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| Harvey | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Henry Koster |
| Produced by | John Beck |
| Written by | Mary Chase Oscar Brodney Myles Connolly (Uncredited) |
| Starring | James Stewart Josephine Hull Peggy Dow Charles Drake |
| Music by | Frank Skinner |
| Cinematography | William H. Daniels |
| Distributed by | Universal International Pictures |
| Release date(s) | October 13, 1950 |
| Running time | 104 min |
| Language | English |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Harvey is a 1950 film based on Mary Chase\'s Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name, directed by Henry Koster, and starring James Stewart and Josephine Hull. The story is about a man whose best friend is a "pooka" named Harvey—in the form of a six-foot, three and one half-inch-tall rabbit.
Hull\'s performance earned her an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actress; Stewart\'s portrayal earned him a Best Actor Oscar nomination.
This film was ranked #35 on AFI\'s 100 Years... 100 Laughs.
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Stewart plays Elwood P. Dowd, a middle-aged, amiable (and somewhat eccentric) individual whose best friend is an invisible six-foot, three-and-a-half-inch tall rabbit named Harvey. (Originally only 6 feet tall, Jimmy Stewart had to add to Harvey\'s height so that he could look up to him as described in the play). Harvey is a pooka, a mischievous magical creature from Celtic mythology. As the film begins, Elwood has been driving his sister and niece (who live with him and crave normality and a place in \'society\') to distraction by introducing everyone he meets to his friend, Harvey. His family seems to be unsure whether Dowd\'s obsession with Harvey is an attempt to embarrass them, or a product of his (admitted) propensity to drink or mental illness.
His sister, Veta Louise Simmons (played by Hull), tries to have Elwood committed to a sanitorium. In exasperation, she admits to the attending psychiatrist (Dr Lyman Sanderson played by Charles Drake) that, after so many years of putting up with it, she sees Harvey every once in a while. This causes Dr. Sanderson to let Elwood out and lock Veta up. After sorting out the mistake, Dr. Chumley (head of the sanitorium played delightfully by Cecil Kellaway) decides that to save the reputation of the Sanitorium he must bring Elwood back. Faced by many trials she doesn\'t understand Veta says to her daughter "Myrtle Mae, you have a lot to learn and I hope you never learn it".
When tracked down, Elwood goes through several ordeals, although he remains oblivious to the plans put in place for him by Dr Chumley, Judge Gaffney (William Lynn) and Veta Louise. In a poignant scene where Dr. Sanderson and his nurse Miss Kelly (played by Peggy Dow) follow Elwood into an alley at the back of his and Harvey\'s favourite haunt - Charlie\'s Bar, Elwood tells the incredible story of how he came to meet Harvey, and explains the way in which people react when they meet them. In a later scene, he gives Dr. Chumley an insight into his "philosophy" of life - you can be "Oh so smart, or oh so pleasant. Well, for years I was smart; I recommend pleasant. And you may quote me".
In the final scene of the film, Elwood (along with everybody else) arrives back at the hospital, having convinced Dr. Chumley of Harvey\'s existence. However, Dr. Sanderson convinces Elwood to come into his office where he\'ll receive a serum that will "stop (him - Elwood) seeing the rabbit." As they are preparing for the injection, Elwood\'s sister is told by their cab driver about all the other people he has driven to the sanitorium to receive the self-same medicine, warning her that Elwood will become "just a normal human being. And you know what stinkers they are." Upset by the very thought of this, Veta halts the procedure.
At the tale\'s end Harvey is given the choice of remaining with Dr Chumley (and potentially spending a lot of time in Akron, Ohio) or continuing his life with Elwood, catches Elwood up at the exit to the Sanitorium and is seen (indirectly) opening the gate to the hospital to follow the others out.
The play/film was made for television several times:
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