"Skeffington, is a fine old fellow, so full
of the milk of human kindness that he almost moos. He may be something of a
rogue, but you can bet your bottom dollar that any skullduggery he has
indulged in has been all for the benefit of the poor and benighted among his
constituents. ... There are some sprightly moments in this film ... but as a really sound
representation of political shenanigans it is a long way from home." —John
McCarten, The New Yorker, November 1, 1958
Cass fumes at being blackmailed by Skeffington. |
Cass and Force ask the Bishop to endorse McClusky for mayor. |
"Everyone’s good so it doesn’t make sense just to list them all, but Basil
Rathbone’s great as a villain, Carleton Young as Tracy’s assistant, Dianne
Foster as Hunter’s wife and Edward Brophy." —Andrew
Wickliffe,
The Stop Button
Spencer Tracy in 'The Last Hurrah'; Portrays Skeffington; John Ford
Directs NOW that all key districts have been heard from, including Hollywood,
it is safe to expect that Edwin O'Connor's highly touted political
character, Skeffington, will repeat in an overwhelming landslide as the
People's Choice this year.
For John Ford and Spencer Tracy, who have engineered his campaign on
the Coast with their motion-picture version of Mr. O'Connor's
tub-thumping "The Last Hurrah," have delivered a smashing majority for
the Irish-American political boss. And if this doesn't sweep him into
office, there's no justice in a stuffed ballot box.
Under Mr. Ford's fine direction of a script Frank Nugent prepared
from Mr. O'Connor's novel (with an addition of some of his own bright
Irish wit), the last political campaign of the old boy—and the last few
weeks of his passage through this vale—are rendered robustly amusing and
deeply touching. And Mr. Tracy is at his best in the leading role. ...
With an evident affection for his subject amounting to sheer
idolatry, Mr. Ford has put together a pungent pageant that gives all the
breaks to Skeffington. When his hero recruits his young nephew to watch
him through a mayoralty campaign, he easily convinces the young
fellow—and perhaps the audience—that it's all a big game. When he
graciously rides herd on his henchmen in a smoke-filled room or at a
wake, it appears, from his genial behavior, that he is nothing but noble
and good. And when he browbeats a group of stuffy Brahmins in their
highly exclusive club, it sounds as if everybody is out of step but
himself, Skeffington.
Indeed, Mr. Ford (and Mr. Nugent) are so kind to him in this film
that one searches in vain for a reason why anyone should think him a
rogue. Much more evil and villainous in their manners are the anti-Skeffingtons—Basil
Rathbone as a big-city banker and John Carradine as an editor. And his
opponent in the mayoralty campaign—a role played by Charles
Fitzsimmons—is made such a farcical nitwit that one is shocked and
bewildered when he wins. Why should the movie audience be so much more
perceptive than the electorate?
But these things, and also an unconscionably long-drawn and
liturgical death-bed scene, are balanced by the sly charm of the hero
and the ebullience of his pals. Edward Brophy as a dopey idolater, Pat
O'Brien as a sane strategist, James Gleason as a fast finagler and
Ricardo Cortez as the guardian of the "Jewish vote" make things as merry
for the audience as they do for Skeffington. Jeffrey Hunter is wholesome
as the nephew, Dianne Foster is bouncy as his wife and Donald Crisp is
authoritarian as a Catholic cardinal, Wallace Ford, Frank McHugh, Jane
Darwell and Anna Lee are good in Irish roles.
Maybe this is a sentimental and one-sided picture of a political
boss, but there are things worse than having an opportunity for a good
cry into a figurative bucket of beer. And that's what you get from this
picture—that and a lot of laughs. ...
Bosley Crowther
— The New York Times, October
24, 1958 |
"Sentimental version of Edwin O'Connor's novel of politics, loosely based on life of Boston's mayor James Curley who in this story is mounting his final election campaign. Top-notch veteran cast makes film sparkle. Remade for TV in 1977 by (and with) Carroll O'Connor."
