Racing Lady (1937)
5/10
The Sport Of Kings Has A Princess
1 May 2009
Making generous use of newsreel footage of racetracks of the era, Racing Lady is the story of a woman entering the man's world of race horse training. The pioneer in this case is Ann Dvorak who comes by her interest naturally being raised by small time owner Harry Carey. It's in her blood.

Young and rich sportsman Smith Ballew claims Dvorak's horse, partly to get a winner, but also partly to gain her as a trainer. Dvorak and Ballew go through quite a rough patch before the film ends.

Stepping into a role that would normally go to someone like Raymond Walburn is Berton Churchill, a foxy fellow owner and quite the sportsman himself. Churchill is probably best known to today's audience as the stuffy banker/embezzler who was a passenger on John Ford's Stagecoach, but in Racing Lady he goes against type and quite successfully.

It's a B film without a terrible lot of production values, but Racing Lady is entertainment enough for those who follow the sport of kings.
11 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed