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Ladies of Leisure

  • 1930
  • Approved
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Ladies of Leisure (1930)
DramaRomance

An upper-crust artist hires a 'party girl' as a model; romance follows.An upper-crust artist hires a 'party girl' as a model; romance follows.An upper-crust artist hires a 'party girl' as a model; romance follows.

  • Director
    • Frank Capra
  • Writers
    • Milton Herbert Gropper
    • Jo Swerling
  • Stars
    • Barbara Stanwyck
    • Ralph Graves
    • Lowell Sherman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Frank Capra
    • Writers
      • Milton Herbert Gropper
      • Jo Swerling
    • Stars
      • Barbara Stanwyck
      • Ralph Graves
      • Lowell Sherman
    • 46User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos21

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    Top Cast13

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    Barbara Stanwyck
    Barbara Stanwyck
    • Kay Arnold
    Ralph Graves
    Ralph Graves
    • Jerry Strong
    Lowell Sherman
    Lowell Sherman
    • Bill Standish
    Marie Prevost
    Marie Prevost
    • Dot Lamar
    Nance O'Neil
    Nance O'Neil
    • Mrs. John Strong
    George Fawcett
    George Fawcett
    • John Strong
    Juliette Compton
    Juliette Compton
    • Claire Collins
    Johnnie Walker
    Johnnie Walker
    • Charlie
    Willie Best
    Willie Best
    • George - The Elevator Operator
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Butterworth
    Charles Butterworth
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Jay Eaton
    Jay Eaton
    • Party Guest on Balcony
    • (uncredited)
    Edith Ellison
    • Jerry's Housekeeper
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Strang
    Harry Strang
    • Ship's Officer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Frank Capra
    • Writers
      • Milton Herbert Gropper
      • Jo Swerling
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    6.71.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6Doylenf

    Good early Barbara Stanwyck tear-jerker directed by Capra...

    Considering that movies only began to talk in 1928, this early sound film starring BARBARA STANWYCK as a girl of ill repute (she calls herself a party girl), and RALPH GRAVES as an artist who wants to use her as a model, is not bad at all. It's certainly one of the better jobs in sound recording for a film made in the early '30s. As usual with films of this period, there is almost no music on the soundtrack except for the moment when "The End" is flashed on the screen. In the TCM print I watched, the screen then fades to black while some "exit" music is played against a dark screen.

    Stanwyck is the prostitute with a heart of gold who finds a good man and doesn't want to let him go, even when his family objects to their union when he proposes marriage. She is convinced by the mother to give him up--but circumstances change after she makes a rash decision.

    Stanwyck is excellent at conveying the brassy qualities of the character, but then reveals the softer nature of the girl as she falls in love with the man who only wants to paint her portrait. The tenderness of the romance that develops is full of nuances that one wouldn't expect from a Frank Capra film. The sentimental ending is more in keeping with his usual style.

    RALPH GRAVES gives a quiet, assured performance as the man who finds that he does really love Stanwyck. LOWELL SHERMAN does his usual schtick as an inebriated friend who flounces around making wisecracks. MARIE PREVOST has some good moments as Stanwyck's roommate and NANCE O'NEIL does a good job as Grave's well-meaning mother.

    Stanwyck fans will appreciate her well modulated performance.
    bill-790

    Stanwyck good, Graves not so hot.

    One reviewer here complimented the whole cast of "Ladies of Leisure." Well, I must respectfully disagree. I found Ralph Graves' performance to be rather wooden. Graves had been in films since he was teenager just after Word Ware I had ended, but clearly he found it difficult to deliver a natural performance in the sound medium.

    I do recommend the film for historical purposes if nothing else. It was released in the Spring of 1930 and may have been filmed in late 1929. That would definitely qualify "Ladies of Leisure" as a member of that first generation of sound films dating from 1928 to 1930.

    One thing I wondered about is whether a boom mic was used. I think someone else opined that hidden mics, placed here and there around the set were still used in this production. I do know from my reading that sound film technology was making progress just about on a week by week basis in those early days.
    HarlowMGM

    The Movie That Made Barbara Stanwyck a Star

    23 year old Barbara Stanwyck became a leading film star in 1930 with the release of LADIES OF LEISURE, after having starred in two flops in 1929. This is a very slender story of a good time girl who falls in love with a millionaire's son who basically is just interested in her as a model for a painting he wants to do. Given how free-wheeling and blunt most early talkies were on morality, this movie is surprisingly discreet about Stanwyck's character's past. We are supposed to read into the story she's a prostitute (or more accurately, a former mistress) - but in her first scene she is fleeing a yacht party that's too risqué for her!! Stanwyck rings honesty out of a cardboard script and she's got good support from three second-tier silent stars who are quite good in talkies - Ralph Graves as the object of her affection, Marie Prevost as her wisecracking, less prudish pal, and especially Lowell Sherman as Graves' drunken buddy who is very open to being Stanwyck's next sugar daddy yet the best scene is the confrontation being Stanwyck and Graves' mother, superbly played by a somewhat unsung character actress, Nance O'Neil.

