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Blondie has Servant Trouble (1940)
aka "Blondie Has Trouble"
Cast Regulars in this Film
Blondie Bumstead (Penny Singleton)
Dagwood Bumstead (Arthur Lake)
Baby Dumpling Bumstead (Larry Simms)
Danny Mummert (Alvin Fuddle)
J.C. Dithers (Jonathan Hale)
Mr. Crumb, the Mailman (Irving Bacon)
Special Guest Stars
Ray Turner (plays Horatio Jones)
Arthur Hohl (plays Eric Vaughn)
Esther Dale (plays Anna Vaughn)
Fay Helm (plays Alvin's mom)
Walter Soderling (plays Morgan)
Frank Melton (plays Ollie Shaw)
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Plot: This is the 6th film
in the series. The Blondie movie series was excellent in the way
that every once in awhile they experimented with different movie
styles. This movie is more of a mystery-thriller than the typical
Blondie movie. It's like a "Blondie meets Charlie Chan" sort of
deal. This movie is still very funny, as are all the movies in
this series, but it brings something new into the mix. I give a
lot of spoilers in this summary because, frankly, that's the only way I
can describe this particular entry. This movie will keep you
guessing until the end.
It starts out innocent enough like most Blondie movies. Blondie
is an overworked housewife who wants a maid. Dagwood cannot
afford a maid, so Blondie pressures him into asking his boss for a
raise. Mr. Dithers (Dagwood's boss) doesn't give him a raise, but
does come up with a solution to Blondie's servant problem. A man
named Morgan tells Dithers earlier about a house that Dithers is having
trouble selling to people. It's said that the house is
haunted! Dithers, refusing to believe this nonsense, sends
Dagwood and his family to the house without telling them about the
haunted house rumors. Dithers hopes the Bumsteads temporary
stay will convince others that the house isn't haunted.
In fact, there is lot about the house that Dithers neglects to
mention. The man who used to live in the house (now he's dead)
was a wealthy manufacturer of magic tricks. Through a series of
mishappenings, the Bumsteads are led to believe that the house is
haunted! Like a lot of the mystery-thriller movies of the time,
you'll see all kinds of trap doors, hidden rooms, dark passageways, and
such. It's a lot like the "Charlie Chan", "Sherlock Holmes", and
"Topper Returns" movies. Much of this movie's story revolves
around this house.
The first person they meet in the house is a black man named Horatio
Jones. He is in the house because he's going through initiation
for a lodge. He'll become a lodge member if he can survive a
night in the haunted house. Horatio is played by a black
character actor named Ray Turner.
Like many of the black actors of the time, he portrays the goofy
coward. Some people may call this stereotypical, but get
real. Any of the popular black actors at the time of this writing
(Eddie Murphy, Chris Tucker, Chris Rock, Eddie Griffin, and Dave
Chappelle) show black people in a much worse light. He's just a
funny character and in this movie he's never put down or called
anything worse than a "colored boy" even once. Just think of this
character as a fraidy-cat who happens to be black; there are plenty of
white fraidy-cats in movies, too. Unlike most of his film
appearances, Ray Turner has a fairly big part in this movie. He's
important in this movie because he adds a sense of realism to all the
goings on. Most of us would act something like that under the
circumstances. In addition, he has a real talent for keeping his
eyes wide open in every scene; he doesn't blink even once!
Later on in the film, they meet their servants Eric and Anna
Vaughn. The mysterious couple don't seem very outgoing or
friendly for servants. Eric, in particular, is very
strange. You find out later in the show that they aren't really
servants. Eric Vaughn is a disgruntled magician who claimed his
ideas were stolen by the man whose house the Bumsteads were staying
in. You'll find out later on that he was earlier arrested,
stabbed his defense attorney while in court, then escaped to this
house. Vaughn believes that this is "his" house and that nothing
was going to keep him away. Every so often he has his
madness spells that make him go temporarily insane and do things of
which he isn't fully aware.
Dagwood catches the criminal in the end in typical Bumstead fashion and
all ends well. One of the things you'll probably notice when
watching this movie is that Baby Dumpling is a lot lippier than
usual. I think the writers were just trying to show us that he
was going through a phase or was just having a bad day. It's
cute, and it shows that Baby Dumpling had more than just a sweet,
innocent side to him. He's given some depth to his
personality. This movie is also filled with a lot of funny magic
tricks.
Extra Stuff: At
one point in the movie, you will see Blondie wearing the fur coat that
she wanted so badly in the previous movie Blondie
on a Budget and finally got at the end of that film.
Frank Melton plays one of the
pre-Jack Rice "Ollie Shaw" roles. In later Blondie movies, Ollie
is given much bigger parts and his character becomes established with
the slick-haired, glasses-wearing actor Jack Rice. Before Jack
Rice, the actors that played Ollie Shaw looked just like ordinary guys
you'd see on the street.
In Blondie Has Servant
Trouble (1940), Mrs. Fuddle is seen and played by Fay
Helm. She has also played Alvin's mom in three other Blondie
movies including Blondie (1938), Blondie Brings Up Baby (1939), and Blondie on a Budget (1940).

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