Frank Capra cleared his throat, and began. The war was over and he was anxious to make another movie. In early October 1945, he approached Lew Wasserman, James Stewart’s agent at MCA, telling him that he wanted to sketch out for Jimmy the idea for a film he had just bought. Capra recalled that ‘Wasserman said Stewart would gladly play the part without hearing the story. But I insisted. If Jimmy was as scared as I was about making another film I’d like to know it.’ Out of practice, demobbed, uncertain, Capra fretted over whether he could still make a great fiction film. He invited Stewart and Wasserman to his business colleague Samuel Briskin’s apartment. There he blundered through what now seemed the sappy tale of a desperate small-town man, redeemed by an angel granting his wish that he had never been born. Capra lost faith in the plot even as he laid it out, and it abruptly struck him as ‘the lousiest piece of shit I’ve ever heard’. According to Capra, the pitch bombed: Wasserman was ‘dying’, and ‘Jimmy doesn’t want to hear [the] story’. And yet, Stewart did want to hear the story. Rather than letting the project give up the ghost, the actor phoned the next morning and persuaded Capra to make the film.
Or so the tale goes. As with much else about It’s a Wonderful Life, it’s hard to disentangle fact from legend. A contemporary interview provides another origin myth, with Capra pitching the film to Stewart, and Stewart being the one who was baffled, declaring, ‘I can’t make head or tail of the damn thing’. The gossip columnist Hedda Hopper had Stewart nevertheless telling Capra that same night, ‘It’s for me’, even as he feared that he could no longer act.
In retrospect, Capra’s hesitancy seems absurd, hanging back on the cusp of making one of the greatest American films. He would encapsulate in this one piece those obsessions that characterised the quintessential Capra movie: the run on the bank (American Madness), the self-help cooperative scheme (Mr. Deeds Goes to Town), friends rallying round with financial help in a crisis (You Can’t Take It with You), contemplated suicide and a Christmas Eve dénouement (Meet John Doe). It’s a Wonderful Life offers the culmination of the Capraesque; he had become his own richest source.
And yet, that loss of faith in the story proves a significant collapse. For Capra was going to challenge himself and his audience in ways that outstripped anything he had done before or would attempt again. He was going to sell a conundrum to the public, a dazzlingly strange movie at once uncanny and homely, which reaches down to despair and yet still touches joy.
The Christmas card
One February morning in 1938, while he was shaving, a story came to Philip Van Doren Stern, a historian, biographer and novelist: a man would be saved by his guardian angel, having glimpsed how life would have been had he never been born. Stern quickly washed and promptly sketched out a two-page outline of the idea. He then shelved it for a year, before endeavouring to make something of it. In the spring of 1943 he tried again, only now adding the Christmas background and titling it ‘The Greatest Gift’. He had 200 copies printed up as a brief pamphlet, posting these to friends as Christmas cards.
The tale that Stern dreamt up was a simple one. One Christmas, George Pratt, a small-town banker, stands on a bridge, contemplating suicide. A stranger’s ‘queer voice’ interrupts him, and he finds himself confronted by an unremarkable angel. The angel begs him to consider his wife, Mary Thatcher, and his mother. However, George has lost himself in ennui, dragged down by being merely ordinary, and so he wishes that he had never been born; immediately, the angel grants him that wish. The angel presents him with a bag of brushes to sell. Walking into town, George discovers that Marty Jenkins, the man who now has George’s job, has absconded with $40,000 and broken the bank. Another man, Marty’s hard-drinking brother, Art Jenkins, has married Mary; they have two children together. Years ago, without George there to save him, George’s brother, Harry, drowned. The nightmare of not being recognised lies at the tale’s heart. George sees Mary’s other children, and the young boy shoots him with a toy gun, crying out, ‘You’re dead!’ The unnamed angel tells him, ‘You’re the freest man on earth now. You have no ties. You can go anywhere – do anything. What more can you possibly want?’ George begs to be given back his life as it was, and as it’s Christmas Eve, the angel grants this second wish. George runs back to his family, and, immeasurably relieved, finds they are still there for him: ‘I thought I’d lost you,’ he says. ‘Oh, Mary, I’d thought I’d lost you.’
