The Pride of the Yankees, 1942, RKO Radio Pictures. Starring Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright. Co-starring Babe Ruth. Directed by Sam Wood. B&W, 128 minutes.
The son of immigrant parents, Lou Gehrig (Gary Cooper) takes an interest in the All-American sport of baseball at an early age. He’d like to pursue it as a career, but his mother (Elsa Janssen) is set on him becoming an engineer like his successful uncle. He can be anything he wants, she says, so doesn’t he want to be an engineer?
He doesn’t stop playing baseball, however, and soon a sportswriter has persuaded a scout for the Yankees to see him play. They offer him a contract, and while Gehrig is tempted, he’s still pulled by his mother’s wishes. However, when she gets sick and the bills begin to pile up, he takes up the Yankees on their offer and signs.

Gary Cooper, Elsa Janssen
Initially playing in a minor league team, eventually Gehrig is called up by the Yankees, where he makes an immediate impression. Teammate Babe Ruth (as himself) is dismissive of the rookie player, but eventually is won over by Gehrig’s hard work and skill.
It’s while playing in Chicago that Gehrig trips over a stack of bats and is laughingly called “tanglefoot” by a spectator, Eleanor (Teresa Wright). The two are formally introduced later, and a romance begins.
In the meantime, his mother has become a baseball convert and her son’s biggest fan. She’s not so fond of his choice of bride, however, and once again Lou Gehrig must convince his mother to see things his way.
Gehrig’s life is good, but of course, that doesn’t last forever.

Gary Cooper
Cooper knew very little about the game of baseball before taking this role and had never played. Director Sam Wood took care not to focus on any skill (or lack of it) the actor had, instead showing more of the personal side of Gehrig’s life. He also made sure the camera didn’t focus on Cooper’s ball playing. At 40, Cooper was twice as old as Gehrig would have been at the onset of this role, so there was a mild credibility issue to overcome. Audiences didn’t seem to mind.
In A Girl’s Got To Breathe: The Life of Teresa Wright, Donald Spoto wrote: “Eleanor Gehrig did not have official cast approval, but [Sam] Goldwyn wisely and courteously wanted her endorsement. ‘When Sam first told me that Teresa would play me,’ Eleanor recalled, ‘I felt that she was much too young. I preferred someone like Barbara Stanwyck or Jean Arthur, or an actress with more experience. But I learned no one could do better, or even as well, as Teresa.'”

Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright
It was on the set of The Pride of the Yankees that Wright fell in love with her first husband, Niven Busch, who was a story editor and writer for Goldwyn. The two had met a year earlier on the set of The Little Foxes, but sparks didn’t fly until The Pride of the Yankees. Goldwyn objected to the romance, fearing Busch would have more influence over Wright than he did, but he couldn’t stop it.
The Pride of the Yankees was nominated for eleven Academy Awards, including Best Picture; Best Actor (Cooper); Best Actress (Wright); Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Black-and-White; Best Cinematography, Black-and-White; Best Effects, Special Effects; Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture; Best Sound Recording; Best Writing, Original Story; and Best Writing, Adapted Screenplay. It won one, for Film Editing. Wright was also nominated that year for and won Best Supporting Actress for her work in Mrs. Miniver.
The film also features one scene with the dancing of acclaimed duo Veloz and Yolanda, known for their Latin style, in particular the Samba. They dance to the music of the Ray Noble orchestra.

Veloz and Yolanda, Teresa Wright, Gary Cooper
This is a heartwarming film, one that can be enjoyed equally by those who love baseball and those who know little to nothing about it. The story of Lou Gehrig, no doubt the most famous person with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an inspiring one and director Sam Wood played it for all it was worth–without becoming maudlin.
I think this was Gary Cooper at his finest here. It was like he was not even acting!
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I agree. He was really at ease in this role.
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No he wasn’t. He was NO ATHLETE and any baseball fan could see that. He portrayed Gehrig as—one of the characters, played by Dan Duryea, stated—“an idiot with a batting eye.” Cooper was so athletically inept that they had to turn the film around so he could be believeable as a left-handed hitter, which Gehrig was. Babe Ruth said he was very disappointed in the lack of baseball scenes. And he was right. Teresa Wright was excellent as Eleanor Gehrig. Because of the tragic latter storyline, we leave this film depressed as hell. It was OK to see…ONCE, unless a viewer is a glutton for emotional punishment.
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[…] The Pride of the Yankees — Classic for a Reason […]
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I’m not a sports fan, but I absolutely love this movie! Cooper and Wright are great together, and the final speech always makes me teary-eyed.
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I loved this movie and not because it’s about baseball, because it’s really not. Rather, it’s a heartwarming and inspiring story about a good man and the people who loved him. I agree that Cooper and Wright are great together. She doesn’t seem like the obvious choice for the role, but she did a great job.
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