Sunday, September 4, 2011

Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House



by HOOKEDONHOUSES on NOVEMBER 15, 2009

I have always been crazy about old movies. When I was growing up, my mom and I used to watch them together on Saturday afternoons. To this day I’ll stop to watch anything with Cary Grant in it. And I can never resist a story that revolves around a house! So it makes sense that Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House would be one of my all-time favorites. I’ve watched it more times than I can count.

side-of-house-with-windows

The story starts in New York City, where the Blandings (Cary Grant and the fabulous Myrna Loy) live with their children in a small apartment:

apartment-ext

Mr. and Mrs. Blandings sleep in twin beds in the small master bedroom.

apartment-master-bedrm

apartment-master-bedrm-2

The dining room is so cramped there’s hardly room for both his daughter’s birdcage and the maid!

apartment-dining-rm

So they go looking for a bigger place in the country. Jim Blandings earns a good living as an advertising exec, we’re told–a whopping $15,000 a year! I ran across an old review of the film from when it came out in 1948 that said:

“It’s hard to feel sorry for a man trying to make ends meet on $15,000 a year when most people earn considerably less.”

This is the first place they see, known to the locals as the old Hackett place:

original-house-on-property

The real estate agent knows a couple of suckers when he sees them. He tells them a story about how the house is an historical landmark because General Gates stopped to water his horses here during the Revolutionary War.

This is how Mrs. Blandings imagines fixing it up:

how-mrs-b-imagines-it

And how Mr. Blandings envisions it:

how-mr-b-imagines-it

Their imaginations are so good that they buy the old Hackett place, only to discover that it’s a tear-down. It can’t be saved. (And that’s only the beginning of their troubles!)

They decide to build on the land instead, but the plans from the architect end up being much more than expected. The new house, he says, will cost $12,500 to build. Jim and Muriel are in shock. How could it possibly cost that much? They already spent $13,000 just on the lot and tearing down the old house.

The architect shows them the rendering of how it will look when it’s finished and the music swells. The Blandings decide to bite the bullet and build it despite the soaring costs.

architects-drawing-of-house

A real house was built for the film. According to CaryGrant.net:

In 1948, RKO Studios needed a rural setting in which to film exteriors for their comedy “Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House.” Their neighboring studio, 20th Century Fox, had 2,000 acres of dramatic landscape in the Malibu hills that served as their location ranch, so a deal was made and construction began.

construction-begins

Despite all of the problems, the headaches, the mixups, and the soaring costs, the house is finished and moving day finally arrives:

moving-day-exterior

Jim carries Muriel over the threshold:

over-the-threshold

And right across the wet varnish on the hardwood floors.

wet varnish

“Oh, Daddy! Look at this!”

side-of-house-no-windows

The windows on the side of the house aren’t in yet! It’s gonna be a chilly night in the new house. . .

new-master-first-night

One of my favorite scenes is when Mrs. Blandings gives instructions to the painter on moving day, patiently explaining:

“First, the living room. I want it to be a soft green. Not as blue-green as a robin’s egg, but not as yellow-green as daffodils. Now, the dining room. Not just yellow–something bright and sunshiny. If you send one of your workers to the grocer for a pound of butter and match that, they can’t go wrong.” Etc, etc., with detailed descriptions of each room’s color.

As soon as she leaves the room, the painter turns to the guy next to him and asks, “Got that, Charlie?”

“Uh-huh,” he says. “Red, green, yellow, blue, and white.”

front-door-foyer

front-door

inside-the-front-door

stairs

We get a glimpse of the dining room, but we never see the kitchen:

dining room

The living room:

mrs-b-and-bill-cole-fire

living room

living rm 2

Just as Jim is about to give up on ever coming up with a promotional strategy for WHAM (it’s a Whale of a Ham!), his housekeeper Gussie (Louise Beavers, who also played Mamie in Holiday Inn with Bing Crosby–another favorite of mine!) saves the day. When Jim asks for HAM for breakfast instead of WHAM, Gussie says:

wham

So he keeps his job, he keeps his house, and everybody’s happy.

side of house-garden

In the final scene we see him holding the book he has published about his adventures in house building:

cary-grant-holds-book

Here’s the real book, written by the real Mr. Blandings–Eric Hodgins. He based the story on his own trials and tribulations with a house he built. The actual house built by Hodgins still stands in the town of New Milford, Connecticut. It sold in August 2004 for $1.2 million.

According to an article in the Washington Post, Hodgins and his wife began construction in the classic New England small town in 1939, anticipating a budget of $11,000. It ultimately cost$56,000 to finish and nearly drove him into bankruptcy.

After living in their dream house for only 2 years, they were forced to sell and downsize. (Isn’t that sad?)

eric-hodgins-photo

Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, Hodgins said, “wrote itself.” It was published in 1946 and was immediately a bestseller. He made $200,000 on the movie rights alone, and the film was a hit. Hodgins wrote a sequel called Blandings Way, published in 1950.

As a promotion for the film, 73 full-scale replicas of the house were built in various locations in the US and raffled off. Here’s one such house in Fresno, California (via theProvidence Journal), as it looks today.

Patricia Shackelford (aka Mrs. Blandings, who named her popular blog after Myrna Loy’s character in the movie) wrote an interesting post about it and the movie promotions here.

The house from the film is still standing. In 1974, Fox sold the ranch to the state of California. The land is now part of Malibu Creek State Park, and the house is used for the administrative offices for park employees. Here’s how it looks today:

realblandingshouse2009-malibu-carygrantdotnet

But maybe it’s best to remember it as it was. . .

blandings-dream-house-exterior

Visit the TV/Movies page for links to all of the ones I’ve featured so far, fromThe Mary Tyler Moore Show to Marley & Me.

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