The Theatre: New Plays in Manhattan: Apr. 4, 1932

  • Share

Happy Landing, Well aware of the risks, skill, and courage involved in flying, some theatregoers may be embarrassed to hear a group of greasepainted actors chatter knowingly about "low ceilings," "take offs'' and "happy landings." That argot, one somehow feels, should be indulged in only by the aviation fraternity if & when it chooses.

Happy Landing has to do with a young man, not unlike Charles Augustus Lindbergh, who sets out on a transpacific flight. Just to make it more difficult, the playwrights have the journey begin at Old Orchard, Me. That such a feat could be accomplished without refueling is explained by having the heroine (Margaret Sullavan). mention "the new carburetor" with which the ship is equipped. When the youth gets back home he is, of course, a national hero. He lunches with the President, is made a colonel in the reserve flying corps and runs into a rich and comely lion-hunter (Catherine Dale Owen), not a bit like Anne Morrow. It looks for a time as though the valiant aeronaut were guilty of treachery to the girl back home, who had sacrificed some property to finance the exploit. But in the end—you've guessed it—he renounces "the hero racket" over the radio, returns quite chastened to his native Maine, his twangy rustic cronies and his girl.

A half-dozen recent debunking farces about heroes, press-agents and high officialdom echo through Happy Landings, but several sequences—notably the one in which the 'leggers and the Moca-loca magnate get the hero to endorse Prohibition— engender good-humored laughter.

Rapidly approaching its close, this theatrical season has been notable for the number of motion picture people whom Broadway has attracted to its boards. Such a person is Miss Catherine Dale Owen, the raspy-voiced, jonquil-haired socialite charmer in Happy Landing. Usually associated with film work, Miss Owen made her first success in the entertainment business with her appearance on Broadway in The Whole Town's Talking. Afterward she went to Hollywood, played opposite John Gilbert in His Glorious Night, with Lawrence Tibbett in The Rogue Song, with Levis Stone in Strictly Unconventional. She announces as the reason for turning her back on the Golden Calf of Hollywood a need to "help her technique." Miss Owen is not alone among oldtime film folk, some definitely shelved by film producers, who have gone to Broadway this year to help their techniques and, as Baseball Manager "Gabby" Street would say, for the profit, too. Some of the renegades have done better than others. Miss Pauline Starke's frightening Zombie was shortlived on Broadway (but is currently a fair success in Chicago). Miss Raquel Torres did not get a great deal of stage experience out of her brief connection with Adam Had Two Sons. Pauline Frederick, after an absence of eight years in pictures and in English and Australian productions, was given an unfortunate re-debut in When the Bow Breaks.

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.