Three Husbands (1951 film)
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Anthony Z. Landi (associate producer)
| Three Husbands | |
|---|---|
![]() Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Irving Reis |
| Written by | Vera Caspary Edward Eliscu Gertrude Purcell |
| Story by | Vera Caspary |
| Produced by | Isadore Goldsmith (producer) Anthony Z. Landi (associate producer) |
| Starring | Eve Arden Ruth Warrick Emlyn Williams |
| Cinematography | Franz Planer |
| Edited by | Louis Sackin |
| Music by | Herschel Burke Gilbert |
Production company | Gloria Films |
| Distributed by | United Artists |
Release dates | |
Running time | 78 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Three Husbands is a 1951 American comedy film directed by Irving Reis and starring Eve Arden, Ruth Warrick and Emlyn Williams.[5]
When recently deceased playboy Max reaches heaven, he is granted a wish. His request is to watch his three best friends, with whom he regularly played poker, for the next 24 hours. Each friend will receive a letter, and the next day, Max's will is to be read. Each letter states that Max had a romantic affair with the recipient's wife. With one, Max attended Friday symphony matinees and sipped tea. With another, he frequented night clubs and taught French. He repeatedly hired the third man's wife as his nurse through his long battle with heart disease.
Each husband reacts differently, as does each wife when she discovers that something has happened to cause her husband to distrust her. At the end of the 24 hours, each couple declares their intention to divorce, with mistrust and disbelief having split each relationship. The lawyer reads the will, stating that Max's great fortune has been left to the three wives, as he believes that marriage is stronger when a wife is not dependent on her husband. Max wrote the letters to show each of his friends how much his wife was worth, as each had begun to take her for granted. He believed that jealousy was the perfect motivator to make someone reappreciate what he holds dear.
Each wife reiterates her intention to divorce, and each husband apologizes and begs his wife to reconsider. The three couples all reconcile, everyone grateful for what Max had done.
Cast
- Eve Arden as Lucille McCabe
- Ruth Warrick as Jane Evans
- Vanessa Brown as Mary Whittaker
- Howard Da Silva as Dan McCabe
- Shepperd Strudwick as Arthur Evans
- Robert Karnes as Kenneth Whittaker
- Emlyn Williams as Maxwell Bard
- Billie Burke as Mrs. Jenny Bard Whittaker
- Louise Erickson as Matilda Clegg
- Jonathan Hale as Edward Wurdeman
- Jane Darwell as Mrs. Wurdeman
Production
Vera Caspary, who wrote the original story and cowrote the screenplay, was married to the film's producer Isadore Goldsmith. Caspary had previously written the screen adaptation for A Letter to Three Wives (1949), a film with a similar plot. Shortly before the film's American premiere, Caspary was asked about the relationship between the two stories and admitted: "I've sold the same story, thinly disguised, to Hollywood five times."[2]
The film entered production in mid-February 1950 at Motion Picture Center Studios[6] and wrapped approximately one month later.[7]
Soundtrack
- "Poor Chap" (Music by Herschel Burke Gilbert, lyrics by Edward Eliscu)
