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Jo Swerling (1897–1964)

Author of Lifeboat [1944 film]

11+ Works 476 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Jo Swerling, Jo Swerling

Image credit: Jo Swerling

Works by Jo Swerling

Lifeboat [1944 film] (1944) — Screenwriter — 119 copies, 3 reviews
The Pride of the Yankees [1942 film] (1942) — Screenwriter — 89 copies, 1 review
Guys and Dolls (Piano/Vocal Selections) (1978) — Libretto — 63 copies, 1 review
Made for Each Other [1939 film] (1939) — Screenwriter — 59 copies, 1 review
Guys and Dolls: A Musical Fable of Broadway [libretto] (1983) — Librettist — 55 copies
Guys & Dolls: Original 1950 Broadway Cast Recording (2000) — Composer — 38 copies, 1 review
Platinum Blonde [1931 film] (1992) — Screenwriter — 17 copies
No Greater Glory [1934 film] (1934) — Screenwriter — 1 copy

Associated Works

It's a Wonderful Life [1946 film] (1946) — Screenwriter — 1,274 copies, 14 reviews
Guys and Dolls [1955 film] (1955) — Original play — 361 copies
The Modern Theatre, Volume 4 (1978) — Contributor — 37 copies
A Lady Takes a Chance [1943 film] (1943) — Original novel — 9 copies
Crash Dive [1943 film] (1943) 8 copies
The Whole Town's Talking [1935 film] (1935) — Screenwriter. — 7 copies

Tagged

1940s (16) 1946 (9) Alfred Hitchcock (9) black and white (12) Blu-ray (20) Broadway (12) CD (13) Christmas (121) classic (12) classics (11) comedy (14) Donna Reed (13) drama (87) DVD (166) family (22) fantasy (29) fiction (14) film (32) Frank Capra (13) holiday (18) James Stewart (23) Lionel Barrymore (10) movie (40) movies (17) music (12) musical (12) musicals (11) romance (16) VHS (27) video (8)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Swerling, Jo
Legal name
Swerling, Joseph
Birthdate
1897-04-08
Date of death
1964-10-23
Gender
male
Occupations
playwright
screenwriter
librettist
Awards and honors
Tony Award
Nationality
Russia
USA
Birthplace
Berdichev, Ukraine
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
This touching film following the trials and tribulations of a newly married couple moves from humor to drama with ease thanks to fine performances from Jimmy Stewart and Carole Lombard, a good screenplay from Jo Swerling, and deft direction from John Cromwell.

Jimmy Stewart is young attorney John Mason, who returns from a recent trip a married man, after a whirlwind romance with Jane. He can’t wait to put his wife’s picture on his desk and the two can barely contain their bliss. Carole show more Lombard glows in her role as Jane, capturing that feeling of newfound love in her performance. Charles Coburn is the head of the law firm James works for and whose daughter he was expected to marry. This causes regret on the part of his mother, portrayed by Lucille Watson. Forced to live with the struggling young couple, her loneliness and frustration vents itself in unfair criticism of Jane.

Jane’s mother-in-law is not the only thing weighing the young couple down, however. Their planned honeymoon aboard the Normandy sails into the sunset when the ship leaves without them after he is called back to work at the worst possible moment. Soon John is passed over for junior partner and forced to accept a cut in pay, resulting in more financial difficulties for the couple, who now have a baby on the way.

Cromwell lets this play out naturally, with humor and tenderness, making for a realistic and sentimental slice of life, but avoiding the maudlin. It is the small moments such as a wedding ring discussion and cut in pay which give this film a poignancy anyone who was once young and married can relate to. When their baby becomes ill, what happens might seem contrived were it not handled so well by director Cromwell. If fact, this was not a contrivance at all, but an actual event in the life of producer David O. Selznick, mirroring something which happened to his brother.

A sweet and rewarding ending proves all the viewer has hoped for in this terrific film full of warmth and sentiment. Those who enjoy a sentimental tear-jerker once in a while will find a new favorite in this one.
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2023 movie #51. 1943. The story of Lou Gehrig. Not much actual baseball in this long movie but still entertaining. Lefty O'Doul, who worked with Cooper (who had never played baseball) supposedly said "Coop threw a baseball like an old lady tossing a hot biscuit".
I love this time period, and this play does such a good job representing the stereotypes we have of the era. Slick talking guys and independent gals. Love the entire thing. I even love the movie version with Brando and Sinatra.
Acting: 5.0; Theme: 5.0; Content: 5.0; Language: 5.0; Overall: 5.0

During World War II, a German U-Boat and a merchant ship, are both sunk. A small group of survivors from the merchant ship attempt to survive on a small lifeboat, after they take a German survivor from the U-Boat on board. Highly recommend.

***March 4, 2025***

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Awards

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Associated Authors

Frank Capra Screenwriter
Frances Goodrich Screenwriter
Albert Hackett Screenwriter
Abe Burrows Librettist, Libretto, Composer
Rose Franken Original story
Ward Bond Actor

Statistics

Works
11
Also by
7
Members
476
Popularity
#51,803
Rating
4.0
Reviews
7
ISBNs
34
Languages
3

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