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His Girl Friday

His Girl Friday

  • Status: Released
  • 18-01-1940
  • Runtime: 92 min
  • Score: 7.4
  • Vote count: 844

Walter Burns is an irresistibly conniving newspaper publisher desperate to woo back his paper’s star reporter, who also happens to be his estranged wife. She’s threatening to quit and settle down with a new beau, but, as Walter knows, she has a weakness: she can’t resist a juicy scoop.

Cary Grant

Walter Burns

Rosalind Russell

Hildy Johnson

Ralph Bellamy

Bruce Baldwin

Gene Lockhart

Sheriff Hartwell

Helen Mack

Mollie Malloy

Porter Hall

Murphy

Ernest Truex

Bensinger

Cliff Edwards

Endicott

Clarence Kolb

Mayor

Roscoe Karns

McCue

Frank Jenks

Wilson

Regis Toomey

Sanders

Abner Biberman

Louie

Frank Orth

Duffy

John Qualen

Earl Williams

Alma Kruger

Mrs. Baldwin

Billy Gilbert

Joe Pettibone

Pat West

Warden Cooley

Edwin Maxwell

Dr. Egelhoffer

Irving Bacon

Gus (uncredited)

Wade Boteler

Mike (uncredited)

Harry C. Bradley

Insurance Doctor (uncredited)

Wheaton Chambers

Elevator Passenger (uncredited)

Edmund Cobb

Cop (uncredited)

Ann Doran

Newspaper Office Worker (uncredited)

Ralph Dunn

Plainclothesman (uncredited)

Earl Dwire

Pete Davis (uncredited)

Pat Flaherty

Frank the Policeman (uncredited)

Jack Gardner

Elevator Passenger (uncredited)

Eddie Hart

Carl the Plainclothesman (uncredited)

Marion Martin

Evangeline (uncredited)

Frank McLure

Newsman (uncredited)

James Millican

Tim (uncredited)

Gene Morgan

Gene (uncredited)

Delmar Watson

Skinny (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

This is a belter of a film! Essentially just a two hander with Cary Grant ("Walter Burns") as the editor of a newspaper facing the loss of his ex-wife, and best reporter Rosalind Russell ("Hildy Johnson") who has decided to marry Ralph Bellamy ("Bruce Baldwin") and start a new life. Anyone who enjoys the modern day writing of folks like Aaron Sorkin will immediately appreciate the depth and class of the clever, witty writing and the superbly fast paced delivery from both as Grant tries all sorts of manoeuvres to change her mind; frame her new fiancée and stop a man from going to the electric chair with the aide of little else but a few telephones and the odd interjection from some great supporters - Gene Lockhart, Porter Hall, John Qualen and Abner Biberman as his go-to fixer "Louie". Russell is no shrinking violet, either - she has plenty of great one-liners and retorts of her own, and the equality with which they scrap makes this all the more fun. The ending is a touch too inevitable, and maybe just a little too muddled and that robs it of a killer punch; but this is still a cracking romantic comedy.