Trivia and Other Fun Stuff on Gaslight
MGM head Louis B. Mayer, determined to eliminate the competition for
what was expected to be one of the studio's biggest hits of the year,
ordered all prints of the 1939 British version purchased and
destroyed. Prints, however, did survive, and the film turned up again
in the 1950s, often under the title of the original 1938 stage
production, Angel Street.
Jack Benny did a spoof of the movie on his TV show in the 1950s.
Called "Autolight," Benny spoofed the Boyer character while Barbara
Stanwyck performed a comic burlesque of the original Bergman part. MGM
brought an infringement suit against Benny, but the comedian's lawyers
argued the skit was in the realm of parody and therefore not a
copyright violation. The suit was dropped.
The British play on which Gaslight was based, Angel Street, was
produced on Broadway in 1941 starring Vincent Price and Judith Evans.
Screenwriter John Van Druten was also a successful playwright and many
of his plays were made into movies: I Remember Mama (1948),
Bell, Book and Candle (1958), and Cabaret (1972, based
on his play I Am a Camera, which was made into a movie in
1955). His play Old Acquaintance became a Bette Davis movie in
1943 and was remade by George Cukor as Rich and Famous (1981),
the director's last film.
Ingrid Bergman won her Oscar® for Gaslight while filming
The Bells of St. Mary's (1945) with previous Oscar winners Bing
Crosby and director Leo McCarey. In her acceptance speech, she said,
"I am particularly glad to get [the Oscar®] this time because I'm
working on a picture at the moment with Mr. Crosby and Mr. McCarey.
And I'm afraid if I went on the set tomorrow without an award, neither
of them would speak to me."
Bergman learned her lesson shooting the love scene with Boyer before
any of the rest of the film had been shot. She hated doing passionate
takes with a leading man she barely knew. Years later, making the
movie Goodbye Again (1961), she co-starred with Anthony Perkins
who played her younger lover. Before shooting began, Bergman invited
Perkins into her dressing room and asked him to kiss her so she
wouldn't blush and feel uncomfortable when the cameras rolled for
their first love scene.
During the production of Gaslight, Boyer's wife, Pat, was
pregnant after many years of trying to have a baby. Bergman said Boyer
was always rushing to the phone to check on his wife as the expected
birth date drew near. The couple thought the baby wouldn't arrive
until after filming, but their only son, Michael, was weeks early. One
day, Boyer rushed to the phone and came back with tears streaming down
his face. Pat had delivered while he was on the set. The cast and crew
immediately opened bottles of champagne.
In the big confrontation scene between the chambermaid and the lady of
the house, Lansbury was required to light a cigarette in defiance of
her mistress's orders. But because she was only 17, the social worker
and teacher assigned to her would not allow her to smoke until she was
a year older. When her 18th birthday arrived, Bergman and the cast
threw her a party on the set, and the scene was done shortly after.
Boyer opened a French library in Los Angeles and formed a French
society there.
Bergman placed number 30 on Empire magazine's list of the 100 Sexiest
Stars in film history in 1995.
Compiled by Rob Nixon
Famous Quotes from GASLIGHT
Paula (Ingrid Bergman): Suddenly, I'm beginning not to trust my
memory at all.
Gregory (Charles Boyer): Jewels are wonderful things. They have
a life of their own.
Miss Thwaites (Dame May Whitty): It's an odd household, too.
That maidservant most impertinent. I can't get a thing out of
her. She won't talk to me, though she would quick enough if I
wore trousers. The way she carries on with that policeman on the
beat. Scandalous!
Paula: Gregory, are you trying to tell me I'm insane?
Gregory: It's what I'm trying NOT to tell myself.
Paula: If I were not mad, I could have helped you. Whatever you
had done, I could have pitied and protected you. But because I
am mad, I hate you. Because I am mad, I have betrayed you. And
because I'm mad, I'm rejoicing in my heart, without a shred of
pity, without a shred of regret, watching you go with glory in
my heart!
Compiled by Rob Nixon
Trivia (5/21) - GASLIGHT
by Rob Nixon | February 17, 2005

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