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The Male Animal ()


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A college English teacher suddenly finds himself the center of a free-speech debate on campus.

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Cast verified as complete

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Tommy Turner
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Ellen Turner
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Patricia Stanley
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Joe Ferguson
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Ed Keller
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Michael Barnes
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Cleota
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Dean Frederick Damon (as Ivan Simpson)
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Wally Myers
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'Hot Garters' Gardner
Minna Phillips ...
Mrs. Blanche Damon
Regina Wallace ...
Mrs. Myrtle Keller
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Coach Sprague
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Alumnus
Bobby Barnes ...
Nutsy Miller
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
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Student (uncredited)
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Trustee (uncredited)
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Reporter on Porch (uncredited)
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Trustee's Wife (uncredited)
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Meeting Guest (uncredited)
Edwin Brian ...
Student (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)
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Reporter (uncredited)
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Reporter on Porch (uncredited)
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Newsdealer (uncredited)
Dulce Day ...
Football Game Spectator (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)
Albert Faulkner ...
Boy (uncredited)
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Football Spectator (uncredited)
George Golden ...
Meeting Guest (uncredited)
Eddie Graham ...
Photographer on Porch (uncredited)
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Reporter (uncredited)
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Faculty Member (uncredited)
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Rally Spectator (uncredited)
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Reporter on Porch (uncredited)
Marijo James ...
Student (uncredited)
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Football Announcer (uncredited)
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Football Game Spectator (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)
Al Lloyd ...
Reporter on Porch (uncredited)
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Trustee (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)
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Reporter (uncredited)
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Editor (uncredited)
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Football Game Spectator (uncredited)
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Reporter on Porch (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)
Will Morgan ...
Reporter (uncredited)
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Meeting Guest (uncredited)
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Gagged Student (uncredited)
Don Phillips ...
Student (uncredited)
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Secretary (uncredited)
Cliff Saum ...
Reporter (uncredited)
Jack Shea ...
Rally Spectator (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)
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Student in Bookstore (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)
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Student (uncredited)

Directed by

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Elliott Nugent

Written by

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Julius J. Epstein ... (screen play) and
Stephen Morehouse Avery ... (screen play)
 
James Thurber ... (from the play by) and
Elliott Nugent ... (from the play by)

Produced by

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Wolfgang Reinhardt ... associate producer
Hal B. Wallis ... executive producer

Music by

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Heinz Roemheld ... (as H. Roemheld)

Cinematography by

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Arthur Edeson ... director of photography

Editing by

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Thomas Richards ... film editor

Art Direction by

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John Hughes

Costume Design by

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Howard Shoup ... (gowns)

Makeup Department

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Perc Westmore ... makeup artist

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

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Arthur Lueker ... assistant director (uncredited)

Sound Department

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Everett Alton Brown ... sound (as Everett A. Brown)

Special Effects by

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Willard Van Enger ... special effects

Costume and Wardrobe Department

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Eugene Joseff ... costume jeweller (uncredited)

Music Department

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Leo F. Forbstein ... musical director
Ray Heindorf ... orchestral arrangements

Additional Crew

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Herman Shumlin ... producer: stage play
Alfred Argus ... french voice dubbing: George Mathews (uncredited)
Claude Bertrand ... french voice dubbing: Dana Andrews (uncredited)
Giorgio Capecchi ... italian voice dubbing: Louis Calhern (uncredited)
Dhia Cristiani ... italian voice dubbing: Constance Dowling (uncredited)
Cécile Didier ... french voice dubbing: Margaret Dumont (uncredited)
Yves Furet ... french narrator (uncredited)
René Hiéronimus ... french voice dubbing: Charles Arnt (uncredited)
Raymond Loyer ... french voice dubbing: Lyle Talbot (uncredited)
Pierre Michau ... french voice dubbing: Fred Essler & Dink Trout (uncredited)
Pierre Morin ... french voice dubbing: Charles D. Brown (uncredited)
Serge Nadaud ... french voice dubbing: Sign Arno (uncredited)
Maurice Nasil ... french voice dubbing: Danny Kaye (uncredited)
Andreina Pagnani ... italian voice dubbing: Dinah Shore (uncredited)
Giulio Panicali ... italian voice dubbing: Dana Andrews (uncredited)
Cesare Polacco ... italian voice dubbing: George Mathews (uncredited)
Lita Recio ... french voice dubbing: Dinah Shore (uncredited)
Stefano Sibaldi ... italian voice dubbing: Danny Kaye (uncredited)
Mauro Zambuto ... italian voice dubbing: Elisha Cook Jr. (uncredited)
Crew verified as complete

