The Solid Gold Cadillac

Anything can happen to the girl in...

6.1
19561h 39m

Laura Partridge is a very enthusiastic small stockholder of 10 shares in International Projects, a large corporation based in New York. She attends her first stockholder meeting ready to question the board of directors from their salaries to their operations.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Cast

Photo of Judy Holliday

Judy Holliday

Laura Partridge

Photo of Paul Douglas

Paul Douglas

Edward L. McKeever

Photo of Fred Clark

Fred Clark

Clifford Snell

Photo of John Williams

John Williams

John T. 'Jack' Blessington

Photo of Neva Patterson

Neva Patterson

Amelia Shotgraven

Photo of Ralph Dumke

Ralph Dumke

Warren Gillie

Photo of Ray Collins

Ray Collins

Alfred Metcalfe

Photo of Arthur O'Connell

Arthur O'Connell

Mark Jenkins

Photo of George Burns

George Burns

Narrator (voice)

Photo of Madge Blake

Madge Blake

TV Commentator (uncredited)

Photo of Richard Deacon

Richard Deacon

Williams (uncredited)

Photo of Leoda Richards

Leoda Richards

Secretary (uncredited)

Photo of Franklyn Farnum

Franklyn Farnum

Dance Extra (uncredited)

Photo of Suzanne Alexander

Suzanne Alexander

model (uncredited)

Photo of Marilyn Hanold

Marilyn Hanold

Miss L'Arriere

Photo of Harry Antrim

Harry Antrim

Sen. Simpkins (uncredited)

Photo of Don Dillaway

Don Dillaway

Reporter (uncredited)

Photo of Neely Edwards

Neely Edwards

Stockholder at Meeting (uncredited)

Photo of Joseph Hamilton

Joseph Hamilton

McKeever's Lawyer (uncredited)

Photo of Carl M. Leviness

Carl M. Leviness

Old Man on Dance Floor (uncredited)

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Reviews

T

talisencrw

9/10

Judy Holliday captivated me greatly, in the few of her only 9 credited films she made in her short life, before breast cancer silenced her at 43. She had a very unique presence in cinema, her voice alone was one-of-a-kind, and her comic timing was nothing short of genius. This was a fine vehicle for her (pardon the pun), in that she plays a friendly but naïve lady who inherits a cat and 10 shares in a corruptly run company, decides to attend a shareholders' meeting, and the rest is history. She fulfills the axiom that if a large company makes personal connections with the small shareholders, the little people behind the scenes who keep large corporations surviving, that the good, honest person can win in big-time American big business. Because of Holliday's splendid personality, she was perfectly cast for the role. Though her character's romance with co-star Paul Douglas' was a minor, but important, feature of the film, I found this screwball comedy in an inexpensive Mill Creek 'Classic Romances' 8-pack, that I only purchased to see another one of Holliday's performances. I think that esteemed and highly of her work.

She was born on June 21, 1921--the summer solstice--and she would be turning 95 this summer, if she was still alive. My only wish is that she was, to at least read this, a love letter, from a truly appreciative fan of her work.

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