—Leonard Maltin, Leonard Maltin's Classic Movie Guide (Penguin, 2015)
In addition to the 1977 television version
of The Last Hurrah mentioned by Leonard Maltin, there was a stage
version in 1999 produced by Boston's Huntington
Theatre Company. See
https://www.huntingtontheatre.org/about/history/1999-2000/The-Last-Hurrah/
Cass and Force are annoyed that they failed to get the Bishop's
endorsement. |
Skeffington's enemies watch a parade for Skeffington march by. |
"The election scene, moving from bustling confidence to cold defeat, is
masterly." —The Monthly Film Bulletin,
February 15, 1959
"This is a first-rate adaptation, taking most of the action and the
dialogue straight from the book and making a very good book into a very good
film." —Eric Beck, "Best Adapted Screenplay: 1958,"
Nighthawk News
The Last Hurrah
The virtuosity with which producer-director John Ford handles actors,
camera and film to achieve a particular effect has seldom had so wide a
range as in this delightful, absorbing, warm and human study of a
politician of the old school and the ould sod. Combined with the Ford
magic is a Spencer Tracy performance, perfect in spirit and letter, which
ranks with anything the old master has done in a long and distinguished
career; and an astonishing list of co-stars and supporting players, each
perfectly matched by the Ford genius to characters they portray. The list,
long enough to crowd any marquee, includes Jeffrey Hunter, Pat O'Brien,
Basil Rathbone, Donald Crisp, James Gleason, Diane Foster, Ricardo Cortez,
Wallace Ford,
Frank McHugh, Basil Ruysdael, Edward Brophy and John Carradine.
The screen play by Frank Nugent is a perceptive translation of the
Edwin O'Connor novel which recounts, through the eyes of a young sports
columnist, the last torchlight and baby kissing campaign of an old-time
political boss. The book, and the picture, depict a New England city and
there are sufficient parallels to Boston to leave no doubt as to the
prototype. However, the emphasis is universal rather than local and the
story is of a unique era in American big city politics.
Tracy is, of course, Frank Skeffington, the political rogue whose wit
is ready, whose genius for organization has brought him to the peak of
municipal politics, whose methods while not always ethical are certainly
effective, but whose rough and ready "bossism" is rapidly disintegrating
before modern but not necessarily better techniques.
Tracy's portrayal, along with Ford's directorial genius, brings
Skeffington to life with humor, in his philosophical approach to politics,
pathos, in the personal tragedy of his widower loneliness and his
disappointment in his playboy son, and magnificent defiance of the narrow,
flint-hearted bankers and "proper" people who oppose him.
The subordinate characters are sketched in a lower key but each is a
gem of characterization with O'Brien and Cortez as John Gorman and Sam
Weinberg, principal lieutenants; Jeffrey Hunter as Adam Caulfield,
Skeffington's nephew who records the story; and Basil Rathbone and John
Carradine as the banker and the vindictive publisher who are the mayor's
principal enemies.
The picture is dotted with other brilliant characterizations, typical
of the Ford touch—Donald Crisp as the
Cardinal, boyhood playmate of Skeffington who opposes his methods but in
the end is reconciled with him; Jane Darwell as an Irish biddy whose hobby
is attending wakes; and a host of minor characters each perfect in their
parts. And several whole sequences will be talked about as gems of cinema
art—Nocko Minehan's wake which Skeffington and his henchmen attend to
comfort the widow and garner votes; Skeffington walking in the park alone
in defeat while the victory parade passes him by; and the memorable
deathbed scene.
Ford's direction alternates between an
impressionism which creates extraordinarily vivid pictures and a realism
which gives the characters life and dimension.
It is a picture destined for a long career
in prestige for both Ford and Columbia and in box office dollars.
James D. Ivers
—
Motion Picture Daily, October 15, 1958
|
"One of the principal pleasures of The
Last Hurrah is
its dynamite cast. I was genuinely surprised to learn that Spencer Tracy was
not Ford's first choice as I can't imagine any actor more suited to the role
of Frank Skeffington than him, and he plays it beautifully, passionate in
his anger at Cass and his cronies but really shining in the small moments of
realisation and understanding. John Carradine is suitably spiteful as
newspaper editor Amos Force, but is outshone here by a perfectly cast Basil
Rathbone, who expertly captures that self-interested callousness that
defines so many of his ilk." —Slarek,
Cineoutsider: Beyond the Mainstream
Cass
watching the parade. |
The Puritans watch Skeffington's concession speech. He announces that he's going to
run for governor, and he expects to win. |
"Rathbone was excellent in the short, but impressive, role [as Norman
Cass]. ... Pat O'Brien recalls that both the director and Tracy had a great
admiration for Rathbone." —Michael B.
