Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Barbara Stanwyck and Dennis Morgan share a “Christmas in Connecticut”

The classic romantic comedy Christmas in Connecticut (1945), directed by Peter Godfrey, centers on Elizabeth Lane (Barbara Stanwyck), a highly popular magazine columnist known nationwide as the ideal American wife, mother, and homemaker who lives an idyllic life on her Connecticut farm. She pens mouth-watering recipes and writes charming anecdotes about her domestic bliss. However, this entire persona is a complete fraud. Elizabeth is actually a single, childless, city-dwelling career woman who can’t even boil an egg. Her witty columns and gourmet recipes are the work of her editor and a professional chef friend, all kept secret from the public and, crucially, from her stern, demanding publisher, Alexander Yardley (Sidney Greenstreet).

The crisis begins when Yardley insists that Elizabeth host a Christmas dinner at her “farm” for Jefferson Jones (Dennis Morgan), a handsome, recently rescued war hero whose recovery was aided by reading her columns and dreaming of her meals. Terrified of being exposed and losing her job, Elizabeth, with the help of her friends, frantically arranges a desperate plan to maintain the deception. This involves agreeing to a hasty, non-romantic marriage to her persistent suitor, John Sloan (Reginald Gardiner), who owns a real Connecticut farmhouse, and borrowing a neighbor’s baby to pose as her own.

As Elizabeth, John, the chef, and the “borrowed” baby arrive at the farm, they are immediately thrown into a farcical whirlwind of complications. The unexpected early arrival of the war hero, Jones, and her publisher, Yardley, threatens to unravel the entire charade at every turn. Elizabeth finds herself struggling to perform the simplest domestic tasks while trying to keep her boss and the eager war hero from realizing the truth. As the impostor housewife attempts to navigate a chaotic Christmas weekend, she soon develops a genuine, unexpected connection with her honored guest, which further complicates her desperate and delicate tangle of lies.

 

Peter Godfrey (1899 – 1970) was an English actor and film director who was born in London. He began his career on the stage as a conjurer, clown, and actor, and was the founder of the experimental Gate Theatre Salon in 1925, where he staged London’s first expressionistic production the following year. After directing two British films in the early 1930s, he eventually moved to the United States, arriving in Hollywood around 1939 to establish a career as a film actor and director. Godfrey became a prominent director, working primarily on B-films for Warner Bros. and directing a variety of genres, including comedy, drama, and thriller, with notable credits including the Christmas classic Christmas in Connecticut (1945), Cry Wolf (1947), and The Woman in White (1948). He later switched to directing episodes for television shows in the 1950s and died in Hollywood, California, at the age of 70.

Barbara Stanwyck (1907 – 1990) was an American film star who got her acting start with a supporting role on Broadway in a play called The Noose (1926). The next year she had the lead in another Broadway production, Burlesque, which was a huge hit. She eventually made it to Hollywood, where her success was not immediate. Director Frank Capra saw something in Stanwyck, and he educated her in filmmaking and film acting, and the rest is history. Stanwyck was nominated four times for the Best Actress Oscar—Stella Dallas (1937), Ball of Fire (1941), Double Indemnity (1945), Sorry, Wrong Number (1948)—and remains one of the most beloved movie stars from Hollywood’s Golden Age.

Dennis Morgan (born Earl Stanley Morner, 1908–1994) was an American actor and singer, best known as a star for Warner Bros. in the late 1930s through the early 1950s. Morgan began his career using the name Stanley Morner in films like Suzy (1936), and later as Richard Stanley, before adopting the name Dennis Morgan when he signed with Warner Bros. He frequently played the amiable leading man with a pleasant tenor voice in musicals and comedies, often being paired with his friend, actor Jack Carson, in films such as Two Guys from Milwaukee (1946). Among his most notable film roles are his appearances in the classic holiday film Christmas in Connecticut (1945), Kitty Foyle (1940), The Desert Song (1943), and My Wild Irish Rose (1947). After his film career slowed, he transitioned to television, starring in the police series 21 Beacon Street in the late 1950s.

Sydney Greenstreet (1879–1954) was a British and American actor who began his distinguished film career at the late age of 61 after decades as a prominent stage performer in both Britain and America. Best known for his imposing physical presence and portrayal of cunning, often villainous characters, he made his sensational screen debut in The Maltese Falcon (1941) as Kasper Gutman, a role that earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. He was a memorable fixture in many Warner Bros. films throughout the 1940s, frequently paired with Peter Lorre, and is highly celebrated for his work in classics like Casablanca (1942), where he played club owner Signor Ferrari, and the holiday film Christmas in Connecticut (1945), where he appeared as the blustering publisher Alexander Yardley. Greenstreet's film career spanned only eight years before he retired due to health issues, including diabetes and a kidney disorder.

 

Barbara Stanwyck and S.Z Sakall

Christmas in Connecticut trivia

  • The Casting of "Elizabeth Lane": Barbara Stanwyck, who plays the famously terrible cook and fraudulent columnist Elizabeth Lane, was personally selected for the role by director Peter Godfrey because he was one of the few directors who knew that Stanwyck was a highly skilled comedienne, a talent often overlooked in favor of her dramatic roles.
  • The Title's Double Meaning: The film's title refers both to the geographical setting of the holiday chaos and to the magazine column written by the fictional Elizabeth Lane. Interestingly, the film was shot entirely on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank, California, and none of the scenes were actually filmed in Connecticut.
  • Sydney Greenstreet's Only Comedy Role: The film features Sydney Greenstreet, known for his roles as menacing villains in noirs like The Maltese Falcon and Casablanca. His role as the demanding publisher Alexander Yardley in Christmas in Connecticut is one of the few, if not the only, purely comedic roles he played during his short but highly impactful film career.
  • A Familiar Farmhouse Setting: The exterior set used for John Sloan's farmhouse—the place where the entire holiday deception takes place—was a standing set on the Warner Bros. ranch. It was reused multiple times for various films and television shows over the years.

 

Click HERE to watch the movie on the Internet Archive.

Click HERE to join the online discussion on December 8, 2025, at 6:30 p.m. Central Time. Once you RSVP, you will receive an invitation and a link to join the conversation on Zoom.

 

Dennis Morgan and Barbara Stanwyck

Discussion questions

  1. Identity and Deception: Elizabeth Lane’s entire public persona is a fabrication. Discuss the moral and professional implications of this deception. 
  2. The Nature of Love and Marriage: Elizabeth is pressured to marry John Sloan, a man she doesn’t love, simply to maintain her professional lie. How does the film contrast this “marriage of convenience” with the genuine, albeit complicated, connection she develops with Jeff Jones? What does the story ultimately suggest about finding true love?
  3. The Role of Setting: The film satirizes the idea of the “ideal” Connecticut Christmas. How essential is the farm setting to the comedy and the plot's conflicts? What does the film say about the difference between the romanticized image of domesticity (as described in Elizabeth’s columns) and the reality of an ordinary household?
  4. The Comedic Use of Authority: Publisher Alexander Yardley serves as the primary obstacle and source of conflict for Elizabeth. Analyze the effectiveness of Sydney Greenstreet’s performance in this role. How does the film use Yardley's strict, overbearing authority—and Elizabeth’s fear of it—to drive the farcical action?

No comments:

Post a Comment



Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...