Plot Synopsis (continued)
Frustrated,
Bruce leaves while Hildy still sits typing furiously at her typewriter.
She calls after him, puts down her identification with him (as a "suburban
bridge player"), and calls herself a "newspaperman":
Bruce: Remember, if you change your mind, I'm leaving
on the nine o'clock train.
Hildy: If you want me, Bruce, you've gotta take me as I am instead
of trying to change me into something else. I'm no suburban bridge
player. I'm a newspaperman. Darn it.
When Earl Williams peeks his head out from the rolltop
desk, Walter orders:
Get back in there, you Mock Turtle. [A 'in-joke'
reference to the character Grant played in Alice in Wonderland
(1933).]
Walter paces frantically and curses out the window: "Now
the moon's out!", worrying that Butch and his movers won't get
there in time to move the desk concealing Williams before being detected.
He works out a signaling system with Earl: "Three taps is me.
Don't forget."
Suddenly, Hildy pauses and innocently asks: "Where's
Bruce?" Then, she proudly reads her story to Walter:
Hildy: 'While hundreds of Sheriff Hartwell's paid
gunmen stalked through the city shooting innocent bystanders, spreading
their reign of terror, Earl Williams was lurking less than twenty
yards from the Sheriff's Office where...'
Walter (dismayed): Wait a minute, wait a minute, aren't you going
to mention the Post? Doesn't the paper get any credit?
Hildy: Well, honey, I did that. Right there in the second paragraph.
Walter: Who's gonna read the second paragraph? Listen honey, for
ten years, I've been telling ya how to write a newspaper story and
that's all I get?
Roy B. Bensinger is the first press man to return to
the office. Hildy and Walter are worried that Bensinger will go over
to his rolltop desk and discover Williams hiding there. To stall
for time, Bensinger is encouraged to recite his own "heartbreaking" poem
that was printed in his paper - the morning Tribune, a competing
newspaper:
And all is well
Outside his cell
But in his heart he hears
The hangman calling
And the gallows falling
And his white-haired mother's tears...
To prevent Bensinger from getting his rhyming dictionary
in the desk, Walter offers the poetic newsman a job at the Post (with
a raise and a by-line), and immediately sends him off to Duffy to
write for their paper:
I want you to hustle and write me a story from the
point of view of the escaped man. (Acting out) He hides, cowering,
afraid of every sound, of every light. He hears footsteps. His
heart is going like that. And all the time, they're closing in.
Now, get the sense of the animal at bay.
In an unethical, "double-crossing" move (Walter's
intention is to hire and then fire the effete newsman), Walter closes
the door on Bensinger and then tells Duffy on the phone: "Handle
him with kid gloves. Put him to work writing poetry. No, no, we don't
want him. Just stall him along 'til the Extra's out. Then tell him
his poetry smells and kick him down the stairs."
Suddenly, Hildy realizes that she can't possibly catch
the nine o'clock train with Bruce on account of Walter's shenanigans: "How
you have messed up my life. What am I going to do?...I could be on
that train right now. What a sap I am falling for your line: 'They're
gonna name streets after me.' Johnson Street!"
As the film's finale approaches, in true screwball
comedy fashion, all the principal characters begin to converge on
the press room. Diamond Louis appears, his hat crushed, his face
bruised, and his coat torn, telling of a car accident he had while
riding in a taxi with Bruce's mother:
Down Western Avenue, we was going sixty-five miles
an hour...We run smack into a police patrol. you know what I mean?
We busted it in half!...Can you imagine bumping into a load of
cops? They come rolling out like oranges!...When I come to, I was
running down Thirty-fourth Street...The driver got knocked cold...I
don't think she's [Bruce's mother] squawking much, you know what
I mean?...Say listen, me with a gun on the hip and a kidnapped
old lady on my hands, I'm gonna stick around askin' questions from
a lot of cops?
It is feared that Mrs. Baldwin was killed in the mishap
- Hildy feels responsible for her death after hearing Louis' tale
("Dead! Oh, this is the end!"). She is distraught: "I
killed her. I'm responsible. What am I gonna do? How can I ever face
Bruce again?" On the left of the frame under a hanging lamp,
she telephones various city hospitals asking about the fate of Mrs.
Baldwin:
Mission Hospital, Receiving Room please...Was there
an old lady brought in there from an auto smashup?...Nobody?...Community
Hospital, give me the Receiving Room, will you please?...Was there
an old lady brought in there in an auto smashup?...Well, look around,
will you please?!...
