< It's a Wonderful Life

It's a Wonderful Life/Trivia


  • Doing It for the Art: While the scene at the Martini bar was filmed, James Stewart said he was so overcome with grief while praying that he began to shed Manly Tears. Frank Capra saw the feelings for Stewart, so Capra had to reframe the shot in order to get it closer than was actually filmed because he wanted to catch an expression on Stewart's face.
    • Remember, too, that at one point Stewart had wanted to leave Hollywood behind after his World War II experiences. That Capra was able to woo him back into acting is this all over.
  • Hey, It's That Guy!: Carl "Alfalfa" Switzer at the high school dance.
    • Also, Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs is now a singer at the Martini bar.
    • Omnipresent character actor Charles Lane plays one of Potter's henchmen. You know, the one who warns him, "One of these days this bright young man is going to be asking George Bailey for a job!"
    • Uncle Billy is Gerald O'Hara.
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: If you've seen the uncensored Tom and Jerry shorts, you might notice Ma Bailey's maid is played by the woman who voiced Mammy Two-Shoes, Lillian Randolph (she was also well-known to radio audiences of the era for playing Birdie, the housekeeper on The Great Gildersleeve).
  • Irony as She Is Cast: George Bailey is denied from military service during World War II because of his deaf left ear. His little brother is accepted and becomes a medal winning pilot. The real Stewart was a bomber pilot and Lt. Colonel in WWII, later being promoted to Brigadier General after the war.
  • Screwed by the Lawyers: After Republic Pictures claimed rights to the soundtrack and The Greatest Gift, they put an end to the Christmastime tradition of this movie being shown on virtually every channel, at any time of day, by giving NBC exclusive broadcast rights. Now it only airs twice every December (although, if you find this movie more enjoyable in moderation, or wish you could avoid it altogether when watching TV at Christmastime, maybe "Screwed" sounds like too harsh a word).
  • Throw It In: In the movie, Uncle Billy staggers away drunk from a party, you hear a crashing metal sound, and (offscreen) he calls back "I'm all right! I'm alllllllll right!". We presume that Uncle Billy stumbled into some garbage cans. In fact, the crashing noise was from a stagehand dropping equipment, and Thomas Mitchell's "I'm all right!" was an ad-lib.
    • And the stagehand got a bonus.
    • The first kiss with Mary, Jimmy Stewart was nervous about his first onscreen kiss since coming back from World War II. It was filmed in one unrehearsed take and part of the kiss had to be cut due to being too passionate for the censors.
    • From the same scene, there were more lines that George was going to say to Mary before kissing her, but Stewart essentially pulled a "Shut Up" kiss on himself and just cut ahead to the act of passion.
    • In the scene when there's a run on the Savings & Loan, Ellen Corby (in her only scene in the film) threw in her request for a very specific amount of money, not just her entire savings back; Stewart was so amused that his reaction is genuine.
  • Vindicated by Cable: It was not a big hit on initial release. It actually became a public domain title in 1974, so virtually every TV station around started airing it around Christmas due to it being so inexpensive. Since the early 1990s its copyright has been re-established (see the other wiki for all the details), but it's still a holiday staple, albeit exclusive to one broadcaster.
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