The Late George Apley
Stop apologizing for sex, George Apley...you didn't invent it!
Bostonites George and Catherine Apley live a proper life in a social circle. However, their daughter Eleanor's love for Howard Boulton and their son John's union with Myrtle threatens their home.
Cast

Ronald Colman
George Apley

Peggy Cummins
Eleanor 'Ellie' Apley

Vanessa Brown
Agnes Willing

Mildred Natwick
Amelia Newcombe

Richard Haydn
Horatio Willing

Nydia Westman
Jane Willing

Percy Waram
Roger Newcombe

Richard Ney
John Apley

Edna Best
Catherine Apley

Charles Russell
Howard Boulder

Paul Harvey
Julian H. Dole

Kathleen Howard
Margaret

Francis Pierlot
Wilson
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
The "Apley" family have been part of the Bostonian establishment since God was a boy, and the head of the household "George" (Ronald Colman) is keen to ensure that with his wife "Catherine" (Edna Best) his son and daughter follow firmly in their establishment footsteps. Thing is, his daughter "Eleanor" (Peggy Cummins) and his son "Richard" (Richard Ney) are rather more independently spirited than that, and their definition of conformity is not quite that of their father! What now ensues is a rather nicely paced comedy that offers us the principle of coming of age - but in this case it's the grown ups who have to come to an age in which their traditions are important, but not all-so. It's based on John Marquand's original, quite satirical, story that casts gentle aspersions on snobbery and elitism, but also acknowledges some of the values those eschewed as a bedrock for a solid and decently evolving society. Colman is on good form in a role I imagined might have suited George Arliss too, and there is the always reliable Mildred Natwick amongst a supporting cast of the sympathetic and not so amongst this family that simply has to adapt to survive. This is an enjoyable ninety minutes of social observation and is well worth a watch.
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