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Marie Antoinette is a 1938 American historical drama film produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was directed by W. S. Van Dyke and starred Norma Shearer as Marie Antoinette. Based upon the 1932 biography of the ill-fated Queen of France by the Austrian writer Stefan Zweig, it had its Los Angeles premiere at the legendary Carthay Circle Theatre, where the landscaping was specially decorated for the event.

Marie Antoinette
Theatrical release poster
Directed byW. S. Van Dyke
Produced byHunt Stromberg
Screenplay byDonald Ogden Stewart
Ernest Vajda
Claudine West
F. Scott Fitzgerald (uncredited)
Talbot Jennings (uncredited dialogue)
Based onMarie Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman
1932 novel
by Stefan Zweig
StarringNorma Shearer
Tyrone Power
John Barrymore
Robert Morley
Anita Louise
Joseph Schildkraut
Gladys George
Henry Stephenson
Music byHerbert Stothart
CinematographyWilliam H. Daniels
Edited byRobert Kern
Production
company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Distributed byLoew's, Inc.
Release date
  • July 8, 1938 (1938-07-08)
Running time
150 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2.9 million

The film was the last project of Irving Thalberg who died in 1936 while it was in the planning stage. His widow Norma Shearer remained committed to the project even while her enthusiasm for her film career in general was waning following his death.

With a budget close to two million dollars, it was one of the more expensive films of the 1930s, but also one of the bigger successes.

Screenplay

In 1769 Vienna, the 14-year-old Maria Antonia is informed by her mother, Empress Maria Theresa of Austria, that Antoine is to marry the future King of France, the Dauphin Louis-Auguste. The young archduchess is excited to meet her future husband and be Queen of France, but the prince she married is actually a shy man, more at home with locksmithing than attending parties at the court of Versailles. After they are married, Marie Antoinette tries desperately to please her husband, and after some trepidation, the Dauphin realizes he can trust Marie and tells her he cannot produce heirs. Without children to occupy her time and attention, Marie is bored and associates with the power-hungry Duc d'Orleans, even though the Dauphin detests him.

On their second wedding anniversary, Marie is insulted by Madame du Barry, the mistress of King Louis XV, who gives the Dauphine a gift of an empty cradle with a poem critical of Marie's inability to produce an heir to the throne. Marie is enraged, but the Dauphin is too weak to have his grandfather, King Louis XV, punish du Barry. Later, at a costume party, she meets the Swedish Count Axel Fersen and introduces him as a member of the Russian nobility as a party game. She then wagers and loses a necklace worth 200,000 livres, which causes her mother's ambassador, Count Mercy to scold her for her wanton behavior and disregard for others. Marie is irritated by the scolding, but pays the ambassador little mind.

On their fourth wedding anniversary, a ball is held to conciliate Madame du Barry and the Dauphiness, but a confrontation between the two women ensues when du Barry pointedly draws attention to the Dauphin's absence from his wife's ball, implying that the couple's estrangement means there will never be an heir to the throne. When Marie responds with a cutting reference to du Barry's past as a streetwalker, the infuriated countess storms out with the king at her side. Louis XV then decides that the childless marriage between his grandson and Marie is to be annulled. This decision finally drives the Dauphin to defend his wife; he pushes his grandfather into a chair and threatens to put du Barry in the Bastille. When Marie is told she is to be sent back to Austria, she is immediately abandoned by d'Orleans, who was only her friend because of her role as future queen of France. Marie flees to the home of her mother's ambassador, Count Mercy. There she finds Fersen, who tells her he loves her and has loved her for years—learning all he could about her from museums.

Marie realizes that she has fallen in love with Fersen, but as she goes to tell the Dauphin of this fact, she learns that King Louis XV is dying of smallpox. The Dauphin tells Marie that he cannot let her leave; he is fond of her even if he does not love her. Marie consents; Louis XV dies, and they become King and Queen of France. Marie tells Fersen that they can meet at another palace to be together, but he refuses to risk ruining her reputation, and tells her to fulfill her duty as Queen. Later, she gives birth in front of an audience to a daughter, Marie-Therese-Charlotte, and after that a new Dauphin is born at last.

Some years later, when the Dauphin has grown into a young boy, peasants throw stones at Marie's carriage while she has taken her children for a drive. She is shocked at the intense dislike displayed by the people of France. She blames d'Orleans for inciting them. Marie later rejects a jeweler's expensive and elaborate necklace, but she is framed by court insiders plotting to acquire the necklace for themselves, and the Affair of the Diamond Necklace erupts. Marie is outraged, but d'Orleans tells the royal couple to abdicate the throne in favor of the Dauphin under the regency of d'Orleans.

