Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Leslie Howard and Joan Blondell star in “Stand-In”

Stand-In (1937) is a screwball comedy directed by Tay Garnett and starring Lesley Howard and Joan Blondell that offers a satirical glimpse into the workings of the Hollywood studio system during the Great Depression. The story centers on Atterbury Dodd (Howard), a reserved and highly mathematical financial efficiency expert from a Wall Street bank. Dodd is sent to Tinseltown to investigate the failing finances of a fictional motion picture company, Colossal Pictures. Armed only with his ledgers and logic, he is tasked with determining if the studio is worth saving or if it should be sold off.

Upon arrival, the analytical Dodd finds himself completely unprepared for the chaotic, extravagant, and often nonsensical reality of filmmaking. He quickly meets Lester Plum (Blondell), a cheerful, street-smart former child star who now works as a stand-in for the studio’s temperamental lead actress. Lester, having a wealth of practical Hollywood experience, takes the bewildered accountant under her wing. She attempts to teach him about the unpredictable nature of the movie business—a world where human emotion and creative whims often outweigh balance sheets and sound economic principles.

As Dodd digs into the studio’s books, he begins to suspect that the financial troubles are not due to incompetence alone, but are the result of deliberate sabotage orchestrated by key personnel conspiring with an outside buyer. With Lester’s guidance, Dodd must transition from a detached man of numbers to a man of action to expose the scheme, save the jobs of the studio's hard-working employees, and prevent the entire company from falling into the wrong hands. The film thus transforms into a high-stakes battle pitting strict logic against the colorful, chaotic spirit of Hollywood.

 

Leslie Howard and Joan Blondell

Tay Garnett (1894–1977) was an American film director, writer, and producer whose career spanned over four decades in Hollywood, working in a wide array of genres. Born in Los Angeles, he served as a naval aviator in World War I before entering the film industry in 1920 as a gag writer for silent comedy legends like Mack Sennett and Hal Roach. Garnett began directing feature films in 1928 and quickly became known as a highly competent craftsman, helming box-office hits and critically acclaimed movies alike, including the pre-Code romance One Way Passage (1932), the adventure classic China Seas (1935), the Hollywood satire Stand-In (1937), the war drama Bataan (1943), and his most noted film, the definitive film-noir thriller The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946). In his later career, Garnett worked extensively in television, directing episodes of popular Westerns and other series like Bonanza and Rawhide.

Leslie Howard (1893–1943) was an acclaimed English actor, director, and producer, known for roles that often conveyed a quiet, sophisticated, and sensitive English charm. Born Leslie Howard Steiner in London to a Hungarian-Jewish father and a British mother, he began his professional career after serving in World War I and receiving a medical discharge for shell shock, which he was advised to treat by taking up acting. Howard found significant success on the Broadway stage before transitioning to Hollywood in the sound era, earning two Academy Award nominations for Best Actor for his roles in Berkeley Square (1933) and Pygmalion (1938), which he also co-directed. He is most widely remembered for his role as the melancholy, honorable Ashley Wilkes in the epic film Gone with the Wind (1939). In the years leading up to and during World War II, Howard returned to England, becoming heavily involved in anti-Nazi propaganda efforts through filmmaking, directing, and starring in films like Pimpernel Smith (1941) and The First of the Few (1942). His life was tragically cut short in June 1943 when the civilian plane he was aboard, traveling from Lisbon to London, was shot down by German aircraft over the Atlantic Ocean.

Joan Blondell (1906–1979) was a prolific American actress who rose to prominence as the quintessential “working girl” of the 1930s, known for her sassy charm, distinctive blonde looks, and ability to deliver witty, fast-paced dialogue. Born into a vaudeville family, she leveraged a successful Broadway run opposite James Cagney to launch a Hollywood career with Warner Bros. She starred in over 100 films, often playing resourceful chorus girls and secretaries in classic pre-Code movies and Busby Berkeley musicals like Footlight Parade and Gold Diggers of 1933, where she sang the iconic, socially-conscious number “Remember My Forgotten Man.” As she matured, Blondell successfully transitioned into a respected character actress, earning an Academy Award nomination for The Blue Veil (1951) and critical acclaim for roles in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and The Cincinnati Kid. Her career spanned nearly five decades across film, stage, and television, ending with a final film appearance in Grease (1978).

 

Stand-In trivia

Source Material: The film is based on a novel of the same name by Alva Johnston, a writer for The New Yorker. Johnston was known for his profiles of eccentric and notable figures, and his book satirized the chaotic, high-stakes environment of the Hollywood studio system during its Golden Age.

Director Switch: Director Tay Garnett was originally scheduled to film A Star Is Born (1937) for Selznick International Pictures, but he traded projects with William A. Wellman, who took over A Star Is Born. This allowed Garnett to direct Stand-In, which offered him a chance to satirize the very industry he worked in.

Leslie Howard’s Rare Genre: While star Leslie Howard was best known for playing romantic leads and sensitive, tragic figures (like in Pygmalion and Gone with the Wind), Stand-In is one of the few pure screwball comedies he ever made. The role of the highly analytical and socially awkward banker, Atterbury Dodd, allowed him to showcase an unusual, dry comedic talent.

Cameo of the Author: Author Alva Johnston makes a brief uncredited cameo in the film, playing a court clerk in the final courtroom scene. This subtle appearance serves as an insider nod to the book’s creator, who was providing a commentary on Hollywood itself.

 


Click HERE to watch the movie on the Internet Archive.

Click HERE to join the online discussion on December 15, 2025, at 6:30 p.m. Central Time. Once you RSVP, you will receive an invitation with a link to join the discussion on Zoom.

 

Discussion questions

Logic vs. Emotion in Hollywood: Atterbury Dodd, the efficiency expert, approaches Hollywood as a purely mathematical problem, while Lester Plum navigates it through practical experience and emotional understanding. How does the film use these two characters to satirize the clash between Wall Street’s logic and the movie industry's creative chaos? Which approach does the film ultimately suggest is more necessary for the studio's survival?

The Role of the “Stand-In”: The title refers to Lester Plum's profession. Beyond her technical job (standing in for the star), how does Lester function as a “stand-in" for the audience or for the true, hard-working people of Hollywood? What does she represent about the industry that the famous stars (like Thelma Cheri) do not?

Satire of the Studio System: Stand In was released at the height of the studio system’s power. Identify three specific ways the film satirizes the business (e.g., the power of the stars, the erratic directors, the financial waste, or the pressure to churn out films). Do these elements of the satire still feel relevant to the entertainment industry today?

Leslie Howard’s Performance: Leslie Howard typically played romantic, sensitive leading men. Discuss how his portrayal of the stiff, humorless Atterbury Dodd uses the screwball comedy format to facilitate his character’s transformation. What key scenes illustrate the shift in Dodd from a cold analyst to someone capable of passion and action?

 

 

 

 

 

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