Olivia Rutigliano offers a piece at
CrimeReads.com on the late, great crime novelist Raymond Chandler wanting actor
Cary Grant to portray his iconic private eye character Philip Marlowe.
Humphrey Bogart will go down in
history as the actor most associated with the detective character Phillip
Marlowe, but he wasn’t the first actor to play him, and he wasn’t author
Raymond Chandler’s first preference.
In 1944, the washed-up musical star
Dick Powell played the sleuth in the first film adaptation of a Chandler novel Farewell, My Lovely (retitled to Murder, My Sweet, lest it seem
like another musical). The movie relaunched Powell’s career, and Chandler was
not disappointed with the casting decision. Powell bought an air of refinement
that Chandler had initially envisioned for his P.I. But actually, he said
later, the actor he most wanted to play his detective was Cary Grant.
What a movie
that would have been. But anyway.
“I like people with manners, grace,
some social intuition, an education slightly above the Reader’s Digest fan,” he
mentioned in a letter to his colleague, the writer George
Harmon Coxe. When writing to movie producer John Houseman, he stressed that
Marlowe was an “honorable man” above all, and this quality needed to shine
through.
You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
Note: Think of Cary Grant portraying Marlowe as he portrayed a tough guy gambler in Mr.
Lucky (seen in the top and above photos), as I noted in my Crime Beat column on Raymond
Chandler.
You can read my Crime Beat column on Raymond Chandler via the below link:
R.T. Thanks. Raymond Chandler is one of my favorite writers. I reread his books every couple of years...
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