Walter is also on the phone on the right of the frame
(under a larger hanging lamp) as they engage in another duet of shouting
words into receivers. He is panicked while yelling into the receiver
at Butch for double-crossing him on account of some dame:
Well Butch, where are you?...Well, what are you doing
there? Haven't you even started?...Listen, it's a matter of life
and death!...Well, you can't stop for a dame now! I don't care
if you've been after her for six years. Butch - our whole lives
are at stake! Are you going to let a woman come between us after
all we've been through?...Butch, I'd put my arm in fire for you,
up to here (indicating up to where). Now you can't double-cross
me...Put her on, I'll talk to her. Oh, good evening madam. Now
listen, you ten-cent glamour girl. You can't keep Butch away from
his duty!
The woman hangs up on him, and Walter has no other
alternative but to ask Louis to go out and find some "guys...anybody
with hair on his chest" out on the streets to move the desk.
When the "dumb immigrant" has gone, he has more ideas: "If
he's not back in five minutes, we'll carry it out alone...There's
a million ways. We can start a fire. Have the firemen take it out
in the confusion."
Hildy starts for the door to locate her future mother-in-law, but is
forced to retreat back into the room, swept in by a tide of reporters,
Sheriff Hartwell and his deputies. They bust in with accusatory, suspicious
claims and refuse to let go of Hildy: "She was goin' out to get
Williams....She had the door locked...He and Mollie were in here talking...They
know where he is!"
In a struggle with Hildy, Williams' gun drops to the
floor. Sheriff Hartwell identifies it: "This happens to be the
gun that Williams used to shoot his way out with!...I ought to know
my own gun, oughtn't I?" McCue cleverly deduces:
"And Hildy got it from Williams." Although "master-mind" Burns
vows: "The Morning Post does not obstruct justice or hide
criminals," the Sheriff threatens to jail both Hildy and Walter
and fine them $10,000. The Sheriff plays into Walter's strategy by
impounding Post property, including the roll-top desk:
Walter: (To the Sheriff) Now I warn you. You move
this desk out of this building and I'll put you behind bars.
Hildy: He can do it to.
Sheriff: Is that so?
Walter: I'll see that Roosevelt hears about it.
Sheriff: Alright, tell him. Come on, boys! Confiscate this desk!
And then a disheveled Mrs. Baldwin (with her hat over
one ear) arrives with a policeman, pointing a wagging, blaming finger
at Walter Burns for staging her kidnapping: "That's the man
that did it, right there!...They dragged me all the way down the
stairs...He was in charge of the whole thing. He told them to kidnap
me." With more characteristic deceitfulness, Walter accuses
Mrs. Baldwin of being a joyrider who is framing him. He makes her
look like the guilty one - until she lets loose with a bombshell:
Walter: Be honest. If you were out joy-riding, plastered,
and got into some scrape, why don't you admit it instead of accusing
innocent people?
Mrs. Baldwin: You ruffian. How dare you talk like that to me!
Hildy: He's just a little crazy, mother.
Mrs. Baldwin: And I can tell you something more. I can tell you why
they did it...They had some kind of a murderer in here, and they
were hiding him.
Walter righteously pounds three times on the top of
the roll-top desk to accentuate his denial of her accusation: "Madam.
You're a Cock-Eyed Liar, and you know it." Then,
he stands there dismayed and horrified, remembering too late the
coded signal arranged with Williams. There are three answering knocks
from the inside of the desk.
The Sheriff and his deputies draw their guns on the
desk, the reporters rush for their telephones, and panic-stricken
Mrs. Baldwin (dubbed a "gray-haired old weasel" by Walter)
streaks for the door into Bruce's arms in the hallway. The press
room door closes them out. The reporters call in their news flashes
about the moment of capture, speed-enhanced by rapid cross-cuts to
each of their faces next to phone receivers. Sheriff Hartwell counts
to three before opening the desktop to reveal the fugitive:
Newsman: In a minute...Hold the wire...
Sheriff: One of you get on each end of the desk.
Newsman: There's somethin' comin' up.
Sheriff: We got you covered, Williams.
Newsman: Have it in a minute!
Sheriff: Don't try to move!
Newsman: Any time now!
Sheriff: I'll count three.
Newsman: It's hot!
