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The Great Profile

  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 22m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,2/10
278
MA NOTE
John Barrymore and Mary Beth Hughes in The Great Profile (1940)
Comédie

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBarrymore lampoons himself. A famous actor, given to drink, nearly destroys the show, but his leading lady returns to save it. Meanwhile, a young girl tries to reform him.Barrymore lampoons himself. A famous actor, given to drink, nearly destroys the show, but his leading lady returns to save it. Meanwhile, a young girl tries to reform him.Barrymore lampoons himself. A famous actor, given to drink, nearly destroys the show, but his leading lady returns to save it. Meanwhile, a young girl tries to reform him.

  • Director
    • Walter Lang
  • Writers
    • Milton Sperling
    • Hilary Lynn
    • Darryl F. Zanuck
  • Stars
    • John Barrymore
    • Mary Beth Hughes
    • Gregory Ratoff
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,2/10
    278
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Walter Lang
    • Writers
      • Milton Sperling
      • Hilary Lynn
      • Darryl F. Zanuck
    • Stars
      • John Barrymore
      • Mary Beth Hughes
      • Gregory Ratoff
    • 14Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 6Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 2 victoires au total

    Photos15

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    Rôles principaux34

    Modifier
    John Barrymore
    John Barrymore
    • Evans Garrick
    Mary Beth Hughes
    Mary Beth Hughes
    • Sylvia
    Gregory Ratoff
    Gregory Ratoff
    • Boris Mefoofsky
    John Payne
    John Payne
    • Richard Lansing
    Anne Baxter
    Anne Baxter
    • Mary Maxwell
    Lionel Atwill
    Lionel Atwill
    • Dr. Bruce
    Edward Brophy
    Edward Brophy
    • Sylvester
    Willie Fung
    Willie Fung
    • Confucius
    Joan Valerie
    Joan Valerie
    • Understudy
    Charles Lane
    Charles Lane
    • Director
    Marc Lawrence
    Marc Lawrence
    • Tony
    Hal K. Dawson
    • Ticket Seller
    William Pawley
    • Electrician
    Eddie Dunn
    Eddie Dunn
    • Furniture Man
    James Flavin
    James Flavin
    • Detective
    Dorothy Dearing
    Dorothy Dearing
    • Debutante
    Paul Brochard
    • Acrobat
    • (uncredited)
    Ralph Brooks
    Ralph Brooks
    • Audience Extra
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Walter Lang
    • Writers
      • Milton Sperling
      • Hilary Lynn
      • Darryl F. Zanuck
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs14

    6,2278
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    Avis en vedette

    7AlsExGal

    This would be funnier if ...

    ... it were not so close to the sad truth of the final years of John Barrymore's life - Barrymore disappearing from the set and going off on a bender, an on-again-off-again relationship with a a much younger fourth wife that was out for what she could get for herself, Barrymore addicted to the drink and unable to get work in his final days unless he was parodying himself.

    As the film opens Evan Garrick (John Barrymore) has run out on his studio for the last time. The studio fires him from his current film role and tears up his contract, and his wife and agent leave him. In true Barrymore fashion he says good riddance to both. Into his life appears aspiring playwright Mary Maxwell (Anne Baxter), who tries to recruit him to play the lead in the script she has just finished. At first Garrick is going to throw her out, but when he learns that Mary's fiancé already has decided to back the play he quickly reconsiders, given that he is 12,000 dollars overdrawn on his bank account.

    The play turns out to be horribly hammy and boring, and looks like it is headed for failure when Garrick decides to relieve his tension after the first act with a little alcohol. When he comes out drunk for the second act his antics have the audience in stitches. However, author Mary Maxwell is not amused and wants to close the play. When the critics judge the play a success - not realizing it is just a drunk Garrick carrying on - everyone involved convinces Mary that Garrick just needs reforming, and that she shouldn't turn her back on him. They never realize she'll take them seriously and actually reform him. A sober Garrick gets them back where they were - a bad play, an unresponsive audience, and a greatly diminished box office. What's worse, Garrick is now stealing Mary away from her fiancé (John Payne). How can this thing end happily? I'll let you watch and find out.

