Films
in Focus
By
Ed Garea
Employees’
Entrance (WB, 1933) – Director: Roy Del
Ruth. Writer: Robert Presnell, Sr. Cast: Warren William, Loretta
Young, Wallace Ford, Alice Whiter, Hale Hamilton, Albert Gran, Allen
Jenkins, Ruth Donnelly, Frank Reicher, Charles Sellon, & Marjorie
Gateson. B&W, 75 minutes.
Department
Store Girls – This is your picture, about your lives and your
problems! See what happens in department store aisles and offices
after closing hours! Girls who couldn't have been touched with a
100-ft yacht – ready to do anything to get a job! Beautiful models
who whisper their dread of the "Boss" who can "make"
or break more women than a sultan!
– Ad copy for the
film.
About
seven months after MGM released Skyscraper Souls with
Warren William, Warner Bros. released this similarly themed flick
also starring William. The MGM film was concerned with the
behind-the-scenes doings in a huge skyscraper; Employees’
Entrance is concerned with the behind-the scenes doings is a
huge department store. William was the ruthless boss behind the
shenanigans in Skyscraper Souls, as he is here. In Souls,
Maureen O’Sullivan plays the young naïve worker deemed by Williams
as just ripe for the plucking. In Employees’ Entrance,
Loretta Young is the young, naïve object of William’s lust. Of the
two films, Employees’ Entrance is the far better
of the two, as Warner’s was much more comfortable dealing with the
problems of the working class.
William
is his usual villainous self as Kurt Anderson, the hard-driving
general manager of the Franklin Monroe Department Store. The film
opens as we see sales rise through the 1920’s and we quickly led to
infer it’s because of the dynamic leadership of Anderson. A
corporate hot shot brought in as general manager, his strict
adherence to his philosophy of profit over people makes him the hated
target of all. He’s also introduced among a montage of complaints
from both employees and suppliers, while superimposed over those
complaints is the story of the store’s rise, from $10 million in
annual sales to $25 million in 1925, and $100 million in 1929. We see
the store’s namesake and top executive, Franklin Monroe (Hamilton)
issue lame apologies with the explanation that Mr. Anderson makes all
the decisions.
However,
the Depression has come and it’s hit not only the store, but also
the entire industry quite hard. We meet the directors at a board
meeting where Monroe is more concerned about chairing the Mayor’s
Welcoming Committee. His cousin and toady, Denton Ross (Gran),
dutifully seconds his every word. Anderson sits there sneering before
demanding his salary be doubled along with total control. But the
directors are in a panic, telling Anderson that he can stay, but only
under supervision. He scoffs at the offer, replying that he and he
alone is responsible for the store’s growth, and if his terms are
not met, he’ll leave and sign a contract with their biggest
competitor. With that Monroe walks out to welcome some Trans-Atlantic
flyers, and the directors, now alone, buckle and agree to his terms.
And
if we think he’s tough with the board of directors, wait until we
see him with the suppliers. The new clothing supplier, Garfinkle
(Reicher) informs him that part of the large first order of swagger
coats the store was counting on for a big sale will be delayed three
days because of labor strife, and he can supply only a fraction of
the order for now. He pleads that he has $30,000 invested in the deal
and is already taking a loss to insure future business. Anderson is
angered and cancels the entire order, telling his secretary to sue
for damages. Garfinkle continues to plead, telling Anderson, “It’s
my life.” “Merchandise is the life of this store,” Anderson
retorts. “When you promise to deliver on a certain day and don’t
do it, you threaten our life!” But, Garfinkle continues, “It only
happened once. It can’t happen again.” No soap. “It can’t
happen once!” Anderson screams. “Now get out of here!”
Interestingly,
when Anderson is later walking the floor, he notices a new employee –
none other than Garfinkle himself, who has taken an entry-level
position at the store. Garfinkle tells him, “It’s men like you
who crush that succeed.” But if he was expecting Anderson to fire
him for the remark, he was dead wrong. Instead, Anderson is so
flattered that he pulls out his checkbook and begins to write
Garfinkle a check for $5,000 in return for a half interest in any
business he goes into. The broken man refuses the help, though,
tearing up the check. Anderson is still impressed and orders
Garfinkle’s salary to be doubled. “You’ve got the right idea
now,” he tells him.
