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Easy Living Details

FULL SYNOPSIS

Financier J.B. Ball (Edward Arnold) -- known in the press as "the Bull of Broad Street" -- may be one of the wealthiest investment bankers in the country, but he also knows the value of a dollar. And when his wife (Mary Nash) spends 50,000 of them on a sable coat, he is driven into such a fury in the ensuing argument on the roof of their Fifth Avenue townhouse, that he throws the coat into the street -- where it promptly lands on the head of Mary Smith (Jean Arthur), a clerk-typist on her way to work, riding on the upper deck of a double-decker bus, ruining her hat in the process. She jumps off the bus to try to return the coat, but Ball insists that she keep it. What she really needs, however, is not a 50,000-dollar sable coat so much as a ride to work -- as she doesn't even have a dime for bus fare -- and perhaps a new hat. Ball obliges, taking her to one of the top clothing stores in New York, buying her an expensive fur hat to go with the coat, and then dropping her at work in his limo. Her superiors, seeing her decked out in a sable coat and a new hat, and getting out of the chauffeured car, conclude that Mary is a kept woman, and, therefore, unfit to work for the boys magazine where she is employed, and they fire her. Now out of work and virtually broke, she seems to have become a victim of random fate, but suddenly the scales start to tip the other way from the very same misunderstanding that got her fired. Having been seen in the company of J.B. Ball -- whose name she didn't even get -- she is rumored to be his mistress; the prissy clothing store proprietor (Franklin Pangborn) spreads this story, and that turns Mary into the object of attention for Mr. Louis Louis (Luis Alberni), the owner of a failed luxury hotel on which Ball's bank holds the mortgage, and is about to foreclose. For reasons that she can't begin to understand, since there is nothing going on between her and J.B. Ball (whose name she doesn't even know), or between her and anyone, Louis moves her into the most luxurious suite in his hotel for a dollar a day, asking her only to inform "that certain someone" of how she loves living there. Mary has no idea of who "that certain someone" is, or what Louis is talking about, but she needs a place to live, and Louis is insistent. She still needs to eat, and, while trying to get a meal at the automat, she crosses paths with a handsome, well-meaning, but inept waiter (Ray Milland), who gets fired for helping her. She takes him into her suite so he has a place to stay, and the two fall in love in the course of finding out about each other. She knows that he is John Ball Jr., but doesn't realize that he is the son of J.B. Ball, trying to make it on his own, nor does she yet realize who J.B. Ball is, in terms of being the man who gave her the coat and the new hat, or one of the wealthiest men in the country. But after the elder Ball spends an innocent night at the Hotel Louis, a gossip columnist named "Wallace Whistling" (William Demarest) prints that he is keeping a woman at the hotel, and suddenly the Hotel Louis, perceived as a fashionable playground for the upper-crust, is filled with guests. This multiple case of mistaken identity plunges through two or three new layers, eventually bringing about an impending stock market crash to rival 1929, before Mary discovers who her would-be benefactor and her would-be fiancé are. She bails them out of the jam that they're in, also restoring the Ball's marriage, her own reputation, and her romance with Ball's son in the process. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

Cast

Jean Arthur
as Mary Smith
Edward Arnold
as J.B. Ball
Ray Milland
as John Ball, Jr.
Luis Alberni
as Mr. Louis Louis
Mary Nash
as Mrs. J. B. Ball
Franklin Pangborn
as Van Buren
Barlowe Borland
as Mr. Gurney
William Demarest
as Wallace Whistling
Andrew Tombes
as E.F. Hulgar
Esther Dale
as Lillian
Harlan Briggs
as Office Manager
William B. Davidson
as Mr. Hyde
Nora Cecil
as Miss Swerf
Robert Greig
as Graves, Ball Butler
Dora Clement
as Saleslady
Don Brodie
as Auto Salesman
Forbes Murray
as Husband
Wilson Benge
as Butler
Olaf Hytten
Lee Bowman
Stanley Andrews
as Captain
Marsha Hunt
Bennie Bartlett
as Newsboy
Edwin Stanley
as 2nd Partner
Gertrude Astor
as Saleswoman
Harold Entwistle
as Elevator Man
Adia Kuznetzoff
as Bum
John Dilson
as Nervous Man
Hayden Stevenson
as Chauffeur
Nick Lukats
as Bit
Francis Sayles
as Houseman
Laura Treadwell
as Wife
Sidney Bracey
as Chauffeur
Dennis O'Keefe
as Office Manager
Ethel Clayton
Kate Price
as Laundress
Hal K. Dawson
as Jeweler
Gloria Williams
Arthur Hoyt
as Jeweler
Virginia Dabney
as Blonde
Frances Morris
as Assistant Secretary
Robert E. Homans
as Private Guard
Lee Phelps
as Hotel Detective
Jesse Graves
as Porter
John Picorri
as Oinest
Vernon Dent
as 1st Partner
Rex Moore
as Elevator Boy

Crew

Mitchell Leisen
Director
Arthur Hornblow, Jr.
Producer
Preston Sturges
Screenwriter
Ted Tetzlaff
Cinematographer
Boris Morros
Composer (Music Score)
Boris Morros
Musical Direction/Supervision
Doane Harrison
Editor
Ernst Fegte
Art Director
Hans Dreier
Art Director
Travis Banton
Costume Designer
Farciot Edouart
Special Effects
Wally Westmore
Makeup
Vera Caspary
Short Story Author
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