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The Model and the Marriage Broker

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
The Model and the Marriage Broker (1951)
Marriage broker Mae Swasey, who somewhat cynically arranges her loser clients' affairs, meets model Kitty Bennett and can't resist meddling in her life, by disentangling her from a married man and fixing her up with a nice radiologist. Of course things go wrong...
Play trailer2:28
1 Video
7 Photos
Romantic ComedyScrewball ComedyComedyRomance

A female marriage broker attempts to do a little freelance matchmaking for her friend who is a beautiful unattached model.A female marriage broker attempts to do a little freelance matchmaking for her friend who is a beautiful unattached model.A female marriage broker attempts to do a little freelance matchmaking for her friend who is a beautiful unattached model.

  • Director
    • George Cukor
  • Writers
    • Charles Brackett
    • Walter Reisch
    • Richard L. Breen
  • Stars
    • Jeanne Crain
    • Thelma Ritter
    • Scott Brady
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George Cukor
    • Writers
      • Charles Brackett
      • Walter Reisch
      • Richard L. Breen
    • Stars
      • Jeanne Crain
      • Thelma Ritter
      • Scott Brady
    • 27User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:28
    Trailer

    Photos6

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Jeanne Crain
    Jeanne Crain
    • Kitty Bennett
    Thelma Ritter
    Thelma Ritter
    • Mae Swasey
    Scott Brady
    Scott Brady
    • Matt Hornbeck
    Zero Mostel
    Zero Mostel
    • George Wixted
    Michael O'Shea
    Michael O'Shea
    • Doberman
    Helen Ford
    • Emmy Swasey
    Frank Fontaine
    Frank Fontaine
    • Mr. Hjalmer Johannson
    Dennie Moore
    Dennie Moore
    • Mrs. Bea Gingras
    John Alexander
    John Alexander
    • Mr. Perry
    Jay C. Flippen
    Jay C. Flippen
    • Dan Chancellor
    Lucile Barnes
    • Model
    • (uncredited)
    Bunny Bishop
    • Alice
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Board
    • Usher
    • (uncredited)
    Harris Brown
    • Conventioneer
    • (uncredited)
    Kathryn Card
    Kathryn Card
    • Mrs. Kuschner
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Carter
    Harry Carter
    • Big Doug
    • (uncredited)
    Ken Christy
    Ken Christy
    • Mr. Kuschner
    • (uncredited)
    Blythe Daley
    Blythe Daley
    • Receptionist
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • George Cukor
    • Writers
      • Charles Brackett
      • Walter Reisch
      • Richard L. Breen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    7.01.1K
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    Featured reviews

    9Handlinghandel

    Absolutel Beautiful

    George Cukor may well have directed more good movies than anyone else. Not to say that he was the greatest director of all time. Orson Welles was no slouch. Neither was Sam Fuller. But look at the list of movies Cukor directed and you will see an extraordinary oeuvre.

    "The Model and the Marriage Broker" is one of the lesser known of his very good movies. It has beautiful shots of New York. The ensemble cast is uniformly superb. The story is appealing, thanks to Charles Brackett. And Thelma Ritter -- the great Thelma Ritter -- gets to play a title character! (She is the marriage broker -- two words and more letters -- rather than the model, of course.) She could light up a movie the same way Shirley Booth could. Some say she stole movies from others. Here that was not necessary, as she is the star. (Her best performance, for me, is still in "Pickup On South Street." But that is a supporting role.) Shirley Booth did so few. She must have been great on the stage. What a shame for posterity that she made only a handful of movies.

    Ritter, however, made loads of them. And this is one of her best. It also is one of Cukor's best. Who could say which is his best? Probably there is no single best. I do feel he was generally better with black and white than in his color outings. And I have a particular fondness for "The Marrying Kind." But who knows? The Judy Holiday and Aldo Ray characters might originally have been brought together by the character Ms. Booth plays so beautifully in this story.
    8kwindrum

    Interesting as view of love as economic issue

    I agree with other comments about this being a little-known gem with a terrific cast and that it is a pleasure to see Thelma Ritter in a leading role. Cukor's direction is efficient and he's particularly good with long, unbroken takes which help the actors gain momentum and relate to each other. What I found interesting was that the film is very direct about marriage as an economic proposition and how it is often a business arrangement. The other interesting quality is that many of the scenes are almost surreal in their grotesqueness. I really like seeing Scott Brady in a romantic lead, he's very fresh. The film is interesting as a Fox film made right before their turn to CinemaScope the next year with the somewhat similar, and inferior, How to Marry a Millionarie. This film would have been in color and 'scope if made later. It also has some location shooting which was a growing trend at Fox and other studios during this period yet the pacing and dialogue-driven quality of the film is much like a screwball comedy from 10 years earlier.
    drednm

    Thelma Ritter Steals the Show

    Although Jeanne Crain gets star billing in this comedy/drama, and even Scott Brady as the X-Ray guy gets billing over Thelma Ritter, this is Ritter's film from the get-go.

