The Girl from Missouri

The story of a platinum blonde who wouldn't go off the gold standard!

6.9
19341h 13m

Leaving Missouri to find a wealthy husband in New York City, Eadie Chapman becomes a chorus girl and soon entertains at the lavish home of millionaire Frank Cousins. Cousins proposes to Eadie, only to then commit suicide due to bankruptcy. Fellow millionaire T. R. Paige defends Eadie when the police question her for having Cousins' jewelry -- but when she becomes enamored with his son, Tom, Paige declares Eadie a gold digger.

Production

Logo for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Girl From Missouri (Preview Clip)

The Girl From Missouri (Preview Clip)

Cast

Photo of Franchot Tone

Franchot Tone

T.R. Paige, Jr.

Photo of Lewis Stone

Lewis Stone

Frank Cousins

Photo of Patsy Kelly

Patsy Kelly

Kitty Lennihan

Photo of Alan Mowbray

Alan Mowbray

Lord Douglas

Photo of Clara Blandick

Clara Blandick

Miss Newberry

Photo of Hale Hamilton

Hale Hamilton

Charlie Turner

Photo of Henry Kolker

Henry Kolker

Senator Titcombe

Photo of Nat Pendleton

Nat Pendleton

Life Guard

Photo of William 'Stage' Boyd

William 'Stage' Boyd

George - Eadie's Stepfather (uncredited)

Photo of Francis X. Bushman Jr.

Francis X. Bushman Jr.

Paige's Palm Springs Doorman (uncredited)

Photo of Lita Chevret

Lita Chevret

Miss Ulricks (uncredited)

Photo of Douglas Fowley

Douglas Fowley

New Bellboy with Vase (uncredited)

Photo of Alice Lake

Alice Lake

Paige's Manicurist (uncredited)

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Reviews

T

talisencrw

8/10

After seeing this, my third film from the 7-DVD 'Jean Harlow 100th Anniversary Collection' from Warner Archives, I'm very tempted to say, without exaggerating, that perhaps she was the first 'modern' actress (though Barbara Stanwyck and Joan Crawford would also be in the running). Her speech was very fast by that era's standard, she displayed a huge range of emotion, was incredibly sexy and was great at both comedy and drama.

This was great, as she's a chorus girl from a poor family in the Midwest who wants to marry a millionaire but the right way, and without sacrificing her values in the process. At first she's not taken seriously, as she meets a wealthy banker (finely played by Lionel Barrymore) who knows what it's like to be on the poor side of the tracks, and enters his social circle. Then his playboy son (a very good performance by Franchot Tone, whom I liked best in 'Mutiny on the Bounty', his only Oscar-nominated work) takes a shine to her, unsure if she's the real thing or just another floozy.

Heartily recommended. Not a great script, but it's lifted with Harlow's personality, jolly comedic relief by Patsy Kelly and a solid supporting cast, decently directed. For single-handedly saving Warner Brothers from bankruptcy just the previous year, she deserved better but this wasn't a bad showcase at all for her considerable talents.

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