Trivia Question #1: What film was the
supporting feature for the legendary
Citizen Kane during its premiere
run in New York in 1941? Answer:
The Mexican Spitfire's
Baby.
Between 1939 and 1943, the Mexican-born Lupe Velez teamed
with
rubber-legged one-time Ziegfeld Follies star Leon Errol for a
series
of eight fast-paced, slapstick comedies about the adventures of a
fiery
Latin singer (Velez) married to an advertising man. Her efforts to
embrace domesticity
were aided and just-as-often undermined by her husband's
eccentric Uncle Matt
(Errol), who bore a striking resemblance to British
whiskey baron Lord
Basil Epping (also Errol) and, in one installment,
Epping's valet. It
wasn't exactly Noel Coward, but the series was popular
enough with rural
audiences to keep RKO studios churning out entries until
Velez decided to
move on to other projects.
Velez was at a career
low-point when RKO studio head George Schaeffer
tapped her for the lead role
in The Girl from Mexico (1939), in
which she starred as a singer
brought to the U.S. by ad man Donald Woods.
The film did so well, Schaeffer,
who also was instrumental in bringing
Orson Welles to RKO, signed her to a
contract that kept her playing Carmelita and
similar roles for four years.
For the other seven films, the series
capitalized on a nickname that Velez's
energetic performances and offscreen
behavior had earned her early in her
Hollywood career, "The Mexican
Spitfire." Made for pennies, these B films
provided the second half of
double features with more prestigious films,
though in many cases, they
proved more popular than the films they
supported. Other constants in the series were director Leslie Goodwins, who
helmed all eight movies, and Elisabeth Risdon, cast as Velez's snobbish aunt
by marriage, who spends every Spitfire film trying to break up the
relationship so her nephew can find a more suitable
wife.
Carmelita's adventures encompassed everything from smuggling
(Mexican
Spitfire's Elephant, 1942) to seeking a divorce (Mexican
Spitfire Out
West, 1940). For The Mexican Spitfire's Baby (1941),
the studio teased audiences
with the possibility of an addition to the
family, only to reveal that the
war orphan Carmelita and her husband try to
adopt is really a full-grown
and very seductive Frenchwoman named Fifi
(Marion Martin). New to the
series is Charles "Buddy" Rogers, who took over
the role of Carmelita's husband from Woods
and would keep the part for two
more films. (Walter Reed would play the
husband in the series' final two
entries). In addition, ZaSu Pitts joined
a string of character comics --
including Cecil Kellaway, Tom Kennedy, Alan
Carney and Mantan Moreland --
who graced the series with their
work.
Trivia Question #2:
Which Mexican Spitfire regular would go on to
win an Oscar&;?
Answer: Although putting "Mexican Spitfire" and
Oscar® in the same
sentence seems something of an oxymoron, Rogers
would win the Motion Picture
Academy's® Jean Hersholt Humanitarian
Award in 1985. The third (and
last) husband of silent-screen legend Mary
Pickford, Rogers became
extensively involved in charity work in the '60s,
often acting on behalf of
his wife, who preferred to stay out of the
limelight. It was hardly his
first brush with Oscar®, however. He was
also the star of the first
Best Picture winner, Wings, in
1927.
Producer: Cliff
Reid
Director: Leslie Goodwins
Screenplay: Charles E. Roberts, Jerry
Cady, James Casey
Based on a story by Charles E.
Roberts
Cinematography: Jack MacKenzie
Art Direction: Van Nest
Polglase
Music: C. Bakaleinikoff
Cast: Lupe Velez
(Carmelita Lindsay), Leon Errol (Uncle Matt
Lindsay/Lord Basil Epping),
Charles "Buddy" Rogers (Dennis Lindsay),
Elisabeth Risdon (Aunt Della
Lindsay), ZaSu Pitts (Miss Pepper), Marion
Martin
(Fifi).
BW-70m.
by Frank Miller
The Mexican Spitfire's Baby
by Frank Miller | February 12, 2007

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