A Great Big Girl Like Me

ebook The Films of Marie Dressler · Women's Media History Now!

By Victoria Sturtevant

cover image of A Great Big Girl Like Me

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In this study of Marie Dressler, MGM's most profitable movie star in the early 1930s, Victoria Sturtevant analyzes Dressler's use of her body to challenge Hollywood's standards for leading ladies. At five feet seven inches tall and two hundred pounds, Dressler was never considered the popular "delicate beauty," often playing ugly ducklings, old maids, doting mothers, and imperious dowagers. However, Dressler's body, her fearless physicality, and her athletic slapstick routines commanded the screen. Although an unlikely movie star, Dressler represented for Depression-era audiences a sign of abundance and generosity in a time of scarcity.

This premier analysis of her body of work explores how Dressler refocused the generic frame of her films beyond the shallow problems of the rich and beautiful, instead dignifying the marginalized, the elderly, women, and the poor. Sturtevant inteprets the meanings of Dressler's body through different genres, venues, and historical periods by looking at her vaudeville career, her transgressive representation of an "unruly" yet sexual body in Emma and Christopher Bean, ideas of the body politic in the films Politics and Prosperity, and Dressler as a mythic body in Min and Bill and Tugboat Annie.

|Acknowledgments ix
1. Tillie's Punctured Romance: Genre and the Body 1
2. Breaking Boundaries: The Unruly Body 30
3. Politics and Prosperity: The Body Politic 60
4. Min and Bill and Tugboat Annie: The Mythic Body 93
5. Emma and Christopher Bean: The Sexual Body 126
Conclusion Dinner at Eight: The Unclosed Body 161 Notes 173
Filmography: Dressler's Feature Films 185
Index 187|"An eminently good read."—The Bay Area Reporter
"[An] excellent, superbly detailed and illustrated book. . . . Highly recommended."—Choice
"An important, groundbreaking work. In reminding us of the stardom of Marie Dressler—the most significant female box-office star of the early sound era in Hollywood—Sturtevant not only tells the definitive story of this unjustly forgotten figure, but calls into question the very idea that stardom is simply an 'industry of desire.'"—David Desser, coeditor of Hollywood Goes Shopping
|Victoria Sturtevant is an associate professor of film and video studies at the University of Oklahoma.
A Great Big Girl Like Me