    What makes this work is that Anne Baxter is out-hamming Barrymore throughout so that his self-parody does not seem so over-reaching. Gregory Ratoff is hilarious as Garrick's agent who is on the run from the mob over an eight thousand dollar gambling debt and needs to make the play a success if he doesn't want to wind up in a cement overcoat. A young John Payne has the role of Mary's fiancé.

    Like I said in the beginning, the less you know about the truth of John Barrymore's final days the funnier this will be to you. It really is a good comedy.
    6blanche-2

    When life mocks you, mock it back

    Some classic age actors, when seen today, appear hammy and using old-fashioned technique. And some are timeless. John Barrymore is timeless and, in one of his last films, "The Great Profile," he lampoons himself mercilessly - in the role of a ham with old-fashioned technique. The story is based on what really happened to the actor during a play called "My Own Children." The actor Evans Garrick (Barrymore) has been missing for three days. When he arrives home drunk, he's in costume and he's reciting Shakespeare, believing that he just left a film set an hour earlier. Infuriated, his wife Sylvia (Mary Beth Hughes) leaves him. Then pretty Mary Maxwell (17-year-old Anne Baxter) arrives with a play she is desperate for Garrick to do. He gets rid of her by saying he will meet her in his agent's office the next day. His agent (Gregory Ratoff) owes some mobsters $8200 and when he hears that Ms. Maxwell has a wealthy fiancée, Richard Lansing (John Payne) who will back the play, he's all for it. It's a complete disaster, but it gets Sylvia back from Reno as soon as she hears about it, and she wins back her role. Totally polluted by the second act, Garrick makes the play a hit by ad-libbing and finally rolling off of the stage in a wheelchair. Ms. Maxwell is finally convinced to take what she considered her serious drama into New York, where it's been booked for a six-month run, but she takes Garrick in hand to sober him up. Everyone's unhappy - her fiancée and Garrick's agent in particular, since the play is deathly if Garrick isn't drunk.

    Strangely enough, most of this actually happened to Barrymore in real life, including his wife leaving him and returning to get her part back in New York. And she did hide in Barrymore's wardrobe as Garrick's wife does in the film, though in real life, Barrymore's daughter Diana tried to keep her from doing so.

    Barrymore is extremely dissipated in "The Great Profile" and reads his lines off of cue cards, which toward the end, he did often. For people who say he's a ham, I say he was playing one. He does Hamlet with a quivering sing-song voice. Does anyone believe this is actually how he played his famous Hamlet? He was Olivier's inspiration for the role. Olivier first played Hamlet in 1937 and was known for speaking the dialogue instead of singing it.

    There are some very funny moments in "The Great Profile" but in the end, it's a bizarre movie, enlivened by Barrymore's presence. If you want to see a non-hammy Barrymore, I suggest "The Great Man Votes" or "Bill of Divorcement." He was a great actor with a big personality - if that seems strange by today's standards, well, it's the pictures that got small.
    5utgard14

    I've seen this before and better

    Anemic attempt at recapturing the magic of Twentieth Century. John Barrymore is dialed to eleven and spends the whole movie screaming at people. Cutie Mary Beth Hughes is no Carole Lombard for him but tries her best. Early role for Anne Baxter that's nothing impressive. As harsh as I'm being it's still a watchable picture. It moves along well and the cast is likable in spite of the weak writing and Barrymore sucking all the air out of the room.
    1cmartori

    Heartbreaker

    I almost couldn't make it through the whole film, but I stuck it out for JB. He breaks my heart in a way that almost no one else can. For those of you who are using this one performance as a yardstick to judge his talent by, you're selling him and yourselves short. This was a phenomenally gifted man with a finger constantly pressing his self-destruct button for reasons only he knew. You have to see his other films, silent and sound, that show his true range. "Twentieth Century," "Don Juan," "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," "Svengali," - these are a few of the performances that are worth seeing. He was more than astonishingly handsome and sexy. He had guts and fire, and just couldn't overcome his fatal thirst. I would sell my soul to go back in time to see his "Hamlet" or "Richard III". All of his private and public sins aside, he was one of the greats, unjustly ignored by the Academy and forgotten by viewers. How sad. He deserved so much better.
    5SimonJack

    Even Barrymore's hamminess has lost its humor by this time

    The 20th Century Fox DVD I purchased of this film had some interesting text on the cover. It said that "The Great Profile" was an autobiographical movie about John Barrymore's life. Really? Would Barrymore have made an intentional movie that parodied his own alcoholism and his associated acting demise as a result of it?

