When a small-town girl is incorrectly diagnosed with a rare, deadly disease, an unknowing newspaper columnist turns her into a national heroine.

Hazel Flagg

Wallace "Wally" Cook

Dr. Enoch Downer

Oliver Stone

Dr. Emil Eggelhoffer

Master of Ceremonies

Max Levinsky

Warsaw, Vermont Drugstore Lady

Baggage Man

Boy Biting Wally's Ankle (uncredited)

Schoolteacher (uncredited)

Photographer (uncredited)

Telephone Girl (uncredited)

Nurse Rafferty (uncredited)

Guest at Banquet (uncredited)

Nightclub Extra (uncredited)

Tearful Waiter (uncredited)

Dowager on Ship (uncredited)

Ferdinand Roassare - Poet (uncredited)
I rather enjoyed this. Sure, it doesn't quite conform to the attitudes of the naughties, but I think that's part of it's purpose and of our progress - it really does stand back and take a swipe at virtually everything vain, empty, and shallow in a daft comedy with Carole Lombard and Frederic March. The former plays the victim of a misdiagnosis with mixed emotions. Though happy no longer to be heading for the arms of Hades, she was looking forward to using her compensation money to go out in style. March is a gullible reporter trying to repair his recently damaged reputation, who decides her story (not aware of the truth, as yet) is just what his readers want and so sets about indulging her - so off to New York she goes where she successfully ingratiates herself with society and becomes something of "draw". There is a love story with March, of less interest - though it does build nicely to the obvious question for the the conclusion.... what is going to happen when she doesn't actually die?
November 25, 1937

Hazel Flagg

Wallace "Wally" Cook

Dr. Enoch Downer

Oliver Stone

Dr. Emil Eggelhoffer

Master of Ceremonies

Max Levinsky

Warsaw, Vermont Drugstore Lady

Baggage Man

Boy Biting Wally's Ankle (uncredited)

Schoolteacher (uncredited)

Photographer (uncredited)

Telephone Girl (uncredited)

Nurse Rafferty (uncredited)

Guest at Banquet (uncredited)

Nightclub Extra (uncredited)

Tearful Waiter (uncredited)

Dowager on Ship (uncredited)

Ferdinand Roassare - Poet (uncredited)
I rather enjoyed this. Sure, it doesn't quite conform to the attitudes of the naughties, but I think that's part of it's purpose and of our progress - it really does stand back and take a swipe at virtually everything vain, empty, and shallow in a daft comedy with Carole Lombard and Frederic March. The former plays the victim of a misdiagnosis with mixed emotions. Though happy no longer to be heading for the arms of Hades, she was looking forward to using her compensation money to go out in style. March is a gullible reporter trying to repair his recently damaged reputation, who decides her story (not aware of the truth, as yet) is just what his readers want and so sets about indulging her - so off to New York she goes where she successfully ingratiates herself with society and becomes something of "draw". There is a love story with March, of less interest - though it does build nicely to the obvious question for the the conclusion.... what is going to happen when she doesn't actually die?