However,
all work and no play males Kurt a very dull boy indeed. One evening
as he is leaving, he meets Madeline Walters (Young), beautiful young
woman who he discovers hiding in the store’s model house. She tells
him that she’s broke and unemployed, and that hiding in the store
can ensure she’s first in line the next morning for a job. He
offers to take her to dinner and she agrees, later spending the night
at his place. The next morning, she’s the store’s new model.
At
the next day’s meeting with the department heads, Anderson notes
that because the Depression is cutting into business, he is cutting
executives' salaries (including his own) by 10% and is looking for
new ideas from his staff. His second-in-command is an older man named
Higgins (Sellon). Higgins has been with the company since 1906, but
makes the error of voicing his preference of retrenchment. Anderson,
disgusted with what he’s heard, turns to Martin West (Ford), an
employee in the men’s clothing department and the youngest man in
the room, for suggestions. West suggests selling men’s drawers to
women. Anderson is intrigued and asks Higgins what he thinks. Higgins
replies, “Fantastic. Not at all in line with the policy of the
store, and I’ve been 30 years in this business.” It’s a fatal
error. Anderson turns to him. “Higgins, get out,” he explodes.
Higgins begs him not to do it like this; that is, publicly. “Publicly
or privately, you’re through. You’re too old,” Anderson
retorts, calling Higgins dead wood and throwing him out the door.
Anderson now promotes West as his assistant, but with the caveat that
he stay single – this is no job for a married man and he must
devote himself solely to business if he’s to get ahead.
But
– wouldn’t you know it – Martin and Madeline fall in love and
secretly marry, which later places a strain on their relationship
because Martin is always at Anderson’s beck and call. They can’t
let Anderson find out about their situation, lest they both lose
their jobs. When it comes to women, Anderson is a complete cynic,
believing that the only thing women are after is financial security.
Not that they don’t have their uses. Being as Monroe Franklin is
away once again, Anderson doubles the salary of employee Polly Dale
(White) to keep Franklin’s interim executive, Ross, occupied and
out of Anderson’s hair.
Meanwhile,
Higgins has been desperately trying to get in to see Anderson in
hopes of getting his job back. But Anderson has written him off and
won’t see him. Despondent, Higgins goes up to the ninth floor and
jumps out the window to his death. Informed of Higgins’ death,
Anderson can only say, “When a man outlives his usefulness, he
ought to jump out a window!”
The
strain on the Wests grows to the point where they quarrel at the
company party, with Martin drinking himself into oblivion with the
boys and passing out. This leaves Madeline vulnerable to Anderson’s
entreaties. But this time he gets her drunk and invites her to rest
awhile and clear her head at his hotel suite. She passes out on the
bed and we seen him enter later. The next day, Madeline again rebuffs
him in his office, telling him that she feels “like someone you’d
pick up on the street.” She asks why he chose her. Anderson answers
that he finds her attractive, adding that she also has an exemplary
sales record. What a charmer. During their argument, she lets slip
that she’s married to West, which surprises and angers Anderson.
They both betrayed him. She then begs him not to tell Martin. All
Anderson can do is spit out, “I’ll take care of it.”
And
does he take care of it. First, he tries to get Polly to seduce
Martin, but Polly won’t hear of it. Angered, he wants to fire
Polly, but is stopped by Ross, who is totally infatuated with her. So
it’s on to Plan B: He has Martin sitting at an intercom in an
adjoining office while he calls Madeline back in. During their
conversation he manages to coax the information about their two
nights together from Madeline, telling her that, “You women think
an affair with you is the most important thing in the world.” Then
– clearly for Martin’s benefit – he adds, “A man’s work
and his success is.” He dismisses her, “You women make me sick.”
Both
Martin and Madeline are emotionally crushed. She leaves her husband a
farewell note, saying that she has failed him as a wife. Later,
Martin learns that she took poison in an unsuccessful attempt as
suicide. Martin is fit to be tied and is itching for a confrontation
with Anderson.
