The wife of a publishing executive mistakenly believes that her husband's relationship with his attractive secretary is more than professional.The wife of a publishing executive mistakenly believes that her husband's relationship with his attractive secretary is more than professional.The wife of a publishing executive mistakenly believes that her husband's relationship with his attractive secretary is more than professional.
Hooper Atchley
- Postal Clerk
- (uncredited)
Eugene Borden
- Ship's Officer
- (uncredited)
Sidney Bracey
- Butler at Club
- (uncredited)
Frederick Burton
- Ned Trent
- (uncredited)
Leonard Carey
- Taggart
- (uncredited)
Maurice Cass
- Mr. Bakewell
- (uncredited)
André Cheron
- Frenchman
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe name of one of the screenwriters, Alice Duer Miller, is seen as the author of an article in a magazine, and Clark Gable remarks, "Hey, Alice has written a very nice article here."
- GoofsThe story supposedly takes place in New York City. All the telephones are Automatic Electric models. Telephones of that era, in NYC, would have been exclusively made by Western Electric, for the Bell System's New York Telephone Company.
- Quotes
Helen 'Whitey' Wilson: You're a fool, for which I am grateful.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
- SoundtracksThank You for a Lovely Evening
(1934) (uncredited)
Music and Lyrics by Jimmy McHugh
Sung a cappella by Clark Gable and by Myrna Loy
Played at the party and danced to by the guests
Played as background music often
Featured review
A lot of this is typical 1930s melodrama. The story continues because various of the characters fail to have the obvious conversations, which would have cleared things up in a jiffy.
The scene I found particularly interesting and innovative was the penultimate one. In the third from the end scene, Harlow shows up in Loy's stateroom aboard the French Liner ship she is planning to take to Europe to forget about her husband (Gable), whom she imagines, incorrectly, to have had a fling with his secretary Harlow during a business trip to Havana. Harlow tells Loy that if she leaves Gable now, he will turn to Harlow out of loneliness and Loy will never get him back. (Yes, that sounds like the mother's speech to Norma Shearer in The Women.) Loy believes, incorrectly, that she has already lost Gable, so she says she won't go back to him. Harlow tells her that that would make her (Harlow) happy.
The next scene takes place in Gable's office. He is talking with Harlow. We hear footsteps coming down the hall outside. Footsteps that take a long time. It turns out that they belong to the cleaning lady. Then, when she leaves, we hear footsteps again, very assertive footsteps, for a long time. Harlow gets up - she suspects it is Loy, come to return to her husband. And this time it is. Harlow then walks through the next, large office - more long footsteps - and leaves. The use of the footsteps is really very impressive.
The scene I found particularly interesting and innovative was the penultimate one. In the third from the end scene, Harlow shows up in Loy's stateroom aboard the French Liner ship she is planning to take to Europe to forget about her husband (Gable), whom she imagines, incorrectly, to have had a fling with his secretary Harlow during a business trip to Havana. Harlow tells Loy that if she leaves Gable now, he will turn to Harlow out of loneliness and Loy will never get him back. (Yes, that sounds like the mother's speech to Norma Shearer in The Women.) Loy believes, incorrectly, that she has already lost Gable, so she says she won't go back to him. Harlow tells her that that would make her (Harlow) happy.
The next scene takes place in Gable's office. He is talking with Harlow. We hear footsteps coming down the hall outside. Footsteps that take a long time. It turns out that they belong to the cleaning lady. Then, when she leaves, we hear footsteps again, very assertive footsteps, for a long time. Harlow gets up - she suspects it is Loy, come to return to her husband. And this time it is. Harlow then walks through the next, large office - more long footsteps - and leaves. The use of the footsteps is really very impressive.
- richard-1787
- Oct 14, 2014
- Permalink
- How long is Wife vs. Secretary?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Wife Versus Secretary
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $519,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content