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Little Gloria... Happy at Last

  • TV Mini Series
  • 1982
  • 3h
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
899
YOUR RATING
Little Gloria... Happy at Last (1982)
Little Gloria
Play trailer1:37
1 Video
5 Photos
BiographyDrama

The story deals with Gloria Vanderbilt's difficult coming-of-age when, at eleven, she was a pawn in a custody battle between her sybaritic mother and her aunt.The story deals with Gloria Vanderbilt's difficult coming-of-age when, at eleven, she was a pawn in a custody battle between her sybaritic mother and her aunt.The story deals with Gloria Vanderbilt's difficult coming-of-age when, at eleven, she was a pawn in a custody battle between her sybaritic mother and her aunt.

  • Stars
    • Angela Lansbury
    • Maureen Stapleton
    • Martin Balsam
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    899
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Angela Lansbury
      • Maureen Stapleton
      • Martin Balsam
    • 10User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 6 Primetime Emmys
      • 7 nominations total

    Episodes2

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    TopTop-rated1 season1982

    Videos1

    Little Gloria
    Trailer 1:37
    Little Gloria

    Photos4

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    Top cast33

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    Angela Lansbury
    Angela Lansbury
    • Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney
    • 1982
    Maureen Stapleton
    Maureen Stapleton
    • Nurse Emma Kieslich
    • 1982
    Martin Balsam
    Martin Balsam
    • Nathan Burkan
    • 1982
    Glynis Johns
    Glynis Johns
    • Laura Fitzpatrick Morgan
    • 1982
    John Hillerman
    John Hillerman
    • Maury Paul
    • 1982
    Michael Gross
    Michael Gross
    • Gilchrist
    • 1982
    Lucy Gutteridge
    Lucy Gutteridge
    • Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt
    • 1982
    Bette Davis
    Bette Davis
    • Alice Gwynne Vanderbilt
    • 1982
    Jennifer Dundas
    Jennifer Dundas
    • Little Gloria
    • 1982
    Rosalyn Landor
    Rosalyn Landor
    • Thelma Morgan Converse
    • 1982
    Leueen Willoughby
    Leueen Willoughby
    • Consuelo Morgan
    • 1982
    Cec Linder
    Cec Linder
    • 1982
    Philip Craig
    Philip Craig
    • 1982
    Booth Savage
    Booth Savage
    • 1982
    Christopher Plummer
    Christopher Plummer
    • Reggie Vanderbilt
    • 1982
    Barnard Hughes
    Barnard Hughes
    • Justice John Francis Carew
    • 1982
    Joseph Maher
    Joseph Maher
    • Smythe
    • 1982
    Ken Pogue
    Ken Pogue
    • Judge James Aloycious Foley
    • 1982
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    7.4899
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    Featured reviews

    10scarlet_8

    Excellent cast

    This movie was very well done. Lucy Gutteridge did a wonderful and believable portrayal of Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt. You can feel her pain as you follow along. The actress who played little Gloria looked just like Gloria Laura Vanderbilt which helped to make her credible. Angela Lansbury was also amazing as Gertrude Vanderbilt, I ended up disliking her by the end of the movie (which is rare for this actress). Definitely see this movie.
    8AlsExGal

    A high quality made for TV movie

    I never thought I'd say this about a film made in my adult lifetime, but they just don't make them like this anymore. From 1975 until the early 1990's the miniseries was one of the mainstays of broadcast TV. In the better ones - which this was - the production values were high, the story intricately told, and prominent stars were involved.

    In this day of people who seem to believe that they deserve what they have simply because they have always lived this way, this story of the super-rich set against the background of the Great Depression is timely. Gloria Morgan is the bride of 43 year-old Reggie Vanderbilt at 18, a mother at 19, and a widow at 20 when her husband, whose health has been ruined by a dissolute lifestyle, dies and leaves her penniless. The fact that she is the mother of one of Reggie's two surviving children leaves her the impoverished mother of a wealthy infant. As Gloria is an infant, though, and she is the surviving parent, big Gloria has an income of 48 thousand dollars a year on which to live, a limitation over which she complains endlessly. 48 thousand dollars a year would be roughly half a million dollars annually in today's currency.

