“Like blood to the Vampire” quote from Rod Steiger about W C. One of the great comedies to come out of Hollywood’s Golden Age.
,
W.C. Fields walked off the set of "My Little Chickadee" (1940) over what director Edward F. Cline felt was a minor disagreement, but when it was clear after two weeks that he was not coming back to finish the film, nearly one-third was shot using a double. The double used is unknown. It could have been John Sinclair, who had doubled for him in "Poppy" (1936), or David Sharpe, who was his stunt double in later films. The double wore a plastic mask and most of the shots were long shots.
Dick Foran, who was being paid by the week, would go to Mae West and tell her that Fields was rewriting his lines to give himself more screen time and to try to steal the film from her. Then he would go to Fields and tell him the same thing about West. In this manner he was able to extend his employment from a few weeks to several months, as both Fields and West - who didn't like each other - would hold up production while they would rewrite their scenes.
In the scene where Fields' character Cuthbert pretends to have a telegram so he can get into Flower Belle's room, she tells him to "shove it under the door." Fields kept changing his next line until West got so frustrated that she finally gave her line as "shove it...under the door." The pair would only speak when filming scenes together. West refused to work with Fields again or to even speak about him thereafter. Despite this, contemporary critics praised their on-screen comedic chemistry.
On lunch break one day, Fields went to his dressing room to start on a new bottle of whiskey he had saved for that purpose. Apparently someone beat him to it, as the bottle had been opened and about half of it had been drunk. Fields immediately ran outside and roared to the crew, "Who took the cork out of my lunch?"
Groucho Marx, on Fields: "He had a ladder leading up to his attic. Without exaggeration, there was $50,000 worth of liquor up there. Crated up like a wharf. I'm standing there and Fields is standing there, and nobody says anything. The silence is oppressive. Finally, he speaks: 'This will carry me for twenty-five years.'" (IMDb)

Comments
Post a Comment