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Nancy Drew- Movie Star
By Rich Drees
Many sleuths have made the translation from print to movie screen.
Many of them have been hardboiled detectives, gentlemen
criminologists and sweet little old ladies who have a flair for
solving murders. But there was only one cinematic sleuth who managed
to fit her detecting in between getting her homework done- Nancy
Drew.
And for four
films released over a 10 month span in 1938 and `39, Nancy, as
embodied but teen actress Bonita Granville, alternately thrilled
audiences and had them laughing with her comic adventures.
Teen-sleuth
Nancy was created in 1930 by Edward Stratemeyer, founder of the
Stratemeyer Syndicate and creator of such other long running
literary series as the Hardy Boys, Tom Swift and
The Bobbsey Twins. As was the case with the series put out by
the Syndicate, Stratemeyer outlined the books for hired
ghostwriters, who had to adhere to certain format restrictions.
Contractually, the ghostwriters were sworn to silence, each series’
pseudonymous author being an important part of the books’ brand. For
this new series writer Mildred Wirt Benson was chosen. Stratemeyer
outlined the first four Nancy Drew installments before dying
on May 10, 1930. He never saw the publication of any of the books.
Inheriting the business from her father, Harriet Stratemeyer would
continue to provide the outlines for the series for the next several
decades.
In just a few short years, the Nancy Drew books had become
exceedingly popular and it was only natural the Hollywood would come
calling. Although initially skeptical of Nancy’s prospects on the
big screen, Harriet Stratemeyer sold the movie rights to Warner
Brothers studio for $6,000. Stratemeyer also used the sale to
restructure her writers’ contracts, cutting them out of any profit
sharing from any potential further use and resale of their stories.
Wirt was asked to, and did, sign a special letter to Warner Brothers
giving up any right to royalties from the Nancy Drew film
series.
The resultant
film series was overseen by producer Bryan Foy, head of Warner
Brothers’ B-movie unit. Known on the lot as “Keeper of the Bs”, Foy
had a full plate, overseeing 20 films that were to be released in
1938 for the studio. Among those films were entries in the studio’s
Torch Blaine series, comic b-movie mysteries which were
solved by a fast talking woman reporter who often outsmarted her
police detective boyfriend. Perhaps hoping to strike a similar
light-hearted tone, William Clemens, who had already helmed a
handful of installments in the studio’s Perry Mason series as
well as Torchy Blaine In Panama (1936), was tapped by Foy to
direct the new Nancy Drew series. Although relatively new to
the studio, screenwriter Kenneth Gamet also had a Torchy Blaine
film – 1937’s Smart Blonde – to his credit and was assigned
to scripting Nancy’s big screen adventures.
For the role of Nancy, the studio turned to spunky fifteen year old
actress Bonita Granville. Born into a show business family in 1923,
Granville was already a seasoned screen professional with 21 films
under her belt at first RKO Pictures and then Warners. Only two
years earlier, she had received an Academy Award nomination for Best
Supporting Actress for her role as a school girl who spread
scandalous lies about her teachers in These Three. Frankie
Thomas, who had already headlined A Dog Of Flanders (1935)
and the serial Tim Tyler’s Luck (1937), was cast as Nancy’s
long suffering boyfriend - who underwent an inexplicable name change
from Ned - Ted Nickerson. Rounding out the cast were John Litel as
Nancy’s attorney father Carson Drew, Renie Riano as Effie, the Drews’
housekeeper and Frank Orth as River Height’s chief of police,
Captain Tweedy. Filming on the first film in the series, Nancy
Drew - Detective, began in February 1938.
Released on
November 19, 1938 and based loosely on the book The Password To
Lockspur Lane, Gamet’s screenplay has Nancy trying to solve the
mysterious disappearance of Mrs. Eldredge (Helena Phillips Evans), a
rich widow who was set to endow Nancy’s private school when she
vanished. The trail ultimately leads to a secluded house near Sylvan
Lake. But will Nancy and Ted be in time to prevent Mrs. Eldredge
being murdered for her fortune?
Convinced they
had a winning new series on their hands before the first installment
had even been released, Warners ordered a second film, Nancy
Drew… Reporter, into production almost immediately. Released
almost three months to the day later on February 18, 1939, the
second film finds Nancy working at the local newspaper. While
covering a murder inquest, she becomes convinced that the accused
(Betty Amann) is not guilty, despite the amount of evidence to the
contrary. With Ned in tow, she sets off to uncover the real
murderer.