    Over the next ten years or so, Gloria travels around Europe and complains when the judge that is her daughter's guardian says that she must come back to America so that little Gloria can grow up there, as per their prior agreement. She gripes that she can't live the way she wants and that it is all Gloria's fault. Big Gloria seems to forget she would be living in a cardboard box were it not for little Gloria's existence. Eventually big Gloria's lifestyle, her vengeful mother, and little Gloria's religious nurse all work against her when her former sister-in-law, Gertrude, sues for custody of Gloria.

    There are really no sympathetic characters in this story. The doctors are more than glad to give quack treatments to little Gloria and take the Vanderbilt money, the lawyers -as always - are glad to take anyone's money, the judge in the case is more interested in the Vanderbilt's opinion than justice, and Big Gloria doesn't come across so much as a bad mother as she does as someone who simply knows no other way to live than the way she has been living. Not exactly having a glowing example of motherhood upon which to rely, Big Gloria seems genuinely baffled as to why everyone is upset with her.

    Unfortunately, miniseries such as these have been replaced with one reality show after another all of which are just variations on the theme "Human Beings Behaving Badly". Years from now I doubt anyone will be interested in them other than as exhibits on a degenerating culture. This film was a theatric reproduction of an actual true story, and for that reason it surprises me that Gloria Warren Vanderbilt's story has so many parallels in the biography of silent film star Lina Basquette. Her tragic tale can be found in the book Lina Demille's Godless Girl. That book is a rare title, but it is good reading if you can find it.
    6HotToastyRag

    Soapy and dramatic

    I knew absolutely nothing about the Vanderbilt scandal, so when I watched Little Gloria...Happy at Last, I was completely surprised by every turn. Those who are very well versed in their socialite history might be a little bored or come to the miniseries with their own points of view. As it was, I got the distinct impression that William Hanley's screenplay, based on Barbara Goldsmith's book, had its own axe to grind. Without spoiling the story, I will just say that there is no clear-cut villain, but instead several potentials.

    Lucy Gutteridge takes the lead as Gloria Vanderbilt, the older. It's a little ironic that Lucy Gutteridge was cast as Mother Gloria Vanderbilt, when she bore such a striking resemblance to what Little Gloria grew into as an adult. As a teen girl, Lucy gets swept off her feet by the older, world-wise Christopher Plummer. They marry, much to the delight of her money-hungry mother, Glynis Johns, but soon after the birth of their daughter, Chris drinks himself to death. Young, alone, and with an inheritance she believes is unfair, she becomes a careless mother who would rather galivant in nightclubs. The baby's nurse, Maureen Stapleton, forges a bond with Glynis and vows to help the child grow up with a Catholic faith, despite her Protestant christening. As Lucy becomes more distant and self-centered, Maureen becomes the most important fixture in the child's life. With the Lindbergh kidnapping case in the newspapers, Little Gloria becomes fearful and clings further to Maureen.

    I loved Bette Davis's performance as Lucy's formidable mother-in-law. Stripped of her false eyelashes and over-the-top makeup, she really toned down her delivery and channeled her inner Gladys Cooper. A far cry from Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, she seemed to finally adapt to modern times. Martin Balsam was once again cast as a lawyer who's not very good at his job (poor guy), and it was ironic because he also played the defense attorney in the tv movie The Lindbergh Kidnapping Case. Angela Lansbury's character was my favorite, as she was the only one who acted unselfishly and with the child's best interest at heart. Also toned down, she was subtle, savvy, and played a good match as Bette Davis's daughter. If the story interests you, rent this three-hour miniseries for a lot of soap and some very beautiful costumes and houses. It's a little dated, and part of it is upsetting, but you should be expecting some soap opera elements to a Vanderbilt story.
    9blanche-2

    Miniseries based on Goldsmith book

    "Little Gloria...Happy at Last" is a 1982 miniseries and a clear indication that they just don't make TV movies like they used to. For one thing, the miniseries is gone; for another, since no murder was committed, this type of story is no longer of interest to producers. One thing it might have going for it today - it is true.

