The Wild Man of Borneo (film)

The Wild Man of Borneo is a 1941 American period comedy film directed by Robert B. Sinclair and written by Waldo Salt and John McClain, based on the 1927 Broadway play by Marc Connelly and Herman J. Mankiewicz. The film stars Frank Morgan and features Mary Howard, Billie Burke, Donald Meek, Marjorie Main, Connie Gilchrist, Bonita Granville and Dan Dailey.[2] The film was released on January 24, 1941 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[3][4]

The Wild Man of Borneo
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRobert B. Sinclair
Screenplay byWaldo Salt
John McClain
Based onThe Wild Man of Borneo (1927 play)
by Marc Connelly
Herman J. Mankiewicz
Produced byJoseph L. Mankiewicz
StarringFrank Morgan
Mary Howard
Billie Burke
CinematographyOliver T. Marsh
Edited byFrank Sullivan
Music byDavid Snell
Production
company
Distributed byLoew's Inc.
Release date
  • January 24, 1941 (1941-01-24)
Running time
79 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

edit

“The good old days! When Roosevelt was president, and Dewey was an admiral. …. The medicine, man! A grifter, a grafter, a fraud, and a liar – he’s sold you a bottle to make you well he took your money and made you like it…”

Dissolve to a medicine show wagon proclaiming, “Dr. Dunbar’s Traveling Temple of Health.”

Dan Thompson emerges carrying two suitcases, and enters another wagon, where his partner, Doc Dunbar, is filling bottles of snake tonic. Dan’s 18-year-old daughter has asked him to come, now that her wealthy aunt has died. He last saw Mary when she was three. Weary of grifting and eager to “make good” with Mary, he is taking the next train to Twin Rapids, New York. Arriving at a huge Victorian mansion, he discovers that the house has been emptied by creditors. He cannot bear to tell Mary that his letters were full of lies. He takes her to a theatrical boarding house New York City full of characters. The landlady, Bernice Marshall, is a widow. She and her husband ran a successful repertory company. Daniel cons his way into her good graces by pretending to be a friend of Richard Mansfield, an actor Bernice idealizes, and declaring they will “make a lark of it” by foregoing a house and servants and staying in “the theatrical boarding house of his youth.” A bewildered Mary is distracted by charming fellow boarder, Ed LeMotte, an  inventor who is working on a moving-picture machine.

After a disastrous job hunt, Daniel pulls out his recipe for Dr. Dunbar's soap and cooks it up in his room. He is hawking it on a street corner when fellow boarders Evelyn Diamond and her daughter, Francine, see him. He flees and ducks into a nickelodeon, where he tries to sell the soap. A barker drags him to the manager—his erstwhile partner Doc Skelby—who is glad to see him and offers him a job and an advance.

George Burdo exposes Dan's soapmaking to the residents of the boarding house, but Bernice reserves judgment. Dan returns, swears the Diamonds to secrecy, and reveals that he is Richard Mansfield's  understudy in King Lear. As expected, they tell everyone. Dan tells Bernice the soapmaking is a hobby.

Burdo is furious. Mary steps forward to defend her father. With a flourish, Dan produces a $20 bill and hands it to Mary “to relieve their indebtedness.”

While changing into his Wild Man of Borneo costume, Dan confesses to Doc Skelby that he is worried about breaking Mary's heart.  

At the boarding house, Mary asks her father to read Lear to her Cordelia. Bernice is moved. Stunned to learn they are all going to the theater, Dan collapses on his way out. The detective Evelyn hired to find her husband arrives and announces success. They all decide to follow him instead. Freed from his need to feign illness, Dan leaves. Everyone else follows the detective—to the Nickelodeon.

Daniel is unrecognizable in his costume. When Burdo riles the audience by crying “fake”, Doc Skelby appears. Bernice identifies him: He owes her $4,000. Doc declares she took him for everything he ever had and appeals to his friend of 20 years, Dan, who reveals himself. Bernice leaves in tears. Dan says meaningfully, “Take care of her,” to Ed, who says he understands and takes Mary home.

Daniel returns to the boardinghouse with an elaborate story. In private, Bernice shows him a portrait of her husband, “a gallant scoundrel, like you, Daniel.” She proposes to him. He tells her he has been “disappearing” ever since he was 14, and is about to do it again. He plans not to see Mary but she and Ed are kissing in a taxi outside. They are engaged, Ed—whose father was a medicine showman— has signed a contract for a motion picture. He wants Dan to be involved.

Inside, they learn that Doc Skelby has remarried Evelyn. He gives Dan a half-interest in the Nickelodeon and suggests they put Ed's “flickers” in. Just as a sideline, since it is a “passing fad.”

Irma brings in a birthday cake for Dan, who embarks on a tall tale about escaping the Little Big Horn.

Cast

edit

Reception

edit

Writing for Turner Classic Movies, Glenn Erickson observed: “The colorful cast includes a gallery of distinctive personalities: Donald Meek, Marjorie Main, Bonita Granville and Phil Silvers. Did producer Joseph Mankiewicz intend this odd comedy as an 'origin story' for the motion picture business?”[5]

Production

edit

Principal photography took place from early October to mid-November 1940, with retakes starting on January 2, 1941, photographed by Robert Planck, since Oliver T. Marsh, the film's cinematographer, was shooting another film.[1]

MGM employed Ruby Ray, a bird call imitator, to instruct Donald Meek on how to purse his lips so as to appear to be imitating birds. She also did the actual whistling heard in the film.[6]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b The Wild Man of Borneo at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
  2. ^ Fetrow p.577
  3. ^ "The Wild Man of Borneo (1941) - Overview - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  4. ^ "The Wild Man Of Borneo". TV Guide. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  5. ^ "The Wild Man of Borneo". www.tcm.com. Retrieved 2023-02-26.
  6. ^ "Ruby Ray" AFI Catalog

Bibliography

edit
  • Fetrow, Alan G. Feature Films, 1940-1949: a United States Filmography. McFarland, 1994.
edit