer's winning personality and natural screen presence; in fact, many people felt that he walked away with the movie. Following his boxing career, Baer managed to make a living as an actor, appearing in several feature
films throughout the 1940s and 50s, including The Harder They Fall
(1956). His son Max Baer, Jr. went on to television fame playing Jethro on The
Beverly Hillbillies.
Producer: Hunt Stromberg, W.S. Van Dyke II
Director: W.S. Van Dyke II
Screenplay: Frances Marion (story), John Lee Mahin, John Meehan
Cinematography: Lester White
Film Editing: Robert Kern
Art Direction: Fredric Hope, David Townsend
Music: Ray Egan
Cast: Myrna Loy (Belle Mercer Morgan), Max Baer (Steve Morgan), Primo Carnera (Himself), Jack Dempsey (Himself), Walter Huston (Edwin J. Bennett), Otto Kruger (Willie Ryan).
BW-102m. Closed captioning.
by Andrea Passafiume
The Prizefighter and the Lady
by Andrea Passafiume | August 25, 2004

SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTERS
CONNECT WITH TCM