Druxman, Basil Rathbone: His Life and His Films (South Brunswick
and New York: A.S. Barnes, 1975)
"The
Last Hurrah"
Columbia's "The Last Hurrah" is certainly a refreshing film, if not a
boxoffice smash. At its best moments, this John Ford production overflows
with a warm-hearted gusto and rough-hewn eclat. And its star Spencer
Tracy, gives a thoroughly irresistible taste of Boston blarney. He is
playing, of course, that wonderfully flamboyant mayor people took to their
hearts when reading the Edwin O'Connor best-seller of which this film is a
pretty faithful transcription. The mayor is called Frank Skeffington and
his politics are a picaresque sort indeed: a real old-guard city boss
running for a fifth term, dandily dressed in homburg and chesterfield,
smart as a whip a democratic Machiavelian who "knows what the people want
and what they will settle for." Plainly this is a tarnished hero, but it
is the theme of this film that something of dignity will vanish from the
American scene when this breed dies out. Frank Nugent's barb-filled
screenplay and John Ford's neatly nostalgic direction we get a perfect
background for our hero. The screen is crowded with colorful characters,
with the eccentricities and absurd rivalries between the "good" people and
the "bad" taking on a vantage point in reality: that fine old city of
Boston with its traditional free-for-all between the Irish-American wards
and the Beacon Hill brahmins. from a fantastic Irish wake that turns into
an affectionate political rally to a crackling invasion by Skeffington
into the upper-stuffy Plymouth Club, where the hardened Yankees sit round
their Founding Fathers table, and finally to a tautly realistic yet
touching evocation of election night, "The Last Hurrah" brims over with
rich and flavorful talk, finely atmospheric vignettes, just-plain-folks
humor but done in the grand and frequently hilarious style of the old
country and always a seemingly unending string of bravura performances
form a large supporting cast that is really a delight. Pat O'Brien, James
Gleason, Ricardo Cortez, Edward Brophy, Wallace Ford and Frank McHugh are
grandly in tune as Skeffington's political sounding boards; Basil Rathbone,
John Carradine and Willis Bourchey are nice and flinty as the aristocrats
opposing him; and Donald Crisp, Basil Ruysdael and Ken Curtis are holy
enough as men of the cloth who can't help liking him. Then there is also
handsome Jeffrey Hunter as Skeffington's nephew, a naivete who learns that
politics is the country's greatest spectator sport. As for the
distaff side in a film which has little matinee trade appeal, we find
pretty Diane Foster as Hunter's wife, Anna Lee as a stricken widow and
Jane Darwell in a rollicking bit as one of those old-timers who make a
hobby of funerals. Actually, however, there is a lack of real plot and
romantic interest and these factors will restrict the film's chances in
the general market. It is certain to do quite will in the family market.
Whatever plot there is relies on the war between Skeffington and the
snobs, his foxy tactics against them and his surprising defeat at the
hands of one of their vacuous young candidates who used Madison Avenue
techniques on TV. The grand old man has a stroke, dies and when one of his
arch rivals says to him "you'd do it very, very differently if you had it
to do over" he replies with a last smile: "Like hell I would!"
— The
Independent Exhibitor's Film Bulletin, October 27, 1958 |
"Frank did some questionable things but had good intentions behind them.
This made for an interesting take on politics, spinning a positive angle
on tactics that could be construed as dishonest or bullying. It’s also
portraying an interesting period of political history, when campaigns saw
a change in style, making use of TV which favours attractive, charismatic
candidates over those less ‘camera-friendly’ politicians possibly better
suited to the job at hand.
The performances are strong too, with Spencer Tracy delivering the goods
as usual, as the kindly but driven Frank. Rathbone and Carradine make
suitably venomous villains too and there are several classic character
actors from Ford’s troupe of regulars making appearances here and there."
—David Brook,
Blueprint: Review, April 15, 2020
After Skeffington has a heart attack, he has a visit from the Bishop. |
Adam and Maeve visit Uncle Frank, whose death isn't far off. |
"Tracy, eyes twinkling as he rides a cloud of ballyhoo, is very good
indeed, and there are some class performances from Basil Rathbone, Edward
Brophy and John Carradine." —Anthony Carthew, Daily Herald,
December 27, 1958
Back to Page One. See Page Three for pictures of posters,
lobby cards and promo photos.
The Last Hurrah is available
|
Images on this page and pages 1 and 3 are from the film "The Last
Hurrah," copyright Columbia Pictures.
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