Sheriff: ONE.
Newsman: Ready for an emergency.
Sheriff: TWO.
Newsman: Any second now.
Sheriff: THREE - Up with it!
When the cover on the desk is raised and Williams is
found cowering and sweating in the desk, he pleads with them: "Go
ahead, shoot me." The weakened, pitiable criminal is assisted
out the door, although the insensitive reporters sensationalize the
news of Williams' capture as the camera tracks past them:
"Williams was unconscious when they opened the desk...Williams
put up a desperate struggle, but the police overpowered him...He offered
no resistance...He might shoot out with the cops but his gun wasn't
workin...He broke through a whole cordon of police...The Morning
Post just turned Williams over to the Sheriff."
Now Hildy and Walter are physically handcuffed together
side by side - one step closer to being linked once more (they "look
kind of natural"). They are charged with aiding and abetting
a criminal and kidnapping. Walter assertively tells the Sheriff: "You're
gonna wish you'd never been born!" The corrupt Mayor enters
the press room and congratulates the Sheriff for his fine work:
Mayor: You certainly delivered the goods. I'm proud
of you!
Sheriff: Look kind of natural, don't they?
Mayor: A sight for sore eyes.
The Mayor is confident that the Post is finally
licked, although Walter thinks otherwise, suggesting a horrible fate
- in a classic come-back line [the second major "in"-joke
of the film]:
Mayor: Well, it looks like ten years apiece for you
two birds.
Walter: Does it?
Hildy: Whenever you think you've got the Morning Post licked,
it's time for you to get out of town.
Mayor: Whistling in the dark? Well that isn't gonna help you this
time. You're through.
Walter: Listen. The last man who said that to me was Archie Leach
just a week before he cut his throat. [Archie/Archibald Leach was
Cary Grant's real name.]
Sheriff and the Mayor: Is that so?
Walter: We've been in worse jams than this, haven't we, Hildy?
Hildy: Nope.
With the Mayor and Sheriff believing that everything
is working their way, the Governor's messenger Pettibone reels in
the doorway with an opened umbrella over his shoulder. By refusing
a job as city sealer (because it might displease his wife), he exposes
their previous bribery attempt:
Here's your reprieve...Oh, you can't bribe me...I
don't want to be a City Sealer.
The politically opportunistic Mayor at first denies
Pettibone's charges as a "cock-and-bull story":
Mayor: That's absurd on the face of it. Walter, he's
talking like a child.
Walter: Out of the mouths of babes.
Pettibone: Hi, babe.
Walter: Hi ya, toots.
But then the Mayor quickly jumps on the bandwagon to
support Williams' reprieve:
If this unfortunate man, Williams, has really been
reprieved, I'm personally tickled to death....Sheriff, this document
is authentic, and Earl Williams has been reprieved. And
our Commonwealth has been saved the painful necessity of shedding
blood.
Hildy responds with an improvised line: "That's
awful." She and Walter are released from their handcuffs and
now they turn the tables on the Mayor, threatening him with only
three more hours in office until an expose is printed in the next
special edition of the Post:
Hildy: That's long enough for us to get out a special
edition asking for your recall...
Walter: ...and your arrest. You know, you little boys ought to get
about ten years apiece, I think.
Mayor: Don't make any hasty decisions, Mr. Burns. You might run into
a thumping big libel suit.
Hildy: You're going to run into the Governor.
So Earl Williams is reprieved, and Bruce is thought
to be on his way home with his mother to Albany. As Walter recaps
things with Duffy on the phone throughout the remainder of the film,
he and Hildy glow with satisfaction over their successful teaming
to turn the events of the day toward their own advantage - personally
as well as for the paper-reading public.
Hildy: Remember the time we stole Old Lady Haggerty's
stomach off the coroner's physician...We proved she'd been poisoned
then, didn't we, Walter? We had to hide out for a week. Do you
remember that?...That's where, I mean, how...
Walter: We could have gone to jail for that too, you know that.
Hildy: I guess so.
As one final ploy to win her back, Walter argues that
being a newspaperman is a "bad business." He feigns happiness
and support for her marriage to Bruce, speaks unselfishly about being "noble" for
once in his life, and encourages her to go off (with her coat) to
Bruce - and Hildy believes him for once:
Walter: Aw yes, maybe you're right, Hildy. It's a
bad business. Well, you're gonna be better off. Say, you better
get going.
