Thorne Smith Classic on TCM

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On Turner Classic Movies they're going to be showing a completely restored version of Topper on the 30th at 2:30am EST 11:30pm on the 29th!

It will be followed by Turnabout, a very early body swap tale. 4:15am EST immediately followed by the short, OKAY TOOTS! which covers some of the same ground.

Comments

Thorne Smith really deserves more attention

Especially as a writer who managed to put a very fine body-swapping story (Turnabout) into the mainstream.

I'll have to see the movie, but the book is quite fine, and I recommend that everyone go to their public library and find it, or read it online or download the ebook. I *have* seen Topper, and tried to watch it once with my daughter, who was too young for it at the time. She did understand that only Topper could see the ghosts, but after that kept asking, "Is that man a ghost? Is she a ghost? Is he invisible?" about EVERY character who appeared onscreen.

I had to give up.

His writing has been an inspiration to me, and -- although I don't think I've actually stolen anything from him -- his Topper stories did make me want to write ghost stories.

Thanks, Puddintane.

Toots...

Puddintane's picture

...was eminently forgettable, almost a direct steal from Turnabout (as a short one-reeler) but with a surreal twist in that evidently personalities and voices were changed, as well as everyone's anomalous memories of the married couple, but without any physical transformation whatsoever.

Turnabout is okay as a film, but much better in the original.

Of the Topper series, the first Topper was the best, and Smith's writing is a treat almost without reservation. I have pretty much all of them, in several editions, including electronic versions.

The only dud in the bunch is the last, The Passionate Witch which was published posthumously with more than half of it ‘completed’ by a hack. It does start out nicely, though, before it falls apart.

My favourite line from the stories is the classic Thorne Smith quip, ‘One's company, three's a crowd, but four makes a vice ring.’

Truer words were never spoken, at least in Thorne Smith's whimsiccal world.

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Cheers,

Puddin'

A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style