    The movie clearly has a plot that does resemble Barrymore's life. It probably also resembles any number of other actors of the day. More than a few saw their careers tank due to booze or drugs. The same has been true for actresses. Barrymore played other roles besides this one in which his character was alcoholic, or often drunk. But, as a recovering alcoholic myself, I question that he would intentionally have played a role in a movie that was meant to portray his real life. Most alcoholics live in denial about their drinking ever being a problem until one of two things happens. They (we) reach a stage of ultimate surrender to the booze with a high and mighty attitude of "so what?" or "that's my business" which then generally leads to death in time. Or, we hit bottom and find recovery through one or more of many different ways.

    Well, less than two years after this movie came out, John Barrymore would be dead, due to cirrhosis of the liver and pneumonia. In the early 1930s, the first years of sound pictures, Barrymore gave some very good performances, although his drinking affected other roles. He made just one excellent comedy - "Twentieth Century" in 1934. In that film, Barrymore's hamminess was so deliberate and over the top that one couldn't help but laugh. In this film, it seems more something for a disoriented actor to fall back on, and it doesn't have the comedic touch.

    In this film, Barrymore seems to be sober at times, and perhaps just playing drunk at other times. But biographies and books say that in his last several years he couldn't remember his lines and had to have cue cards. So, it's likely that was the case with this film. And, it's also likely that his drunk scenes here were more than acting - maybe just part acting.

    This is supposed to be a comedy, but there's not much funny here. My guess is that the script played up the part of Boris Mefoofsky, the agent of Barrymore's Evans Garrick. Gregory Ratoff plays that role. But it's not funny beyond the first instance maybe, when the nervous and harried Boris is at wit's end over Garrick's whereabouts. After that, the constant efforts of Boris to dodge some debt collectors from the mob are flat as a pancake. His antics and lines soon become irritating,

    The rest of the cast do their best, but Mary Beth Hughes, John Payne, Anne Baxter and others just have too little to contribute to lift this film as a comedy. The film wouldn't even earn five stars if not for the general efforts of the cast and an occasional spark of humor from Garrick or someone else.

    Here are the few good lines I heard.

    Confucius, "This time I think master dead."

    Evans Garrick, "Ingratitude - thy name is woman."

    Evans Garrick, "I've got it. Tomorrow I shall enter a monastery." Boris Mefoofsky, "If you find a Russian one, I'll go with you."

    Evans Garrick, to Mefoofsky, "Your troubles, my friend, belong to this life. Not to the sanctuary to which I am going."

    Mary Maxwell, "You, you love me?" Evans Garrick, "More than life itself." Mary, "But... are you sure you're not confusing gratitude with love?" Garrick, "I'm old enough to know whether I'm in love or not."

    Richard Lansing, "Well, I only thought..." Mary Maxwell, "I know what you thought, you evil-minded....Philadelphian."

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      John Barrymore did not memorize any of his lines for the film, but read them from a blackboard. He never missed a cue or muffed a speech, which is credited for bringing in the film 5 days ahead of schedule, thereby saving the studio an estimated $25,000.
    • Citations

      Evans Garrick: I've got it. Tomorrow I shall enter a monastery.

      Boris Mefoofsky: If you find a Russian one, I'll go with you.

    • Bandes originales
      Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny, Oh!
      (1917) (uncredited)

      Music by Abe Olman

      Lyrics by Ed Rose

      Sung by chorus during the opening credits

      Played by studio orchestra during the closing credits and occasionally in the score

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 30 août 1940 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • El gran perfil
    • Lieux de tournage
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • société de production
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 22m(82 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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