However,
Kurt Anderson has bigger problems. Despite his efforts to get things
moving again, sales at the store are still plummeting and Commodore
Monroe is way from the store on a yacht. This leaves the voting
interest of the company in the hands of the bankers, who have turned
on Anderson. They want to replace him with someone who will cut back
and retrench in these hard times. This forces Anderson into an
alliance with the dimwitted Ross – he needs Ross to get Monroe to
grant him proxy if he’s to defeat the bankers.
Martin
finally confronts Anderson, threatening to kill him. Anderson,
already under pressure facing dismissal if the proxy voters don’t
come through, dares Martin to do it, even tossing him a gun. Martin
fires, but only manages to inflict a minor wound on Anderson. Other
employees, hearing the shooting, burst into the office, but Anderson
assures them that nothing really happened. Martin quits and leaves.
Meanwhile,
Ross has managed to contact Commodore Monroe, and get his proxy just
in time for the vote of the board of directors. Anderson keeps his
job. Martin and Madeline reconcile and decide to look for new jobs
away from the Monroe Franklin Department Store. As for Anderson,
having survived the vote, he resumes his job with his new assistant.
It’s none other than Garfinkle, embittered and now just as ruthless
as his new boss.
Employees
Entrance is a pretty shocking Pre-Code movie with a
surprising relevance to today.
Although based on a play, it has
the feel of the typical Warner Bros. “ripped from the headlines”
movie. According to Brian Cady, writing for TCM, Variety speculated
that the story referred to Klein's department store in New York,
which had enjoyed an unaccountable success during the Depression.
Monroe Franklin, Hale Hamilton's character, with his many political
connections, was thought to be based a politico who was dubbed “Mr.
New York” and served as its "official greeter," Grover
Whalen.
It’s
also a film that can’t be made today. Not because of the subject
matter, but because of the locale. At the time Employees’
Entrance was made, department stores occupied a much more
exalted position in the American outlook. They were early versions of
fantasylands that appealed to those who believed in the American
Dream. The common perception was that anyone could get a job and rise
up the economic ladder on hard work and dedication. It was also a
place where aisles of luxury goods stood next to those of
necessities; shopping wasn’t simply an activity, but an experience
that could take hours – even the entire day – as people dressed
up and strolled the aisles languishing over the latest necessities
and moving over an aisle of two to gaze at luxury items they could
only dream of affording.
There
were roughly 40 movies made in the ‘20s and ‘30s where the plot
revolved around a department store. The best known include It
with Clara Bow as the girl who steals; Safety Last,
starring Harold Lloyd; and Our Blushing Brides, where
working girl Joan Crawford wins the heart of the store owner’s son,
played by Robert Montgomery. Employees’ Entrance changed
things a bit by making William’s Kurt Anderson, the general
manager, and not the owner, of the store, his power resting not in
his wealth, but his ability to control his employees’ wealth.
Anderson
fit the ideal for the Depression times – a strong man who could
take change and get things moving. Make no mistake the man is a
monster, perhaps the embodiment of capitalism in his ruthlessness.
Everything he does is based on exploitation; even his relationships
are exploitative. And if he has to destroy someone he does so
willfully, for the goal is to make money. But even though the film
showed the damage a dictator like an Anderson might do, his persona
takes on the quality of an anti-hero when compared to the owner and
the board of directors. The owner, when he’s not absent, is a cold
fish whose idea of leadership is to send telegrams to the store’s
employees quoting such platitudes as Thomas Paine’s “these are
the times that try men’s souls.” His cousin, who is
second-in-command, is a fat toady, unable to think for himself. And
the board is composed of bankers who are only satisfied when there
are plenty of profits.
Anderson,
on the other hand, despises them. In his words, they are not
producers. He, on the other hand, is a self-made man who rose through
the ranks on ability and merit alone, as he alludes to Martin West in
what passes for a tender scene between them. There was a girl he
loved back in Minnesota, but there was no way he was going to settle
down with a wife and bring a child into the sort of poverty he
experienced. Now that he has money, he is determined not to lose it.