The French Revolution comes, and the royal family is taken prisoner. Fersen returns with a plan of escape, but when the Dauphin tells a guard that his father is a locksmith, the King is recognized and arrested after a former priest at Versailles identifies him. The King is put on trial and sentenced to death, and spends his last night with his family, his children not realizing this is the last night they will spend with their father. Marie is heartbroken, but is then separated from her children, put on trial and condemned to death. The Dauphin, too young to understand what is going on around him, is forced to testify against his mother. The night before she is executed, Fersen goes to the prison and they pledge their love to each other, with Marie telling him that she will never say goodbye. The next morning she goes bravely to her execution, which Fersen witnesses from a distance.

  • Norma Shearer as Marie Antoinette
  • Tyrone Power as Count Axel von Fersen
  • John Barrymore as King Louis XV
  • Robert Morley as King Louis XVI
  • Anita Louise as Princesse de Lamballe
  • Joseph Schildkraut as Duc de Orleans
  • Gladys George as Madame du Barry
  • Henry Stephenson as Count Mercey
  • Cora Witherspoon as Countess De Noailles
  • Barnett Parker as Prince de Rohan
  • Reginald Gardiner as Comte d'Artois
  • Henry Daniell as La Motte
  • Joseph Calleia as Drouet
  • George Meeker as Robespierre
  • Scotty Beckett as The Dauphin
  • Marilyn Knowlden as Princesse Thérèse

William Randolph Hearst originally planned this film as a vehicle for Marion Davies as early as 1933. However, a clash with Louis B. Mayer after the failure of her film Operator 13 led to the couple switching to neighboring Warner Bros.

Norma Shearer was the wife of MGM studio head Irving Thalberg when this project was greenlighted sometime before his death in 1936. This was reportedly Shearer's favorite role.

Originally to be directed by Sidney Franklin, the job was given to W.S. Van Dyke. Irving Thalberg originally planned for Charles Laughton to play the role of Louis XVI, but Laughton, after lengthy deliberations, finally declined.

Costumes and set designs

The film boasted thousands of expensive costumes and lavish set design. The array of costumes created for the film are among the most expensive in film history. Costume designer Adrian visited France and Austria in 1937 to research the period. While there he purchased vast quantities of antique materials, French lace, and period accessories for use in the film. He studied the paintings of Marie Antoinette, even using a microscope on them, so that the embroidery could be identical. Fabrics were specially woven and subsequently embroidered with stitches sometimes too fine to be seen with the naked eye. The studio raged at the amount of money being spent on costumes for the film. The attention to detail was extreme, from the framework to hair. Some gowns were extremely heavy due to the amount of embroidery, fabric and precious stones used in their creation. Ms. Shearer's gowns alone had the combined weight of over 1,768 pounds, the heaviest being the 108 pound wedding dress created using hundreds of yards of white silk satin hand embroidered in gilt thread. Originally slated to be shot in Technicolor, many of the gowns were specially dyed. The fur trim on one of Ms. Shearer's capes was therefore dyed the exact shade of her eyes.

The elaborate costumes were subsequently reused multiple times in other period films to offset the cost of their creation. Many have survived and exist in both museum and private costume collections internationally.

The ballroom at Versailles was built to be twice as large as the original to give the ball sequences a grander scale. Genuine French furniture from the period was purchased and shipped to Hollywood, some of it thought to have originally been from Versailles. The budget was a then-enormous $2.9 million. After calculating the huge expense of costume and set design, plans to render it in color were scrapped because of concerns it would cost even more to add Technicolor.

The film premiered on July 8, 1938 at the Carthay Circle Theatre in Los Angeles following a lavish outdoor red carpet ceremony for which the nearby lawns were transformed into an imitation of the gardens of the Palace of Versailles. The premiere, including the preparations of the grounds, is depicted in a short black-and-white newsreel film Hollywood Goes to Town produced by M-G-M.

The film was popular but because of its enormous cost recorded a loss of $767,000..

Sofia Coppola released her 2006 film version of the life of the queen at Versailles, causing Warner Bros. to release its 1938 vault version of Marie Antoinette on DVD. Extras are sparse, with only two vintage shorts included on the disc. "Hollywood Goes to Town" provides a glimpse of the elaborate premiere for the movie, while a trailer is also included.

  • Best Actress – Norma Shearer
  • Best Supporting Actor – Robert Morley
  • Best Art Direction – Cedric Gibbons
  • Best Music, Original Score – Herbert Stothart

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