Throughout the history of classic Hollywood,Henry Fondawas applicable across many genres. He thrived as a sheriff or cowboy in Westerns under the direction of eitherJohn FordorSergio Leone. He was the idyllic everyday individual in dramas, who expressed nobility during the Dust Bowl inThe Grapes of Wrathor inside a jury deliberation room in12 Angry Men. Most of all, Fonda carried an esteemed presence that made him perfect for playinghistorical icons or courageous men in stories about social issues. One might suspect that Fonda would have been too polished to effectively situate himself within the confines of an absurdist screwball comedy from a master of the genre likePreston Sturges, but one of his most charming roles, as a naive heir inThe Lady Eve,shows him playing against type while also confirming his endearing screen presence.
The Lady Eve
A trio of classy card sharks targets a socially awkward brewery heir, until one of them falls in love with him.
Henry Fonda Subverts His Image as the Heroic Everyman in ‘The Lady Eve’
During his acting prime during the 1940s, audiences could count onFonda being the consummate everyman. His gentle affection towards others and the world around him aided his image as a stalwart hero, despite not possessing traditional archetypes of masculinity. Casting him as a bumbling fool in an acerbic screwball comedy likeThe Lady Eveseems like a misread of Fonda’s acting range, but the rolevalorizes the star’s earnest screen persona as much, if not more so, than any other film. Additionally, the 1941 film is arguably the crowning achievement of Preston Sturges' career, who is renowned for his popularization of the screwball comedy genre. Even through farce, Sturges' witty dialogue was refreshingly modern and grounded.
The Lady Evecenters around a team of con artists led by Jean, played by thedazzling comedic force and alluring femme fatale,Barbara Stanwyck. Jean, along with her father “Colonel” Harrington (Charles Coburn) and his business partner, look to swindle Fonda’s Charles Pike, a dedicated zoologist, and the heir to a financially prosperous brewery, Pike Ale. Charles is an awkward and naive book-smart man trapped in his insular world of studying snakes. In other words,he is the perfect target for a con.Ambivalent towards his family wealth, Charles is saved from the con after Jean takes a romantic interest in him. Throughout the film, their relationship fallsthrough the pratfalls familiar in modern Rom-Coms, including misunderstandings that morph into revenge plots. The dramatic ploy of the film revolves around Jean, in the aftermath of Charles breaking off their relationship once he learns of her true identity, posing as a glamorous British aristocrat known as “the Lady Eve Sidwich,” so that he can fall for her once again and subsequently embarrass him.

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Sturges' films, whileclassically entertaining and embracing genre staples, are usually satirical at heart. His other masterpiece released in 1941,Sullivan’s Travels, takes an acidic approach to the ridiculousness of the filmmaking industry.Film critic Andrew Sarriswrotethat “Sturges repeatedly suggested thatthe lowliest boob could rise to the top with the right degree of luck, bluff, and fraud.“The Lady Eve’s second act morphs into a comedy of manners that suits Sarris' analysis of Sturges, but the characterization of Fonda’s Charles Pike reflects upon the filmmaker’s cynical worldview. Charlesis barely even aware of the moneythat is soon to be passed down to him, and even if he is, he sure would rather spend time with snakes in the forest than indulge in wealth. Charles is understood to be an expert in his field, yet his inability to recognize that the titular Eve and Jean are the same person forces the viewer to reconsider his intelligence.

Henry Fonda Captures the Spirit of Classic Screwball Comedies in ‘The Lady Eve’
Beyond the textual implications of Sturges' insight into how wealthy and successful people operate, Fonda captures the ideal spirit of the male lead of a screwball or romcom. Beneath his naivety,Fonda’s sweet and guileless nature perfectly contrasts with Jean’s conniving behavior.The character’s intense fixation on his practice is not out of self-involved vanity, but rather, an earnest commitment to snakes and the science of studying these menacing creatures. Earnestness wasFonda’s calling card throughout his prolific career. Placing him in a film where he is the target of a fraudulent scheme writes for itself. Sturges, who understood comedy as well as any writer/director of the big screen, knew that Charles could not be solely victimized. His sympathetic conviction in his worldview not only proves to be a weakness, but the audience can’t help but ultimately view him as a dimwitted and haphazard heir.
A screwball comedy is only as good as thechemistry between its two stars. The dynamic between Henry Fonda and Barbara Stanwyck inThe Lady Eveis everything one could ask for in a screwball comedy served on a delicious platter–verbal gags, physical gags, a mismatched odd couple, and heartfelt romance. Fonda’s performance isespecially humorous because never has a male romantic lead wanted to be in a screwball comedy less than Charles Pike. At first, he can’t be bothered by an exuberant and gorgeous woman like Jean, who develops an attraction to Charles and tries to abort the con against him. Like any warm-blooded man, he eventually becomes smitten with Jean. This is whereFonda’s vulnerability is integral to the story, as “like all young men who are truly and badly in love,“Roger Ebertwrote in his reviewforThe Lady Eve, “his consciousness is focused on one thing: the void in his heart that only she can fill.”

The sequence in which Jean snuggles with Charles on a couch, playing with his hair while Charles expresses a face of complete shock–the way most people would when coming into contact with a snake,epitomizes Fonda’s exquisite brand of acting. Ebertargued that this sequence was both the funniest and sexiest scene in the history of romantic comedies. The overwhelming sensation of being courted by a vivacious woman has never looked so honest as it does through Fonda’s expression. It is funny but wholly sympathetic. The actor’s performancecapitalizes on Sturges' understated gender role reversal.InThe Lady Eve, the woman is a strong-willed, domineering force who holds personal agency, and the man is a ditzy figure, often bamboozled by the surrounding situations, and needs love to round out his life.
‘The Lady Eve’ Both Complements and Challenges Henry Fonda’s Screen Persona
The role of the naive heir inThe Lady Evebothleans into Henry Fonda’s strengthsand challenges the star’s beloved screen persona. The sensitivity that backed iconic performances inThe Grapes of WrathandAlfred Hitchcock’s docu-dramaThe Wrong Manwas required for Charles Pike. In a performance that evokes the poetic beauty of John Ford,Fonda as the mythologized Tombstone sheriffWyatt EarpinMy Darling Clementineisconveyed through an immense amount of reserved shyness, as he portrays Earp as an awkward romantic. A similar sentiment runs through Fonda’s inspired performance asAbraham Lincolnin Ford’sYoung Mr. Lincoln, whose championing of the law and upholding good virtues ischecked by his bewilderment surrounding his impending public influence.
Through the absurdity of his performance inThe Lady Eve, Charles Pikepresented itself as a challenge that Fonda gladly accepted.The actor is a force that demands reverence with every screen appearance. In12 Angry Men, he manages to sway 11 of his fellow jurors to reconsider their “guilty” verdict in the respective murder trial by focusing on logic and reason rather than their indifference or prejudice.Fonda’s career swan song and Oscar-winning performanceinOn Golden Pondshows a curmudgeonly elderly man preserving his family legacy through restored bonds with his daughter. These areweighty parts that call for a star of titanic esteem. Of course, this is why we love Henry Fonda. However, we can also be thankful to Preston Sturges andThe Lady Evefor allowing Fonda toloosen up and be a lovable goof in a perfect screwball comedy.
The Lady Eveis available to rent on Prime Video in the U.S.