Hildy: Where would I go?
Walter: Well, to Bruce, of course.
Hildy: But you know, he's gone. He took the nine o'clock train.
Walter: Just send him a wire. He'll be waiting at the station when
you get into Albany. Now go on.
Hildy: I don't know. I got so messed up, Walter. Maybe...
Walter: Get going, Hildy.
Hildy: Get going? What is that with you?
Walter: ...Now look, honey. Can't you understand? I'm trying to do
something noble for once in my life. Now get out of here before I
change my mind. Come on.
Hildy: But Walter, listen, just a minute...
Walter: ...Send the fellow a wire. He'll be waiting when you get
in. Come on.
Hildy: Who'll write the story?
Walter: I'll do it myself. Won't be half as good as you can do it,
but what's the difference?
Hildy: It's my story. I'd kinda like to think that it...I get it,
Walter. The same old act, isn't it? Trying to push me out of here,
thinking I'll be stupid enough to want to stay.
Walter: Now I know I deserve that, Hildy...but this is one time you're
wrong. Look honey, when you walk out that door, part of me will go
right with ya. But a whole new world's gonna open up for you. I made
fun of Bruce and Albany and all that kind of thing, you know why?
Hildy: Why?
Walter: I was jealous. I was sore because he could offer you the
kind of life I can't give ya. That's what you want, honey.
Hildy: I-I could stay and do the story, and take the train in the
morning. Doesn't make that much difference.
Walter: Now forget it. (He takes her by her shoulders) Come on, come
on. Goodbye dear, and good luck. (He kisses her goodbye, turns her
toward the door, and resumes his phone conversation with Duffy.)
At the last minute, Hildy takes a phone call from Bruce
at the 4th Precinct Police Station, arrested for "having counterfeit
money," given to him earlier by Hildy (through Walter). The
unscrupulous Walter stealthily tip-toes toward the door, but turns
back after seeing a subdued and submissive Hildy driven to tears
with her head down on the desk. The phone call reminds her that all
along, Walter has been scheming to keep her away from Bruce so that
she could return to him:
Hildy (sobbing and sniffling): I thought you were
really sending me away with Bruce. I didn't know you had him locked
up. I thought you were on the level for once. I think you were
just standing by and letting me go off with him without doing a
thing about it.
Walter: Oh come on, honey. What do you think I was? A chump?
Hildy: And I thought you didn't love me.
Walter: Oh, what were you thinking with?
Hildy: I don't know. Well, what are you standing there gawking for?
We have to get him out of jail. Send Louis down with some honest
money and send him back to Albany where he belongs.
Walter: Sure, sure.
Ultimately, the two are reunited in two of their favorite
pursuits - love and work as newspaper reporters. She surrenders to
him and accepts being a
"newspaperman" and a "woman" at the same time.
She will write the story of Earl Williams' reprieve, and the two will
get married. But they will have to spend their planned honeymoon in
Albany instead of Niagara Falls - covering a news story about a strike:
Walter (To Duffy on the phone): We're coming over
to the office. No, don't worry about the story. Hildy's gonna write
it. Course she's not quitting. She never intended to. We're gonna
get married.
Hildy: Oh. Can we go on a honeymoon this time, Walter?
Walter: Sure. Hey Duffy, you can be managing editor. No, no, not
permanently. Just for the two weeks we're away on a honeymoon...I
don't know where we're going. (To Hildy) Where are we going?
Hildy: Niagara Falls.
Walter (To Duffy): Niagara Falls, Duffy.
Hildy: Two whole weeks, Walter?
Walter: Sure. You've earned it. (To Duffy) What? What? Strike? What
strike? Where? Albany? Well, I know it's on the way Duffy, but I
can't ask Hildy to...
Hildy: All right, we'll honeymoon in Albany.
Walter: ...Ha, ha, ha. Well, isn't that a coincidence? We're going
to Albany. I wonder if Bruce can put us up?...
The film's improvised closing line is a suggestion
delivered by Walter to Hildy about her suitcase as they exit the
Press Room and speak to each other under the door frame's arch. As
always, he strides in front of her, and observes:
Say, why don't you carry that in your hand?
[Note: The theatrical version of the script ended with
the famous line: "The son of a bitch stole my watch", only
heard in The Front Page (1974), but truncated, due to censor
demands, to: "The son of a...stole my watch" in The
Front Page (1931).] |