Stern posted one of his ‘Christmas cards’ to his Hollywood agent, Shirley Collier. She passed it on to the studios, and Stern found himself selling the tale for $10,000 to RKO, a deal apparently struck at Cary Grant’s insistence. Stern also sold it to Good Housekeeping, under the title, ‘The Man Who Never Was’; in 1945, under its original title, it was published as a short book.
That Christmas of 1943, the Story Department at Paramount Pictures put a copy of Van Doren Stern’s story into circulation. Above the title, ‘The Greatest Gift’, at some point, in brackets, someone scrawled ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’. On 26 February 1944, Ray Spencer at Paramount wrote out a synopsis of Stern’s story, designating it as ‘Drama; Fantasy’, and the period it was set in as the ‘Present’. Spencer judged it to be a ‘very charming short story’, but one that would work best in an ‘episodic picture like the Tales of Manhattan.cBut whether it should be made the basis of a full-length screenplay is a moot question.’
Extracted from It’s a Wonderful Life by Michael Newton (BFI Film Classics, 2023). Reproduced by kind permission of Bloomsbury Publishing. ©Michael Newton
IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE
Directed by: Frank Capra
©/Presented by: Liberty Films
Produced by: Frank Capra
Assistant Director: Arthur S. Black
Screen Play by: Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett, Frank Capra
Additional Scenes by: Jo Swerling
Based on the story ‘The Greatest Gift’ by: Philip Van Doren Stern
Directors of Photography: Joseph Walker, Joseph Biroc
Special Photographic Effects: Russell A. Cully
Film Editor: William Hornbeck
Art Director: Jack Okey
Set Decorations: Emile Kuri
Costumes by: Edward Stevenson
Make-up Supervision: Gordon Bau
Musical Score Written and Directed by: Dimitri Tiomkin
Sound by: Richard Van Hessen, Clem Portman
uncredited
Contributor to Screenplay: Michael Wilson
Director of Photography: Victor Milner
Cast
James Stewart (George Bailey)
Donna Reed (Mary Hatch)
Lionel Barrymore (Henry F. Potter)
Thomas Mitchell (Uncle Billy)
Henry Travers (Clarence)
Beulah Bondi (Mrs Bailey)
Frank Faylen (Ernie Bishop)
Ward Bond (Bert)
Gloria Grahame (Violet Bick)
H.B. Warner (Mr Gower)
Frank Albertson (Sam Wainwright)
Todd Karns (Harry Bailey)
Samuel S. Hinds (Pa Peter Bailey)
Mary Treen (Cousin Tilly)
USA 1946
129 mins
Digital 4K
CHRISTMAS FILMS
The Apartment
Tue 10 Dec 18:30; Mon 23 Dec 20:30; Sat 28 Dec 14:10
The Bishop’s Wife
Sat 14 Dec 15:10; Fri 20 Dec 20:45; Sat 21 Dec 18:10
The Shop Around the Corner
Sat 14 Dec 17:40; Fri 20 Dec 14:30
Meet Me in St. Louis
Sun 15 Dec 14:40; Sat 21 Dec 12:10; Mon 23 Dec 18:10
It’s a Wonderful Life
Fri 20 Dec 18:10; Sat 21 Dec 14:45; Sun 22 Dec 14:50; Mon 23 Dec 17:45
Scrooge
Sat 21 Dec 12:20; Sun 22 Dec 18:10; Mon 23 Dec 14:30
BFI IMAX
Polar Express 20th Anniversary screening
Sun 1 Dec 10:45; Sat 7 Dec 10:30; Sun 8 Dec 14:00; Sat 14 Dec 11:45; Sun 15 Dec 10:45
The Red Shoes
Sun 5 Dec 11:00
Ghiblioteque presents: Tokyo Godfathers Tôkyô goddofâzâzu + intro
Sat 7 Dec 13:00
The Wizard of Oz
Sun 8 Dec 16:30
The Green Knight
Wed 11 Dec 20:30
Die Hard
Sun 15 Dec 13:15
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