8/10
A warm comedy of a small-town girl inheriting a big city newspaper
27 December 2020
Edna May Oliver, Maureen O'Sullivan and Walter Pidgeon make "My Dear Miss Aldrich" a very good, heart-warming comedy. Built around New York City's largest newspaper (fictional), the plot here is a relatively mild and not-sensationalist portrayal of the press and journalism of the day. That's the picture that most moving pictures paint of the press of the time. Not that they are far off, but it's just refreshing to have one film whose focus is more on the professionalism of the paper. This has that, with nice doses of humor.

O'Sullivan plays Martha Aldrich, a young small-town teacher from Upper Platte, Nebraska. She inherits the Globe-Leader from a distant relative. Oliver is her aunt, Mrs. Atherton, whom she calls Lu. The aunt is a sort of mother hen, watchdog and companion of Martha. Naturally, she will go to New York with her niece. And Pidgeon plays Ken Morley, the managing editor of the newspaper. After his mistaken presumption of an old maid, stick-in-the-mud schoolteacher, Morley is very pleased to find the young and intelligent Martha as the heiress. One can guess where the film will go from there - with romance between the two.

But some good twists and meat to the story come from a couple of adventures the new owner gets into as a reporter for her paper. The film has some funny dialog, including frequent pithy lines from Aunt Lu. This is a warm comedy with a down-home feel that all ages should enjoy. Well, at least all who don't need constant adrenaline rushes to be entertained.

Here are some favorite lines from the film.

Mrs. (Aunt) Atherton, "You'd live in that school if they'd let you." Martha Aldrich, "I like to teach school." Mrs. Atherton, "Nonsense. Nobody likes to teach school - anybody that isn't homely. I'll say this for you - you may be crazy, but you're not homely."

Mrs. Atherton (Aunt Lu), as the phone rings, "Shall I answer the phone?" Martha, "Oh, you might as well - that's why they ring it. When they don't want you to answer, that's when they don't ring." Aunt Lu, "That's another thing - that sarcastic sarcasm of yours."

Ken Morley, "I expect nothing. That's why I'm never disappointed."

Ted Martin, on the phone, "Where am I? I'm on the other end of the phone."

Doc Howe, "Maybe being a woman ain't a crime - in Nebraska."

Mrs. Atherton, "We've got eight pieces of luggage, countin' the umbrella. See that everything gets off. Everybody in New York's a thief."

Mrs. Atherton, "Well, it seems a funny name to call a place that's free of locusts, Locust Valley."

Mrs. Atherton, "A thing makes sense, or it doesn't make sense."

Mrs. Atherton, "Out in Nebraska, when they give a place a name, the name means something." Martha Aldrich, "Lincoln was never in Nebraska, Aunt Lu, and yet that's the name of the capitol." Aunt Lu, "He could have come if he wanted to - it was there."

Martha Aldrich, "You see, I not only don't know how to play bridge; I don't even know how to watch bridge." Ken Morley, "Well, I wouldn't be surprised if getting away from bridge players keeps as many people occupied at night as playing bridge does."
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