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In Old Chicago (1937)
In director Henry King's urban disaster film and family
drama - a fictionalized account of the historic fire in Chicago in
the 19th century:
- the spectacular 20-minute sequence of the famous
Chicago fire of 1871 with thousands fleeing into Lake Michigan
as a panoramic shot shows the city totally ablaze
- the concluding segment in which Irish immigrant matriarch
Mrs. Molly O'Leary (Oscar-winning Alice Brady) watched the city burn
down in the distance with playboyish entrepreneur son Dion (Tyrone
Power) and pretty saloon singer Belle Fawcett (Alice Faye) in his
arms; she spoke sadly about the loss of her crusading lawyer son
Jack (Don Ameche): ("It's gone, and my boy's gone with it. But
what he stood for will never die. It was a city of wood, and now
it's ashes, but out of the fire will be coming steel. You didn't
live to see it, my lad, no more than your father did before you.
God rest the two of you. But there's Dion left, and his children
to come after"); Dion assured his mother: ("He'll have
his dream, Ma. Nothing can lick Chicago any more than it could lick
him")
- the ending sequence of wet-eyed Molly steadfastly
speaking words of hope that the city would rebuild and survive, and
life would go on - the dream of both her boy Jack and her deceased
husband Patrick: ("Aye, that's the truth. We O'Learys are a
strange tribe. There's strength in us. And what we set out to do,
we finish")
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The Sequence of the Chicago Fire of 1871
Molly's Hopeful Words
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