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Father
of the Bride (1950)
In director Vincente Minnelli's and MGM's satirical
domestic comedy about a wedding ceremony, including all the travails
and joys of a harrassed father experiencing his only daughter's expensive
wedding:
- in the opening voice-over narration
of harrassed and exhausted father, Stanley T. Banks or "Pops" (Oscar-nominated
Spencer Tracy), talked directly to the camera about the stresses
before (and after) a lavish June wedding for his 20 year-old daughter
Kay (Elizabeth Taylor), and his recollections of how she had grown
up so fast to become engaged - with an extravagant marriage ceremony
that had just occurred: ("I
would like to say a few words about weddings. I've just been through
one. Not my own, my daughter's. Someday in the far future, I may
be able to remember it with tender indulgence, but not now. I always
used to think that marriage was a simple affair. Boy and girl meet,
they fall in love, get married, they have babies. Eventually the
babies grow up, meet other babies, and they fall in love and get
married, and so on and on and on. Looked at that way, it's not
only simple, it's downright monotonous. But I was wrong. I figured
without the wedding")
- during the film's lengthy flashback that
told the witty and contrived story of the previous three months
leading up to the wedding, Stanley realized that
his 'little girl' Kay was soon to be leaving in anticipation of
her marriage ("All I could think of was a little girl
in brown pigtails and dirty overalls")
- Stanley desired to "get
a peek at this Superman," his daughter's
fiancee, Buckley Dunstan (Don Taylor) from the front window, and
had a pained reaction
- in the middle of the night, Stanley frantically
worried to his wife Ellie (Joan Bennett) about Kay's choice of
a fiancee: "We don't know a thing about him. Not a darn thing.
Not where he comes from, what he makes, or what he makes making it"
- they had a lengthy,
one-sided "man-to-man" financial
talk (three months before the nuptials) to determine if
Buckley could suitably support Kay
- during the required meeting of the Banks to get
to know the wealthy in-laws the Dunstans, Herbert
or "Herbie" (Moroni Olsen) and Doris Dunstan (Billie Burke),
Stanley admitted: "We did more bare-faced lying in those few minutes
than we had done in our entire lives"
- in the scene of the Banks' party to announce the
engagement, Stanley found himself confined to
the kitchen and was unable to deliver his prepared speech
- Stanley became exasperated about how everyone else
was spending his money, but soon realized he
would lose the battle for a small wedding: "From then on,
I was a dead duck"
- Stanley was completely flabbergasted by the amount
of clothing being purchased for the event, and all of the other included
expenses: ("It's only two syllables from Banks to bankruptcy...What
are people gonna say when I'm in the gutter because I tried to
put on a wedding like a Roman emperor?"); eventually, Stanley
gave in to the entire guest list
- Stanley faced his daughter's overbearing
caterers, led by fussy caterer Mr. Massoula (Leo G. Carroll): ("An
experienced caterer can make you ashamed of your house in 15
minutes")
- once the RSVPs for the invitations began to arrive,
Stanley was dismayed by the many positive responses
- then, Kay abruptly announced that "the
wedding's off" during a sudden explosion of emotion, after
Buckley impulsively proposed that the couple go on a fishing trip
in Nova Scotia for their honeymoon; Buckley arrived to sincerely apologize
for his awful and selfish lack of judgment with Kay; Stanley
was forced to intercede after the couple's fight and make things
right between the feuding couple, and the two quickly reconciled
their differences
- during the botched church rehearsal for the wedding
arrived, the groom Buckley and the minister Rev. Galsworthy (Paul
Harvey) were absent from the proceedings, and the rehearsal run
by the minister's assistant Mr. Tringle (Melville Cooper) was totally
disorganized and chaotic
- the night before the wedding, Stanley also
experienced a nightmarish
vision of what might happen at a disastrous wedding (he
imagined himself appearing late, in tatters, and not able to walk
down the springy and rubbery aisle, as his daughter screamed at
him from the altar)
- once he awoke from the nightmare during a midnight
snack kitchen scene, he visited with his daughter as they shared
a bottle of milk and sandwiches; she confessed
her fears about the monumental wedding about to occur, and then
complimented her father: "Nothing
ever fazes you, does it?"
- the day of the wedding dawned with massive distractions
and confusion over preparations in the house for the reception,
including collisions between caterers setting up and movers taking
out the furniture; however, Stanley then saw his daughter in her
wedding gown, reflected in a triple-paned full-length mirror ("She
looked like the princess in a fairy tale") - it was a wonderfully
visualized moment
- as Stanley played his part to give Kay away, he
felt ambiguity and confusion about losing his only daughter: ("What's
it going to be like to come home and not find her. Not to hear
her voice calling 'Hi Pops' as I come in. I suddenly realized what
I was doing. I was giving up Kay. Something inside me was beginning
to hurt")
- the film concluded with the chaotic reception back
at the Banks home; missing her throughout the entire reception in the
crowded house, in the midst of the hubbub and catering staff and
the crush of the hordes of guests, Stanley failed to see the throwing
of Kay's bouquet from the front indoor staircase, and only caught
a glimpse of her departing in the newlyweds' car. Crestfallen,
he thought to himself (in voice-over): "She was gone. My Kay
was gone. And I'd been too late to say goodbye to her." Later
after the last guests departed, Stanley surveyed the "wreckage" in
the house with Ellie, and suddenly felt how empty the house had
become
- in a concluding tearjerking scene, Kay made a post-wedding
phone call (from the NY train station on her way to her Nova Scotia
honeymoon) to lovingly say 'thank you' to her father: ("And
Pops, you've been just wonderful. I love you. I love you very much.
Bye bye")
- Stanley delivered a memorable last line:
("Nothing's
really changed, has it? You know what they say: 'My son's my son
until he gets him a wife, but my daughter's my daughter all of
her life.' All of our life")
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Stanley's Voice-Over Narrated Flashback
Stanley's "Man-to-Man" Talk with Fiancee Buckley
The Wedding Caterers
Wedding Nightmare
Kay's Post-Wedding Thank You Phone Call to Her Father
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