iām glad someone noticed jerry took on the female roles in the remakes m&l did!
first in their remake of nothing sacred (1937) with living it up (1954) where jerry fills in carole lombardās role as the main character dying of radiation poisoning (in nothing sacred, it is radium poisoning). dean plays his childhood friend and physican, who, in the original film, was carole lombardās romantic interest.
then they did it again in the major and the minor (1942) with youāre never too young (1955), where jerry takes on ginger rogersā role of the main character dressing up as a kid to get out of a sticky situation. dean, once again, plays the āmajorā in the title (this time a regular sharp customer) and is playing the role of the male love interest.
surprisingly, scared stiff doesnāt do away with mary carterās character played by paulette goddard from the bob hope film ghost breakers (1940). instead, they keep mary (carroll)ās role, played by lizabeth scott, and invent a new character for jerry to playāmyron mertz, larryās childhood friend. funnily enough, their scenes in the beginning of the film have homosexual underpinnings, and deanās character, larry, shirks the girl he is originally seeing to go find and help myron.
additionally, pardners (1956), is very loosely based on bing crosbyās rhythm on the range (1936), and doesnāt have jerry take on a reinterpreted female roleāthough dean and jerryās characters have a silly meeting like the main romantic couple do in the 1936 film.
it is clear that there is āunintentionalā homoerotic coding in their filmsāremakes or not. the remakes slot jerry into the female romantic leadās role, while their original films beat-by-beat make the characters as close as a couple.
additionally, jerryās characters are generally queer-coded, or in a vaguely problematic 1950s way, stereotypically female (plus he cross-dresses three timesāin the stooge (1952), in at war with the army (1950), and in money from home (1953)).
in the friendship between dean and jerryās characters, he plays the doting, loyal āfemaleā coded roles, usually with strong loving housewife underpinnings. in the caddy (1953), jerryās character, harvey, patiently cooks deanās character, joe, dinner. a frilly apron is tied around his waist, and he sweetly greets joe at the door, even fussing with joeās clothes and nagging at him. in artists and models (1955), their characters are trying to make it bigājerryās character eugene a writer and deanās character rick a comic book artist. the two men co-habit together and are very good friendsāsuper sweet and affectionate to the nth degree. in the beginnings of the film, eugene makes dinner for the two of them, apron once again tied around his waist; it doesnāt say if they take turns making dinner, but the way itās set-up, itās implied eugene is the usual homemaker. itās a meager dinner but ricky eats it nonetheless, and even reads a newspaper like a husband would. later, ricky tries to leaveāstating they need to get a ādivorceāābut falters once he sees eugeneās teary face and decides to stay. eugeneās character is loving and well-intentioned; if this were a straight goofball comedy, one can easily imagine the actress playing jerryās role as āthe wifeā or āeventual wifeā of the pair.
1940s and 1950s america had clearly caught onto the romantic tension between jerry and dean, and did their best to reflect it onto the screen. the crowds flocking to their shows were wildly permitting for a post-war audience and especially for fans of a comedy duo. they even delighted in the affection dean and jerry showed each other on stage and implied in dirty asides (jerryās āridingā joke from the radio show comes to mind).
can you imagine how titillating it mustāve been to sit in a movie theater and swiftly realize that your favorite comedy duo acted as they merely did on the screen as they did on stageāin love?













