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Come to the Stable
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{{Short description|1949 film by Henry Koster}} {{Use American English|date=January 2025}} {{Infobox film | image = Come to the Stable VideoCover.jpeg | name = Come to the Stable | caption = | director = [[Henry Koster]] | producer = [[Samuel G. Engel]] | screenplay = [[Oscar Millard]]<br>[[Sally Benson]] | story = [[Clare Boothe Luce]] | starring = [[Loretta Young]]<br>[[Celeste Holm]] | music = [[Cyril J. Mockridge]] | cinematography = [[Joseph LaShelle]] | editing = [[William Reynolds (film editor)|William H. Reynolds]] | distributor = [[20th Century Fox]] | released = {{Film date|1949|7|27|New York}} | runtime = 94 minutes | country = United States | language = English<br>French | budget = |gross = $3 million<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://archive.org/stream/variety177-1950-01#page/n58/mode/1up|title=Top Grossers of 1949|magazine=Variety|date=4 January 1950|page=59}}</ref> }} '''''Come to the Stable''''' is a 1949 American [[comedy drama]] film that tells how two French religious sisters come to a small [[New England]] town and involve the townsfolk in helping them to build a children's hospital. It features [[Loretta Young]], [[Celeste Holm]], [[Hugh Marlowe]], [[Elsa Lanchester]], [[Thomas Gomez]], [[Dooley Wilson]] and [[Regis Toomey]]. The movie was based on a story by [[Clare Boothe Luce]], and the screenplay was written by [[Oscar Millard]] and [[Sally Benson]]. It was directed by [[Henry Koster]]. It was nominated for [[Academy Awards]] for [[Academy Award for Best Actress|Best Actress in a Leading Role]] (Loretta Young), [[Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress|Best Actress in a Supporting Role]] (Celeste Holm and Elsa Lanchester), [[Academy Award for Best Production Design|Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White]] ([[Lyle R. Wheeler]], [[Joseph C. Wright]], [[Thomas Little]], and [[Paul S. Fox]]), [[Academy Award for Best Cinematography|Best Cinematography]], [[Academy Award for Best Original Song|Best Music, Song]] ([[Alfred Newman (composer)|Alfred Newman]] and [[Mack Gordon]] for "Through a Long and Sleepless Night") and [[Academy Award for Best Story|Best Writing, Motion Picture Story]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/87650/Come-to-the-Stable/awards|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100625143851/http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/87650/Come-to-the-Stable/awards |url-status=dead|archive-date=25 June 2010|department=Movies & TV Dept.|work=[[The New York Times]]|publisher=[[Baseline (database)|Baseline]] & [[All Movie Guide]]|date=2010|title=NY Times: Come to the Stable|accessdate=20 December 2008}}</ref> ==Plot== One winter's night, two French sisters, Chicago-born Sister Margaret ([[Loretta Young]]) and Sister Scholastica ([[Celeste Holm]]), arrive at the small New England town of Bethlehem where they meet Amelia Potts ([[Elsa Lanchester]]), a painter of religious pictures. The sisters announce that they have come to build a hospital, and Sister Margaret explains that she was in charge of a children's hospital in Normandy during [[World War II|the war]] when it became a potential target during a military campaign. As many of the children could not be evacuated, Sister Margaret made a personal plea to an American general not to shell the hospital, which the Germans were using as an observation post. The hospital was spared but at the cost of American lives, and Sister Margaret made a promise to God that, in gratitude for saving the children, she would return to America to build a children's hospital. Miss Potts wonders why they chose Bethlehem, and Sister Margaret says that they had received a postcard with a reproduction of a nativity scene painted by Miss Potts, titled "Come to the Stable," with information about the Bethlehem area. The sisters then decide that a local hill depicted in another of Miss Potts' paintings would be a good site for the hospital. After composer Bob Masen ([[Hugh Marlowe]]), who is Miss Potts's neighbor and landlord, tells the sisters that the hill is owned by Luigi Rossi of New York, the sisters visit the local [[Bishops in the Catholic Church|Catholic Bishop]] to seek his support for their planned project. He is unable to help them with their project, but does give them a small amount of money to tide