Bedside Manner is a 1945 American comedy film directed by Andrew L. Stone and starring John Carroll, Ruth Hussey, Charles Ruggles and Ann Rutherford. It is based on a 1944 Saturday Evening Post story of the same name by Robert Carson and was distributed by United Artists. The film was re-released in 1950 by Astor Pictures under the title Her Favorite Patient.

Bedside Manner
Film poster
Directed byAndrew L. Stone
Written byMalcolm Stuart Boylan
Robert Carson
Frederick J. Jackson
Produced byAndrew L. Stone
Henry S. Kesler
StarringJohn Carroll
Ruth Hussey
Charles Ruggles
Ann Rutherford
CinematographyJohn J. Mescall
James Van Trees
Edited byJames Smith
Music byEmil Newman
Production
company
Lysander Productions
Distributed byUnited Artists (original)
Astor Pictures (re-release)
Release date
  • June 14, 1945 (1945-06-14)
Running time
72 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$700,000[1] or $1 million[2]

Plot summary edit

Plastic surgeon Dr. Hedy Fredericks picks up three hitchhiking Marines, Tommy, Dick, and Harry (who all have Smith as their last name), while driving home to Chicago. On the way she makes a quick stop in her birth town of Blithewood, and is appalled by the way the town has changed since she left it years ago. The whole town now has a large defense plant with the population having grown dramatically.

Hedy runs into a man she believes is her childhood friend Smedley Hoover during her short visit, but it is in fact a test pilot named Morgan Hale. Her meeting with Morgan makes his date, Lola Cross so jealous that she stands him up.

Hedy also meets with her uncle, Dr. J.H ”Doc” Fredericks, who in vain tries to persuade her into staying and sharing his practice. She also visits another childhood friend named Stella Livingston, who is in need of plastic surgery after an accident at the defense plant. Hedy performs the surgery on her friend’s face, and then she goes out to the local hang-out with the three Smiths later in the night. There they meet Morgan, Lola, and a beautiful Russian pilot named Tanya. A series of complications occurs, leading to Morgan pursuing Tanya and Lola going out with Harry Smith.

Morgan is still angry at Hedy for breaking up his date earlier, but they make up after he crashes his plane during a test flight and Hedy is the one to treat him afterwards. The next day though, Hedy heads for Chicago after taking Morgan’s stitches out, much to his disappointment. Desperate to get Hedy to stay, Morgan chases her in his car, but crashes again, leading to Hedy having to treat him again. The next day, Morgan has another condition in need of treatment, and Hedy continues treating him. She spends a lot of time with Morgan, but doesn’t realize her feelings for him until Morgan stays out all night with Lola, and she gets jealous. Her uncle reveals that he and Morgan have been in on a plan to get her to stay in town. Furious, Hedy starts treating Morgan with a series of very unpleasant and rough sine cures, trying to make him expose himself as a fraud. Then she tries to leave for Chicago one more time, but slips on an ice cube from one of her rough treatments and is knocked unconscious. When she wakes up, she confesses her love for Morgan and they have their first kiss.[3]

Cast edit

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Indies $70,000,000 Pix Output". Variety: 18. 3 November 1944. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
  2. ^ "Bankrollers". Variety. 11 May 1949. p. 16.
  3. ^ "Bedside Manner". Turner Classic Movies.