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Night Nurse (1931)
In this notorious Warner Bros. pre-Code melodrama from
director William Wellman, its emphasis was on the themes of drug
usage and alcoholism, neglectful mothering and child abuse, medical
establishment malpractice and corruption, and violence against women:
- the film's startling opening scene: the driver's
POV of an ambulance (with siren) careening and racing through streets
to the city's hospital with a car-crash patient wheeled in with
a broken skull
- the salacious and sexually adventurous activities
of the two "night" nurses who were roommates in training:
Lora Hart (Barbara Stanwyck) and sassy, wise-cracking blonde friend
B. Maloney (Joan Blondell), and the film's use of every imaginable
excuse to have the two actress-stars frequently and liberally undressing
down to their silky, lacy underwear: (1) in a hospital scene, Lora
was urged by B. Maloney to try on her nursing uniform in the open,
and she replied: "I guess everybody around here has seen more
than I've got"; then, in her bra and slip, she was spied upon
by a horny male intern Eagan (Edward Nugent) who entered the room: "Oh,
don't be embarrassed, you can't show me a thing. I just came from
the delivery room"; and (2) the two stripped when sneaking into
their dorm room late at night, (3) and then undressed a third time
when working
Heroines Undressing Multiple Times
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Lora in Bra and Slip
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Lora and B. Maloney Stripping
in Dorm Room
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Lora in Bra
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More Undressing
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- the film's story: the discovery by courageous live-in
private nurse Lora that there was a dastardly abusive plot (a slow-poison
scheme) to kill two deliberately-malnourished, anemic children
Desney and Nanny Ritchey (Betty Jane Graham and Marcia Mae Jones)
by their unfit, widowed, alcoholic socialite 5th Avenue mother
Mrs. Ritchey (Charlotte Merriam), in order to acquire their trust
fund inheritance; the evil plan had been orchestrated by the mean
and evil family chauffeur Nick (Clark Gable)
- the scene of Lora being sexually assaulted by a drunken
guest named Mack (Walter McGrail) in the same room where she was
tending to an inebriated and passed-out Mrs. Ritchey; she was rescued
from molestation by Nick (wearing a gaudy silk robe with a dragon
pattern on the back) who entered the room and punched out the man,
but then when she insisted on calling for a doctor, Lora was also
punched unconscious by the brutish Nick; later, she was urged and
bribed (with $100 by Mrs. Ritchey) to keep quiet, as well as by the
family's conniving, drug-addicted physician Dr. Milton Ranger (Ralf
Harolde) (with obvious tics) who was in cahoots with Nick
- Lora's harsh words to the drunken, always-partying,
irresponsible, self-proclaimed proud 'dipsomaniac' Mrs. Ritchey:
"You're a cruel, inhuman mother...You're a rotten parasite, that's
what you are. Don't blame it on the booze, it's you! Why do poor little
children have to be born to women like you?!...You're going up in that
nursery with me if I have to drag you by the hair of your head!" -
and then swung at soused Mack and sent him to the floor when he tried
to interfere
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Lora's Reprimand of Irresponsible
Lush Mother Mrs. Ritchey (and Mack)
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- Lora also stood up to and confronted the nasty Nick
when she learned from the housekeeper Mrs Maxwell (Blanche Friderici)
that he was working with Dr. Ranger to eliminate the two kids to
acquire control of the trust fund: "In your case, I'm talkin'
about murder...If this baby dies, you're in with Ranger...How long
did you think you could get away with this, you fool? Do you think
just because you can strong-arm a couple of women, you have the
brains to put over a racket like this? I had your number the minute
I stepped into the house, and what's more, I reported my suspicions
on the outside...You want those kids to die...because you want
what their father left 'em. That's why you keep the mother all
hopped up and full of booze all the time. One of these days, you'll
take her out and marry her and grab the children's trust fund.
That's what you're after, but you're not gonna get away with it!"
- by the conclusion, the plot was foiled and the children
were saved when the hospital's kindly chief of staff Dr. Arthur Bell
(Charles Winninger) attempted to intervene at the house, and provided
Nanny with an emergency blood transfusion (assisted by Lora), even
though Nick tried to prevent the procedure by knocking him to the
floor; Lora's "My Pal" Mortie (Ben Lyon), a bootlegger
that Lora had befriended earlier in the film, stopped Nick from any
further involvement and led him away (with a concealed gun)
- in the film's unusual ending, Lora happily accompanied
criminal "My Pal" in his convertible; he urged her to shift
the gears - full of phallic sexual innuendo: "When I say shift,
shift"; he hinted that he had sent Nick to the morgue: "Ya
know, I just been thinkin', maybe Nick won't be arrested...Well,
I ain't seen him around since last night... I happened to be talkin'
to a couple of guys last night...only I happened to mention that
I didn't like Nick so good"
- there was a book-ending view of an ambulance rushing
to bring a corpse to the morgue, where one of the attendants mentioned
that the victim was "taken for a ride" - and "he was
wearing a chauffeur's uniform"
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Ambulance in Opening Scene
Lora Hart (Barbara Stanwyck) Applying For Nurse Job From
Head Nurse
Lora Meeting Nurse Trainee Roommate B. Maloney
Lora with Two Young Ritchey Patients
Lora Assaulted by Drunken Guest Mack
"I'm Nick, the chauffeur!"
Lora to Nick: "I'm talkin' about murder!"
Nick Trying to Prevent Dr. Bell From Performing a Blood
Transfusion on Nanny
The Bootlegger Leading Nick Out (With Concealed
Gun)
Riding Off with Bootlegger - Shifting His Gears!
Ambulance Attendant: "He was wearing a chauffeur's
uniform"
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