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I Married a Witch

I Married a Witch is a 1942 American romantic comedy fantasy film, directed by René Clair, and starring Veronica Lake as a witch whose plan for revenge goes comically awry, with Fredric March as her foil. The film also features Robert Benchley, Susan Hayward and Cecil Kellaway. The screenplay by Robert Pirosh and Marc Connelly and uncredited other writers, including Dalton Trumbo, is based on the 1941 novel The Passionate Witch by Thorne Smith, who died before he could finish it; it was completed by Norman H. Matson.

I Married a Witch

The Passionate Witch
1941 novel
by Thorne Smith and Norman H. Matson

René Clair

  • October 30, 1942 (1942-10-30)

77 minutes

United States

English

$1.1 million (US rentals)[1]

Plot[edit]

Two witches in colonial Salem, the witch Jennifer and her father the warlock Daniel, are burned at the stake after being denounced by Puritan Jonathan Wooley. Their ashes are buried beneath a tree to imprison their evil spirits. In revenge, Jennifer curses Wooley and his male descendants, dooming them always to marry the wrong woman.


Centuries pass. Generation after generation, Wooley men marry cruel, shrewish women. Finally, in 1942, lightning splits the tree, freeing the spirits of Jennifer and Daniel. They discover Wallace Wooley, living nearby and running for governor, on the eve of marrying the spoiled Estelle Masterson, daughter of newspaper publisher J.B. Masterson, who just so happens to be Wooley's chief political backer.


Initially, Jennifer and Daniel manifest as white vertical smoky "trails," occasionally hiding in empty, or sometimes not-so-empty, bottles, some of which are of alcohol. Jennifer persuades Daniel to conjure a human body for her with which to torment Wallace. Daniel needs fire to perform this spell, and so he burns down the Pilgrim Hotel. This serves a dual purpose, as Jennifer uses the emergency to trap Wallace into rescuing her from the burning building.


Jennifer tries hard to seduce Wallace without magic. Even though he is attracted to her, he refuses to call off his marriage. Jennifer concocts a love potion, but the scheme goes awry when a painting falls on her, knocking her out. Wallace revives her by giving her the very drink she had intended for him.


Daniel conjures himself a body, then he and Jennifer crash the wedding, though they are at cross purposes. Daniel hates all Wooleys and tries to prevent his daughter from helping one of them. His attempts at interference land him in jail, too drunk to remember the spell to turn Wallace into a frog. Meanwhile, bride-to-be Estelle finds the couple embracing and the wedding is called off. Outraged, Estelle's father J.B. promises to denounce Wallace Wooley in all his newspapers. Wallace finally admits he loves Jennifer, and they elope.


Jennifer then casts a spell on all the voters and ballots using witchcraft to fix the election - even Wallace's opponent ends up voting for Wallace, and the vote is unanimous. The election's outcome convinces Wallace his new wife is indeed a witch. Daniel warns his daughter that she must be punished for revealing her true nature to a mortal, and takes away her magical powers.


In a panic, Jennifer interrupts Wallace's victory speech, imploring him to help her escape. Unfortunately, the taxi they get in to get away is driven by Daniel. He takes the taxi airborne only to crash it into the original tree from the beginning of the story. At the stroke of midnight, Wallace is left with Jennifer's lifeless body, while two plumes of smoke watch. Before they return to the tree, Jennifer asks to watch Wallace's torment. While Daniel gloats, Jennifer reclaims her body, explaining to Wallace, "Love is stronger than witchcraft." She quickly puts the cork into the bottle of liquor her father is hiding in, keeping him drunk and powerless.


Years later, Wallace and Jennifer have children. The housekeeper enters to complain about their youngest daughter, who enters pretending to ride a broom, to which Jennifer comments "We're going to have trouble with that one."

as Jonathan Wooley, Nathaniel Wooley, Samuel Wooley, and principally Wallace Wooley

Fredric March

as Jennifer Wooley

Veronica Lake

as Daniel

Cecil Kellaway

as Estelle Masterson

Susan Hayward

as Dr. Dudley White, Wooley's friend

Robert Benchley

as Margaret, Wooley's housekeeper

Elizabeth Patterson

as Tabitha Wooley

Eily Malyon

as J.B. Masterson

Robert Warwick

as Nancy Wooley

Mary Field

as Harriet Wooley

Nora Cecil

as Jennifer Wooley

Ann Carter

as Justice of the Peace

Aldrich Bowker

as Policeman (uncredited)

Wade Boteler

as Fire Chief (uncredited)

Robert Homans

Cast notes:

Release[edit]

The film was one of a number of films sold by Paramount to United Artists in September, when UA did not have enough films to meet its commitments and Paramount had a surplus.[3] It was released by UA on October 30 that year.


At the time of the film's release, a film critic from The Chicago Tribune wrote, "I Married a Witch is bizarre but beguiling. Under Rene Clair's delicately preposterous direction it unreels a story of modern witchcraft, the like of which has not been seen on any screen." The reviewer also called Veronica Lake's performance "delightfully outrageous and very funny."[8]


Diabolique agreed, eight decades later. "This is wickedly funny, an absolute delight – due greatly to Lake who was never more alluring, strutting around in men’s pajamas, casting spells, chasing after March and causing devilry. This was her only fantasy movie and it beggars belief that Paramount never tried her again in that genre – she had a vaguely ‘otherworld’ appearance (that hair, that voice) perfect for it."[9]


The movie was released on VHS by Warner Home Video in the U.S. on July 18, 1990.[10] The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray by The Criterion Collection in the U.S. on October 8, 2013.[11]

Awards and honors[edit]

I Married a Witch was nominated for a 1943 Academy Award for "Best Music (Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture)" for composer Roy Webb.

at IMDb

I Married a Witch

at the TCM Movie Database

I Married a Witch

at AllMovie

I Married a Witch

at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films

I Married a Witch

at Thorne Smith

I Married A Witch

at Trailers from Hell

I Married a Witch

an essay by Guy Maddin at the Criterion Collection

I Married a Witch: It’s Such an Ancient Pitch

at Variety

Review of film