Directed by Mitchell Leisen, Dream Girl is a 1948 romantic screwball comedy adapted from Elmer Rice’s 1945 stage play. Released by Paramount Pictures, the film runs approximately 85 minutes and stars Betty Hutton, Macdonald Carey, and Patric Knowles. It translates theatrical whimsy to a glossy studio comedy anchored by Hutton’s kinetic performance.
Plot Summary
Georgiana “Georgie” Allerton (Betty Hutton) is a charming but chronically distracted daydreamer whose vivid fantasies keep colliding with real life. While her sister plans a sensible marriage, Georgie daydreams romantically about several suitors and imagines grand, cinematic scenarios that complicate her relationships. Reporter Clark Redfield (Macdonald Carey) sees beyond Georgie’s flights of fancy and tries to win her by appealing to her steadier side, while Jim Lucas (Patric Knowles) provides a rival, more conventional option. The film follows Georgie as she learns to balance imagination with commitment and chooses a life that blends romance and responsibility.
Cast
- Betty Hutton as Georgie Allerton
- Macdonald Carey as Clark Redfield
- Patric Knowles as Jim Lucas
- Spring Byington as Aunt Viola
- Jeff Donnell as Peggy; Charles Dingle, Mabel Paige, and Paul Guilfoyle in supporting roles
Production Notes
- The screenplay adapts Elmer Rice’s stage play, expanding Georgie’s fantasy sequences with cinematic flourishes and visual gags to take advantage of film’s possibilities
- Mitchell Leisen’s direction emphasizes polished studio production values: elegant sets, crisp pacing, and widescreen-friendly compositions typical of late-1940s Paramount comedies
- Betty Hutton’s performance blends physical comedy, rapid-fire delivery, and musical timing, making her the emotional and comic center of the picture
- Victor Young’s musical arrangements and several upbeat production numbers underscore the film’s buoyant tone without turning it into a full musical
- Costume and art-direction choices highlight postwar domestic ideals while playfully undercutting them through Georgie’s anarchic imagination
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