Girl 27

Girl 27

For 70 years, money and power buried the truth...
Directed by David Stenn
Written by David Stenn
Release dates
  • 2007 (2007)
Running time
86 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Girl 27 is a 2007 documentary film about the 1937 rape of dancer and sometime movie extra Patricia Douglas (1917-2003) at an M-G-M exhibitors' convention, the front-page news stories that followed, and the studio's subsequent cover-up of the crime. Also covered in the film are a similar assault on singer Eloise Spann and her subsequent suicide, and the better-known scandal involving actress Loretta Young and her "adopted" daughter Judy Lewis, the product of her affair with Clark Gable during the production of The Call of the Wild (1935 film).[1]

The filmmaker, David Stenn, uses first-person interviews and vintage film footage and music to explore the political power of movie studios in 1930s Hollywood, as well as public attitudes toward sexual assault that discouraged victims from coming forward. The filmmaker's dogged pursuit of Douglas and their resulting friendship is a consistent theme throughout.

Production

Stenn, who first came across the story while researching his 1993 biography of Jean Harlow, Bombshell, spent a decade in pursuit of the facts relating to the Douglas case – which led to his discovery that Douglas herself was still alive. He located her and persuaded her to tell her story, which he first detailed in a 2003 Vanity Fair article, "It Happened One Night...At MGM.”[2] In an interview at the time of the film’s release, Stenn elaborated on the degree of his personal investment in the project:

You name it, I did it wrong. I used my own money, which is the first no-no of all time, I did everything myself, like legal clearances, our crew was tiny, and I just didn’t really know what I was doing. It was based on complete inexperience. I broke a cardinal rule by using my own money, but that turned out to be very liberating because I had complete control. But also I was blowing my savings and thinking, “Is anyone ever going to see this?” There was all that stuff, waking up in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, sitting in the car, crying, thinking, “There’s just too much here, I don’t know if we’re going to get it done.” But we did.[3]

The film was picked up for distribution by Red Envelope Entertainment (Netflix), then Magnolia Pictures after its premiere in competition at the Sundance Film Festival.

References

  1. Lewis, Judy. Uncommon Knowledge. Pocket Books, 1994.
  2. Stenn, David. "It Happened One Night...at MGM." Vanity Fair, April 2003.
  3. "David Stenn, Girl 27" by Nick Dawson, Filmmaker Magazine Jul 27, 2007 accessed 13 Oct 2014

External links


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