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Special Effects

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Storyline

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Plot Summary

It's Homecoming weekend at Midwestern University, the weekend which will culminate with the big game between Midwestern and Michigan. Homecoming marks the return for the first time in six years of alumnus All-American Joe Ferguson, whose world is all about football and especially his place in it. Mild-mannered English Professor Tommy Turner is able to handle the thought of Joe's return to campus as the ex-boyfriend of Tommy's wife of six years, Ellen Turner née Stanley, who is temperamentally more like Joe than him. Tommy knows that Ellen loves him, the reason he doesn't mind the thought of Joe. The weekend starts off well enough for Tommy in that he believes he is being promoted from associate to full professor, which if be the case would be much earlier than he or Ellen had expected. However, it comes to his attention that Michael Barnes, an idealistic student of his who is also the editor of the campus' literary magazine, has written an editorial for the upcoming edition of the magazine denouncing what he considers the fascist policies of the Ed Keller led Board of Trustees, who have gone on a Communist witch hunt among the faculty, and praising who he considers principled Tommy, as Tommy is planning on reading to his English Composition class a letter written by anarchist Bartolomeo Vanzetti. Tommy admits the fact that Michael has written is true, he regularly reading what he considers documents of good writing by non-professional writers, regardless of content or the author, as he is also planning to read to his class a document written by Abraham Lincoln. Frederick Damon, the Dean of the English Department, wants to stay out of the fray and what he knows will be the wrath of the powerful Keller about the editorial and Tommy's intended actions. Tommy has to decide what to do, he reading the letter which would jeopardize his life at Midwestern. Through the weekend, he also sees what he thinks is more clearly Ellen's kinship to both him and Joe, she who would be better off with his competitor than him. What Tommy decides to do may not only affect his position and his marriage, but also the life of Ellen's younger sister Patricia Stanley as two men vie for her affections: Michael and the team's star fullback, the dimwitted Wally Myers. Written by Huggo

Plot Keywords
Taglines SHE turned a lamb into a lion! See more »
Genres
Parents Guide View content advisory »
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Additional Details

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Also Known As
  • El macho (Spain)
  • Tú eres mi hombre (Mexico)
  • La debilidad del hombre (Argentina)
  • Assim é que Elas Gostam (Portugal)
  • La debilidad del hombre (Venezuela)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 101 min
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Did You Know?

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Trivia The play by James Thurber and Elliott Nugent opened at the Cort Theatre in New York on 9 January 1940 and closed on 3 August 1940 after 243 performances. Don DeFore, Ivan F. Simpson, Minna Phillips, and Regina Wallace were in the cast, and originated the roles that they play in the film version. The opening night cast also included Leon Ames as Joe Ferguson, author/director Elliott Nugent as Tommy Turner, and Gene Tierney as Patricia Stanley. See more »
Goofs When Tommy and Michael are drunk on the patio, the arm Tommy has in his jacket switches depending on the camera angle. See more »
Movie Connections Featured in AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Henry Fonda (1978). See more »
Soundtracks The Old Grey Mare See more »
Quotes Prof. Tommy Turner: [Reading Vanzetti's writing sample, at 1:35:40] If it had not been for these things, I might have lived out my life talking at street corners to scorning men. I might have died, unmarked, unknown, a failure. Now we are not a failure. Never in our full life can we hope to do such work for tolerance, for justice, for man's understanding of man, as now we do by accident. Our words - our lives - our pains - nothing! The taking of our lives - lives of a good shoemaker and a poor fish peddler - all! That last moment belongs to us - that agony is our triumph.
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