Review of First Love

First Love (1939)
10/10
Cinderella Deanna!!!
8 March 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This has to be my very favourite Deanna movie. One or two critics at the time sneered that "First Love" was a return to the Cinderella story but had she ever really left that formula!!! It was a revamped "Cinderella" story complete with the slipper left at the ball as the clock strikes 12 and having all the horrible, ugly stepsisters rolled into one supremely nasty cousin, Barbara, played by Helen Parrish who that same year had played one of Deanna's sisters in "Three Smart Girls Grow Up". Poor Helen having to be nasty to Deanna, no wonder her career didn't recover.

Like all the best Durbins it was directed by Henry Koster, a film maker of charm and taste and as Deanna's first adult vehicle (much publicity was given to her first screen kiss by Robert Stack) it was a smooth transition away from her "little Miss Fixit" roles, probably because she had grown into such a beautiful young lady. The movie also borrowed from "My Man Godfrey" by dropping Deanna into the midst of a family of rich eccentrics complete with a very selfish daughter who makes Connie's (Durbin) life miserable and with Eugene Palette reprising his role as the exasperated father. A lot of Deanna's popularity with the depression era public was her warm rapport with the working class and the hired help and this movie was no exception.

Most popular student at the young ladies academy, Connie Harding breaks down during a rendition of "Home, Sweet Home" knowing that as an orphan she doesn't have a home of her own. Crotchety old principal (with a heart of gold of course) (Kathleen Howard) urges her to go to New York and make it her own. She arrives at her uncle's doorstep feeling very small but after her soaring vocals of the beautiful "Amapola" immediately has all the staff entranced and ready to help her in every way. Her Uncle Jim (Pallette) is flabbergasted - "You like being here, you've met your aunt and your cousins and you actually like being here"!!!

Following the Cinderella story, Connie is beside herself with excitement at her first ball but nasty Barbara thinks Connie is just too excited and also that Connie's dress is a bit too beautiful and doesn't believe it when Connie innocently says that the cook just fixed up her graduation dress (that's what the staff told her - in reality they all chipped in to buy her a beautiful lacy gown). At the last minute Connie is told she can't go - but in the best Cinderella tradition and with the help of her fairy godmother, I mean the butler and Uncle Jim, Barbara's car is held up and Connie gets to the ball, dances with her "handsome prince", sings a medley of Strauss waltzes (a very funny sequence) and leaves on the stroke of midnight, being careful to leave her shoe on the grand staircase.

By the end everyone has had their comeuppance but Connie doesn't know - she has fled back to her old school, determined to become a teacher and an old maid. But after a beautiful rendition of "One Fine Day" from Puccini's "Madame Butterfly" and seeing all the "old maids" crying their eyes out she is more than happy to live happily ever after with her Prince Charming.

Leatrice Joy who during the twenties had been married to John Gilbert played the addled Aunt but something about her showed, to me, that she was just too smart for the part. I started to wonder why she hadn't succeeded in talking movies, she had clear diction and really handled the speedy delivery of the dialogue. Peggy Moran played one of Connie's pals at the beginning of the movie (the other one was Marcia Mae Jones). Peggy soon retired to marry the director Henry Koster.

Highly Recommended.
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