Johnny Come Lately is a 1943 drama film directed by William K. Howard starring James Cagney, Grace George, Marjorie Main and Hattie McDaniel. It was the first film produced by Cagney's brother, William Cagney.
The title is derived from the idiom "Johnny Come Lately", which refers to a newcomer who seeks to change an established system.[3] The film centers on a drifter who comes to a new town and is faced with the question of choosing integrity or financial gain.
Plot
In 1906, Tom Richards, a drifter, arrives in the small town of Plattsville. He sits reading a book in the town square when newspaper proprietor Vinnie McLeod speaks to him and offers him help. She goes to meet wealthy mayor Dougherty, a corrupt man who also owns a rival newspaper.
Mrs. McLeod re-encounters Richards in the town courtroom where he is on trial for vagrancy. She offers him a job as a journalist to allow him to escape imprisonment. He starts to shake the place up, and asks to close the paper (the Shield and Banner) for 3 days to redesign and relaunch it, specifically launching an attack on Dougherty.
Meanwhile Dougherty's son is in love with Mrs. McLeod's niece. Dougherty offers Richards a job paying three times more but he declines due to his morals. Dougherty goes to extreme measures and sends two hired guns to shoot Mrs. McLeod. They hit her in the hand. Richards (who pre-empted the attack and has a gun) chases them off, shooting one.
Mrs. McLeod's niece starts to fall in love with Richards but decides it is young Dougherty she loves.
An eccentric rich woman, nicknamed "Gashouse Mary" (clearly modelled on Mae West) gives funds usually channeled through Dougherty to the orphanage to Richards instead. When she taunts Dougherty she ends up in prison on a bail of $1,500.
Dougherty starts to bend when the entire town parades by holding an effigy of him on a gibbet. Richards and Dougherty Jr. start brawling in the street and Richards is arrested and taken off in a horse-drawn black maria. The townsfolk storm the jail and release him.
In the end Dougherty senior meets with Mrs. McLeod and Richards and agrees to leave town for the sake of his son and her niece. All agree. He also gives back Mrs. McLeod the mortgage on her property. Richards too decides to move on.
Cast
James Cagney as Tom Richards
Grace George as Vinnie McLeod (as Miss Grace George)
Marjorie Main as Gashouse Mary
Marjorie Lord as Jane
Hattie McDaniel as Aida, Mrs McLeod's servant
Edward McNamara as W.M. Dougherty
William Henry as Pete Dougherty (as Bill Henry)
Robert Barrat as Bill Swain
George Cleveland as Willie Ferguson, a kindly drunkard working for McLeod
Margaret Hamilton as Myrtle Ferguson, McLeod's receptionist
Norman Willis as Dudley Hirsh
Lucien Littlefield as Blaker
Edwin Stanley as Winterbottom
Irving Bacon as Chief of Police
Tom Dugan as First Cop
Charles Irwin as Second Cop
John Sheehan as Third Cop
Clarence Muse as Butler
John Skins Miller as First Tramp (as John Miller)
Arthur Hunnicutt as Second Tramp
Victor Kilian as Tramp in Box Car
Wee Willie Davis as Bouncer (as Wee Willie Davis)
Joseph Crehan as Judge Flynn (uncredited)
Harry Tenbrook as Saloon Patron (uncredited)