    The miniseries is based on the Barbara Goldsmith book covering the custody battle between Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt and Gertrude Hay Whitney for Gloria Vanderbilt, who was 11 at the time. According to Goldsmith's excellent book, the insecure Little Gloria's fears of being kidnapped were fed into by her deeply religious nurse, Dodo, and vengeful grandmother, Laura Fitzpatrick Morgan while her mother traveled and she visited with her Aunt Gertrude. With all the talk done in front of her about the Lindbergh kidnapping and other copycat crimes, Gloria came to fear her own mother would kidnap and kill her. Never asked to explain the origins of her fears or what they exactly were, Gloria was then paraded in front of doctors and prescribed all sorts of things for her upset stomach and night terrors. Gertrude eventually refuses to return Gloria to her mother, starting an enormous court case, scandal and publicity.

    This opulent film is wonderfully acted, beautiful to look at and engrossing, with a top cast including Lucy Gutteridge as Gloria's mother, Angela Lansbury as Gertrude Whitney, Christopher Plummer as Reginal Whitney, Gloria's father, Glynis Johns as Laura Morgan, Maureen Stapleton as Dodo, Jennifer Dundas as Little Gloria, John Hillerman, Martin Balsam, Michael Gross and Barnard Hughes. One more star: Bette Davis as Alice Gwynne Vanderbilt, Little Gloria's grandmother. The casting of Lansbury as Davis' daughter is inspired! The entire cast, as one may imagine, is magnificent.

    The story of Little Gloria, today mother of Anderson Cooper, is heartbreaking and shows not only how the power of money continues to corrupt the legal system but the pathetic way that children were raised and treated in our society in the 1930s. Much is made of Gloria's mother traveling and living away from her daughter as if she was the only one doing it; in reality, most wealthy people handed their children to nurses and took off for months at a time. Though Gloria was assigned a guardian, no one unbiased ever talked to her, and doctors were too glad to take the Vanderbilt money, prescribe her laxatives and keep her out of school. You can't count the judge (who was a patient at a mental hospital); he was pro-Vanderbilt and concerned only with Gloria's religious upbringing, not the undue influence she had been under because of her nurse. One's sympathy is with Gloria's inept, confused, passive, overwhelmed mother, who was not a mean-spirited woman, just someone who knew only one way to live. Gertrude, perhaps at first well-meaning, emerges as someone who used her money to buy the justice she needed by getting the help of Mrs. Morgan and the nurse.

    A really wonderful movie. Don't miss it.
    7bkoganbing

    Those Vanderbilt Women

    Watching Little Gloria forthe first time what struck me about this film is how the women were totally running the show. Old Commodore Vanderbilt may have made the family fortune from the New York Central Railroad, but by the 20s and 30s the women were certainly running the show.

    The only male Vanderbilt is Christopher Plummer playing Reginld Vanderbilt and he's a wastrel just wasting away. In his 40s he marries Lucy Guttridge and the marriage lasts long enough to produce Little Gloria our subject. Plummer dies from the excesses of a partying life Prohibition spirits no doubt helped.

    Jennifer Dundas plays Little Gloria the heir to a trust fund set up by her grandfather who wisely knew Plummer would blow it. But when he dies Dundas becomes the center of a custody battle between Guttridge who has a hedonistic lifestyle in Europe and Plummer's sister Angela Lansbury.

    This was a good mini-series which even had an appearance by Bette Davis playing Plummer and Lansbury's mother the Vanderbilt grand dame. But the appearances I liked were that of Maureen Stapleton the nurse who poisoned Little Gloria's mind against her mom and Glynis Johns who was Guttridge's mother and quite the character herself.

    All this was entertainment fodder for the Depression masses. Little Gloria certainly captures the mood of the times.

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    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In reality, Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt and her sister Thelma were identical twins. Lucy Gutteridge, who plays Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt in this TV movie, later played Thelma in The Woman He Loved (1988).
    • Goofs
      The voiceover at the end states that Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt died in 1964. She in fact died in February 1965.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 35th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1983)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 24, 1982 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kleine Gloria - Armes reiches Mädchen
    • Filming locations
      • Brockville, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • London Film Productions
      • Cine-Gloria
      • Edgar J. Scherick Associates
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 3h(180 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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