them over. When they return to Bethlehem, Bob's religious porter, Anthony James, offers them a ride from the railroad station in Bob's jeep (he continues to help them throughout the movie). As Sister Margaret learned to drive a jeep during the war, they arrange to borrow the jeep to go to New York City to find Mr. Rossi and ask him to donate his land. Rossi runs a [[bookmaker]] operation and, despite his security, the sisters manage to see him. He tells the sisters that he intends to build his retirement home on the site. As they prepare to leave, Sister Margaret notices a picture, and they learn that Rossi's son was killed in action near their hospital in Rouen. The sisters then tell Luigi they will pray for his son. Suddenly, Rossi changes his mind and informs them that the land is theirs if they will install a [[stained glass]] window in the future hospital in memory of his son. Elated, they return to Bethlehem, where Bob and his girlfriend, Kitty Blaine, are listening to a demo of a new song he has composed and the sisters come to thank him for the use of the jeep. Bob then announces that he will be going to Hollywood for twelve weeks to work on a motion picture. The sisters acquire a three-month option for $5,000 on a former [[witch-hazel]] bottling plant opposite the Rossi property for use as a temporary shelter to stage the construction of the hospital. However, when the bishop looks over the papers, he discovers that the purchase price carries a $25,000 mortgage, significantly more than the operating funds the sisters have available. He tells the sisters that he will have to cancel the contract, but at that moment, 11 more sisters and a chaplain arrive from France, having been previously summoned by the sisters following their initial success. The bishop relents, allowing them to stay for the period of the option with the understanding that they must all leave if they cannot raise the additional money within that time, but later remarks to his monsignor assistant that he feels unstoppable forces at work. When Bob returns from Hollywood with Kitty and three house guests he discovers the now increased number of sisters having a produce-and-arts sale in Miss Potts' yard, and Bob insists that she evict all the sisters - which is unnecessary, as they are planning to move into the abandoned bottling plant in anticipation of finalizing its purchase. On the day before the option is to lapse, the sisters find themselves $500 short of the necessary amount. That evening, after Kitty performs Bob's new song for his guests, they hear the sisters singing a hymn the tune of which is similar to Bob's song. Concerned about potential allegations of plagiarism, Bob swears that he first thought of the tune after his Army outfit landed in France four years earlier, but guest Al Newman, a music critic, identifies the melody as a 1200-year-old [[Gregorian Chant]]. The next morning, Sisters Margaret and Scholastica accidentally drive a stake through Bob's waterline while building a shrine, and mistake the resulting gusher as a holy sign. Bob visits the real estate agent and arranges to buy the witch-hazel plant in order to keep it out of the sisters' hands. Sister Margaret, meanwhile, discovers Bob's guests playing doubles tennis and arranges a wager for $500 if Sister Scholastica can help Al beat the other couple. Although Sister Scholastica is a former tennis champion, they lose the match. Later, after Sister Margaret tells the sisters that they must leave, Bob apologetically comes to bid them goodbye and overhears their prayers, discovering that their Mother House is in Normandy, near where he was stationed during the [[World War II|war]]. When the sisters ask him to pray for them, Bob is moved to change his mind about their project, and the film ends with Bob, Kitty, Anthony, Miss Potts, Mr. Rossi and the bishop all attending the dedication of the temporary home of the hospital of [[Jude the Apostle|St. Jude]]. ==Cast== * [[Loretta Young]] as Sister Margaret (based on Mother [[Benedict Duss]])<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/10/nyregion/mother-benedict-dies-at-94-head-of-a-cloistered-abbey.html Mother Benedict obituary] accessed 25 January 2016</ref> * [[Celeste Holm]] as Sister Scholastica (based on Sister Mary-Aline Trilles de Warren) * [[Elsa Lanchester]] as Amelia Potts (based on artist [[Lauren Ford]])<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=fRY0QiacQccC&pg=PA460&q=clare%20boothe%20luce%20come%20to%20the%20stable Fox Film History] accessed 25 January 2016</ref> * [[Hugh Marlowe]] as Robert Masen * [[Thomas Gomez]] as Luigi Rossi * [[Dorothy Patrick]] as Kitty * [[Basil Ruysdael]] as The Bishop * [[Dooley Wilson]] as Anthony James * [[Regis Toomey]] as Monsignor Talbot * [[Mike Mazurki]] as Sam * [[Wally Brown]] as Howard Sheldon * [[Walter Baldwin]] as Claude Jarman * [[John Bleifer]] as Rosey (uncredited) ==Release== The film had its premiere at the Rivoli Theatre in New York City on July 27, 1949 before opening to the public the following day.<ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=July 6, 1949|url=https://archive.org/details/variety175-1949-07/page/n13/mode/2up?view=theater|pages=14-15|title=Really Rolling (advertisement)|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}</ref><ref name=AFI>{{AFI film|id=25883|title=Come to the Stable}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=July 27, 1949|url=https://archive.org/details/variety175-1949-07/page/n182/mode/1up?view=theater|page=15|title=Heat Bop's B'way; 'Everything'-Crosby $86,000; 'Not Wanted' Only 20G, Palace Vaude With 'Alimony' Low at $18,000|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}</ref> ==Awards and nominations== {| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |- ! Award ! Category ! Nominee(s) ! Result ! Ref. |- | rowspan="7"| [[22nd Academy Awards|Academy Awards]] | [[Academy Award for Best Actress|Best Actress]] | [[Loretta Young]] | {{nom}} | rowspan="7" align="center"| <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oscars.org/oscars/ceremonies/1950|title=The 22nd Academy Awards (1950) Nominees and Winners|access-date=18 August 2011|website=Oscars.org}}</ref> |- | rowspan="2"| [[Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress|Best Supporting Actress]] | [[Celeste Holm]] | {{nom}} |- | [[Elsa Lanchester]] | {{nom}} |- | [[Academy Award for Best Story|Best Motion Picture Story]] | [[Clare Boothe Luce]] | {{nom}} |- | [[Academy Award for Best Production Design|Best Art Direction-Set Decoration β Black-and-White]] | Art Direction: [[Lyle R. Wheeler]] and [[Joseph C. Wright]]; <br> Set Decoration: [[Thomas Little]] and [[Paul S. Fox]] | {{nom}} |- | [[Academy Award for Best Cinematography|Best Cinematography β Black-and-White]] | [[Joseph LaShelle]] | {{nom}} |- | [[Academy Award for Best Original Song|Best Original Song]] | "Through a Long and Sleepless Night" <br> Music by [[Alfred Newman (composer)|Alfred Newman]]; <br> Lyrics by [[Mack Gordon]] | {{nom}} |- | [[7th Golden Globe Awards|Golden Globe Awards]] | colspan="2"| [[Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture β Drama|Best Picture]] | {{nom}} | align="center"| <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.goldenglobes.com/film/come-stable|title=Come to the Stable β Golden Globes|website=[[HFPA]]|access-date=5 July 2021|ref={{harvid|HFPA|1950}}}}</ref> |- | [[2nd Writers Guild of America Awards|Writers Guild of America Awards]] | [[Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written Comedy|Best Written American Comedy]] | [[Oscar Millard]] and [[Sally Benson]] | {{nom}} | align="center"| <ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.wga.org/awards/awardssub.aspx?id=1551|title=Wga awards|archive-url=https://archive.today/20121205095022/http://www.wga.org/awards/awardssub.aspx?id=1551|archive-date=5 December 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref> |} ==See also== * [[Abbey of Regina Laudis]] ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== * {{AFI film|id=25883|title=Come to the Stable}} * {{IMDb title|id=0041257|title=Come to the Stable}} * {{Rotten Tomatoes|come_to_the_stable}} * {{TCMDb title|id=71296}} {{Henry Koster}} [[Category:1949 films]] [[Category:1949 comedy-drama films]] [[Category:20th Century Fox films]] [[Category:American black-and-white films]] [[Category:American comedy-drama films]] [[Category:1940s English-language films]] [[Category:1940s French-language films]] [[Category:Films about Catholic nuns]] [[Category:Films about Catholicism]] [[Category:Films directed by Henry Koster]] [[Category:Films produced by Samuel G. Engel]] [[Category:Films scored by Cyril J. Mockridge]] [[Category:Films set in New England]] [[Category:1940s American films]] [[Category:English-language comedy-drama films]] [[Category:Films set in convents]]
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