Monday, March 16, 2026

“Twentieth Century” (1934) - Egos on the Express: A High-Speed Clash of Broadway Giants

Directed by the legendary Howard Hawks, Twentieth Century (1934) is a seminal screwball comedy that captures the high-octane, ego-driven world of Broadway. The story follows Oscar Jaffe, a flamboyant and manipulative theater producer whose career has hit rock bottom after a string of failures. Desperate to reclaim his former glory, he boards the luxurious Twentieth Century Limited train traveling from Chicago to New York, setting the stage for a frantic, confined drama where the stakes are as high as the theatrical flair.

The film stars John Barrymore as the eccentric Oscar Jaffe, delivering a performance defined by comedic melodrama and grandiosity. Opposite him is Carole Lombard in her breakout role as Lily Garland, a former shopgirl whom Jaffe transformed into a massive stage star. Having fled Jaffe’s stifling control years prior to find fame in Hollywood, Lily happens to be on the same train, leading to a volatile and hilarious reunion between two people who can’t decide if they love or loathe one another.

As the train speeds toward Manhattan, the narrative becomes a relentless tug-of-war. Jaffe employs every trick in the theatrical handbook—guilt, fake illnesses, and elaborate lies—to convince Lily to sign a contract for his new play. The chemistry between Barrymore and Lombard is electric, characterized by rapid-fire dialogue and physical comedy that highlights the absurdity of their professional and personal rivalry. They are supported by a colorful cast of characters, including Jaffe’s long-suffering assistants who try to manage the chaos.

Twentieth Century is widely regarded as one of the films that defined the screwball genre, blending sophisticated wit with chaotic energy. It explores themes of identity, the artifice of celebrity, and the thin line between performance and reality. By keeping the action largely restricted to the sleek, Art Deco interiors of the train, Hawks creates a pressure cooker of hilarity that moves as fast as the locomotive itself, ensuring the audience is just as breathless as the characters by the final stop.

Howard Hawks (1896 – 1977) was a versatile titan of Hollywood’s Golden Age, renowned for his ability to master almost every cinematic genre with a signature style of understated, fast-paced storytelling. Often characterized by the “Hawksian woman”—female characters who were as tough, witty, and capable as their male counterparts—his films frequently explored themes of professional stoicism and masculine camaraderie. Throughout his prolific career, he directed foundational masterpieces ranging from the gritty gangster grit of Scarface and the pioneering screwball energy of Bringing Up Baby and His Girl Friday to the rugged Western atmosphere of Red River and Rio Bravo. His economical directing style, which favored eye-level camera placement and seamless editing, earned him late-career status as a favorite among “Auteur theory” critics and cemented his legacy as one of the most influential directors in film history.

John Barrymore (1882 – 1942) was a preeminent force of the American stage and screen, widely considered one of the most gifted actors of his generation and a key member of the legendary Barrymore acting dynasty. Initially a reluctant performer, he achieved immortality through his athletic and definitive portrayal of Hamlet, a role that bridged 19th-century theatricality with modern psychological depth. Earning the moniker “The Great Profile” for his strikingly classical features, he successfully transitioned from silent film romantic leads in Don Juan to the “talkie” era, where he showcased his versatility in sophisticated dramas like Grand Hotel and high-energy comedies like Twentieth Century. Although his later years were marked by a well-publicized struggle with alcoholism that mirrored the tragic, washed-up characters he often portrayed, Barrymore remained a magnetic presence whose quick wit and Shakespearean command left an indelible mark on the evolution of 20th-century acting.

Carole Lombard (1908 – 1942) was the undisputed queen of screwball comedy and one of the highest-paid, most beloved stars of Hollywood’s Golden Age. Born Jane Alice Peters, she began her career in silent films and slapstick shorts before her razor-sharp wit and energetic physical comedy made her a definitive screen presence in the 1930s. Her breakout performance in Twentieth Century redefined her image from a sophisticated blonde lead into a comedic powerhouse, a reputation she solidified with an Academy Award-nominated turn in My Man Godfrey and the satirical Nothing Sacred. Known for her off-screen candor, profanity-laced humor, and high-profile marriage to Clark Gable, Lombard was as respected for her intelligence and professionalism as she was for her luminous beauty. Her life was tragically cut short at the age of 33 in a plane crash while returning from a record-breaking war bond rally, an event that led President Franklin D. Roosevelt to posthumously award her the Presidential Medal of Freedom as the first woman killed in the line of duty during World War II.

 

Carole Lombard, far right

Twentieth Century trivia

The Lombard Transformation: Before this film, Carole Lombard was primarily cast as a sophisticated clothes horse in dramatic roles. Director Howard Hawks, frustrated with her stiff acting during early rehearsals, famously took her aside and told her to stop acting and just be the outspoken, energetic woman he knew her to be in real life. The result was her breakout performance, which redefined her career and established her as the queen of screwball comedy.

A “Great Profile” Parody: John Barrymore’s flamboyant performance as Oscar Jaffe was largely a parody of his own legendary theatrical persona and that of his real-life mentor, the eccentric Broadway producer David Belasco. Barrymore reportedly enjoyed the role immensely because it allowed him to mock the very high-acting style that had made him famous on the stage.

Real-Life Inspiration: The character of Oscar Jaffe was based on the notorious Broadway producer Morris Gest, known for his melodramatic flair and volatile temper. The original play, written by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur (who also wrote the screenplay), was a thinly veiled satire of the chaotic backstage world they had experienced firsthand in the New York theater scene.

The “Hawksian” Pace: Twentieth Century is often cited as the first true screwball comedy because of its relentless, overlapping dialogue. Howard Hawks encouraged the actors to speak over one another to simulate the frantic energy of a real argument, a technique he would later perfect in films like His Girl Friday. This rapid-fire delivery was a technical challenge for early sound equipment but became a hallmark of the genre.

 

Carole Lombard and John Barrymore

Click HERE to watch the film online ok.com. Or click HERE to watch it on YouTube.

Click HERE to join the online discussion on March 23, 2026, at 6:30 p.m. Central Time. Once you RSVP, you will receive an invitation to join the discussion on Zoom.

 

Discussion questions

The Nature of Performance: Oscar Jaffe and Lily Garland seem unable to turn off their theatrical personas, even in their most private moments. Do you think they are ever being their “true” selves, or has the world of Broadway permanently blurred the line between their real personalities and the characters they play?

The Power Dynamic: At the start of the film, Oscar is the mentor and Lily is the protégée, but the scales shift dramatically by the time they meet on the train. How does the film portray the struggle for control between them, and does Lily ever truly achieve independence from Oscar’s influence?

Screwball Archetypes: Twentieth Century is often cited as the film that launched the screwball comedy genre. Which elements of the film—such as the rapid-fire dialogue, the confined setting, or the battle of the sexes—do you think were most influential in defining this style of filmmaking?

Sympathy for the Villain: Oscar Jaffe is manipulative, dishonest, and ego-driven, yet he remains the protagonist of the story. How do John Barrymore’s performance and Howard Hawks’ direction manage to make such an objectively difficult character charming or even relatable to the audience?

  


 

 

 

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