    She plays Mae Swasey, a no-nonsense marriage broker with a heart of gold. She makes a small living helping life's lonely plain-janes and balding swains find a little happiness. And some of her clients are real doozies. She holds little Sunday afternoon "parties" where the lonely and desperate come together over coffee and cakes and get nudged into pairs.

    Of course Mae has a secret of her own: she's in the business because her husband was stolen away 20 years before and she knows loneliness. When she accidentally runs across a naive model (Crain) being strung along by a married man, she knows the score.

    So Mae manipulates the model and a struggling X-Ray guy who makes only $75 a week in New York City into some sort of relationship. But they get resentful and send Mae packing. The trouble is that while these glamorous types might not need her help (but they do), many others really do.

    Crain learns this after Mae closes shop and goes off to a resort for a rest. Crain meets a few of Mae's customers who can't make a move without her compassion and sage advice. Crain catches on and does a little manipulating of her own.

    Thelma Ritter is sensational as Mae. She funny and down to earth and can spit a cherry pit across a room with the best of them. Jeanne Crain is good as the model, and Scott Brady does well as a X-Ray guy. Excellent supporting cast includes Zero Mostel, Nancy Kulp (in her film debut), Dennie Moore, Frank Fontaine, Helen Ford, Michael O'Shea, Allison Daniell as Mae's secretary, Maudie Prickett, Frank Ferguson, JOhn Alexander, Jay C. Flippen, Mae Marsh, Kathryn Card, and Joyce Mackenzie.

    They don't make films like this anymore. More's the pity.
    hildacrane

    a love song to thelma

    Thelma Ritter was a national treasure. She could combine humor and pathos, and the warmth beneath the crusty exterior was always in evidence. Her presence in any film was always one of the high points, but this one is totally hers; she probably has in it the most screen time of any film she was in and, but for the vagaries of Hollywood, should have been first-billed in the credits. She brings great compassion to the character of Mae, who has endured a great loss and as a result has found herself in a business whose goal is to help others.

    Under Cukor's sensitive direction, a wonderful script is brought to life (and, in view of his purported concerns about his physical appearance, one wonders if the script's allusions to the lonely and less-than-beautiful people of the world had a particular resonance for him). Dennie Moore, who had played the saucy maid in Cukor's "Sylvia Scarlett" 16 years earlier, shows up and is again a delight.
    7blanche-2

    Matchmaker, matchmaker

    "The Model and the Marriage Broker" is a great film find. It has one thing few films have - Thelma Ritter in the lead! In this, she plays a marriage broker trying - and often succeeding - at matching up misfits. When she takes a model's (Jeanne Crain) purse by mistake and vice versa, the two end up in each other's lives, with Ritter dissuading Crain from a relationship with a married man by getting her involved with an eligible bachelor (Scott Brady). Yes, believe it or not - even bald, fat character actor Scott Brady had his palmy days when he was considered a hunk. He was a slightly rougher version of Robert Wagner, in fact, and even had a fan club.

    Thelma is fantastic as a woman with a sad past who tries to make the future of others happier. The film is wonderfully directed by George Cukor and written by Charles Brackett. It's one of those dozens of films churned out by the studio back then. Nowadays, when the studios churn them out, they're $20 million flops and not little gems like this one. Jeanne Crain is lovely and the rest of the cast ably supports the leads: Jay C. Flippen, Zero Mostel, Michael O'Shea, Frank Fontaine, Nancy Kulp, and John Alexander. One comment disliked the character played by Brady, but you can't judge men by the standards of today. Like it or don't, the character was pure '50s.

    A delightful, heartwarming movie with a marvelous turn by Thelma, who no matter what part she had, was always a star.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      One of cinema's most stalwart supporting actors, Thelma Ritter enjoyed her only starring role in this film, in which she appears in nearly every scene prior to the one-hour mark, when Matt (Scott Brady) meets Kitty (Jeanne Crain) for their first date. The only other film that came close in terms of her screen time was The Mating Season (1951), in which she was also central to the plot.
    • Goofs
      (at around 1h 21 mins) Just after Mae pulls up the window shade, out of frame a crew member apparently moves something that casts a tall vertical shadow on the apartment wall at the right edge of the frame. The shadow looks like that of a coat rack, but might be of equipment such as a stand to support something else.
    • Quotes

      Dan Chancellor: Beautiful up here, isn't it? Those trees. I've always liked that poem that said, "Only God can make a tree."

      Mae Swasey: Yeah, but on the other hand, you gotta figure, who else would take the time?

    • Connections
      Version of The 20th Century-Fox Hour: The Marriage Broker (1957)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 1951 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • Swedish
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La modelo y la casamentera
    • Filming locations
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 43m(103 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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