First Lady (1937)
Directed by Stanley Logan
Genres - Comedy |
Sub-Genres - Political Satire, Satire |
Release Date - Dec 4, 1937 (USA - Unknown) |
Run Time - 82 min. |
Countries - United States |
MPAA Rating - NR
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Synopsis by Hal Erickson
Based on the 1935 Broadway play by George S. Kaufman and Katharine Dayton, First Lady is not, as might be assumed, the story of the first woman president. The central character, played by Kay Francis, is the granddaughter of a president (though clearly inspired by Teddy Roosevelt's daughter Alice). Ms. Francis is married to Secretary of State Preston S. Foster, whom she hopes to propel into the White House. Her principal rival is the wife (Veree Teasdale) of a mildly corrupt supreme court justice (Walter Connolly). The rival is planning to divorce her husband and promote her own, younger presidential aspirant (Victor Jory). Kay retaliates by mounting a mock campaign for the befuddled justice--which snowballs into the real thing.
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Themes
Keywords
political-campaign, politician, blackmail, husband, presidential-candidate, rival, Supreme-Court-Justice, wife, corruption, divorce, election, granddaughter, President