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In reply to the discussion: Remember George Bailey? [View all]
 

UnrepentantLiberal

(11,700 posts)
25. According to this, you are correct:
Tue Nov 27, 2012, 01:21 PM
Nov 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/1992/05/03/books/it-wasn-t-such-a-wonderful-life.html

Audiences flocked to see "Capraesque" movies like "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town," "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" and "Meet John Doe" -- parables of ordinary people forced to stand up against the greed and corruption of the rich and powerful. Those dramatic comedies, with their depictions of hardship, their "common man" heroes (usually Jimmy Stewart or Gary Cooper) and their celebrations of small-town virtues, gave expression to a country struggling to climb out of the Depression; they have, ever since their release, been identified with Roosevelt and the New Deal. Yet it is one of the great surprises of Joseph McBride's masterly, comprehensive and frequently surprising biography, "Frank Capra: The Catastrophe of Success," that the man who seemed to put the spirit of the New Deal on the screen was, in reality, a closet reactionary and a dogged Roosevelt hater.

Frank Capra managed to fool just about everyone; even his wife was unsure of his political affiliations. Longtime co-workers who were Democrats assumed he shared their political convictions. Katharine Hepburn, who starred in his 1948 picture "State of the Union," thought him "quite liberal"; others applied the term "radical" to him. And why shouldn't they have, when Variety was calling a sympathetic character in "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town" "quasi-communistic" and The Saturday Evening Post was reporting that in the Soviet Union Capra was "hailed as a comrade"? But as Mr. McBride, the author of previous books on Howard Hawks, John Ford and Orson Welles, tells us, Capra was a lifelong Republican who never once voted for Roosevelt. He was an admirer of Franco and Mussolini. In later years, during the McCarthy period, he served as a secret F.B.I. informer.

In part, the misperception was due to Capra's writers, who generally ranged from New Deal Democrats to card-carrying Communists. One of Capra's great strengths as a director in the 1930's was his ability to work with anyone who had something to contribute to his pictures, even those who were far to his left. He was also enough of a popular entertainer to cater to his audiences; he understood that during the Depression the most hissable villains were grasping bankers and businessmen.

But ultimately the misunderstanding over Capra's politics seems to be a case of people seeing what they wanted to see. In his analysis of "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town," Mr. McBride points out that the Gary Cooper character, far from being some sort of socialist or New Deal liberal, was, if anything, an "enlightened plutocrat" whose philosophy of voluntary giving was little different from that of Republican businessmen opposed to the New Deal; and he shrewdly notes that while Deeds got into trouble for trying to distribute most of the $20 million he inherited to desperate farmers, he was still planning to keep $2 million for himself.
Remember George Bailey? [View all] Whovian Nov 2012 OP
I bought a copy of the DVD at a fair last weekend malaise Nov 2012 #1
Damn librul..... lastlib Nov 2012 #2
"Damn librul....." That's not the phrase used by Rahm. AnotherMcIntosh Nov 2012 #15
this movie was one of the favorites of my younger son riverbendviewgal Nov 2012 #3
You just brought tears to my eyes. Whovian Nov 2012 #5
May Kevin speak forever! Cracklin Charlie Nov 2012 #23
Your son was a Wonderful Life, colorado_ufo Nov 2012 #28
That really is an incredible quote. Curmudgeoness Nov 2012 #4
thank you for sharing this--a quote that should be in the offices of EVERY CEO and politician and niyad Nov 2012 #6
well heaven05 Nov 2012 #7
This message was self-deleted by its author freshwest Nov 2012 #8
What a wonderful father you had! lucca18 Nov 2012 #13
This message was self-deleted by its author freshwest Nov 2012 #14
"He would be called a 'bleeding heart liberal' by conservatives." And "fucking retarded" by Rahm. AnotherMcIntosh Nov 2012 #16
Imagine if this country could see itself without social services. Barack_America Nov 2012 #9
To the members of the 47 % who foolishly continue to vote Republican... chuckstevens Nov 2012 #10
Wow, you're onto something here! Jackpine Radical Nov 2012 #12
The lies and propaganda put out by the Potters of this world fasttense Nov 2012 #11
Too bad that didn't sink in. UnrepentantLiberal Nov 2012 #17
I believe the director (Frank Capra) became quite the conservative, too. lexw Nov 2012 #20
I Wonder Chili Pepper Nov 2012 #22
According to this, you are correct: UnrepentantLiberal Nov 2012 #25
SNL did a skit about this years ago, The Lost Ending edbermac Nov 2012 #18
Especially ironic: Jon Lovitz as Potter. tclambert Nov 2012 #27
Scurvy little spiders!!! lexw Nov 2012 #19
It took a bailout to save his S&L. ieoeja Nov 2012 #21
Frank Capra was a conservative republican who disliked FDR and did not vote for him andym Nov 2012 #24
VIVA GEORGE! rivegauche Nov 2012 #26
still the same and worse now 2Design Nov 2012 #29
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