And one of the ways to lose it is through romance and marriage, hence
his misogyny. Women are for play only; they are there to be
exploited.
Exploitation
is the right word for the relationship between Anderson and Madeline,
and it exists on both sides. When he discovers her hiding in the
store’s home display, she is at first hesitant to speak with him
until she discovers who he is. Then and only then will she allow him
to buy her dinner and then go back to his apartment for the night.
Once she falls for Martin, she tries to avoid Anderson any way she
can until the night of the office party. After Martin deserts her for
a night of inebriation with the boys, Anderson spots her and they
have drinks. While she is getting more and more soused with each sip,
he, as always, keeps his head about him. Finally, drunk and confused,
she accepts his invitation to take the key to the room he’s
reserved and lie down for spell while he waits back at the party. But
before we see Madeline collapsing on the bed, Anderson is already
sauntering down the hall and letting himself into the room. As she’s
lying on the bed, clearly passed out, he closes the door and spends
the night. We can only second the view of Mick LaSalle in his
book, Dangerous Men: “It’s tantamount to rape. She’s
practically in a coma.”
However,
there is another side to Anderson that, despite all his villainy,
endears him to the audience, especially an audience during the
Depression. Anderson saves jobs. The bankers on the board want to cut
jobs and retrench. Anderson, on the other hand, realizes the
lifeblood of the store rests with its workforce. When the board tries
to force him out for not cutting back on the workforce his answer is
to find the wandering owner rather than back one millimeter on his
stand. He tells the board to their faces that they “make him sick.”
“You’re a banker, not a producer, “ he tells one. “All you
have is dignity and today you can’t get one thin dime for it.”
While
he will brook no nonsense from the executives or suppliers, he takes
a slightly softer line with his employees. When his secretary, Miss
Hall (Donnelly), is caught spending her salary on a dress from one of
the store’s competitors, Anderson is fit to be tied. “Whose
money?” he asks. “Who pays that to you?” He’ll make an
example and embarrass her, but he will not take her livelihood away.
It’s the same with store detective Sweeney (Jenkins). He catches
one of the customers, Mrs. Hickox (Gateson), supposedly in the act of
stealing a purse, but it's her own purse. Taken to his office,
Anderson tries to charm her, but to no avail, especially when she
informs him that her husband is the editor of one of the city’s
larger newspapers. At a loss, Anderson asks her if there might be
some item in the store she would like to have as a token of apology
and to keep the story out of the papers. There is, she says: a grand
piano, which he lets her have. After she leaves, he turns his wrath
on Sweeney, telling him that the piano is coming out of his salary at
the rate of $10 a week. When Sweeney protests that it will take him
the rest of his life to pay the debt, Anderson answers, “I doubt if
you’ll live that long. Get out.” But he doesn’t fire Sweeney.
Anderson is the example of the perfect Depression manager: a ruthless
businessman who will fight for each and every dollar, without
recourse to any sort of emotion, be it sentimentality, tenderness, or
pity. It’s exploit or be exploited, the perfect person for these
Social Darwinian times.
As
with Skyscraper Souls, the film revolves around, and is
dominated by, the persona of Warren William. Ironically, William was
not the studio’s first choice for the part. That was Edward G.
Robinson, who turned the part down, causing a small rift between him
and the studio. But William turned out to be the right choice. No one
played the hard-hearted cad as well as he did, or as charmingly,
which made him even more dangerous. Simply put, he’s so good at
being so bad. No actor could play this part today; it’s just too
cold-blooded. There would have to be some mitigating factor in place
to explain why he is the way he is and give him a chance to redeem
himself at the end.
