Adam’s Rib (1949) Queer Film (A).

Adam's Rib
DIRECTOR: George Cukor
BOTTOM LINE: Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn (Adam and Amanda Bonner) are married lawyers who find themselves on the opposite sides of a sensational trial involving Doris Attinger (Judy Holiday), who shoots her unfaithful husband (Tom Ewell) after catching him with his mistress. After a dramatic courtroom showdown – including a memorable moment where Amanda has a female weightlifter (Hope Emerson) hoist Adam to demonstrate female strength – the Bonners reconcile, acknowledging the complexities of equality in both law and love.

Screenwriters Ruth Gordon and husband Garson Kanin populated their court case comedy with a bunch of great supporting characters played by the likes of HollidayEmersonEwell, Jean Hagen and, as Amanda’s best friend, David Wayne’s Kip Lurie. Kip is their next-door neighbor and a Broadway composer.

Gay with his closely cropped hair (so fashionable today!) and flamboyant behavior, he is the constant butt of Adam’s putdowns, such that it wouldn’t be hard to turn Kip into a woman since he is halfway there already. Kip, nevertheless, pursues Amanda with dogged determination to the point of composing a song especially for and about her entitled “Farewell Amanda” (written by Cole Porter, no less). Thanks to Wayne’s inspired performance, Kip is one of Hollywood’s most memorable gay characters from the Hays Code era.

Oscar-nominated original screenplay by Gordon and Kanin.

Hepburn and director George Cukor, Gordon and Kanin arranged for Judy Holliday’s scenes to showcase her comedic talents as a kind of audition, so that the boss of Columbia Pictures, Harry Cohn, would relent and give her the role of Billie Dawn, which she had created on the Broadway stage. They succeeded and, two years later, Holiday picked up a Best Actress Oscar for “Born Yesterday,” which was also directed by Cukor.

CINEMATOGRAPHY
George Folsey
MGM

STREAMING: Amazon Prime, YouTube and Apple TV+

75 Queer Films Under the Hays Code (1934-1967)
https://thebrownees.net/75-queer-films-of-the-new-hollywood-1968-1980
https://thebrownees.net/the-great-cinematographers-of-hollywoods-golden-age/ https://thebrownees.net/the-42-most-honored-directors-in-cinema-history/

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