Sneha Girap (Editor)

Cheers for Miss Bishop

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
7
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
7
1 Ratings
100
90
80
71
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Tay Garnett

Music director
  
Edward Ward

Duration
  

Language
  
English

6.8/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Screenplay
  
Bess Streeter Aldrich

Country
  
United States

Cheers for Miss Bishop movie poster

Release date
  
February 21, 1941 (1941-02-21)

Based on
  
Miss Bishop (novel)

Writer
  
Bess Streeter Aldrich (novel), Stephen Vincent Benet (screen adaptation), Adelaide Heilbron (screenplay), Sheridan Gibney (screenplay)

Cast
  
Martha Scott
,
William Gargan
,
Edmund Gwenn
,
Sterling Holloway

Similar movies
  
Martha Scott appears in Cheers for Miss Bishop and One Foot in Heaven

Cheers for miss bishop 1941 drama


Cheers for Miss Bishop is a 1941 drama film based on the novel Miss Bishop by Bess Streeter Aldrich. It was directed by Tay Garnett and stars Martha Scott in the title role. The other cast members include William Gargan, Edmund Gwenn, Sterling Holloway, Dorothy Peterson, Marsha Hunt, Don Douglas, and Sidney Blackmer. This film marked the debut of Rosemary DeCamp.

Contents

Cheers for Miss Bishop wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters1611p1611p

Cheers for miss bishop 1941 drama


Plot

Miss Ella Bishop (Martha Scott) is a teacher at Midwestern University. The story is told in flashback and takes place over many years, from the 1880s to the 1930s, showing her from her freshman year to her retirement as an old woman. At the beginning, she lives with her mother and her vixenish cousin Amy (Mary Anderson); she remembers when her father had a farm near the town. Ella is an inhibited girl whose frustration grows as she approaches womanhood. She dreams of becoming a teacher. When she graduates from Midwestern University, she is thrilled when its president, Professor Corcoran (Edmund Gwenn), offers her a position on the faculty.

Ella becomes engaged to lawyer Delbert Thompson (Don Douglas), but Delbert is led astray by Amy and eventually has to marry her, despite loving Ella. The couple move away. After Amy becomes pregnant, Delbert abandons her. Amy dies in childbirth, leaving Ella to care for Amy's daughter Hope (Marsha Hunt). Hope grows up and marries Richard (John Archer), and they move away and have a daughter named Gretchen (Lois Ranson). Ella also has a fling with another teacher, the unhappily married John Stevens (Sidney Blackmer), but John's wife cannot give him a divorce for religious reasons, forcing Ella to break off the relationship. Later, she is distressed to learn that John has been killed.

Through all the years, Ella is supported by her friend Sam Peters (William Gargan), a local grocer who loves her. Another source of support is Professor Corcoran, who persuades her to stay when she considers leaving. His death is a blow to Ella.

As Ella reaches old age, she reflects back and realizes she allowed the years to go by without achieving what she believes to be true fulfillment. When the new president pressures her to finally retire, she agrees. However, the years have not been without glory; and her moment of triumph arrives when her numerous, now-famous students from over the years return to a testimonial dinner at the school to honor their beloved Miss Bishop.

Cast

  • Martha Scott as Ella Bishop
  • Edmund Gwenn as Professor Corcoran
  • Don Douglas as Delbert
  • William Gargan as Sam Peters
  • Sterling Holloway as Chris
  • Dorothy Peterson as Mrs. Bishop
  • Sidney Blackmer as John Stevens
  • Mary Anderson as Amy
  • Marsha Hunt as Hope
  • Rosemary De Camp as Minna
  • Adaptations

    Cheers for Miss Bishop was adapted as a radio play on the March 17, 1941, broadcast of Lux Radio Theater with Martha Scott and William Gargan reprising their film roles and on the November 6, 1946, broadcast of Academy Award Theater starring Olivia de Havilland.

    Awards

    Cheers for Miss Bishop earned Edward Ward an Academy Award nomination for Best Scoring of a Dramatic Film. He was also nominated for scoring two other 1941 films, Tanks a Million and All-American Co-Ed. Ward earned seven Oscar nominations between 1939 and 1944, including one for the score of Phantom of the Opera (1943).

    References

    Cheers for Miss Bishop Wikipedia
    Cheers for Miss Bishop IMDb Cheers for Miss Bishop themoviedb.org