It’s
always interesting to compare the Pre-Code Loretta Young with the
Loretta Young of the ’40s and ‘50s, when she became the poster
girl for devout Catholicism. Before she became St. Loretta she was
quite the Wild Child. Born Gretchen Young in Salt Lake City, Utah, in
1913, she, along with her sisters, had been appearing on screen as
extras since she was four. Eventually, the extra work led to small
parts, which in turn led to supporting roles, such as in Laugh,
Clown, Laugh (MGM, 1928) with Lon Chaney. Warner
Brothers-First National signed her in 1928, and in 1929 she had her
first lead role in the early talkie, The Girl in the Glass
Cage. From 1928 to 1934, she made almost 50 films, most of them
for Warner Bros. with titles like The Truth About Youth, Big
Business Girl, Play-Girl, Week-End
Marriage, They Call It Sin, Midnight Mary,
and Born to Be Bad, among others. In 1930, at the age of
17 she fell in love and eloped to Yuma, Arizona, with her co-star
in The Second Floor Mystery, Grant Withers, who was 26.
The marriage was a stormy one and lasted only nine months before they
divorced. The next film they starred in, Broken Dishes,
was due to be released after their divorce, so the studio renamed
it Too Young to Marry.
In 1934, she jumped ship and signed with Fox, where she went on to become one of Hollywood’s leading ladies. During the filming of The Call of the Wild (1935) with Clark Gable, the two had an on-set affair, which resulted in Loretta becoming pregnant. Because of the morality clauses in their contracts, and the fact that Gable was married, the studio fixers saw to it that the only person outside Gable and Young who knew was Loretta’s mother. Loretta and her mother left for Europe where Loretta delivered a healthy baby girl on November 6, 1935, whom she named Judith. Studio publicity said that Judith was adopted while Loretta was in Europe on vacation. If Barbara Stanwyck could be said to be the Queen of the Pre-Codes, then Loretta Young was its Princess.
In 1934, she jumped ship and signed with Fox, where she went on to become one of Hollywood’s leading ladies. During the filming of The Call of the Wild (1935) with Clark Gable, the two had an on-set affair, which resulted in Loretta becoming pregnant. Because of the morality clauses in their contracts, and the fact that Gable was married, the studio fixers saw to it that the only person outside Gable and Young who knew was Loretta’s mother. Loretta and her mother left for Europe where Loretta delivered a healthy baby girl on November 6, 1935, whom she named Judith. Studio publicity said that Judith was adopted while Loretta was in Europe on vacation. If Barbara Stanwyck could be said to be the Queen of the Pre-Codes, then Loretta Young was its Princess.
Young’s
work in Employees’ Entrance was in fitting with
her other film work at the time – outstanding. I have never seen
any actress of that time play a drunk as well or as convincingly as
Young, and the chemistry between her and William was superb, making
the fact that she hated him quite believable. Alice White, making a
return to the screen after a nearly two-year absence, is pleasantly
surprising as Polly Dale, Anderson’s “sex torpedo,” using her
to destroy business rivals. Her scenes with William are priceless;
the two trade barbs and circle each other like two hyneas as they are
but two different examples of the same species. White was being
groomed for major stardom by Warner’s in the late silent/early
sound era, but her limited acting skills, combined with a full-blown
case of “divadom,” led her to walking away from the studio.
Sadly, just as he career was finally getting back on track, a scandal
later that same year ruined any chances she had to a comeback.
Wallace Ford is given more to do here than he was in Skyscraper
Souls, and although his scenes with Young are nothing to write
home about, his scenes with William are excellent, reflecting the
intensity between the two characters. Ford was in interesting actor:
during the ‘30s he was a featured player in A-pictures and a
leading man in the B’s before settling down as a character actor in
the ‘40s and ‘50s.
Employee’s
Entrance is an engrossing, yet hard movie to watch, mainly
because of the character of Kurt Anderson. Yet, it’s Warren
William’s performance as Anderson that makes the film so lively and
fascinating. He’s a monster, and revels in being such. Nor does the
movie seek to make excuses for him. No, he is a self-made monster,
and Williams does a masterly job in playing the monster with a
mixture of hostility and sublimated sadness. It was directed in usual
assembly belt fashion by Roy Del Ruth, whose Pre-Code films always
manage to find a raw nerve and focus on it, which is why his films
are so interesting.
QUOTABLE
DIALOGUE:
Polly
Dale: Hello, Mr. Anderson.
Kurt
Anderson: Oh, it’s you. I didn’t know you with all your
clothes on.
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