I Can Get It for You Wholesale (film)

I Can Get It for You Wholesale is a 1951 romantic drama film. It's a very loose adaptation of the 1937 novel of the same title with the film replacing Harry Bogen, the novel's protagonist, with female Harriet Boyd among other alterations. It's one of the top 10 office hits of the year and could have brought in more revenue had it not been pulled from theaters.

Plot
Set in New York City's garment district, the story focuses on ambitious model and fashion designer Harriet Boyd, production manager Sam Cooper, and salesman Teddy Sherman, who leave their firm to start their own business that specializes in $10.95 dresses. Their plans temporarily are derailed when Harriet's mother refuses to give her the insurance payment the family received when her father died, having promised it to Harriet's younger sister Marge for her wedding. Harriet dupes Marge and her fiance Ray into giving her the money, and Sherboyco Dresses opens for business.

Teddy, who has fallen in love with Harriet, is dismayed when she flirts with lecherous buyer Mr. Savage during a business dinner, so he proposes marriage. She declines his offer, telling him she enjoys her freedom. Her refusal prompts Teddy to try to back out of their partnership, but he discovers their contract is ironclad.

Harriet begins dating J. F. Noble, the owner of a chain of upscale department stores, who wants her to quit and work exclusively for him. Her uncertainty puts her on edge, and when Teddy discusses her change in attitude, she claims she is stressed by overwork and wants to quit. Teddy repeats his offer of marriage and this time Harriet considers accepting. She visits Noble to decline his offer, but Teddy interrupts their meeting, misunderstands her motives, and mistakenly believes her behavior was a ploy designed to lead the way to her departure from Sherboyco. Heartbroken and angry, Teddy departs, and soon after leaves town for a sales trip. During his absence, Harriet shifts money from Sherboyco to a new company she is founding, stops production on Sherboyco's dresses, and begins designing for Noble's department stores.

Unaware what has happened, Teddy continues to take orders for Sherboyco's popular low-cost women's wear while on the road. Not until buyer Hermione Griggs contacts him about an order she has not received does he learn about Harriet's deception. She tries to convince her Sherboyco partners it is in their best interest to align with her at Noble's company, but Sam and Teddy prefer to declare bankruptcy rather than join forces with the competition. Harriet prepares to sail to Paris with Noble, but at the last moment she realizes her commitment to Sam and Teddy is too important to ignore. She returns to Sherboyco, where she admits she loves Teddy and asks him and Sam to forgive her.

Cast

 * Susan Hayward as Harriet Boyd
 * Dan Dailey as Teddy Sherman
 * George Sanders as J.F. Noble
 * Sam Jaffe as Sam Cooper
 * Randy Stuart as Marge Boyd
 * Marvin Kaplan as Arnold Fisher
 * Harry von Zell as Savage
 * Barbara Whiting as Ellen Cooper
 * Vicki Cummings as Hermione Griggs
 * Ross Elliott as Ray
 * Richard Lane as Kelley
 * Mary Philips as Mrs. Boyd

Crew

 * Director: Micheal Gordon

Review
Bosley Crowther of the New York Times observed, "In adapting Jerome Weidman's sizzling novel of 1937 to the screen, Vera Caspary has changed practically everything except the title of Mr. Weidman's book. An ambitious model now is the center of attraction, but she does not compare with Harry Bogen, the breezy, unscrupulous Bronxite who left a trail of broken promises in his sweep up Seventh Avenue in the novel. However, give Susan Hayward some quick recognition for bringing to life a hard-shelled dame, who travels just as fast and loose as the screenplay written by Abraham Polonsky permits her to. Within the story framework laid out by Miss Caspary, Mr. Polonsky has written some crisp, double-edged dialogue, but the flavor of the garment industry never is really exploited. This is regrettable because the chief distinction in the way of freshness the picture has to offer are the scenes which reflect the pulse beat of the dress industry — the crowds scurrying along Seventh Avenue amid the traffic of dress carts and the frenetic atmosphere of the showrooms where the buyers are not only baited with dresses but blandishments as well. The camera roves excitingly through this fabulous, hurly-burly in the pictures' opening sequences, but too soon Director Michael Gordon has to face the business of telling the story of a pert young-lady who is determined to climb to the top of the heap. . . With less whitewash and more honesty, I Can Get It for You Wholesale could have been an exciting, instead of just an average good, entertainment."

Abraham Polonsky and the House Un-American Activities Committee
Shortly after the film's release Abraham Polonsky was called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee. Issue had come from the fact that at the time of the film's release soviet films had a tendency to feature strong female characters, and Abraham for some reason had decided to replace the male lead of the novel with a female lead in the film. While the film featured strong capitalist ideals the change of Harry Bogen into Harriet Boyld seemed needless in regards to getting such entrepreneurial message across and had thus put Abraham under suspicion of being a Communist Party member seeking to open Hollywood up to films such as those in the Soviet Union. Abraham admitted that in the 1930s he was a devoted Marxist, had joined the Communist Party, and had been editor of a left wing newspaper 'The Home Front '. The film was pulled from theaters as Un-American and Polonsky was blacklisted from writing another film in Hollywood but continued to be a ghost writer for many years.