Nancy returned
to Sylvan Lake in the series’ third entry, Nancy Drew… Trouble
Shooter, released on June 17, 1939. Taken there by her father
for a vacation, Nancy soon discovers that Carson is there to try and
clear the name of his old friend Matt (Aldrich Bowler) of a murder
charge. When Nancy isn’t sticking her nose into her father’s
investigation, she’s turning it up at her father’s sudden interest
in the lovely Edna Gregory (Charlotte Wynters). Probably the jokiest
film of the series, slapstick is played up to the detriment of the
mystery storyline.
After the previous two studio-generated plot lines, the fourth
installment of the series went back to the original book series for
Nancy Drew And The Hidden Staircase released on September 9,
1939. In what would be the series final installments, Nancy
investigates a murder at the mansion of two old women who want to
donate their home to a children’s hospital.
Warner
Brothers’ Nancy Drew turned out to be much different than her
literary counterpart. The cinematic Nancy was very much in the mold
of other movie heroines of the day- a slightly ditzy, high-strung
gal who often found herself in trouble over head. Granville’s Nancy
relied more on blind luck and her “woman’s intuition” than in any
real sleuthing or deduction skills. She’s willfully disobedient of
her father at times, to the point where she sends her father a fake
telegram in Hidden Staircase to get him out of town.
Poor Ned/Ted
doesn’t fare much better, often baring the brunt of Nancy’s
harebrained schemes. In Reporter, Nancy has Ted disguise
himself as boxer in order to get some information in a gym, but some
how finds himself in the ring with a real champ. In Trouble
Shooter, he risks his life charging into a burning building to
try and save some important evidence, though he’s foiled by one of
the film’s villains. In both Detective and Hidden
Staircase, Ted finds himself in drag. Furthermore in Hidden
Staircase, Nancy constantly drags Ted away from his summer job
delivering ice to help with her investigation and then when he balks
at her request, she threatens to tell his employer that he’s been
goofing around on the job. The last shot of the whole series is Ned
being drug off to jail by Captain Tweedy for obstruction of justice
for going along with one of Nancy’s schemes.
If Harriet Stratemeyer had thought that having Nancy Drew on the
screen would help boast sales of the books, she would be
disappointed. In a letter dated August 3, 1939 to Mildred Wirt she
wrote, “Up to date we have not found that having Nancy Drew on the
screen has increased the sales of the book any, but perhaps it takes
a while to get these things started.”
But whether the
films helped boast book sales or not, the series ended in 1939 as
Granville’s contract with Warners did. The actress left for greener
pastures, and better roles, at Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Although
Hidden Staircase received the best reviews of the series, it was
decided to not recast the role and any plans for further films were
abandoned.
Granville’s
career flourished as she moved into more adult roles in films
including Now Voyager (1942) and two installments of the
studios long running Andy Hardy series with Mickey Rooney,
though she would still appear in some lower budget features, such as
the luridly-titled propaganda piece Hitler’s Children (1943).
In 1947, Granville married oil millionaire-turned-producer Jack
Wrather, whom she met while starring in The Guilty for
Monogram Pictures. Although she retired from acting in the
mid-1950s, she served as a producer on Wrather’s Lassie
television series.
Frankie Thomas’
career also headed towards the emerging medium of television. After
serving in both the Coast Guard and the Navy during World War II,
Thomas headed to New York City to act in the burgeoning live
television field, first in the first soap opera A Woman To
Remember and then more famously as the star of Tom Corbett,
Space Cadet. John Litel continued his busy career as a character
actor, including a stretch as another famous patriarch in the long
running Henry Aldrich series at Paramount.
Despite her
popularity with readers, Nancy Drew remained conspicuously absent
from movies and then television for nearly the next four decades,
until the premier of the Pamela Sue Martin television series in
1977. Perhaps Stratemeyer was unhappy with the ditzier, bubblier
version of Nancy as depicted in the Warners pictures or maybe she
was convinced that such translations wouldn’t boast book sales.
But whether or
not the Nancy Drew that hit the screen in 1938 and 1939 was entirely
faithful to the her literary progenitor, the four installments of
her big screen adventures have entertained audiences for far longer
than a series of disposable b-pictures were ever expected to. |