    The movie's minor fame today rests on it being Stanwyck's first screen success and an early hit for director Frank Capra yet Capra's direction is rather dull and often awkward and the movie is very badly edited with some scenes conspicuously made up of different takes with shot angles and acting rhythms off among other giveaways (to say nothing of the scene where Graves answers the phone and says "Hello" way before the receiver is anywhere near his mouth!!) As mentioned by another reviewer, a "silent" version of the film was also shot (the smaller studios like Columbia were still making silent versions of some of their films up to 1931 for the ever dwindling number of movie theaters that were still not wired for sound), I don't know anything about the silent version being available on video and not the sound film, possibly the silent version fell into public domain and that's why that version alone is on tape, however the sound version still exists and was shown on American Movie Classics in the early 1990's back when that channel actually showed classic movies. Turner Classic Movies, on the other hand, has so many MGM and Warner Bros. films at their disposal they hardly need to go elsewhere for films so it's not likely they will bother to pick up rights to this movie from Columbia. I wouldn't be surprised, however, one day to see it and a number of other early Capra talkies together in a boxed DVD set given his legend as a director.
    7mukava991

    in the Capra mold

    LADIES OF LEISURE, adapted to the screen from a play, is another in a long line of Frank Capra-directed films that pits the lower orders against the upper through the device of a romantic entanglement. In this case it's "lady of leisure" (read: prostitute or good time gal) Barbara Stanwyck against the slightly bohemian scion of a wealthy banking family (Ralph Graves). The theme of the movie is set right away as we see a bustling Manhattan street at night. Suddenly bottles fall from the sky and explode on the sidewalk, narrowly missing pedestrians. They are coming from a group of drunken young women who are tossing them over a penthouse terrace balcony for kicks. These party girls have been hired by dissolute swell Lowell Sherman, a friend of Graves, who, offended by the crudity of the party scene, hops into his roadster for a drive into the country. He stops by a lake where he sees a young woman (Stanwyck) dressed in an evening gown rowing herself ashore in a canoe. It turns out she too is a party girl and is also escaping a wild party, this time on a yacht. He finds her attractive and offers her a ride back to the city. As is her habit, she picks his pocket while he's driving. Thus the plot line is set. We know what will happen by the end. Along the way we are treated to a beautifully etched characterization by Stanwyck who covers a wide range of acting territory from crude and lowdown to transcendentally idealistic. The equally inventive Marie Prevost provides generous support as her overweight roommate. Lowell Sherman, playing the same type of hard-drinking, pleasure-loving sophisticate as he often did in other movies (Bachelor Apartment, What Price Hollywood), is also excellent.

    For whatever reason, Ralph Graves cannot perform like a flesh and blood human being. His movements are stiff and unmotivated, his emotions seem forced and sudden. Even the expression on his face looks pasted on from some other character in some other movie. All wrong. One is not surprised to see that within a few years he was playing uncredited bit parts in third-rate movies. His silent film credits are numerous and go back to the teens so one can only wonder what his appeal was. He is not bad looking, so one must assume that his substantial silent film career owed a lot to his appearance.
    7eddax

    The first Stanwyck-Capra collaboration. Better works to come.

    This is the first Barbara Stanwyck and Frank Capra collaboration, and it's obvious that while both have yet to perfect their craft, they already possess the raw talent that indicates great things to come.

    It's a melodrama, with perhaps a unique enough story to stand out. A professional party-attendee (i.e. a pretty girl to paid to pad the attendance) mets an artist and heir at the party, who decides to paint her and they fall in love, but their differences in status threaten to tear them apart.

    Already in 1930 Stanwyck was portraying one of her trademark hard-outside- soft-inside-sassy-all-over roles, even though she was a tad too smushy in this one - probably because the script demanded it. It's not the most sparkling of screenplays, but the highlight here is Stanwyck anyway, and Capra captures her magnificently.

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    Related interests

    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Despite the fact her three previous films had been critical and commercial failures, Harry Cohn was intent on casting Barbara Stanwyck as Kay, but the actress was on the verge of returning to her theatrical roots in New York City. She agreed to meet with Frank Capra, who had another actress in mind, but the interview went badly. Stanwyck's husband, actor Frank Fay, became furious when Stanwyck returned home crying and called Capra to complain. The director was surprised by her reaction, saying she had acted as if she did not want the part. Fay urged him to screen a film test she had made for The Noose (1928) at Warner Bros., and Capra was so impressed by it he urged Cohn to sign her immediately.
    • Goofs
      Although the onscreen credits state "Adapted from A David Belasco-Milton Herbert Gropper stage play," only Gropper was the author of the play; Belasco produced it.
    • Quotes

      Bill Standish: Ever done any posing before?

      Kay Arnold: I'm always posing.

      Bill Standish: How do you spend your nights?

      Kay Arnold: Re-posing.

    • Alternate versions
      Columbia simultaneously released "Ladies of Leisure" in both sound and silent versions.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 54th Annual Academy Awards (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Misterioso Agitato
      (uncredited)

      Music by Harold Smith

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 5, 1930 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Mujeres de lujo
    • Filming locations
      • Malibu Lake, California, USA(exterior locations)
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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